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Show Page A6 Thursday, November 4, 1982 The Newspaper Come to DUCKS UNLIMITED DUCKS UNLIMITED W2k 7 "-eS 1 jjj 1 ,1 JULAlttllJ; Dinner & Entertainment Tuesday, Nov. 9, 6 p.m. at The Black Pearl $35.00 per person V What Ducks Unlimited Is All A bout: Ducks Unlimited, a non-profit organization, was created in 1937 when both man and nature almost brought waterfowl to extinction. To date Ducks Unlimited has completed com-pleted 1,949 wetland projects (they vary in size from prairie potholes to complexes of over 500,000 acres) throughout the Canadian provinces. D.U. has also embarked on a pioneer project to revitalize IS, 000 acres of wintering habitat located west of Mexico City, so Ducks Unlimited is truly an international conservation organization. Membership Member-ship in D.U. is a blend of both environmentalists and hunters dedicated to providing healthy waterfowl habitats. There is absolutely no hunting on land managed by Ducks Unlimited. By attending the 4th annual Park City Ducks Unlimited benefit dinner you are contributing con-tributing to the chain of dollars that is reaching the habitat areas of North America's waterfowl resource. Your host and 1982 Chairman Joseph E. Bernolfo, III FALL CLASSES iiiltS ftOeKY moOntAiv ROCKY MOUNTAIN KITCHEN GIFTS IS OPEN DAILY 10 to 5 ENROLLMENT LIMITED Please register early for classes. Payment of tuition is expected at time of registration STUDENT DISCOUNT 10 off any store purchase made on day of class Sts chenese cocking Active "Rirhc'ipation w',th VALCHIN CLAi Oct. iq 7-13o E t Flower Soup "Red Cooked Chicken "gee uoiHi Snow) Teas 7r fry $ck Choy in OpAic Oil , 2 Hot and Spicy Uov.Z Tot S'iktr5 Hot and $our Soup Twice. Cooked "fork. fVeii6cd Sichuan flplant and ioHof'Rice- CLA55 3 lgaant Celebration J Nov. 3o 7-1 3o WonTon 5oup . Whole SreamedTish "Browed Chicken With Mushrooms, saiAsaaev Wine Surprise "Dessert , SERIES VQOc;Soo Limited gnrollrvtertt of Individual Classes FALL 60KRMET MEALS with CAROLYN GOODWOKTH 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4? 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4? 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 'TP CLAl HarvestPmner Oct. Z 7- :oo Herb Cheese leqant Chicktn-SavisaqeKolk With Cumberland SaUce Salad Dijon . Flawiioq HearHTuwpkinlorHi CLA55 2 . Company i Gorvunq Gruyere FrifterS Veal Oscar Carrots Qranaene Lime Souff leL Chocolate Truffles Christnnas Gifts from the Kitchen. Dec. 13 l-'i'.oop.m 6o ." EVER- TbP'ULAK NEW-MEXICAN CUISINE with HERMlNlO TKUXILLO OCT.W 7-l 5. A FULL PINNER. FEATURING CHIU RELLEN05 NCVll 7-t I5. TRAPITIOKJAL. ENCHILADAS WITH 6.KEEN AM? REP CHIU in;l Chocolate fn FASTv with NinaBeque. and Aharon -WatviiiMorttA NOV, 7- T.op.m. FiaII instruction on Making iiour" own pasta... Ma& ad taste delicious pasta verdc, onion pas-ra, carbon pesto and -fresh pasta, pr'i wa vera . CHRISTMAS IN NEW MEXICO with Werrni nioTr u i 1 II "DEC.2.J 7- 30 ATi,a-gf 5outK ofthe "Bander Holiday Treats HOllDA FliH OLD WOKLt? CHKISTMAS , CoofclgS AKbTADS DEC. 1-3 pirn.. &IFTf FI20M THE K ITCHtN PEC. 13 I -3 p,rn. IO. " IOLIPAVC0CKTAIL BUFFET , with LeHu Flcttt "PeC.i-4 n 1-30 ChickcnPateinsptc Stuffed Mushroonis CheweP&nnie. and more,., '20. 649-2372 401 MAIN PARK CITY ij GREAT CHEFS OF EVENIN6 BcuriVE "VInKTER. WITH . tHEF -FhILL I PPE Cafe maifo$.a ttELO OCT. 26 7-IOp rn. . Trench Chef and. Owner of ,, Th'illippes in The Copper botforvi Tnn. .Whadd'ya Know? by Rick II r outfit First, a note to the hapless souls who lost in $20 a person to $15 to the current price of last Tuesday's election. $12.50. Give it seven more years, the Y'know, there conies a time in every Chamber of Commerce will pay you to person's life when your best-laid plans don't attend. work out, and you're feeling mighty low. At a Tina is brimming with ideas for the ball's time like that, it always meant a lot to us circus-carnival theme, and she says Deer when someone walked up, put his arm Valley's Snow Park Lodge has enough room around us, and said, "Here, son, have a Life to hold an endless number of activities. For Saver." those with dancing feet, a Big Band will play Therefore, "Whaddyaknow" will give on the top floor, and a punk group will away a free pack of Life Savers to every entertain downstairs. Park City businesses, losing candidate in the major county-fire primed for the winter season by the early district races. This is on the level! Just come snowfalls, are enthusiastically preparing into The Newspaper office to claim your dunking booths, dart-throwing games, and consolation prize. (Maybe it doesn't seem other exhibits. like much after losing a high-paying Rumor says that Debby Symonds and government position. But it's better than Marti Peterson are running a kissing booth nothing! ) The members of City Council don't this year. It is not true, however, that yours qualify for prizes, (even if they did oppose truly is manning a non-kissing booth Proposition 1). However, primary losers adjacent to it. (For a dollar, you're John Carbine and Matt Alvarez are welcome supposedly insured. Forget it, Tina ! ) to claim the left-overs if the other candidates Local businessman Jess Reid is also don't pick up their prizes. interested in arranging an old-fashioned sideshow of freak exhibits. You know the Where in Utah could you find Senate kind of thing-three-headed babies, fish with candidate Ted Wilson peering through a pair handlebar mustaches, people who under- of 3-D glasses at "The Creature From the stand Proposition 1... Reid recalls that Black Lagoon"? At the U.S.Film Festival's these exhibits were usually preserved in jars Deer Valley Halloween party, that's where, of formaldehyde. Park City has a lot of The soiree was a multi-entertainment event, pickled specimens, and we know that if The Joe Muscolino Band provided dance anyone can find them all, you can, Jess, music. Over in the corner, a bank of TV sets was playing horror movies, and the "vidiots" The bleary patrons at a bar in Post Falls, (as Rebecca Terry called them) were Idaho looked out the window and saw an absorbed as Frank Langella's Dracula put 150-pound bear perched up a pine tree in the the bite on young ladies, or Carrie wiped out middle of town. According to an AP report, her entire senior prom. A series of small the bear was brought down with shots from a projectors also projected old films on tranquilizer gun. We don't know what the hanging gauze curtains, so that one was bear was doing up the tree, but it sounds to constantly surrounded by Frankenstein, the us like a reaction to the election season. Wolf Man, and the Phantom of the Opera. But what of the celebrities? The visitor in Our favorite headline in a recent issue of the great Donny Osmond costume turned out the Salt Lake papers is a banner that says to be Donny Osmond. "Super Gonorrhea Reported in Utah." It We talked to Mayor Wilson and explained sounds a bit like a scene from a cheap to him that the only reason The Newspaper monster movie: "General, we can't stop it! endorsed him was because Wilking's Our tanks and bombs are powerless against astrologer told him to support people who Super-Gonorrhea. The countryside is littered had names starting with "W". (So maybe with victims! -The poor fools! If only they'd you got a better system?) learned to say 'No'! (If you ask us, it just Shelley Thomas appeared to announce the looks like a Japanese actor dressed up in a winners of the costume contest. One winner gonorrhea outfit!) was Mr. Royal Street himself, Edgar Stern, who came as a Mardi Gras mummer. (I'm Does Debbie Fields toss her cookies? You glad somebody told me. I thought he was a bet she does! maitre'd from the Battlestar Galactica.) The Park City's favorite baker was featured Worst Costume prize went to Hank Louis, for last week on a segment of Channel 5's news coming as Hank Louis. Actually, Hank said show, "Prime Time Access." According to he was dressed as Timothy Bottoms from the report, Fields Cookies is expanding to "The Paper Chase." Damn if there wasn't a some 65 outlets by the end of the year. But resemblance. Debbie will not hesitate to close down a The space here is too small to cover all the franchise or throw out cookies if they don't numerous other parties and costumes around meet her exacting standards, town. But one source tells us that Roy We were also very fortunate to receive Reynolds cut a dashing figure in drag, and some tips from Debbie on the most critical that Rocky Smith, in blackface, looked like problem facing a chocolate-chip cookie-eater "a shrunken, wash-and-wear Roosevelt how to keep the little furshlugginers soft. Grier." If you don't eat the cookies fresh from the store, said Debbie, you should keep them in A worried official at Deer Valley called the freezer unit of your fridge, and thaw Tina Lewis and asked her if she was planning them out later to eat. If they've already to bring a roller skating act to the Snow Park turned hard, soften them up by slipping a Lodge as part of this year's Snowflaker's slice of white bread in with the cookies. If Ball. Someone called the resort about you're out of white bread, play a Barry showing up with a group as the "Flying Manilow album for a few hours. Fettuccinis," but the floors at Deer Valley Lodge aren't ready for that kind of activity, And you thought Ron Perry was elected the official said. commissioner because of his faint resem- This means Tina will probably have to put blance to Coalville's Tony Geary of "General off her plans for the seal act and the Human Hospital." Not so. Ron was elected because Cannonball. Darn! I was looking forward to voters recognized he is meticulously the Nude Snowmobile Race and the prepared for any situation. For instance, The mini-Ride & Tie with Shetland ponies. Newspaper just received a letter from Ron As you may have guessed, big plans are consisting of two brief notes-one to run in the underway for the Snowflaker's Ball, to be paper if he was elected, and the other if he held Nov. 20 at Deer Valley. This year, said lost. Ron signed both notes "In all sincerity." Lewis, the price is more accessible than (Maybe not spontaneous, but certainly ever. The cost has fallen over the years from sincere.) dec .7 ZS. 7-10 p.m. J Gallops wiiti tables in2 Puff TosH with X CTirwer 5aiAcd 4 Toadied 5olmon wrHi $2, lCaVjl Sj QUESTION OF THE r.'OHTIJ QUESTION: How do I frame a duck stamp print and still preserve its value? ANSWER: Historically, some Duck Stamp Prints, both Federal and State, have increased greatly in value over the years. However, there have been instances where owners of such prints have attempted to sell them only to find that, due to the method of framing, their prints were virtually worthless. One recommendation for framing of the subject print is: 1 . Use common 1 12 inch black moulding. 2. Use totally acid-free mat board; cut it 1 4 x 1 7 inches. 3. Cut opening in mat for Duck Stamp Print and Duck Stamp. 4. Opening for the Duck Stamp to be centered 58 to 34 inch below opening for the print. 5. Use Showgard stamp mount 36 to hold Duck Stamp. Opening in mat to be large enough to allow serrations of stamp to show. 6. Glue the stamp mount to a piece of 3 x 4 inch acid-free paper; acid-free paper is then glued to the back of the mat board. 7. Use photo corners to hold Duck Stamp Print in place; glue the photo corners to the back of the mat board. 8. Use rag paper behind the print. CAUTION: Do not write on, draw on or otherwise mar the front or back of either the print or the stamp Do not use any type of tape on print or stamp Do not allow any material that is not acid-free to come in contact with either print or stamp Silver Mill Haus. P.C. Resort Center, 649-8102. Council passes noise ordinance Rossi Hill residents should sleep more soundly next summer. The Park City Council voted Thursday to amend Ordinance 82-18 to help control con-trol the noise emanating from Park City drinking establishments, particularly those on Main Street. Passage of the so-called noise ordinance came in response to complaints from residents of areas above Main Street who had charged that the racket was keeping them awake, particularly par-ticularly during the summer months when windows and doors were open and outdoor decks were in use. In its final form, the ordinance or-dinance prohibits the use of speakers on outdoor decks, instructs bar owners to close those decks at 10 p.m., and calls for all exterior doors and windows in those establishments playing live or recorded music to be closed at 10 p.m. At the request of bar owners, the ordinance exempts those doors which open onto Main Street. However, this exemption brought protests from Charles Latterner who lives at 218 Sandridge, just east of the Cowboy Bar. "It doesn't matter what door it (the noise) is coming out of," Latterner charged. "I think this is merely legalizing the noise." Also arguing for a more restrictive ordinance was Ellen Anderson of 465 Main Street. She claimed that the stereo systems at nearby bars were turned off only for about four hours each night. "The cleaning people come in at 6:30 in the morning, mor-ning, and they turn it up above the vacuum cleaner ... Here we are again facing noise that this ordinance doesn't touch." But Park City Police Chief Frank Bell supported the ordinance, or-dinance, suggesting that a tougher proposal might have been defeated by the council. "I think the ordinance does address itself to noise emanating from establishments," establish-ments," he said, "And it doesn't specify a time of day ... Basically it says that establishments are required to control the volume of the noise." Bell pointed out that the ordinance could still be amended later. "If this doesn't work, we'll get tougher," he said. City buys water rights The City Council voted Oct. 28 to approve the purchase pur-chase of a water right on the north side of Quarry Mountain Moun-tain which has an annual yield of about 21 acre feet. The contract calls for the city to make an initial option payment of $7,500 toward an eventual purchase price of $50,000. According to City Attorney At-torney Tom Clyde, the water would serve about 44 residential connections. "I am concerned about the change application process taking a long time, or the application being denied, leaving the city with a right that was of little use," City Manager Arlene Loble said in a memo to the council. "If we fail to exercise (the option), op-tion), Thomson (Alan Thomson, Thom-son, owner of the water right) has been able to make a backup arrangement, and the third party will refund the $7,500 option price to the city if we fail to exercise. This eliminates the risks, and gives six months to process the application." Peddlers' ordinance tabled A proposed ordinance regulating peddlers and solicitors was tabled Oct. 28 after City Councilman Bill Coleman expressed concern that the section on street vendors was becoming too cumbersome. The 20-page document, which calls for the regulation and licensing of itinerant merchants within the city limits, had drawn fire at previous meetings from representatives of timeshare companies who objected to stipulations that all business except outdoor dining be conducted in a fully enclosed building, that all solicitors be subjected to background investigations by the police, and that each solicitor be charged a $100 annual license fee. In response to those criticisms, the city has reduced the license fee to $75, but has made few other changes in the proposed ordinance or-dinance as it relates to solicitors. Sweetwater representative represen-tative Debra Westlake, who attended the Oct. 28 council meeting, also complained that the penalties for violation of the ordinance were too severe. But Mayor Jack Green was not sympathetic. sym-pathetic. "When you say that, it suggests you fully intend to violate the ordinance," he said. Coleman's objections were focused on the three pages of regulations governing the activity of street vendors, of which there is only one currently operating in Park City. Councilman Bob Wells also questioned the need to regulate demonstrations and promotions at local conventions. conven-tions. The ordinance will be discussed again at this week's council meeting. These subscriptions need sponsors by Nan Chalat The Friends of the Park City Library are looking for sponsors to adopt orphan magazine subscriptions. They don't eat much. Approximately 50 people a day stop by the library to browse through the magazines. During the winter win-ter as many as 100 people come in to get warm and to leaf through the most recent GEO or Vogue issues. There are over 87 different periodicals and 11 newspapers to choose from. The newspapers include the Sunday New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and the Wall Street Journal. The magazines cover a wide range of special interests from Art News to Audubon. In 1980 the library's magazine collection was greatly enhanced by the first annual Park City Library Periodical Drive. Town residents bought subscriptions subscrip-tions to their favorite magazines for the library so that others could enjoy them too and the response was excellent. ex-cellent. But subscriptions lapse unless they are renewed and the time has come again to ask for help. Of the library's 87 subscriptions sub-scriptions approximately need sponsors. The orphans include Bicycling, Gourmet, Outdoor Life, Car & Driver and Harpers among others. The Sunday Denver Post and the Sunday LA Times also need sponsors, according to drive organizer Marlene Ligare. Either individuals or businesses may offer to pay for these orphan subscriptions subscrip-tions and the sponsors will be recognized by name on the rack for the particular magazine. The Friends of the Library ask that you not subscribe directly on your own but come to the library because the orders are handled through a central subscription subscrip-tion service. Suggestions for new magazines, particularly those for children, are welcomed as long as they are not too technical to be of general interest. The subscriptions range in pi ice from $8 to $35. |