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Show Page A8 Thursday, June 24, 1982 The Newspaper Mountain Trail Hides Steak Rides Overnight Trips 20 minutes from Park City In The Wasatch National Forest r PIUTE CflESK 0UT7XTTBR3 INC. Barb and Arch Arnold Phone 783-4317 Kamas, Utah 84036 Write or call for free brochure and reservations U wgu SUBARU OF MURRAY SERVICE SPECIALS FRONT BRAKE SPECIAL $34.95 Replace brake pads, inspect calipers, hydraulic lines, check rotors 1974-1982 Subarus only AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE Charge system with freon, general inspection Subarus only $16.00 CHTTFtD SUBARU OF MURRAY 53rd So. & State - Murray - 262-2831 HOLIDAY VILLAGE MALL, PARK CITY, UT - 649-6541 00 WEDNESDAY FAMILY DAY OPEN FOR MATINEES ALL DAY $T) STEVEN SPIELBERG'S Tv ue iS 0frQi,f STARTS FRIDAY X1. He is toto v v&rP y pfeJone- Daiy 1 1 5:20,7:35,9:45 J THEEXTRASa,"-sSS; U OTERRESTRIAL53545 show.ng wm wifliisiwn mmm IrJLv i if MAN HARRISON FORD s airujE nUniiEn MAUL STARTS FRIDAY HIS Daily: 5:30, 7:45, 9:50 MATCH Sat" Sun"' Wed: 1:10, 3:15, 5:30' 7:45i 9:50 t i tlttllttl.tl! A' 4 y v 1 - 'V Summer dance workshops scheduled David Chaplin Chaplin named to UEA board David Chaplin, an an teacher at Park City High School, has been appointed to the Utah Education Association Board of Trustees. Chaplin's one-year appointment appoint-ment was made to fill a vacancy on the board. The Board of Trustees is the UEA's governing body, and has 16 members. Chaplin served as Park City Education Association president in 1979, and as president of the governing board of a service unit for local education associations. He is a member of the UEA Professional Rights and Responsibilities Committee. Chaplin has been a teacher since 1961, except for a break in service when he was a professor of art education at Weber State College and a graphic artist for the Park City Resort. Art Festival appeal of open container law denied If the city's Open Container Contain-er Law were waived during the Art Festival, police officers could turn their attention from minor drinking drink-ing infractions to more important law enforcement matters. So said Sean Toom-ey, Toom-ey, director of the August event, in an appeal to the City Council last Thursday. The council had denied Toomey's request to waive the law the previous week. City Manager Arlene Loble admitted that she had been mistaken in the belief that a waiver of the law would allow festival food booths to serve beer. Toom-ey Toom-ey emphasized that only bars would be allowed to serve alcohol, but a waiver of the law would mean a person who escaped a bar undetected undetect-ed with liquor in hand would not be subjected to arrest. Police Chief Frank Bell said that he was "relatively aware of the problems of 20 to 25 officers trying to enforce an unpopular law against 200,000 people." But he cautioned the council against waiving ordinances for specific functions. Parti erev 1300 SO. Regardless of how you get there. ..you can browse, beautify, munch, dine, dazzle your senses, be practical, be thrifty, be whimsical, all in stores that turn the chore of shopping into recreation. Foothill Village. Where shopping is a feast for the senses. Some stores open 7 days a week. Shop at Foothill Village The Park City Recreation Department's dance advisor, ad-visor, Mary Jane Bird, will conduct Park City's first major dance workshop July 12 through July 23. Locals will be given the opportunity to participate in dance classes class-es of ballet, modern dance, jazz and tap. A special creative crea-tive dance class for children ages six through 12 also will be offered. Teaching for the Summer Dance Workshop will be Kelly Roth, who has performed perfor-med with The Murray Louis Dance Company, and assisted Louis in the creation of "Suite for Erik" ("Five Haikus"). He is a member of the National Endowment's Artists-in-Education program, pro-gram, and as a choreographer and performer perfor-mer of his own works. Roth has received international acclaim. In 1978, he organized Kelly Roth & Dancers Dan-cers and the Wasatch Foundation Foun-dation for the Arts Inc. Spring 1980 found him in Council members discussed the appeal, and concluded that officers should have the option of enforcing the Open Container Law when faced with disorderly, "obnoxious" "obnox-ious" drunks if the case arises. Bill Coleman added that the threat of enforcement enforce-ment of the law may encourage patrons to stay in the barrooms, thus increasing increas-ing business for the local merchants. Toomey said his only reason for asking for the waiver was to insure the smooth operation of the festival, and to eliminate any "hassles" for visitors. While the council denied the appeal, they did approve a request by Toomey for city help with the festival. In lieu of the $1,000 traditionally given by the city to the festival, the council agreed to donate the use of city buses and drivers; water trucks to keep dust down; crews to hang festival flags; use of the Treasure Mountain Moun-tain Inn parking lot; and minor repair of the wooden fence above the parking lot. Hong Kong at the invitation of City Contemporary Dance Company. While in Hong Kong he taught, choreographed choreo-graphed and performed to standing room only audiences audi-ences at the Hong Kong Arts Center. Adrienne Hawkins of Dance Impulse Theatre will also instruct. Ms. Hawkins has taught for American Dance Festival Summer Scene in Amsterdam, Denmark and Paris. She specializes in jazz movement using Jose Limon and Louis Horton modern dance styles with her own unique ethnic background that is sure to excite and delight the student of jazz. The special class for young dancers, ages six through 12, will be offered from 1 to 3 p.m. daily. This Creative dance class will be taught by Leslie Creamer, a former faculty associate with the dance department of Arizona State University. The cost for this children's class will be $25. Ms. Creamer is a member of Kelly Roth and Dancers. All levels of technique will be taught for the absolute beginner to the professional performer. A special price has been set up for locals only (you must be a Park City resident): $10 per day for three to five classes a day; $5 for any two classes a day; $4 per class; $30 a week for all classes held that week ($60 for both weeks). Dance films will be shown throughout the workshop and a special performance will be presented by the instructors in-structors and some of the students in the workshop on the night of July 23 at the Carl Winters Middle School Auditorium at 8 p.m. Brochures and applications ap-plications can be obtained from the Recreation Department, Depar-tment, 649-9461, or thru Mary Jane Bird. Classes begin daily at 9 a.m. and continue thru 6:30 each evening. Early registration is being urged. Park City residents planning private school concept A group of Park City parents is looking into the establishment of a private school, initially to encompass encom-pass preschool through first grade. Steve Nipkow said-the group is working with Rowland Row-land Hall-St. Mark's, a private school in Salt Lake City, in an attempt to set up administration for the proposed pro-posed school, but emphasized empha-sized that no commitments have been made by the institution. "At this stage we are taking a look at a budget. We need a facility and a contingent contin-gent of parents who would be interested," Nipkow said. If a facility and enough children child-ren were available to make the plan feasible, a proposal then would be made to Rowland Hall-St. Mark's, he said. "We are interested in putting together a school that is first class not necessarily neces-sarily for gifted children, but those in the upper 50 percent," Nipkow explained. The program could take advantage of Rowland Hall's testing and administrative facilities, he said. The group is aiming toward tow-ard operation of the school by this fall. Persons interested inter-ested in working with the group may call him at 649-1304. Park City Area Chamber of CommerceConvention and Visitors Bureau Plans for a lively summer Welcome to summer, Park City! The Chamber Bureau will soon release a calendar of events and activities, highlighting the months of July, August, and September. Septem-ber. Just around the corner is the Oakley Rodeo and Celebration, and our own Park City Old Fashioned Fourth of July. Tickets for the Oakley Rodeo are on sale now, at the Oakley Fire Station, $3 for general admission, ad-mission, and $4 for reserved seating. Tickets will not be sold at the gate. We suggest you get them now, as this is always a sell-out event. The rodeo has been expanded to three days this year, July 2, 3, and 5, at 7:30 p.m. The Oakley Celebration will take place all day on July 5. Parade applications are available at the ChamberBureau Cham-berBureau office for Park make this a special event by "floating" down Main Street and Park Avenue, to the City Park, with the rest of us. It's a great way to gain visibility! For more information on these and other summer events and activities, contact con-tact the ChamberBureau events clearinghouse, 649-6100. 649-6100. Just wait until you see what's in store for July 10. New members Our new 1982 members are still rolling in, thanks to the dedicated efforts of ChamberBureau Cham-berBureau membership coordinator, Tina Lewis. Congratulations to these businesses who have joined over the last week: Don Brady Associates The Irish Camel, Ltd. Peek-A-Boo's VanCott, Bagley, Cornwall, and McCarthy Olpin Mortuary City's Old Fashioned Fourth of July Parade, sponsored by the Park City Men's Coalition. We hope that the Park City business community com-munity will support the Coalition by actively participating par-ticipating in Park City's celebration. This event is designed to help develop community spirit and civic pride, and provide local residents and out-of-town visitors with a full day and evening of organized, well-rounded entertainment. Park City is one of very few Utah communities that will celebrate Independence Day on the Fourth of July this year. We support the Men's Coalition in their decision to hold our celebration on the Fourth, and expect that there will be many visitors in Park City who will gladly join in. You and your business can help tusTY euul mmm AT PARE CITY Open Friday and Saturday from 8:00p.m. to 1:00a.m. Friday, June 25th Saturday, June 26th SPACES 3elairs Country Rock and Jazz Summer Drink Prices are Drastically Reduced 8:00 to 9:00 a.m. Ladies free Draft beer and mixers 2 for 1 No membership required 649-3500 Located at the Resort Plaza Foothill Blvd With 22 Shops to Excite You! . nr |