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WARREN’S WORLD WARREN MILLER MEMORABILIA
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ON THE WALL OVER MY DRAW- ing board, beside my desk in my o ce in our home, on the side of a ski hill, 100 feet from a chair lift, hangs lots of memorabilia. Each of these con- jures up images of stu that I have done or photos of faraway places that I would like to have visited when I was a lot younger and stronger.
One is a large poster of Gary Lopez at the Pipeline in Hawaii riding a wave that is over three times as tall as he is. It brings back a lot of memories of getting smashed by what I used to think were big waves. In the early 1940s, the waves we rode were nowhere near that big, but we got smashed and pummeled in 50-degree water long before wet suits and light sur oards were invented.
Alongside that photo are two photos that were sent to me from an Air Force pilot who ies a C-147 to the South Pole. He ies a gigantic load of supplies to the South Pole Station and on the return trip the plane is completely full of trash. He sent the photos to me because when he was a youngster in Vermont, he was taken to one of my ski movies in the late 1970s and it changed the direction he chose for his life. I really appreciate it when I know I changed someone’s life with one or more of my many ski movies. In one of the pho- tos he is standing at the South Pole and an American ag is waving in the wind. He also sent Laurie and me that South Pole ag that ies on a tall pole in front of our house on Orcas Island.
On that same wall is a bit of memora- bilia of my own: one of the original post- ers from my rst 16mm ski lm, “Deep and Light.” It was rst shown in Pasadena and we charged $1 to see it. In those days there was still a 10 percent entertainment tax on any ticket that cost over one dol- lar. It was the start of 55 consecutive, fea- ture length ski lms that I enjoyed every
minute of producing.
Also on the wall is a photograph of
Ernest Shackleton, who tried to traverse the Antarctic Continent in 1914 but his ship got ice bound and he and his men spent the next two years on an ice ow after their ship was crushed and sunk by the Antarctic ice. You have to read the book of the expedition because it is the greatest survival story in the history of Antarctic or Arctic exploration. I am proud of that photo of Shackleton because it also includes his autograph and was sent to me as a present for my 70th birthday.
In the middle of all of this stu hangs a photo taken from a space vehicle as it ew 200 miles above our Montana home on one of its trips around the world every hour and a half.
About six years ago I received a phone call from the Johnson Space Center in Texas and the woman said, “Captain Phil- lips would like to talk with you.” I said, “Put him on.”
“I can’t. He is up in the space station. He has a half-dozen of your ski videos with him and he has been up there for four months and is bored. He told me that he grew up on your ski movies.” We made arrangements to talk when the space cap- sule ew right over Seattle.
Captain Phillips skied with us in Mon- tana later that winter and gave Laurie and myself that photo of our house that he per- sonally took when he ew over Big Sky.
My best treasure however is a hunting knife that was forged from a piece of the cable that was a part of the rst chairlift ever built in the world. It hauled skiers up Dollar Mountain in Sun Valley from 1936 until 1949 and was moved to Boyne Moun- tain Michigan where it did the same thing until 1990.
This column was originally printed in 2013.
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SEVENTH ANNUAL
Planning to send your child to camp this summer? Sponsorship may be available through Flathead Conservation District.
CROSSTOWN BOXING SMOKER
THURSDAY APRIL 14TH, 2016
• Natural Resources Youth Camp
• Youth Range Camp & Range Days • Glacier Institute Camps
Requests due May 1, 2016
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: Twisted Bliss Universal Athletics
Trade Center, Flathead County Fairgrounds 265 N. Meridian Road, Kalispell
Featuring over 10 bouts of area athletes (female and male), boxing in 3 one-minute rounds. All age groups welcome, a family event.
CONTACT:
FLATHEAD
CONSERVATION DISTRICT (406) 752-4220 • www.flatheadcd.org Local, common-sense conservation Since 1945
$20 Ringside • $15 Adult • $10 Student
APRIL 13, 2016 // FLATHEADBEACON.COM
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MONTANA
Summer Youth Camps
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at 5:30 PM
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