Now the city of Layton has gotten into the act.
Norton, who was told by a city official last winter that the sign in his yard did not violate zoning ordinances, received a letter from the Layton City Attorney's Office recently informing him that, upon further review, the sign does violate the ordinance and he would have 10 days to take it down.
The sign currently contains 1,715 postage-stamp-sized pictures of each dead soldier that Norton downloads from CNN's Web site. The number is updated whenever there is a new casualty. Above the pictures is a large bold-faced headline denoting the latest number of Americans killed in Iraq. Next to the sign is an American flag.
Norton says that by day, many people, including veterans, stop by and thank him for keeping the sacrifices of the soldiers and their families in the public eye. But by night he is harassed by anonymous antagonists, including one who shined a spotlight into his 6-year-old daughter's window.
The letter, from Layton Assistant City Attorney Stephen Garside, said the city inspector who told Norton six months ago that his sign was OK used the wrong code section in reviewing the sign.
Norton responded by telling the city to cite him, because he could find nothing in the code to indicate a violation and, he noted, the city code specifically exempts memorials. His sign is a memorial to the soldiers.
Norton has obtained an attorney and is prepared to fight. "I will go to jail before I will pay a fine for displaying a sign that honors the war dead," he said.
The good old days: At the exclusive Alta Club in downtown Salt Lake City, where women were not allowed as members until the 1980s, three framed photographs of stately looking women hang in the second floor women's restroom.
Two of the women are identified as community leaders of the past. The caption under the third photograph identifies the matronly looking figure as an "infamous lady of the evening."
Can't we all get along? When Donald Dunn replaced Meg Holbrook two years ago as the Democratic state chairman of Utah, one of his first moves was to get rid of longtime executive director Todd Taylor.
Dunn had run against Holbrook on the issues of priorities for the party and organizational efficiencies. The party needed to move in a different direction, Dunn said at the time.
Now, it appears, the Democratic Party needs to reverse direction again and go back to where it was going before.
New Party Chairman Wayne Holland and the party's executive committee have decided to bring back Taylor, who had worked for several Democratic Party regimes and is known to have encyclopedic knowledge of local politics and election laws.
prolly@sltrib.com

