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Show Wednesday, November 9, 1977 FALL CLEANING Get Ready for the Season Before the Snow Flies Homes - Condos Rental Units - Offices - Steam Clean Carpets - Windows - General Cleaning - Construction Cleanup Call and ask about our weekly maid service. PARK CITY MAINTENANCE inc. For all your needs, call G49-9055 ONE PERFORMANCE OREGON MIME THEATRE A family evening of magic, suspense, laughter & entertainment SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12th 8 P.M. ADULTS $2 CHILDREN $1.50 KIMBALL ART CENTER PARK CITY FOR INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS 649-8882 """s "" . y td iri Rollers Score 3 In Second Half For Win By Owen Roberts ONLY - The Park City High 5 Rollers exploded for three . second-half goals Saturday s to post a 3-1 victory over Orem City. The win boosted the Rollers' league record to 5-1. Orem moved the ball well in the first half, utilizing a It Could Snow Soon im iff ' w trr ifn h LiLj . III! .. J. -I .Ml.) -I - I These snowmaking Snowmaker Joe Milina of Park City Resort and his crew of four have been busy over the past several months preparing for snowmaking operations. Snowmaking at the resort, which is slated to begin this week, will be expanded this year to include the entire mile-and-a-half Payday run, the botton half of the Nastar run, the First Time run, and the top of the Three Kings run. Unlike the noisy system leased by the resort last year, this year's machines do not require air com- skillful passing game. It managed to penetrate the Roller defense once, putting its only goal of the afternoon past goalie Tony Brady. Park City passing was sharp in the opening period but a reluctance to take shots on goal kept the machines were put into operation 1 uesday evening. pressors. The four new ; $32,000 Hedco snowmakers from Paramus, New Jersey will "not make much more noise than a car," commented commen-ted Molina. Water will be pumped by three 500-horsepower pumps housed on the golf course behind the Payday condominiums. con-dominiums. One $20,000 pump was purchased by the resort and the two additional ones, which will be used for suction, belong to the golf course. Up to 1,200 gallons of water ; per minute will run through 22,000 feet of four- and eifiht- Ronald Nate, Electrician-Foreman, Salt Lake City; Joe Ashley, Jr., First Class Carpenter, Utah Division; Harry Johnson, Pipefitter, Salt Lake City; Jerry Britton, Night General Foreman, Salt Lake City; Michael Chavez, Switchman, Ogden; John Carter, Carman Apprentice, Salt Lake City; June Johnson, Steno-Clerk, Salt Lake City; Jack Cox, Truck Driver, Salt Lake City; Keith Cox, PICL Clerk, Ogden; Dee Wadsworth, General Contract Clerk, Salt Lake City; Clarence Kincaid, Crane Operator, Salt Lake City; Ron Bolyard, Asst. Chief Clerk, Clearfield; Bob Barker, Dist. Traffic Agent, Salt Lake City; Valjean Williams, Cashier, Provo. f0 Rollers off the board. Down 1-0 going into the second half, the Rollers caught fire and dominated plays. Tony Brady moved to the inside and Rick Phaler went into the goalie box. Pat Carley1 scored Park City's first goal with an excellent ex-cellent shot early in the half. It appeared that had he scored again soon after on a corner kick but the referee ruled that. the ball had entered en-tered the goal through the top of the net. Undaunted, the Rollers put the ball into the cage once more when Brooks Bloom-field Bloom-field made a great cross to Tony Brady, who made a spectacular head shot into the net. Lou Warner accounted for Park City's third goal, heading the ball in off a corner cor-ner kick. The hotly contested match was verbal as well as physical with both sides exchanging ex-changing caustic comments. At one point in the second half, an Orem player was ejected from the game after he swore in Spanish at the referee, who spoke the language. The Rollers pocketed their fifth win of the season by making their solid defense work cohesively with their aggressive offense. This Saturday, Park City will meet the B-Clippers at 2 p.m. and will be seeking to bring their league record to 6-1. it inch steel piping. Water will be drawn from the golf course cour-se pond directly behind the pumphouse. "For those who are water conscious," Molina said with a smile, "we explain that we aren't taking the water, we're just borrowing it. It will all be returned in the spring, right?" The snowmaking machines will operate together with all four rotating from one run to another. They will be in use day and night whenever temperatures are 28 degrees or below. VJe caini IhiainidlDe ift. the Union Pacific railroad people Unique Area Threatened By Kim Crumbo The National Park Service has released a draft of its wilderness proposal for the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area (GCNRA). The Park Service has proposed a 519,000 acre wilderness that includes much of Utah's famous Escalante River country. Efforts to protect the Glen Canyon region date back to pre-World War II days when conservationists proposed an eight-million-acre Escalante National Park. Today, construction of Glen Canyon Dam, roadbuilding and mining operations have ! reduced the wilderness to a fraction of its original size. What remains is still one of this planet's most unique natural areas. While most conservationists conser-vationists agree that the Park Service has presented a good proposal, they also complain that other important impor-tant areas were excluded from the wilderness recommendation. recom-mendation. The Escalante Wilderness Committee, a coalition of several conservation conser-vation organizations, prefers Alternative A of the proposed management plan. This alternative calls for 1,030,830 acres of wilderness, or roughly twice the Park Service's proposal. While the state of Utah has yet to express its own feelings concerning the Glen Canyon management plan, it is interesting to note that the Utah Environmental Coordinating Coor-dinating Committee, or ECC, has recommended to the governor that the state support a much smaller wilderness. The ECC endorsed endor-sed a 163,000-acre wilderness consisting of the Escalante , River bottom and a portion of the Little Rockies, according accor-ding to private sources. An official state position should be announced before November 15. Another area of controversy controver-sy is the proposed "Trans- The amount of water used in snowmaking is dependent on the air temperature. At 20 degrees the machines each utilize 45 gallons per minute. At 10 degrees they utilize 250 gallons per minute and are capable of producing an acre-foot in one night. . A crew of six snowmakers on two shifts will be working for the resort this winter. "What the machines are doing," Milina said, "are nucleating the water into fine particles. These freeze when they hit the air as they are pushed out by an air stream and a huge speed fan and shot 200 feet into the air." "You're going to see the Page 9 Escalante" highway. Legislation which created the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area required the study of a road corridor extending from Highway 80 on the south to Bullfrom Marina. The Park Service has made no recommendation recommen-dation to actually construct the road, a welcomed concession con-cession to environmentalists who feared the road would severely impact the Escalante Wilderness. The Escalante Wilderness is a vast wilderness of over 600,000 acres, much of which lies outside the Glen Canyon Recreation Area. Two other agencies, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the Forest Service, manage other segments of the river drainage. The BLM has administratively designated the Escalante under its jurisdiction as The Gulch, North Escalante and Phipps-Death Hollow Outstanding Out-standing Natural Areas. The Forest Service controls the uppermost protions of the drainage Which include The Box and Death Hollow wilderness study areas. These two agencies will be conducting their own separate wilderness studies in the future, as required by law, .' . Other areas of concern within the Glen Canyon Recreation Area include the Dirty . Devil River, the 'Orange Cliff adjacent to1 Canyonlands National Park, and Wilson Mesa near the San. Juan River. Environ- ? mentalists feel that the Park Service's wilderness proposal would not adequately protect these highly scenic lands. Persons interested in commenting on the draft en-" en-" vironmental statement for ; the Management Plan, Wilderness Proposal should ; do so by November 15. Comments should be sent to: , James Isenogle, Utah Director Direc-tor National Park Service, Salt Lake City, Utah 84111. snow even, on Main Street on windy days," he continued. "It's fine stuff and will blow far." This year's snowmaking equipment will help improve skiing at Park City Resort, even in good years, according accor-ding to Molina. "This means there will be skiing all the way to the bottom bot-tom of the mountain both in early and late seasons," he commented. - Molina, who came to the United States from Czechoslovakia in 1957, has worked with snowmaking operations in Ohio, Wisconsin, Wiscon-sin, and most recently, in Shannon, Illinois. |