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Neighbors gather to try out Santa Clara park renovation.


Byline: Serena Markstrom The Register-Guard

They traveled on bicycles, tricycles and on foot. Some carried hula hoops hula hoops

large plastic hoops revolved around body by hip action (1950s). [Am. Hist.: Sann, 145–149]

See : Fads
 and Frisbees while others tugged their younger siblings in wagons, but these kids had one mission in common Thursday evening: to officially dedicate a Santa Clara-area park their neighborhood stomping grounds.

"This is a great park," 4-year-old Lilly Nino said, as her mom pushed her on a swing. "It's called Awbrey Park."

There were games, relay races, speeches, plenty of giggling and new grass stains. Mayor Kitty Piercy "Kitty" Piercy is the current mayor of Eugene, Oregon, sworn in January of 2005.

The press dubbed Piercy's election part of a "shift to the left" for the Eugene City Council.
 was there, too, and pointed out that attendees had eaten 50 pizzas.

"I didn't know the mayor was a girl!" Lilly squealed.

Piercy was an enthusiastic girl for this event, thanking the Junction City Junction City, city (1990 pop. 20,604), seat of Geary co., NE Kans., at the confluence of the Republican and Smoky Hill rivers; inc. 1859. The rail, trade, and processing center of an agricultural and dairy area, it grew as the supply point for nearby Fort Riley,  Polka polka, ballroom dance for couples in 2/4 time. Originated by Bohemian peasants about 1830 from steps of the schottische and other dances, the polka by 1835 reached the drawing rooms of Prague, from which it spread to the capitals of Europe.  Band for providing the perfect music for a day like Thursday that was "very upbeat, very sunny," Piercy said. "I remember coming here when it wasn't this beautiful. It feels great to be here."

Instead of a traditional ribbon-cutting, organizers attached blue crepe crepe (krāp), thin fabric of crinkled texture, woven originally in silk but now available in all major fibers. There are two kinds of crepe.  paper to two trees and held a three-legged race three-leg·ged race  
n.
A race in which contestants run in pairs with their near legs tied together.


three-legged race
Noun

a race in which pairs of competitors run with their adjacent legs tied together
 to break the "ribbon." Piercy and Parks and Open Space employee John Weber ran the race but were badly beaten by a bunch of kids who were much quicker on their conjoined conjoined /con·joined/ (kon-joind´) joined together; united.

conjoined

joined together.


conjoined monsters
two deformed fetuses fused together.
 feet.

Revamping Awbrey Park, which is just north of Spring Creek A spring creek is a stream that flows from a spring. Spring Creek may refer to any of the following specific places:
  • Spring Creek, Arkansas
  • Spring Creek, California
  • Spring Creek (Colorado), a tributary of the Cache La Poudre River
  • Spring Creek, Florida
 Drive on River Road, was possible because of a 1998 bond measure that gave the city $2.5 million to create new parks and improve existing ones, said Weber, a semi-retired landscape architect who designed the park.

His plan includes a yet-to-be-built bridge that would connect the park to subdivisions on the north end so kids wouldn't have to walk along River Road to get there, Weber said.

He said Awbrey's face-lift cost about $300,000. For that price, area families got playgrounds, concrete paths, a parking lot and street lights for safety.

Contractors didn't damage any trees excavating and building, Weber said.

Designers took Spring Creek, a wide-open field of grass and a wooded wildlife oasis into account.

For that reason, the play structures and paths are bunched into the southwest portion of the 6-acre park.

Part of the city's overall goal is for all people to have a park within a half mile of where they live or work, Piercy told the group.

Three-year-old Baily Schaefer got a ride from her dad to the park and said she liked it because it has so many, many things. "And I like pizza," she added.

When asked if she thought there would be pizza at the park every time she came, she replied with a confident, "Yes."

There won't be pizza, but everything else she liked will be there.
COPYRIGHT 2005 The Register Guard
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Government
Publication:The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
Date:May 13, 2005
Words:444
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