OCR Text |
Show A-4 Wed/Thurs/Fri, October 2-4, 2019 The Park Record Council celebrates blue-ribbon art dinner nightly at 5pm COURTESY OF BEAU RINGEL weekend live music join us in our lounge 25 OFF DINNER $ with the purchase of two entrees Please present this coupon to your server when ordering at Riverhorse on Main. Limit TWO dining certificates per group. | Not valid in conjunction with any other promotional offer. | Food must be consumed on premises. | A 20% service charge will be added to the bill before the discount. | Contracted parties not valid. Valid Through October 31st, 2019 540 Main Street, Park City RiverhorseParkCity.com 435-649-3536 Riverhorse on Main @riverhorseonmain Solar Made Simple LEARN HOW YOU CAN GO SOLAR SCPW Solar is a community-led program bringing Summit and Wasatch County homeowners a discounted and streamlined solar installation process. Made possible by Get started! Take the solar survey at SCPWSolar.org Made possible by COURTESY OF MICHEAUX BROCK The Summit County Council will recognize the blue-ribbon art winners from the Summit County Fair, Micheaux Brock in the adult division and youth artist Beau Ringel. Brock says her work, right, titled ‘Cordell’s Cows,’ was inspired by bike rides to her mom’s house that took her past this scene. “I’d bike past Cordell’s house and one day I stopped and I said, ‘Oh, my goodness, I’m snapping a picture. I want to paint this,’” she said. Brock has won several awards for her painting, including the first year she entered a piece in the County Fair when she was in seventh grade. This is the second year Beau Ringel has been painting, the second year he’s entered a piece in the County Fair and the second year he won an award for doing so. He said he paints in an art class in Henefer, and that he likes to work with oil paints because of the greater control it affords the painter. He plans to keep painting and enroll in the class again next year, and said it felt “pretty good” when he found out he had won. Continued from A-3 Sheriff’s report The woman texted a friend to call the Sheriff’s Office, and deputies went to the woman’s Silver Summit home to find her children alive and well. Deputies indicated the number appeared to be from Mexico and could not be tracked down or called back, and that the call appeared to be a scam. A Jeremy Ranch man suspects his ex-wife stole $1,800 worth of lawn decorations from his front yard, but has no proof. The suspect also appears to have attempted to enter the back of the residence, as a deck window screen was damaged. Deputies indicated the man was working on retrieving surveillance footage from a doorbell camera. Sometime in the last week, a person broke into a vehicle in Summit Park and stole a subwoofer. It was valued at $150 and deputies indicated the In- vestigations Division would follow up with the database for pawn shops. Someone stole a privately owned asphalt sealer from the Home Depot parking lot sometime earlier this month. Deputies indicated there wasn’t surveillance footage where the machine was parked, its owner couldn’t provide a serial number and there were no suspects in the case. Tuesday, Sept. 24 Thousands of dollars worth of tools were stolen from a Summit Park utility trailer overnight. Deputies indicated there are no suspects in the case and that they would follow up. A counterfeit $100 bill was passed at a Kimball Junction gas station. The suspect was captured on surveillance footage, as well as the newer model Toyota Rav4 he was driving and its Utah license plate, though the numbers are illegible. Deputies indicated the case would be forwarded to the Investigations Division. Monday, Sept. 23 A patron at a Snyderville Basin hotel checked in using fake credit cards. After being confronted by staff, he provid- ed another credit card that may have been altered. Deputies indicated they unsuccessfully attempted to contact the man, but would follow up. A 35-year-old Taylorsville man was arrested for an active warrant at a Snyderville Basin hotel. Deputies found drug paraphernalia and prescription drugs and several credit cards that were not his in his luggage. Deputies indicated they would follow up about the recovered credit cards. A Bear Hollow father reported that his daughter’s iPhone XR was stolen at a party two days earlier. Deputies indicated there were no suspects but they had listed the phone in a national database. A truck was stolen from a Woodland driveway after it was left unlocked with the keys in it. The victim said it was a company truck and had been left parked with other company equipment. Deputies indicated they had listed the truck in a national database. A witness called sheriff’s deputies to report two men fighting at a Coalville gas station. They left in opposite directions, but deputies located both and determined one brother to be the aggressor and arrested him. BRAIN FITNESS THE PROGRAM INCLUDES: • 7 weekly 90-minute sessions presented by doctors, dietitians, exercise physiologists, and licensed mental health providers. • Personalized action plan to maintain optimal brain health through healthy lifestyle behaviors • Small group interactive sessions • One year subscription to AARP’s Staying Sharp online brain health program TOPICS INCLUDE The LiVe Well Center offers a program to educate you about evidencebased healthy lifestyle behaviors that support brain health. Every Tuesday from October 8 – November 19, 3:00 - 4:30 pm. In the Blair Education Center, Room 1-B LiVe Well Center Park City 900 Round Valley Dr., Suite 110, Park City, UT 84060 Phone: (435) 333-3535 Email: livewellcenterparkcity1@imail.org • Think Well: Understanding the brain and how aging and disease affects brain function — Cognitive practices to maintain brain health. • Move Well: Brain healthy physical activity. • Eat Well: Brain healthy nutrition. • Sleep Well: Translating sleep wellness to cognitive wellness. • Relax Well: Brain healthy stress and relaxation management — Inner wellness practices and brain health. • Love Well: Living with love and purpose for brain health support. • Connect Well: Connecting with the community and resources. • Be Well: Translating physical wellness to cognitive wellness. • Live Well: Putting the brain fitness plan into action. The program is not intended for individuals already experiencing symptoms of cognitive impairment, nor is it for caregivers of individuals with cognitive impairment who are seeking resources to aide in their caregiving responsibilities. The program fee is $175. Brain Fitness is available to adults of any age, who are in generally good cognitive health and are interested in learning how they can maintain their cognitive health. Download a program application and register for the program at intermountainhealthcare.org/brainfitnesspc |