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Show Page A10 Thursday, November 15, 1990 Park Record Groups gather Nov. 18 Conventions arriving in Park City Nov. 18-24 include 4 groups. Scheduled by Meeting Convention properties and the ChamberBureau, are: LA Ski & Sun Group; Marker Ski Binding; Break Loose Ski Group; and KISN Radio. TV 'dm Kim McClelland, of Jupiter Property recently named Certified Property Manager. DON'T BE A TURKEY... Remember early deadlines for THE PARK RECORD Thanksgiving issue will be: Display Advertising- 5 p.m. Friday, Nov. 16 Classifieds & Legals- 5 p.m. Friday, Nov. 16 Call 649-9014 CPM awarded Kim McClelland, of Jupiter Property Pro-perty Management, Park City, recently was awarded the designation designa-tion of Certified Property Manager (CPM), by Hal Hansen, president of the the Utah Chapter of the Institute of Real Estate Management. McClelland has been a property manager with and is now Vice President Presi-dent & General Manager of Jupiter, specializing in condominium management since 1983 and is active in civic affairs in Park City. He received a bachelor's degree in hotel and resort management in 1978 from Michigan State University and moved mov-ed to Utah in 1979. The CPM designation is awarded only to a select group of property managers who are able to meet IREM's requirements in the areas of experience, education and ethical conduct. IREM is a professional organization affiliated with the National Na-tional Association of Realtors. Weekly projected lodging Projected Lodging Tally For the week of Nov. 18 - 24 Provided by Park City Chamber Bureau 1990 Total visitor nights : 15,630 Weekly high: 2,821 (Friday) Weekly average: 2,233 Year to date: 1,266,094 Visitor night tally computed by adding ad-ding number of visitors per night by week. SIX SALES ASSOCIATES JOIN COLDWELL BANKER PREMIER REAL ESTATE 1 v .mmZmmami ..... 4hmhmJ Joe Mueller A i ll XM Caroline Gardner i r" 1 ff t ll ' I Bridgette Murphy Bob Schneider Kathy Penrose J.F. Lanvers PARK CITY-Coldwell Banker Premier has announced Joe Mueller, Caroline Gardner, Bridgett Murphy, Bob Schneider, Katharine Penrose, and Jean-Francois Lanvers have recently joined the company's Park City Office. Mueller worked with ERA Carlson & Company prior to joining Coldwell Banker Premier. He has attended LDS Business College and is working toward his Associates Degree in Marketing. He has owned an operM the Mirror Lake Convenience Store for six years and is a resident of Oakley. ..minu i. ae of Glendora High School and Interior Design Institute in California. Prior to joining Coldwell banker Premier, she worked at an advertising and media company in California. Murphy studied at the Fashion Institute of Technology and received an AAS degree. She and her husband Bud live in Park City. Schneider is a graduate in Communication from the University of Utah. ! Penrose attended Long Beach College, and prior to joining Coldwell Banker Premier, she was affiliated with Wardley Better Homes and Gardens. Lanvers is an Engineering graduate of Ecole Nationale d'Horlogerie Cluses in France. Prior to joining Coldwell Banker Premier, he owned a retail store at The Resort Center in Park City, named Direx, Inc. Karen Mahoney ASSOCIATE RECEIVES G.R.I. DESIGNATION PARK CITY-Karen Mahoney, a Sales Associate at Coldwell Banker Premier's Park City office, recently received her Graduate, Realtors Institute (GRI) professional designation. The designation recognizes individuals who have demonstrated a keen understanding of real estate transaction operations and who have made a voluntary commitment to advancing their career through higher levels of education. r-v Irene Ziegler ASSOCIATE NAMED COMPANY SALES LEADER PARK CITY-Coldwell Banker Premier has announced that Irene Ziegler, a Sales Associate in the company's Park City office has been recognized as the sales leader for the company during the month of September. All six company offices and 225 associates compete for this monthly award. Ziegler was recognized for having nine open sales during the month. She joined the Park City office in February, 1988. . ft " f J I t..T ! r- W 1 i I J 11 ' k I v r . J , Wis x. - fe r - -, vrtl 1 Main Street Grocers Mary Lou and Jim Woodward say their shelves are stocked to provide local residents and Park City visitors with a closer walking-option to shop for those last minute food items. Main Street Grocery: a short walk Groceries on Main Street are back, and both Old Town residents and now Park City visitors will only have to walk as far as the Red Banjo Pizza parlor's lower floor at 322 Main to shop for anything from bread and milk to Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream of Vermont fame. Jim and Mary Lou Woodward say they opened the new "Main Street Grocery" in response to a local need. "We've been open one month and have been received really well by those living in Old Town and the young people landlocked at the end," Jim, grocer-manager says. The store is probably one of the last places in the world where children can buy "penny candy" and for the skiers, drink mixes and beer are always on hand. Mari Lou, who has owned and managed the Red Banjo pizza m ib m restaurant upstairs holds the record for the longest running business on Main Street 28 years and its pizza piz-za pie service is alive and well. Born and raised in Park City, Mary Lou also owns a bed and breakfast along with a restaurant in Lava Hot Springs, Spr-ings, Idaho, run by her son Steve To-ly To-ly and his wife Lisa. In fact Red Banjo and the Main Street Grocery are also a "family affair," af-fair," with Scott and Roxanne Toly helping their mom Mary Lou with the pizza while Jim and Mary Lou's granddaughter Tana is Jim's right hand person in the Main Street Grocery. t Jim, raised in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, decided to follow a career in the U.S. Air Force, and a career managing Schubach Jewelry Stores with a career in the food industry. "I quit selling jewelry and started selling twinkies," Jim says jovially. As one descends the stairs inside Red Banjo, to the Main Street Grocer below, Jim can be caught capturing a mountain scene on a canvas. Oil painting is his first love, and during his recent interview with the' Record, be was working on a view of the Grand Tetons. "When it's slow in the store it gives me an opportunity to do what I really enjoy doing," he said. Jim recently sold a painting to the Summit County Commission for its display on the wall of the Courthouse, Cour-thouse, as a part of the Commissioner's Commis-sioner's Choice Program. And if one pries further, Jim might be convinced convinc-ed to show his collection of photographs that document each of his oil painting works, and buy a few groceries, to boot. An avid oil painter, Jim Woodward says his new grocery store allows him to enjoy painting between customer arrivals. ar-rivals. Here, he paints a scene of the Grand Tetons, near his family home. J GIVE THANKS Thanks for being exactly who you are. Learn to love yourself...unconditionally. right now...today. Call Nancy Pollard 649-7600. f2 14 Nancy Pollard, LCSW 644 Park Avenue, Park City, Utah A Privatb Practice In Psychotherapy HUM awrViW Tminii.iiin, Diabetes symptoms don't always show up until lilt's li-lt's too late. Don't wait. The next time you see a doctor, take the blood sugar test. Ask for your score. Know what it means. DIABETES Tki the test Know t h 0 score. A. Amrton Dlttxm Awoctotlon. i.. . mm, KING KONG VIDEO, Park City, Heber City, and the MUSIC SHOP of Park City wish you and yours a very Happy Thanksgiving Day. In order to allow our employees to spend time with their loved ones, we will be closed Thanksgiving Day but will reopen maay, November 23rd at 10:00 a.m. We invite you to rent any of our videos on Wednesday, November 21st and return them on Friday, November 23rd before 6:00 p.m. at no additional charge. We sincerely thank you for your continued patronage and invite you w swp oy ana view our newest releases, as well as our many other interesting films. VWE0 4 |