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Show A-2 Wed/Thurs/Fri, May 30-June 1, 2012 The Park Record The Park Record, Park City's No. 1 source for local news, opinions and advertising, is now available for home delivery in Summit, Wasatch, Salt Lake, Davis and Utah counties. Single copies are also available at 116 locations throughout Park City, Heber City, Summit County, Salt Lake City. 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The Record's Web site also hosts interactive entertainment, restaurant and lodging listings, multimedia features and community blog forums. Contents of The Park Record are copyright © 2004, Utah Media Inc. All rights reserved. No portion may be reproduced in any form without written consent of the managing editor or publisher. The Park Record (USPS 378-730) (ISSN 0745-9483) is published twice weekly by Utah Media Inc., 1670 Bonanza Drive, Park City, Utah, 84060. Periodicals Postage Paid at Salt Lake City, Utah, 84199-9655 and at additional mailing offices. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Park Record, P.O. Box 3688, Park City, Utah, 84060. Entered as second-class matter, May 25, 1977, at the Post Office in Park City, Utah, 84060 under the Act of March 3, 1897. Subscription rates are: $42 within Summit County, $70 outside of Summit County, Utah. Subscriptions are transferable: $5 cancellation fee. Phone (435) 649-9014, fax (435) 649-4942 or email circulation@parkrecord.com. Published every Wednesday and Saturday.. Be on time online will vote on whether to authorize an $8.5 million bond to construct a North Summit Recreation Center, which will raise property taxes. Cowley said the full language and an explanation of the bond are posted online. "The language is pretty clear, but it may help for people to see it ahead of time and be able to ask North Summit Recreation if they have any questions Continued From A-1 Player earns recognition on and off the field, and is a valued academic role model within the school community." The explanation aptly describes Case. During lacrosse season, Case would get up at 5:45 a.m. two to three days a week to be a peer tutor at Park City High School. After school, Case would have a couple hours for homework or social activities until lacrosse practice got underway, typically at 5 p.m. each day. In addition to his grueling schedule, he is the head of the Red Cross chapter at PCHS and is also a youth liaison on the board of directors for the Red Cross Salt Lake City chapter. "He is not the best player on the field, not the star of the team, but really, like all of these kids, to put in the practice time, practice six times a week from January on … it takes so much dedication," said his mother, Kristen Case. "Again, Caleb is not the only one. To be in lacrosse, they have to be involved." According to a press release from US Lacrosse, Bob Scott served as the men's head lacrosse coach for Johns Hopkins from 1955 until 1974. He compiled a career record of 158 wins and 55 losses, winning seven national championships. He coached at Johns Hopkins longer than any other coach (20 years) and is still its all-time leader in career wins. Scott served as athletic director for Johns Hopkins from 1974 to 1995 and was inducted into the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame in 1977. Continued From A-1 Main Street Deli robbed as scraggly. The person was wearing a black long-sleeved shirt or a sweat shirt. The Police Department has identified a person of interest and has spoken to the man. Kirk said the investigation is continuing, though. Anyone with information may call the Police Department at 615-5500. BEST SWIM LESSONS & SWIM TEAM START 6/11 non-members welcome! 80+ FREE weekly Classes 2 CLUBS... 1 LOW PRICE Prospector Club 649-6670 Kimball Jct. Club 575-0350 www.SilverMountainSportsClub.com about it prior to voting," he said. Prior to the November General Election, Cowley said he does not expect any new online features to be added. Instead, the clerk's office will update and refine what they already have. "There are not very many other counties or states that are implementing smart phone features like this," he said. "And while it is against state law to vote online, we want people to be able to do as much as possible." To view a sample ballot or download a Summit County voting app, visit www.summitcounty.org/clerk. Residents who would like to vote in the primary election must register to vote in person or online by June 11. Early voting begins June 12 and will last until June 22. Primary Election Day is June 26. "This is an opportunity to show our appreciation to a player who may or may not be All-American-level, but like Bob Scott, has a true passion and love for the game," said Stephen Berger, US Lacrosse men's game director in the release. Case has a true passion for lacrosse, and has since fifth grade. "Compared to a lot of sports I've played, it's a free-wheeling, go-andplay kind of sport," he explained. "It's more than just run around with a stick and hit people. Some of it is a good combination of grace, some things are really smooth and pretty to watch, and there's just as much gritty toughness. There's good balance." Case will be attending Claremont McKenna College, a private liberal arts school near Los Angeles, Calif., this fall. "It was one of my favorite schools I'd seen," he said. "If we could make it work, I was into it. "And they have club lacrosse, and I definitely want to keep playing." Kristen Case said the Bob Scott Award wouldn't have been possible without the help of head coach Andy Langendorf, who spent an hour-anda-half filling out the necessary online forms to nominate Case. At the end-of-the-year team banquet, the team gave the brainiac a standing ovation. "To see them be so happy for him - and they really were - that meant a lot," Kristen Case said. And it did to Caleb Case, too. "It feels like at least four years worth of recognition kind of bundled into one, four years of working hard two hours a day and trying to juggle everything else in the process," he said. "It was nice to be recognized for all the juggling I did." The case is a rare episode of a violent robbery in Park City, and Main Street has long been considered a safe place to do business. The police regularly patrol the street in their vehicles at all hours while foot patrols on Main Street are also commonplace. Rick Ryan, another police captain, said Tuesday morning the police are not close to making an arrest. "There's just not enough there yet, evidence-wise, on any particular individual," Ryan said. The Main Street Deli is a longstanding restaurant that occupies a hightraffic location on the 500 block of the street. An owner declined to discuss the case. The worker who was attacked was not immediately available for comment. view your Park Record subscription online at parkrecord.com Driver runs into teen Boy was in crosswalk at busy intersection, driver is ticketed By JAY HAMBURGER The Park Record A driver struck a teenage boy Tuesday morning while the boy was in a crosswalk at a busy Prospector intersection, throwing the 14-year-old eight feet and breaking one of his legs, the Utah Highway Patrol said. Trooper Lawrence Hopper said an ambulance took the teen to Park City Medical Center. The Park City Police Department said the accident occurred at just before 7 a.m. at the intersection of Kearns Boulevard and Bonanza Drive. Hopper said the teen, who is a student at Treasure Mountain Junior High School, was crossing the intersection with the signal on a longboard. A 17-year-old Park City High School student driving a pickup truck was southbound on Monitor Drive and turned left onto eastbound Kearns Boulevard, hitting the teen, Hopper said. Phil Kirk, a Park City police captain, said eastbound traffic on Kearns Boulevard was blocked for approximately 30 minutes as emergency crews responded. Kearns Boulevard is under the jurisdiction of the state. Hopper said the highway patrol cited the driver for failure to yield to a pedestrian in a crosswalk. Leash tails on trails Animal Control will conduct patrols in Park City, county By SARAH MOFFITT The Park Record As more residents and their pets take to the trails this summer, Summit County Animal Control officers are trying to make sure dogs remain leashed so the trails are safe for everyone. According to Summit County Personnel Director and head of Animal Control Brian Bellamy, officers will be on various trails throughout Summit County and Park City during the summer to remind residents that no matter how nice or well behaved their dog is, it has to be leashed. "We want to get ahead of the curve and start enforcing the leash ordinance before it gets even nicer out and more people begin walking their dogs on the trails," Bellamy said. "Our goal is to educate the public, not be mean or get anyone into trouble." Bellamy said that as long as residents are "decent about it," the officers will simply remind people about the ordinance and ask them to leash their dogs. Officers will carry extra leashes in case someone does not have one with them. Residents who do not have their dog on a leash can Continued From A-1 Respect, 50 years later in the Vietnam War. "Vietnam veterans have more respect now as a result of more recent wars," he said, adding, "In the recent wars, our vets have gotten a lot more respect." The Memorial Day ceremony at the cemetery, which was decorated for the holiday, drew a crowd of mixed ages, from the elderly to children. The American flag at the cemetery was lowered to half-staff. Some told the crowd about family members or friends who were killed or injured in wars starting in World War II. A few voices cracked as they spoke. Mayor Dana Williams, the son of Park City Karate hosts Utah Championship & USA Karate National Qualifier June 16, 2012 | Basin Rec - Fieldhouse be issued a citation and fined. "Everyone thinks their dog is the best, but sometimes dogs can get too excited or playful and jump up on someone and hurt them," he said. "If it is in your yard, we don't care, but on a public trail, they just have to be leashed." As part of the county's renewed effort to remind residents of the leash ordinance, Snyderville Basin Recreation District will post additional signs marking trails as "on-leash" areas. The most common phone call that animal control receives, according to Bellamy, is from trail-users reporting multiple dogs playing with each other off-leash and knocking someone over. "We have had problems in Round Valley of a dog biting someone, so things do happen if dogs are offleash," he said. "We don't want people to be scared of our officers, they just need to know we are trying to keep the trails safe. We have dog parks where residents can play fetch with their dogs and have them offleash." On Tuesday, animal control officers went to Willow Creek Park and encountered three dogs that were off the leash. The dog owners complied with the officer's request to leash the dogs. Bellamy added that Animal Control will announce where their officers will be ahead of time so that residents will be in compliance with the leash ordinance. a World War II veteran, briefly addressed the crowd, talking about honoring Park City soldiers who have served in Afghanistan and Iraq and mentioning that the Sea to Shining Sea bicycle ride involving wounded veteran is scheduled to stop in Park City in June. Another Vietnam War veteran at the event on Monday, Phil Jung, said the anniversary commemorations should focus on the people who served in Southeast Asia rather than the polarizing politics of the era. Jung served in Vietnam and in Thailand in 1972 and 1973, eventually spending 25 years in the Air Force before retiring in 1995 as a colonel. Now living in Kamas, Jung said on Monday there have been changes in amount of respect for soldiers in the time since the Vietnam War. He said the recognition then was limited to the families of the people who served. "We had no support, basically, from the general population," he said. "There's been a major shift in attitude." Save Money in Heber! EE e ng at ici m Pr FR i st ge E ka kata & kumite events June 16th, 2012 & c Pa Time: 8:00 a.m. Cost $50 for 1 event, $65 for 2 Location: Basin Rec- Fieldhouse All Karate Students ages 4 and up are invited to participate On-Line Registration only: www.tournamentinabox.com c ti o ne Carpet • Hardwood • Tile •Bamboo • Cork d By kumiteSEMINAR June 15th, 2012 Instructor: Tom Scott All Karate Students ages 6 and up are invited to attend Time: 6:00 -7:30 Cost $30 Location: Basin Rec-Fieldhouse Advance registration, phone Park City Karate (435)655-5755. Day-of registration permitted. 18 Time National Champion Jr. & Adult S po Serving Summit County since 1880 Continued From A-1 San The Park Record. for more information www.ParkCityKarate.com (435)655-5755 ns d By ore In Heber City You won't Believe What's Inside! 480 North Main Street • Heber City • 435-654-1817 |