OCR Text |
Show Page A4 Thursday, May 28, 1992 Park Record Police Blotter GREAT HOME, SMALL PRICE This 3 bdrm., 2.5 bath is loaded with amenities: hot tub, landscaping, tile floors, fenced yard, and great views. Approx. 1968 sq.ft. OwnerAgent. ASKING ONLY $129,000 DANIELS ACREAGE, just south of heber Two, 6.63 parcels on 3000 South near 1200 West. Combine them for over a 13-acre estate. Views of Timpanogas & Deer Creek. Trade or owner finance possible. $48,000 each. PROSPECTOR PARK LOT Oversized corner lot with great views of ski resort Near schools. Flat buildable lot on approx. .1 7 acres. $42,590. GLOBAL REALTY 1240 Park Ave. Michael Kermizis 649-2985, 645-8500 .J Park City's hottest new real estate specialist. RISTORANTE SUMIIVflEIR SPECIALS EVERY SUNDAY FETTLCiNi AlfREdo VEqqiE AlfREdo ChickEN AlfREdo $5.95 EarIv BiRd oNly, must be seatecJ by 7 p.M. b $4.95 EVERY MONDAY SpAqhETTj NiqhT $4.95 FEATURiNQ AS MUCh AS yOU WANT SpAQhETTi, SALAd, ANd QARliC bREAd OR YOUR OWN Gsero's Gourmet Pizza All NiqhT Lonq EVERY TUESDAY CasseroIe NiqhT Your choiCE of Joe's VeqetarIan, Lasaqna, EqqplANT Parmesana or LumaconI $5.95 EARly BiRd ONly, must Lte sEATEd by 7 p.M. EVERY WEDNESDAY ChickEN NiqhT BAkEd 12 ChickEN, ChickEN CAcciATORE, ChickEN Pesto or ChickEN Lasaqna $6.95 EARly BiRd ONly, must be SEATEd by 7 p.M. EVERY THURSDAY FREsh SEAfood NiqhT Snapper or SoIe over SpEdAiTy pastas ANd SEAfood RavIoII $7.95 & $9.95 All NiqhT Lonq OpEN Nicjkrly fROM 5:50 p.M. 649-5044 506 MaIn Street Carpet cleaners, golf balls create ruckus A concerned citizen reported at approximately 8 p.m. May 19 that an individual was fishing golf balls out of a pond on the Park City Golf Course. This individual apparently had been told before to leave the balls alone. Police searched the area, but the golf ball grabber was gone. Another carpet cleaner has been stolen in Park City. This one, a Bissel, was reported missing from the Edelweiss Haus May 21 along with a camera and a barbecue, presumably taken by a steak-eating, photo-taking house cleaner. A Heber man reported the theft of keys to all the Park Station CondosMay21. After a residential alarm went off at 4:38 a.m. at a Telemark Drive residence May 22, the Deer Valley Security person on duty called for police assistance. They found a window in the house smashed, but nothing stolen. Two males at The Club May 23 decided to offer their assistance to a woman arguing with another man. It wasn't necessarily needed. Officers broke up the fight at 1:36 am. An officer on patrol at three in the morning May 23 saw the car driving behind him hit another parked vehicle. The driver of the offending automobile, who obviously saw the police officer, jumped out of the car and fled on foot. His or her vehicle was impounded-and with an expired registration to boot; One Monarch Drive resident weary of the cacophony of hot air balloons soaring overhead Saturday mornings, called the police at 10:30 a.m. May 23 to file a noise complaint. An officer called to report May 23 at 7:30 p.m. he had just removed two juveniles from the roof of the Parks and Recreation Building. (This is the real reason behind Little League: to keep the youth off the roof.) A Park City woman called the police at 11 a.m. May 24 after discovering an unknown man asleep in her vehicle. Officers made contact with the tired individual, who seemed, they said, disoriented. Ambulance iiii fciiiiun uiiMirniin' nm mmmmn He claimed to have left Albertson's at 9 a.m but he had no idea how he ended up in her car (UFOs?). Police drove him home. A dog, apparently trying to hitch a ride on 1-80 May 24, got one--to the pound. Luckily the officer called to the scene recognized the wayward pooch and reunited him with his owner. Alarms went off at a residence on Hidden Splendor Court May 25 at 3:30 in the afternoon. After notifying the alarm company, officers checked the house out. They found a broken window and a golf ball. And other than four or five spats on Main Street Saturday night, that's all she wrote...this week. USU to hold dutch oven Sunday, May 17, the ambulance was called to the scene of a motor vehicle accident, but canceled en route. The ambulance was called to a home on upper Norfolk Avenue May 18 to assist a 74-year-old Park City woman, who was suffering from diabetes related medical problems. She was taken first to Park City Family Health & Emergency Center and then to Holy Cross Hospital in Salt Lake City where she was admitted. A 19-year-old Park City male who had injured his head in a skate boarding accident on the bike path behind the Miner's Hospital was taken first to the clinic and then to Holy Cross Hospital. The ambulance was called to a motor vehicle accident on State Road 224 May 20 but was canceled en route because there were no injuries. A 22-year-old Park City male, who allegedly jumped from a vehicle traveling north on SR 224 was taken to the University of , Utah hospital May 20. He sustained a basal skull fracture, knee and shoulder injuries in the fall, as well as possible internal injuries. He was admitted. The ambulance responded to an industrial construction site May 22 located at the Chaparral Condos in lower Deer Valley, where a 26-year-old construction worker from Salt Lake City had fallen 20 feet. He sustained head and neck injuries in the fall and was taken to Holy Cross Hospital for evaluation. An elderly couple sustained chest trauma in a motor vehicle mm m accident on Highway 40 May 22. A 74-old-male and 72-year-old female were both stabilized on the scene and transported by ambulance to the Burns Fire Station, where they were flown by AirMed to LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City. A 35-year-old man from Ogden was taken first from a Park City home to the clinic and then to the U. Hospital after having a reaction to medication. He was admitted. The ambulance was called to a home in Summit Park May 22 to assist a 42-year-old man from Park City who was experiencing chest pains. He was taken to Holy Cross Hospital where he was admitted. The ambulance was called to a motor vehicle accident May 23 but canceled en route. From May 17 to May 23 the ambulance was called on nine runs. classes Utah State University Enrichment Classes will hold Dutch oven cooking classes on Saturday, June 13, and Saturday, July 18, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The annual event is held at Upper Guinivah in Logan Canyon. Students learn how to season and clean a Dutch oven and to prepare a variety of meats, vegetables and desserts. The teachers demonstrate preparation of 14 dishes; students are served a complete meal by sampling the food. Pre-registration for the June 13 class must be completed by June 8, for the June 18 class by June 13, Mail $15 registration with name, address and phone number to: Enrichment Classes, Utah State University, Logan, UT 84321-3720. 'Run a Cop out of Town' to be held on May 28 T 1 1 C m. , BRAKE SERVICE 20 OFF All makes & models Certified in anti-lock brakes. Offer expires June 30, 1992 OtJE TOUGH MOTOR OIL $18.95 LUBE, OIL & FILTER WITH 21 POINT CHECK Wp rervrle mntnr nil 1155 lronhorse Drive HORSE 649 2886 dUTOmOTlUE most cars Local law enforcement agencies are running. Running, that is, to help out the Utah Special Olympics. The 11th annual "Run a Cop out of Town," torch run, held May 18 through June 4, is undertaken by law enforcement officers to help promote awareness and raise money for the Special Olympics. This year's run has the participation of all of the state's law enforcement community. In fact, more than 600 officers ran last year. The torch run will reach Summit County May 28. It will start at 8 a.m. that morning in Heber City, run along State Road 40 to mile post number six and then to the county line. At approximately 9 a.m. Summit County officers will pick up the torch arid start near Blondquist Mobile Home Park in Coalville, traveling north on Main Street and ending at the Chalk Creek Bridge. Park City's leg of the 1992 Law Enforcement Torch Run will start a noon May 28. The torch will start at the Main Street Marketplace Mall and head down to Heber Avenue, then to Park Avenue. It will continue down Park Avenue to Hardees. In 1991 the Torch Run raised more than $17 million nationwide for the Special Olympics, $50,000 of it from Utah officers. The event is being sponsored in part by the Utah Highway Patrol and the Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office. Hardees, KISN 91 radio, Motel 6 and the Good Sam Club are other event coordinators. i F s ! i tmmm 12 I x ri i . iirays to onopror A Real Estate Loan I I ORIGINATION FEE g (Conventional Loans) B OLD WEST J MORTGAGE CO. ! 800-541-1172 Serving Utah since 1977 4TC0Y" The Country Best Yogurt Siill Open Late!!! Sun-Thurs: 11am-10pm Fri& Sat: llam-llpm 6494000 632 Main Street (bottom of Main Street) The Snow's Dyin' McPJt The M"d S Flyi" I1" SPECIALISTS IN OUTDOOR EIIDEAVORSI : 1 Bike Labor Specials Full Tune-Up Reg. $35.00 Special $24.95 Overhaul Reg. $90.00 Special $69.95 Summer Programs Weekly Time Trials Thursday PM Group Trail Rides Saturday AM "Learn to Ride" Class Rock Climbing Clinics All skill levels welcome! Fun & safety emphasized Open Daily: 10 AM -7 PM We're Bikin' Hlkln' Campin' Climbin' Folks! Drop in and chat with out friendly qualified staff at 363 Main Street, Park City, Utah 801-649-8710 |