OCR Text |
Show The Park Record MonTues, February 25-26, 2002 DANVILLE'S CLUBHOUSE ORE DOCS ON MAIN STREET Dw TXm P.KHq E V ' 1- uy i win viyv i i 5 A-10 I S i ft FOR CHILDREN OF ALL ABILITIES PROFESSIONALLY TRAINED STAFF -tWITIESI a" " UniirenffirvMYitinn v Monday - Saturday 12:00pm 10:00pm. 'Sunday Eve. by appt. NECESSA Rates $10.an hour for first child (minimum 2 hours) Each additional child (of same family) $3. 333 Main Street Mall second level Park City jtfMENT - y Oh my heck, it's over Picture Yourself Here! Old knvn Itn Gflca Vims and Sui ftl Ml uf 'J i Mfmr-l1liii IW4 KlDD CIRCLE Ni Iflflll lt.1. ( M 1,-11 i km l lowtt I ill. lt((ii)t tin I timing Ai)nra. II IM rt wild vi 4f n lit tut lfM. MMIlll I H lllft S iKtlruotn. 4 lnth hum with B.it IVniI iouiii. Jitil workout room. $135,000 $735,000 GraLooaian and Yaks C-312 Si somi Luix.k W.tIL in dilute. lii'tiif( jiiI .1) J! Iflllll SIImI.I l)HlKt'. tWK Ih.Imm.hk mn ImiIim-miiv ll-H4'H( tllllll(nil(l'. III-IIC MMIMttfUirill. glMtll II 91U h)l,U)l Will in M4HI Street thtifuHtin. dining .it mI niftliilihr. I wo ImltotHtt. rwo I will, jihI tunrM vicwi. )ti Irrr (mm finite. WtHII I Ilium. klHMtV (Kite tjlllC1, 4xi gl.tiitir vixnitrrttifn in kiulkrn. $350,000 $209,000 kidtcllianoflheCity ii .-. I-. I i M iivmii hnn. I-. A(fit SUM! tt.nv (.Miitu umiiunnin l.ii in ktnlK-ii iihI iIL ll.l UllaHI. I. Mil ll.Klh ,11111 t.' ll.lllK KlHItIV .lit It' r I- Iv ixmi i.tlxtnWH It. fW.li.. MH.ni ..Uk. W.il, il lilt III 1 ,lk Itmiiliift ill HH-.ll Iihii (iiqtlKo nmin iml IihIkH I kiif'jHi 1 1 m ml hi ((, ( miifiiid Ititilnn k..m! 1" ,!'" $3,650,000 Prudential Utah Real Estate MvlN MMtr f I'tMHtHSt VX'tlk iti lw;. (lining jml town lift ihwii tlm (i if i lit k uotkt niihmtr. 2 In It n i. 2 Kitlt. 2 tifc4.Kn. HnMifihillv liminliril. ,ifmni. I.4IH . H. Irivjtr (Ink (h (wiv.iir titHk-frutimt urttiDg. $650,000 Dirrct: 4 tS-64"-ll(l.W Toll trt: Well, the fat lady has sung, and there's nothing left but the sweeping up. So was that fun or what? I have to admit that despite my skepticism about the whole thing, I had a ball during the Olympics. I saw several events, volunteered for light duty, spent some time on Main Street, did Salt Lake, and managed to ski on the deserted slopes at Park City and Deer Valley. Somehow, I neglected to buy a beret, but otherwise, it was a great experience. The fact that it's over really hit the other day. KSL's guy assigned to cover the off-beat, odd, and quirky aspect of all of this, Greg Sumner, called and wanted to interview me about the dog situation on Main Street. When it gets down to the point that the reporters covering the quirks have nothing left to do but interview each other, well, stick a fork in it, it's done. The closing of the Games raises a whole list of very delicate questions. At what point should we quit sleeping sleep-ing with identification lanyards around our necks? I know people with so many different credentials hanging around their necks, each on its own color-coded lanyard, that they are under chiropractic care. Some started wearing them about Christmas. I'm not sure who the arbiter of style is, but I hope the decision is to make a clean break of it, and not shed a lanyard a day from now until August. It's a small enough town that we still know each other without SLOC-issued security passes with our photos on them. Besides, they get in the soup when you try to eat. A more difficult issue is whether all those berets will be showing up at the Deseret Industries next week. Everybody had to have one during The U.S. 40 lot worked well enough that it was easier than doing battle with local parking and overcrowded local buses. But before anybody up at the Castle or the ski areas gets any wild ideas about making that permanent, let me say this: It was an acceptable solution to a difficult, short-term problem. As a lifestyle, park and ride from the U.S. 40 quagmire has no future. It worked surprisingly well for attending As a lifestyle, park and ride from the U.S. 40 quagmire has no future. It worked surprisingly well for attending events. It's no way to get the grocery shopping done." . . H y Tom Clyde the Games, but I'm not sure the look will last. Wearing Monica Lewinski's hat isnt the sort of fashion fash-ion statement that most Uth families fami-lies will want their kids making. So are they relegated to the souvenir box, will people wear them next winter, or are they yesterday's news? I've got a dozen parking passes in the glove box. In reality, there were only a couple that got used. Public Meetings Rb. 25-March 2, 2002 SNYDERVILLE BASIN SPECIAL RECREATION DISTRICT Public notice is hereby given that the Administrative Control Board of the Snyderville Basin Special Recreation District will meet in a regularly scheduled board meeting on Wednesday, February 27, 2002, 6 p.m., at Trailside Park, 5705 Trailside Drive. AMENDED AGENDA II 6:00 PM WELCOME NEW BOARD MEMBERS 6:05 PM CONSIDERATION OF REVISED SLATE AND ELECTION OF 2002 SBSRD BOARD OFFICERS 6:10 PM FOURTH QUARTER FINANCIAL REPORT 6:15 PM CONSIDERATION OF CONTRACT WITH JACK THOMAS ARCHITECTS ARCHI-TECTS FOR TRAILSIDE PARK BUILDING 6:35 PM DISCUSSION: SCHEMATIC DESIGN TRAILSIDE PARK BUILDING 6:55 PM DISCUSSION: WILLOW CREEK PARK MASTER PLAN AND ARCHITURE 7:15 PM CONSIDERATION OF CONTRACT WITH INTERNATIONAL LOG BUILDERS ASSOCIATION . 7:25 PM CONSIDERATION OF CONTRACT BETWEEN SUMMIT COUNTY AND SBSRD FOR MAINTENANCE OF KIMBALL JUNCITON PEDESTRIAN OVERPASS 7:30 PM CONSIDERATION OF 2001 INDEPENDENT AUDIT ENGAGEMENT LETTER 7:35 PM DISCUSSION: PINEBROOK COMMUNITY TRAIL EASEMENTS 7:50 PM WIKSTROM STUDY UPDATE 8:00 PM AUTHORIZATION OF TRAVEL TO URPA CONFERENCE 8:10 PM COMMITTEE REPORTS TRAILS -RECREATION ICE -8:30 PM SERVICE PROVIDER APPROVALSPLANNING UPDATE ' 8:35 PMAPPROVAL OF MINUTES OF 11602 AND 13102 :: ' 8:40 PM APPROVAL OF INVOICES 8:45 PM OTHER BUSINESS 8:50 PM EXECUTIVE SESSION: LAND ACQUISITION events. It's no way to get the grocery shopping done. We've all ended up with a wardrobe of officially licensed Olympic logo clothing. My quest to buy something blatantly counterfeit failed because the SLOC Brand Mafia was so effective, and the monopoly on retail near the venues was so complete. Some of it I really like. But is it all passd now? The other day while skiing, I saw a whole family decked out in parkas that said "Athens 2004" on the backs. Yikes! I spent all that money on last year's color? Will it still be cool to wear our Olympic coats, or will they seem as strange as a Santa Claus tie in January? Overall, we hit a home run with this. I've spent a lot of time talking with people from out of state, or out of the country. Most arrived with only a vague notion of what to expect in Utah. They were all pleasantly pleas-antly surprised by what they found. Visitors arrived, not knowing what to expect, and left knowing what we all have known all along - that Utah is a "Pretty, Great State." Let's just hope they dont decide to stay. If we learned anything at all from the traf: fie during the Olympics, it's that doubling or tripling our population is a really bad idea. ' It's only a matter of days until Teflon Mike Leavitt steps before the cameras and takes credit for the success of the Olympics, Of course in court papers, he continues to deny knowing anything about it. No politician could stand that close to such a success without claiming the victory as his own. The real credit goes to Mitt Romney, who was handed an absolute train wreck and, in the end, made the trains run on time. Even the "F" trains to Snowbasin. I watched TV coverage of the night scene in Salt Lake, and had this strange feeling. That looks like Salt Lake, I thought, but there are people outside after dark in the downtown area. It had bigger crowds than General Conference weekend -- at night! It was a kind of Bizaro World, where things look the same, but everything is reversed. The city is vibrant and the suburbs are still. The restaurants and clubs are busy, the scrapbook . supply stores are slow. I had to go down and experience it myself. It reminded remind-ed me of a "Seinfeld" episode where George gets invited to secret parties attended by super models inside what looks like a meat-packing plant. He goes there night after night, but when he takes Jerry to see it, it has reverted to a meat-packing plant. By the end of next week, my guess is that Salt Lake will be a much more familiar place. Too bad. I remember a hike in Moab years ago. It was spring, and the desert was in bloom. Flowers blossomed out of solid rock. Each little puddle of snow-melt water was full of life. The sky was impossibly blue, and with every step, a million miracles were revealed. A woman in flip-flops, flip-flops, with a cigarette in one hand an,d a bloody Mary in the other called to me from the trail head. "Can you see anything from down there that you cant see from here?" she called from the parking lot. " Is it worth it?" she called. "No, I dont think so," I responded. She would-nt would-nt have noticed it. The Olympics . have been that kind of experience. I have friends who holed up in Salt Lake, living on canned goods and hoarded toilet paper for the whole time, never venturing ven-turing out. They were afraid of the traffic. There have been reports of people sending their children out of state because of paranoia about terrorism. ter-rorism. Others have volunteered for the Games and worked harder at that job than their real careers. Some have been to two or three events a day, or collected pins by the ton. , .,. The experience was exactly what each of us made of it. And then the circus packs up and leaves town. What a show. WEST VALLEY $SUZUKI Engineered to fit your life T ONLY $249. PER MONTH Standard model lease 39 months $2000 down plus tax & License 0 36 mo -1.9 48 mo - 3.9 36 mo 3146 West 3500 South 967-9696 2100 S West .Vullev Suzuki PARK CITY . l """ " 1 ' k - - - tf miimm Congratulations Team USA! You Made Us Proud. S. Scott Kimche, D.D.S., L.L.C. Family and Cosmetic Dentistry 1901 Prospector Avenue, Ste. 26 645-8500 Call for an appointment. Convenient evening and weekend hours. Emergencies welcome. Most insurance plans accepted. 3' A v : RHA5S& CHATEAUX X f n . i ". At r i |