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Show C-4 The Park Record Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, November 11-14, 2017 Continued from C-2 PARK CITY FILM SERIES.ORG CREATING COMMUNITY THROUGH FILM FEATURE FILM: FREE SCREENING: JANE Rated PG Buena Vista Social Club: Adios Rated PG NOV 11 NOV 11 Sat 8pm NOV 12 Sun 6pm (Post-film Q&A) Sat 4pm Presented in partnership with the Park City Library. Underwritten by Park City Orthodontics. Underwritten by Tim Lapage, Safari Experts Thank you for your support on Live PC Give PC! JIM SANTY AUDITORIUM 1255 PARK AVE, PARK CITY • 435.615.8291 Programs enhance display Park City Museum formed for the programming. The second is with the Park City Film Series, which will screen a Peter Bratt’s documentary “Dolores,” at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 16, in the Park City Library’s Jim Santy Auditorium. “Dolores,” not rated, is about Dolores Huerta, who was an equal partner in co-founding the first farm workers unions with Cesar Chavez. “The film was shown at the Sundance Film Festival, and was very popular,” Knispel said. “Many people couldn’t see it because it sold out, so we’re bringing it back with the Park City Film Series.” December is also peppered with labor-related presentations. “The big one we have is on Dec. 2, when we’ll have the Utah Museum of Fine Arts come in to create clay pottery with the public,” Knispel said. This is a free event that will run from 11 a.m to 1 p.m. in the museum’s upstairs conference room. “Ceramics is one of the oldest art forms, and creating pottery is also one of the oldest occupations in the world,” Knispel said. “This will be a lot of fun, and we hope a lot of kids come in to do some pottery to take home.” Continued from C-1 Exhibit spotlights work ments in the exhibit, Titus said. “It includes an audio tour that people can dial into with The New York Times crossword puzzle “LANE CHANGES” By Natan Last Puzzles Edited by Will Shortz ACROSS 1 Popular web portal 4 Sweet stuff 11 Braggadocio 18 “Well, well, well!” 19 Coming 20 Slant in columns 22 1992 movie based on an “S.N.L.” sketch … or, diverged: Modus vivendi 24 Railroad line? 25 “Out!” 26 Suffix with host 27 Like pins-and-needles feelings 29 Mystiques 30 Defunct org. in which Donald Trump owned the New Jersey Generals 32 “Adios!” 33 “Prince Valiant” son 34 “We’re doomed!” 39 Computer mouse action … or, diverged: Event for RuPaul 44 Less friendly 45 Blue-roofed eatery 47 Gambols 48 Time to remember 49 Erstwhile Fords 50 “The Simpsons Theme” composer Danny 52 Many a frat pledge 53 Become bored (of) 54 ____ mother 55 Scarcely 56 Freudian “will to live” 58 Better, to an impatient boss 60 Spots likely to smear 63 Italian novelist Morante 66 Destroys, in gamer-speak 67 1916 Frost verse … or, diverged: Start of a saying about meaning well 71 “Star Wars” nomad 73 Opposite of “da” 74 Put a cover on 78 Molson rival 80 “No ____!” 82 Heads overseas? 83 Coral, e.g. 84 A long way off 85 Part of a treasure chest 89 Another form of “Jehovah” 91 Big swig 92 W.W. II org. whose insignia featured Athena 93 Prepare, as leftovers 95 Fill-up filler 96 Cassava, for one 97 Bring someone home … or, diverged: Common high school offering 100 Frigid 102 From l. to r. 103 Proscriptions 105 Chill out 106 “Button” that’s plainly visible 109 Showy debut 110 A germophobe might have it, for short 112 Acronym for the four major entertainment awards 115 Artist with the third-most Top 40 hits in the 1960s, behind Elvis and the Beatles 117 Nissan S.U.V.s … or, diverged: Emotional appeal 120 Hit 2007 Will Smith film 121 Some potatoes 122 Comic-strip cry 123 Establish, as rules 124 Gratiano’s love 1 2 3 4 18 22 6 7 8 10 11 35 27 36 37 38 45 49 40 51 17 52 63 72 64 65 84 85 86 87 93 90 100 120 123 in “The Merchant of Venice” 125 Line in the sand? DOWN 1 Does course work? 2 Bygone title 3 Expression of shock at someone’s actions 4 Go after for redress 5 Try to induce a bigger purchase 6 Rookery cries 7 Symbols of density 8 Beyond, to bards 9 Sea dogs 10 Went for a whirl 11 Vegas casino robbed in “Ocean’s Eleven” 12 Without purpose 13 Supermodel Carangi 14 Armless coats that may bear coats of arms 15 Overflow (with) 16 Fabulist 17 Russia’s ____ Sea (arm of the Arctic Ocean) 20 Hungarians 21 Activist youth org. 23 Snacks 28 Ball brand 31 La Dame de ____ (Eiffel 114 101 104 105 110 117 113 91 96 109 116 83 95 103 108 82 89 99 102 77 70 75 81 94 98 115 88 76 59 74 80 43 66 69 73 79 42 53 58 68 78 41 48 57 62 67 107 16 29 47 56 61 92 15 33 39 50 97 28 46 55 71 14 21 32 44 60 13 24 31 54 12 20 26 30 106 9 23 25 34 5 19 111 118 112 119 121 122 124 125 Tower nickname) 33 Sacred crosses 34 1946 femme-fatale film 35 Santa’s reindeer, e.g. 36 Monumental support 37 TV band 38 “Word on the street is …” 40 Deadly cobra 41 Wilson of “The Office” 42 They might be giants 43 Kind of review 46 The usual 50 Actress Sommer 51 “Keep out” sign 53 Burgs 55 Bygone Apple app 57 ____-pitch 59 Autobahn autos 61 Feuding 62 Syndicate head 64 Online ticket exchange 65 Chem. neurotransmitter 68 Sheriff’s asst. 69 “Them’s the breaks, I guess” 70 ____ Industries (oil and gas giant) 71 “Aladdin” villain 72 Summers back in the day? 75 “How Deep Is Your Love” group 76 “Introduction to the Analysis of 77 78 79 81 86 87 88 90 91 93 94 96 98 99 101 104 106 107 108 109 110 111 113 114 116 118 119 the Infinite” writer Cool again God, informally Gender-neutral possessive Lummox Philip ____, first Asian-American film actor to get a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame “Milk” star, 2008 Interrupted midsentence? Like leprechauns Tipsy Shrank Skipjack, e.g. Early flight inits. For naught Straight-talking Certain radio format What you might sit in by the pool Kabuki sash Territory in Risk Motif for Verdi or Monteverdi Whole heap “Fancy seeing you here!” $$$ bigwigs Certain fro-yo add-in Sounds of reproof Back Besmirch Eavesdropping org. The next lecture will be mining engineer and retired mining consultant Donovan Symonds at 5 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 6. “He moved to Park City in 1978 and has been a docent with the Park City Museum for the last nine years,” she said. “He will talk about the day in the life of a Park City miner who lived between 1870 to 1900.” Symonds selected that time frame because he wanted to focus on the early days of mining. The next event, a book discussion at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 7, is a partnership with Dolly’s Book Club at Dolly’s Bookstore, which is two doors up from the museum at 510 Main St. “I have attend the book club as much as I can, and they suggested we do a partnership with a book about work,” Knispel said. The book the club will discuss is Dave Isay’s “Callings: The Purpose and Passion of Work.” Isay, the founder of StoryCorps and the recipient of six Peabody awards, a MacArthur “Genius” Fellowship, and the 2015 TED Prize, is th author of four StoryCorps books: “Listening Is an Act of Love,” “Mom: A Celebration of Mothers from StoryCorps,” “All There Is: Love Stories from StoryCorps” and “Ties That Bind: Stories of Love and Gratitude from the First Ten Years of StoryCorps,” according to Knispel. “We’ll join the club for the discussion, and I will also give out free museum passes,” she said. Six days after the book club discussion, on Wednesday, Dec. 13, the museum will host Chris Merritt, an archaeologist from the Utah Division of State History, from 5-6 p.m. at the Park City Museum’s Education and Collection Center located at 2079 Sidewinder Ave. Merritt will speak about Chinese immigrants and address topics like why the Chinese workers immigrated to the West, and what they did and why they left. “Chris has given this lecture before in Salt Lake City,” Knispel said. “I attended the lecture, which is fabulous, and learned so much.” The final discussion of “The Way We Worked” programming will be held at 5 p.m. on Monday, Jan. 8, two days before the exhibit closes. Richard Ellis, a Park Citybased writer, will dig into the culture of local web commuters with a lecture titled “From Miners to Nomads: Work Culture in Park City through the Lens of a Ghostwriter.” A ghostwriter is hired to author books, talks or blogs that are credited to another person, Knispel said. “Richard will also take the audience through an interactive exercise that will show what he does for a living,” she said. The programming for “The Way We Worked” was one of Knispel’s most ambitious projects, and she hopes the public will attend some of the sessions. “We are very excited to do this, and we hope people will learn something from the lectures and programming,” she said. For information about visit www.parkcityhistory.org. their cell phones,” she said. “The information they will get hear on their phones will be in addition to the information that is shown on the different panels. The great thing about this is that it will give people the opportunity to record your own work experiences and stories for the Smithsonian. ... the Smithsonian staff will review the recordings and add some of them to the tour.” The other interactive segment includes a kiosk that will run recordings of the Beehive Archives, a radio program that is broadcast on Utah Public Radio. “The exhibit has been on tour in Utah for the past year, and the different places that have displayed it have added their own little narratives to the Beehive Archives,” Titus said. “The Park City Museum has added our own as well, and we hope the one we have contributed will be running at the kiosk.” “The Way We Worked” was adapted from the original exhibition that was developed from the National Archives, according to Titus. “This exhibit has been made possible by a partnership with the Smithsonian Institute and the Utah Department of Humanities,” she said. “They formed a program called Museum on Main Street, and one of the program’s goals is to provide smaller and more rural communities with access to Smithsonian level exhibits.” In addition to Park City, the exhibit has been shown in Ogden, Hyrum, Castle Dale, Fillmore and Leeds, “We were on the list of Utah Museums and we are the last stop on the exhibit’s Utah tour,” Titus said. An opening ceremony for “The Way We Worked” exhibition will start at 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, Nov. 11, at the Park City Museum, 528 Main St. the exhibit is on display until Jan. 10. For information, visit www. parkcityhistory.org. |