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Show A-8 Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, August 15-18, 2020 The Park Record In Memory... BOGO SPECIAL MASSAGE & FACIALS 2 FOR 1 $99.00 AMAZING SPA & SALON FEATURES • • • • • Boutique Hair Salon Aveda Color Services Private Massage Rooms Ayurveda and Customized Facials Private couples room w soaking tubs ****OFFER EXPIRES OCTOBER 31, 2020 Now Hiring - Email us! CALL FOR DETAILS 435-315-9348 24/7 435-658-9411 201 Heber Ave Park City Main & SKY Hotel spa@puravidaonmain.com PuraVidaOnMain.com AVEDA SPA & SALON ON MAIN Jennifer Joan Rusk June 17, 1956 - July 23, 2020 Mom. Wife. Friend. While cliché doesn’t escape Jennifer, it also doesn’t even come close to encompassing all she gave and got out of life. Wisconsinite, cheese lover and true Green Bay Packer fan help describe her roots after her birth in Madison, Wisconsin, to loving parents Erwin & Joan Zuehlke. Coast to coast trips in the back of a station wagon with 3 brothers David (Carrie), Alan (Barb), and Greg (Hope) taught her to camp, scout, and deal with boys, but even these couldn’t stop her from falling for her tennis instructor and ultimate husband, Steve Rusk, in Rockford, Illinois. Tennis and other athletics remained mainstays in her life even as she raised and chased three of her own boys Joshua (Brianne), Zachary, and Noah (Brittney). Role model, rule follower, and perfectionist, she strived to make her sons’ handwriting as beautiful as hers and ensured they learned to double and triple check every piece of their work. She rode the early computer revolution wave, incorporating computers into industry after earning a B.S. degree from the University of Wisconsin, Parkside, and was even a pioneer in bringing computers into primary education classrooms. Jennifer and Steve instilled their love of the mountains upon their family with a move from Illinois to Utah in 1998. It was here where she serenaded her church congregation with piano music, challenged the local tennis community, and kept professional skier athletes organized and in-line as she volunteered during multiple world-cup championships and also the 2002 Winter Olympic Games. It was also in Utah where she began being robbed of life by early onset Alzheimer’s Dementia. Mentally tough and physi- cally strong, Alzheimer’s slowly stole from her over the course of her last 10 years, despite an outpouring of endless support from family, friends, and caregivers. Ironically, while the disease wore down her intensely private outward facade, it allowed those close to her to peer deeper within and discover a love of dancing and showing physical affection with hand holding and hugs. Her last days and breaths were spent with family holding her hands, laughing and reminiscing about favorite memories, and singing along to her during her favorite movie ‘The Sound of Music.’ For a more complete memory and tribute to Jennifer Rusk including photos, recommendations for donations in her name, and future arrangements to celebrate her incredible life, please visit www.larkincares.com. An online memorial service is tentatively scheduled for Saturday, August 22, 2020. Sarah Colby-Dobell September 16, 1996 - August 3, 2020 The world lost a lot of light, laughter, and sparkle when Sarah Cynthia Colby-Dobell, a 2015 graduate of Park City High School, passed away on August 3. It is difficult to capture the vibrant and loving person that Sarah was in writing. She was hilarious and could find the humor in any situation. She was a loving friend, the kind who would get out of bed at any hour to drive to help someone in need. Sarah had a feisty personality and was quick to defend the weak and challenge those in power. In middle school, she came home with a note from a bullying victim on her school bus thanking Sarah for standing up to the bullies. Everyone who met Sarah marveled at her natural beauty. She adored animals and was a devoted mother to her cat, Muffin. Sarah was a biology student at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario. A lover of plants and nature, she worked in an aquaponics lab and was a board member of Queen’s conservation club. She helped students in crisis as a volunteer for a community crisis line. Sarah was a talented seamstress and designer who worked for Queen’s charity fashion show to raise money for victims of sexual violence. In her free time, she made clothes for herself and her friends. She loved cooking elaborate meals from scratch, exploring new countries with friends, dancing at parties without a care for what others thought, hiking with her aunties, texting goofy selfies to her mom, spending time on the water, and being the nudge toward any exciting and impulsive adventure. Sarah is survived by her mother, Julie Dobell, her twin, Erin Colby-Dobell, her brothers, Nick and Joe Colby, aunts and uncles, dozens of cousins, and many dear friends including Sara Tabin, Molly Leavens, Katie Kelly, Keaton Quinn, and Connor Smith. In lieu of flowers, donations can be sent to Summit Land Conservancy in Sarah’s honor. HOA apologizes for notice to take down BLM signs Associated Press SALT LAKE CITY — A Utah homeowners association apologized after asking residents to take down their Black Lives Matter signs. One of those residents was Dan Carlson, a sociology and family and consumer studies professor at the University of Utah. He posted a photo on social media Tuesday of the notice that the Daybreak homeowners association in South Jordan, a Salt Lake City suburb, sent him. “We appreciate your desire to place temporary signs in your yard but remember that, according to Daybreak’s governing documents, certain restrictions exist,” the note read. Carlson said he was told all eight notices were given to households with Black Lives Matter signs. He added that he has lived in Daybreak since 2016 and has never been aware of any other instance where the homeowners association attempted to have political yard signs removed. “It was clear that it was the content of the sign that drew the attention of the HOA,” Carlson said. Carlson said he spoke with the director of the homeowners association, who was apol- ogetic. She said, according to Carlson, that there is a policy in effect to remove signs and flags that break the association’s rules but that “someone on her team must have gotten the wrong message.” The association apologized on social media later in the day. “Thank you for your concerns and calls regarding the courtesy notice signage tags that were placed on eight resident doors this afternoon,” they wrote. “Please understand that these tags were placed in error. We certainly apologize for any inconvenience and misunderstandings this may have caused.” Emergency aid available Submitted by United Way of Utah County Mountainlands Emergency Food and Shelter Program has been chosen to receive two allocation amounts to supplement emergency food and shelter programs in Wasatch and Summit counties. The amounts received are $8,059 (Phase 37) and $16,685 (CARES). A local board made up of the American Red Cross, Utah County Housing Authority, the LDS and Catholic churches and others will determine how the funds awarded. The funds will be distributed among the emergency food and shelter programs run by local service agencies in the area. The funds were appropriated by Congress to help expand the capacity of food and shelter programs in high-need areas around the country. The board is responsible for recommending agencies to receive the funds and any additional funds made available under this phase of the program. The local board seeks to address the following priorities/needs: Shelter homeless singles and families, homelessness prevention through rental assistance, food assistance due to hunger caused by economic emergencies and mortgage assistance to prevent homelessness. Agencies chosen to receive funds must: be private voluntary non-profits or units of government; be eligible to receive federal funds; have an accounting system; practice nondiscrimination; have demonstrated the capability to deliver emergency food and/or shelter programs; if they are a private voluntary organization, have a voluntary board. Qualifying agencies are urged to apply. Agencies interested in applying for the funds must contact Shannon McCarty (shannonm@unitedwayuc.org) at United Way of Utah County, 148 N. 100 W. in Provo for an application. Applications must be submitted via email to shannonm@unitedwayuc.org by noon on Aug. 21. |