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Show 4 Page 3 Wednesday, March 29, 1978 4 i 1 111 reft x J ix I hr r i 1 II in I Ik I ir- x JA t ,r"W -sm I w W- if V V Weaving Exhibit Opens At KAC The Park City Kimball Art Center will open a new show entitled "Processes" by the Mary M. At water Weavers Guild of Utah on Sunday, April 2nd. The new exhibit will feature decorative and functional weavings including sculpture, sculp-ture, wall hangings, clothing and rugs. Christine Barker, chairwoman of the Weavers Guild show noted that this show will emphasize the source from which the fiber artist drew inspiration. A reception for the Utah weavers will be held on Sunday, Sun-day, April 2, from 3-5 p.m., the public is invited. The show will hang in the main gallery through Thursday, April 20th. In addition to the weaving exhibit, there will be a statewide Utah Han-dweavers Han-dweavers Conference held Saturday, April 8, at the Kimball Art Center. This conference is sponsored by the Weavers Guild and supported sup-ported by a grant from the Utah State Division of Fine Arts. Participants from throughout the intermoun-tain intermoun-tain west are expected, the conference is open to the public. Registration fee is $17 and includes all workshops, a clothesline exhibit of original han-dwoven han-dwoven pieces, lunch, cocktail party and dinner. Conference participants will take part in several mini-workshops throughout the day including: "Cold The Newspaper staff proudly displays UPAPA awards ewspaper Honore ith Prestigious Awards cj A year of casual labor and sporadic moments of clarity have earned The Newspaper a compact truckload of awards from the prestigous Uinta Primative Area Press Association. UPAPA is unique among the international inter-national consortium of press associations in that it is the only one which draws its winners from a hat. UPAPA member papers are divided into three classes and identical awards are given to the winners in each class. The Newspaper entries for 1977 honors were entered in the "low" class competition, open only to publications with employes having I.Q.s of 80or less. . " Heading the list of honors bestowed upon the local paper was the First Place Award. Although picked at random, the recipient of this honor almost inevitably begs the question: "How did this paper ever get started in the first place?" Janet Gilchrist's report on home baby deliveries in Park City gained her the much sought-after "Best Story by a Reporter Without a High School Education" award. Gilchrist said the $3.95 cash prize would go towards the purchase of a Bic pen sharpener. The informative article on Utah's liquor laws penned by Tina Moench came out of the 'hat as the "Best Story by a, Reporter with a Drinking fflAi A DIDLE STUDY FELLOWSHIP A PLACE TO FEAST ON THE WORD OF GOD 9 A.M. SUNDAY For More information: 649-8295, 649-8424, 649-8535, 649-7955 649-7955 or write: P.O.Box 2473, Park City, Utah 84060 Problem." Moench said she would invest her prize money by buying stock in the Park Record. Editor Steve Dering was honored with the "Best Disguised Editorial" award for his proposal to turn the Memorial Building into a home for orphaned homing pigeons. The "Best Advertising Campaign" award went to business manager Jan (pronounced "yawn") Wilking, who masterminded the No Tell Motel "Let us plan your next affair" slogan. Wilking is credited for ending twelve local marriages. . ; . Graphic artists Marianne Chaplin and Bobbye Hammond Ham-mond were hands-out-of-the-hat winners of the "Best Mass .0 Design for an Advertisement Less than Two Column Inches." In-ches." The ad was for Large Louie's King and Queen Size Clothes Store. The "Most Obtuse Column" award went to Hank Louis, whose "Hankerings" column was read by many and understood under-stood by few. Publishers Wilking and Dering said they were proud of the UPAPA honors but expressed concern over their chances in 1978. "We just hired Julie Lawson as our new office manager and I'm afraid her I.Q. may be over 100," Wilking said. "If this proves to be true it could push usout of the 'Jow class and into the middle class. It's tough sledding sled-ding there, they have people who can read and write. " pens ggstatic! The Easter bunny hopped down the slopes of the Park City Resort Sunday and in his trail he left eight huge eggs. These eggs didn't contain cholesterol, but prizes for the treasure hunt that opened and closed with the lifts that day. All of the prizes were eventually sniffed out with the aid of clues chalked onto the blackboards at the top and bottom of some of the lifts. Rabbits Rab-bits don't eat carrots for nothing and the winners must have taken heed, because only sharp eyes discovered the eggs in some unusual spots. The yolk was on the rest of us who didn't look up in the trees or in the old mine building on Claim-jumper. Claim-jumper. The grand prize five-day ski trip to Alpine Meadows resort in California went to Lee Bray of Kamas for his eggcelent find on Parleys Park. The egg Gary Thomas of Spanish Fork found hatched into a pair of Dynastar skis and Joan Fallon of California was eggstatic over the 10-day 10-day pass coupon book she found. An end-of-the-day resort search party found no stray eggs, although not all prizes have been claimed. Anyone who sits on their egg instead of turning it in for a prize is cracked. rouf Readerz n Strighk "Fotonicks 99 Nick Nass of Main street Photo has announced plans to build and locate several drive-up photo service centers. cen-ters. These centers will be similar simil-ar to the nationwide chain of "Fotomats." However, to make them unique to Park City he will design and build them to fit the environment of the area. Example, a drive-up located locat-ed at the resort center will be an old abandoned gondola car. For the Main Street area it will resemble an old ore cart. For those who don't have cars, he will provide a limo service for drive-up convenience conven-ience The name of these centers will be "Fotonick." Local Prouf Readerz Onion No. 3 set up pickit lines outside the Newspauper office last weak, demanding the last wurd in wage rates. The stryke last only a short period of time but the proof readers did refuse to work on this article. "Wage rapes were one of sex negotiation points," union leader Rhoda Donkee said Oneday. "We wanted to be spayed by the word and they wanted to pay by the sentence. The other five points were less imported." The union reached a contact con-tact aagreement with Newspaper publishers Jan Wilting and Steve Herring which calls for the proof breeders to be paid by the paragraph with a per sentence sen-tence bonus clause. "It wasn't esactly the kind of contact we desired," Donkee said, "but it was close enough." EMU! DYNAMITE LOCATION! Underground Parking Secluded Sunken Living Room All Electric Low, Low Down Call Bill Kranstover, Skyline Realty, 649-9066 We sold 62 of these in a day and a half! I, -. u r jjj BUMPS BURGERS presents the WORKMAN'S SPECIAL SINGLE BUMP (quarter pounder - does not include cheese or tomato) FRIES SMALL DRINK (any 35c drink) Good Monday through Friday 11:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. only O - FOR ONLY S1.30 IRON HORSE DR. & PARK AVENUE Water Procion Dyeing" by June Adams, Cedar City; "Handweavers Guild of America Certificate of Excellence" Ex-cellence" by Sharon Alderman, Alder-man, SLC; "Color and Design" by Ruta Dreijmanis, SLC; "Strips, Straps, and Modules" by Sandra Dung worth, St. George; "Kug Varieties" by Jane Jennings, SLC; ."Patterns ."Pat-terns and Sources of Navajo Weaving" by Gayle Corah Weyher, SLC; and "Working with Flax" by Elizabeth Whitehead, Jackson, Wy. For information, contact the Kimball Art Center at 649-8882. 8 Featuring: Live Maine Lobster Dinner $1 3.95 Pick your own from our tank. Special: Fresh Red Snapper 368 Main Street 649-8981 6 to 11 p.m. Open 4 a.m. to 6 p.m. Two Donuts and Coffee, $.50 Afternoon Special Behind the Kindersport "580 Main' Street LLOUR IGI-I PRO DEMOS 00 with bindings AND THAT'S NO FOOLING f ixn o ft m mum 'mm m m .vm.ii.. mi HAPPY HOUR ON THE PATIO 4-6 DAILY 25c DRAFT BEER Located at Resort Center and Lower Entrance it |