OCR Text |
Show Lakeside Review LAKESIDt: Saturday. August 31. 1996 7 SINCE"! 953 &cntmcfetcr & Co. Little dipper twX' ic m - s'v ?.' ' ' ., !.;, ' ' s , - y $ ; V " - ,? - - , s '' ; - ' : - , J ,;s ; jf ' n3k? ? : v . " ' : !V HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING ' r, sV i i'-'- " v ' .. :'r ''' ' PRO uw tcv.fo Ht&'NGiAlfl ' POOHSaONAl 5lA.iT flrjut Low 00 Interest from Utah Power 773-690- & Light 0 ECONOMICALT&EFFICIEN ARE YOU WORKING ON YOUR CENTENNIAL CITIZEN CERTIFICATE? Call now so we can DIANE SKEETER WAR: Ryan Miller, a student at Weber State the Davis County Mosquito Abatement District. University, uses a dipper to check out a west Layton bog for mosquito larvae. More convention space needed New Salt Palace eyed for expansion The Associated Press : SALT LAKE CITY - Just six months old, the new Salt Palace already has been declared too small, and Salt Lake Visitors and Convention Bureau President Rick Davis is talking expansion. - Indeed, during the Outdoor Retailer Summer Market Show that closed Sunday, walls on the exhibition hall and grand ballroom were constructed without steel supports in anticipation of future growth. Salt Palace Marketing Director Beth White told The Salt Lake Tribune that the construction workers could return to the downtown complex within two years. With the Olympics coming and the continued popularity of the faI cility, that should get serious consideration, she said. There are too many positives for that not to hap- pen. - Expansion was on the minds of designers of the current facility. White said the building was designed so that it would be out of operation for only six to 10 weeks during an expansion. The Summer Market was the first of seven twice-yearl- y shows scheduled. It drew 15,487 people, representing 751 exhibitors in 2,254 booths and 3,371 retail outlets. , The event stretched the Salt Palace and Salt Lake hotel and transportation systems to their limits. Two tents had to be constructed in parking lots outside the Salt Palace to accommodate the crowds, and that caused its own problems. SMG, a private facility management firm - which also operates the Moscone Center in San Francisco, the Hawaii Convention Center, the New Orleans Superdome and Chicago's Soldier Field - to manage your award. BUSHStandard-Examme- r Miller works for We Know What you Want! SEPTEMBER 6 Centennial Production at Ed Kenley Amphitheater Awards Presented 7:00 PM the Salt Palace. Centennial certificates presented. We need your name now! A FREE musical overview of Layton's history. Fireworks - FREE to public! The county and the private organization make money from facility rental fees, parking and food ser- vice. While it is impossible to gauge how much business was done at the show: Some estimates went as high as $500 million, while convention bureau estimates had the four-da- y show pumping $20 million into the state's economy. Parking is horrendous, said Frannie Huff of Jackson Hole-base- d Wyoming Wear. You have to walk three and four blocks. I've got three parking tickets. How can you figure out where to park? Overall, though, attendees were complimentary of the new facility. Its the best convention center weve ever been in, said Michael Hodgson of Outdoor Retailer, which puts on the trade show. It's new and clean. People are raving about the food. The show was so big that the first day, many were like college kids on the first day of school trying to find their way around campus. The friendliness and helpfulness of the Salt Palace staff surprised manufacturers participating in the SALT LAKE CITY DOWNTOWN Upcoming U.S. Postmasters and American Legion conventions are expected to draw more people than Outdoor Retailer. MIDVALE HDLLADAY SUGAHHOUSE OGDEN LAYTON -- Call SALT LAKE CITY - When it activities comes to money-makin- g on Forest Service lands, recreation ras replaced mining, timber harvesting and grazing, a government official says. For More Information , S00THT0WNE Utahns who wonder what the crowds will be like at the 2002 Olympics could get more of a glimpse when the Winter Market Outdoor Retailer show returns in late January. Join us for Lakeside Review and Macey's Grocery stores. It will hit Salt Lake City the same week as a Ski Industry Association trade show, the influx of skiers for the three-da- y Martin Luther King weekend, and the Park City Sundance Film Festival. show. Salt Lake County contracts with $97.8 billion, fish and wildlife activities $12.9 billion, mineral production $10.1 billion and timber $3.5 $800 million backlog in building recreation facilities and a $267 million backlog in rebuilding some of the 125,000 miles of trails. billion. Ironically, the Forest Service spends only 21 percent of its budget for outdoor recreation. Lyons says a large part of the reason for that is the outdoor-recreatio- n industry is not an outspoken lobby in Washington or one respected by Congress. Speaking Sunday to the Outdoor Retailer Summer Market, Jim Lyons, assistant U.S. Agriculture Sectary for natural resources and environment, said activities on agency and contribute $130.7 billion annually to the economy. More and more, our business is recreation, he insisted. We need to help give Congress a better, understanding on the need to invest. Of that, recreation generates Lyons said his agency had an 544-141- 1 PROVO Recreation generates big bucks he Associated Press prepare Lyons, a Clinton appointee, also criticized conservative sentiment that the government should divest itself of some public lands in favor of state ownership. Suimie Renshaw, a professional home economist serves up a plate of fun and facts preparing 1 4 recipes on stage and brings food products and kitchen appliances HOMEMAKER SCHOOLS Bringing You a Information. Tfatea Everyone who attends the show receives a free Maceys gift bag. with a cookbook of the recipes being prepared and valuable Items offered by national and local manufactures and businesses. The wholesale divestiture of public lands is irresponsible, he charges, adding that states could not begin to afford to pay to maintain recreation facilities or fight wildfires on the new lands. Prizes, prizes and more prizes given a way In drawings throughout the two hour event. of groceries from Maceys Wreaths from Lilt Of Yesteryear Scrapbooks from C&M Celebrations Service from Jiffy-Lub-e Free bread and rolls from Rhodes Lots morel SO bags Wjfomi yo. colp wm TWO SHOWS Layton High School Tuesday, September 17 Ogden Union Station Wednesday, September 18 Door open at 6 p.m., program starts Tickets: just $3 per person SATURDAY. AUGUST 31st $50,000 10 race fans FRITO WY GRAB BflQ at random for a chance to grab a $100, $500 or the one with $50,000. be 19 & Present to Purchase Necessary-Mus- t Frito-La- y will be picked (No LAST WEEKEND OF RACING SAT., SUN. & MON FIRST RACE 1 P.M. MM i! 57P i bag containing Win.) ON A TYPICAL LABOR DAY WEEKEND 1i WE PAY OUT OVER $250,000 IN WINNING TICKETS! at 7 p.m. each night. Available at Lakeside Review 455 23rd street, Ogden 2146 North Main, Layton The door the evening of the shows. Mail-sen- d request to STANDARD-EXAMINECooking Show 455 23rd Street Ogden, Utah 84402 add 50b per ticket for postage and handling. Standard-Examine- r R Call 625-451- 4 for more information. q |