OCR Text |
Show C-4 The Park Record CREATING COMMUNITY THROUGH FILM PARK CITY FILM.ORG RAISE HELL: THE LIFE & TIMES OF MOLLY IVINS Not Rated NOV 8 Fri 8pm NOV 9 Sat 8pm NOV 10 Sun 6pm HOWEVER LONG Not Rated NOV 7 Thurs 7 pm Post-film panel discussion with Director Jenny MacKenzie. Part of the Made in Utah Film Series - Admission is free. Underwritten by Encompass Health- Home Health and Hospice. Underwritten by Ric Catoni JIM SANTY AUDITORIUM 1255 PARK AVE PARK CITY • 435.615.8291 Get your subscription to The Park Record! Mail or Home delivery within Summit County (Includes a free Sunday Tribune and e-Edition subscription) 1 Year $56 2 Years $98 Mail delivery outside of Summit County (Includes a free e-Edition subscription) 1 Year $80 2 Years $138 Home Delivery within Salt Lake, Utah, Davis, Wasatch Counties (Includes a free e-Edition subscription) 1 Year $80 2 Years $138 Call us today and ask for Lacy 435.649.9014 Continued from C-1 Nonprofits ready for fundraiser backpacks to more than 300 kids,” Miller Gitlin said. “The backpacks are our way of giving them a little hand up.” Food insecurity affects all areas of life for those who experience it, she said. “It messes with your health and mental ability to focus on what you’re learning at school or to focus on a part-time job,” Miller Gitlin said. “Younger kids also don’t have the means or way to go to a grocery store, and rely on mom and dad. Sometimes mom and dad can’t get to the store because they are working two or more jobs to make ends meet.” EATS Park City’s community gardens program has expanded into eight local schools and Lucky Ones Coffee at the Park City Library, Miller Gitlin said. These gardens help students and employees learn how to garden, about the healthy foods they are growing and become aware of environmental sustainability, she said. For information about EATS Park City, visit eatsparkcity.org. Recycle Utah Recycle Utah volunteers will wave their signs on the corner of Kearns Blvd. and Woodbine Way in the morning, said Executive Director Carolyn Wawra and spokesperson Eric Moldenhauer. “We want to get people to come into the center,” Moldenhauer said. “We’ll also have volunteers here in the parking lot holding signs and raising awareness of who we are.” Raising awareness about Recycle Utah is important because some members in the community don’t know the organization is a nonprofit, Wawra said. Raising awareness and money is, of course, the ultimate goal, because the recycling market is a little tricky right now, because The L.A. Times crossword puzzle “NAME TAGS” BY GARY LARSON Across 1 Milky white kind of glass 5 “Dumb and Dumber” costar 11 Confident 18 Stellar phenomenon 19 Aspirations 20 Self-officiated game with a disc 21 Inspiring Gates? 24 Upright Fosse? 25 More tender 26 Driver’s lic. info 27 Red dye 29 Use for a fee 30 Family nickname 32 Something read to the rowdy? 35 English breakfast __ 37 Outrage 40 Very funny sort 42 Hostess output 44 It has an eye on TV 47 1980s Panamanian dictator 49 Refined Bailey? 51 Careless Montana? 53 Type, in Calais 54 Westminster landmark 55 Jumbles 56 House shower 58 Causes of frequent breakins? 60 IBM competitor 61 1942 Philippine battle site 63 Cold sheet 64 Vividly expressive Carney? 67 Outgoing Macdonald? 73 Actor Neeson 74 Fortune-telling aids 75 One of the fire signs 76 Period of the first dinosaurs 80 State with a panhandle 81 Plane angle symbol 83 Very long time 84 Some corporate jets 86 Slothful Sontag? 89 Seafaring Davis? 92 Where to find an idiomatic pig 93 Family docs 94 Widespread 95 One doing stars, say 96 Outlaw Kelly 97 “Ben-Hur” studio 98 Starts to negotiate, as a price 100 Clearasil target 102 Formally transfer 105 Opposite of piano 107 Young socialite 109 Dependable 113 Forthcoming Tyson? 115 Forceful Kelly? 119 Fan of Jerry Garcia’s band 120 Flea market deal 121 Part of a pot 122 __ overload 123 Absorbs the financial hit 124 “Enough!” Down 1 Till stack 2 Game played in an anagram of itself 3 Swear 4 What loafers lack 5 Burnable medium, briefly 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 20 22 23 28 31 33 34 36 37 38 39 41 43 Dry as a bone “Made to be broken” thing Browning’s Ben Ezra, e.g. Former U.K. recording giant Fashion initials “__ want for Christmas ... ” Hindered, as growth __City: computer game Eclipse shadow “Streamers” playwright School since 1440 Balance on a card, say Parvenus Bench press muscles Seized, as an opportunity Go down, so to speak Like some turkey stuffing Eye care product prefix Certain Sooner ESPN Deportes language Joyous way to break out Surfing wave Symphony originally dedicated to Napoleon Friend of TV’s Sheldon Stay in shape 44 Popular spring break locale, informally 45 Uncle Remus title 46 Stone and Stallone 48 Wall St. news 49 French Oscar 50 “Barnaby Jones” star 52 Numerical prefix 57 Frisk, with “down” 59 Rio greetings 61 Partial view? 62 Lombardy-based football club 65 Nursery item 66 Sound of disapproval 67 Early rock horn 68 Face-to-face exams 69 Toledo thing 70 “Little House” family name 71 Second shot 72 Sounded ghostly 74 Green cars 76 Sharp flavor 77 Harvest 78 Markers 79 Like many fine wines 80 Deked, say Wed/Thurs/Fri, November 6-8, 2019 81 Bolshevik’s foe 82 March opening 85 “He’s __ notable coward ... ”: Shak. 87 Speed 88 Santa __ Valley: California wine region 90 More cozy 91 Polar helper 95 Sites for fights 97 Patches up 99 Horace, for one 101 “Animal House” party attire 102 Some UPS deliveries 103 Duel tool 104 University VIP 106 “Just __ is not __”: AT&T slogan 108 Island near Java 110 Mardi Gras follower 111 Liking 112 Insightful 114 Old reciprocal electrical unit 116 Mt. Hood’s home 117 __ culpa 118 Bottom line COURTESY OF EATS PARK CITY Curious Cooks, one of the EATS Park City programs, teaches students how to cook tasty and nutritious meals. Live PC Give PC donations will help this and other healthy-food programs organized and presented by the nonprofit. China has stopped accepting all paper products including cereal boxes and newspaper, she said. China started the ban, known as “National Sword” in September, citing concerns about the environment, and it will not take any recyclable materials from the U.S. or other countries unless the materials are contaminant free, according to news reports. “That has affected recycling in the United States, and Recycle Utah is actually paying to get most materials people drop off recycled right now,” Wawra said. “We’re feeling the pain of what China has done and since we currently have to pay to recycle some of the items we collect, the funds we raise in Live PC will help with that.” Recycle Utah’s Live PC Give PC fundraising goal is $50,000, and the money will not only help the nonprofit recycle all paper, cardboard, plastic and glass it takes in, it will help it host its hazardous waste collection and dumpster days, Wawra said. Every day an average of 400 cars stop by the center to drop off recyclables something, Moldenhauer said. “It shows they believe in what we do, and we want to spread the word more into other parts of Summit County to help them live sustainable lives,” he said. Funds raised will also go toward Recycle Utah’s educational programs, Moldenhauer said. “We reach more than 5,000 students in grades K-5 in Summit and Wasatch counties every year, and teach them the Three Rs — reduce, reuse and recycle,” he said. “We teach what can go into the bin, and what can be picked up curbside and what has to be brought to the center.” The kids take the information home and, in turn, parents start recycling more, according to Moldenhauer. “A lot of kids are receptive to what we’re teaching, and I think it’s important to have these programs, because it’s good for our community and our future as well,” he said. There are also education programs, such as Green Drinks, for adults, Wawra said. “Green Drinks is held every other month, and that’s a networking event that addresses sustainable topics,” she said. The next is Nov. 12, at Park City Storage and will focus on water, according to Wawra. The speaker will be Mike Leurs, director of the Snyderville Basin Reclamation District. “We’ll also discuss green cleaning, and talk about how things that go down your drain affect the water supply,” Wawra said. Although the global recycling community is struggling, Wawra is optimistic for the future. “I think five years into the future we will be dealing with what we do with our waste more responsibly,” she said. For information about Recycle Utah, visit recycleutah.org. Live PC Give PC When: Friday, Nov.8 Web: livepcgivepc.org Summit Community Garden Like EATS Park City and Recycle Utah, Summit Commu-P nity Garden is keen to be seene on Friday, said garden director Colie Belieu. Volunteers will wave signs and take donations from 8-10 a.m. at Park City Nursery, 4459 N. S.R. 224. “We’ll have a tent set up with a donation station,” she said. “We’ll serve coffee and hot cocoa from our local sponsor Hugo Coffee Roaster, and we’ll also set up some fun children’s activities and encourage people to visit the nursery, which is one of our great community partners.” In addition, Summit Community Garden has partnered with other businesses and organizations like Park City Hospital, the National Ability Center and St. Luke’s Episcopal Church to set up their own gardens. In the afternoon, the Live PC Give PC festivities will move to Summit Community Garden, located at 4056 Shadow Mountain Dr., from 2-4 p.m. “Since the Winter Sports School is our neighbor, we’re going to have some of their students with us waving signs on the corner of Old Ranch Road and S.R. 224,” Belieu said.”Then we’ll encourage people to come into the garden for some tours.” Belieu is excited for the tours that will showcase the garden’s expansion. “We now have 44 additional community garden plots, a perennial pollinator-friendly garden by the beehives that include three heirloom apple trees, a fruit-tree garden that features five apple-tree cultivars,” she said. “We also have a hops garden that lines the north fence.” From there, Summit Community Garden will host other popup donation stations throughout the day, and will announce those on the website and through their social media, Belieu said. Summit Community Garden raised close to $3,500 during last year’s Live PC Give PC event, and Belieu hopes to double that this year. The money raised during Live PC Give PC will help with Summit Community Garden programs that include summer camps for kids and educational programs for adults, according to Belieu. “Education is a pivotal part of our mission, and while we’re expanding on our children’s summer camps for more handson experiences for middle school and high school students, we are also finding professionals and specialists to give the best quality adult classes as we can,” she said. For information about Summit Community Garden, visit summitcommunitygardens.org. |