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Show i i : rk' I Park City, Utah 84060 ' OasnSST C03PC3ATI0?! HP JeArCI JA, rrV,J2D&Sn? 3322 SO. "3rd EACT STREET . N XJ jrT IKJW 1,. . SALT LASS CHY, UTAH 64115 oip ' ' 1 Volume One Wednesday, August 4, 1976 . US Postage Paid Number Forty-Six - m i 1 C3 ; ?V - , - U D : 1 ;; I' i ir ' 1 1 1 it '-l' I I ''0 Warm with scattered afternoon af-ternoon and evening thun-dershowers. thun-dershowers. Highs should be between 80-90, with lows between bet-ween 55-65. mum Gov. Calvin Rampton and Sen. Frank Moss were in town Friday for a benefit golf tournament staged to raise funds for Moss' re-election campaign. -17 mimm Police Dispatchtr ............ 649-9561 Park City Police Office. . . . . ... 649-9361 .'i'Vi. s t ..:( v649-9211 - rofJiartce Jt 'i -": ?49-92i 1 . QiMStlons concerning watr,Mwf, garbage,' jrtraats, rtc., plaase call: v V City Hall. ;..-.. .649-9321 : Cfty Recorder . . . ; . . . . . : 649-9321 : City Manager . and Building Inspector 649-8474 City Justice of Peace. ......... 649-9321 (Above are open Monday thru Friday ; f rom 8 a. m. til 1 4 p. m. ) After normal office hours Mayor Leon Uriarte 354 Main Street ..... 049-9396 Councilwoman Eleanor Bennett 91 1 Empire A. ...... . . , . . . 649-8028 Councilman Steve Dering ' 16 Homestake Condos 649-9786 Councilman Jack Green 421 Park Ave 649-9695 Councilman Richard Martinez 187 Daly Ave. ....... .... 649-9636 Councilman Jan Wilking 328 Marsac Ave. . . . .. . .649-9866 OH ODD MM S Fr Idy irsdlay sffice mm Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday 9 to 4 A hat could be the last public hearing on the proposed revised zoning ordinance tfill be held Thursday night at 7 p.m. in the Treasure Mountain Inn. " Froponels of the long awaited code are optimistic that it will receive city council coun-cil approval Thursday night but are also conceding that the ordinance will be amended amen-ded after passage. Way Back When An article in the December 5, 1972 issue of the University of Utah's Daily Utah Chronicle stated: "Today, Park City has definitely changed. Con dominiums are . going up, people are opening new shops and skiing and tourism are giving the town a new shape. These things aren't causing Park City to lose its flair, but they may destroy ,the old town atmosphere of a town which is 6nly one of six like it' surviving . in the United States." . ' Sharing the sentiments espoused by the Chronicle, Park City officials commissioned com-missioned planning consultant con-sultant Gene Carr and the Architects-Planners Alliance to formulate the "Develop ment Guide and Comprehensive Com-prehensive Plan Update PARK BUILDING HIT FOR $1 ,500 : Thieves broke into the recreation building at the Park City ; Park Saturday afternoon and ' destroyed and demolished what they didn't take" before Ihey . scaped .with at least $l,r()0 ' worth of equipment, Park t'ity Kern-iit'on Director ljuin- Hail r ; " ,,l : Z The di;st . (! ly , incluflfMl 0- an 5 projects hildn-n had b'-?n making to HI at tin- Park City Art Festival scheduled for the 14th and 15th of August. "The .kids had worked on them for six weeks and now they are destroyed, just splattered against the walls," Hail said. "To gain entrance to the building,' the recreation director said, the vandals first broke a window and then smashed down a door with three bolt locks on it. ' Besides a number of different dif-ferent balls that were stolen, Hail disclosed that the majority of the missing equipment consisted of bows and arrows that were recently pruchased at a cost of $1,500. "Now people will wonder why we don't have any equipment", she added. One of the most disturbing aspects of the entire incident, according to Hail, was the lack of cooperation she received from people who might have information about the burglary. When she asked people at the park Saturday afternoon if they had seen the thieves she was told by one person that they did not want to get involved", while another told her they did not want to get any kids in trouble. Hail said a cash reward of $50, is being offered for information in-formation leading to the arrest of the thieves. 1973." The purpose of the Comprehensive Com-prehensive Plan was to set the- guidelines for eventual zoning changes needed to accomodate the city's growth. . . , Included in the Plan were sections on Community Goals and Objectives, Analysis of Current Conditions, Projections, Development Guide and Recommendations, Recom-mendations, Plan for Main Street and a Summary of Recommendations and Implementation Methods. Using the Comprehensive Plan to provide direction, city planners began piecing together a revised zoning ordiance which would hopefully achieve the goals Carr had set forth. The revision process has sputtered and sparked since that time with anticipated completion dates continually being pushed back. Reasons Jan Wilking, who has served as the Master Plan Committee chariman since he was elected to the city council in 1973, says two major factors are responsible for the slow pace of the zoning revision. "Every time a new city council member or planning commission member becomes a part of the Master Plan Committee, he or she introduces new ideas and directions," Wilking said. "There have also been continual changes in the input from the private sector," the councilman added. "It has taken this long to get to the point where we feel we have an ordinance which is acceptable to the majority of the citizens of Park City." , Thousands of Hours Observing that "thousands and thousands of man-hours" Continued on P02 CITY GOVERNMENT SKI NEWS SCHOOL NEWS LOCAL SPORTS EDITORIAL COMMENT REAL ESTATE CLASSIFIEDS PUBLIC NOTICES TELEVISION LISTINGS HOW ABOUT IT? IT'S STILL OUT THERE ROLAND'S ROUNDUP STAR GAPER PUZZLE PARK CITY FLICKS |