OCR Text |
Show The Park Record C-4 PARK CITY FILM SERIES.ORG FEATURE FILM: CREATING COMMUNITY THROUGH FILM SPECIAL SCREENING: National Theatre Live! PATERSON MAR 18 MAR 19 Not Rated Sun 2pm MAR 19 Sat 8pm Sun 6pm Tickets $15-$20. Special pricing for members! Presented in partnership with Park City Library. Underwritten by Dr Phone Fix Underwritten by Julie Hopkins, KW Real Estate Agent. JIM SANTY AUDITORIUM 1255 PARK AVE, PARK CITY • 435.615.8291 A level of intelligence equal to the elevation Introducing the Mercedes-Benz GLS. It un-levels the playing field. With advanced safety, entertainment, navigation and communication systems that work with intuitive ease. All the luxury you would expect — including the luxury of seating up to seven adults. Mercedes-Benz 575 South State Street Downtown Salt Lake Mercedes-Benz of Salt Lake City (801) 257–3000 “One Person, One Hour” Continued From C-1 Lecture will focus on trains highlighted in those magazines over the year,” Nicholas said. “And quite a few years ago, I read an article about his visit to Park City that was written by Shirley. Several years later, I read that Dick’s health was in significant decline and that he had passed away in 2011, so I reached out to Shirley through the magazines to strike up a correspondence with her.” Nicholas was interested in purchasing some Steinheimer’s photos and learning about his visit to Park City. “Shirley told me that when Dick came to Park City, they weren’t married,” Nicholas said. “She said he was 24 years old. And at that stage in his photographic career, [he] didn’t keep good records.” The lack of information only pushed Nicholas to dig deeper in his research. Nicholas eventually learned Steinheimer and his friend Don Sims photographed Union Pacific steam engines in Ogden in February in 1953. “Dick paid to ride the Park City local from Ogden to Park City,” Nicholas said. “Along the way, the train made various stops and Dick would get off the train, walk around and take pictures.” One of the stops was in Echo. “There are a series of pictures of the station and some beautiful photos of a Challenger Series Union Pacific Engine, running down the hill after pushing another train up and over the hill,” Nicholas said. “These pictures show how the station in Echo was an important stop on the Union Pacific Transcontinental Cruise line.” When Steinheimer arrived in Park City, he took pictures of the train while it moved cars at the Judge and Ontario loading stations. “He also walked around town and took pictures of people and different structures,” Nicholas said. Steinheimer’s photos show Park City at a very trying time in the town’s history. NO MAN'S LAND Rated R Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, March 18-21, 2017 kengarffmercedes.com The New York Times crossword puzzle TAKING THE FIFTH By Alan Arbesfeld / Edited by Will Shortz ACROSS 1 Chest protectors 7 The 2000s, with “the” 14 Camry competitor 20 Fisher of fashion 21 Coming up 22 1943 conference site 23 “Put that Southern state on next month’s agenda”? 25 Like some wedding cakes and stadiums 26 Sulk 27 Pooh’s pal 28 New York : The Big Apple :: ____ : The Big Guava 30 Pain in the neck 31 Go off course 32 What a male babysitter may sport? 36 Panama, e.g.: Abbr. 37 Numbskull 38 Minuscule, informally 39 Romantic liaison 42 Shared with, as a story 45 Ending with chick 46 Spoils, in a way 47 Playing a fifth N.F.L. period, say 48 Romanian currency 50 Capital of Yemen 54 Race pace 55 ____ volente (God willing) 56 Like a fired Broadway star? 59 Small handful 62 Comedian Smirnoff 64 Auric Goldfinger, to James Bond 65 Leave thunderstruck 66 Color in “America the Beautiful” 68 Do to do 69 A.A.A. and B.B.B. 71 Jai ____ 72 One in a crowd at a bookstore? 73 Total 74 Billiards feature 75 South American greeting 76 Eskimo-____ languages 77 Winter hrs. in Vail 78 Sweaty, irritable rabbit? 83 Suffix with nod 84 Follow 86 Really bother 87 Grp. in the Oscar-winning documentary “Citizenfour” 88 Kunis of “Black Swan” 89 Stuck 92 Bit of bar food 94 Real hoot 96 Commotions 97 Setting for many Stephen King novels 99 “The Persistence of Memory” artist 100 “Pencils down!” 101 What’ll feed everyone at a tailgate party? 104 “What else could it be?!” 107 Road to the Forum, e.g. 108 “Lovergirl” singer ____ Marie 109 Christmas-song contraction 110 Broadway star Rivera 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 20 24 26 27 31 32 43 12 13 14 33 34 69 73 74 77 78 84 50 51 70 52 80 66 71 72 60 61 97 101 105 106 82 94 98 103 104 109 115 116 110 119 120 121 122 123 up? Wand wielder “What happened next?” Puzzle inventor Rubik Brandy fruit Unpopular baby name Formation fliers Hour in the graveyard shift Target of a 1972 ban It’s inescapable “Shoot!” Nice piece of change Plays without a break “Check out the Argentine soccer star!”? 45 500, e.g. 49 Exercitation 51 Grp. that might have a launch party 52 Where kids get creative in school 53 Diving equipment co-invented by Jacques Cousteau 56 Shout from an arm waver 57 Exodus 58 They may have many chapters 60 Part of the brain that controls involuntary functions 61 Reds, Blues or Browns 63 World Cup chant 67 Start to practice? 18 19 24 29 33 34 35 37 40 41 42 43 44 111 117 118 95 99 108 114 83 88 93 102 113 67 76 81 92 96 DOWN 1 Held in reserve 2 Queen topper 3 Jostle 4 Move, informally 5 Is unobliged to 6 Soldier, for one 7 Curtain fabric 8 Ticked off 9 Wear and tear 10 Some sporty cars 11 Popular landscaping plants 12 Compact 13 Dreaded comment on a returned exam 14 Lead-in to boy or girl 15 Island chain? 16 1993 film that garnered Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress Oscars 17 Turnaround too tempting to pass 59 Searching for new things to do? 54 87 91 Supermodel Bündchen Reformed barbarian? Start of a marital spat? 2000s TV hit set in Baltimore Guinness entry Vocal quavers A cross might be given for it Invites across the threshold 19 41 65 86 107 53 75 85 100 40 58 79 90 18 After the stop in Park City, Steinheimer took the train to Keetley, a ghost town now submerged by the Jordanelle Reservoir, and then rode it back to Ogden. “A part of the presentation will be about Keetley, which of course, is now underwater,” Nicholas said. In addition to the historical significance of the photographs, Nicholas will talk about Steinheimer’s photographic knowhow. “I remember the first time I saw these pictures,” Nicholas said. “I thought they were amazing, and a friend of mine who is an accomplished photographer has marveled at Dick’s compositions.” Nicholas will also talk about Steinheimer’s life and other occupations. “Some other interesting aspects about Dick are the fact that he was an early Silicon Valley entrepreneur, working for Fairchild Semiconductor, Intel and Ford Aerospace,” Nicholas said. “He also did public relations in various marketing positions, and he was a poet.” Steinheimer submitted articles and photographs to Klambach Publishing that published Train magazine. “He took something like 28,000 negatives over the course of his photographic career, which started when he was 16 in 1946,” Nicholas said. A few years ago, Nicholas began writing and researching for the Park City Museum and has had 30 or 40 articles published. “Three or four years ago, I wrote a series of the Way We Were columns for The Park Record and used Dick’s photographs to show what we could see in town,” he said. “So, to do this presentation is an honor.” Researcher and historian David Nicholas will give a presentation about photographer Dick Steinheimer’s train travel from Ogden to Park City in 1953 from 5-6 p.m. on Monday, March 20, at the Park City Museum, 528 Main St. The free event is open to the public. For information, visit www.parkcityhistory.org. 36 39 64 68 17 “This was the only time he visited Park City, and at that time, Park City was a dirt-poor town,” Nicholas said. “If it wasn’t already classified as a ghost town, it soon would have been declared a ghost town by Summit County.” The photographs captured quite a few landmarks that people can see today. “The Union Pacific station depot, which is now Zoom restaurant is one of them,” Nicholas said. “The Silver King aerial tramway, which wasn’t operating at the time because it shut down during a strike in 1951, is also seen in the collection. You can see the lower towers and ore buckets very clearly in some of the pictures, which are all for sale from Shirley.” 30 35 57 63 16 Photographer Richard Steinheimer was in this train’s caboose cupola as it headed toward Park City from Echo on the 27-mile spur, which is now the Rail Trail. 46 49 56 62 29 45 48 15 22 28 44 55 112 114 118 119 120 121 122 123 11 38 47 112 10 25 37 89 9 21 23 42 8 RICHARD STEINHEIMER 70 Schedule position 79 Baltic Sea feeder 80 2005 horror sequel 81 Undercover operation 82 Stuffy-sounding 85 Heavenly 88 Picture of health, in brief? 89 Tense 90 First African-American to win a Best Actor Oscar 91 Tivoli’s Villa d’____ 93 Attractions for bees 95 They’re always tired 97 French ice-cream flavorer 98 Lessener 99 Gossip 102 Moor 103 “____ where they ain’t” 104 Natural-history-museum exhibits, for short 105 Centers of early development 106 Composer who taught Beethoven 108 “Bill & ____ Excellent Adventure” 111 Pawn 113 Short, for short 115 1945 battle site, informally 116 2018 Super Bowl number 117 Internet ____ (what we live in) You don’t have to work this hard. Check out the calendar in Scene for local music, events and more! |