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Show Cedar City to get a new health center 1 . if ' 'A : ! ! Karen Wiebe (wearing crown) was recently I crowned as the 1982 SUSC homecoming queen. Around her are her attendants (left to right) Lorena Sullivan, third attendant; Sherri Olson, first at- i tendant; Mary Ellen Kenney, second attendant; Lynette Jolley, fourth attendant; and Suzanne Nixon, Miss Personality. CEDAR CITY - Cedar City is getting a new health spa center very soon. The announcement came during a very short city work meeting Thursday, when the council heard from Joe Wells, former Southern Utah State College football star. He stated that the spa will be located in the South Main Square where the Fashion Village clothing center once was. According to Wells, the spa will open its doors in approximately three weeks. Wells told councilmen that to encourage membership a corporate membership will be offered, of-fered, which is a membership mem-bership that is offered to companies or corporations, cor-porations, then employees em-ployees of the organization may use the spa at a reduced monthly rate. During other business, the council announced that its members would travel to St. George Nov. 5 to conduct a meeting with St. George councilmen coun-cilmen regarding the redistribution of sales tax. i During the last four ' legislative sessions, bills were presented that dealt : with the issue of ; redistribution of sales tax and now the legislature is I trying to get the League : of Cities and Towns to come up with something that they can support concerning the issue.. According to City Manager Joe Melling, some cities stand to lose by the bill and some will gain. So the League of Cities and Town is looking at way to minimize losses and gains so that some cities don't go bankrupt and other cities have windfalls. wind-falls. The proposal will once again go to the State Legislature in January. In final action, the council tried to come to an agreement regarding the definition for mobile homes. In the past there has been some difficulty in distinguishing a mobile home from a module-factory module-factory built home. "Sometimes it really gets confusing," said Melling and added that part of the problem stems from the fact that the industry's definitions are changing. He added that the city does not want to open the entire community up to mobile homes, but that it appears that this is the only way that many people can afford housing. The council came to no decision on the issue and agreed to send it back to the Planning Commission which will try and set some criteria to differentiate dif-ferentiate between the ' two types of homes and then present it once again to the city council. |