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Show TV B-14 The Park Record WedThursFri, July 31 -August 2, 2002. jjlFirst Western Mortgage .... I "Park City's Premier Uortme UiiU Lender Since 1983" First Western Building 1245 Deer Valley Drive Park City, UT 84060 435-649-9556 voice 435-649-3249 fax Dan Margolis Steve Honeywell Brady I fartzog Jeff Creveling Richie Brera LOOK AT Tl IESE CURRENT MORTGAGE RATES 30 Yr to $300,700 1 5 Vr to $300,700 51 ARM 11 ARM 30 Yr Jumbo 15YrJumbo 51 ARM Jumbo 6.125 6.321 APR 5.625 5.805 APR 5.125 5.289 APR 2.875 2.967 APR 6.625 6.837 APR 6.125 6.321 APR 5.375 5.547 APR As 0161902 NEW PRODUCT 6 Month ARM Primary $5,000,000 3.53.612 APR Cash Out Max $1,000,000 40 Year Term Stated income $2,000,000 10 Year Int. Only Investment $1,000,000 Single Close Construction Loans ABSOLUTELY 3.75 for up to 18 months PURCHASE - REFINANCE - CONSTRUCTION CALL US WITH ???? CASI I n.OW SOLUTIONS W INTEREST ONLY AVALABLE dmargolisffiparkrityloans.com ' RtM can and do champ Can tot today no cost rate Officials: Wyoming tourism strong GILLETTE, Wyo. (AP) At least 1.500 RVs have arrived at Cam-Plex for a rally, an indication indica-tion that Wyoming's tourism industry is enjoying a strong summer, sum-mer, slate officials said. The 38th Holiday Rambler RV Club International Rally began Tuesday and continues through Saturday. More people are driving to vacation destinations this year in the wake of Sept. 11, and many are stopping in Wyoming while traveling between Yellowstone National Park and the Black Hills, state Travel & Tourism Director Laurie Green said. Reservations in RV parks this year are 30 percent higher than at any time in the last six years, according to a study, she said. RV sales are up also. "Life is short. Instead of just working all the time, people are taking the time off that they've earned," she said. Mike Lane, spokesman for Barnhart CMI, the ad agency for the state's tourism division, agreed that Wyoming is a popular popu-lar choice. "People consider us a safe place to travel," he said. Jeff Vander Vliet, chief operating oper-ating officer for the Rambler RV club, said events in the last year have changed Americans' values. "People want to come together togeth-er and put a greater emphasis on family," he said. He said it is not uncommon for families from the East Coast to fly into Salt Lake City, rent an RV, drive to Yellowstone and then go on to the Black Hills, before flying home out of Rapid' City.S.D. The key, he said, is to entice people to make stops and have activities to do all along the way. . "If Cam-Plex stages it right;! people are going to tell everyone," every-one," he said. "And when word spreads. That's the best kind of advertising you can have." Utah to get federal funds for prisoner reentry Attorney General John Ashcroft announced that Utah will receive a total of $2 million to support prisoner reentry initiatives. ini-tiatives. The Utah awards were among 68 grants totaling $100 million to support efforts to ensure public safety and reduce victimization by helping returning offenders become productive members of their communities. Forty-nine states, including Utah, and the District of Columbia and Virgin Islands will receive the funds. The grants, awarded by the Justice Department's Office of Justice Programs (OJP), are part of the Serious and Violent Offender Reentry Initiative, an unprecedented collaboration among the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Education, Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban sir "..iiiw .r S It , LADIES LOUNGE AT LAKOTA EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT 5PM-1AM Enjoy the Gorgeous Mountain Views from our Patio 7 Days 7 Nights jl:D0am - 1:00am Kitchen Open Until Midnight 3 - Star American Regional Cuisine at, Extremely Affordable Prices $8.00 SaturdaySunday CUNti Served Irom 11:00am - 3;Q0pM j . "'"i " it' g " 4 ft i- J. ?. Reservations 03658-34uO7 Opoff Site Catering (435) 658-3600 Sports Programming WCDpMX Surround System NOW FEATURING OUR 2 FOR 1 SPECIAL i BUY ONE ENTREE GET ONE ENTREE FREE ! 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DMD PC SptnoJia m OttJmAhhici for AJWit tni CJuMm For more information regarding our patient-centered practice, visit nowccKjntryorrhodontic8.com. Development, Justice, Labor and Veterans Affairs. "By educating and treating offenders, we are not only helping help-ing them improve their lives, we are reducing the chance they will return to crime and drug abuse," said Ashcroft. "My hope is that the reentry programs will improve public safety and reduce the burden on law enforcement and corrections." correc-tions." The Serious and Violent Offender Reentry Initiative will build on innovative reentry efforts in states for both juveniles juve-niles and adults with the goal that these efforts serve as nationwide nation-wide models. Reentry efforts will begin while offenders are still in correctional cor-rectional facilities, continue through offenders' transition back into the community and help sustain ex-offenders through services such as employment employ-ment training and substance abuse and mental health treatment. treat-ment. Efforts will be tailored to one, or a combination of, the following fol-lowing age groups: Youth, ages 14-17; young adult, ages 18-24; and adult, ages 25 and over. These efforts involve close coordination coor-dination among institutional corrections, cor-rections, law enforcement, community com-munity corrections and other community-based service providers. The Utah Division of Youth Corrections will receive $1 million mil-lion to strengthen the existing reentry programs in northern and central Utah and establish the Utah County Aftercare Program (UCAP) for offenders from southern and rural Utah. The Utah Department of Corrections will receive $1 million mil-lion to implement a collaborative reentry partnership program with various state and local agencies agen-cies and community and faith-based faith-based organizations to reduce recidivism, increase public safety, safe-ty, improve offender reintegration reintegra-tion and maximize the use of existing transitional resources within the state's correctional institutions and the community at large. "These programs are all tailored tai-lored to meet the unique needs' of the state and local communities," communi-ties," added Ashcroft. "But they draw together different dif-ferent disciplines to develop state-of-the-art, integrated reentry reen-try efforts." The Serious Violent Offender Reentry Initiative is designed to-address to-address all three stages involved in returning an offender to the-community. the-community. The process involves education, educa-tion, treatment and life skills programs while offenders are in institutions, services and supervision super-vision as they reenter the com- munity and networks of agen- cies, and individuals to support offenders as they become productive pro-ductive and law-abiding mem-; bers of their communities. More information about the Serious and Violent Offenders Reentry Initiative and other OJP programs is available on OJP's Web site at www.ojp.usdoj.gov. District court gets tough on unemployment insurance fraud In a recent Fourth District Court decision, a Provo woman was found guilty of providing false information to Utah's department of Workforce Services (DWS) Unemployment Insurance (UI) Program. The court determined the defendant committed a Class A Misdemeanor so she could receive unemployment insurance benefits. On May 14, 2002, Judge Ray M. Harding found the defendant guilty and sentenced her to 365 days in jail. Judge Davis later reduced the defendant's jail time to 20 days and ordered the defendant to repay the entire $3,050 she had defrauded from Utah's UI Program. Judge Davis also ordered her to pay an additional $3,038 penalty to Utah's UI Program, a $740 fine to the court and serve ' 80 hours of community service. "Utah's Unemployment Insurance Program has always taken a firm stand against unemployment unem-ployment insurance fraud," said DWS deputy director Jim Finch. "The court is simply reinforcing a law that clearly states UI fraud is. not tolerated in Utah." Individuals are encouraged to report UI fraud to Utah's Unemployment Insurance. Program at (801) 526-9545. WeVe. Mwed! ciHB CWMIttil (If) flV (iHi (!! wniimsn linnstftuv tin f 'i!fi!ii1?i 0 I A 1 V 7 1-1 ' New Location: Queen of Arts - Building 515 Main St. I:rk City, Utah '25) 650-3900 ?) 7952702 1 V 5 I Stop L ew' lor duri rts F eeken I poQr cop |