Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Meet this week's Featured Eatery

Boudreaux’s BBQ Express
Pictured: Carole and Gordon Turner
For the past three weeks, Carole and Gordon Turner have taken their wares to the corner of 100 North and 400 East in Payson on Fridays and Saturdays, parking the Boudreaux Express wagon on the Best Deal Springs parking lot where they offer excellent Southern BBQ, including pulled pork, beef brisket, and pork ribs, along with what they call “The Dessert” with a special pecan praline sauce.

The response has been great, and the wagon is parked there from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m. on those two days.

Bedtime Stories and Donuts in Payson

Donuts by the Donut Hole. Photo by The Payson Chronicle.
Pillows and blankets were welcome at the City Center Banquet Hall last night. It was the location of Bedtime Story Night, a family event hosted by the Payson City Library every-other month. Youngsters and parents were treated to donuts and stories about donuts at last night’s story time, with special guest Lt. Bill Wright of the Payson Police Department, as a special guest, assigned to relay the historical relationship between the confection and his occupation, and to read one of the Payson Library’s latest literary acquisitions, “The Case of the Missing Donut.”

Friday, March 21, 2014

Miss Payson Emily Hayes Turning Over Crown To New Queen

Miss Payson 2013 Emily Hayes (pictured, right) and First Attendant Paige Downey (left). Photo courtesy Memory Lane Photography
Read a statement written by the outgoing Miss Payson, Emily Hayes, on our new website, www.paysonchronicle.com.   
Stories concerning the April 5 Miss Payson Pageant, as well as photos of this year's contestants, to come in upcoming editions of The Payson Chronicle in print.  Subscribe today at paysonads.com.

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Furthering a Fine Tradition: Senior Citizens’ Ceramics Exhibit Enters Third Year


Like clockwork each Wednesday, a group of Payson women gather at the Payson Senior Center ceramics room.  Here, they find a studio stocked with the tools and materials they need for their masterpieces.  Using paint and glaze and, at times, smoke from a candle, they apply their artistic touch to ceramic figures, chosen themselves or by family with special requests to fill.  They are now sharing the result of their artwork, albeit by observation only, at a ceramics exhibit at the Peteetneet Museum and Cultural Arts Center in Payson.
The annual Senior Citizens Ceramic Show, now in its third year, is in full swing through the end of April.  It showcases favorite pieces by these Senior Citizen Center artisans, all of whom receive instruction by Marie Noll.
Marie has spent the past six years as the ceramics instructor at the Center, but her experience extends far beyond her time in Payson. ”I’ve been doing ceramics for almost all my adult life,” she said last week, as the group met inside the exhibition site, Room D on the Peteetneet’s main floor.  Ceramic making and painting were popular among her peers during the first years of her marriage.  Marie dove into the artistic outlet while her husband, Gary Noll, served in the U.S. Military.  She even ran her own ceramics studio for eleven years while the couple resided in Dixon, California, before they moved to Payson.
As the instructor at the Payson Senior Center, Marie teaches the ladies--and an occasional gentleman or two joining the group from time to time--how best to use the mediums appropriate for ceramics: Acrylic and oil paints, glazes, and not to mention, the smoking technique mentioned above.
Most of all, Marie facilitates a friendly experience for the artisans who meet each week for her direction in the ceramics room. “We sit there and just have fun,” she said.
There seems to be a strong consensus among the women who shared this remark with the Chronicle last week.  That is, enjoyment and the pleasure of creating art among friends are what have kept them returning to the Payson Senior Center ceramics room week after week.
“I enjoy going to ceramics because it’s a place to be with friends,” Joye Jasperson echoed her instructor.  “And I enjoy making new things.”
Among these things, now on display at the Peteetneet, are Joy’s adorable handpainted gnome, a turtle, snail, ladybug, frog, caveman, and a welcome sign maintained by a scarecrow that appears more welcoming than his title suggests.
Near the entrance in the room sits Lois Hicks’s finely painted bust of a Native American.  Other ceramics she has carefully created and included in the show are fine Christmas decor, whimsical ants, an alligator, and a frog on a rock.
“It’s fun to do- we love it!” she said of the ceramics program in Payson..
“I enjoy coming to the Senior Center to be with the group to do ceramics,” Dorothy James said. “And I do yard ornaments.  So I have a duck and a frog and a turtle and a worm and an owl, because I like to make things to sit in my flower bed.”
To prepare them for the elements outside, Dorothy turns to applications which aid her characters as they reside in fluctuating weather. One technique involves a graveling effect, she said, while another still is the application of a glaze to protect her pieces before they are placed outside.  “That makes it so they are more weatherproof,” she added.
Meanwhile, Nola Adams is drawn to what appeals to her at the moment.  “I do them as [they] come,” she said.  “Whatever I feel” at the time.
Her contributions this year are her beautiful Native American figurines, whimsical characters, as well as a remarkable piece depicting Jesus Christ at a door, knocking, signifying a hope to be allowed inside.
Betty Frisby, a relative newcomer to the ceramics group, is still working on completing pieces for future shows, as well as for the countless family members and friends in the community who are often gifted by the senior artisans.   Betty joined the local Senior Citizens a year ago and has been attending the ceramics group for about seven-eight months.
“I’m glad that [Marie Noll] can get in there and teach me how to draw a straight line,” said Betty, her bright smile alluding to a sense of happiness and belonging shared among them.
Although Dawna Larson had not yet submitted any of her work as of March 5, she said she planned on doing so soon.  Among the items she will likely include in the exhibit are her lighthouse and a tall vase, she said.
As for the ceramics group and the work they do together as friends?  “I love it!” Dawna said. “I look forward to Wednesdays.  I don’t even have to write it in my planner.  I just know that I get to go to ceramics.”  
Would she encourage others in the community join them?  “Yes!” said Dawna, smiling as she stood in the gallery among these friends at their current exhibit.  
The Senior Center ceramics studio is open from 9 AM - 4 PM each Wednesday and the ladies arrive anytime in between.  Some prefer to work from home, which is fine, noted ceramics instructor, Marie.
“Ceramics isn’t just a hobby,” Marie explained.  “It’s actually something that relieves stress, and it’s something that you can give to friends and family that will last beyond our lifetime.
“We are seniors.  This is something we can pass down.  And our grandchildren think we’re geniuses,” Marie chuckled.
You can view a piece of this special tradition at the Peteetneet Museum and Cultural Arts Center during its regular operating hours.  The museum is open Monday through Friday, from 10 AM - 4 PM, and is located at 10 North 600 East, Payson.

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Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Big Plans Ahead for Chamber; President Seeks Payson City Support


Payson Chamber of Commerce President Colin Logue, photographed March 6  inside his office in east Payson. 
Payson’s new Chamber of Commerce President, Colin Logue took a moment at the mic of the March 5 city council meeting to announce some big plans in store for the local business group, as well as seek support from Payson leaders.


More immediate among the events, Mr. Logue noted, is its annual installation banquet.  The banquet will take place March 21, at the Peteetneet Museum and Cultural Arts Center, with Clarion Garden & Event Center lined up as caterer. The guest speaker will be Jason Chaffetz, Utah 3rd District Congressman, Logue added.


“I’m hoping that everybody on the council will take the time on that night--which is going to be on a Friday night,” and attend, said Mr. Logue, noting that tickets for the event are still available for purchase.


“It should be a good night,” he added. “We’re really happy about that.”


The Chamber also has its sights on sponsoring a series of movie nights this summer on the Peteetneet grounds, “Free for the citizens of Payson,” Logue said.  But at a cost to the Chamber of Commerce.


According to Logue, movie system fees are estimated at $500.  Logue requested the City pay half, while the Chamber of Commerce would come up with the matching $250. The screening rights for films the Chamber is considering screening are available free of cost to governing bodies, like Payson City, according to Logue, while the chamber of commerce would require to pay a fee in order to acquire the licenses.  To avoid the additional cost, Logue also asked city leaders to place the order on behalf of Payson’s Chamber of Commerce.


Requirements would limit the audience numbers to 200 guests per screening, according to Logue; wristbands could be made available by sponsoring businesses to ensure attendance numbers not be exceeded.  Further promotional opportunities will be made available to participating businesses, on site, at each event.


“I want to present this to you and have you talk it over amongst yourselves,” said Colin, “maybe for another Council meeting.”


The upcoming annual Easter egg hunt and a the Shop Payson Expo, slated for June 21, are among other events sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce to look forward to in Payson, Logue said.


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Payson Forms Economic Development Board


Meet the Payson Economic Board: (pictured, front row, left-right): Amanda Baker, Board Secretary; Scott Wilson, Nebo School District; Brian Hulet, Board Chairman and Vice President, Central Bank; Payson Mayor Rick Moore; Payson City Councilman Mike Hardy; (back row, left-right): Payson City Manager David Tuckett; Luke Peterson, Utah Valley University; Lorne Grierson; Jacob Atkin, Utah Valley University; Ric Johnson, Mountain View Hospital; and Payson City Councilman Scott Phillips.  Absent from photo: Evan Ockey, Russ Fotheringham, Noam Temkin, Deidre Henderson, and Rhett Huff.

Read more about it in this week’s edition of The Payson Chronicle.  Order YOUR subscription today at paysonads.com. For a taste of The Payson Chronicle, check out our new website at www.paysonchronicle.com.

Friday, March 7, 2014

Huff Family Contest Celebrates--and Rewards--Community’s Young Music Makers

Pictured: The late Lewis Huff’s children join the winners of a long-running music contest bearing his name on stage: (pictured left-right): Wayne Huff, Tate Grimshaw, David Green, Katie Gneiting, Jacob Hayes, and Matthew Palmer.  See all the participants of the 2014 Huff Music Contest in the March 12, 2014 printed edition of The Payson Chronicle.


A decades-long tradition celebrating excellence in music-making continued March 4th. That was when the annual Huff Music Contest brought together fourteen young musicians to the auditorium at Payson High School, all there for an evening of harmonious competition.

Competition, though friendly, was tight, and every performance proved pleasing to the ear.  But only four could walk away as winners after the final song had played.

Winning the contest's highest honor that night was Katie Gneiting.  She was presented a large trophy for having won the Sweepstakes prize for her stunning vocal solo.  Rendering winning performances, too, were Tate Grimshaw, who was awarded this year’s Instrumental Solo Award for his percussion performance, while vocalist David Green won the Vocal Solo Award, and Samantha Hayes walked away with the Piano Solo Award.

Marilyn Morgan, Payson High School Choir Instructor, and Brad Collins, PHS Orchestra Instructor, led the event.  As a panel of three judges deliberated, Abby Bennion, 2013 Huff Music Contest Instrumental Solo Award winner, joined, too, by delighting the audience with a performance on French horn.  

The Huff Music Contest was established in Payson over forty years ago by the late Lewis Huff.  Mr. Huff was active in the Kiwanis Club talent contest, as well as the Peteetneet School and local dance bands, of his day, and saw a need to create the event as means by which to celebrate the community’s music makers.

Two of Lewis’s children, Wayne Huff and Colleen H. Wilson, represented the Huff family at last week’s competition. “We look forward to hearing the youth perform,” said Wayne, as he and his sister shared a bit of history with an audience gathered to take part in its continuation.  Wayne further thanked music instructors, Mr. Collins and Mrs. Morgan, for supporting and helping to sustain a contest that has surpassed its fortieth year.

Colleen noted that two of her children, April Wilson Jones and Rhett Wilson, who were in the audience that evening, were among a long list of Huff Music Contest participants over the years.

“We are so happy that it is still here,” Colleen added.



David Green (pictured here as he sings "Loch Lomond") was awarded the Vocal Solo Award at Tuesday night's Huff Music Contest in Payson. Subscribe to the Chronicle. Log on to paysonads.com today and you will be on your way!

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Thursday, March 6, 2014

Coming Up Next

Last week, we featured Zach Voorhees, a Payson restaurateur, whose flair for flavor has been bottled for sale in his new commercial venture: Poor Boys Sauces.  Coming up next, we talk with a talented esthetician and businesswoman, Cloey Roper, whose spa on Utah Avenue is a favorite place for respite among locals.  Check out next week’s edition of The Payson Chronicle as we turn the spotlight on Cloey’s Skinporeium. PIctured: Cloey Roper in her spa at 145 East Utah Avenue in Payson, Utah.
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Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Katie Gneiting Wins Huff Music Contest Sweepstakes Prize

Vocalist, Katie Gneiting (pictured, far left, with trophy) walked away with the Sweepstakes prize following last night's Huff Music Contest.  She was among fourteen extraordinary musicians who took part in the competition, held in the auditorium at Payson High. The Huff Music Contest has been encouraging young musicians to pursue their talents for forty years, thanks largely to the family of the contest's founder, the late Lewis Huff. Representing the Huff family last night on stage were two of his children, Wayne Huff (second from left) and Colleen H. Wilson (second from right).  Marilyn Morgan (far right), Payson High School choir instructor, helped facilitate the competition, serving as the evening’s emcee.  Find a complete list of the participants and prize winners, and view additional photos taken during the event, in next week’s edition of The Payson Chronicle.
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Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Santaquin Area Chamber Presents Awards, Installs Officers

Swearing an oath to serve as Santaquin Area Chamber of Commerce officers Saturday evening (pictured left-right) are: Brenda Shupe, Angela Kay, Carri Thompson, and Nick Miller.  See this and other photographs taken during the Fifteenth Annual Installation Banquet in this week's edition of The Payson Chronicle.

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The Payson Chronicle

In This Week’s Edition