OCR Text |
Show C-4 Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, February 29-March 3, 2020 The Park Record PARK CITY FILM.ORG CREATING COMMUNITY THROUGH FILM LES MISÉRABLES Rated R FEB 28 Fri 8pm FEB 29 Sat 8pm MAR 1 Sun 6pm Winner of the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival and nominated for an Academy Award for Best International Film. JIM SANTY AUDITORIUM 1255 PARK AVE PHOTO BY NATALIE HAWS/BEEHIVE PHOTOGRAPHY The Michelle Moonshine Trio, a local favorite, will perform during Park City Mountain’s 2020 Spring Grüv. The resort partners with Mountain Town Music to bring Park City’s music scene to the celebration, says Sarah Stutman, Park City Mountain brand experience manager. PARK CITY • 435.615.8291 Continued from C-1 Resort will Grüv into spring season, Stutman said. “It’s hard to imagine a more entertaining event for both the spectators and participants,” she said. “Our prestigious team of judges will then award prizes for Best Costume, Best Splash and Crash and overall Best Male and Female contestants.” The following set of rules will help keep people safe and grüving through the competition. • No teams allowed • Minimum age is 10 years old • No nudity, thongs, or bare butts allowed • No full-face masks or costumes that inhibit full visibility • No fire allowed in costumes • No animals allowed • Must compete on skis or snowboards. No sleds, sit-skis or ski bikes allowed • Costume must be able to fit inside the Red Pine Gondola with the doors closed • Poles may be used but must be dropped before skis touch the pond • No pre-runs; each competitor gets one run to be judged Stutman said the costumes are one of the best aspects of pond skimming. One year, a contestant dressed up as a Jenga game made of cardboard boxes that scattered when he hit the water, she said. “Every year the competitors come dressed to impress,” she said. “We’ve seen Mary Poppins, Aladdin on his magic carpet, RESOLVED 1 2 3 4 5 6 PARK RECORD FILE PHOTO Park City Mountain Resort’s Spring Grüv will feature family-friendly activities that are open to the public from March 6 through April 5. flying squirrels, sharks, snowmen, Sesame Street characters and more. Every year, we award a prize for the best costume and can’t wait to see what people come up with this season.” Live music is another Spring Grüv draw in the days leading up to pond skimming, Stutman said. This year’s musical guests include Changing Lanes, Fuse ‘N Rock and the Michelle Moonshine Trio, to name a few, she said. The full schedule can be found at ParkCityMountain.com. “Plus (we have) interactive experiences with bucket drumming and dueling pianos,” Stutman said. “We’re really excited to be trying some new music this 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 year. Both of these acts allow m concert-goers to be a part of the T music experience during Spring e Grüv.” “ Park City Mountain worked with Mountain Town Music, a local nonprofit, to find the bands, according to Stutman. “We have a great and longstanding partnership with Mountain Town Music to help bring the best of Park City’s music scene to the mountain and worked with them on our Spring Grüv programming,” she said. “Spring Grüv is all about celebrating the longer days and enjoying the mountain with family and friends, we look for music experiences that capture that excitement and energy.” 14 15 16 17 18 48 49 87 88 89 111 112 BY SOPHIA AND DAVID MAYMUDES / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ Sophia Maymudes is a senior at Carleton College in Minnesota, studying computer science and math. This is her third crossword for The Times. Her father, David Maymudes, is a senior staff software engineer for Google in Seattle. After years of being Sophia’s test solver, he decided he wanted to construct, too. They write: “We presume there have been other father/daughter co-constructors, but we were wondering if there have been any others where the daughter was the one who introduced the father to constructing.” I can think of just one other father/daughter pair, from 1998. I believe this is the first one in which the daughter is the veteran puzzlemaker. — W.S. AC RO SS 45 Build rapport like a presidential 1 Feeling of hopelessness candidate? 8 Julius Erving, to fans 50 “Livin’ la ____ Loca” 11 Calendar abbr. that’s 51 Celery unit also a French number 52 “Hmm, that’s odd!” 15 “Your choice — him 53 Dance craze of the ____” early 2010s 19 Early online 54 Right on encyclopedia 56 Spot for a 20 “____-hoo!” laundromat? 21 The Powerpuff Girls, 58 Color akin to cyan e.g. 60 Anger 22 Fantasy author 61 Word with pop or crop Gaiman 63 Subject of gossip 23 Going my way? 65 Dance-class garments 24 What’s up? 67 Matter of survival 25 Wagner opus 70 Hate getting ready to 27 “Stop rolling move? sevens!”? 74 ____-di-dah 30 Southeast Asian 75 Children’s book made ethnic group into a 2012 3-D 31 Princess in a galaxy animated film far, far away 77 Singer Bareilles 32 Lady bird 78 Grunts 33 Org. in charge of 80 Tempo Tokyo 2020 81 Ran 34 Suffix with expert 83 Fancy rides 36 “Oy ____!” 86 Cy Young Award 37 Bay window winner Hernandez 39 Home of Mount 90 Requite Rushmore: Abbr. 92 Board pick 40 Bobby of the Black 94 Kind of scholarship Panthers 96 Dunce cap, basically 42 Spew out 97 Makes friends while working retail? Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more 100 Accepts than 4,000 past puzzles, responsibility for nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). 101 “More or less” 102 Model and TV host Banks 103 Billionaire Carl 105 Trickster 107 Understood 108 Today, to José 109 Train-schedule abbr. 110 Dutch cheese town 113 This may be at the end of one’s rope 115 Event planner’s post-banquet task? 120 Winter athlete, not a summer one 122 Turnabout 123 Where first tracks are found 124 Wrinkled fruit 125 “To Live and Die ____” 126 Wichita-to-Omaha dir. 127 Christie’s event 128 Start of a Guinness record 129 Rough talk? 130 Our sun 131 Cheer on DOWN 1 Pullers of Artemis’s chariot 2 Georgia of “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” 3 Extent 4 Antiterrorism law 5 Unpaid debt 6 “Indeed” 7 Bad records to have 8 Company that makes products that suck 9 Streaming-media device 10 Thrill-seeker’s action 11 Utterly failed 12 Prince in “The Little Mermaid” 13 Like medium-rare steak 14 Dress (up) 15 Ending with pseud- or syn16 Young woman to call when your data gets deleted? 17 Pooh creator 18 Formal lament 26 Miser, colloquially 28 Berate 29 Reluctant (to) 35 Baby plant 38 Letters before “.gov” 39 Island neighbor of Guadeloupe 41 ____ Ingalls Wilder, author of “Little House on the Prairie” 42 Second person? 43 Be sociable 44 State in both the Mountain and Pacific time zones: abbr. 46 Locke who was called “the Father of the Harlem Renaissance” 47 Brexit exiter 48 Actress Swinton 49 “Ooh, that’s bad!” 19 20 21 23 24 25 27 28 31 42 43 55 61 67 46 68 69 75 56 70 57 63 71 90 92 66 74 78 93 84 107 95 96 103 104 109 116 110 117 118 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 55 Runner in Pamplona 57 One side of Mount Everest 59 What many Latin plurals end in 62 “Bull’s-eye!” 64 Relative of a xylophone 66 End-of-the-week expression 67 For face value 68 Whitney Houston hit “____ Nothing” 86 100 108 115 85 94 102 114 79 99 101 113 65 83 98 106 60 73 82 91 97 105 64 59 77 81 41 53 58 72 76 80 36 47 52 62 35 40 51 54 34 39 45 50 30 33 38 44 26 29 32 37 22 69 Places to swim during school? 71 ____ soda 72 Suits 73 Brief glimpse of a star 76 Slow, musically 79 Runner-up 82 Car with faulty brakes, e.g. 84 Study of birds: Abbr. 85 Star of “Your Show of Shows” of 1950s TV 87 Way down 88 Travel stop 89 Deletes, with “out” 91 Canyons 93 “The joke’s ____!” 95 Screening org. 98 Subject of the 2006 documentary “When the Levees Broke” 99 Rehearsals 104 Move in the direction of 105 “Overall …” 106 Home planet of Ming the Merciless 119 109 Gird (oneself) 111 “Half ____ is better …” 112 ____ Park, home of Facebook 114 “M*A*S*H” actress Loretta 116 Wrigglers 117 Spanish youngster 118 Neophyte: Var. 119 Visionary 121 Cassis cocktail |