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Show Page C6 Thursday, March 27, 1 986 Park Record 'TVTyTXi MJJJVI 7""" " -,"V "" 'Tr"" VJla, " '-' k f.& " 1 fc " -' s I 1- -; .' v 1 v.,"" -- . 1 BOOTHILL CONDOMINIUMS 1 654 Square Feet 2 Bedrooms it 3 Full Bathrooms Large Loft -k Woodburning Fireplace k: 1 Car Garage k: Rear Decks for Privacy and Views Incredibly Convenient Location k Special Financing Available Location in the heart of Park City. JJVE UNITS AVAILABLE 1910 Prospector Avenue Park City, UT 84060 649-3000 JESS REID -'REAL F.STAT ! rze Grub Steac Restaurant invites you to Easter Sunday Brunch Celebrate Easter Sunday at the Grub Steak! We are preparing a most extraordinary Easter brunch for you, featuring a delectable variety of fresh foods exquisitely prepared. Executive Chef Sue Haygood will be serving many of her famous specialities. Choose from 16 hot entrees, fruits and salads, homemade breads and such temptations as fresh baked cobblers, cakes and pastries. Make this Easter memorable with a feast you won't soon forget. Only $11.95 for adults, $4.95 for children under 12. r C " - The Grub Steak is located at the Prospector Square Hotel. Easter brunch will be served from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. March 30. Accepting Reservations for parties of 8 or more only. Please call G49-8060. vfiii bv Kurt Kidman P.C. needs casino, dog track Earlier this month a public hearing was held to determine deter-mine just what the public wanted in the way of a new recreation facility. The public was asked to throw off its inhibitions and wish for whatever its little heart desired. Money, the public was told, was no object. OK, then I will unleash my wildest recreational fantasies'. fan-tasies'. I think something along the lines of a domed nine-hole nine-hole golf course would be nice. And underneath it let's dig out a huge cavern where we can put in a dog racing track and a secret casino. We'll subsidize the city's education department with the money we make from the casino and the track. The best bit is, the revenue will mean that residents of Park City will get free use of all the facilities. Next to the golf course we need an Olympic-size swimming swim-ming pool with an hydraulic, glass roof that we can open at the push of a button during those warm summer afternoons. after-noons. Of course we'll need a bar in the swimming pool, and one in the posh clubhouse. Oh yeah, we'll need a regulation size ice skating rink no make that two of them, side by side. We'll need seating for about 15,000 people around each rink. You see when the Winter Olympics come to Park City, we will need one rink for the hockey competition and one for the ice skating contests. I think that while we're at it, we should construct a luge run. We'll need one for the Olympics, and I think it would be good fun getting on one of those little sleds and screaming down the mountain. Maybe we could wait on the luge run and the 90-meter ski jumping hill until after we start making money from the casino. What? Be realistic, you say? Well you just told us to be unrealistic. Make up your mind. First you say money is no problem, then you say I can't have an underground dog track. What's the story? The story is that the Memorial Building is slipping away from Pam Bradford and the rest of the recreation department staff. The building is up for sale and v n f V i & cum m ny Ikn sometime uno ouumiu we recreation denart all those who conduct and attend classp i ,l Building will have to start doing so in the strm Park (!itv tippHq a rorofitin l -i .. sent So Park uty needs a recreation hi,;u: onequick. 'ndit At the meeting the top two recreation facilit . ters were a multi-purpose room and a swim fe Good solid choices maybe not as much f ' underground casino, but possibly more practiM 35 51 Cooperating on the project will apnaiW school district and the city of Park City For 7 k those who are soon to be homeless aerobicis ke' those involved with the project don't drag their?' ' What seems to be needed is a large rol basketball, volleyball and other court gam ketf played. Install a movable dance floor for th would like to be able to dance without shin sJT think we got it knocked. Install some nice offi 1 phones that work for the recreation department08 and they will certainly be satisfied. 0r Rather than build an indoor and outdoor pool r a pool with a 'bubble' on it should be considered J?15 tiful has had a bubble pool for years. The bubble off in the summer, and is put on in the winter pLkJf could make sure its bubble was colored in earth to The bubble pool is certainly cheaper than buildill pools. It also allows for the opportunity to bu Tl slickest, fastest, wettest, longest, tallest neli superest and keenest water slide in the Free Wort n would be a great tourist attraction, hopefully bri people to Park City in the summer, and it would also? revenue maker. It would of course be in earth tones It wouldn't make nearly as much money as theiW track and the casino and it is not as much fun as the! -run, but it is perhaps a bit more practical. So, I'll tell you what. We'll do away with theeasinol now and construct a water slide, but let's talk about I golf course.... unnirsoy coim spDits by Jim Murray Hooked on a-reelin': Presidents, crime bosses jigged for big ones It is a fact of life in this country that most sports, when you take part in them, send your blood pressure soaring, your heart pounding, your lungs bursting and your senses racing. Even running a leisurely long distance can be counted on to keep your blood pressure 100 points over normal and your pulse rate 50. But if you're looking for the sport that will slake the competitive urge and refresh the inner juices but calm the blood pressure down to a snooze and still the racing pulse, Cotton Cordell of the Ouachita River Cordells advises ad-vises you to throw away your running shoes and raquets and get a pair of hip boots and a pole. If you want a short exciting life, get a race car or boxing box-ing gloves. If you want a long, tranquil one, get a fishing reel. Cordell, who has been fishing the waters of the world since he was able to walk, which makes that 55 years, wants to know what other sport can boast of a president of the United States and the head of the New York Mafia as enthusiatsts? Calvin Coolidge gave up the presidency to go fishing, and Cotton remembers growing up as a boy in Hot Springs, Spr-ings, Ark., and seeing Frank Costello, no less, sitting in a boat tying to coax a bite out of the bass on a man-made lake there. Owney Madden used to buy bait from him at a time when a hundred FBI agents were looking for Madden. God is a fisherman, in the view of Cordell, and man is never happier than when he is wading up a trout stream with a new fly rod or tossing a hook into a boil of yellowtail off the fantail of a party boat. As a fisherman, I have wet a line now and again but, believe me, Hemingway was never going to write any books about me. The trouble with it as a sport is that, in any given situation, there always seems to be more fishermen than fish. And, although man may be the more intelligent creature on land, the reverse is true on water. The fish has the home-court advantage. Man has been trying to out-think fish since Biblical times. It is a sad commentary on our civilization that pollution has killed more fish than hooks. Cordell has made a career out of evening the odds. He was once descibed by a press agent as "the man who thinks like fish." Not in a poker game, but in a boat. Ii your boat. The trick in fishing, Cordell says, is to put sometb in the water that looks to the fish like a four restaurant. This is done by an artful combination d movement and color that makes the fish think he's ml: a pizza with everything, to go. This is Cotton's specialt make an eggshell look like an omelet. He did this initially by snatching dog hair from thek of his English setter and fastening it to a jig. The fish i everthing but follow him home. Cotton turned his discovery into an enterprise tit now has factories in Taiwan, El Salvador and Arkansas They use deer tails now, instead of dog hair, butCordel who sold his business to an Alabama conglomeratf thinks the fish are still overmatched. The real great plus in fishing is, it breeds optimism a man, Cordell says. There are no pessimists ontheeri of fishing poles. A lunker is just around the next And optimism is the secret of long life. Thay may all be so. But I can't help remembering fe fisherman I once encountered who had left his writf on the bulkhead of a fishing boat. If not a pessimist, was at least a realist. It was his version of "Theold)l and the Sea." Under the heading of "Alibis," lavatory poet had listed: You should have been here yesterday. It will pick up tomorrow. It's too cloudy today. The sun is too bright today. They ain't hitting sardines today. Boy, if we only had sardines today! The sea is too choppy. I wish we had a little chop today. They're too deep today. They're too near the surface. He concluded with "the world's greatest lie," idpntifipri as "T rpa llv didn't mind not catching any today because the fresh air, sunshine and boat ride wonderful." Maybe that's the secret: When nothing's go (c) 1986, Los Angeles Times. Dist. by Los Angeles Tin Syndicate ? M TP ' Dinner u o Specials 4 p.m. to 11 p.m. UAlr? 4 p.m. loll p.m. jet. 224 & 248 East Park City 649-9868 6 a.m. Midnight 7 days a week MONDAY Spaghetti Dinner $3.35 Tossed green salad, vegetable, garlic bread. TUESDAY Chicken-Fried Steak $4.75 Whipped potatoes, vegetable, tossed green salad, dinner roll s. Abutter. CAFE WEDNESDAY Prime, Rib 8 ounce i $6.95 Baked p-'.nato, tossed salad, vegetable, dinner roll & butter f THURSDAY 2 Large Pork Chops $5.25 Rill-oH r,M.,. I tossed green salad, dinner roly All dinners include a dish of ice cream or yogurt. Park City friendly family restaurant. As good as the best, better than the rest. We also serve a breakfast and luncheon special daily Private parties. No substitutions FRIDAY Halibut Steak 8 ounc $6.50 Baked potato, tossed salad, vegetaoicu & butter. SATURDAY T-BoneSteaii'"" $6.95 B Baked potato, tos" salad, vegetable, u butter- J r One ...,r.V half Fried $5.50 ...,it vcsciat"1"" & butter- |