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Cache Magazine HAIR-RAISING

EVENING Zombiefest takes over at OPTIONS for Independence

The Herald Journal

OCTOBER 14-20, 2016


contents

October 14-20, 2016

COVER 6 Options plays host to fun and chilling Zombiefest

THE ARTS 3 USU Orchestra set to perform at St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Parish

4 Music Theatre West

presents ‘Diamonds and Demon’ murder-mystery

4 Annual Moondog Ball

fundraiser set for Oct. 15

4 USU library unveils a

new Shakespeare exhibit

5 Olate Dogs coming to

perform at the Ellen Eccles Theatre on Oct. 17

MUSIC 8 Prince fans still coping

with loss after six months

MOVIES 9 Two and a half stars:

Ben Affleck’s ‘Accountant’ doesn’t quite add up

COLUMN 5 Dennis Hinkamp shares

some real locker room talk

CALENDAR 11 See what’s happening this week in Cache Valley

McKenzie Devey of Nibley celebrates after winning the Jell-O/brain-eating contest at Zombiefest Monday at OPTIONS for Independence. On the cover: 8-year-old TyLyn Glockhamer receives the finishing touches on her zombie look. (Jeff Hunter/Herald Journal)

FROM THE EDITOR My mother used to say, “There’s always room for Jell-O.” But she never said anything about there always being space for brains. So, I wasn’t exactly sure how the “brains-eating” contest at Zombiefest was going to turn out last Monday night. The annual fundraiser for OPTIONS for Independence — a local organization started in 1982 to “provide services to individu-

als with disabilities to facilitate their full participation in the community and raise the understanding of disability issues and access to the community” — Zombiefest crammed an awful lot of fun into two hours. As you can see on Pages 6-7, there was “Thriller” dancing, lots of makeup and Halloween-themed games, and good food ... not including the Jell-O that represented brains during the brains-eating contest. Inasmuch as utensils were not allowed, you would have thought that one of the young boys involved would have been more than willing to gobble up a plate full of Jell-O using only their hands. But

McKenzie Devey was really the only contestant who got after it, scooping up the red gelation with her hands and managing to keep it in her mouth — you know, like a real zombie. “I think it was like cherry or strawberry; I don’t know, I couldn’t really taste it,” said Devey, who added that she was just grateful she didn’t experience a reversal during the contest. And for beating five guys’ brains out, so to speak, Devey won — what else? — a $25 gift certificate to Five Guys. — Jeff Hunter


Time for some ‘Joyful!’ noise USU Orchestra set to perform at local parish

– Prince superfan Maria Newport on hearing about the death of her idol (Page 8)

PET OF THE WEEK Available for adoption

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The Utah State University Symphony Orchestra will present its fall concert, “Joyful!” in celebration of the 75th anniversary of the St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Parish. The concert will begin at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 14, at St. Thomas Aquinas, 725 S. 250 East in Hyde Park. “The program features Torelli’s ‘Trumpet Concerto’ with USU faculty soloist Max Matzen and Bach’s ‘Prelude in C minor’ performed by faculty organist Lynn Thomas,” said Sergio Bernal, director of the USU Symphony Orchestra. “In an arrangement by parishioner Deborah Baker Monday, ‘Panis Angelicus’ will be performed by faculty soprano Cindy Dewey and faculty clarinetist Nicholas Morrison together with the USU Chamber Singers conducted

“I just started wailing. Like, fetal position, in my bed.”

The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, October 14, 2016

ALL MIXED UP

Quotable

Caine College of the Arts

The USU Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Sergio Bernal, will be joined by additional USU groups and musicians for a celebration of the St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Parish.

by director Cory Evans.” The performance also features the choirs and the young violinists from St. Thomas Aquinas, the young violinists from El Sistema Utah and the USU Chamber Singers. “We will end the evening

with the ‘Ode to Joy’ from Beethoven’s ‘Ninth Symphony’ with its universal message of unity among people under the loving embrace of God,” Bernal said. “We are looking forward to a beautiful music experience in celebration of

St. Thomas Aquinas. I have a feeling the congregation will be very moved.” “Joyful!” is free and open to the public. For more information, visit the CCA Box Office in the Chase Fine Arts Center, call 7978022 or visit cca.usu.edu.

AFCO presents ‘Halloween Spooktacular’ The American Festival Chorus & Orchestra, conducted by Dr. Craig Jessop, kicks off its 2016-17 season with “Halloween Spooktacular: A Family Pops Concert,” at 2 and 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 29, at the Ellen Eccles Theatre. This fun-filled concert for all ages takes on a spooky twist as it pays homage to the “Haunting of the Ellen Eccles Theatre.” The Halloween-inspired theatre decorations will provide the perfect backdrop for the 220-voice choir, full orchestra, soloists, dancers, and “surprise guests.” The program will be

produced and hosted by USU Professor Cory Evans, along with Professor Richie Call as his sidekick. Children are encouraged to wear costumes, and there will be trick or treating in the lobby afterward. The concert will include a dazzling array of favorite tunes from Disney, “Star Wars,” “Phantom of the Opera,” “Harry Potter” and more. AFCO’s “Halloween Spooktacular” also will feature music by local composers Jay Richards and Emma Cardon, including the premiere of Cardon’s “October Lullaby.” Jessop ensures that the Family Pops

Concerts, which are among AFCO’s most popular concerts of the year, are geared to please audience members of all ages. “I cannot think of a better way to introduce the arts to our youngest audience members,” he says. “Musical experiences such as this have the potential to make a positive and sometimes profound impact on our children.” Ticket prices are $13 to $22. Babes in arms are welcomed; children 18 months and older must have a ticket. For ticket information, visit americanfestivalchorus.org or call 752-0026.

Pet: Holmes From: Four Paws Rescue Why he’s so lovable: Holmes came to us from the Brigham City Animal Shelter. He is a beautiful bluetick coonhound. We are unsure if he is house-trained or crate-trained because he is new to Four Paws Rescue. He is good with other dogs. He came with another hound named Sherlock. They seem to be a bonded pair. Holmes loves to cuddle and play. He is super friendly as is his friend Sherlock. The adoption fee for Holmes is $150 which includes the spay or neuter surgery and vaccinations (rabies and parvo/ distemper). We show dogs by appointment or at adoption events. If you would like to meet Holmes, please call and leave a message with Lisa at 764-3534 or email us at scfourpaws@hotmail.com.


The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, October 14, 201

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all mixed up Delve into ‘Diamonds and Demons’ Music Theatre West presents their second annual, high-class dinner theater production in the murder-mystery style. This year’s production of “Diamonds and Demons” will take you on safari into the African Jungle in the 1930s on a quest for diamonds and a brush with African gods. The show, written by local playwright David Sidwell, is full of witty repartee, quirky characters and delightful physical comedy. It also includes a mix of original music and classics from the early 1900s, all choreographed by the talented Stephanie White. Come

prepared to laugh and even sing along. The costumes, designed by Maren Lyman, add the finishing touches to Marianne Sidwell’s directing, and the evening would not be complete without Jay Richards on the piano. To add to the ambiance of the event, audience members are invited (not required) to dress up in the style of the evening. Links to costume ideas will be included in the ticketing email. The dinner theater show will run select dates from Oct. 14-29, and the ticket price is $38. There will also be dessert-only shows, priced at $20, on

Monday nights, Oct. 17 and 24. The venue for this show is the newly renovated Church Street Event Center at 155 Church Street, across from Caffe Ibis). There is plenty of parking with a ramp and elevator for easy access. Almost all seating is wheelchair accessible. The buffet-style dinner, catered by Justin Hamilton’s Off-Premise Catering, is gluten-free, except the rolls and one of the dessert options, so don’t let that stop you from coming and Photo courtesy of Music Theatre West enjoying the evening with us. For more information, visit music“Diamonds and Demons” will be presented on select dates from Oct. 14-29. theatrewest.org.

Celebrate Shakespeare USU library opens up ‘Unruly Women’

The year 2016 marks the 400th anniversary of the death of William Shakespeare. In commemoration of this significant event, the Utah State University MerrillCazier Library has mounted an exhibition entitled “Unruly Women: Women in Shakespeare’s World.” The Library will also have on display its original 1632 partial “Second Folio,” along with other 17th-19th century printed works. Unruly Women explores both the roles women played and the perceptions of women during Shakespeare’s time. Covering topics such as women rulers, female martyrs, midwifery and witchcraft, the exhibit addresses Shakespeare’s incorporation of many of these themes into his own plays. The USU Library’s partial “Second Folio,” purchased through the Stanford O. and Shirley A. Cazier Program Endowment Fund in 2014, includes four of Shakespeare’s tragedies: “Titus Andronicus,” “Troilus and Cressida,” “Romeo and Juliet” and “Coriolanus.” It is bound in modern leather with marbled paper and is housed in Special Collections and Archives.

Photo courtesy of Utah State University

Utah State Univesity’s University Libraries has opened a new exhibit that looks at Shakespeare’s “Unruly Women.”

In addition to the “Second Folio,” other works on display include John Foxe’s “Book of Martyrs” (1641) as well as Henry Holland’s “Heroologia Anglica” (1620). The USU University Library’s exhibition is free and open to the public. The “Unruly Women” panels are located in the Merrill-Cazier Library’s atrium. The rare books are on display in the Hatch Room,

located in the Library’s Special Collections and Archives Division on the lower level of the building. These works are available to view from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, with late hours until 7 p.m. on Tuesday and Wednesday. The exhibit will be on display through Dec. 5. For more information, contact Jennifer Duncan, books curator and interim associate dean for Special Collections, at 797-8148.

Four Paws ready to host annual Moondog Ball There is no moon like an autumn moon, and no better way to celebrate it than a Moondog Ball. A-RO-OO-OO! This happy howl from Four Paws Rescue is your invitation to join them for the 16th annual Moondog Ball on Saturday, Oct. 15. Continuing their longstanding tradition, the rescue’s festive fundraiser will take place at the Logan Golf & Country Club, 710 N. 155 East. Hors d’oeuvres will be served at 7 p.m. followed by a silent auction. This year, Four Paws Rescue will feature a special performance by Olate Dogs at 8:30 p.m., with dancing beginning at 9 p.m. Attire, as usual, is fashionably “dress to impress,” an unofficial cross between very formal and not so formal. The evening’s festivities will feature the Joe McQueen Quartet, led by 97-year-old jazz legend Joe McQueen, who has played with Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Dizzie Gillespie and more; followed Allie Harris & Friends, a performance by Shimmering Sands Belly Dance and dance music from the local band, The Raindogs. This year’s hors d’oeuvres will be catered by Justin Hamilton of Off Premise Catering. Tickets for the Moondog Ball are $60 and are available at Caffé Ibis, The Italian Place, and The Island Market, as well as online at moondog.eventbrite.com, a secure ticket purchasing site. For further ticket information or information about the rescue itself, visitFour Paws Rescue online at 4paws.petfinder.com or call 770-7844.


“The locker rental fees went up again?” “That scale has got to be wrong.” “Do you prefer ibuprofen or Advil?” “How many calories per mile again?” “Yes, I hate BYU, even though I went to BYU.” “Why are all the running shoes day-glow colors now? Is that gay?” “Which surgeon did you use for your hip replacement?” “Is that Paleo?” “Where did you get

that tattoo? What does it mean? Did it hurt? Were you drunk at the time? Do you know a dermatologist who can remove it?” “Why do my toenails look so weird?” “Why didn’t I write my locker combination down?” “Crossfit, Boot Camp or Zumba?” “Do they make yoga pants for guys? Is that gay?” “I don’t run fast enough to pull a muscle.”

“Where did I put my wallet?” “How come the shoes wear out before the shoelaces now?” “How much did your sports watch cost?” “Kale shakes? Are you kidding me?” “I think the chlorine in the pool is making my hair fall out.” “Ultimate Frisbee is too a real sport.” “Why are you still wearing a Speedo? Is that gay?” See SAID on Page 10

Olate Dogs and new tricks COMING UP Downtown Ghost Tours

Talented rescue pups won NBC’s ‘Talent’ show

Olate Dogs’ Rescue Tour is coming for one night only to the Ellen Eccles Theatre. The second performance in the CacheARTS Presents 2016-17 National Touring Season, these winners of “America’s Got Talent” will be wagging up a storm at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 17. Millions of viewers witnessed Olate Dogs’ high-energy canine performance steal the show during Season 7 of “America’s Got Talent,” winning the $1 million prize and headlining the Palazzo in Las Vegas. Now Olate Dogs is touring around the nation and bringing their fastpaced canine tricks right to Cache Valley to charm audiences of all ages. More than just Frisbee chasing and sitting on command, the Olate Dog act thrills and excites with hilarious and adorable costumes and innovative stunts like backflips and driving cars, not to mention human acrobatics and music. Tickets for Olate Dogs’ performance are available at cachearts.org, at the CacheARTS ticket office at 43 S. Main Street, or by calling 7520026. Olate Dogs got their start in Chile where the patriarch of the Olate fam-

Haunted structures, nighttime spirits and eerie stories await your arrival this Halloween season in Historic Downtown Logan. Learn about downtown’s most infamous ghosts, poltergeists, and spirits doomed to the realm of mortals. The Historic Downtown Logan Ghost Tour is technically a family-friendly tour, however, it is not recommended for small children or for people who don’t like to be scared. Your private guided walking tour will take you into the heart of Logan’s haunted history as you visit sites with the Bridgerland Storytelling Guild, Cache Theatre Company and Music West Theatre. Each guided tour lasts approximately two hours and walking distance is less than a half mile. Tours run nightly between 7 and 11 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays on October 7-8, 14-15, 21-22 and 28-29. Tour reservations required online at logandowntown.org.

Halloween Treat Walk

Photo courtesy of Olate Dogs

The Olate Dogs’ Rescue Tour will come to the Ellen Eccles Theatre in downtown Logan at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 17.

ily, Richard Olate, grew up. As a boy of 10, Richard rescued his first street dog and discovered he had a gift for animal training. By the age of 12, he was supporting his entire family by performing with his dog troupe in schools and small circuses. He

eventually developed a canine act that brought him to perform in the United States at age 33. There he met his wife, Rebecca, See DOGS on Page 10

Get the children dressed up as ghosts, goblins and ghouls, and enjoy a fun celebration of trick or treating during the annual Treat Walk in downtown Logan on Halloween Day, Oct. 31. Many establishments will open their doors and welcome costumed trick or treaters throughout the holiday. No rush for moms and dads; businesses will be open and treating between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Enjoy a safe and relaxing outing with the family in downtown Logan. Just look for the Halloween Treat Walk poster in their door or window. Businesses participating are between 200 North and 100 South, and along Center Street and 100 North between 100 West and 100 East. Visit logandowntown.org for more information.

The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, October 14, 201

days, and I can testify on a pile of Lycra that less than one percent of the locker room inhabitants talk like Mr. Trump suggests. Of the ones who do, 50 percent have Tourrette Syndrome or steroid rage. To the best of my knowledge and memory, this is a compilation of my recent personal or overheard locker room talk: “Is the pool still at least 10 different states closed? What are they representing nine different cleaning it with a toothsports at all hours of the brush?”

Slightly Off Center DENNIS HINKAMP

I’ve stayed mainly silent on the bloviating of the two presidential candidates. They have offended whole basket loads of people in general, and women, minorities and thinking people specifically. Not until Mr. Trump blamed locker room talk for his vapid sexist dialogue did my temper snap like a wet towel. I have been a frequent user of locker rooms since age 15, which was five decades ago. I have been in locker rooms in

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What’s really being said in men’s locker rooms


Left, 3-year-old Carolina Carter joins the USU Dance Company on stage to help teach Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” dance during Zombiefest Monday night. Above, the Kaitlyn, Jonny and Ben Hoffman run the Virus Swamp. Below left, 13-year-old McKenzie Devey of Nibley powers her way to the brains-eating championship. Below right, Brittany Case tries to drum up business.

A GATHERING OF ZOMBIES OPTIONS for Independence hosts annual fundraising event

PHOTOGRAPHS BY JEFF HUNTER


Above, members of the USU Dance Company teach the steps to “Thriller” Monday night at Zombiefest. Far left, 10-year-old Maya Stephens learns Michael Jackson’s choreography. Left, Kerry Duffy makes ballon animals during the annual OPTIONS for Independence fundraiser. Below, Mandie Kaneko applies zombie makeup on Allison Harris.


The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, October 14, 201

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‘Girl on the Train’ bests ‘Nation’ at box office NEW YORK (AP) — Propelled by the popularity of Paula Hawkins’ best-seller, the fasttracked big-screen adaptation of “The Girl on the Train” led North American theaters in ticket sales with $24.7 million, according to studio estimates Sunday. Less successful was Nate Parker’s Nat Turner biopic “The Birth of a Nation,” which moviegoers largely greeted with a shrug after a 17-year-old rape allegation resurfaced against its star and

director. “The Girl on the Train,” a psychological thriller starring Emily Blunt, appealed significantly to female moviegoers, who made up 68 percent of the audience, according to the film’s distributer, Universal Pictures. The film, directed by Tate Taylor (“The Help”), is about an alcoholic suburbanite woman who becomes embroiled in a mysterious disappearance. Released just last year,

Hawkins’ novel went from bestseller lists to the top of the box office in short order. DreamWorks acquired film rights to the book ahead of its publication. While reviews for the film were weak, Blunt’s lead performance was largely praised. Nick Carpou, president of domestic distribution for Universal, credited the film’s success with the alliance of Universal and

AP Photo

“The Girl on the Train” took the top spot at the box office See BOX on Page 9 last weekend, bringing in a total of $24.7 million.

Prince fans still mourning 6 months later NEW YORK (AP) — Have you ever missed someone so much that even the thought of them made you burst into tears? Now imagine that feeling drenched in purple rain. Nearly six months after the shocking death of Prince, some superfans are still grieving hard, creating tearful memes, snapping up “I Still Miss Prince” T-shirts featuring a despondent Charlie Brown, sharing photos and seeking solace in an explosion of fresh concert videos and unreleased music on YouTube. They see no end in sight to their sadness, especially with regular Prince developments in the news — details on the death investigation, his house being turned into a museum and Thursday’s official tribute concert in his hometown of Minneapolis among them. Maria Newport still cries regularly over the loss. She broke up with her boyfriend soon after Prince was found dead April 21. When she heard about it, “I just started wailing.

unselfish lover.” He said of the death, “I just walked around in a daze for weeks. I still cry when I hear certain songs like ‘Breakdown’ and ‘Adore.’” Jazz buff Cheryl Emerson, at 66, doesn’t fit the

traditional Prince demographic but she, too, is still profoundly saddened by the loss. She wouldn’t let her Prince fan of a daughter, Rana Emerson, see the Oscar-winning “Purple Rain” at age 13 in San Antonio, Texas, ship-

ping her off with her little brother to their grandparents’ house so she and her husband could go alone opening weekend. Emerson redeemed herself years later, when See PRINCE on Page 11

CACHEARTS PRESENTS 2016-17 NATIONAL TOURING SEASON TM

AP Photo

Margo Davis poses for a portrait as she lays next to a collection of Prince memorabilia at her home in Smyrna, Georgia.

Like, fetal position, in my bed.” As for the boyfriend, she said he didn’t get it, in the raw moment or in the weeks that followed. “He could not understand. He couldn’t understand the pain,” Newport said of the guy she had been seeing for about a year and thought she would marry. “He would say, ‘This is the dumbest thing ever. Like, you’ve never met this man.’” Ron Worthy, who

lives in Brooklyn, runs a music-focused website, Soulhead.com, and recalls his first encounter with Prince’s music, listening to the naughty “Soft and Wet” on the radio when he was a tender 7 years old. He knew it was about stuff grown folks do, but that and Prince’s numerous other sex songs “basically gave you instructions on some level on how to be vulnerable with women, how to be a competent and giving and


rearing its ugly head in “Jason Bourne,” with Paul Greengrass devolving into shaky-cam fight scenes for a character who is AP Photo specifically detail oriented. Bourne uses anything in Ben Affleck appears in a scene from “The Accountant.” the world around him as mistake, a fair share of a weapon. His moves are actual accounting going precise and deadly. So, on. when the camera work Wolff is a man who shakes, bobs, and weaves is obsessed with details. with no discernible reaDirector // Gavin O’Connor He’s a strict, clean perStarring // Ben Affleck, Anna Kendrick, Jeffrey soning, the entire effect son. He has one set of Tambor, Jon Bernthal, J.K. Simmons, John Lithgrow of watching a character Rated // R for strong violence and language silverware — knife, fork, absorbed in detail is lost. throughout spoon — which he lay in So it is with “The his drawer in a perfectly Accountant.” Director records trying to find out — as he uses his laser straight line. His mind is Gavin O’Connor treats his where the money is miss- one of order. This is why focus on mathematics to attentive character with perform almost supernatu- ing and why. He’s driven it’s so infuriating that the careless directing. Wolff by single-focus tasks. ral forensic accounting. filmmaking betrays the is an exacting fighter. While “The Accountant” He pours over company detail-oriented aspects that No move is wasted. His is billed as an action expense reports, earnmake him who he is. This movements are economimovie, there is, make no ings statements and bank problem was last seen cal. Nevertheless, the cam-

★★

‘The Accountant’

Box Continued from Page 8 Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Partners. Carpou said the film’s box office was largely unaffected by Hurricane Matthew. But perhaps the most closely watched opening was Fox Searchlight’s “The Birth of a Nation.” Playing in 2,105 theaters, the film opened with a disappointing $7.1 million. The movie fetched a record $17.5 million at its muchlauded Sundance Film Festival premiere, where it was hailed

as an Oscar contender and an answer to the then-boiling “OscarsSoWhite” backlash. But Parker became enveloped in a rape allegation from his past, when he was a sophomore wrestler at Penn State. Parker, who has maintained his innocence, was acquitted in 2001. The alleged victim killed herself in 2012. As the controversy continued through the summer and fall (Parker appeared on “60 Minutes” last weekend), Fox Searchlight worked in vain to direct focus back toward Parker’s movie. On opening night Thursday, protesters held

a silent vigil for victims of rape and sexual assault outside a Los Angeles theater. Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for comScore, was hesitant to say how large a role the controversy played in the film’s performance. “It’s hard to know, but considering the initial promise of the movie and all the positive talk about the film and its Oscar prospects, you would have figured that it would do more business,” Dergarabedian said. “Now it’s in the marketplace where the audience can decide how they feel about the movie.”

Also opening in wide release was the CBS Films and Lionsgate release “Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life,” based on the James Patterson books about a teenager who terrorizes his principal with pranks. It debuted with $6.9 million. Last week’s top film, Tim Burton’s “Miss Peregrine’s School for Peculiar Children,” slid to second place with $15 million in its second week for 20th Century Fox. The Lionsgate real-life disaster film “Deepwater Horizon” took in $11.8 million in its second week.

era is a fountain of wasted movement. It bounces around during action scenes like it’s intent on providing the least effective visual possible. Here’s a movie that watched “John Wick” and thought that the key to the house-fight scene was the home’s modern architecture. It learned nothing from the way the camera stays stationary during Wick’s fight scenes, taking in the well-choreographed action. The action here, could very well be intricately choreographed, but you’ll be hard-pressed to discern where, or even be amazed by it. It’s a shame, really. Wolff is an intriguing character that is let down by his own film. This movie desperately wants us to think of him as an original, but when the fighting starts and the camera commences shaking it’s difficult to separate him from the dozens of other blurry shaky-cam action stars.

The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, December 25, 2015

The Reel Place Aaron Peck

“The Accountant” is a slapdash mix of Jack Reacher, John Wick and Jason Bourne. Yet, somehow it manages to never focus in on what makes any of those characters and their respective movies, great. This is partly to do with its undercooked storyline — its irritating observance of gotcha twists — but even more so to do with its execution. Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) is a man of many names. Wolff isn’t his only name, but for the purposes of this review, we’ll refer to him as such. As a kid Wolff was diagnosed with high-functioning autism. His militaristic father focused his son’s concentration on defending himself from bullies. Wolff’s main obsession has to do with numbers, though. As an adult he oversees money for some of the world’s most dangerous criminals. This time around he’s taking on a civilian job. There’s a robotics company that appears to be missing money. Wolff is just the guy to find it. He draws balance sheets on windows — “Beautiful Mind” style

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‘The Accountant’ doesn’t quite add up

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The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, October 14, 2016

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Said Continued from Page 5 “Running barefoot can’t be good for you.� “I have socks older than you.� “I kind of like that drug they give you for your colonoscopy.� “What did we do before Gatorade?�

Dogs Continued from Page 5 whose parents were members of a circus and whose father had been a professor at Utah State University, while performing in the same show together shortly after Richard came to U.S. Eventually the Olate Dogs act became a family performance when

“Is that a lap or a length?� “Who’s your favorite physical therapist?� “How much can you bench?� “How many miles a week?� “How many laps did you do?� “What’s your BMI?� “What’s your percent body fat?� “Is that scale broken?�

“I feel like 10 bucks.� “I don’t remember this hurting this much.� “I think I just need to warm up more.� “I don’t run far, but I run slow.� “Aren’t you retired yet? I thought you were retired. What are you going to do when you retire?� “Didn’t you used to be a really good runner?�

his son Nicholas joined his father in training and performing with the dogs at the age of 6. This feel-good family show is filled with beautiful routines built on positive relationships with each of the dogs, and both Richard and Nicholas showcase the amazing things that can be done with a strong human-animal connection.

Over 80 percent of the dogs in the Olate Dog family are rescues, and CacheARTS is proud to support our local Cache Valley animal rescues with this performance. The Cache Humane Society and Four Paws Rescue will each receive $1 of each ticket sold to Olate Dogs. And don’t forget your VIP ticket to meet the dogs nose-tomuzzle after the show.

  Â? Â?  Â? Â?Â

Admittedly, most of my compilation is culled from my Baby Boomer peer group, but that pretty much coincides with Mr. Trump’s age group. I can’t really speak for the younger generation, but my observation are that they engage in much locker room talk of any kind. Most of the time when I see them, they

have their ear buds or bluetooth headphones on and are oblivious to their surroundings. Sometimes they take them off long enough to talk on their cell phones. I saw someone talking on their cell phone for two miles on the treadmill. I saw another millennial with a cell phone in a plastic bag in the steam room.

I returned back from the locker room tonight, and nothing I heard was remotely related to groping, kissing or shopping for furniture as a seduction technique. Mr. Trump, have you ever been to a locker room? ———

Dennis Hinkamp can be found in a locker room somewhere, sometime, on average five days a week.

DIADM O N D S EMONS

MURDER MYSTERY DINNER THEATRE

OCTOBER 14-29 limited seating • more info: musictheatrewest.org


USU’s Science Unwrapped presents “Starstruck Science: Gravity and the Unseen Sky” at 7 p.m. Friday, Oct. 14 in the Eccles Science Learning Center Auditorium on campus. Featured speaker is USU alum and Penn State physicist Sydney Chamberlin. Admission is free and all ages are welcome. Refreshments and learning activities follow the lecture. For more information, call 797-3517 or visit usu.edu/science/unwrapped. Sego will perform with Dine Alone Records, Mojave Nomads, True Violet and Ivouries at 7 p.m. Friday, Oct. 14, at WhySound, 30 Federal Ave. Admission is $8. Visit whysound. com for more information. The Old Barn Community Theatre is proud to present it’s upcoming production, “You Can’t Take It With You.” The play will take to the stage every Monday, Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. from Oct. 7 to 22. Matinees will also be presented at 2:30 p.m. on Saturday Oct. 8, 15 and 22. For tickets and more information,

Prince Continued from Page 8 Rana — now 45 — was in her 20s. The two went to see Prince together twice, and Rana three more times on her own. “My heart’s still broken,” the elder Emerson said. “Why? Why wasn’t there someone there to prevent it, to help him, to see what he was doing, to give him advice?” She was referring to Prince’s accidental painkiller overdose at 57 after decades of residual pain from epic live performances that had him madly jumping off pianos, doing multiple splits and — to these fans — giving them everything he had. Daughter Rana, who works

visit oldbarn.org or call (435) 4582276.

SATURDAY Little Barefoot will perform with Cinders and Saline Lakes at 7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 15, at WhySound, 30 Federal Ave. Admission is $7. Visit whysound. com for more information. Danny Sadleir will perform from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 15, at Caffe Ibis, 52 Federal Ave. The Cache Valley Gardeners’ Market will be held from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 15, on the grounds of the Historic Cache County Courthouse at 199 N. Main St. Visit gardenersmarket.org for more information.

fashionably “dress to impress,” an unofficial cross between very formal and not so formal. The evening’s festivities will feature the Joe McQueen Quartet, led by 97-year-old jazz legend Joe McQueen, who has played with Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Dizzie Gillespie and more; followed Allie Harris & Friends, a performance by Shimmering Sands Belly Dance and dance music from the local band, The Raindogs. Tickets for the Moondog Ball are $60 and are available at Caffé Ibis, The Italian Place, and The Island Market, as well as online at moondog.eventbrite. com, a secure ticket purchasing site. For further ticket information or information about the rescue itself, visitFour Paws Rescue online at 4paws.petfinder.com or call 770-7844.

afterwards. For more information, call 752-0331. Velvet Underground Duo will perform from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 16, at Caffe Ibis, 52 Federal Ave.

MONDAY The Elizabeth Mathews DUP Camp will meet at Chuck-ARama on Monday, Oct. 17. The hostess is Ruth Ann Lewis and the lesson will be presented by Kathleen Sneddon.

Jill Pable, professor in the Interior Architecture and Design Department at Florida State University and a fellow and past national president of the Interior Design Educators Council, will speak in USU’s Caine Performance Hall at 7 p.m. Monday, Oct. 17. Her talk is entitled “Designing for Trauma Relief: St. John’s Episcopal Church, Crafting Effective Spaces for the Disadvantaged.” The lecture is 85 E. 100 North, Logan will hold free and open to the public. For a Taizé Vespers service at 7:30 more information, call 797-8022 p.m. Sunday, October 16. Join us for this short meditative prayer or visit cca.usu.edu. service featuring vocal accomThe Logan Library Monday paniment by the USU Choral Movie will begin at 6:30 p.m. Scholars, followed by a reception

Four Paws Rescue will host the 16th annual Moondog Ball on Saturday, Oct. 15, at the Logan Golf & Country Club, 710 N. 155 East. Hors d’oeuvres will be served at 7 p.m. followed by a silent auction. This year, Four Paws Rescue will feature a special performance by Olate Dogs at 8:30 p.m., with dancing beginning at 9 p.m. Attire, as usual, is

SUNDAY

as a higher education administrator in New York, is also still deeply affected by Prince’s death but takes a little comfort in so many details that have surfaced about the enormity of his philanthropy. “What I’m feeling, I know it’s not going to pass anytime soon,” she said. While Prince’s brilliance as a musician is what many fans may miss most, for his devoted followers, his loss means something more. Cheryl Emerson appreciated what he meant for black people, his trailblazing ways, and in particular, his battles for artists’ rights. “We were proud that he was fighting the system when he was writing slave on his face and changed his name to the symbol and all of that,” she explained. “He was doing

these things for other people who would come along later. Not just himself.” Brooks Brown, a 44-yearold lesbian living in Albany, New York, recalls being drawn to the androgynous Prince when she was growing up in Alabama, appreciating him as someone to identify with. “He was so gender fluid and kind of race fluid, too. I was like 11 and 12 and I felt that way a lot and felt that in him. He was so confident,” said Brown, who is a web administrator for an education nonprofit. “It’s still coming in waves,” Brown said of her sadness. “It just knocked the wind right out of me when he died.” She first saw Prince live in 2004. Worthy saw him several times. Newport had

seen him just the one time, at his final show in Atlanta, but her friend, Margo Davis, a 40-year-old human resources manager, can barely count the number of Prince shows she enjoyed, including some of his famous after-parties and concerts all over the United States, in London and at Prince’s Paisley Park just outside of Minneapolis. Off the top of her head, she estimated more than 20. She has saved her ticket stubs. Every last one, including the one to Prince’s last, intimate piano show in Atlanta with Newport, just a week before he died. “It’s a spiritual connection for me,” Davis said. “I had to leave work when he passed. I still have days, like, it can’t be real. It’s still so hard. I couldn’t listen to his music, I

Monday, Oct. 17, in the Jim Bridger Room. This week’s movie is “Beauty and the Beast” which is rated G. Popcorn and admission is free.

TUESDAY The Cache Valley Toastmasters will meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 18, in Room 248A of the Nutrition and Food Science Building at Utah State University. Visit cachevalleytm.toastmastersclubs.org for more information.

THURSDAY The 33rd annual North Logan Pumpkin Walk will be held Oct. 20-22 and 24-25 at Elk Ridge Park, 1100 E. 2500 North. Hours are 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Admission is free. This year’s theme is “American Icons.” The Pumpkin Walk is wheelchair accessible. Free shuttle bus service will be available starting at 6 p.m. with the pickup stop at Greenville Elementary, 2500 N. 400 East. Free parking for the shuttle is at the school and next door at Cache Valley Hospital. For more information visit pumpkinwalk.com or facebook.com/pumpkinwalk.

didn’t turn on the TV or pay attention to any of the tributes. I’m finally able to listen, but in a very limited way.” Like Davis, Newport is also still having a hard time turning on Prince’s music, but why does she think his death was different? Many icons have come and gone, after all. “There was a depth of understanding that you got when listening to his music that just took you to another place,” said Newport, along with other still-sad fans. Newport and Davis check in with each other regularly on the Prince front. “She’ll send me a random text and say, you know, ‘Today is just a bad one.’ And I’m, like, I get it,” Newport said, melting into tears. “I don’t know how I’ll come out from under this cloud.”

The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, December 25, 2015

FRIDAY

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calendar


The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, October 14, 201

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CrossworD By Myles Mellor and Sally York Across 1. Shipping option 5. Air 9. Office workers, collectively 14. Mascara site 18. Eskimo people 19. Binge 20. Recipe direction 21. A fan of 22. Clint Eastwood role and film 26. Baseball leadoff men, often 27. Break out 28. Home improvement network 29. Champagne with Perignon 30. “My dear man” 31. Lecture hall 34. Confirm a password, perhaps 36. Summer shade 39. “Road” film destination 42. New Zealand parrots 44. Change machine input 45. Czech city 49. Specified more closely 52. BMW Series 53. Fall locale 54. Elite group 55. Spanish dish 57. All-inclusive 60. Stage of development 65. Bugs 68. Annoyance 72. Got a good look at 73. Mexican romantic film, popular in the U.S. 79. Arab ruler 80. Manufacturing problem 81. Medieval bow instrument 82. Fill in 84. “Bye” 86. Melodious 91. Aggregate

Deadlines

95. Fortune 98. Feudal lord 99. Depict 103. Constraint 105. Holy Father 106. Point record 108. Copter’s forerunner 109. ’60s drug 110. Some Russians 113. Wrap 115. Bro’s partner 118. Dry 119. “___ true!” 121. Can 122. Discouraging 127. Liam Neeson starred in it 132. Hokkaido people 133. Planetary shadow 134. Film ___ 135. Fool 136. Earned a citation? 137. Staff bearer 138. Camera setting 139. Convenience Down 1. Newton, e.g. 2. “No problem!” 3. Breads 4. Pens and needles 5. Celeb 6. His and ___ 7. Crew member 8. With a touch of irony, often 9. Spread on the cream cheese 10. Everyday article 11. A hand 12. Cut out 13. Panache 14. Collagen target 15. Pain reliever 16. Back down 17. “A Study in Scarlet” hero 18. Fingers 23. Catnip and lovage, e.g. 24. Bulletin board fastener 25. Food additive 31. Eager beaver 32. Luau strings

33. Fabricated 35. Big load 36. Chef’s measure 37. Carpet layer’s calculation 38. Church section 40. Bass, for one 41. Bucko 43. Word before horse or lion 46. Abbr. before a number 47. Relative by marriage 48. “Wheel of Fortune” request 50. Swindled 51. Belief system 56. College life 58. Hindu loincloth 59. Attention 61. E.U. member 62. Knotted weave 63. At a future time 64. “___ to Billie Joe” 66. Took the cake, say 67. Call, as a game 69. Gather with difficulty 70. “Ain’t ___ Sweet” 71. High ball 73. Bucharest money 74. Evil spirit 75. Little butter? 76. “Big Band” period 77. Communications authority 78. Eyes 83. Driveway material 85. “When We Were Kings” subject 87. Beyond tipsy 88. Cover, in a way 89. I’s 90. Incline 92. Pack animal 93. Moments 94. White coat 96. “The Sweetheart of Sigma ___” 97. White wine aperitif 99. Herbal tea choice 100. Lacking vigor 101. Podded plant 102. Mine transport 104. A ship’s officer

105. Italian dishes 107. Abbr. at the end of a list 111. U.S service agency (abbr.) 112. Play, in a way 114. Doglike carnivore 116. Cuckoo 117. Furrow 120. Body of an organism 122. Just __ __! 123. 60’s do 124. Lodges 125. Diamond complement 126. In high spirits 128. Something to chew 129. Peacock network 130. Burn up 131. Old French coin

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.

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