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Show Pate AS Thursday, February 18, 1982 The Newspaper School board candidates interviewed ft- at the Golf Course Park City's Finest Restaurant Open nightly 6:00-11:00 Sunday Brunch 11:00-2:00 Live Entertainment Friday & Saturday Tom Distad Reservations Please 649-7177 Available for Private Parties of 20 or more. J For sale in Old Town j I Small brick home on quiet street, laundry room, carport, fireplace, price $90,000.00. CONTRACT AVAILABLE. THE HUNTSMAN CHRISTENSEN CORP. 649-7220. 1 Three area residents have thrown their hats into the ring for the seat on the Park City Board of Education recently vacated by Susie Williams. The three candidates were scheduled to have been interviewed at a special meeting of the board set for 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, after this edition went to press. They are: Rand Clark, a resident of Silver Springs, who founded the Tower Management Company, a hotel and resort development company, in Park City last April. Clark is a graduate of Brigham Young University with a degree in marketing. He has also done graduate work in hotel management at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas. While in Las Vegas, Clark was the vice-president and general manager of the Sands Hotel. He also served for three years as a board member and founder of the Summa Employees Federal Credit Union. Clark has three children; the oldest is a student at Parley's Park Elementary School. Diane Wallin, a resident of Snyderville, well-known locally lo-cally for her involvement in school-related issues. She served for three years as the president of the PTA, and is currently a member of the Park City School Community Council. Mrs. Wallin also participated on the Marsac School Community Council and the Carl Winters Middle School Community Council, and served on the committees commit-tees which screened principal princi-pal candidates for the Parley's Par-ley's Park Elementary School and Carl Winters Middle School. Mrs. Wallin is married to Summit County Commissioner Commis-sioner Bill Wallin. The Wal-lins Wal-lins have four children; two are graduates of Park City schools, the other two are students in the district. Amanda Peterson, who recently re-cently resigned after serving almost seven years as the executive director of the Park City Area Chamber of Commerce. Mrs. Peterson has a long history of involvement involve-ment in local community affairs, including the Park City School District ski program and the Park City Parks Master Plan Committee. Commit-tee. She also served as a volunteer coordinator at the Marsac School. Mrs. Peterson has a Bachelor Bach-elor of Science degree from the University of Utah, and was awarded a teaching certificate in 1964. She is QUAIL MEADOWS NEAR PARK CITY MM t 4 """u L J With ownersplitting you own an equity in your own luxurious townhouse along with 1 2 others. You get to use it four weeks a year- one week each season. And you can let friends use it or rent it. Quail Meadows townhouses are built with care and integrity by Spencer-Gamble Development. Ownersplitting is one of three plans offered through the marketing of Eagar and Company. And What a Plan It Is! $1 8,500 total price for four week ownership ( $16,000 if cash). $4,625 down payment. 1312 interest over five years. (15.34 annual percentage rate) $319.26 per month payment (with no balloon). One time service fee of $555 (prices slightly higher on larger units). 9 financing available with 50 down payment Luxury Without Blowing Your Budget. Quail Meadows offers the best quality in the Park City area. You can choose from two thoughtfully-designed units. Each has a cheerful fireplace, complete appliance package, a garage and. of course, an acryhc hot tub strategically located next to the view windows. Each has a patio, plenty of storage space and big rooms. Bread in the Refrigerator. It's a complete package. Your ownersplitting price includes all furnishings, window coverings, carpets and appliances are covered. All you do is turn your key in the lock and move into your Quail Meadows unit. We'll even put a loaf of bread in the refrigerator. One Week Per Season. Compare our package. Where else can you get the quality, price and four weeks use in a solid luxury condo on a site that includes lakes, pools, courts and countryside9 Ownersplit. Quail Meadows. New from Eagar and Company and Spencer- Gamble Development. In Silver Springs. Call for more information: (801)272-9686 Salt Lake (801)649-6798 Park City TRA DITION IN REAL ESTATE ( OVER TWO DECADES OF SERVICE Please send me a brochure on this exciting new concept Name: Address: City, State:. Phone: ZP Mail to: Eagar & Company 5200 Highland Dr. S.LC.,Utah,84117 married to Jan Peterson, owner of Jan's Mountain Outfitter in Park City. The Petersons have two children attending schools in the district. One of the three candidates candi-dates will be selected to represent Precinct Four, completing the final three years of Susie Williams' four year-term. Mrs. Williams offered her resignation in January after moving out of the precinct. WtW Whadd'ya linow? by Rick Brough and Bettina Moench CHEAP SHOT OF THE WEEK: (From an anonymous D.J. on KPCW): "Who needs Space Invaders when you've got Park Avenue?" "Wilkommen" said the Kimball Art Center, as it staged the Park City Cabaret last weekend to a large crowd. Several of Park City's finest entertainers showed off their dancing shoes in a series of numbers that contrasted Park City past and present. One highlight, as promised, was a strip number which featured Roger Fuller in bathing trunks, and Leslie Kuyken in a T-shirt over a bikini. The number ended with much applause, plus several abrupt trips to the washroom by hyperventilating members of the audience. Our only problem with the show was that the program, after af-ter some good skits, became a standard fashion show. Call us old-fashioned, but we always thought a cabaret was a series of songs and dances, and an atmosphere that evokes old Bogart movies. Y'know gypsy dancers whirling in the smoke while, in the corner, little foreigners that look like Roman Polanski trade black-market diamonds for a ticket on the plane to Lisbon. (Granted, that's not exactly Park City atmosphere.) Don't get us wrong though. The show was enjoyable, en-joyable, despite the odd format. Tina Lewis' Mystery Garment was finally revealed to be a jacket made entirely, we remind you, out of imported quarter-inch fabric. After a short auction, it was sold for $250 to Merle Huseth. Attention, Arlene Loble: If you're looking for a rest after this job, then apply as city manager for the town of Irwin, Idaho. According to an AP story, Irwin mayor Ed Backus confessed that the only service the city provides is snow removal, and now they can't even do that because money has dried up. BackusjJvho was elected mayor by 13 votes, was attending a regional city-county conclave although he admitted he ' didn't have too much to add to the conversation. After his city left fire protection to its regional fire district (why does that sound familiar?), the only responsibility it had was snow removal. And after the handle of the city shovel broke well, what can we say? The 30-year-old broadcaster with the 55-year-old Volunteer Voice celebrated his birthday last week. KPCW director Blair Feulner marked his third decade last Jan. 31. B.F.'s birthday was the only significant local event in the last year and a half that hasn't been broadcast over the length and breadth of Summit and Wasatch Counties. The occasion was marked by a quiet party this weekend, hosted by Blair and his wife, Becky "I Can Cope" Widenhouse, who divides her time between Life With Feulner and her thankless job as a graphic arts designer for The Newspaper. The party was attended by such notables as editor David Hampshire, Tom and Paula Hurd, and Matt and Helen Alvarez. Blair has led a long and colorful life, and while we could make the obvious jokes ( "The only baby in the maternity ward who sounded like Broderick Crawford", etc. ) we refuse to stoop so low. A TV-movie shot in the area last summer by Sunn Classics will finally make its premiere this week. "The Capture of Grizzly Adams" is scheduled to play this Sunday, Feb. 21, on NBC. The film is about Grizzly's return to civilization, where he is reunited with his little daughter (Sydney Penny) . (Some of you might recall that Grizzly's daughter already appeared in the original movie as a full-grown woman ! Picky, picky ! ) The cast also includes Chuck Connors, June Lockhart, Noah Beery, Kim Darby, and Keenan Wynn. NBC evidently thinks a lot of the picture, since it's scheduling it in the February ratings period when the networks traditionally pack the airtime with audience-grabbers. Park City's building business this year was so impressive that even other resort areas took notice. "The Review", a paper from Mammoth Lakes, California, reported that Park City led all ski-resort towns with $70 million in new construction. construc-tion. Mammoth itself was runner-up with about $60 million. And Aspen was a distant third, with less than 50 percent of Mammoth's construction. You know how funny it is when the other guy slips on a banana peel? We were reminded of this after spotting a news item in the Jackson Hole Guide which was headlined "Virginian sued for dumpster attack." It seems a former resident is suing the Virginian Hotel because he was assaulted by its trash bin. The victim said he was waiting for his fiance, a hotel employee, to finish her duties, and while he was bent over the bin to throw a trash bag inside, the lid "suddenly and without warning" ... clunked him on the head. We know a local entrepreneur who dreams of one day making a movie called "Battle of the Backhoes". Maybe he should change the title to "The Deadly Dumpsters." The City Council recently passed a resolution which limited the number of unexcused absences allowed to members of the Planning Commission. The results of this tough new policy could be seen at last week's commission meeting. Burnis Watts, who was absent from the Jan. 27 meeting, handed han-ded a note to Chairman Greg Lawson which read, "Dear Mr. Lawson. Please excuse Burnis for not being to plan review last month. He had an appointment at the state legislature Signed, Burnis' mother." Lawson, however, refused to accept it, explaining that only Mayor Jack Green or State Rep. Glen Brown were authorized to sign excuse notes. As punishment, Watts was assigned to write a five-page essay on "The Difference Between Tacky Imitation and Compatible Historic Architecture". He was also forbidden to go on the commission's weekly field trip to Janeaux's. We urge the chairman to continue this policy. The commissioners com-missioners want discipline and will respect you for it. As one l,,,r '! .I--mj? Id ('a I ( 'owner. "Geez, you got Lawson ; '"''' touch!" |