OCR Text |
Show A-16 The Park Record Scoreboard More Dogs on Main Results – August 20 North Summit 3, Logan 0 Hunter 3, South Summit 1 High School Sports Wednesday Coed (Comp. Division) Results – August 26 Billy’s Bombers 13, Boxed Wine Bombers 12 US Bank 20, Honey Badgers 9 Vida Tequila 21, Fall Line 8 Moose Management Sluggers 27, On Top Roofing 26 Standings RegionOverall Division 5A Region 8 W L W L Park City 1 0 2 1 Results – August 28 Salem Hills 1 0 1 1 Pine View 41, Park City Maple Mountain0 1 5 2 40 Springville 0 1 0 1 North Summit 17, North Provo 0 0 2 0 Sevier 6 0 0 1 1 Beaver 55, South Summit Payson W L Spanish Fork 0 0 1 1 Standings 10 6 1 Wasatch 0 0 0 2 Billy’s Bombers Wasatch 42, Viewmont Moose Management 10 Division 3A Region 13 Sluggers 6 2 Results – August 21 5 3 Park City 44, Juan Diego Providence Hall 0 0 1 0 On Top Roofing Maeser Prep 0 0 7 1 US Bank 5 3 10 South Summit 12, North South Summit 0 0 4 3 Boxed Wine Bombers4 5 3 5 Morgan 0 0 5 4 Honey Badgers Summit 10 3 5 Grantsville 0 0 2 3 Vida Tequila Wasatch 20, Mountain Judge Memorial0 0 0 1 Fall Line 0 8 Crest 6 Milford 38, South Summit Summit Academy 0 0 0 3 20 Thursday Men’s Tournament Results – Standings RegionOverall Division 2A Region 16 Gunnison 1 0 3 2 August 27 Division 4A Region 10 0 1 0 5 Bear Fights 15, Misfits 12 W L T W L T North Sevier Ogden 0 0 0 3 0 0 North Summit 0 0 2 1 Snow Snakes 13, Bear 0 0 2 2 Fights 11 Ben Lomond0 0 0 2 1 0 Duchesne Altamont 0 0 0 1 Sapp Development 24, Mountain View 0 0 0 0 Strader’s Boyzz 14 0 0 0 2 1 0 Monticello Football Stansbury 0 Cedar Valley 0 Park City 0 Tooele 0 Uintah 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 1 2 2 3 3 Division 3A Region 13 Summit Academy 0 00 3 0 Grantsville 0 0 0 2 1 South Summit 0 00 1 2 Juan Diego 0 0 0 0 3 Morgan 0 00 0 2 Division 2A North Duchesne 0 0 0 North Summit 0 00 Layton Christian 0 00 Gunnison Valley 0 00 Monticello 0 0 0 Rich 0 00 3 0 2 1 1 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 Division 5A Region 8 W LT WL Salem Hills 0 0 0 3 0 Wasatch 0 00 3 0 Maple Mountain 0 00 2 1 Spanish Fork0 0 0 2 1 Provo 0 00 1 1 Springville 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 Spanish Fork Quad Results – August 29 0 Girls Time 0 1. Amelia Hunter Salem Hills 19:25.2 0 2. Abbie Randall 0 Wasatch 19:46.2 0 3. Allison Munck Wasatch 20:01.8 4. Erica Maestas 0 Salem Hills 20:14.2 5. Sarah Seeley 0 Spanish Fork 20:20.2 6. Lucy Groberg 0 Salem Hills 20:21.0 7. Emma Page 0 Wasatch 20:33.1 0 8. Alexis Gladding 0 Spanish Fork 20:38.2 9. Lillie Randall Wasatch 20:55.1 T 10. Danielle Krull 0 Wasatch 20:55.9 0 17. Tesha Krull Wasatch 21:41.3 0 18. Audrey Burton 0 Wasatch 21:43.5 0 30. Savanna Dorrough 0 Wasatch 23:04.0 Girls Soccer Results – September 1 Salem Hills 5, Wasatch 0 Wasatch 0 0 - 0 Salem Hills 2 3 - 5 Scoring W – None SH – St. Peter, Kendrick, Harris, Carrick, Hughes. Keeper – Hofheins Results – August 27 Salem Hills 0 (4), Park City 0 (2) (2 OT) South Summit 3, American Heritage 3 (2 OT) Maple Mountain 2, Wasatch 1 Results – August 25 Park City 2, Maple Mountain 1 South Summit 2, North Summit 0 Wasatch 6, Payson 0 Results – August 20 Springville 8, Wasatch 0 pts. 31 46 62 80 Boys 1. Tyler Reese Spanish Fork 16:24.1 2. Grandin Olson Salem Hills 16:28.1 3. Andrew Sullivan Wasatch 16:59.5 4. Andrew Fellars Timpview 17:03.2 5. Aidan Anderson Am. Leadership 17:08.2 6. Carson Guymon Wasatch 17:20.2 7. Bailey Smith Salem Hills 17:20.5 8. Trevor Hardy Wasatch 17:30.8 9. Ryan Cobb Spanish Fork 17:34.5 10. Nathan Willis Timpview 17:35.9 11. Andrew Folsom Spanish Fork 17:36.6 12. Eastin McCotter Wasatch 17:41.6 13. Zack Goode Wasatch 17:45.9 18. Christian Spencer Wasatch 18:07.8 20. Hunter Patterson Wasatch 18:21.0 21. Caeden Jarvis Wasatch 18:22.9 Standings RegionOverall Division 5A Region 8 W LT WL T Maple Mountain 5 10 6 3 0 Salem Hills 5 1 0 6 2 0 Springville 5 1 0 6 2 0 Park City 3 20 3 3 0 Provo 2 40 2 6 0 Wasatch 2 40 2 6 0 Spanish Fork1 5 0 1 7 0 Payson 0 5 0 1 6 0 Team Scores 1. Wasatch Division 3A Region 13 2. Salem Hills Judge Memorial 3. Spanish Fork 1 0 0 4 2 0 4. Timpview Morgan 0 00 6 0 0 Grantsville 0 0 0 4 2 0 South Summit 0 00 2 3 0 Recreation Summit Academy 0 0 0 1 2 0 Sports Providence Hall 0 1 0 0 7 0 Adult Softball Division 2A North St. Joseph 0 0 0 Rowland Hall0 0 0 Waterford 0 0 0 North Summit 0 00 Utah Military 0 0 0 Standings W L Snow Snakes 8 1 Sapp Development 6 3 Strader’s Boyzz 6 3 Bear Fights 2 8 Misfits 1 8 Cross Country Team Scores 1. Wasatch 2. Salem Hills 3. Spanish Fork 4. Timpview Sat/Sun/Mon/Tues, September 5-8, 2020 pts 38 50 63 72 Adult Kickball Results - September 2 Trippin’ Ballz 19, Keyballers 2 Keyballers 10, Trump Bunts 4 Balls Deep 7, Trump Bunts 1 Squid 12, 4th Base 6 Later Today Saints 3, Saved by the Ball 2 Big Balls Little Kicks 8, Plastered Penguins 5 Whiskey Business 9, Kick-Fil-A 1 Down Underdogs 6, Kick-Fil-A 0 Results - August 26 Big Balls Little Kicks 13, Kick-Fil-A 9 Big Balls Little Kicks 16, Down Underdogs 8 Balls Deep 2, Saved by the Ball 1 Squid 2, Saved by the Ball 0 Trump Bunts 14, 4th Base 7 Whiskey Business 11, Keyballers 2 Later Today Saints 9, Squid 2 Plastered Penguins 3, Trippin Ballz Standings Big Balls Little Kicks Squid Balls Deep Plastered Penguins Whiskey Business Down Underdogs Keyballers Later Today Saints Trippin Balls Saved by the Ball Trump Bunts 4th Base Kick-Fil-A W 5 3 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 0 they had their hands full al- on a jet pack slamming into ready. His comments mostly the windshield of an airliner ignored the police shooting wouldn’t end well for anybody. (and all of the others) that set Flying is scary enough with the it off, and focused instead on mask brawls and plague risk. the unacceptable risks riots Now there’s a chance of a guy pose to innocent vigilantes. on a jet pack getting sucked It came across as an endorse- into the jet engine and crashing ment of 17-year-olds taking the plane. It’s not something to law enforcement into their own be encouraged. hands. It certainBut, oh, the ly missed the pure joy of it. mark about why It’s almost as the police drilled good as the guy seven shots into with the helium Jacob Blake. A guy on a jet pack balloons tied to Kellyanne Con- slamming into the his lawn chair. way, Trump’s an- windshield of an We all remember swer to Baghdad where airliner wouldn’t end exactly Bob, came right we were back out and said that well for anybody. in 1982 when violence in the Flying is scary Lawnchair Larstreets was help- enough with the ry, aka Larry ful to the Trump Walters, flew an mask brawls and campaign. ordinary lawn It went on like plague risk.” chair to an altithat for days, tude of 15,000 punctuated by feet with helium occasional plague news, and balloons. The control mechjust about the time my head anism was to shoot a balloon was going to explode, the best now and then with a pellet thing of the whole year hap- gun to control the descent. pened (admittedly a very low It worked flawlessly until he bar). A guy on a jet pack flew dropped the pellet gun. He ulthrough the flight path of the timately got tangled in a powLos Angeles airport. He was er line, but was able to climb at about 3,000 feet, and flew down unharmed. The only within about 300 feet of an thing missing from that story American Airlines plane. He was that it happened in San Pewas also spotted by a JetBlue dro, California, instead of Florpilot. It’s unclear if he was ida, where that sort of thing wearing a mask as required by rightly belongs. Lawnchair airline policies. Larry was an instant hero. Of course, this is a stupid The jet pack guy is a modern and dangerous stunt. A guy remake, but I still have to give the prize to Lawnchair Larry for the original. It was so simple and home made, where the jet pack guy had a lot of expensive technology at his disposal. Either way, the idea of the jet pack guy cruising through the LAX flight path, getting picked up by air traffic control who, in what seems like a parody of air traffic control, nonchalantly broadcast his position, altitude and direction to the incoming planes. Just another day on the job. Fortunately, nobody was hurt in the stunt, so we won’t need Trump to go to Los Angeles to give a speech in which he would say that this sort of lawlessness wouldn’t be happening if he were president. We don’t know who the jet pack guy is, though I’m assuming the whole thing was duly recorded on multiple GoPros and will get posted on YouTube. And while he’s no Lawnchair Larry, the interruption of the otherwise toxic news flow was nothing short of delightful. A grateful nation salutes you. So when a town is faced with deciding what to do with the empty pedestal where the local Robert E. Lee statue used to be, the obvious choice is a statue of the jet pack guy. He made America smile again. Tom Clyde practiced law in Park City for many years. He lives on a working ranch in Woodland and has been writing this column since 1986. And now ... Act III L 0 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 2 3 3 3 4 T 0 0 0 0 0 Golf Wasatch Ladies Golf Association Tuesday Coed (Rec. 3 1 0 Division) 1st Flight Score 2 2 0 Results – August 25 Melanie Bassham 33 2 1 0 The Bear Fights Two 12, Linda Wilson 30 Squid 19 0 2 0 Deer Valley Sno Sox 14, 2nd Flight 0 2 0 Milwaukee Beers 8 Sandy Holman 37 Underhand Jobs 14, Park Laura Bohn 34 City Rental Properties 12 Miner Leaguers 27, 3rd Flight Brydge Pros 8 Volleyball Rosemary Brewer 26 Julie Schwartz 15 Standings W L Results – September 1 Squid 7 1 Park City 3, Springville 0 6 2 Springville 22 17 25 - 0 Miner Leaguers Park City 25 25 27 - 3 The Bear Fights Two 5 3 Park City Rental Properties 5 3 Please forward submisResults – August 27 Deer Valley Sno Sox 3 5 sions by noon Sunday North Summit 3, South Milwaukee Beers 3 5 for Wednesday’s edition Summit 1 Underhand Jobs 3 5 and by noon Wednesday Results – August 26 0 8 for Saturday’s edition to Lone Peak 3, Park City 0 Brydge Pros Results – August 25 scoreboard@parkrecord. South Summit 3, Tooele 2 com Union 3, North Summit 1 Compiled by Joe Lair This week, El Presidente went to Kenosha, Wisconsin, to try to, well, I don’t really know what his goal was. I mean, who better to calm an explosive situation than Donald Trump? The riots were sparked by the police shooting of Jacob Blake. Blake was shot seven times in the back as he tried to avoid arrest. He was getting into his car, with his young children inside, when a police officer grabbed him by the shirt and then fired seven shots into his back at very close range. Some people in Kenosha thought that wasn’t OK. As an aside, the calm and dignity of Blake’s family through this is kind of surreal. They have been amazing. The shooting was followed by nights of protest and some rioting, looting and general mayhem. To add to the mix, a 17-year old from neighboring Illinois decided to take matters into his own hands. He drove to Kenosha with his AR-15 rifle to preserve order. Nothing preserves order like well-armed, random teenagers wandering around in the middle of a riot. He ended up shooting three people, killing two of them. Not a lot of it is clear, other than he deliberately drove to Kenosha with a rifle and the intention to get into the middle of it all. None of it looks good. Trump went to Wisconsin, against the wishes of the governor and mayor, who said By Teri Orr Results - August 27 Cornerstone Realty 9, PC Rage 5 Intermountain Mortgage Company 7, Jesus & his Disciples 3 Individual Stableford Results – August 25 A new national hero for our times sunDay in the Park 7v7 Soccer Standings W L Intermountain Mortgage 2 0 Cornerstone Realty 1 0 Jesus & His Disciples 1 1 Messi 0 1 PC Rage 0 2 By Tom Clyde When I left being editor of this paper in the early ’90s — in my early 40s — I had no idea what I would do next. It was just time to do something different. I leapt without a net and patched things together — working at Dolly’s Bookstore — writing a book I chose not to publish — turning down an HBO movie contract for that too-personal book. I volunteered on the Navajo Reservation with Linda Myers before the Adopt-a-Native-Elder program had a name. Ann MacQuoid, JoAnn Krajeski, Gary Cole and Heather Urich took me to lunch one day and asked if I would help them run a bond campaign to build a joint-use performing arts center with the school district. I said sure. When the bond passed the realization hit — someone would have to raise money for that building. Someone would have to program that building. I was between jobs so I agreed to help out. When the building was completed we started programming shows. The board insisted I hire someone to help handle the talent. They thought I should hire Robert Urich’s gopher in Park City — my daughter, Jenny. I thought it was terrible idea to work together. I told the board they would hire her and when the time came — they would fire her. Jenny turned out to be the not-so-secret Eccles sauce. Every act loved her. She made them all feel like this was a temporary home away from home — even if they were just spending a day on their tour bus. She did everything with grace and good humor. The reputation the institute enjoys in the performance world is due largely to her patient and enthusiastic treatment of each act. She remains the only fulltime employee under Executive Director Ari Ioannides, who took the reins March 1, now fully this week. The very first season we wanted to show the variety of what could happen on our stage. We presented — Maynard Ferguson, National Orchestral Society, Acting Company of New York and Alvin Ailey Dance Ensemble. We had no idea how to price tickets or seat people. Park City and Salt Lake communities were forgiving — they were hungry for national acts. We started that first year with $5 student tickets in the Park City School District and expanded later to include all Summit County students. The first season and every season thereafter we of- fered free tickets to our senior citizen community. Then it was a handful of mostly mining widows. After 9/11 when no one was traveling we decided — with the help of Tommy Tune — to keep our gala as planned — just 10 days after the Twin Towers fell. That night, when Tommy told the audience that performing was the only way he knew how to help, we took the hands of those next to us in the audience and got quiet for a moment. The theater became church. The next year we brought in from West Sengal — Mandinka — and they gave us a taste of Africa in dance, music and storytelling. They had such a great time in Park City on their very next stop — in Berkeley, California — the entire 30-person troupe just walked off stage and defected. They had wanted to do that in Park City, I learned from their agent, but realized they might have been spotted more easily here than on the streets in Berkeley. During the Olympics we were the only venue outside of Salt Lake City to host the Cultural Olympiad. Pilobolus and Alvin Ailey dance companies performed to international full houses. In the summers we started doing concerts in City Park with local bands. The permit was for 500 people. The night I counted 1,400 people I knew we had to move. The next summer we were at Deer Valley presenting Kenny Loggins and The Pointer Sisters. We turned the free concerts over to Mountain Town Music. Those summer shows were their own kind of magic. The elaborate picnics and celebrations we all shared — birthdays, weddings, even a high school graduation moment for a young woman who had missed her own ceremony due to cancer. We worked hard seating our donors and put them with folks we thought would make for a good dinner party. It created decades-long friendships. And oh — those shows! B.B. King and Etta James. Willie and Bonnie and Lyle. Jon Baptiste — long before he became the band leader for Stephen Colbert. And that epic muddy night of Earth, Wind and Fire and that other epic, muddy night of Sara Bareilles opening for Open Republic. In 2007 I was invited to join the TED community — our programming morphed some more. Speakers included Sir Ken Robinson, Dr. David Gallo, Dr. B.J. Miller. Edward Snowden via his “snowbot” and Monica Lewinsky. TED sent me to Aspen, Palm Springs, Whistler, Banff, Edinburgh, Tanzania and Qatar. It changed my life to see the world. It has given me friends in exotic places doing good work. As a lifelong reader, bringing authors to the stage seemed the right thing. Sue Monk Kidd, Anne Lamott, Sherman Alexie. Journalists Maureen Dowd, Carl Hulse and Van Jones. The ability of our tech crews to make cirque folks fly across our stage always amazed me. I was happiest the night those shows were over, safely. I am grateful for pre-parties and after-parties at local art galleries and restaurants, which hosted us in their magical spaces. All the Sundance stories — too many but much gratitude for their willingness — from the first festival in Eccles — to help us create a Filmmaker in the Classroom program, ensuring local students didn’t have the festival just happen to their school but included them. Our own artist-in-the-classroom program had choreographers like Jessica Lang traveling to Coalville and teaching young dancers. Monica Lewinsky explained to students what it felt like as Patient Zero of cyberbullying. All the New Year’s Eve shows starting at 8 p.m. and ending with the balloons falling around 10 p.m. so folks could head home before the midnight hour or to our parties from the Yarrow to St Regis to Tupelo. The volunteers — regardless of the snow storm or the scorching summer heat — who showed up without fail to be the first line of response and defense greeting guests. I am grateful for every single person who purchased a ticket. Who brought a friend — who sponsored a show — who donated food or lodging. All the media folks who donated space in magazines, newspapers and radio spots who knew a vibrant smart community needed a vibrant smart performing arts center. The donors who supported things they knew and even more they had no idea about. What would be flying across the stage — dancers or tough language? All the boards who wanted to make certain — from the start — that all staff had full health care — incredible 25 years ago. I am grateful for shows we booked because an agent assured us this emerging act was a worth a risk. Nickel Creek — later Punch Brothers led by the McArthur genius Chris Thile — my favorite example. But there was the fake Hamlet with “members of the Royal Shakespeare Company.” In 1999 it was much harder to do homework with only DVDs to view. We loved the idea. Turned out the only link to the Royal Shakespeare Company was the makeup guy who was also the lover of the guy who played Hamlet. He once did makeup for a run of RSC in Vegas. Hamlet laughed in all his scenes like Pee Wee Herman. That was the same dreadful year we had The Lullaby guy — who had a recommend on his CD from Christopher Reeves. He decided — unbeknownst to us — not to perform lullabies but rather ingest something prior to going on stage and do something so freeform we were apologizing to every person who was streaming out of the theater at intermission. These things are funny only in hindsight. But even just one minute of Bernadette Peters hiking her ballgown to climb on the baby grand and sing “Fever” made up for the other stuff. Or Kris Kristofferson giving us his raw version of the song he had shared with Janis Joplin — “Me and Bobby McGee.” Or Rufus Wainwright on New Year’s Eve with the penultimate encore — a song he hadn’t performed publicly in four years — Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah.” You could have heard a pin drop. I hope you have your own best — and less — list of shows at Eccles, summers outdoors and Curiosities nights we tossed in for good measure. Or maybe your child joined us during the 10 years we ran the MegaGenius Supply Store and IQHQ — a free literacy tutoring center. I have 25 years of crazy and scary and mostly life-affirming moments to wrap up in. So “thanks for the memories” and for allowing me to have had the best job I never knew I wanted. It changed my life and for that I will be forever grateful — each Sunday in the Park... Teri Orr is a former editor of The Park Record. She is the founder and director emeritus of the Park City Institute, which provides programming for the George S. and Dolores Doré Eccles Center for the Performing Arts. |