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Show B-2 Wed/Thurs/Fri, April 3-5, 2019 The Park Record Nonprofit aims to honor its namesake rec report Fund named after late freeskier joins with USSS PARK CITY MOUNTAIN RESORT Park City Mountain Resort closes Sunday, April 7. For information on upcoming events and winter ticket prices go to parkcitymountain. com or call 435-649-8111. BEN RAMSEY DEER VALLEY RESORT The Park Record Deer Valley Resort closes Sunday, April 7. For information on winter Local nonprofit Live Like Sam is taking a much larger stage. On March 26, the organization partnered with U.S. Ski and Snowboard. Live Like Sam, distributes scholarships in the memory of the late local freeskier Sam Jackenthal, has been accruing partners rapidly since the official launch of LiveLikeSam.org in February. It now has more than 25 partnering businesses and organizations, with U.S. Ski and Snowboard being the latest addition. The partnership is still in its infancy with many of the details yet to be settled, but U.S. Ski and Snowboard plans on using Live Like Sam curriculum as a tool for athlete development. Ron Jackenthal, Sam’s father and the founder of Live Like Sam, said the nonprofit is in the process of developing digital, evidence-based programming that will promote the attitude that Sam Jackenthal brought to his own athletic pursuits before the 16-year-old’s fatal training accident three years ago. “We thought this would be a strong partnership,” Jackenthal said. “It’s a strong goal of (U.S. Ski and Snowboard) to get further into whole-athlete development and youth athlete education. And there was a lot of support from them and others in the community around the initiative.” The resulting curriculum will likely take the form of age-group specific web-based education and training, Jackenthal said. “It’s a welcome medium, leveraging a lot of video,” he added. activities and ticket prices go to deervalley.com or call 435-6491000. WHITE PINE NORDIC CENTER White Pine Nordic Center’s 3K, 5K, farm loop, practice area and dog loop are open for cross-country skiing. For rental and course information go to whitepinetouring.com. JEREMY RANCH GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB Jeremy Ranch’s Nordic trails are open for the winter. For rental information, ticket prices and track conditions go to TheJeremy.com. UTAH OLYMPIC PARK Utah Olympic Park has winter activities available, including guided tours and bobsled rides. For a complete list of winter hours and rates, visit utaholympiclegacy.org. BASIN RECREATION Basin Recreation maintains a busy trail maintenance schedule during the winter months, grooming over 17 miles of trails for cross-country skiing, walking, biking, and more. A grooming report can be found at basinrecreation.org. For trail information or maintenance concerns, email Phares Gines at phares@basinrecreation.org. MOUNTAIN TRAILS FOUNDATION The Mountain Trails Foundation grooms Round Valley for cross-country skiing, fat bike riding and snowshoeing. For trail information, including maps and conditions, go to mountaintrails.org. UINTA-WASATCH-CACHE NATIONAL FOREST The Heber-Kamas Ranger District maintains trails and campgrounds in the Uinta Mountains east of Kamas. For information, visit fs.usda. gov/uwcnf for more information. ROAD STATUS Continued from B-1 Guardsman Pass, Wolf Creek Pass and the Mirror Lake Highway are is geared toward boys and girls ages 3 to 4 and Tee Ball is structured for ages 5 to 6. Programs take place at The Fieldhouse. Specific dates and times vary by division. The cost is $80 for Blast Ball, $90 for Tee Ball. Learn more and register at basinrecreation. org. Sports briefs closed for the season. For more info, go to fs.usda.gov/uwcnf or call 435-783-4338. For more information on seasonal road closures go to udottraffic.utah.gov. STATE PARKS AND RESERVOIRS For information such as water temperature and current conditions at Jordanelle and Rockport state parks, visit stateparks.utah.gov. For information on the Echo Reservoir, call 435-336-2247. Tom Webb, chief spokesman for U.S. Ski and Snowboard, said there are no firm dates yet on when that curriculum will put to use, but both organizations already see the partnership as fruitful. “We have an opportunity with a national and international audience to promote awareness of what their aims are,” Webb said of Live Like Sam. “It’s a good thing for us to do, and we are really proud to lend our name and support to Live Like Sam.” Webb said Live Like Sam’s message will become part of U.S. Ski and Snowboard’s athlete career and education program, which helps athletes navigate life by offering things like career development and mentorship opportunities, scholarships and life planning. The Live Like Sam curriculum would focus more on development of the athlete as a person, and would show the benefits of adopting some of the ideas that defined Sam’s personality, such as sportsmanship, responsibility and inclusivity. “That’s really at the heart of what Live Like Sam is all about,” Webb said. “This desire to drive an agenda that says being a good person is a good thing, and we think that’s a really, really inspirational message.” The partnership will represent a big jump in visibility for the nonprofit, which could potentially be introduced to hundreds of feeder clubs and thousands of athletes across America associated with U.S. Ski and Snowboard. In the meantime, Jackenthal is happy to see his son’s name associated with an organization that the family was so close to. At the time of his death, Sam had won a freeskiing junior national championship and, outside of graduating high school, his two main goals were to compete in the Olympics and to compete in the X games. “It’s not a way I would have chosen three years ago to wind BLAST BALL & TEE BALL WALK WITH EASE Basin Recreation’s Blast Ball and Tee Ball programs will be running from April 15 to May 22. Blast Ball Basin Recreation’s April session of Walk with Ease, a four-week program that focuses on walking to T C S t COURTESY OF RON JACKENTHAL h Sam Jackenthal pictured during a Rev Tour competition. Live Like p Sam and the Sam Jackenthal Fund have partnered with U.S. Ski and Snowboard to promote positive athlete development based s on the late freeskier’s characteristics, such as sportsmanship, inclu- t sivity and responsibility. v up in a partnership with this organization that we had a longstanding connection with,” Jackenthal said. “But I’m really glad we have the opportunity to make a difference in the lives of young athletes. I get to honor Sam. I get to take our loss and hopefully turn it into an even greater legacy, and that feels very special.” He said had Sam been alive to see the partnership and his name associated with U.S. Ski and help or prevent arthritis, is taught by instructors certified through the Arthritis Foundation. The program could help those trying to rehabilitate after an injury or those seeking to increase mobility while making new walking buddies. Classes run through April 25 and meet on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10–11 a.m. at The Fieldhouse. Cost is $20 or free with a Silver Sneakers or Renew Active card. Learn more or register at basinrecreation.org. o Snowboard, he would have been “stoked.” t “He was so good with younger j kids and mentoring and helping d that I think he would feel this is S the right thing to do,” Jackenl thal said. “And I think if Sam couldn’t (ski), he would want to j help and give back. It was just e the way he was wired.” g For more information on Live h Like Sam or the Sam Jackenthal i Fund, go to LiveLikeSam.org. t a ROYAL COURT PICKLE- s BALL Each Friday from 12-2 p.m., the PC a MARC gymnasium will be reserved b for Royal Court Pickleball. This i drop-in program takes the form p of round-robin play. Winners stay d on the court; losers are sent to the bottom and must work their way back to the top. Royal Court Pick- l leball is included in monthly facility e passes or requires a $7 drop-in fee. s Equipment available at the MARC s t front desk. t B The Weather b b Wednesday, April 3, 2019 g g FIVE DAY FORECAST FOR PARK CITY ALMANAC Park City statistics for the week ending April 1 Temperatures: REGIONAL FORECAST WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY Morning flurries; otherwise, overcast Mostly cloudy and milder Rather cloudy An a.m. flurry; otherwise, mostly cloudy Periods of clouds and sunshine Winds: WSW 6-12 mph Winds: S 7-14 mph Winds: S 6-12 mph Winds: NW 6-12 mph Winds: SSW 6-12 mph 49°/35° 55°/40° 51°/36° 46°/31° 53°/35° High for the week ................................ 55° Low for the week ................................. 22° Precipitation: Total for the week ............................. 0.30” ACCUWEATHER UV INDEX TM REGIONAL CITIES Logan 54/37 Wed. Thu. Fri. Sat. Sun. Mon. The higher the AccuWeather UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Shown is the highest value for each day. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 High; 11+ Extreme. Ogden 55/41 Elko 56/34 Salt Lake City 57/43 Sunrise Wednesday ...... 7:07 a.m. ......... Thursday .......... 7:05 a.m. ......... Friday ............... 7:04 a.m. ......... Saturday .......... 7:02 a.m. ......... Sunday ............. 7:01 a.m. ......... Sunset 7:52 p.m. 7:53 p.m. 7:54 p.m. 7:55 p.m. 7:56 p.m. Moonrise Moonset Wednesday ...... 6:44 a.m. ......... 6:24 p.m. Thursday ........... 7:11 a.m. ......... 7:24 p.m. Friday ............... 7:37 a.m. ......... 8:24 p.m. Saturday .......... 8:05 a.m. ......... 9:26 p.m. Sunday ............ 8:35 a.m. ....... 10:29 p.m. Provo 56/39 Price 57/36 Ely 53/32 Richfield 57/35 First Full Moab 64/40 Cedar City 60/36 Shown is Wednesday’s weather. Temperatures are Wednesday’s highs and Wednesday night’s lows. Grand Canyon 57/28 Apr 5 Apr 12 Apr 19 Grand Junction 59/40 Farmington 61/34 Page 69/47 Last Aspen 45/29 Cortez 57/30 St. George 71/49 MOON PHASES New Craig 50/30 Park City 49/35 Wendover 60/42 SUN AND MOON Evanston 39/29 Apr 26 NATIONAL CITIES City Albany Anchorage Atlanta Atlantic City Boston Buffalo Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbus, OH Dallas Denver Wednesday Hi Lo W 57 32 s 44 29 s 73 51 s 65 37 s 59 38 r 45 28 pc 70 44 s 59 38 pc 64 46 pc 54 37 pc 61 43 s 66 58 pc 57 37 c City Aspen Boulder Butte Colorado Springs Elko Ely Evanston Flagstaff Gallup Grand Canyon Grand Junction Gunnison Idaho Falls Jackson Hole Mesquite Missoula Ogden Page Pocatello Provo Pueblo Reno Rexburg St. George Salt Lake City Spokane Sun Valley Tahoe Twin Falls Yellowstone Wednesday Hi Lo W 45 29 sn 58 39 c 47 27 c 56 34 c 56 34 c 53 32 c 39 29 sf 55 29 pc 59 27 pc 57 28 pc 59 40 sh 41 24 sn 52 38 c 42 30 sf 75 51 pc 52 36 sf 55 41 sh 69 47 c 55 37 c 56 39 sh 63 36 c 63 43 pc 51 37 c 71 49 pc 57 43 sh 55 39 c 47 35 sh 49 31 pc 58 36 c 40 23 sf Thursday Hi Lo W 54 31 pc 64 45 pc 52 30 c 64 42 pc 61 36 c 56 34 c 46 34 c 58 30 pc 66 30 pc 61 31 c 64 44 c 47 26 pc 58 40 c 46 29 c 78 52 pc 57 36 c 63 46 c 72 50 c 59 41 c 65 47 c 70 43 pc 60 42 c 55 40 c 73 51 pc 65 50 c 58 45 c 49 40 c 44 32 sn 63 42 c 42 24 c The weather will be unsettled across the r Rockies Wednesday with rain and snow t showers as a storm system slowly moves m east. A ridge of high pressure will provide partly sunny skies from Nevada into west- a s ern Utah and much of Arizona. Across fi much of the Rockies, the weather will improve Thursday as the ridge of high pres- t sure builds east. t t ROAD CONDITIONS w S F Interstate 80: A few rain and snow showers a will be around Wednesday with wet and in h some places snow-covered roads. a US-40: The road will be wet and in some d places snow covered Wednesday with a m couple of rain and snow showers. a TRAVELERS FORECAST Travelers heading to the west will have good travel conditions with partly sunny skies Wednesday. Elsewhere, skies will be mostly cloudy with a couple of rain and snow showers. Reduced visibility will lead to slower traffic. WEATHER HISTORY A heavy storm struck the mid-Atlantic on April 3, 1915. It dropped 10 inches of snow in New York City, 15 inches in Dover, Del., and nearly 20 inches in Philadelphia. Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019 WORLD CITIES Thursday Hi Lo W 49 27 pc 41 31 pc 74 57 pc 62 40 pc 53 32 s 42 31 pc 72 52 pc 45 39 r 64 50 r 46 40 r 59 47 r 84 58 pc 65 43 pc City Des Moines Detroit Dover Houston Honolulu Las Vegas Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis Nags Head New Orleans New York Norfolk Wednesday Hi Lo W 54 42 r 54 34 pc 65 39 s 72 63 pc 83 68 s 78 59 pc 67 54 pc 80 72 pc 52 32 pc 61 48 s 75 62 s 63 45 s 68 48 s Thursday Hi Lo W 54 42 c 43 35 c 63 44 pc 84 63 c 84 68 s 79 56 pc 64 52 pc 82 72 pc 48 39 c 61 53 s 76 63 t 58 40 c 69 51 s City Oklahoma City Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Providence St. Louis San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Seattle Tampa Washington, DC Wednesday Hi Lo W 63 55 t 78 59 pc 66 42 s 79 59 pc 57 37 s 60 35 r 68 51 pc 71 67 sh 67 58 pc 64 53 pc 58 45 r 81 64 s 69 46 s Thursday Hi Lo W 73 48 pc 82 65 pc 63 44 c 85 57 pc 53 44 r 52 30 s 60 52 r 87 63 pc 67 58 pc 64 55 sh 62 49 c 84 70 pc 68 51 pc City Auckland Bangkok Barbados Beijing Berlin Buenos Aires Dublin Frankfurt Hong Kong Jerusalem London Montreal Wednesday Hi Lo W 67 54 sh 94 80 t 85 77 pc 73 44 pc 64 47 pc 76 60 s 46 36 sh 52 38 r 80 72 s 61 47 s 48 35 t 46 26 c Thursday Hi Lo W 71 54 pc 94 81 t 84 76 pc 86 46 s 65 46 pc 74 49 t 46 38 sh 49 35 sh 78 71 c 63 47 pc 49 43 sh 38 23 pc City Moscow Oslo Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome San Juan Seoul Sydney Tokyo Toronto Warsaw Zurich Wednesday Hi Lo W 46 28 s 39 33 sh 51 34 t 88 74 s 61 52 t 86 76 pc 54 37 pc 79 64 s 55 43 pc 45 26 pc 58 39 s 58 35 r Thursday Hi Lo W 47 31 pc 49 37 pc 53 38 c 90 77 s 61 41 t 85 75 pc 58 44 s 75 65 sh 60 51 s 43 27 pc 61 41 pc 41 26 r Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice. t i p d a d “ w s e c |