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Show Wed/Thurs/Fri, June 8-10, 200§ The Park Record C-12 Fashion naturalforinvestor Please join us for our first annual WWWWW Festival. Learn more about Weeds, Wildflowers, Wildlife, Watersheds, and Wetlands by local experts ffee ff> fhe jruhlfc and'a Qfea Swaner Nature Preserve Kiosk • Saturday, June 11, 2005 12.00 - 3.00 PM Weed and Wildflower Tour on Preserve 12:00-1 ;00PM • Weed identification and botany tour • Dyert Woad bag distribution and pickup • Informational brochure handout • Weed display Birding Exhibition 1:00-2:00 PM Nature Tour and Wetland Education 2:00-3:00PM • Scope and binoculars, birding instruction • Raptor education and wingspan display • Guided nature tour of the Preserve • Watershed and wetland education • Live falconry exhibition • Discussion of local water issues For more information calf 435-649-1767 Collection bags will be distributed for invasive Dyer's Woad, and a S 5 fee can be earnedforeach bag. •Swaner Nature Preserve Onceintonta! Junctor g Bmer Rd. toting e<.u. Tr^d &yyq fenet Rd. wftch /urn p^t?f to fSO. for just Ortf a m^e und ycu rc-tdi the I£Q urWefjMi', (HgWard Dr.ve] T ^ a fcght (KuthJ urxJs 1-60 and then an "imed^e n^ni (west) a t o a paved road [rut leads io trw Preserve ertrance. A shon ctswnce dcwn [he road you w i iee ihe Swaner Nature Prewve w;n and kiosk Pa^w*} FS j/s^Oe a rr>e Preserve • Educate • Nurture www. swanernaturepreseve.org SWANER didates and waited his turn, musBy SUZANNE S. BROWN tering the guts to model before MediaNews Group Wir Service four male judges and a largely Denver - Erik Sale went to a female audience scrutinizing party Wednesday night thinking every sartorial detail. he would meet the best-dressed Among his competitors were man in Denver. an anesthesiologist and a wedInstead, the 31-year-old real ding planner, a wine steward and estate entrepreneur won the a college student. They gave a fashion nod. short spiel about themselves and Sale now will .compete with their sense of style before modelnine other guys across the coun- ing sleek suits and beaded jeans, try for the title of Esquire maga- starched shirts and scruffy zine's Best Dressed Real Man in Converse sneakers. America, as well as a car, clothes As contestant No. 17, Sale was and other prizes. near the end. Sale, a strapping 6-foot-2 "I'm from Vail, I work in blond who likes to wear jeans Denver, and I'm a real estate and snow clogs in the winter and investor and developer," he said shorts and flip-flops in the sum- when it was his turn to face the mer, says he met friend and judges. Realtor Rollie Jordan at a "My sense of style is somerestaurant on Wednesday for thing like mountain passion what he thought would be a meets city spontaneity, similar to drink before the two went to din- my participation in this competiner at another restaurant. tion. I sort of play it by ear. I He knew a party was going on don't have specific labels. I like at the upscale menswear retailer to do what comes naturally." that teamed up with Esquire to Sale earned the winning posihost the search, but entered the tion because he "was casual, but contest only after he was encour- he definitely cared about his aged to do so by Jordan and the appearance," said Wendell registration clerks. Brown, Esquire's senior fashion Wearing faded blue jeans, a editor. red striped button-front shirt "He was extremely confident and brown leather jacket, Sale but he wasn't arrogant," the got in line with the other 20 can- fashion editor said. "He had a nice sort of clean-cut, whole-! some, out-West look. It's som>-^ thing we haven't really picked up< on so far on this search - a little! rugged and casual, but pulled*,l together." •, Posing for photos, Sale said he! felt "a little giddy" and was wait-' ing for the reality to sink in. Not as much of a fashion! hound as some of the other con-^ testants, Sale shops for clothe^ only a couple of times a year.! The pants and shirt he was wear-! ing came from Riga, Latvia,1 where he recently visited witli! family members. >| When asked to pick a favorite^ designer. Sale said he Iike^ Giorgio Armani but is more like-! ly to wear sportswear than a suit.' The Oregon native also ha'^! clothing specific to such favorite!1 sports as skiing, white-water kayaking and fly-fishing. ;The Esquire team will visit 10; cities in all, picking one semv; finalist from each. Esquire's edf-.' tors will narrow that list .to five,; who will be featured in the mag'-' azine's September issue. The fiveJ will participate in a last round in; which viewers of "The Today Show" will make the final choice..' The winner will get a new., Chrysler Crossfire and a $2,000' shopping spree at Macy's. ! Cold cases heat tilings up in novel (AP) In "The Closers," Michael Connelly's 11th in the series, Harry Bosch finally finds his calling: as a detective in the Los Angeles Police Department's new Open-Unsolved Unit. The voices that draw him to it belong to "the chorus of forgotten victims." First, though, he had to be lured back to the department. A few books ago, Bosch had left it to become a private detective after too many run-ins with his boss, Deputy Chief Irvin S. Irving, who, to Bosch, seemed more concerned with covering his own tracks than with tracking down criminals, a suspicion since confirmed. The opportunity to work with his former partner Kizmin Rider on a cold-case team that has the blessing of the new chief - who shares Bosch's passion for justice - tips the scales toward his return. Only an hour into his first case, a 1988 abduction and murder of a The Park City Chamber/Bureau presents biracial high school girl, Bosch Vorloren was snatched from her; feels his adrenaline begin to stir. bed, her mother had left the room"It didn't matter how long ago virtually untouched - except for' the blood had fallen. There was a tidying the girl's cat-pattern quilt,; killer in the wind and Bosch was unknowingly giving Bosch ah coming. Like the prodigal son important clue. returning, he knew he was back in Everyone else thinks the moth-; his place now. He was baptized er is crazy, but Bosch doesn't. He again in the waters of the one true understands that her life ended". church. The church of the blue when her daughter's did. religion. And he knew that he The father also never recov;-. would find his salvation in those ered from Rebecca's death,"; who were long lost, that he would though his sadness played out difi-"1 find it in these musty bibles where ferently. He began drinking heav> the dead lined up in columns and ily, left his wife, lost his restaurant' there were ghosts on every page." - the one where Rebecca had"; From the beginning of the worked that summer she was series, Connelly has made Bosch a killed - and ended up on the; haunted and introspective charac- street. ter, one who lives to decipher how When Bosch finds him, howeV-i and, especially, why others died. er, he sees that the father ha< His personal life is a mere distrac- recently taken steps to improvetion, although thoughts of his himself and his life. "young daughter who lives far But dredging up the memory ofaway help him empathize with the the murder, even with such noble-mother and father in his current intentions, has consequences that case. .,a neither Bosch and Rider, nor theSince the night Rebecca new chief could have imagined.*^ '. House 8 Pet Sitting Service The June Business After-Hours Mixer and Summer Tourism Tradeshow House & Pet Sitting Services with you and your pef s happiness & well being in mind Vocation Sitting • Midday Walk or Play Visit • Feeding The Chateaux at Silver Lake 7815 Royal Street East Wednesday, June 8th «f - 7 p.m. • Overnight Sitting • Plant Care •a Annie's House & Pet Sitting Service Call now for availability & pricing 435-962-2663 Loving Care for those you love 25+ businesses represented! AMAZinG PRIZE GIVEAWAYS! Alpine Slide & Zip Rider tickets Tickets to The Pointer Sisters at Deer Valley Resort Utah Jazz tickets Rafting trip on the Weber River Gift certificates to Hapa Grill, Goldener Hirsch Inn N or Red Rock Junction Summer bobsled ride at the Utah Olympic Park Mark your calendars to attend-no need to RSVPf Bring plenty of business cards! ART. ASK FOR MORE. For more information about the importance of arts education, please contact www. AmericansForTlieArts.org'. Call 435-644-6100 for more details. AMERICANS CHAMBER OF COMMERCE/CONVENTION« VISITORS BUREAU parkcitylnfo.com |