OCR Text |
Show THE Thursday, February 15, 1979 Page 11 New School District Boundaries HOYTSVILLE TO SALT LAKE 1 l J V S OAKLEY V l MARION N. V I KAMAS A PARK CITY f 1 SUMMIT FRANCIS WOODLA i SUMMIT COUNTY, UTAH Shaded area represents land added to the Park City school district. Restaurant Planned For Depot Wheels have started turning turn-ing on the often-discussed but never-realized conversion conver-sion of the historic Union Pacific Depot to a restaurant. restaur-ant. Ron Smith, former president presi-dent of the Chart House restaurant chain, presented plans for the conversion and restoration of the depot at the Planning Commission's February 7 discussion session. ses-sion. Smith, who will undertake under-take the project with a partner and not as part of the Chart House chain, showed 'slides depicting previous restoration projects completed com-pleted by Chart House. A 20-foot extension is planned plan-ned for the, rear of the building but Smith noted that identical architecture would be used. There would be no threat to the depot's status on the National Historical Register, he added. Smith said 11 Chart House restaurants restaur-ants are on that same register. The restaurant will include a bar and lounge furnished with railroad artifacts but there will be no railroad V? Utile J' ,"" SSS9 Mi III .f-MfeSi I 1JMI 4V l it k 1 Hi iviibj ... ....... . s "SSL" - U' y !ni Ifjm rrtn Av If I u The historic Union Pacific Depot may become a restaurant. museum, Van Martin of J.J. depot, Smith said, "The At the conclusion oi the Johnson and Assoc. told the configuration would remain slide presentation, commis- commission. the same. It would be sion chairman Burnis Watts As for the interior of the literally untouched." commented, "It looks fine." High School Drug Abuse Continued From Page 1 Dozier cited several court cases which gives a school principal a much broader authority of search and seizure than is held by -officers of the law. Reasonable cause for search of a student's person, effects (such as his automobile if it is on school property), and locker by a school principal may be conducted based on information from another student, a teacher, an anonymous phone call, a student's individual drug record and other suspicious evidence that would ordinarily be considered too insubstantial for a legal police search. Dozier said his plan is an effort to "train and educate" the students about drug abuse rather than an ef fort to "hang" drug users. The principal prin-cipal now intends to address the entire en-tire Park High student body on the anti-drug policy. In other school business, board members voted for a preliminary staffing increase of four full-time and one part-time teacher for Park City schools in the 1979-1980 academic year. The tentative plans call for the hiring of a fourth grade teacher, a combination fifth and sixth grade teacher, a combination industrial arts and driver education instructor for the high school, a full-time distributive education and cooperative co-operative education instructor, and a part-time music teacher. A new full-time music teacher also will have to be hired next year lo replace the present music director, Dawson Burt, who is resigning alUr his contract term which expires at the end of the summer. Getting an early start on next year's staff additions, the board voted to offer a teaching contract to Gary W. Palmer for the position of industrial arts and driver education instructor at the high school. Palmer will graduate from BYU this spring in industrial arts education. C.W. Smith, who currently teaches industrial in-dustrial arts at the high school, will become a math and science instructor. Tax Revision Law Signed Governor Scott M. Matheson has signed the first two pieces of legislation which were recommended by the bipartisan Tax Revision Study Committee. "These bills are much needed in Utah," said the Governor, "and I am very pleased the Legislature saw fit to pass them relatively early in the session." Senate Bills 31 and 8fi, sponsored by Senator Charles W. Bullen (R-Cache, (R-Cache, Rich) of Logan, were signed Tuesday by the Governor in ceremonies at the State Capitol. SB 31 amends the State Income Tax Statute by changing the procedures for the taxpayer to notify the State Tax Commission of changes in the taxpayer's net income on federal returns which would result in either an additional tax liability or a refund. SB 86, also sponsored by Senator Bullen, also amends the tax laws concerning individual in-dividual income tax. The measure provides that the income tax of a nonresident be the proportion of the resident tax that his other income from sources in Utah bears to the taxpayer's entire federal income. "Over the last eight months the committee has made some sound recommendations recommend-ations that I heartily endorse," en-dorse," said Governor Matheson, "and its members mem-bers have done an outstanding outstand-ing job which will assuredly result in a fairer taxing system for Utah." THE OUST Y y ' vv ran1 Amrv R A Uf4 r LARGE W wm tnm I O Eil MS0SSTU SP h WEB. 0 uin iJIGHT DRAFT BEER & SET UPS THims. DANCE CONTEST VALUABLE PRIZES FBI. dc SflT. Mi YvX LIDOOR STORE ON FRIMISES LCK HOURS, 1:00f.H.-:30P.M. .ADJACENT TO GONDOLA r 1 U ) M 'WW' GOURMET COFFEE & TEAS Now serving espresso & cappuccino Greek pocket pita sandwiches 20 fresh roasted coffee bean varieties Bulk tea & tea things Coffee makers & accessories Espresso & cappuccino pots Fresh Carrot Cakes Oatmeal Cookies Park City, Utah Resort Center 2336 E. 70th South S.L.C. 84121 943-2105 8 ' s-x v Bartender Race Photos POWDER DEVO'S Come By Park City Photo For Those Unforgetable Powder Days PLease call Pat McDowell for appointments available for photographic assignments of all kinds KODAK film open 9:00-5:00 tues.-sat. 649-9494 Located at Powder Room T-Shirt Shop at the Resort Plaza 2E5S2S3iE3ZEB32iSi3l |