Cache Magazine

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Lewis DeMar Hansen

Friends call him Rembrandt; he claims he’s just an amateur; decide for yourself on Page 8

The Herald Journal

July 17-23, 2009


Page 2 - The Herald Journal - Cache Magazine - Friday, July 17, 2009

Cache The Herald Journal’s

Arts & Entertainment Calendar

On the cover:

What’s inside this week Find out what to do if your dog or cat is lost

Magazine

A creation by Lewis DeMar Hansen; read more about the selftaught artist on Page 8.

From the editor

jbaer@hjnews.com

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HAVE COME TO THE RESCUE of a poor, defenseless kitty who needs a home. Again. You heard right — I’ve gone ahead and adopted another homeless cat. As you may recall, I tried this once last year with a kitty we named Muddy May. Unfortunately, after a several-week attempt, we had to give Muddy to some friends due to the fact that my big fat cat kept trying to (what I can only assume was) eat her. “That’s it,” I thought back then. “No more new kitties!” But then this little kitty (whose picture you can see here) started coming around my backyard, looking for love and food and company. My cats didn’t seem to mind too much so when it turned out someone in the neighborhood was burning her whiskers and flinging her in the air by her legs — and Animal Control finally had to step in — I knew I needed to bring her home. I stopped by the pound and paid the fee, and Officer Chris Marquez finally delivered this precious little black and white cat. (I must insert a big thank you here to Officer Marquez ... he was incredibly kind and patient and more than willing to help me out, even though he’d been working hard all day at the site of last weekend’s landslide on Canyon Road.)

Slow Wave

(Page 5)

It’s Pioneer Day the pioneer way at the Heritage Center

(Page 11) A special benefit for the Special Olympics

(Page 5)

Cute Photo by Meegan M. Reid

But none of this would have been so easily possible had I not read a bunch of tips e-mailed to me from Four Paws Rescue. I looked up Logan city and found out who to call and where Animal Control would have taken the kitten, and I had my sights on her in less than 20 minutes. So what I’ve done is re-print these tips on Page 11 of this week’s Cache Magazine — read it, cut it out and keep it in a safe place. Hopefully you’ll never need it but, if you do, it will help you immensely. Have a great weekend, everyone! — Jamie Baer Nielson Cache Magazine editor

(Page 10) Check out this week’s Bulletin Board!

pet photo of the week

This cat is available for adoption! Pet: Bubbles From: Cache Humane Society Why she’s so lovable: Bubbles is a domestic shorthair kitten who is good with kids, dogs and other cats. To meet Bubbles or other animals who need loving homes, visit the Cache Humane Society shelter at 2370 W. 200 North in Logan. Bubbles’ ID number is U20096834. For more information, visit www. cachehumane.org, e-mail michael@cache humane.org or call 792-3920. Send your favorite picture of your pet, along with your name and a couple paragraphs detailing why your pet’s so darn lovable, to Cache Magazine, 75 W. 300 N., Logan, UT 84321, or e-mail it all to jbaer@hjnews.com.

Slow Wave is created from real people’s dreams as drawn by Jesse Reklaw. Ask Jesse to draw your dream! Visit www.slowwave.com to find out how.


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Federal Avenue Caffe Ibis

The Art Center

100 North

The Wight House

HE ALLIANCE FOR THE VARIED Arts will present the Summer Gallery Walk from 6 to 9 p.m. Friday, July 17. Many businesses and galleries in the downtown area will be open later that night with a display of artwork and live music for all ages to enjoy. For more information, call 753-2970 or visit www.avaarts.org. Those participating include:

• Caffe Ibis

(52 Federal Ave.) will be showing the artwork collection titled “No Sex, No Drugs, No Rock n’ Roll” by Bob Bissland.

• S.E. Needham Jewelers

(141 N. Main) will be featuring an oil painting collection by Kathy Ashcroft titled “Wildlife and More.”

Main Street

Winborg Art Gallery

Global Village

S.E. Needham Jewelers

100 East

200 North

• Winborg Masterpieces Art Gallery

(55 N Main, Ste. 208) will have original art and giclee prints by Jeremy and Larry Winborg on display.

Center Street

• The Wight House

(37 N. Main) will feature photographer Ryan Williams’ show, “First Bloom.”

• The Art Center

Utah Public Radio

(25 W. 100 North) will feature new pastel and oil artwork from local artist Colleen Howe.

AVA Gallery

100 South

• Global Village

(146 N. 100 East) will display art from Recycled World titled “Other Worlds — Other Art.”

Harmonious duo Ember to perform at Crumb Brothers HE BRIDGER FOLK T Music Society will present a concert with the harmonious duo

Ember at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, July 18, at Crumb Brothers Bakery, 291 S. 300 West, Logan. Tickets are $10 and are available by calling 757-3468. Seating is very limited, so advance purchase is highly recommended. Since 2001, Emily Williams (Wales) and Rebecca Sullivan (USA) have travelled and sung together constantly. What started out as a unique busking act has evolved into an in-demand band in the UK and Europe. Two distinctive voices form sizzling harmonies accompanied by guitars, fiddle, harmonica, whistle and clarinet. Williams’ Welsh origin sings out through her Celtic fiddle-playing,

while from Sullivan’s Utah roots flows a bluesy element, with her clarinet and harmonica. Tours in Mexico, the U.S. and Europe have inspired a broad range of styles including bluegrass-Americana, dark medieval harmonies and a dash of Spanish flair. At the core of it all is the synergy of two keenly insightful songwriters, each lending her voice to “harmonies to die for” (Taplas Magazine). You could call it contemporary folk — with an edge. Comparisons have been made to Indigo Girls, The Be Good Tanyas, Simon and Garfunkel, Tracy Chapman, Michelle Shocked, Rickie Lee Jones, Peggy Seeger, Chris and Kelly While, the Wailin’ Jenny’s and the McGarrigles. For more information, visit www. embersong.com.

• Utah Public Radio Studio

in the Bullen Center (43 S. Main) will feature “Figures Indoors and in the Landscape” by Trent Gudmundsen.

• The AVA Gallery

(35 W. 100 South) will present “Digital Black and White: Balancing Technology and Creativity” by photographer Michael Nelson and “People, Places and Petals” by photographer Ned Weinshenker.

Visitors Bureau presents free Speaker Series HE CACHE VALLEY T Visitors Bureau’s second annual Summer Speaker Series at the historic

courthouse is under way. The free presentations celebrate a variety of Cache Valley interests. The Speaker Series continues July 29 with Al Burns or Dean Burch from Fireworks West talking about the business of fireworks production. On Aug. 5 local farmers, ranchers and food producers are especially encouraged to attend “Attracting Eco- and Agritourism to Cache Valley” by Steve Burr, USU professor and Extension specialist for outdoor recreation and tourism. All events are free and will start at 7 p.m. at the Visitors Bureau, 199 N. Main St. For more information, call 755-1890.

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The 2009 summer Gallery Walk is here!


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Noon Music series at the tabernacle under way

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he 2009 Noon Music at the Tabernacle series is in full swing. Concerts start at noon every day (except Sunday). Admission is free and all are welcome. For more information, visit www.cachecommunityconnections.com. Be sure to check Cache Magazine every week for profiles on upcoming performers.

The Simmons Brothers (July 17)

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ark, Scott and Darrell Simmons make up the vocal group The Simmons Brothers. They grew up in River Heights and are the sons of Gretta and Dale Simmons. All three have been involved in music from a very young age. Singing together and making people smile and tap their toes with their brotherly blend and harmonies has been their goal for more than 20 years. They have been entertaining crowds all over Northern Utah and Southern Idaho and have also been the opening act for some headline entertainers who have visited Logan. They have also had the opportunity to record four CDs: Three of the easy-listening, country-style music and one Christmas CD.

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Chris Mortensen (July 18)

hris Mortensen is an experienced country performer, having played in many local bands throughout his lifetime, including Rollin’ Country, Diamondback (winners of the Utah State Country Showdown in 1989) and the Wind River Band. He has also “sat in” as a guest bassist with Wasatch Back, Leaping Lulu, Deja Vu and the Phat Ranchers. He currently plays in the duo

Saddle Serenade with Mary Jo Hansen and with The Sagwich Basin Boys, a group of friends from his home area of Avon. Chris will perform many original songs as well as some time-tested favorites with some surprise guest artists. Chris has a variety of original tunes uploaded to broadjam. com, where he currently has five songs in the Utah Top Ten, and also to mormontimes.com/showcase.

onathan Rose was born and raised in North Logan. He began piano lessons at age 7 and organ lessons at age 11. A church organist for almost 20 years, Jonathan has taught numerous training courses for organists focusing on developing proper organ technique. In addition, he has performed in master classes with Dame Gillian Weir and

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onnie Slade founded the Willow Valley Singers in 2005. This unique ensemble takes its name from the original name of Cache Valley, known for its abundance of natural willow trees on the valley floor. They are neighbors from Nibley and include five women and four men dressed in traditional 19th century costumes. Willow Valley

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Jonathan Rose (July 23)

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Willow Valley Singers (July 21)

Sophie-Véronique Choplin. During a study tour of the pipe organs of Paris he received instruction from Daniel Roth at St. Sulpice and Jean Guillou at St. Eustache. From 1994-2004 Jonathan was the organ maintenance coordinator for all of the LDS Church’s pipe organs in Logan; he has also maintained the Holtkamp pipe organ at USU’s Kent Concert Hall.

Singers enjoy performing all types of religious and old-time sentimental songs, specializing in music of the 19th and 20th centuries. Their songs often include a brief oral history of the songs they sing. The singers perform a separate series of coral selections from or about the American Civil War. They perform a cappella with occasional harmonica or autoharp for color.

Moon Light (July 22)

leven-year-old violin composer and prodigy Aubree Oliverson teams with her pianist father, Stephen, to perform touching original works and arrangements as the Moon Light duo. They have performed extensively throughout the Intermountain West and thrilled audiences in other locations such as Seattle, San Francisco, San Antonio, Los Angeles, Minneapolis and Abravanel Hall. Moon Light’s first CD, “The Magic of Music,” has been well received and their second CD — featuring the masterworks and concert favorites “Spanish Shoes,” “Garden Rhapsody,” “Forbidden Footsteps” and “Black Castle” — is due to be released in December. They were highlighted in UV Magazine as one of the “Fabulous 50” for 2008 and highlighted as guest artists on the TV and radio program “Talk of the Town.” Besides their own popular concerts, they have

performed for national and state conventions, multi-stake firesides, school assemblies and helped raise money for charity.


Speaker chosen for 15th annual Arrington lecture ELIGIOUS SCHOLAR, AUTHOR AND R professor Kathleen Flake is the selected speaker for the 15th annual Leonard J. Arrington

A special benefit for Special Olympics

“R

ide 4 A Reason” will take place Saturday, July 18. Cost is $20 per rider and includes a shirt, Dutchoven dinner and door prizes. Registration starts at 10:30 a.m. in the Stokes Market parking lot in Preston; bikes roll at noon. Dinner will be served at 5 p.m. under the

shelter next to the Robinson Building. Music will be performed by Slate. Dinner-only tickets are $10. All proceeds will benefit the Special Olympics. For more information, to join the team or to make a donation, contact LeAnn at 208-760-0717 or Cyndi at 208-530-0438.

Mormon History Lecture, an event hosted by Utah State University. The Arrington Lecture is held each fall and is presented by Special Collections and Archives in the Merrill-Cazier Library at USU in partnership with the Leonard J. Arrington Lecture and Archives Foundation. Flake will present her lecture, “The Emotional and Priestly Logic of Plural Marriage,” at 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 1, at the Logan LDS Tabernacle, 50 N. Main. Admission Flake is free and open to everyone. Flake is an associate professor of American religious history in the Divinity School and Graduate Department of Religion at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn. She is the author of “The Politics of Religious Identity: The Seating of Senator Reed Smoot, Mormon Apostle.” Through its evolution, the Arrington lecture has become a popular and successful event. For information about the Arrington Lecture, call 797-2663.

Page 5 - The Herald Journal - Cache Magazine - Friday, July 17, 2009

All mixed up

Pioneer Day the pioneer way at Heritage Center Festival HE AMERICAN T West Heritage Center will celebrate Pioneer

Day at its Spirit of ’47 Pioneer Jubliee from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, July 24. Admission is free and all ages are invited. Jubilee activities include a return of the unique Pioneer Spa, a Wild West Marbles Tournament, panning for gold, Bridgerland games and pioneer sports, gunfighter activities and more. A country doctor and the Pinkerton Detective Agency will also be visiting. The Gunfighters of the American West will put on their skits in the afternoon at various times, and local favorite Ray Howser will be giv-

ing a lively presentation of his Civil War era cannons and Gatling Gun — all in working order (you may want to bring ear plugs for certain parts of his presentation). As part of the festivities, the Heritage Center will present its annual quilt show, “Quilts Through the Years,” featuring a display of quilts from its unique collection, maintained by the American West Heritage Quilt Committee. This quilt show is a favorite each year and will take place in the Livery Stable. A Pioneer Water Party will take place from 3 to 5 p.m. A Handcart Progressive Dinner will be served starting at 5:30 p.m. (res-

Also: Annual Fiber Arts Week

“Q

A young volunteer shows off her colorful umbrella at the American West Heritage Center’s Pioneer site.

ervations are required by July 23). The dinner features an appetizer at one location, salad at another, the entree at another and finally a pioneer dessert. Families push and pull handcarts to each location and do pioneer-

based activities with each part of dinner. Prices are $12.50 for adults and $8.50 for children. For more information or to see a schedule, visit www.awhc.org. To reserve dinner tickets, call 245-6050.

uilts Through the Years” is the theme of the 2009 quilt show at the American West Heritage Center. The show will be open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. July 23 and 25 and is part of the Heritage Center’s annual Fiber Arts Week. Special hours during the Pioneer Jubilee on July 24 will be 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. On this day, admission will be included in the free activities of the Jubilee. Admission is $3.50 for adults and $2.50 for children and seniors or is included with regular admission to Daily Adventures. The Heritage Center is also seeking quilts in good to excellent condition made

Artist Wes Pound does magic things with thread. in the 1820-80s, 1940s, 1960s and 1970s for its permanent collection. For more information, contact Nelda Ault at 245-6050, ext. 20.


Page 6 - The Herald Journal - Cache Magazine - Friday, July 17, 2009

Film Still playing “I Love You, Beth Cooper” Rated PG-13 ★★ Somewhere in here, there lies a highschool comedy in the same vein as the great John Hughes movies of the 1980s. Under the staggeringly mediocre direction of Chris Columbus (“Home Alone,” the first two “Harry Potter” movies), it never springs to life. All the pieces are in place: the nerdy guy, the popular girl, the quirky friends, the all-night adventures and the obligatory house-trashing bash. But the pacing feels stagnant and the antics simply aren’t inventive enough. There seemed to be potential from the start, too, in the script from Larry Doyle, based on his novel. Instead of spouting generic platitudes about chasing your dreams, geeky valedictorian Denis Cooverman (Paul Rust) uses his graduation speech as an opportunity to tell head cheerleader Beth Cooper (Hayden Panettiere) that he’s secretly been in love with her since the seventh grade. He also gets some sly revenge on the kids who’ve tormented him his whole life by calling them out for their cruelties and insecurities. The fact that this actually happens — that it’s not just a dream sequence — signals the possibility for bold and surreal humor. And Rust has an endearing underdog goofiness about him without being too hyper or ingratiating. But the rest of the movie plays out rather flatly and predictably, as Denis and Beth and their respective friends find themselves bonding over one wild night. PG-13 for crude and sexual content, language, some teen drinking and drug references, and brief violence. 101 min. “Up” Rated PG 1 ★★★ ⁄2 The title is deceptively simple, which is fitting, because the latest achievement from Pixar Animation is deeper and more complex on every level than it would initially appear. It’s a classic B-movie exotic adventure, the kind that inspired Steven Spielberg and George Lucas to make “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” but it’s told through the most high-tech, gorgeous 3-D animation. It’s a mismatched buddy comedy, the kind we’ve seen countless times before, but the buddies are a curmudgeonly 78-year-old man and a tubby 8-year-old boy — who wind up together in a flying house, traveling to South America. And, as with many family films that get pumped out each summer, it has talking dogs. But it’s how the dogs talk and what they say that are truly inspired, and oddly realistic. Pete Docter (Pixar’s “Monsters, Inc.”) and codirector and writer Bob Peterson turn their imagination this time to human beings, rare creatures in the animated kingdom. But between the richness of the characters, the meatiness of their interaction and the authenticity of the details, it won’t take you long to forget that “Up” is a cartoon and

New this week at the Art Cinema! become immersed. Ed Asner is the perfect choice to voice the cranky widower Carl Fredricksen, who ties thousands of helium balloons to his house and takes to the skies, with endearing newcomer Jordan Nagai playing the overeager scout who’s trapped on his front porch. PG for some peril and action. 90 min. “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs” Rated PG ★★ There are more action and cuddly creatures for kids to love in this third adventure than in the animated franchise’s first two installments. For parents, it’s more of the same, a “Yawn of the Dinosaurs” adventure with some new faces and places but the same central characters rehashing the themes of the first two movies. The worn-out idea the filmmakers have yet another crack at: Families can be found objects, stitched together from all sorts of misfits who bond to form their own loving little clan. The main thing that distinguishes this movie from its predecessors is the setting as the gang of prehistoric animals journeys underground to a lost world of dinosaurs. Once again, the main players are Manny the woolly mammoth (voiced by Ray Romano), his wife, Ellie (Queen Latifah), Diego the saber-toothed tiger (Denis Leary) and Sid the sloth (John Leguizamo). Sibling possums Crash and Eddie (Seann William Scott and Josh Peck) also tag along again. A new member of this extended family, one-eyed weasel Buck (Simon Pegg) steals the movie with his lively, looney patter and daring antics. But it’s strictly a slapstick tale for the young ones. PG for some mild rude humor and peril. 93 min. — All reviews by The Associated Press

“Cheri” Rated R ★★ Back in 1988, director Stephen Frears and screenwriter Christopher Hampton teamed up for “Dangerous Liaisons,” one of the juiciest guilty pleasures ever. Reveling in high-class deception and manipulation, the film earned seven Academy Award nominations including best supporting actress for Michelle Pfeiffer, and it won three. Frears and Hampton have reunited for “Cheri,” with Pfeiffer as their star, but the film has none of the same irresistible meat or bite. Pfeiffer is luminous as ever as an aging courtesan in belle epoque Paris — the schemer this time instead of the pawn. But the romance in which she finds herself, the one that supposedly upends her carefully crafted world, is totally implausible from the start. And that’s a problem, because that’s the thing we’re

supposed to care about. Based on the novels “Cheri” and “The Last of Cheri” by Colette, the film features Pfeiffer as Lea de Lonval, a venerable seductress on the verge of retirement at the end of a lucrative career. Her longtime rival, the catty gossip Charlotte Peloux (a shrilly over-the-top Kathy Bates), asks Lea to knock some sense into her 19-year-old son (Rupert Friend), an incorrigible party boy whom Lea long ago nicknamed Cheri. Trouble is, they fall in love with each other and end up in a six-year romance, despite the difference in their ages, personalities and life experiences. At least we’re meant to believe they fall in love with each other: They keep saying so, but they have so little chemistry and the development of their relationship seems so truncated, it’s hard to accept. R for some sexual content and brief drug use. 92 min.


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ARRY POTTER has kept his fans waiting for two years, the longest school break they have had to endure for a new movie adventure about the teen wizard. It’s been worth the wait. “Harry Potter and the HalfBlood Prince,� the sixth movie in the fantasy franchise based on J.K. Rowling’s books, is the franchise’s best so far, blending rich drama and easy camaraderie among the actors with the visual spectacle that until now has been the real star of the series. The hocus-pocus of it all nearly takes a back seat to the story and characters this time, and the film is the better for that. It doesn’t skimp on the Quidditch action, sorcery duels or occult pyrotechnics, but those are simply part of the show, not the main attraction. Previous installments played out in a supernatural bubble bearing little connection to our ordinary little Muggle world. “Half-Blood Prince� brims with authentic people and honest interaction — hormonal teens bonding with great humor, heartache that will resonate with anyone who remembers the pangs of first love. Drop the magic act, and Hogwarts could be any school of self-absorbed geeks, jocks, popular kids and outcasts trying to maneuver through the day. Even the class bad boy provides insight into the behavior of bullies. “Half-Blood Prince� escalates the peril for Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) and his best pals, Hermione Granger (Emma Watson) and Ron Weasley (Rupert Grint), while giving the three-

“Harry Potter and the HalfBlood Prince� Rated PG

ory that new Professor Horace Slughorn (Jim Broadbent) possesses about young Tom Riddle, the future dark Lord Voldemort. Academy Award winner Broadbent gives the best performance yet in a “Harry Potter� flick, mingling a cock-of-thewalk flamboyance with the deep melancholy of a teacher bearing the shame of disappointment in both himself and a star pupil gone bad. The usual teen high jinks and crises lighten the story with plenty of laughs. Romantic entanglements — which have gradually preoccupied Harry, Hermione, Ron and other classmates as they stumbled into puberty — burst out like a wicked case of acne this year. Ron is dating bubble-headed

some that first collaborated as Though the movie drags a bit prepubescent kids their best toward the end, screenwriter Steve Kloves — who adapted platform yet to show their the first four books and returns maturing acting chops. after a one-film hiatus — generDavid Yates, who made ally keeps the intricate plot roll2007’s “Harry Potter and the ing breathlessly. Order of the Phoenix,â€? returns Harry’s big challenge this to direct, his deepening confidence and comfort with the Pot- school year is a clandestine ter realm on display throughout. assignment by Hogwarts headmaster Dumbledore (Michael Three distinctive directors — Chris Columbus, Alfonso Cuaron Gambon), who enlists his protege to retrieve a critical memand Mike Newell — made the first four movies. Along Action! with Yates on No. 5, the filmmakers all brought their own touches and baubles, but there was 2297 N. Main MOVIE HOTLINE 753-6444 a sameness about the ALL SEATS ALL TIMES $3.00 wE OpEN SUNDAY AT 3:45 pM series that was growing OpEN MONDAY - SATUrDAY AT 11:30 AM fOr MATINEES tiresome by Yates’ first NO 9:00 Or MATINEE SHOwINgS ON SUNDAY one. ANgELS & This time, Yates stays DEMONS (pG-13) NIgHT ATTHE 4:10, 6:50 & 9:25 MUSEUM true to the Rowling Fri & Sat Mat 12:00 (pG) recipe yet infuses the 4:40, 7:15, & 9:20 film with a freshness MONSTErS Mon-Sat Mat 11:45 & 2:15 and energy that makes VS ALIENS (pG) 5:00 it seem like a new start, not the stale old chapter Mon-Sat Mat 12:30 & 2:45 X-MEN OrIgINS: wOLVErINE six it could have been. STAr TrEk (pG-13) (pG-13) 752-4966 4:20, 7:00, & 9;40 6:45 & 9:30 /&8 13*$*/( "5 501 5&/ 7*%&0 Mon-Sat Mat 12:45 1 free game w/ad (ask before bowling) Summer kids Matinee • July 20 - 23 • 12:00 & 2:00 Exp. 7/29/09 SpAcE cHIMpS

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bimbo Lavender Brown (Jessie Cave), putting Hermione into a jealous snit. Harry’s got his own love triangle, falling for Ron’s sister, Ginny (Bonnie Wright), who’s dating another student. Along with a romantic rival, Harry has a more dangerous foe in Draco Malfoy (Tom Felton), his bullying tormentor, now a torn and troubled youth himself as an agent of Voldemort. Radcliffe, Watson and Grint have lived these roles for so long — almost half their lives —

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Page 7 - The Herald Journal - Cache Magazine - Friday, July 17, 2009

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ewis DeMar himself an am to some, he s as Rembrand at the nickname an ing is just a pastim Hansen’s style and obviously different painter, his work is family and friends. Hansen, who has 30 years, only cons With the exception class, the Logan re is self-taught. He s capture “the sereni more than 40 paint ern culture and terr “I like painting o he said. Hansen works ou


Hansen calls mateur artist but said he’s known dt. Hansen laughs nd insists paintme for him. While d approach are t from the famous s popular with his . s been painting for siders it a hobby. n of one drawing esident said he said he likes to ity of nature.” His tings depict Westrain. outdoor scenes,”

ut of a small stu-

Lewis DeMar Hansen

Friends call him Rembrandt; he claims he’s just an amateur — what do you think?

Story by Arie Kirk *** Portrait by Meegan M. Reid *** Artwork by Lewis DeMar Hansen dio in his home. One painting, he said, can take about a week to finish but even when it is completed, he is still critical. The continual evaluation of a piece is part of the challenge of painting, he said. “You paint something and then you have to stand back quite a few times,” Hansen said. Pointing to a portrait he did last summer of his grandson riding a horse, he said there are some changes he would like to make. “That painting’s kind of been set aside but now that I get it out and look at it there’s a couple things I want to fix,” Hansen said, noting his grandson’s nose and the horse’s back leg, adding, “It’s close.” Seventy-five-year-old Hansen also has a helpful critic in Marva, his

wife of 54 years. “Her opinion is very helpful. She’ll say something that I don’t see,” DeMar said. Marva said she thinks DeMar’s work is wonderful. The two retired about 30 years ago from farming in Amalga and since then, she said painting is very relaxing for her husband. “Painting has been a very good hobby for him,” she said. In addition to capturing people and wildlife in the outdoors, DeMar Hansen has also painted one selfportrait in which he’s holding a fish he caught in Jackson Lake. “I didn’t really struggle with that. It just fit together,” Hansen said. But painting hasn’t always come as easily as his portrait. Initially,

Hansen said he had a hard time mixing paint colors to get the perfect shade. He said he also struggled painting grass that looked real, but now he can. Hansen, who also works as a real estate developer, said he usually begins his paintings by drawing the content of a previously taken photograph. He visits areas like Jackson Hole to take pictures of what he’d like to paint. In one room of the Hansen home, 25 of Hansen’s paintings are hanging on the wall. DeMar and Marva each have their favorite. Their kids and grandchildren also have their favorites. Marva said many family members have claim to their favorite painting, or have taken it to hang in their homes already. DeMar

has painted a few scenes depicting a cowboy but he only has one left — his family likes those paintings so much, they’ve taken them to display in their homes. “‘We’ll store these for you Grandpa,’ they say. ‘We’ll just store this for you,’” Marva said of their grandchildren. While DeMar said he tries to get his family members to purchase paintings, he says they know better. Marva said it’s become a family joke. “I’m trying to sell my work to my grandkids,” DeMar said with a laugh, adding, “I’ve told them all they start at $500 and go up but my grandkids ... they’re sharp. They got their heads together and feel if they wait long enough, they’ll get them without paying.”


Then” d n a “Now then r o W a l by Beu ith wild abandonpe

Photo taken by Carolyn Mattson in St. George in 1988: “A flying saucer-shaped cloud that was in the sky. It was real bright then it just faded away — weird.”

By Alix Dalley

• Date taken: March 2, 2008 • Location: East Providence/Millville area

GET YOUR STUFF ing ro ran w Then I fences, skipp g trees g in PUBLISHED! Jumpin horses, climb and hope s m a e r Riding g d f in The Cache Magazine Bulletin Board re full o y wedd r is a place for our local community My futu I danced at m and go to wa b Then g hus d lonely to share, well ... anything! From n u o y g an w my short stories to poems to recipes to And sa time was lon lands afar t in The photos to unique tips when it comes to me e fough While h e came home l life to rearranging your closet, Cache a Then h lived a norm better Magazine wants your stuff! Send it e is w And all to jbaer@hjnews.com, or mail it to world d a wife n g in the Cache Magazine, 75 W. 300 North, Nothin g a mother a ren ein hild Logan, UT 84321. We’ll be waiting! Than b n I ran after c r than I ste The fa y n p a p r a dh ften Who o ere good an the sky w d s e e h v c li a Our hter re ifferent g u la r And ou w my life is d and tears No d death joys e pain an I know I still recall th py years p a h But d wly an e long uffle slo Of thos n I walk, I sh gain a he Now w ing not to fall e is now tim Try y m t k then a ders th en days bac in m e R gold t those And no

“Shining Moon Sanctuary” by Gary Bird

Page 10 - The Herald Journal - Cache Magazine - Friday, July 17, 2009

The Cache Magazine Bulletin Board


1. Search your property thoroughly: Look under

A current list of where pets are impounded by each city or town in Cache County:

beds, in closets, behind water heaters, in boxes, in culvert pipes, under vehicles, inside sheds and barns, etc. Look in every nook and cranny. Don’t assume your pet would never crawl into some tiny space.

• Logan city: Cache Meadow Veterinary Clinic, 752-6135 • North Logan, Hyde Park, Mendon, Paradise and unincorporated cities: Cache Humane Society, 792-3920 • River Heights, Providence and Millville: Bridgerland Animal Hospital, 752-2151 • Wellsville and Hyrum: Blacksmith Fork Veterinary Clinic, 245-4710 • Smithfield: AC Officer Frank Keepers, 753-7555 • Richmond/Lewiston: North Cache Veterinary Services, 258-2190 • Nibley: Nibley City Offices, 752-0431 • Amalga: Mayor David Wood, 563-6361

2. Try to attract your pet to you: Make some noise while you walk around the neighborhood; animals can hear you from great distances. Have all your family members call the pet’s name. If your pet has a favorite “squeaky toy,” bring it along and use it to help you make familiar noises. It’s also important to stop regularly, be quiet and listen for your pet to make a noise in reply.

3. Make signs and flyers: Make them colorful and eye-catching. Include a photo of your pet. List the date and place your pet was lost, breed of dog or cat, sex, age, weight, color, markings and your telephone number.

4. Place an ad in The Herald Journal’s classifieds section: The price is reason-

able and many people read the paper daily. Ads with photos generate more attention. Be sure to advertise in the Sunday edition as well as during the week. Check the “found” ads every day.

5. Scan the nearby area: Walk the neighborhood

and talk to everybody you run across. Give them a flyer. Try to get all the neighborhood children involved. Kids are great at finding lost pets!

6. Start making calls:

Call Animal Control. If you

don’t know who handles Animal Control in your locale, call your town or city office or the Cache County Sheriff’s office. Call the AC officer for your city and the ones in neighboring towns. Call every day until your pet is found. Call all the local veterinarian offices. Call local rescue groups, including the Cache Humane Society and Four Paws.

7. Call and visit local impound facilities: Even

though you’ve called Animal Control, you still need to check with the local facilities that house impounded animals. Unfortunately, AC records won’t always be complete or up-to-date when you call. AC officers are often too busy to be on the lookout for your pet, and there may not be good communication between everyone involved in the process. Therefore, YOU need to the one taking action to locate your pet.

***

If the facility is holding any animal that even remotely resembles your pet, VISIT THE OFFICE IN PERSON. Your

description of your pet and their description of the same pet rarely match. YOU MUST GO SEE FOR YOURSELF! You must actually visit the Animal Control and humane shelters every day or two. It works well if several family members can take turns visiting the shelters. Leave a picture of your pet and your phone number at each facility. Befriend them. Find out the holding period of each Animal Control and shelter. Be aware of how much time you have to claim your pet

before it is euthanized. Animal Control agencies usually keep an animal for only three to five days and then they either adopt it out or kill it. You only get one chance at this. Be there!

***

Big strong dogs, especially young ones, can run 5 miles or more. Small dogs may be able to go half a mile at most. Most dogs are recovered well within a 2-mile circle of their home. Dogs are usually picked up within 24 hours, but cats often are

not, since they are unobtrusive and can find many hiding places. If your pet is wearing an ID tag, the Department of Transportation and/or Animal Control agencies should contact you if they find your pet dead along the road — but don’t count on it. You must put forth the effort to find out for yourself. Don’t ever give up. Pets have been known to find their way back home after being lost for several months. Good luck! — Tips from Sheri Zollinger, Four Paws Rescue

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Page 11 - The Herald Journal - Cache Magazine - Friday, July 17, 2009

What to do if your dog or cat is lost ...


Opening a bit of Cache Valley history In the background, 40,000 fans were screaming, all eyes focused on two horses, War Admiral and Seabiscuit, running what would later be called the

“Match of the Century.” Entering the last stretch of the race, both horses are even, headto-head until the final drive starts. At that moment, Seabiscuit’s jockey, George Woolf, turned to Charles Kurtsinger, the jockey atop War Admiral, and said, “So long, Charlie,” as Seabiscuit pulled away. That is the sensationalized scene as portrayed in the popular 2003 movie “Seabiscuit.” While dramatized by Hollywood, the story of Seabiscuit and the race against War Admiral had a very real impact on America in 1938. Winning the race propelled Seabiscuit into national and international fame and crafted the legend used to create the movie. With the success of the movie and eminence of the legend itself, it is hard to find someone who does not know the story of Seabiscuit. Less wellknown is a local thread connecting Cache Valley to Seabiscuit. John Pollard, Seabiscuit’s regular jockey, was injured in a racing accident and was replaced by George Woolf. Already an accomplished racer, Woolf was most noted for riding Azucar to several victories, including the 1935 $100,000 Santa Anita purse, the first $100,000 prize in horse racing history. Despite his accomplishments, it was not until “Georgie,” as he was called, jockeyed Seabiscuit to victory over War Admiral that he gained national notoriety. In many ways, George Woolf was like the horses he was racing — bred for success — and his family line began in Cache Val-

ley. George’s great-grandfather, John Anthony Woolf II, first brought the Woolf name to Cache Valley in 1861. John Anthony and his family were among the

Frank and George Woolf

first to breed “blooded” horses in Cache Valley. George’s grandfather, Absalom Woolf, came to Hyde Park with his father, John Anthony, and was a member of the Utah Militia fighting in the Walker Indian and Echo Canyon wars. Absalom was also known throughout Utah for the expense and care he gave to his horses, a trait he carried to his experience as a Utah Minuteman. George Woolf’s parents, Frank Woolf and Rose Parker, were born and raised in Hyde Park, and it is said that Rose was a circus trick rider and Frank was a rodeo horse rider. The young couple moved

to Alberta, Canada, where “Georgie” was born. Frank and Rose lived their adult lives in Canada, and Frank died in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. While never living in Hyde Park or Cache Valley, George Woolf had many family members who remained in Cache Valley following his career with interest. A headline in the Journal newspaper trumpeted: “Winning Jockey in Recent Big Santa Anita Race is Known in Cache Valley,” with a slightly smaller sub-head reading “George Woolf, Rider of Azucar, is Relative of Logan, Benson and Hyde Park families.” Sadly, Georgie’s life ended short. He died in 1946 doing what he loved — while competing in a race, he fell from his horse and died the next day. George’s place in racing history is clear, if not in the world-famous restaurant he helped create, The Derby at Arcadia, then in the lifesize bronze statue erected in his honor at Santa Anita Park. His memory continues to be honored today through the Santa Anita George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award. The award, according to a number of Web sites, has been given annually since 1950 to a North American jockey, chosen by his or her peers, who demonstrates high standards of personal and professional conduct both on and off the racetrack. This lost connection between Seabiscuit and Cache Valley is among the many historical troves to be found in the newly available

The Ada Morrell Family Scrapbook Collection Brad Cole, associate dean for special collections and archives at USU’s MerrillCazier Library, said there are numerous gems in the Morrell Scrapbooks, including a typed copy of the Madison Daniel Hambleton journal. The original is held by the Madison Daniel Daughters of the Utah Hambleton Pioneers but the typed copy is now available at Special Collections and Archives. The journal covers the whole of Hambleton’s life, from his conversion to Mormonism, the death of his brother from consumption in Indiana, dancing in the endowment room of the Nauvoo LDS Temple with Brigham Young and other apostles, to the hardships faced when settling the Deseret Territory. The Morrell

Ada Morrell Family Scrapbook Collection (call number P0355) at Utah State University’s Special Collections and Archives. The scrapbooks mostly contain Cache Valley history, and cover a period from 1805 to 1980. The creator of the scrapbook collection, Ada Eliza England Morrell, was born April 9, 1887, in Hyde Park, to Charles England and Phebe Almira Woolf England. Ada’s relationship to George is now difficult to trace, complicated by the dual family relationships brought about by the practice of plural marriage. George and Ada share a common grandfather,

Scrapbooks also provide the only known photograph of Hambleton. Along with their historical significance, the Morrell Scrapbooks contain 694 pedigree charts, more than 130 obituaries, numerous historical documents and 1,439 photographs. The photographs include historic images of Logan, including an early 20th century image of the offices of the Journal Newspaper. The Ada Morrell Family Scrapbook Collection is now available for public research. An inventory of the collection can be found online (http:// library.usu.edu/specol/photoarchive/p0355.html) and all materials can be viewed at Special Collections and Archives in the Merrill-Cazier Library. Queries about the collection may be made by calling 797-2663 or by e-mailing SCWEB@usu.edu. The scrapbooks were generously donated by Ada Morrell’s daughter-in-law, Edna Morrell, and Edna’s son, Reid Morrell.

Absalon Woolf, but different grandmothers. As a result, George and Ada were half-cousins. Ada Morrell lived most of her life in Cache Valley, graduating from Brigham Young College, and she was a lifelong member of the Logan 2nd Ward. Morrell was a local historian, noted for publishing “One Hundred Years of History of the L.D.S. Logan Second Ward, 1861 to 1961.” She served as a captain for Daughters of the Utah Pioneers and was honored for her dedication in collecting and preserving Woolf Family documents. Ada Morrell passed away on Dec. 5, 1977, at the age of 90.

Story by Trevor Alvord Photos courtesy USU Special Collections


Evanovich is back with new Plum novel By The Associated Press

T

“Finger Lickin’ Fifteen” by Janet Evanovich (St. Martin’s Press, 308 pages, $27.95)

HE BARBECUE sauce hits the ceiling in “Finger Lickin’ Fifteen,” Janet Evanovich’s new Stephanie Plum novel. One reason why fans hunger for the next installment in the Plum series is the familiarity with the characters, setting and comedic mayhem that Evanovich provides in each story. But as funny as “Finger Lickin’ Fifteen” is — and it is funny — nothing much changes in Stephanie’s life, and it may be time for her to move on. Her latest misadventure begins when Lula, her plus-size friend and co-worker at Vincent

Plum Bail Bonds (Vinnie is Stephanie’s cousin) in Trenton, N.J., witnesses celebrity chef Stanley Chipolte’s decapitation by meat cleaver. Chipolte is famous for his barbecue sauce, and the company that he was representing in a national cook-off being held in Gooser Park is offering a $1 million reward. Lula figures Chipolte was whacked by a jealous competitor, so she enters the contest to get the inside track. Problem is, she has to create her own sauce, and Lula lacks basic cooking skills. After a fiery grilling mishap — a half-dead maple tree at the back of the yard “went up like Vesuvius” — Lula moves

the operation to Stephanie’s kitchen. She cranks up the heat on a pressure cooker and kapow! the lid blows off the pot, sending barbecue sauce everywhere. (Cleanup in aisle one!) There are other complications: That handsome, mysterious man in black, Carlos Manoso, aka Ranger, needs Stephanie’s help in a case involving his security firm. (It may be an inside job, so he doesn’t trust his own men.) That irritates her on-again, offagain boyfriend — plainclothes cop Joe Morelli — because Ranger is always trying to make a move on Stephanie. Joe and Stephanie have broken up, due to an argument about peanut but-

ter, but Morelli is still jealous. As usual, things don’t go smoothly for Stephanie. Her car becomes a fireball, and she’s menaced by some guys in one of Trenton’s seedier neighborhoods (it’s gun-toting Grandma Mazur to the rescue). She also finds herself coated in various substances, including paint and flour. “I honestly don’t know how you manage to do this,” Ranger says. “It boggles the mind.” She even agrees to wear a hot dog-and-bun costume for the barbecue contest. Read “Finger Lickin’ Fifteen” for the laughs, not the plot. And let’s hope Stephanie’s next adventure will be a little less predictable.

Prize-winning reporter delivers fast-paced fictional debut By The Associated Press

EAL ESTATE AGENT R and single mom Mary Guevara is preparing for work

when U.S. marshals suddenly show up at her door. The next thing the heroine of “Sweet Mary” knows, she’s in handcuffs. The marshals have a warrant for her arrest on cocainerelated charges. Never mind the name of “Sweet Mary” by the woman Liz Balmaseda in the (Atria Books, Hardcover, 242 warrant doesn’t pages, $24.99) match Mary’s, nor does the suspect’s birthday or even her photo. None of that matters as Mary is led away, leaving her young son screaming. Pulitzer-prize winning columnist Liz Balmaseda serves up only a brief introduction

before she knocks readers in the gut with her fast-paced fictional debut, which is based on a true 2003 story. The novel follows Mary’s frantic efforts to clear her name and reclaim her life. Balmaseda is at her best with tight descriptions of South Florida in the mode of master Carl Hiassen: “The August steam rose from the Everglades and wrapped itself around the city with a vengeance.” She also has fun with Miami’s quirky locals, including wayward European scofflaws, Cuban families and lecherous cowboys. Balmaseda, herself a Cuban immigrant, draws a compelling portrait of Mary as a woman torn between her loud, working-class Cuban family and her dream of a quiet, assimilated middle-class existence. Her story loses steam as Mary goes from outraged mother to amateur sleuth, and the ending smacks more Hollywood than noir. But perhaps it shouldn’t come as a surprise. Balmaseda originally wrote the

story as a screenplay, and only later turned it into a novel. The book’s earlier incarnation is visible in the scene-setting chapter headings, as well

as the bare bones feel of the novel’s later chapters — as if the author were waiting for a camera to breathe life into the descriptions.

Still, it’s a fun summer read. And it’s not often readers get to cheer a stylish CubanAmerican soccer mom turned gun-toting detective.

* This week’s New York Times Bestseller List * HARDCOVER FICTION 1. “Swimsuit” by James Patterson & Maxine Paetro 2. “Finger Lickin’ Fifteen” by Janet Evanovich 3. “The Apostle” by Brad Thor 4. “Knockout” by Catherine Coulter 5. “The Doomsday Key” by James Rollins HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. “Catastrophe” by Dick Morris & Eileen McGann 2. “Liberty and Tyranny” by Mark R. Levin 3. “Outliers” by Malcolm Gladwell 4. “Horse Soldiers” by Doug Stanton 5. “The End of Overeating” by David A. Kessler PAPERBACK (MASS-MARKET) FICTION 1. “Hidden Currents” by Christine Feehan 2. “My Sister’s Keeper” by Jodi Picoult 3. “Fearless Fourteen” by Janet Evanovich 4. “What Happens in London” by Julia Quinn 5. “The Mackade Brothers: Devin & Shane” by Nora Roberts CHILDREN’S BOOKS 1. “Goldilicious” by Victoria Kann 2. “Gallop!” by Rufus Butler Seder 3. “Explorer Extraordinaire!” by Jane O’Connor 4. “Listen to the Wind” by Greg Mortensen & Susan L. Roth 5. “Swing!” by Rufus Butler Seder

Keep your reading list updated at www.nytimes.com/pages/books/

Page 13 - The Herald Journal - Cache Magazine - Friday, July 17, 2009

Books


Page 14 - The Herald Journal - Cache Magazine - Friday, July 17, 2009

Crossword

www.ThemeCrosswords.com

“Shakespeare’s First Drafts?” by Sally York and Myles Mellor 1. 6. 10. 15. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 33. 35. 38. 39. 41. 46. 49. 50. 51. 52. 58. 59. 60. 61. 63. 65. 71. 73. 75. 76. 79.

Across Cy Young, e.g. Last call? Assassinated Show of hands, maybe Pinker steak Code type Milk: Prefix Water-soluble compound Play about a dragon- slayer’s reverie? (with “A”) Mad. ___ “It’s ___ real!” Gutter locale “___ on $45 a Day” Endangered goose Mouth, in slang According to last testament Adherents Dilly Protect ___ de mer “Mamma ___!” Cousin of -trix Claw Play about a wheeler- dealer going soft? ___-Magnon Blatant Fix, as leftovers “Bolero” composer Within reach Literary magazine founded in 1900 “Island of the Blue Dolphins” author and family Repulsive ones “Watch out!” Hospital chain near Atlanta Hesitant

Potter Continued from p.7 that Harry, Hermione and Ron seem like second nature to them. Whether their acting careers flourish after “Harry Potter” or not, they have left an impressive little body of work with these three characters alone, developing them into full-blooded youths that feel real despite their fantastical surroundings. Most fans know the shocker in store involving

82. Town in western Peru 83. On the train 85. Beau 87. Actor Arnold 88. Play about spouses who kill a duke? (with “The”) 95. Befuddle 96. “Der Ring ___ Nibelungen” 97. “___ Girls” 98. Moray, e.g. 99. Firm that flips products 101. Big pig 103. Gay Talese’s “___ the Sons” 107. Catches 109. Fizzy drink 113. Reverse, e.g. 114. Strolls 118. Rash goddesses 120. Be an omen of 122. Pandowdy, e.g. 123. Play about a plane crash survivor? 128. “Cut it out!” 129. ___ show 130. ___ line (major axis of an elliptical orbit) 131. Dorothy’s dog, and namesakes 132. Keith of country 133. Tangle 134. Clarified butter in India 135. Cognizant Down 1. Big name in fashion 2. Relinquishes 3. Devoted 4. ___ gestae 5. Clobber 6. Circus employee 7. “Gladiator” setting 8. The “p” in m.p.g.

Dumbledore and the ominous Professor Snape (Alan Rickman). Like their young costars, Gambon and Rickman live and breathe these characters by now, Dumbledore a towering presence of grace and nobility, Snape a delightful cold fish whose actions reveal his tiger-shark stripes. Others among the returning favorites are Robbie Coltrane as Harry’s mountainous ally Hagrid, Maggie Smith as prim Professor McGonagall, Julie Walters as Ron and Ginny’s genial mom, Evanna Lynch as ditzy

9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 24. 25. 26. 32. 34. 36. 37. 40. 42. 43. 44. 45. 47. 48. 49. 50. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 62. 64. 66. 67. 68.

Benefit Chip off the old block Bar order “___ du lieber!” “The Addams Family” cousin Nurses Engine sound Hydrox rival Ballet move Flimsy, as an excuse Big Apple attraction, with “the” Back of the neck Fourth-largest city in Minnesota Salinger dedicatee Identify Desires Clothing line Bother City in Uttar Pradesh A pint, maybe Haul Armageddon Many of the Marshall Islands Head, for short Catalan painter Joan Addis Ababa’s land: Abbr. Barter Shack ___ school Character in “As You Like It” Encourages Bayonet Sheryl of rock Addition Chambers Arrange information again Air letters? ___ Domingo

Luna Lovegood, and Helena Bonham Carter, who’s a wicked wonder as Bellatrix Lestrange, one of Voldemort’s fiercest fanatics. Visual-effects technology definitely have caught up with Rowling’s imagination — and the filmmakers have some rowdy fun with their splendid images. The Quidditch match on flying broomsticks is like airborne rugby, the way the players hammer into one another. And the broomsticks between the boys’ legs take on a bawdy phallic look

69. 70. 72. 74. 77. 78. 80. 81. 84. 86. 88.

Temperature of the ozone layer, abbr. “Go, ___!” Nowy ___, Polish town Beach sights Puts up with Wandering ones Column crossers Brit. record label 1950’s political inits. Charlotte-toRaleigh dir. Fold, spindle or mutilate

89. Dutch city 90. Country rtes. 91. Data compression method, for short 92. Chicken 93. It has many keys: Abbr. 94. Wallop 100. Sci-fi weaponry 101. University in St. Paul 102. Island in Essex 104. Catnip genus 105. Make fit 106. End of a threat 108. Horse opera

that wryly complements the sexual themes emerging among the teens. Director Yates is also making the two-part adaptation of the seventh and final book, the movies due out in November 2010 and July 2011. “HalfBlood Prince” should leave fans as eager for those last movies as a high-school junior is for graduation day. “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince,” a Warner Bros. release, is rated PG for scary images, some violence, language and mild sensuality. 153 minutes.

110. Corpulent 111. Charity, often 112. Make sense, with “up” 114. After 115. High in the Andes 116. Messy dresser 117. Make out 119. Alone 121. Are, in Aragón 124. PC linkup 125. Guerrilla group in Uganda, for short 126. Dash abbr. 127. “Awesome!”

Answers from last week


Ongoing events

Saturday

The Spanish Learning Center offers classes for all levels and ages. Learn grammar and vocabulary and practice conversation and writing. For more information, contact Isabel at 764-7730.

The Quick Wits Improv Group will perform at 8 p.m. Saturday at 205 Bear Lake Blvd., Garden City. Admission is $10. To order tickets, call 881-0987.

Providence City will be taking kickball and four-on-four soccer registration through July 23 at the city office during regular business hours, Monday through Thursday, 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. No late registration will be accepted. Kickball registration fee is $25; soccer fee is $20 (jersey is $5). Booth applications are now being accepted for the 2009 Novemberfest Arts and Crafts Fair, an annual Christmas craft and entertainment show scheduled to run Nov. 27 and 28 at the Logan Rec Center. For more information, contact Charlene at 5129745 or Nina at 752-8142.

Friday Stokes Nature Center will host Parent Tot Nature Hour from 10 to 11 a.m. Friday. Kids ages 2 and 3 are invited to explore animals, plants and nature through music, crafts and games. All toddlers must have a parent pal present. Cost is $3 ($2.50 for SNC members). To register or for more information, call 7553239 or visit www.logannature.org. Friday Nine Cities Back will perform with Speitre, Killfloor and Xavier (hardcore/metal) at 8 p.m. Friday at Why Sound, 30 Federal Ave., Logan. Cover charge is $5. For more information, visit www.myspace. com/whysound. A sock hop with Tim Holwig will start at 2 p.m. Friday at Pioneer Valley Lodge, 2351 N. 400 East, North Logan. Everyone is invited. A singles racquetball tournament will be held Friday and Saturday at The Sports Academy. Cost is $15. For more information, call 753-7500. A Love and Logic grandparenting class will be held at 11 a.m. Friday at the Logan Senior Center. Participation is free. For more information, call 755-5171. The Providence Macey’s will host a behind-the-scenes store tour for ages 4-13 from 2 to 3 p.m. Friday. Kids will get to make a “Flat Stanley” and will receive a goody bag and photo. For more information or to sign up, call 753-3301. A new market for fresh fruits, vegetables and bakery products is open from 4 to 8 p.m. Fridays and from 1 to 5 p.m. Saturdays in front of the Historic Cache County Courthouse in downtown Logan. All growers, producers, bakers and consumers are invited. For more information, contact Brad R. Christensen at 770-4757 or brcdesign@aol. com, or Richard Wagstaff at 435-890-0215. All are invited to participate in a Peace Vigil every Friday between 5 and 6 p.m. on the east side of Main Street between Center Street and 100 North in Logan. For more information, e-mail info@loganpeace.org.

The Western singing duo Tumbleweeds will perform from 6 p.m. to closing Saturday at the Cracker Barrel Cafe in Paradise. Everyone is invited. The original inhabitants of Latin America — from Mexico to Chile — is the subject of the next “Saturdays at the Museum” series event provided by the Museum of Anthropology at Utah State University. Guest Patricio R. Ortiz will speak at 1 p.m. and activities will be provided throughout the day. The museum is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. For more information, call 797-7545. Bandolier will perform with La Farsa and Nine Dollar Twin (acoustic) at 8 p.m. Saturday at Why Sound. Cover charge is $5. Bridgerland Literacy’s Bookcrossing stops at the Gardeners’ Market every Saturday morning. Pick up a traveling book to read then release it for others to find. For more information, contact Shari at 753-1270. The Cache Valley Gardeners’ Market is open from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. every Saturday at Merlin Olsen Park, 200 E. 100 South, Logan. This week is Flower Fest. For more information, visit www.gardenersmarket.org.

Sunday Utah State University’s Alumni Band continues its series of summer performances with another outdoor concert at 7 p.m. Sunday on the Quad just east of Old Main at USU. Admission is free and everyone is invited. The Sidwell family, known throughout the valley for their music, will entertain the summer citizens group at 1 p.m. Sunday on the lawn adjacent to Old Main at USU. Bring your lawn chairs. For more information, contact Norman Palmer at 787-1406. The Post-Mormon Community Cache Valley chapter meets for dinner and socializing every Sunday at 6:30 p.m. at a local restaurant. Newcomers welcome. For more information, visit www.PostMormon.org/logan.

Monday A chamber music concert to benefit Four Paws Rescue will take place at 6 p.m. Monday at St. John’s Episcopal Church, 85 E. 100 North, Logan. Concert will feature members of the Utah Festival Opera performing works by Beethoven, Arthur Sullivan, Arensky and Utah composer Phillip Bimstein, among others. Admission is a $5 suggested donation. For more information, visit www.4paws.pet finder.org or e-mail desorgo@gmail.com.

Tuesday A new session of Learn-to-Skate classes will start Tuesday at the Eccles Ice Center, 2825 N. 200 East, North Logan. Classes are

offered Tuesdays and Thursdays for all ages and abilities. For information on specific times and prices, visit www.ecclesice.com. Common Ground Outdoor Adventures will tour a local fish hatchery on Tuesday. Volunteers are always welcome. For more information, visit www.cgadventures.org. Cache Valley’s Gluten Intolerance Group will share some summer cooking recipes at a free cooking and community class from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday in the Providence Macey’s Little Theater. Seating is limited; to reserve a spot, call 753-3301. The Association for Wise Childbearing will host a discussion about postpartum depression and show the video “Feel Like Yourself Again” from 6 to 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Whittier Community Center, 290 N. 400 East, Logan. Cost is $2 per person. Quiet children, especially nursing babies, are welcome, as are dads. For more information, email wise.childbearing@gmail.com.

Wednesday The Cache Interagency Council will host its monthly meeting at noon Wednesday at Hamilton’s Restaurant, 2427 N. Main, Logan. All service organizations are invited. The mission of the CIC is to unite service organizations in sharing ideas, upcoming events and ongoing services, thus producing a spirit of unity and cooperation among the participating organizations. For more information, contact Kendall Andelin at 753-9008. Scott Bradley will lead a “To Preserve the Nation” Constitution class at 7 p.m. Wednesday at The Book Table. Participation is free. For more information, call 753-2930. The Cache Valley Gardeners’ Market’s produce market is now open from 4 to 7 p.m. every Wednesday at the Historic Cache County Courthouse (south side). For more information, visit www.gardenersmarket.org. OPTIONS for Independence will celebrate the 19th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act with a summer picnic at 6 p.m. Wednesday at Hyrum Gibbons/Mount Logan Park. Food, fun and entertainment will be provided. Reservations are required; contact Mandie 753-5353 ext. 108. Nancy Brokaw will host a free educational video presentation by Dr. Lorraine Day titled “Cancer Doesn’t Scare Me Anymore” from 6 to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday in Logan. For the location and to reserve a seat, call 563-9641. The Psycho Kid will perform with Max and the Marginalized, Chucks and The Skars (punk/rock) at 8 p.m. Wednesday at Why Sound. Cover charge is $5. A Dutch-oven cook-off will start at 3 p.m. Wednesday at Pioneer Valley Lodge. Prizes include a Camp Chef, Dutch oven and more. Everyone is invited. A Love and Logic grandparenting class will be held at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the Logan Family Center, 50 S. 400 East. Participation is free. For more information, call 755-5171.

Dr. Grover will talk about losing weight and feeling great through proper nutrition at a free cooking and community class from 7 to 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Providence Macey’s Little Theater. There will be refreshments and give-aways. Seating is limited; to reserve a spot, call 753-3301. The GW MasterMind Financial and Business Network will present a free “pilot program” to the GW MasterMind Roundtable Discussion Groups at 7:30 p.m. every Wednesday and Thursday. Anyone is invited to attend and learn financial self-defense from George W. Smith. This is a pilot program that will ultimately be aired on TV and the Internet and approved for college credit from an International University of Business. For more information, call 435-227-6203. Bridgerland Cruise Nights will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the south Arby’s. Bring your street rod, classic car or specialty vehicle, or just come check out the cars and trucks. Everyone is invited. For more information, contact Jerry at 563-6488.

Thursday Franklin County Theatre Arts will present a live production of “Into the Woods” at 7 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday at the Worm Creek Opera House in Preston. Tickets are $6 and can be purchased at True Value Mart in Preston or at the door the night of the show. Tickets purchased July 24 will include a shuttle ride to the Preston Rodeo Arena after the show, a hamburger, drink and admission to the Rotary Fireworks. Common Ground Outdoor Adventures will go canoeing on Thursday. Volunteers are always welcome. For more information, visit www.cgadventures.org or call 713-0288. The Franklin Cover Up will perform with Obscure Beauty, Nick Crossley and ViaVersa (rock/pop/experimental) at 8 p.m. Thursday at Why Sound. Cover charge is $5. The Knotty Knitters meet from 6:15 to 8:30 p.m. every Thursday at the Senior Citizen Center in Logan. Everyone is invited to work on their crochet, knitting, needlework, crossstitch projects and more. For more information, contact Cathy at 752-3923.

Upcoming events Bruce Parker, who recently summited Mt. Everest, will give a slide presentation and lecture of his climb at 6:30 p.m. Monday, July 27, at the Cobblestone clubhouse, 445 N. Pine Grove Lane, Providence. Everyone is invited. A Summer Ice Skating Show will take place at noon Saturday, Aug. 1, at the Eccles Ice Center in North Logan. Admission is $5 and includes free ice skating lessons after the show. All proceeds will go to support the Ice Center’s fundraiser, “Growing Family Fun: Community Recreation & Parking Project.” The Sky View Class of 1984 will host its 25th year reunion at 6 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 1, at The Bluebird restaurant. Organizers are still looking for some class members; if you haven’t been contacted or want more information, contact Dave Israelsen at 753-4530.

Page 15 - The Herald Journal - Cache Magazine - Friday, July 17, 2009

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