STAR COULBROOKE IS
POETRY IN MOTION
Star Coulbrooke has been extremely active in her role as Logan City Poet Laureate over the past two years.
The Herald Journal
JUNE 17-23, 2016
contents
June 17-23, 2016
COVER 6 Star Coulbrooke settles in as Logan Poet Laureate
THE ARTS 3 Renowned mandolinist Sierra Hull to play Logan
3 Noon concerts continue
at the Logan Tabernacle
4 Summerfest Arts Faire
now underway downtown
4 ‘Peter Pan’ to kick off
reopening of Utah Theatre
5 USU’s Lyric Repertory
Company takes on Sherlock Holmes’ show, ‘Baskerville’
5 Reyes to perform Elvis
tribute show at fundraiser
MOVIES 8 ‘Conjuring 2’ breaks run of low-performing sequels
9 Three stars: Cache critic
welcomes return to the sea in Pixar’s ‘Finding Dory’
COLUMN 8 Charlie Schill reviews
Lyric Rep’s production of ‘Arsenic and Old Lace’
CALENDAR 15 See what’s happening this week in Cache Valley
Kevin Hart, bottom, and Dwayne Johnson share a scene in the new film, “Central Intelligence.” (AP Photo) On the cover: Logan City Poet Laureate Star Coulbrooke speaks with Idaho Governor C.L. “Butch” Otter in Preston in 2013. (John Zsiray/Herald Journal)
FROM THE EDITOR The end might be coming much sooner than I feared. For years, I have been concerned over the potential demise of Hastings, which has been my go-to store for books, magazines, CDs and videos ever since I first moved to Cache Valley in the fall of 1991. At the time, there wasn’t a Hastings store in my hometown in Idaho Falls — but there is now — so I was just thrilled to death with the place that had so much to offer in the way of entertainment
impulse buying. But, much like daily newspapers, such great entertainment stores have started to suffer with the rise of the internet and the ability to acquire music, movies and books immediately on electronic devices. So, especially since the downfall of Borders a few years ago, I’ve been extremely worried about Hastings ability to stick around. Unfortunately, Hastings’ parent company filed for Chapter 11 this week, leaving the future of Logan’s store at 50 E. 400 North in serious doubt. And I have to say, if the store ends up closing, it would leave a serious hole in the community ... certainly in the hearts of older individuals such as myself who still prefer the feel
and appearance of a glossy magazine, the thrill of tearing the plastic wrap off of a new CD, the ability to choose from such a a large selection of DVDs and Blu-ray discs and the satisfaction of reading the final page of a book, closing it and taking a few moments to think about the journey you just completed. Certainly, times are changing — just ask the likes of Blockbuster, Media Play and Borders — but hey, people are starting to rediscover the joy of vinyl records, so here’s to saving a place like Hastings now before we have to try and bring it back again in the future. — Jeff Hunter
Bridger Folk Society welcomes singer/musician The Bridger Folk Music Society will host a concert by renowned singer and mandolinist Sierra Hull at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, June 25, in Bruner Hall at the Presbyterian Church, 200 W. Center St. Tickets are $20 in advance; $25 the day of the show. Tickets are available via PayPal at bridgerfolk.org. Hull, the former child prodigy who signed with Rounder at age 13, distinguished herself by becoming the first bluegrass musician to receive a Presidential Scholarship to the prestigious Berklee College of Music. Fifteen-time Grammy winner Béla Fleck produced Sierra’s new recording, “Weighted Mind,” which features 11 compelling new compositions Photo courtesy of Sierra Hull written or co-written by Hull, The Bridger Folk Music Society will host a concert by Sierra and one traditional tune for Hull at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, June 25, in Bruner Hall at the which she and Fleck provided a Presbyterian Church, 200 W. Center St. new arrangement. While Hull’s
ethereal voice and fluid playing take center stage here, she receives ample support from bass marvel Ethan Jodziewicz. Béla Fleck’s banjo adorns the elegant “Queen of Hearts/ Royal Tea,” and Alison Krauss, Abigail Washburn, and Rhiannon Giddens add enchanting harmonies. Though she is best known for her work as a mandolin player, on these songs, Hull reveals her abundant gifts as a composer and lyricist. Themes of loss and restoration run through the album, starting with the muscular opening number, “Stranded,” and continue on the stirring “Compass,” on which she declares, “I’ve thrown away my compass, done with the chart...I’ll just step out, throw my doubt into the sea, for what’s meant to be will be.” The gentle, dissonant title track ponders existential
questions, while the haunting “Birthday” and “Fallen Man” offer somber reflections on strained relationships and impossible choices. The album closes on an optimistic note, with the sweetly assertive “I’ll Be Fine,” and the uplifting, philosophical closer, “Black River.” Fleck, Giddens, Krauss, and Washburn all guest on this track, on which Hull reflects, “A thousand years is but a day, and maybe in a thousand years, I’ll find my way.” Veteran music scribe and fellow musician Peter Cooper writes, “Hull’s bluegrass roots inform and inspire this soundscape, but bluegrass does not define or limit ‘Weighted Mind.’ This is not bluegrass music, or chamber music, or pop music. This is original music, from a virtuoso who tells the truth and speaks from herself.”
Summer concert series continues at Tabernacle The Music at the Tabernacle Summer Concert Series continues at the Logan Tabernacle this week. Admission is free, and all concerts begin at noon. There will be no performances June 16-18 due to the Summerfest Arts Faire. Visit logantabernacle.blogspot.com for more information. Monday, June 20 Utah Festival Opera & Musical Theatre: Singers and instrumentalists will perform their favorite music in addition to previewing the upcoming UFOMT season which includes “Ragtime,” “Porgy and Bess,” “Show Boat,” “Puccini’s Trilogy” and “Peter Pan.” For more information, visit utahfestival.org. Tuesday, June 21
Mountain Crest High School Young Artists Cup performers: The Young Artist Cup is a music competition held each spring that allows students to display their talent and compete for trophies and cash prizes. Ten students will perform a variety of selections from classical repertoire, show tunes and contemporary literature, including: Jacki Andrus (marimba); Matt Rigby (piano); Christian Parish (cello); Elizabeth Sweeten (flute); Emmeline Swink (vocal); Mason Syddall (vocal); Samantha Bell (vocal); Levi Hopkins (vocal); Kiersten Jensen (piano); and Jessica Merkley (piano). Wednesday, June 22 Chris Mortensen: A local cowboy sing-
er/songwriter, Mortensen is a seasoned performer, having played music for most of his life. Starting at 13 years old, in his older brother’s band, Mortenseon has played bass guitar in many top local bands through the years. These days, he performs as a solo act, singing and playing guitar at many of the cowboy gatherings throughout the Intermountain West. He has also played bass for Leaping Lulu, with the trio, Saddle Serenade, and with some of his experienced musician friends in Gramps With Amps. Thursday, June 23 Lyric Repertory Company: Come enjoy actors and singers as they preview the 2016 Lyric Repertory Season. Shows this year include: “Arsenic
and Old Lace,” “Baskerville: A Sherlock Holmes Mystery,” “Singing’ In the Rain” and “You Can’t Take It With You.” You will see everything from comedy, suspense, to an old Hollywood classic and hilarious slapstick. There is something for everyone. Visit cca.usu.edu/theatre/ about-us/lyric for more information. Friday, June, 24 Ryan Frazier & Friends: A soloist, jazz pianist and teacher currently working on a computer science degree, Frazier will be joined by his wife, Emma, who plays the piano, guitar, organ, violin and ukulele. Anna Lisa Davidson is a flute teacher, adjudicator and performer with a bachelor’s in music, and cellist Alexis Haviland will join them for this performance.
The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, June 17, 2016
Hull coming to Logan
Page 3 -
ALL MIXED UP
The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, June 17, 2016
Page 4 -
all mixed up Summerfest now underway downtown The Summerfest Arts Faire is gearing up for exciting and varied musical and other performances June 16-18 on the grounds of the Logan Tabernacle. “Our performance jury has a lot of experience and connections in the music world, and our 2016 lineup demonstrates
this,” said Summerfest executive director Elaine Thatcher. Last year, Summerfest brought in The Strike, a highenergy and original band from Utah Valley. This year, continuing the effort to bring in Utah artists that are attracting attention nationally and even internationally, Summerfest
will feature blues artist Tony Holiday, singer-songwriter Talia Keys, folk singer Kate MacLeod and bluegrass band Blue Sage, featuring wellknown banjo master Mike Iverson. Headliners on the three nights are Colt .46, a country band from Ogden on Thursday
night; Abraxas, a ’60s and ’70s rock and roll and rhythm and blues band from Logan on Friday; and Party Rock Project, a pop/rock band from Perry on Saturday night. “We try to select groups that are great for dancing as our headliners each evening,” said Thatcher. “All three of these
groups have loyal fans, and I know everyone will have a great time.” Abraxas is a remix of the popular group Way Way East Bay, playing a different repertoire, but featuring wellknown local musicians Mike See NOW on Page 11
Utah Theatre returns with ‘Peter Pan’ Ballam, Biner star in inaugural show of 2016 UFOMT season For the last decade there has been no question in Michael Ballam’s mind what production would christen the stage of the Utah Theatre when it’s renovation was complete. It had to be “Peter Pan.” “No other musical has captured the imagination of children from 1 to 92 as Peter carries us to magical Neverland,” said the founding director of the Utah Festival Opera & Musical Theatre. Ballam’s dream will become a reality on Friday, June 24, when the Broadway production opens in the newly renovated 1924 Utah Theatre, the first time the public will have a chance to see the interior of the Art Deco theatre. Ballam plays the menacing Captain Hook and New York City actor Adam Biner has returned to Logan to literally soar across the stage as Peter Pan. Biner played the lead role in last year’s UFOMT production of “How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying.” The musical will be directed by Vanessa Ballam, the festival’s education director and Ballam’s daughter. He is thrilled to work with
her for the first time in this capacity. “I saw fairy dust twinkle in her eyes when she first experienced ‘Peter Pan’ as a little girl. Now she is transferring that magic to a new generation of lost boys, pirates, wondrous animals and warriors,” he said. “She was born with theatricality in her blood stream. I always knew her great talent would rise to the top.” The production will showcase the state-of-the-art technical and acoustical features of the Utah Theatre and is part of UFOMT’s 2016 season. Evening performances of “Peter Pan” will be held at 7:30 p.m. June 24-25, July 1, 20 and 26 and Aug. 4. Matinee performances will be held at 1 p.m. June 25, July 2 and 14 and Aug. 3. Ticket prices range from $13 to $77. Students of all ages receive a 25 percent discount with ID. The complete Festival officially runs July 6 to Aug. 6 and includes four additional Mainstage Productions in repertory — “Showboat,” “Porgy and Bess,” “Ragtime” and Puccini’s final completed work “Il Trittico” — all held in the
Photo courtesy of Utah Festival Opera & Musical Theatre
Adam T. Biner, left, and Michael Ballam will star at Peter Pan and Captain Hook, respectively, in the Utah Festival Opera & Musical Theatre’s production of “Peter Pan” at the Ellen Eccles Theatre.
Ellen Eccles Theatre and performed with a full orchestra. In total, 139 performances, concerts, lectures, interactive
classes, backstage tours and more will be presented. Tickets are available online at utahfestival.org, by calling
750-0300 or in person at the UFOMT box office located in the Dansante Building at 59 S. 100 West.
money for different organizations and charities. This concert will benefit The Family Place, a nonprofit organization that provides workshops for families, care for children and counseling to build stronger families throughout the community. Esterlee Molyneux, executive director at The Family Place, says “The Family Place is ecstatic
over the generous offer of Buddy Reyes to perform on behalf of The Family Place. What is most touching is his desire to help children in Cache Valley as well as internationally. We are grateful for his generosity and belief in The Family Place.” To register for the concert, visit thefamilyplaceutah.org/buddyreyes-benefit.
Sherlock comes to Lyric New comedy ‘Baskerville’ now on stage
Utah State University’s Lyric Repertory Company brings audiences “Baskerville: A Sherlock Holmes Mystery,” a comic retelling of Arthur Conan Doyle’s “The Hound of the Baskervilles.” The play opened Thursday, June 16, at the historic Caine Lyric Theatre in downtown Logan and continues Friday, June 17, and Saturday, June 18, then on select dates through Aug. 6. “It’s a zany, romp of a play,” Jason Spelbring, Caine College of the Arts professor and the play’s director, said. “The funny moments are really funny, but the more intense moments are very suspenseful and terrifying. It’s a lovely combination of trying to balance the absolute slapstick hilarity with a terrifying murdermystery.” The plotline finds Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson investigating the death of Sir Charles Baskerville, whose body was discovered on the grounds of his estate. Playwright Ken Ludwig, who brought “Lend Me a Tenor” and “Moon Over Buffalo” to the stage, puts his farcical spin on this classic mystery. “A lot of people aren’t familiar with this play, but are familiar with Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson,” Spelbring said. “Walking into this experience, they’ll have a leg up on what to expect
Brenn Hill show in Nibley
Utah native Brenn Hill will perform a free concert as part of Nibley’s Heritage Days celebration at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, June 18, at the 3200 South park ampitheater. A true cowboy who has a passion for family, country and the American West, Hill released his 10th album, “How You Heal,” last month. Visit nibleycity. com and brennhill.com for more information.
Ice Cream Summerfest To celebrate Little Bloomsbury Foundation’s 10th anniversary and the 150th anniversary of pioneers in the Northern Utah/Idaho region, Little Bloomsbury will be holding an inaugural Ice Cream Summerfest from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. June 16-18 at 181 N. 200 East (directly west of the LDS temple, “where the teepee is.”) The event has been approved by Logan City and is totally separate from the Summerfest Arts Faire on the grounds of the Logan Tabernacle. The theme of the Ice Cream Summerfest is “Lengthen Your Stride.” Everyone will be offered a free Great Harvest Bread ice cream sandwich, while supplies last. Activities include handcart pulling, sketch club, calligraphy, pioneer dance, music, costume contest and storytelling. For more information, visit littlebloomsbury.org.
Final Art on the Lawn The 12th and final Art on the Lawn event will be held from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, June 25, at the Old Crookston Homestead, 1491 E. 2300 North in North Logan. There will be entertainment all day long (including Lorisa Pulotu, Ana Anawalt & Friends, Ben Watkins, Cottonwood Run and the Blue Blazers), with more than 40 artists creating on the lawn and you can help local artist Michael Bingham paint a mural on an old barn. Some lawn space is still available. Contact luciart@comcast.net or visit artonthelawncachevalley.net for more information.
Freedom Fire tickets
Photo courtesy of Caine College of the Arts
Utah State University actor Sean Peters plays Sherlock Holmes in the Lyric Repertory Company’s production of “Baskerville: A Sherlock Holmes Mystery.”
because all the iconic things about Sherlock and Watson are present in this play, it’s just told differently. ‘The Hound of the Baskervilles’ is a popular novel and the play incorporates all the elements of the novel with a twist.”
In the show, there are two principal actors and three ensemble members. Between them, the three ensemble members portray 40 characters. See LYRIC on Page 11
Tickets For the Freedom Fire Independence Day Celebration and Fireworks Show go on sale Monday, May 16. Join your family, friends, neighbors, and fellow Americans on Friday, July 1, to celebrate the greatest country in the world at USU’s Maverik Stadium. The entertainment will include Caleb Chapman’s Crescent Super Band, Journey Unlimited: The Tribute and Ryan Innes. Tickets are $8. Tickets will be available the Logan Community Recreation Center (195 S. 100 West), Logan Aquatic Center (451 S. 500 West), Cache Valley Visitors Bureau (199 N. Main St.) and the USU Spectrum Ticket Office (850 E. 900 North), or online at pr.loganutah.org.
The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, June 17, 2016
Internationally renowned Norberto Buddy Reyes, the father of Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes, will perform at 7 p.m. Thursday, June 23, at the Four Seasons Events Center, 140 E. 2200 North in North Logan. Known at the “Filipino Elvis,” Reyes has toured with Bob Hope, produced movies and performed all around the world raising
Page 5 -
‘Filipino Elvis’ ready to play COMING UP
A ST
A short, thin woman with the top of a 200-foot cliff b George. She took a deep br Either I am going to quit l die, thought Star Coulbrook time. She couldn’t ignore th mind. After days of writing knew she couldn’t live this With a burst of courage, C
“I felt myself lift off, and I knew was never going back to the perso was before,” she says. Although it wasn’t a physical jump, Coulbrooke now believes it be a mental leap of far greater con quence. Coulbrooke, Logan City’s firstever poet laureate, wouldn’t have same job, the same friends, the sa family or even the same name if it hadn’t been for that jump. “So I had the same body when I walked back down that trail, but th me inside was entirely new. Full o resolve, full of light.” Now, 25 years later, Coulbrooke has found her true self. When she stepped off that cliff, she stepped into a life where she soars. And sh never been happier. “I just couldn have a better life than what I have right now,” she says. Her friends and coworkers say it’s not her career they admire. Th admire Coulbrooke because she so obviously wants to help others suc ceed. She spends hours teaching tutors at Utah State University’s Writing Center, encourages writer to share their work at a communit open-mic forum she organized at Logan Library called Helicon Wes and teaches poetry at community events. Alyssa Quinn, a senior creative writing major who works in the W ing Center, met Coulbrooke when she was a freshman member of th Bull Pen, USU’s creative writing club. She remembers the day clea
TAR IN THE MAKING
h spiky red hair stood soberly at by the Great Western Trail near St. reath, then released it slowly. living with him, or I am going to ke, who was 40 years old at the he idea as it played on loop in her poetry and contemplating, she way anymore. Coulbrooke jumped.
wI on I
t to nse-
-
the ame t
I he of
e
he’s n’t e
hey o c-
rs ty the st
Writn he
arly.
“I remember just being really, really struck by her,” Quinn says. “She seemed really cool, with her spiky hair and ankle tattoos and big red pumps. She had so much character and spunk.” Quinn, the 21-year-old valedictorian of the College of Humanities and Social Sciences, was 18 at the time. She stood timidly in front of the group and read her poem. Coulbrooke nodded. “That is really good,” she said. Quinn smiles as she recalls that moment, and how Coulbrooke has encouraged her to push herself both as a writer and a tutor since then. “She really, really cares about people,” Quinn says. “She has so much on her plate. She’s involved with everything, and yet when a student comes by to see her, she’ll put down everything and make time for them. Despite everything, she really puts others first.” Coulbrooke’s students and colleagues say she validates and encourages their writing and opinions constantly. “One of Star’s best qualities is she makes you feel important – that you matter, that your voice matters, that what you have to say matters,” says Susan Andersen, who has worked with Coulbrooke for years at the USU Writing Center. “You can be a beginning poet or an advanced poet, it doesn’t matter to Star. The important thing is that you’re saying something.” But before she could help others
Above, Logan City Poet Laureate Star Coulbrooke reads a poem at a Logan Municipal Council meeting in 2013. (Eli Lucero) Facing page, Coulbrooke reads a May Swenson poem at the poet’s grave during the May Swenson Memorial Poetry Walkabout in the Logan Cemetery last month. (John Zsiray)
Story by Melanie Fenstermaker find their voices, Coulbrooke had to find own. And it took her 40 years to do it. “When you look at her, you might think she’s had it all together all her life,” Andersen says. “She hasn’t, not at all.”
FINDING STAR
Coulbrooke grew up on a small farm near the Oneida Narrows in Southeastern Idaho. Even as a child, she was an avid reader. She recalls the poetry books in her house: Longfellow, Robert Frost. “I read a lot of poetry when I was a little kid,” she says. “My family had some books around the house because, I guess my dad used to recite poetry.” When Coulbrooke was 11, her father died, and her older sister took her to live with her in Montpelier. Her first memory of writing a poem was when she was 13. A few
minutes before the bell rang to end school one day, her speech teacher asked the students to write a short poem. Coulbrooke’s poem just came to her, she says. It began: My dad just loves to be outdoors I never shut him in “Where did you get this poem?” the teacher asked. “I just wrote it,” Star replied. “Well, who wrote it first?” her teacher asked. Once she was convinced that Coulbrooke had written the poem, the teacher made the class stay after the bell to listen to the first-time poet read it. “From then on, I felt like I could write poems,” she said. But Coulbrooke’s love for poetry was soon overshadowed by a love of another kind. She met a boy who
had money and a good job, and her friends all gushed over how handsome he was. Three months later, he asked her to marry him. He was 18. She was 16. She dropped out of high school and moved in with him. They had three children together — two girls and one boy. But she soon began to feel trapped. “I had a husband who wasn’t very emotionally available,” she says. “He didn’t like me to write things.” She didn’t write much for a long time — only 12 poems over more than two decades — because she was afraid of a husband who was emotionally abusive and a heavy drinker. She tried to leave him once, but he found the divorce paperwork and became angry. “It wasn’t a very good scene, and I didn’t dare leave,” she says. By the time Coulbrooke turned 40, the abuse got worse. “He did some things that I felt like were the last thing, and I was either going to quit living with him or I was going to die.” Coulbrooke went to visit her mother in St. George when she was 40, and decided to hike to clear her head. It was at this point that she found herself looking over the edge of the cliff, and decided it was time to move on. By the time she’d made it back down from the mountain, she knew she would never go back to him. When she returned to Logan, Coulbrooke went to a shelter for abused women. She packed a few suitcases, climbed into a red 1959 Camaro, and drove away from a 24-year marriage. Coulbrooke didn’t leave with much: half of a meager savings account, a couch, a can opener, a kitchen knife, some makeup. After living at the shelter for 30 days, she rented a small, cinder-block apartment near USU and started working See STAR on Page 10
Aisle Views
just happens to think that he’s the first President Roosevelt. It’s a noisy delusion, but harmless (mostly). As brother Jonathan, the hulking homicidal maniac of the Brewster clan, Brendan Allen is convincingly menacing on one hand and hilarious on the other, especially when he plays straight man to the diminutive Dr. Einstein. Lyric newcomer Cameron Blankenship is marvelous as the killer’s fast-talking crony. Despite those valiant efforts by their co-stars, Leslie Brott and Colleen Baum naturally steal the show as Abby and Martha Brewster, the merry murderesses of Brooklyn. It’s difficult to imagine the ditzy spinsters being played by a more adorable and entertaining duo. Brott and Baum have perfect stage chemistry and their comic timing is bang-on. Their characterizations are so believable that you can almost accept their rationale that dispensing poisoned wine to elderly gentlemen is an act of Christian charity. A half-dozen solid
actors round out the cast as clueless cops, a nosy pastor and a gullible nuthouse administrator. They are Jim Dale, Christobal Perez, Kenny Bordieri, Max Falls, Michael Francis and Lyric patriarch W. Vosco Call. Additional evening performances of “Arsenic and Old Lace” are slated at the Caine Lyric Theatre on June 18; July 8, 16, 20 and 28; and Aug. 5. A matinee will be offered on July 23. ——— Editor’s Note: Charlie Schill is a former city editor of The Herald Journal. He has directed and performed with theater groups in the United States and overseas. Schill also served as theater critic for the Temple Daily Telegram in Texas and the Pacific Stars & Stripes and Japan Times, both daily newspapers in Tokyo.
NEW YORK (AP) — The recent slump of sequels at the box office finally caught a break with “The Conjuring 2,” a horror sequel that topped weekend theaters with an estimated $40.4 million. The Warner Bros. film, in which Vera Farmiga and Patrick Wilson play married paranormal investigators, opened nearly on par with its 2013 original, which was also directed by James Wan. That film debuted with $41.8 million and went on to earn $319 million globally. The big-budget videogame adaptation “Warcraft,” a co-production between Universal and Legendary that reportedly cost $160 million to make, came in second with $24.4 million, according to studio estimates Sunday. Though it effectively bombed in North America, “Warcraft” has been a hit
AP Photo
The horror sequel “The Conjuring 2” topped the box office last week with a total of $40.4 million.
overseas, particularly in China. In China, the film, taken from the “World of Warcraft” video game franchise, has made a staggering $156 million in its first five days. That
surpasses the foreign film release record of “Avengers: Age of Ultron,” not to mention blockbusters like “Star Wars: The Force Awakens.” See BOX on Page 9
FATHER ’S DA SAlE Y
10% off ALL TREES June 17 - 25
7 North Main Logan •
(435) 752-3365
•
752-0733
Quality Victorian Furniture
in Rosewood, Mahagony, Walnut & Oak, also glassware, art glass, porcelain, persian rugs, silver etc.
Open Wed through Sat 12 - 5 or by appointment
50% off
Hanging Baskets
20% off Planters
Annuals Buy 2 Get 1 fREE
“Cache Valley’s favorite Nursery”
The GreenHouse Inc. 295 West 300 South, Logan • 752-7923
www.logangreenhouse.com
1468779
The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, June 17, 2016
The Lyric Repertory Company’s ongoing production of the theater classic “Arsenic and Old Lace” is an absolute treat for nostalgia lovers. Under the gifted direction of Jim Christian, a cast of Lyric Rep veterans and newcomers brilliantly handle this screwball comedy’s challenging mix of rapid-fire wisecracks and slapstick physical humor. Mitch Shira is a welcome addition to Lyric family of players in the role of Mortimer Brewster, a frustrated theater critic who is driven to the brink of hysteria when he discovers murderous family secrets. Shira skillfully avoids the danger of over-acting while still providing much of the manic energy that has made “Arsenic and Old Lace” a laugh riot since the late 1930s. Lyric veteran Katie Francis, back as Mortimer’s bewildered fiancée, provides a refreshing pool of her trademark charm and elegance in the midst of the play’s sea of panic. The good news is that 2016 seems to be the season of Katie Francis at the Lyric; she will also star in two other productions this summer. “Arsenic and Old Lace” also gives local favorite Richie Call an opportunity to shine as Teddy, a Brewster brother who
Charlie Schill
Page 8 -
Lyric Rep opens ‘Conjuring 2’ scares up up with ‘Arsenic’ $40M at the box office
Box Continued from Page 8 The Lionsgate magician caper “Now You See Me 2” opened in third place with $23 million domestically. That’s a drop from the original’s $29.4 million debut. It eventually grossed $351.7 million worldwide. The dip for “Now You See Me 2” was more in line with the diminishing results seen from recent poorly performing sequels. “Alice Through
★★★
‘Finding Dory’
the Looking Glass,” ‘’Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows” (last week’s top film, which slid to fourth this weekend with $14.8 million), “Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising,” ‘’Ride Along 2” and “The Huntsman: Winter’s War” have all done worse than their preceding films. Next week, Pixar’s “Finding Dory” will hope to continue the turn of fortune for sequels. The “Finding Nemo” sequel is expected to perhaps be Pixar’s biggest opening ever.
Action!
PROVIDENCE 8
UNIVERSITY 6
535 West 100 North, Providence
1225 North 200 East, Logan
The Angry Birds Movie (PG) 2297 N. Main MOVIE HOTLINE 753-6444 WWW.WALKErCINEMAS.NET THE SUMMEr FUN TIME MOVIE FOr JUN 13-16TH IS MINIONS MON-THUrS 12:00 & 2:00 2D SEATS $4.00 • 3D SEATS $6.00 OPEN MON - SAT AT 11:30 AM FOr MATINEES OPEN SUN AT 3:45 PM NO 9PM SHOWINGS SUNdAy
2d KUNG FU PANdA (PG) 4:50 THE HUNTSMAN: WINTErS WAr (PG-13)
7:00
SING STrEET (PG-13) 4:40 7:30
MONEy MONSTEr (r) 7:15 ZOOTOPIA (PG) 4:30 6:45 SATUrdAy’S WArrIOr (PG) 4:00
1466149
10:30, 1:00
Central Intelligence* (PG-13) 10:45, 1:15, 3:45, 7:45, 10:15
The Conjuring 2 (R) 3:30, 6:30, 10:00 pm 3D Finding Dory* (PG) 10:20 pm Finding Dory* (PG) 10:35, 11:30, 1:10, 2:00, 3:10, 4:30, 5:15, 6:15, 7:00, 8:45, 9:30
Love & Friendship (PG) 12:50, 8:10 Me Before You (PG-13) 10:30, 3:35,
6:20, 9:00
Central Intelligence (107) (PG-13) 10:40,
June 17 - June 23 MOVIES 5
2450 North Main, Logan
Alice Through The Looking Glass (PG) 4:30, 6:30, 10:15**
The Angry Birds Movie (PG) 12:35, 5:15
Captain America: Civil War (PG-13) 12:40, 3:50, 7:00, 10:10**
Now You See Me 2* (PG-13) 12:00, 3:00,
3D Finding Dory*
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out Of The Shadows (PG-13) 1:45, 5:35 3D Warcraft* (PG-13) 12:45, 9:30 Warcraft* (PG-13) 11:00 X-Men: Apocalypse (PG-13) 10:40, 2:00
Finding Dory*
6:05, 9:10
Private Screenings & Events 435-752-7155
(PG) 10:00**
(PG) 12:00, 2:30, 5:00, 7:30
Jungle Book (PG) 12:15, 2:50, 7:40, 10:20**
X-Men: Apocalypse (PG-13) 1:15, 3:15, 7:10, 9:10**
Showtime Updates:
www.MegaplexTheatres.com
1:05, 3:25, 5:40, 8:00, 9:05
Finding Dory 2D (103) (PG) 10:30, 12:55, 3:20, 5:45, 6:45, 8:10, 10:30
Finding Dory 3D (103) (PG) 1:45 *Conjuring 2 (133) (R) 10:35, 4:15, 7:05, 10:20
*Warcraft 3D (123) (PG-13) 11:00 *Warcraft 2D (123) (PG-13) 1:30, 4:05, 9:55 Now You See Me 2 (115) (PG-13) 10:50, 1:35, 4:20, 7:00, 9:45
*Me Before You (110) (PG-13) 10:30, 5:40, 8:05, 10:25
*Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2 2D (112) (PG-13) 12:50, 3:15
Dbox Warcraft 2D (123) (PG-13) 4:05 Dbox Warcraft 3D (123) (PG-13) 11:00 Dbox Central Intelligence (107) (PG-13) 9:05 **NO DISCOUNT TICKETS OR PASSES ACCEPTED *TIME ChANgE 1472781
The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, June 17, 2016
With its lighthearted nature and heart-tugging narrative, “Finding Dory” manages to add substance to one of Pixar’s most-beloved films. The worry with sequels is that they’ll somehow diminish the original. This one doesn’t do that at all. It never feels forced or pandering. There’s a genuine hilarity about it that feels fresh. It doesn’t hit tic visuals go. the same emotional Sure, “Finding Dory” AP Photo chords that “Finding looks a little more polDory, voiced by Ellen DeGeneres, and Hank, voiced by Ed O’Neill, interact during a scene Nemo” struck, but it ished, much like “The in Pixar’s latest sequel, “Finding Dory.” has its tear-worthy Good Dinosaur.” It harmoments all the same. bors near photo-realism in Within its beautiful not knowing where to places. They both contain exterior and its smorstart. Marlin (Albert astounding animation. Brooks) has his doubts, gasbord of hysterical Animation that instantly but easily puts them marine-themed jokes, aside, owing his character draws you into its under- there’s a story about Director // Andrew Stanton, Angus MacLane change to the last movie. water world. overcoming seemStarring // Ellen DeGeneres, Albert Brooks, Ed Nemo (Hayden Rolence) The trail of halfingly insurmountO’Neill, Hayden Rolence, Kaitlin Olson, Ty Burrell, also joins in on the search. remembered moments able obstacles. How Diane Keaton, Idris Elba, Eugene Levy Returning to this world from Dory’s childhood Rated // PG for mild thematic elements parents can help their leads the trio of friends to kids achieve what is just delightful. “Findan aquarium where they ing Nemo” remains one seems impossible. wanting your child to ways to help Dory funcmeet all sorts of new char- How children can of the most beautifully tion despite her difficulty have a lifetime of success acters. Chief among them conquer their probno matter what challenges animated feature films, remembering. They’re is a surly octopus named and “Finding Dory” is may arise. lems as long as they tireless in their efforts Along with her chronic right up there with it. It’s Hank (Ed O’Neill), who have determination because of the love they reluctantly helps Dory a testament to the brilforgetfulness, Dory is and optimism. There’s have for their child. liant quality of animation try and find her parents. a spontaneous ball of a lot to be said here, They want her to sucin “Finding Nemo,” when Hank’s presence provides and “Finding Dory” ceed. Every parent in the energy. The moment she 13 years later there isn’t a much of the movie’s finds some interesting audience will understand remembers her parents, she sets off to find them ways to say it. large gap as far as realis- humor. that feeling. Desperately
The Reel Place Aaron Peck
Imbued with the same sense of wonder and attention to detail as its predecessor, “Finding Dory” presents us with an origin tale for the forgetful, but lovable blue tang. It may not harbor the exact same surprising awe as “Finding Nemo” since we’re not strangers to this world anymore. It would be almost impossible to recreate that magical feeling a second time. However, this story adds worthwhile depth to the first and doesn’t feel tacked on as a meaningless sequel cash grab. We begin with Dory (Ellen DeGeneres) suddenly remembering her parents. There’s a flashback. She’s a cute, bugeyed youngster who, due to her famous short-term memory loss, is unable to find her way home, so her patient parents teach her to follow a line of shells home. The scenes between Dory and her parents are life affirming; a tiny glimpse into what it must be like for parents living with special needs children. Not saying that it’s a direct analogy, but Dory’s parents find
Page 9 -
‘Dory’ is a return to a ‘delightful’ world
The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, June 17, 2016
Page 10 -
COMING UP Star
‘Beauty and the Beast’
Continued from Page 7 for $5.25 an hour as a part-time nursing aide at Sunshine Terrace, a local senior residential center. She also decided to change her name. “After I got divorced, I didn’t want to have anything to do with his name or my childhood name,” she says. She first chose the name Starsun, but eventually shortened it to Star. Her coworkers at Sunshine Terrace helped her come up with Coulbrooke. Her name means everything to her, she says: It’s her true identity. “Our names are exactly who we are,” she says. “If people have a name that isn’t them, they should change it. It’s very poetic to have the name that you feel is the one that you’ve always lived up to.” A few months later, she met Mitch Butterfield, a friendly man with deep laugh lines, in a bar. But Butterfield already knew her. “I recognized her because I used The Old Barn Community Theatre in Collinston proudly presents “Fiddler on the Roof” every Mon- to take her groceries out when I was a bagger,” he says. “I remember day, Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. from June 10-25. Matinees will begin at 2:30 p.m. June 11, 18 the car that she drove. It was really strange; she made an impression on and 25. me before I even knew her.” Set in the little village of Anatevka, the story Coulbrooke wasn’t so keen on the centers on Tevye, a poor dairyman, and his five daughters. With the help of a colorful and tight-knit idea at first. “I really didn’t want a Jewish community, Tevye tries to protect his daugh- relationship. I didn’t want a man. I wanted to be alone,” she says. ters and instill them with traditional values in the face of changing social mores and the growing anti- But Butterfield’s kindness changed her mind. She moved in Semitism of Czarist Russia. with him a few weeks later and For tickets, call (435) 458-2276 or visit oldbarn. eventually married him in 2001. org. “He loves everything about me unconditionally,” Coulbrooke says. “That was part of what helped me be who I am today. I realized that, no, I Auditions for the Sky High Players’ summer didn’t need to be alone. I just needed production of “Wild West Shakespeare: Romeo & to be with the right people — to Juliet, the Musical Comedy” will begin at 9 a.m. have the right people in my life.” Monday, June 20, at Sky View High School in That was in 1991. A few weeks Smithfield. later, Coulbrooke went back to Students from Cache, Logan and other nearby school for an English degree. She school districts should contact Dr. David Sidwell recalls walking up the 158 icy steps at david.sidwell@ccsdut.org if wish to participate. of Old Main Hill for the first time. Actors should be at least 12 years of age; recent alumni may also participate. The show will be per- It was a cold January morning. She looked up at the “A” on top of Old formed July 6-7 in the evening. Rehearsals will be Main tower through the cloud of from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday through Thursday. her breath. The play is a lively, comic adaptation of the “It was the most beautiful and famous play by Shakespeare, but with Wild West wondrous experience I had ever melodrama acting and original songs. had in my life,” she says, almost 25 “We have had so much fun with this script,” years later. “I just felt like I could Sidwell says. “I really look forward to getting to breathe. I could finally breathe.” know students from all over Cache Valley and Coulbrooke worked four partbeyond as we rehearse and perform it.”
Four Seasons Theatre Company begins its 2016 season with Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast” June 17-27 at the Sky View High School Auditorium. Show times are 7:30 p.m., with 1:30 matinees on Saturday. Tickets are only $11 online at fourseasonstheatre. org. Family and group discounted rates are also available by calling 535-1432. The cast of Beauty and the Beast includes local performers from all over Cache Valley. The production is directed and costume designed by Kody Rash, music directed by Afton Furniss and choreographed by Katie Packard, Hollie Boehme and Scott Henderson. Local performers in “Beauty and the Beast” include AnnAlyse Chidester (Belle), Trenton Bateman (Beast), Benjamin Phillips (Gaston), Cory and Aubree Keate (Lumiere and Babette), Debbie Miles (Mrs. Potts), Tyler Jones (Cogsworth), Alex Eby (LeFou), Jennifer Bohman (Wardrobe), Scott Hunsaker (Maurice) and McGregor Brough and Ayden Kofoed (Chip).
‘Fiddler’ at the Old Barn
Sky High show audition
time jobs to get through school, one at the The Italian Place. The owner of the sandwich shop happened to know USU poetry professor Ken Brewer, who later became Utah’s poet laureate. “Bring me something you’ve been writing, and he’ll comment on it,” the restaurant owner said. “Oh, no, no, no,” Coulbrooke said. “I’d be too embarrassed.” But she finally gave him a few pieces of her writing. Three months later, Brewer returned the writing to the The Italian Place. One handwritten comment said, “I like the voice here.” Another said, “I don’t understand who’s speaking here.” “It really scared me,” Coulbrooke says. “I didn’t dare take a class from him until 1996, when I got into grad school.” But when she did take a class from him, she immediately clicked with Brewer’s teaching style. “He mentored me and his comments were always very spare,” she says. “He trusted me to write my poems the way that I write. He’s the reason I became fearless in my poetry.” Brewer, who served for three years as Utah’s poet laureate, died in 2006. But Coulbrooke still invokes him in her classes. She says she has modeled her teaching style after his. “I’d rather be more spare with comments for aspiring writers,” she says. “You can revise too much, too early while people are still trying to find their voice.” “I believe that it’s important, first of all, to get people able to be fearless, to put their words on paper and not be afraid of having them dashed by someone or changed by someone.” Poetry saved Coulbrooke’s life, and she believes it can help others through hard times. To her, that alone is reason enough to teach. And it’s why she has loved her time as Logan’s first poet laureate. “Isn’t it cool?” she says, beaming. “I get to do what I always wanted to do, which is bring poetry to the people.”
SHARING THE GIFT
Every month, Coulbrooke leads community writers on a walk and writing workshop that she calls a Poetry Walkabout. Before each one, she puts on thick sunglasses, heads
down Old Main Hill and walks the path she has planned. She watches for stairs, narrow pathways, uneven ground. If it all looks good, she invites community writers. At the walkabouts, Isaac Timm rides alongside his wife, Aaron Timm, in his powered wheelchair. Isaac, a 2014 USU English graduate, smiles in gratitude when he thinks of all Coulbrooke has done for him. “Star walks the path that she takes to the walkabouts to see if I can take my wheelchair over there,” he says. “I feel included. She makes sure I’m not isolated, that I’m accepted as any other poet.” Coulbrooke tries to make everyone feel accepted, Isaac says, because she believes poetry is a gift worth sharing. “She’s not lording her knowledge — she’s sharing it,” he says. “Poetry is a gift given to her by Ken Brewer and May Swenson, and she’s just exploding it out into the city she loves. And I think she really has a love for this city and Cache Valley writers.” Coulbrooke says her ultimate goal is to make sure everyone has access to poetry. “The important thing is, if people like poetry, they should be able to have it in hand. They should be able to write it themselves if they want to.” When the walkabout group reaches the final destination, they gather around her and read a prompt designed to help inspire them to write poems. After they’ve written for a few minutes, Coulbrooke encourages the poets to share their work. She wants them to be fearless with their words because she knows how healing it can be. “Writing poetry has really always been the best thing in my life because it really enables me to feel the question without fear of injustice or fear of saying something wrong,” she says. Coulbrooke adds that freedom of self-expression in poetry is what saved her from jumping that day 25 years ago. Coulbrooke says she has never returned to the exact spot on that cliff in Southern Utah — mentally or physically — but when she sees friends and students standing on the edge of their own mental cliffs, she urges them to write.
Beard of Bees will perform with Rorry Forbush at 7 p.m. Friday, June 17, at Why Sound, 30 Federal Ave. Admission is $6.
park), and the Children’s Theatre production of “Sand Castles: Tales from the Arabian Nights” (7 p.m. at the 3200 South park amphitheater). Visit nibleycity. com for more information.
The 11th annual Four Paws Rescue Rummage Sale will be held from 5 to 8 p.m. Friday, June 17, and from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, June 18, at 227 W. 400 North. All of the proceeds from the sale go to benefit the homeless cats and dogs of Four Paws Rescue, a private animal rescue organization. Visit 4paws.petfinder.com for more information.
Four Seasons Theatre Company begins its 2016 season with Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast” June 17-27 at the Sky View High School Auditorium. Show times are 7:30 p.m., with 1:30 matinees on Saturday. Tickets are only $11 online at fourseasonstheatre.org. Family and group discounted rates are also available by calling 535-1432.
The Summerfest Arts Faire will be held June 16-18 on the grounds of the Logan Tabernacle. Summerfest offers fine art, great food and entertainment to its visitors as well as quality entertainment with headliner concerts each evening. Hours on Saturday are 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Visit logansummerfest.com for more information.
Logan City Poet Laureate Star Coulbrooke will be reading with local poets Shanan Ballam, Brock Dethier, Mary Ellen Greenwood, Ben Gunsberg and Isaac Timm at 6 p.m. Friday, June 17, on the South Stage at the Summerfest Arts Faire on the grounds of the Logan Tabernacle.
Heritage Days in Nibley continues on Friday, June 17, with a variety of events, including the Quilt Show (noon to 6 p.m. at the Nibley City Hall), the Mayor’s Dinner (5 p.m. at the 3200 South
The Summerfest Arts Faire will be held June 16-18 on the grounds of the Logan Tabernacle. Summerfest offers fine art, great food and entertainment to its visitors as well as quality
SATURDAY
Now Continued from Page 4 Christiansen on guitar, Jim Schaub on bass/vocals, Travis Taylor on drums, Jon Gudmundson on saxophones, and Todd Fallis on trombone and percussion. They have taken their name from the 1970 album by the Latin rock group Santana. Party Rock Project describes themselves as inventive, high-energy, audience-interactive, and family-friendly and promise to give audiences driving covers of some of their favorite pop and rock music. The group is headed by Nate Davis on guitar and vocals, Quinn Dietlein on keyboards and vocals and Dawn Dietlein on vocals. They also use backtracks that supplement the sound. Non-musical performances this year include Logan City Poet Laureate Star Coulbrooke and some of her poet
entertainment with headliner concerts each evening. Hours on Friday are 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Visit logansummerfest.com for more information. The Logan Library presents “Learning @ the Library” — classes showing how to get the most from your e-reader device or computer using the free resources available at the library. “eReaders & the Library” will be taught at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, June 18, at the Logan Library. Sign up in person at the information desk or call 716-9120.
held on Saturday, June 18. Visit runragnar.com for more information. Lake Island will perform with Taylor Ross Wilson, Shane and Boone Hogg at 7 p.m. Saturday, June 18, at Why Sound, 30 Federal Ave. Admission is $6. The 25th Street Market will be open from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, June 18, at 475 E. 2500 North in North Logan. Come enjoy fresh spring produce and beautiful handcrafted items. The Sunshine Swing, a croquet and lawn party benefiting Sunshine Terrace Foundation, will be held from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday, June 18, at the Old Crookston Homestead. Spectators welcome. Cost $20 for lunch and a chance to witness speed obstacle croquet. Call Alta at 752-0411 for more information.
Heritage Days in Nibley continues on Saturday, June 18, with a variety of events, including the Heritage Days Parade (10 a.m. beginning at Heritage Elementary), Family Festivities (11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Elkhorn Park, 750 W. 2600 South), Concert in the Park featuring Brenn Hill (7:30 p.m. at the 3200 South park amphitheater), fireworks (10 p.m. at the 3200 South park) and Youth Dance (after the fireworks at the 3200 South park). Visit nibleycity. com for more information.
SUNDAY
The Reebok Ragnar Wasatch Back relay race from Logan to Soldier Hollow in Midway will be
Chrysalis will perform with Dead Horse Trauma and White Knuckle Riot at 7 p.m. Sunday,
friends. Last year, this was a popular session with a packed audience. Storyteller Ted Erekson will also be on stage with his stories for all ages. There will also be smaller performances and interactive opportunities in the Creation Station (formerly the Family Art Yard). Valley Dance Ensemble will provide some movement activities for all ages, Anna Anawalt will present her “Music for Little Monkeys” and the Honkey Tonk Monkey Shine Improv group will share some improvisational theatre games for children and adults. This year, the South Stage (formerly the Acoustic Stage) will have a full sound system and engineers, so the listening experience should be better than ever. Two audio mixing interns will be working on that stage with an experienced engineer. For a complete schedule of performances at Summerfest, please visit logansummerfest.com.
Hoodoo will perform from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday, June 18, at Caffe Ibis, 52 Federal Ave.
Lyric Continued from Page 5 “Along with dialect and amazing costumes designed by Russel Terwelp, it’s my job to make it clear to the audience which character the actors are portraying at any given moment,” Spelbring said. “The actors use physicality to create the appearance of different characters. Literally within the turn of a head they could be someone else. Making sure there are consistencies — and differences — throughout will help the audience experience a clear story.” The Lyric Rep production uses sound and projection design to create many different settings in the play. Spelbring loves that the Lyric Rep is a professional theater com-
June 19, at Why Sound, 30 Federal Ave. Admission is $7. Todd Milovich will perform from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday, June 19, at Caffe Ibis, 52 Federal Ave.
MONDAY Four Seasons Theatre Company begins its 2016 season with Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast” June 17-27 at the Sky View High School Auditorium. Show times are 7:30 p.m., with 1:30 matinees on Saturday. Tickets are only $11 online at fourseasonstheatre.org. Family and group discounted rates are also available by calling 5351432. The Logan Library Monday Movie will begin at 6:30 p.m. Monday, June 20, in the Jim Bridger Room. This week’s movie is “Newsies,” which is rated PG. Popcorn and admission is free.
WEDNESDAY No Sun will perform with Indiscriminate and James Junius at 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 22, at Why Sound, 30 Federal Ave. Admission is $6.
pany that has the ability to embrace the technology. The physical set is a street in London with five platforms that are up to 13 ft. tall and painted in a forced perspective style, a technique that employs optical illusion to make an object appear farther away, closer, larger or smaller than it actually is. The cast for “Baskerville: A Sherlock Holmes Mystery” includes Sean Peters (Sherlock Holmes), Cameron Blankenship (Doctor Watson), Shannon Leigh Peters (Actress), W. Lee Daily (Actor One) and Richie Call (Actor Two). For more information and tickets, call 797-8022, or visit lyricrep. org or the Caine Lyric Theatre Box Office in downtown Logan at 28 W. Center St., from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday, and one hour prior to curtain on matinee dates and show nights.
The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, June 17, 2016
FRIDAY
Page 11 -
calendar
The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, June 17, 2016
Page 12 -
CrossworD By Myles Mellor and Sally York Across 1. Japanese fish 4. Snap 10. French reply 14. Snake’s disapproval 18. Minute particles 19. Apprentice 20. Rich Little, e.g. 21. Ancient Andean 22. How messed up can a red fruit get? 25. Clash of clans 26. Kan. neighbor 27. Art school material 28. Area for exchanging commodities 29. Inception 30. Date 31. “Sure” 32. Entertain 35. Long-snouted fish 37. Sigma follower 38. Identifying mark 39. Sight related 41. Gave your wife her fave fruit? 51. Private conversation 52. 99c per tune, e.g. 53. ___ vera 55. Carpenter tool 56. Prefers, with “for” 58. Appearance 61. Historic periods 62. Bounce back, in a way 64. Sound booster 66. Automobiles with tailgates 70. Did a new figure out 74. “Shoot!” 75. Hang in there 79. Burrowing mammal with spines 80. “ER” doctor 82. Domain of a noble 85. Latticework 86. Beefeater 87. Place of pain and turmoil 89. Adds a dog and a plant to the entree? 95. Frozen snow 96. Cry out loud 97. “Semi-Pro’’ org. 100. Museum piece
Deadlines
101. Hornswoggle 103. Thou 106. Hasten 109. Extend, in a way 111. Big block of time 112. Like Beethoven 113. Quaint 114. Primitive aquatic plant 115. Provide Greek monster to French writer? 121. Chocolate bite 122. “Mi chiamano Mimi,” e.g. 123. Control freak’s handful? 124. Attention-getting word 125. Scottish tartan pattern 126. Chitchat 127. Actors that have roles in crowd scenes, etc. 128. Father figures Down 1. Linen fabric 2. Perspective 3. Belief 4. Hosiery material 5. From a cask 6. Remain 7. Cry in cartoons 8. Eur. land 9. Big blast maker 10. Asian shrub 11. Tiff 12. Pet doctor 13. Master 14. LP player 15. Unmoving 16. Roman legionaries’ shields 17. A monk 18. Stork cousin 23. Steely 24. Wife of Saturn 29. A desperate housewife? 32. Long (for) 33. Andy Warhol painting 34. Ashes holder 35. Federal agency 36. Money machine 38. Idled
39. “___ to Joy” 40. Conflict 41. Mark with a branding iron 42. Sicilian rumbler 43. Buttons and Skelton 44. ___ in Victor 45. Letter from Corinth 46. Condensation 47. Newt 48. Flunky 49. Potpourri 50. It’s high time 51. Best-known 54. Compass direction 56. “What have we here?!” 57. Water bodies 58. Freudian topic 59. Acronym for linked computers 60. Warm-___ (preconcert sessions) 62. Ending of the Bible 63. Kind of acid 65. One of a dozen 66. Landscaper’s need 67. 252 wine gallons 68. Former Turkish title 69. Much used verb in history 70. Coffee order, abbr. 71. Tannish 72. Not that 73. Goes underground 75. Joe ___ 76. Unproductive 77. Mover and a shaker 78. Rescue squad 81. Married John 82. Santa’s helper 83. “___ along the Watchtower” Jimi Hendrix 84. Frat letter 86. Secure 87. Sword handle 88. Moray, e.g. 90. Popular side 91. Over, poetically 92. NY ball team 93. Caustic solution 94. Pasture 97. Caspian sea tributary 98. Misrepresent
99. Anxiety 101. Floorboard noise 102. Nightmare visitor 103. Buttinsky 104. US novelist, Joyce 105. Roswell sighting 106. Hubbub 107. Turns over 108. Waxed cheese 110. A Wicked Witch’s home 111. Christie’s __ Under the Sun 112. Kind of prize 115. Old gang weapon 116. Lyricist Gershwin 117. Metal source 118. Dinosaur last name 119. World time zone (abbr.) 120. Blast
Cache Magazine calendar items are due Tuesday by 5 p.m. They will also run for free in The Herald Journal one to two days prior to the event. Calendar items can be submitted by email at hjhappen@hjnews.com. Any press releases or photos for events listed in the first half of Cache Magazine can be sent to jhunter@hjnews.com. Poems and photos can also be sent to jhunter@hjnews.com and run on a space-available basis if selected.
answers from last week
www.ThemeCrosswords.com