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Show Page A6 Thursday, January 27, 1983 Park City News 4 ' UNBELIEVABLE "OLD TOWN" REDUCED TO $89,500 Approximately 1 300 square feet 3 Bedroom2 Bath Mechanically excellent condition New roof in 1981 50 steps from Main Street Owner financing available You can own this. Call Don for details. i fflnms JTI 21 649-7900 PARK CITY PROPERTIES CONDOMINIUMS V7 JLJL MOM. AMENITIES THAN ALL THE REST SWIMMING POOL INDOOR AND OUTDOOR OUT-DOOR SPA SAUNA WADING POOL TENNIS & ICE SKATING SKI STORAGE HOTEL SERVICE ON SITE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT AND SECURITY DESIGNER DECORATED 2 BEDROOM UNITS WITH LOCK-OFF LOCK-OFF 1 BLOCK TO PROPOSED DEPOT CHAIR LIFT SHORT WALK TO MAIN STREET. Call Janet Reeves, Huntsman-Christensen Real Estate Corp. KPCW makes its annual pitch mm mm This Monday KPCW kicks off its annual winter fund-raising fund-raising drive. It's your chance to both contribute and win. Every hour during the five-day fundraiser, you will have a chance to win prizes by calling in and naming the mystery tune. In addition, it will be your chance to call in your pledge of support for noncommercial noncommer-cial station KPCW. As in the past, KPCW will be giving premiums as its way of saying "Thanks" for continued listener support. For $15 contributors, KPCW is giving a certificate for a free banana split from the new Park City Dairy Queen. For $30 donors there is a Deer Valley day pass. Those giving a $50 contribution contri-bution will receive their choice of either a gold or silver chain from the Family Jewels. Special premiums for major donors, those donating donat-ing $100 or more, will be the top of the line Smith Turbo Fan Goggles or the Smith Greyhawk Sunglasses, which retail for over $70. "Unlike other public radio and TV stations, KPCW doesn't spend a lot of time fundraising," noted Station Manager Blair Feulner. "Last year KPCW was on the air fundraising only ten days out of the entire year. "That's why its important that you do your part during the marathon to help support the station that contributes to you 19 hours a day, 365 days a year. "KPCW receives no government funding, relying instead entirely on the tax-deductable tax-deductable contributions from our listeners and business busi-ness underwriters. "Last year it only cost a little more than $80,000 to keep KPCW on the air all year. 'Operating with only a these groups each year." KPCW has become part of the lifestyle of Park City and Summit County residents in less than three years on the air. The special services KPCW has provided in recent months include: Live broadcasts of the City Council hearings on the proposed beer tax and the amendments to the Land Management Code. Comprehensive coverage cover-age of the November election, elec-tion, including weeks of interviews with the candidates candi-dates for office. Live broadcasts of the Park City High School football foot-ball team at the state playoffs. "All this, plus our continuing, continu-ing, daily coverage of the news, are services you can't get anywhere else," Feulner pointed out. On the musical side, KPCW has also witnessed substantial improvements the past few months under the direction of Program Director Glen Steigmeyer, he said. "There is now a greater variety of music on the air and the afternoon hours have been given over almost entirely to jazz. "During the past six months KPCW has also made changes in the programming pro-gramming of the morning show, going to a more contemporary sound that features the current top forty records from both the rock and country charts." In addition, 1983 finds KPCW in a major construction construc-tion phase with the completion comple-tion last week of the new Quarry Mountain transmitter trans-mitter site, giving improved coverage in this end of Summit County. Coming up later this winter and spring will be new offices and studio space at the Memorial Building. KPCW is not a charity," paia scan oi less man live, 80 feulner argued. Were in percent of our programming I the business of providing an is done by volunteers, who , essential communication donate three hours a week to service to the residents of entertaining you. Park City and all of Summit k "Your tax deductablecpq-' 'County via our Lewis Peak tribution to KPCW is also, in translator. effect, a donation to every other arts, performing arts and nonprofit group in town, because of the hundreds of hours of free public service announcements KPCW gives "Don't let other people in town pay for the service you're getting free. Please pitch in and make your pledge next week during the fundraiser." Historic District Commission commission agenda February 2, 1983 I Approval of the minutes of the January 19, 1983 meeting. II 628 Main Street. Decision regarding a signage plan for a commercial building. Ill Decision regarding the Preservation Ordinance. " ' BIRTHDAY STARS January 27 Bob Pinder Marly Lofquist Pam Sandberg Steven Wellever Mary Tuttle Debra Dietz January 28 Jerry Pinder Laraine Burns Nancy Kassow Larry Nelden January 29 Dorothy Payne Connie Condon Ryan McManus Susan Sheldon Corin Wagner January 30 Valerie Pratt Jake Root January 3 1 Greg Pratt Blair Feulner Tom McClintock February 1 Gayle Dahl Lynette Roberts February 2 Laura Jarvis David Dugan Grace Weaver Jill Snyder p by Rick Brongh This week, we are saying farewell to one of the most vital employees in the Park City Newspaper's organization. This is the last issue for Rick Lanman, who has been our business manager, th author of "Winepress" "Wine-press" and one of Park City's most redoubtable Renaissance men. (Think of a human equivalent for the cartoon character Mr. Peabody. That's Lanman! ) He is going to the University of Oregon to study political science, economics, and will solve the Middle East crisis in his spare time. For those of you who don't work around the office, it's hard for us to convey his importance. But when a bill has to be collected; when the IRS is breathing at our door; when the newspaper negatives have to be assembled and shipped out the door to the printers, the legendary cry goes up: "This looks like a job for Lan-Man ! "Yes, Lan-Man! Strange visitor from another planet, with powers far beyond those of mortal men! (Also a good nose for Beaujolais.) "Lan-Man who can change the course of mighty creditors bend invoices in his bare hands and who, disguised as the mild-mannered mild-mannered business manager for a great metropolitan newspaper, fights a never-ending never-ending battle for truth, justice and the speedy delivery of our paychecks ! " Lanman is also known as the classical-music classical-music DJ on Thursday mornings. But for his farewell performance, he's going to invade the rock territory of such folk as Dr. Bop! Rick happens to be an aficionado of the Jefferson Airplane, and will present a two-hour program of their music, 7-9 p.m. tonight. Marion Cooney is being promoted into Lanman's armchair as the new business manager. Aside from that, we can think of only one benefit: Whenever someone yells for "Rick" we no longer have to ask, "Which one?" Here's a great bumper-sticker slogan for you businesses that are a little shaky in these days of Reaganomics: "Oh thank heaven for Chapter 11." Our editor came up with this, so if you plan to market it as a bumper sticker, remember to send the royalties to: David Hampshire; P.O.Box 3688; Park City, Utah. Wedding bells will ring this summer for Glenn Artist, actor and co-owner of the Corner Store at the Park City Resort, and Sandy Erickson, a staffer at the Holy Cross Clinic. Local sources insist this is not a "marriage of convenience" between rr- local restaurant and the nearby medical facility. On top of everything else, artificial-heart patient Barney Clark suffers the indignity of daily press coverage. Every picayune detail of his treatment has been blown up into headlines. ; : v . .. , "Clark's Nose Starts Bleeding," we've read. "Clark's Nose Stops Bleeding!" "Packing Put on Nose." "Gauze Unpacked from Nose." The best example so far came from a recent issue of the "Daily Utah Chronicle," which posted this headline: "Clark Back in Surgery; Nasal Arteries Stapled." Jacques Brel may be alive and well and living in Paris, but he was also inconspicuous this week. IAE's musical review, playing one week only, came in the middle of a flood of movies from the U.S. Film and Video Festival. Heck, even "Brel's" director, Ron Burnett, was kept busy reviewing movies for KPCW. We confess with red face that on the last night we scrambled out of a movie and drove to the Kimball Art Center, only to find that nothing was left except a short second act. From what we saw, however, this show is worthy of revival. Among a uniformly good cast, our favorite was Barbara Bramble, who' seemed warmly responsive to the ensemble of story-songs. Her best moment came in a "carousel song" of forced gaiety that became more and more manic. A fine Salt Lake actress, Ruth Agle, was funny as a singing corpse sneering at her hypocritical mourners. Kurt Graf handled a love song with sensitivity. Tony Leger went through several shades of frustration in the song, "Next" about the assembly-line mechanics of love at a brothel. And Kim Ballou, in the bittersweet "Mariki, Marika" was a little unsteady-but heartfelt. The well-done piano accompaniment accompani-ment was by Roxanne Shapiro. Perhaps IAE can revive this show preferably not during Arts Festival weekend. Poet Sharon Doubiago, currently a resident of Park City, is the author of a recently published book, "Hard Country." The volume is a 264-page epic poem, set in the Bicentennial year of 1976. Its settings include the author's Los Angeles childhood, a Cambodian refugee camp, and other locations across the U.S. The work is also replete with mythical references to everyone from Marilyn Monroe to Sasquatch. According to a release from West End Press, the book has been praised as "a major response to the male epic consciousness of 20th-century poetry." It is available at Dolly's Bookstore. If someone asked you if journalism was show business, you could always point to reporter-actors like David Fleisher and Anne Burnett. Now the Park City Newspaper has itsownthespian. Our former staff writer, Morgan Queal, returned to her home in Crested Butte, Colorado last fall. The local paper, "The Crested Butte Pilot" recently reported on her stage debut in Neil Simon's Chekhov adaptation. "The Good Doctor." The local reviewer wrote, "... Queal is an actress with an innate dignity combined with a unique touch of the taciturn. Surely a combination to reckon with!" See, you Egyptian folks ! At least one of us can act! . We're not even going to bother to write original humor anymore. We're just going to report the quips from City Hall jokesters like Chief Frank Bell, Attorney Tom Clyde, and now Mayor Jack Green. n ; , A ( v It seems Hizzoner was strolling up Main Street the other day in one of those sporty English hats when he encountered rowdy developer Bob Harrington. Opined Bob, "Sure wish I had a hat like that." Without missing a beat, Green shot back, "Well, I don't think they make them big enough." Reported one witness, "It was one of the rare moments when Harrington couldn't think of a response." mm. tig) jiM I A V :i t-. ; - We've Got Them! HERMAN SBWmBS ubbr Ducli' SIlOOG THEY GO m WET, SLOPPY WEATHER WHILE THEY KEEP YOUR FEET DRY! Gals' High-Top Pepin orNavy 0I98 Stylish knee-high boot with quilted Nylon upper, fleece-lined with fold-down fold-down cuff and waterproof rubber foot. Sizes 5 to 10. Men's Low-Cut 3298 Brown or Navy 'Hayannis' model with waterproof rubber foot and leather trimmed upper. up-per. Fleece lined for warmth with rubber ripple sole for traction. 7 to 12. Ken'i Ankte-Kigh Eoct with OM nr Lut3terTep,7ts12 o4.UO Gals' Low-Cuf The look, and comfort, you want for stormy days. Waterproof All Rubber bottom and leather-trimmed upper, ribbed rubber outsole. 5 to 1 0 Open Daily 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. 649-1922 n |