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Show r Page A6 Thursday, Fdfcuar) 3, m. Park ( ii, News Planners O.K. 11 a.m. Park City Soupe Company open daily- catering -private parties - take-out 442 Main St., Park City, Utah (801)649-7687 Ken Ashburner, owner New hours: 10 p.m. daily Closed Sundays Brazier Restaurant SALE ML SAO, Good thru Feb. 28, 1983 Ifs the best meal going! Our 100 pure beef single burger, a regular order of crispy golden fries, vour favorite small drink and top it off with a cool and creamy Dairy Queen' regular sundae. i Hwy. 246 & Bonanza Drive, Prospector Square Open 7 a.m. - Midnight Daily Drive Thru The Stein Eriksen Lodge incites you to enjoy Cocktails, Hots Voeuftes and rte Viano by the incomparable Gabrielle Stubbs The charming Troll Hallen Lounge is a must for apres ski. Stop in for a drink and live piano before or after dinner at one of our two restaurants. Hear Gabrielle Stubbs Wednesday thru Sunday, 7:00 p.m. to closing. So ... ski in, drive up (underground parking, of course) or call the Lodge for our shuttle schedule. fftMfl Stein eriksen lodge Located just west of Silver Lake Lodge in Deer Valley 649-3700 Bail SCO Skis, Boots, Bindings, Poles fa . i Tune Up Special Includes hand file, edge sharpening, and wax. Reg. $15.00 Now $9.00 Good thru Saturday, Feb. 12th Holiday Village store only. H ousing near Deer Valley switchback Despite reservations from some members, the Park City Planning Commission approved a density plan on the Deer Valley Switchback Parcel. The vote was 5-2, with the two Naye votes coming from Commissioners Rusty Davidson and Burnis Watts. The proposed 15-unit parcel par-cel would be located in the hills directly west and above the Snow Park Day Center in Deer Valley. Access would be from a switchback curve in the adjacent mountain road. Watts said the site was not appropriate due to the switchback, the intrusion of homes on the ridgeline, and the severe site disturbance it would cause. "Just because it has a lot of problems, that doesn't mean it's unusable," said planner J.J.Johnson. "I think we've mitigated those problems." The city staff's report to commission said the switchback switch-back was an access problem, but there was no other feasible location. The project will work, it said, if developers de-velopers follow recommendations recommen-dations laid down by traffic engineer Jess Agraz. The most important it said, is for a snow removal program to be operated by parcel owners. The report also said the project intrudes on the ridgeline as viewed from the Snow Park Lodge. But it said that impact would not be significant. However, Davidson said, "That part of the ridgeline is a major view from the resort. That view could just be a mass of roof tops going up the hillsides." Davidson pointed out another an-other project has been approved ap-proved further down that slope. "However, it may turn out to be fine," he said. "The project was a tough call to vote on " Chairman Greg Lawson said he was concerned the project had so many difficulties difficul-ties and "marginal" solutions solu-tions to them. "It doesn't seem to me that the city should add problems to an already hazardous switchback." switch-back." Commissioner Cal Cow-her, Cow-her, favoring the project, said it meets the original intent of Deer Valley's Master Plan to cluster units near the ski lodge. He told The Newspaper the ridgeline Oriental rug display opens today in P. C. A rare collection of oriental rugs will be on display for viewing and purchase, Feb. 3 through Feb. 5, in the lobby of the Park City Village Condominiums, located at the Park City Ski Area resort center. Nadine Finch, of Lake Oswego, Oregon will be on hand to present the rugs, which are handcrafted and imported from the Far East. The rugs range in price from $175 to $2,500, varying in size and design. Ms. Finch has been traveling around the United States the past year with her display, specializing in resort communities. Oriental . rugs have grown in popularity in the past few years, becoming both investment in-vestment collector items as well as decorating accessories. ac-cessories. The display will run Thursday through Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., free of charge. For more information or details contact Park City Village Condominiumfront desk at 649-1700. 2 Bargain-Priced Self-Serve Copy Machines Do it yourself!! 812x11and812x14 PLUS 11 x17and 14x18 Printshop-Quality Copies -excellent copies - wide selection of paper colors and weights - copy onto ycur letterhead -reductions - automatic collating and stapling the more copies per original, the lower the price Copies in Color -from slides or prints image area of slides enlarged from min. 4 x 6 to max. 7 x 10 t-shirt transfers We can take your favorite slide or print and make a t-shirt transfer that can be ironed onto your shirt -LADIES, try the t-shirt transfer process to make a quilt or coverlet with everyone in color your project will be completely washable, -transparencies Have you seen one in color? e.g. color coded graph on an overhead projector. In addition to copying services we offer an answering service and full secretarial, typing and wordprocessing services. ECRETARIAL ERVICES 1750 Park Avenue Park City, Utah 84060 (Summit Savings, lower level) (801)649-8790 intrusion is visible only from the lodge. "As you move westward, the houses will fade more into the hill." He added the city is not in a good position to restrict ridgeline intrusions, because it has no ordinance for it. "No one has come up with a Mi good definition of what an intrusion is," he said. The city staff recommended recom-mended approval, with conditions con-ditions set down on utility installation and snow removal re-moval operations. City planner plan-ner John Eskelin said the project will set the units in to ICnoi? match the contours. "In the plans, they have been shoe-horned shoe-horned on in a very precise way," he said. v J.J.Johnson concluded, "We've tried 20 different concepts. We believe this is the best we've come up with." by Hick Brough KPCW Radio is a helpful and vital stimulus to the Park City community. Now that the radio station is conducting its annual fund-raising fund-raising drive, we should review the great contributions the station has made to the area. Before the radio station came along, Park City was a sleepy little mining town, and a local celebrity was someone who spotted a Florida license plate on the highway. KPCW attracted attention to the town, bringing in big real-estate operations, celebrities such as Hal Linden, and gourmet restaurants. Due to our proximity to the Salt Lake Airport, visitors can leave Los Angeles in the morning and arrive here in time to catch Roy Reynolds' jazz show in the afternoon. There's no question the radio station brings people here. As one tourist wrote in a questionnaire, "I can go skiing anywhere, but where else can I wake up in the morning to hear Toto's "Africa" played at the wrong speed?" KPCW has also raised the intellectual level of the town. In a notarized statement, one citizen wrote, "Before the radio came along, scientific analysis showed the electrical impulses given off by my brain were equivalent to that of a standard-sized vacuum bag. But the radio station educated me. Today, I'm a prominent local citizen, I'm on a first-name basis with the Utah Legislature, and I own more real estate in Utah than the BLM." There's a more personal level to this story too. The radio station has actually reshaped lives! You'll understand better if we take a personal example. Let's call her Susie Q. Susie's home and family were wiped out by a sudden rezoning. For several months, Susie lived a life of quiet desperation. She searched through dumpsters, competed with dogs for scraps, and sucked the ink from Chamber of Commerce maps for nourishment. Then Susie became a KPCW volunteer. Together with many others she now lives in the basement of the Memorial Building, receiving food, clothing and spiritual sustenance from the leader they call B.F. (or Big Fella). T'" KPCW volunteers can often be seen at the Salt Lake airport, handing out flowers. ("Hi. Have a nice day. Have you ever flown with the Volunteer Air Force?") These "Feulnies" sometimes meet in the Memorial Building gym for mass wedding ceremonies conducted by B.F. They are instructed to be fruitful and raise children with deep, resonant radio voices. After all this, do you still need reasons to donate money to KPCW Radio? Well, let's tell you about some of the improved features you'll get in the future from the station: Better record service. The radio station started out in 1980 with very few records. They've come a long way from the days when D.J.s had to desperately improvise by jumping up and down on the counter, yelling "WeareDevo!" Today the station has some 18 million albums. There's only one problem, according to station manager Blair Feulner, "They're all sitting in a big pile in the middle of my office Willie Nelson, Beethoven, Bob James, Broadway soundtracks, you name it. It sure would be easier for D.J.s to find a record if we had someone to file and organize this stuff." Improved news coverage. "We devote a lot of time to news now," said reporter George Richer. "But with a better budget, we won't have to make up all the stuff we report." Yep, you heard it here first. All the news you've heard on KPCW for months has been fictitious. Richer confessed, "Blair and I pretend to interview someone, then we do the various voices. Blair does the guys, like Supt. Goodworth or Jack Green. And I'm good at doing the ladies' voices Arlene or Debby from the Chamber. In a way, it's fun like being on the Muppet Show. "However, we'd really like to get some reporters to go out and interview the actual people. It'd be a treat for the listeners. Did you know, for instance, that Chief Frank Bell sounds exactly like Robert Mitchum?" Lost and Found reports. To complement their famous "Lost Dog" reports, the station will issue "Lost Owner" reports. Like so: "Be on the look-out for a six-foot, Spanish-American mix. Answers to the name Larry. Doesn't have a collar, and may have lost his shirt." Movies. Can't afford to watch the latest movies on Home Box Office? Why not listen to them on radio? By arrangement with the video shop on Main Street, the radio will broadcast the latest full-length movies. Naturally, the experience won't be quite the same as seeing it in a theater. For instance, for the car chase scene in "Bullitt," you'll hear mostly a lot of screeching tires and shifting gears. However, for a minimal fee, articulate KPCW D.J.s like Mike Phillips, Marilyn Zink, and Tom Willett will come to your living room and give vivid descriptions of what's going on. Clearly, KPCW Radio has an unbelievable future ahead. It deserves your financial support. ' """ Remember, "We're here when we need you. " Or something like that. Last Sunday's "Deseret News" focused on another local gourmet. A big spread in the Food Section focused on Dean Himmelman, the- executive chef at Deer Valley's Stein Eriksen Lodge. Of course, it's easy to write about those cooks who could fill you up just by reciting their ingredients. When are they going to write about Park City's low-key delights, such as the Jana Cole chocolate chip cookie? Alpha Beta shrimp? The excellent truck-stop cuisine of the Mount Air Cafe? The Teri Gomes tossed Caesar salad? (The last, Gomes said, is based on a secret wrist motion she learned as a youth while a member of a Southern California Valley Girl cult.) MOUNTAIN FLORA INTERIORpLANTCARE FRESHFLOWERS WEDDINGS Please call:- 801649-6910 1 , fc jQiiii iiin if ifi iiflm it .irti. irtfti ifr rTtn fin iHi -r A H ri 11 nffh IB &, i . ijOi . Wi iiM. ifc dffi i" |