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Show University of Utah Library Salt Lake City 12, Utah The Nei Serving the Southeast Salt Lake Communities of Volume 8 Holladay, Cottonwood, East Mill Creek Winner Named in Gravity Model Car Racing Contest Joey Frank, Vinita 10, Ulvd., Pinewood Derby held last week at Winner in the male quartet division of the MI quartet Festival is the quartet from Butler First and Eighth Wards. From left to right Keg Anderson, Lewis King, Robert the j Community Holladay Church. The Pinewood Stef-fi'use- and Paul Stevens. j Derby is a This contest. year fifty yearly boy scouts entered their model racing ears in the competition. The miniature cars were dc-signed as a parent and son pro-jeef under the direction oi the Boy Seoul Association. Joeys racing model won out in the first phase of the competition by taking first place in design over models entered by other boys of Den 7. Mrs John II. Drummond is the den leader. Then Joey went on to the finals and was chosen sweep-stak- e wrnner after judges exmodel and amined his well-buiclocked it running down a ramp about 4 feet high and 25 feet long. The Frank youths car was the fastest in the competition and it was named third best in design. As the. top winner of Pack 1 Butler Quartet Wins Superior at MIA Festival Bullet High-Powere- d Kills Valuable Mare 1 A valuable Morgan mare, named Molly was killed Sunday, Mar. 24 by a rifle bullet that entered her shoulder and came out her flank. The horse. Sue Mulhoiland's pet, was valued at $400 to $500. d The quartet, Paul Stevens. Bob Sleifensen, Lewis King and Reg Anderson, were rated as the best male quartet at the festival. Donna Mitchell accompanied the group. The quartets participating in Pony-C- olt the festival had to win in ward, stake and district competition before they could appear un the up final night. Fourteen other quartets appeared uu the final program. Winning in the ladies quartet Maintenance personnel at Skydivision was the Bonneville intermediate Registration of Ward and winning in the mix- line high school arc among the few people in the slate who all boys in the Mt. Olympus ed quartet divisiun was the have been Pony-Cohoping that we would League will be con- Thirty Sixth Ward. more rain or snow. no receive ducted Saturday, Apr. C, 1963, there is much rain time Every at the Cottonwood Pharmacy on r snow m the valley a good 7000 South just west of Highportion is bound to settle on the land Dr. roof of the new high school and This . registration will cover sooner or later, as water alall boys for the age 13, It, 15, ways will it tries to seek a 16, year old bracket who wish A pair of Olympus high school level. If it can't run downhill er lo play baseball. one Skyline high it will students and The area covers every one seep, and seep it does, student received honors over into the halls and class 39 86 to and South South from right week end. rooms of the school. from Seventh East to the moun- the past From Olympus, Francis Jut The leaking is attributed to tains. us won a superior rating among the settling uf the new building. s the Clusss A high school wlm participated in the Sugar House Kiwanis State Oralury contest. In the Hears Psychologist field of art Darrell Wiiitc won a to Westminster scholarship The Sugar House Kiwanis for his senior College portfolio Club heal'd Dr John M. Landin painting. ward, vocation psychologist for Skyline high extemporaneous ihc Veterans Administration, The second boxing show lo be speaker Jim Talvitic won a su- speak on Services that the Vetpresented by promoters Tommy perior rating in the Class A erans Administration Provides Marlin and Ivan Bland on high school shaking contest at th? regular meeting of the Thursday night. held Saturday at the U of U. club on Tuesday. an outstanding Headlining card will be two ten round main events. The first will put popular local middleweight, Milo Savage against Bill llcsllcr of Los Angeles. The seeond Witii the arrival of Spring, bers of the community will bo main event puts the highlight if is said that a young mans inspired to do the same to their of the last boxing show in Salt fancy turns to thoughts oi love; Lake, Waymun Cray against this is nut so with the Holladay yards and vacant lots near them the diamber has arranged to Tiger A1 Nieto of Monterey, Chamber of Commerce. Their to thoughts of dean have trucks in the area to pick turns fancy Mexico. to streets and yards. up trash. Arrangements The boxing card will get Starting Saturday, Apr. 6. at have trucks pick up rubbish can under way at 8:30 p.m. 7:30 in the morning, members tie made by calling Weber llo-Liat State Electronics. of the Holladay Chamber of exPromoter Tommy Marlin Mr ltopkins is chairman j Commerce will lake brooms and to tends an invitation everyrakes and shovels in hand and of the dean up campaign. one in the area lo come to the Mr Hopkins also announces clean the streets of the Salt Luke Fairgrounds to see Village Slipping Center. that the t::eme of Hie program, will Ul Days in Holladay In the hope that other mem an evening of first class boxing. The Butler First and Eighth Ward quartets in the MIA Quartet Festival, held last Saturday night at Kingsbury Mall, received one of three superior ratings given. Skyline and Water Are Sign-- lt 518 Joey was presented a trophy with his name inscribed. Winning model gravity car races is nothing new to Joey. The first year he built a car and entered it in competition, he took the championship trophy in design. That was in I960, when he was attending troop meetings at St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Salt Lake. In Citizens in the Cottonwood Heights area will have an opportunity lo express their feelings on two zoning propositions in the immediate area. A meeting will be held at Butler school on Apr. 4 at 7 p.m. One proposition woulu upgrade an area at 7000 South and 2300 East from its present zoning of commercial to residential, which it was until last May when it received its present zoning. At one lime there were negotiations to put a drive-i- n theatre on the property, but Mrs Harry I. Smith, wife of the owner of the property, has assured this paper that such negotiations have not developed. The other zoning proposition to face residents of this area, is one to place a light manufacturing facility un the southeast corner of 7000 South and Wasatch Blvd. The area is curwhirh is a rently zoned residential zone that will allow the keeping of animals and fowl for family food production and not for rental. The property is bounded on two sides by forest zoning and on one side by a power sub station and a water treatment nlanl on the other side of Wasatch Blvd. The application to change the zoning to M-- l is being sought by Montck Inc., manufacture of electronic components. Mr Jack Halvcrsen, speaking for the Montck said interests the company is now trying to devel op similar to General Motors It building on Foothill Blvd. he transferred to the Holladay Community Church and there won the den trophy fur speed. In 1962 he won the first place den prize for rocket speed. Next year Joey plans to trans-ic- r back to St. Paul's Episcopal Church where he will be a member of the regular boy scut troops. He says he will still keep up his hobby of building model racing cars. Talented in other fields as well as building cars, Joey is a member of the junior church choir and sings with a chorus at the Cottonwood elementary school. His hobbies include raising canaries and rabbits, and he keeps up a coin collection too. In his church activities he is an acrolylc (an altar boy.) 1961 R-1- Settling April 6 lt High School Students Win Jaycees Thursday Night Will Elect Officers Holladay-Cottonwoo- stud-dent- Boxing Card At Fairgrounds Wednesday, April 3, 1963 Zoning Battles Return To Cottonwood Heights son of Mrs No. Frank, 5206 Holladay won the top prize in the d Jaycce president Richard Dahn announced this week that elections will be held on Apr. 9. Candidates for president of the club will be Dr Rod Livingston and Jim Thomas. Other offices open for new officers are external and internal and four directors. d Jack Baglcy of the Jaycees will be a candidate for one of the State vice president jobs open this year. vice-preside- nt Joey Frank displays trophies he has accumulated during the last four years in model car gravity race contests. The entries are judged on spil'd end design. Joey holds the most recent addition to his c'lllcclion. lie won the sweepstake- prize at the Pinewood Derby last week. Holladay-Cottonwoo- CH7-265- , 1 These views uf various spots in or about the Holladay Village Shopping Center will be part of the Holladay Chamber of y 4. continue through the mouth of hers of the Holladay Garden who will lake the respon-- , April with special clean up of planting around the , , sibilily .or each Saturday. basc grams fIaj, ,lc in 1Iolla. merchants Holladay Village village, will all feature the campaign in On Saturday, Apr. 6, all mcm-thestores with outstanding hers of the Holladay Chamber buys of merchandise to help res-an- d anyone else interested in paint-up- , idents dean-up- , to dean up the streets and green-utheir own procr-u- l Holladay will start at Kcn-ty- . tueky St. and work north to fire station cleaning up and Helping to make the Holla-th- e day Shopping Center one of the removing all trash and rubbish most attractive areas in tlicin their way. Members of all dubs in the area arc par county to shop will be the mem-civi- c ir p Commerce objective in sponsoring their elean-ucampaign r which will got way this Saturday morning at 7:30 a.m. p uu-Je- b lias been further stated that beauty of the building, this type building will require There are 29 acres involved none of the facilities normally in the rezoning and the Montek f connected with an industrial Company plana to use the tire amount in either building or Montek comlcmplatcs build- - landscaping. The property is siting a 46.000 sq. it. structure on uated on the site of a former property at a cost of $500,000. CC Camp at the mouth of Big Eventually the firm could Canyon and sits on ploy up to 1000 people. top of a small plateau. The construction will be in Residents in the area have modular type with one unit protested on the grounds that being constructed so that an ad- - such a zoning change would dition could be added and ithqvc an undesirable effect on would not detract from the the entire area. en-s,l- c' ... Needed: Foresight Editorial There is, jKrhiips, no Licet of local government which rouses citizens as quickly and as emotionality as zoning. Yet, zoning should nul be a mailer of emotion; it should he a calm consideration of the facts involved. There is a tendency, nunnal enough, for home owners to oppose any commercial or industrial zone. The line dividing two zones becomes a mailer of hot debate before Ihe line is actually drawn, hut once it is established the problem never seems lo lie as groat as had been anticipated, and ncighlmrs usually manage to get along with less coni flict than they sincerely believed possible. It should be obvious that not all land can be residential. People must have places to work, stores to shop in, as well as homes to live in. Most folks like to be reasonably close to Ihcir work. Daily commuting is enjoyable only up to a point. residential areas were Everyone is agreed that built-uso const riicled because the owners were assured of residents zoning, and it should be resj letted unless unforsccn conditions arise lu make revision mandatoiy. And these same people, after assuring themselves of residential security, ask two other questions, How far is it from my work?" and How far is it from a shopping center? If either of these considerations are too inconvenient, they look far another site. Zoning must consider natural resources. If a valuable mineral occupies a certain area, it would be foolish to insist on humesites there; we cannot afford to waste natural resources. Neither can we afford lo drive away industry from our community. Areas adjacent to through highways do not make desirable homcsilcs; they arc naturally suited to commercial interests. At present, a light industry wants a site of about 21 arros at the mouth of Big Cottonwood Canyon. Homeowners think it would make a fine residential area, as indeed it might, though it will always have the disadvantage of and north-southeavy traffic past it, both is land Presently this entirely undeveloped, awaiting man's will lo do something about it. The people who have use fur it feed it meets their qualifications well. It dues not interfere with any present housing development; its nearest neighbors are a water treatRoads arc adequate, ment plant and a and there arc plans for improving them. Most utilities do not presently roach the urea: the plant would extend water, gas, sewer mains which would be available to other development in the general area. The 500 or more people who would lie employed there would nearly all live within reasonable driving distance; close enough to he desirable; far enough nut lo lie objectionable. Tliero mav lie other factors, but the zoning request does nul appear unreasonable. p cast-we- HoSiaday Chamber Slates Clean - Up pro-Uu- Number 14 ticularly invited lo help in the Holladay cleanup. The Chamber is also making plans for waste receptacles to be placed in various spots throughout the shopping center for the convenience of shoppers. At the same time they are making arrangements with the state and county road to have regular cleanup crews work along the roads and streets year round instead uf the irregular way they have done it in the past. com-ini-.u- when members ut the chamber and anyone else interested in seeing a cleaner Holladay will take brooms, shovels and louugc-rcslauraii- st h. L rakes us their arms against trash and rubbish. The campaign is scheduled to last all through April. it clean-u- p |