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Show r?e Parr Record Wednesday, October 3, 2001 A-4 tl ' RIGHT ANGLE PICTURE FRAMING PHOTOS HUNTS -FINE ART QuaSty art and top quafty service serv-ice to meet al your frarring needs Park City's most unique collection of pre-made frames! RIGHT ANGLE PICTURE FRAMING 1240 1 RON HORSE DR. 6494840 Just across the road from the Lost Sock Laundry 1 - - - County Report by Tim Sullivan OF THE RECORD STAFF Silver Summit The Summit County Sheriff's Office figures to save itself several hours of time per day with over $100,000 of new computers com-puters it plans to install in patrol vehicles. The Sheriff's Office recently received a $76,(XX) federal grant for mobile data terminals, laptop computers com-puters outfitted with GPS that allow dispatch officers to track their patrol units, said Lieutenant Joe Offret. The technology has been available for about five years, said Offret, and the Sheriff's office has been seeking it for about two or three, but money has been an issue. But, said Offret, in the last few years, the mobile data terminal systems sys-tems have become less expensive and the agency decided to apply for the grant through the U.S. Department of Justice. The Summit County Commission matched the grant for the Sheriff's Office with $25,000 of its money. Now, every patrol vehicle will have a laptop and modem. The Sheriffs Office's four detectives will have transportable units that they will be able to take out of their vehicles vehi-cles at crime scenes. In addition to allowing communications commu-nications officers at the Sheriff's Office to track the locations of patrol units, deputies will be able to use the new computers to run drivers driv-ers license information independently independ-ently of the main office. This, said Offret, will cut down on voice traffic on the radio system, which is almost at critical mass: The Sheriffs Office dispatches an extraordinary number of agencies, including the Utah Highway Patrol, the Forest Service, as well as other state agencies like State Parks and Division of Wildlife Resources. Offret said that the Sheriffs office will put the time saved by the new computers into community policing efforts. Uintas The U.S. Forest Service has closed the high campgrounds along the Mirror Lake Highway. Now, only the campgrounds from Cobblerest west are open, without running water. Those include Cobblerest, Shady Dell, Soapstone, Pine Valley, Lower Provo River, Shingle Creek, Taylor Fork and Yellow Pine. The Mirror Lake Highway remains open with fees still in place. It will likely close at the end of the deer season, near the end of this month. The restrictions on open fires, which allow for fires in developed pits only, are still in effect j Oakley Work is progressing on the North Bench Farms subdivision in the north part of town along SR. 32. The 93-home subdivision's developers devel-opers are currently building its utility utili-ty infrastructure. But, according to city officials, the developers have yet to receive their final plat approval from the City Council. Oakley code states that developers may build infrastructure, before their plat is recorded. ETTOSPECT WATER &JJGHT .ill rrj J A A. v ' a i . -ANs I I i ' ! rr '. : . - in up i i mtJ n i np mi umini m n - L J I .ipiii,EUWMll. Sheriff's Report 5 68 East 700 South SALT LAKE Cm UTAH ' , 801-51-RETROsi7 Mr , Tuesday-Fri Noon-6:pm SATURDAY 10;AM-5;PM f Closed Sun-Mon . The Summit County Sheriff's Office began its week with a call from the Jeremy Store on Sept. 24 at 9:41 a.m. The store claimed someone had given them a counterfeit coun-terfeit $50 bill. A Menden, Utah, resident reported on Sept. 24 at 1 1:19 a.m. that he was threatened by a man in the mountains. A Snyderville Basin resident called on Sept. 24 at 3:59 p.m. to report a deer caught on a fence that needed to be put down. A Basin resident reported on Sept. 24 at 4:56 p.m. a forgery of her husband's checks. She said the checks were probably stolen from their house. On Sept. 24 at 6:36 p.m. a Coalville woman reported that vandals had hit her mailbox, and after she had reset it, they had come back and totally destroyed it. On Sept. 24 at 6:37 p.m., a Kamas man complained of shots being fired near his house. A Marion resident reported on Sept. 25 at 10:14 a.m. that a generator had been stolen from her garage. 81 ummu win lar mm mamm wm don't miss our "fantasy football festival" SATURDAYSUNDAY 11AM-5PM MONDAY NIGHTS 5PM-1AM ENJOY THE GOOUS FAlMORS FROM OUR HEATED PATIO 7 Days 7 Nr-js ll:UUam -l:Uuam Kitchen JJn Until Midnight 5 Complete On and OffSitf oTAR AMEAN KEGIONJEL SyCISINWVF EXTF'JffiprAFFORDABLE f RICES $8.00 SMDUtSx? 3Hll4'EL't)M MAM - ftQQPM, r SDof siatee IW hIm VwltKCD D!vlX Sittround-Sound Svstem t ' : . .. .... ti ., 4i ',.a; m jEiyoui ivtie iaKoiaparKciiy.com wilier jertiu. ikLimehr schedufe 75lManrStat 7th Sf(n Park City 2eptilJS435) 658-3400:atering (435) 658-3600 LOCALS 2 FOR 1 FALL SPECIAL BUY ONE ENTREE GET ONE ENTREE FREE ! Not to exceed $19.00 menu price j GOOD FOR LUNCH OR DINNEREXP1RES OCTOBER 5,2001 ! I MUST PRESENT COUPON FOR DISCOUNT NOT GOOD WITH ANY OTHER OFFERS OR DISCOUNTS ! A private club for the benefit of its members j COWBOY POETRV & MUSIC SHOW St. Mary's Parish Hall & Center, White Pine Canyon Friday, October 5, 2001 Social Hour 6:30pm - 7:30 pm Refreshments Available Show Starts 7:30pm ends 9:00pm featuring cowboy poets Fred Engel & Don Kennington COWBOY MUSIC BY Blue Sage Brenn Hill PrtHflM by THE KNK2HTS OF COLUMBUS to benefit T7M PwWi NV FumMmFund. TWwtt $20 tacti door or In advance. Cell (435) 815-9164 tor mtomwtion St. Luke's Episcopal reported on Sept. 25 at 10:51 a.m. that someone was stalking the area, claiming it was the fourth time this individual had been sighted. South Summit High School called the Sheriff's Office on Sept. 25 at 3:04 p.m. because there were three male juveniles dressed in "South Pacific" attire with numchucks. All three, said school officials, have either been suspended or have quit school. On Sept. 25 at 3:56 p.m., one of the Factory Stores at Park City reported a theft. On Sept. 25 at 6:20 p.m., a Basin resident reported a burglary burgla-ry from his home. A Basin resident called on Sept. 26 at 5:55 p.m. to say her son was late from school. A Henefer resident reported a theft of $20 from her home, on Sept. 26 at 7:15 p.m. A Coalville resident reported that someone was driving around smashing mailboxes from a small blue truck, on Sept. 26 at 10:22 p.m. A Basin resident on Sept. 27 at 11:03 a.m. reported an incident of trespassing. He said he was having hav-ing a problem with a catering truck driver. Summit County Animal Control reported on Sept. 27 at 11:43 a.m. that some money had been taken from the office. On Sept. 27 at 1:32 p.m., a Coalville resident reported a fight taking place. A Hoytsville woman reported another destroyed mailbox on Sept. 27 at 3:20 p.m. On Sept. 27 at 3:26 p.m., a resident resi-dent of a Kamas gated community said his cabin was broken into'. A Peoa resident called the Sheriff's Office on Sept. 27 at 6:45 p.m. to say some kids had taken her garbage can and dragged it alongside their truck and then dumped it. The Utah Olympic Park reported report-ed a trespasser that security guards were chasing on foot, on Sept. 27 at 9:45 p.m. The Olympic Park called again on Sept. 27 at 11:37 p.m. They said there were two trespassers on foot. ; A Marion resident advised the Sheriff's Office of a possible meth lab on Sept. 28 at 8:28 a.m. On Sept. 28 at 10:01 p.m.,! a Basin resident reported that he had heard bottle rockets going off. A Basin resident reported hunters were trespassing on private pri-vate property on Sept. 29 at 8:50 a.m. A Wanship resident also reported hunters on Sept. 29 at 9:02 a.m. . A Basin resident advised the Sheriff's Office on Sept. 30 at 12:33 a.m. that she received a threatening phone call. The caller, she said, told her that her kids were going to die. Neighbors team up for relief efforts A Snyderville Basin neighborhood neighbor-hood recently showed how seemingly seem-ingly small $25 donations to disaster disas-ter relief can quickly turn into a meaningful sum. Sun Meadows resident Kim Deimling reports that her neighborhood, neigh-borhood, through small household donations, put together $1,720 to aid Red Cross disaster relief efforts in New York. That amount, in turn, was matched by the neighborhood's developer, the Fieldstone Foundation, amounting to $3,440 headed to victims of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. Craig Reece, CRS GET RICH QUICK WITH INVESTMENT REAL ESTATE You see them on cable TV, sitting around a svWmming pool, sharing stories about how they got rich quick by buying valuable real estate for give-away prices. They took a course on how to invest in real estate and become millionaires overnight with nothing down and no credit hassles from mortgage lenders. The course worked for them, and they say it will work for you, too. If all this sounds too good to be true it is! These "get-rich-quick" courses and schemes are being investigated by consumer fraud agencies around the country. This does not mean that you can't become a millionaire million-aire by investing in real estate. But investing in real estate requires one important thing from you-an inVestment of cash. You can't build an empire overnight but you can do very well over the long term by selecting select-ing property in a good location that is priced well, and which can provide a reasonable cash flow. For rock solid advice on buying or selling real estate, call Craig Reece at 435-647-8017 or toll free at 1-800-553-4666. Craig has been a full time Park City resident since 1973 and a full-time real estate agent since 1978. www.craigreece.com (435) 647-8017 (435) 649-7171 (800) 553-4666 Prudential Utah Bui ba Saddleview OKict Park 2200 Park Avenue, Bldg B Park City , UT 84060 The Prudential and are registered service markj ot Tr PiudenM lnwar Company ot America. Equal housing opportunity. Each company txlepOTlentty owned and operated. "There were people who were feeling that their $25 wouldn't make a difference," said Deimling, "but to put it all together, they felt their money did make a difference." differ-ence." Deimling said she simply created creat-ed a flyer on her computer requesting request-ing that each of about 100 households house-holds in the neighborhood donate $25 each to the effort. Deimling said 40 households came forward with donations ranging from $25 to $100. It wasnt that the neighbors who didnt donate weren't generous, gener-ous, she said; many had already donated to other relief efforts. Deimling said she said other communities have the resources.to put together such a large donation to disaster relief. "We want .to inspire other neighborhoods to do the same," she said. ; Habitat for Hiranity to break ground- On Saturday, Oct. 13 at 10 a.m.J Habitat for Humanity of Summit and Wasatch Counties invites the community to a groundbreaking celebration of two new homes m Coalville. The homes will be located at 150 S. 257 West. Their recipients will be the Kilhon and Ramirez families, who will each put in 350 hours of sweat equity on the projects, and will purchase the homes with zero percent interest. The group aims to finish one of the houses by Christmas, and per haps dedicate the other one during tne Ulympics m February. It says it needs about 700 volunteers for the project. - - Utah's Best Selection Of Home Fabrics Storewide Fabric and Trim Sale 30 Off Join us for our best sale of the year. Take 30 off on all in-stock fabrics and trims, Chenniles, velvets, tapestries, linens, silks, denims, sheers, prints, plaids and more. Sale Ends: 103101 I he Design Company 2253 South 500 East Salt Lake City 466-3559 Mon-Fri: 10-5 Sat: 12-4 Fabrics Trims ' Home Fashions 5 www.designslc.com (POOE |