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Show fr - " ....... '. ..... m .'"';''-' ... ' , , . 1 ' - ... fX '',iv 5- .. ... " - ., " - ' " - "- - .' - '" - : . .-. .... :-V.- a -..,.' . , - - - - - - . " - , - . i -. 3 ' - " ' - " " " 1 r . Z ' '. - 4 i-v: ,. ' Wf "" ' - ,Vf '...' ' , . f j " f . '1 ? .-w. ' ' .. , , I .... . ..r.-..- r-:-a 9& i " , ... . ; . .-. - .-- 6 . - t .. a Hidden Beauty Desolation of the abandoned penitentiary site couldn't dampen spirits of the new seven-man Suprar House Park committee this week as they started serious planning for the tremendous development project to rid the area of the eye-sore. S. H. Park Committee Cheers Pen Possibilities Radiating enthusiasm, the committee assigned to plan development de-velopment of the old Utah penitentiary property into a civic park for Sugar House, this week visited their project. "This property can be made into a grand thing with proper . planning and wise development," Harold Fabian, chairman of the seven man advisory board, reported. "One of our jobs," he added, "will be to obtain money. Then we must have some real architectural arch-itectural planning, and carry the project ahead. We were all enthusiastic with what we saw and the possibilities we can see." The 400-foot wide strip of the property that has been dedicated dedi-cated for a freeway from the mouth of Parley's canyon into downtown Salt Lake at some future day is a good thing, too, Fabian said. Fabian visualizes the park as an ideal spot for some true culture cul-ture development for southeast Salt Lake, the greatest centr of population and shopping center business. And with such leaders as the committee members, Ray Free, Otto Buehner, Richard Roberts, Pierce L. Brady, Commissiion-ers Commissiion-ers L. C. Romney, Edwin Q. Cannon, and Mr. Fabian, something some-thing of a cultural nature, sometthing recreational, something some-thing useful, but most of all, something lasting will be created. cre-ated. Following a jeep-tour of the prison acreage, three of the seven committeemen visited the National Society of the Sons of Utah Pioneer Museum at 3000 Connor street, where they expressed pleasure and enthusiasm enthu-siasm over the project fathered and built through the efforts of Horace A. Sorensen. It has been proposed that the museum be transplanted to the old penitentiary property to become be-come the heart of a Mormon Pioneer Village designed to preserve pre-serve the history and heritage of teh hardy Utah Pioneers. |