Cache Magazine

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Artist Bob Bisslands degree in landscape architecture was one step toward a lifelong career in graphic design. >> Read about him on Page 8. << Edgy designs The Herald Journal June 25 - July 1, 2010

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June 25 - July 1, 2010

Transcript of Cache Magazine

Page 1: Cache Magazine

Artist Bob Bissland’s degree in landscape architecture was one step toward a lifelong career in graphic design.

>> Read about him on Page 8. <<

‘Edgy’ designs

The Herald Journal June 25 - July 1, 2010

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Cute pet photo of the week

This cat is available for adoption!Pet: Bella From: Four Paws RescueWhy she’s so lovable: “Bella is a long-haired female. She is dramatically beautiful with a luxuri-ous coat and big eyes. And like many a diva, she can be possessive and temperamental. She has already been dumped twice, so she needs a little patient care in order for her to relax and show you her loving side. She wants to be the only pet in the home so she doesn’t have to share you. She would probably also do better in a home without little children. She basically needs an owner who is willing to give her some time to adjust and to just let her be a cat.” If you would like to meet Bella or learn more about her, contact Sheri at 787-1751. The adoption fee for most Four Paws cats is $75, which includes spay/neuter and shots.Slow Wave

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.

Check out this week’s ‘Photos By You’ feature!

(Page 10)

What’s inside this week

Hinkamp says: Let’s celebrate

Fathers, not Father’s, Day

(Page 10) Tabernacle series ......p.4The Reel Place ...........p.7

(Page 12)Find your inner artist at the

annual Art on the Lawn event

Utah family helps bring safe drinking water to Fiji village

(Page 11)

Cache

BLOGS ARE SO STRANGE to me. I won’t deny that I read many of them, but every time I do I think

about how odd it is that I am reading about — and actually somewhat interested in — what complete strangers are doing. Thousands of people look at pictures of their kids (whom we’ll never meet), take advice from them, try their recipes and check back every day to see what we’ve missed.

My new favorite blog, mycharmingkids.net, is all about one woman’s journey through motherhood and marriage and a million other things (accord-ing to her self description, she’s into ... “pho-tography and all things colorful, homeschool-ing, natural living, traveling, living with no television, cloth diapering, advocating for small government, speaking German, spon-soring children in developing countries, vac-cination delaying and straw bale gardening”).

It’s funny, because going through that list,

I’m pretty much none of those things. So why am I so interested in how she’s living her life and what her kids are up to on a daily basis?

I think it must be our society’s fixation with, and easy access to, other people’s lives. Like with Facebook, it’s all too easy to figure it all out by just logging onto the Internet. We all look through pictures of people we don’t know with kids we’ve never seen doing things we’ll probably never care to do. It used to be that we’d hear about the neighbors from the other neighbors and that was it; now we’re following people from across the coun-try and yes, our neighbors are, too.

Here are some of my favorite blogs these days in case you want to check them out:

• mycharmingkids.net• allabouttheenskats.blogspot.com• www.nogreaterjoymom.com• www.utahbrideblog.com• nevadivup.blogspot.comHave a great weekend, everyone!

— Jamie Baer NielsonCache Magazine editor

From the editor [email protected]

Bob Bissland uses an electronic pad to draw on his computer while working on a project in his studio. Getting a classical

art education doesn’t necessarily mean carving your future in stone. For Bissland, a degree in landscape architecture was one step toward a lifelong career in graphic design and the start of many friendships with clients and artists that have changed his life. Meet the artist and see some of his work on Page 8. Photo by Alan Murray

On the cover:

Magazine

The Herald Journal’s

Arts & EntertainmentCalendar

Cache

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THE SIXTH ANNUAL Corinne Pageant will be held June 25 and 26

in the Corinne city park. The cast rehearsed in the park all week to bring you the best-ever pageant play that will tell of a colorful history of the town of Corinne and its “boom years.” This year’s pageant will go back to the original script, but with some fun twists and scenes for more interest and laughs.

Corinne, the “Burg on the Bear,” has a very different histo-ry compared to the rest of Utah’s towns, as it was known as the “Gentile Capital” of Utah — not settled by the Mormon pioneers, Corinne originated as the last town built along the transconti-nental railroad and was the last of the “Hell on Wheels” town built just before the joining of the rails at Promontory summit.

In its boom years of 1869-71, grand speculation and promo-

tion were on the rise. Promoters could see that the Union Pacific Railroad would build through the Bear River marshes toward Promontory and eventually meet with the Central Pacific Railroad. They started to plan a great city, and by March 1869, 500 frame buildings and tents had been erected, housing a population of 1,500.

Soon Corinne became a freighting center, shipping fin-ished goods north to Idaho and Montana, and received ore back to be smelted in Corinne. At this time many teamsters would come to Corinne, lining up their wagons and increasing the popu-lation to 10,000. Corinne had no Mormon churches in it at this time, but many other denomina-tions were present, and the Meth-odist church still stands here today as the oldest non-Mormon church still standing in Utah.

The annual pageant also brings

out the christening of the steam-ship “The City of Corinne,” the only steamship west of the Mis-sissippi that carried ore, goods and passengers along the Bear River to the Great Salt Lake and back. Gen. Williamson attempted to make Corinne the capital city of Utah, and Brigham Young is brought back to life as he warns of the coming collapse of the town. A divorce machine is fea-tured where for $2.50, one can get a writ of divorce, which gives a Mr. Shafley the ability of great freedom to “fly like a bird.”

The pageant will begin at dusk or a little after 9 p.m., but there will be a pre-show featur-ing western music and talent beginning at 7 p.m. Conces-sions will also be sold.

Families should bring their lawn chairs, blankets, mosquito spray, umbrellas (in case of rain) and a dollar or two to buy some Dutch-oven peach cobbler.

All mixed up

“AN AMERICAN Salute,” presented by

the American Festival Chorus and Orchestra with special guest Grammy Award nominee Peter Cetera, will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, July 1, in the Kent Concert Hall on the campus of Utah State Univer-sity. Tickets are $20, $25 and $30 and available at the Caine School of the Arts Box Office and at the Eccles Theatre Ticket Office, 43 S. Main St.; by call-ing 797-8022; or online at www.americanfestivalchorus.org.

The chorus and orchestra will perform show tunes and patri-otic favorites, then Cetera and his band will take the stage with the orchestra.

Singer, songwriter and bassist Cetera has enjoyed a remark-able solo career with two Grammy Award nominations,

an Academy Award nomina-tion and four hit singles landing at No. 1. From 1968 to 1986 Cetera played with the legend-ary rock group Chicago. Today Cetera appears with his five-piece unplugged group to audi-ences around the world.

Tickets now on salefor ‘American Salute’

with Peter Cetera

From Sea to Shining ‘C’REGISTRATION IS

under way for Cache Children’s Choir Summer Music Camp, to be held July 12-16 at the Chase Fine Arts Center at USU. This camp is for children ages 5 to 11 and also includes dance, drama, art and games.

Each camp session is divided into

three age groups and morning and afternoon sessions are available. Cost is $55 per child. Registra-tion forms can be downloaded at cachechildrenschoir.org. For more information, contact Lori Roberts at 563-0618. Preregistration is required by June 30.

Celebrate Corinne at sixth annual pageant

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The ninth annual Noon Music at the Tabernacle series is in full swing. All concerts are free to the public and begin at noon. Be sure to check Cache Magazine every week for profiles on upcoming performers. (The schedule is always subject to change!) For more information, visit www.cachecommunityconnections.com.

Noon Music at the Tabernacle under way

Mark Gibbons (June 25)M ark is a singer/songwriter/dairyman

known for his unique talent and dairy adaptations of country songs. He has performed and entertained all over the western United States including Washington, Oregon, Califor-nia, Idaho and Utah. He is well known for his country songs and “oldies but goodies.” He enjoys entertaining at conventions, concerts in the park and county fairs. Mark owns and oper-ates a dairy farm in Lewiston and is president of the Governors Agriculture Advisory Board and Dairy Producers of Utah. He loves to sing and can often be heard serenading the cows. But his greatest love is working with his boys and spending time with his family and friends.

Broadbent family (June 26)

R ichard and Merrilee Broadbent have been singing together

since they met and especially enjoy performing with the whole family. Michelle, their soprano, has studied and performed inter-nationally, Nicole, who teaches sixth grade in Utah Valley, is the gorgeous alto, James recently returned from an LDS mission, and 10-year-old Christopher just finished the fourth grade. Come and join them for a program filled with variety as they perform “The Best of the Broadbents!”

Willow Valley Singers (July 1)T he Willow Valley Singers specialize

in a cappella hymns, gospel songs and sentimental songs from the 1800s to modern times. From the fervent har-monies and strong rhythmic drive of the revival period to the heartfelt music of American spirituals to joyful pres-ent-day gospel songs, Willow Valley Singers enjoy bringing all these musical elements together. Founded and directed by Bonnie Slade, the group is made up of friends and neighbors in the Nibley

and Hyrum area. They will present some of their best-loved songs plus several newer numbers, including “You Only Need a Mustache,” a break-away piece by Civil War composer Stephen Foster, and the original version of “A Poor Wayfaring Man of Grief.” Their com-panion group, the Willow Valley Players string band, will perform a group of Irish dances and songs featuring Larry Slade on vocals for “Danny Boy” and “Start of the County Down.”

Hillary Dodd (June 29)H illary Dodd has enjoyed sing-

ing all her life. She started early, at age 5, helping her mom teach the children at church the songs by sing-ing the song so they could know the melody. Then, at age 8, she sang at the almost-full-to-capacity tabernacle for a church congregation. Maybe those experiences helped with her courage in singing for others. She has since been a lead in “Les Miserables,” “Lit-tle Women,” “High School Musical,” “Grease” and “How to Succeed in Business.” Recently she began writing and singing her own songs. Last year she served as studentbody president at Logan High School and will be leav-ing to attend BYU-Hawaii in July.

Combined Choirs (June 30)J ulie Beyler is the founding director

of The Chorale. After her formal music education with an emphasis in music education and voice, she assumed the position as choral director of the Waverly (Iowa) Senior High School where she led its choirs to highest state honors. She served on the staff at the Interlochen Summer Music Camp in Michigan, taught on the Navajo Indian

Reservation in Ganado, Ariz., and sang with the Bermuda Philharmonic Society. Over the last 27 years she has devoted much of her time to The Chorale’s pro-grams and activities. In 2008, Beyler was named a Woman of Distinction by the Girl Scouts of Central Illinois. A Mahomet, Ill., resident for 30 years, Beyler has three grown children and lives with her husband, Allen.

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SHAPIRO WILLperform with DJ Vita-mins and JD Carter

(pop/rock) at 8 p.m. Tuesday, July 6, at Why Sound, 30 Fed-eral Ave. Cover charge is $5. For more information, visit www.myspace.com/whysound.

Shapiro, a Washington, D.C., rock band, possesses a fresh, epic and fun-loving sound coupled with a near-reckless energy that leaves listeners mesmerized. Following relent-less touring nationwide and self-releasing their EP, “You Are Alone,” the band drew the attention of producer/engi-neer John Mark Painter (Ben Folds, Death Cab for Cutie, John Mayer) who immedi-

ately thought they should work together. Shapiro spent numerous weeks at IHOF Stu-dio (Tim Finn, Frally, Alva Leigh) recording their debut full length, self-titled “Shap-iro.” Showcasing their witty songwriting, the album also demonstrates Shapiro’s musi-cal acuteness. The result is a masterpiece of a record with themes of human relationships and heartbreak, all packaged in a theatrical mischievousness. This record succeeds in captur-ing a snapshot of the energetic and passionate live show for which Shapiro is best known and loved by their loyal fans.

For more information, visit www.shapiropeople.com.

Rhythms

Shapiro: Energetic and passionate

THE BRIDGER FOLK Music Society will pres-

ent a concert with Rachael Sage at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, July 10, at Crumb Brothers Bakery, 291 S. 300 West, Logan. Tickets are $13 and available by calling 757-3468, or take your chances at the door the night of the show. Seating is very limited, so advance purchase is rec-ommended.

Singer, songwriter and producer Rachael Sage has penned quirky, melodic pop songs since she was old enough to reach the piano keys. Over the course of her career she has steadily built a loyal grassroots fan base

with a rigorous international tour schedule that has seen her sharing stages with such seminal artists as Eric Bur-don, John Lee Hooker, Judy Collins and Colin Hay, and prompted Performing Song-writer Magazine to name her “One of the Top 100 Inde-pendent Artists of the Past 15 Years.” Leaving aside set lists in favor of a more spontaneous approach, every show she performs combines top-notch musicianship with hilarious between-song banter, what The New York Times recently dubbed Sage’s “inner Fanny Brice.”

Delving into the writing process for her latest album,

“Delancey Street,” with her typical fervor, the two-time Independent Music Award winner turned to her immi-grant Jewish heritage, com-bined with the prospect of finally moving from the same East Village Manhattan neigh-borhood she’d lived in for over a decade, as a creative starting point.

In January 2009, Sage recorded more than two dozen tracks in one week with drummer/composer Quinn, whom she’d met only a few weeks before while on tour in Los Angeles.

Gradually whittling the track list down to a dozen originals and a couple cov-

ers, Sage enlisted an impres-sive array of NYC-based players to help her flesh out a collection she describes as “an album about enthusiasti-cally embracing change ... and breaking the patterns of behavior that can make that process so daunting.”

Sage, who has a degree in drama from Stanford and has studied at The School of American Ballet as well as The Actor’s Studio, made her debut at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival with the critically acclaimed show “Sequins & Shpiel.”

For more information, visit www.bridgerfolk.org and www.rachaelsage.com.

Up next at Crumb Bros.: Rachael Sage

THE UTAH STATE University Alumni Band

will kick off its summer season at 7 p.m. Sunday, June 27, on the USU Quad immediately east of Old Main. Admission is free and everyone is invited.

The Alumni Band concert tra-dition was launched in 1963 by USU music department faculty

member Max Dalby. Since then, concerts have been held at a vari-ety of venues, indoor and out, and have developed a loyal following, including members of the band itself, said current director and USU music department faculty member Nicholas Morrison.

While there are upwards of 250 musicians on the band’s active

list, each concert features approxi-mately 60 musicians, including a core group of approximately 20 to 30 who will perform in all five concerts this summer.

The USU concerts feature a mix of marches, popular music and classical offerings. Guest soloists — both vocal and instru-mental — are often on the pro-

gram, and a variety of conductors are featured. The program also includes the “Intermission Fea-ture,” where smaller groups or ensembles are invited by Mor-rison to perform.

While Morrison will be on the podium for most of the June 27 opening concert, Thomas P. Rohrer, director of bands at

USU, takes the baton for one. Also in the spotlight is USU fac-ulty member Mark Emile, who is the featured violin soloist in the theme from the film “Schindler’s List.” The evening’s “Intermis-sion Feature” is a Civil War brass band that includes Hal Briggs, principal trumpet player in the Alumni Band.

USU Alumni Band kicks off its summer season

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“Grown Ups”Rated PG-13★ Shockingly inept even by the standards we’ve come to expect from a Happy Madison produc-tion, this feels as if it were made without considering whether an audience would ever actu-ally see it. It assaults us with an awkward mix of humor (which is rarely funny) and heart (which is never touching), but even more amateurishly, it features copious cutaways to characters laughing at each others’ jokes. For long stretches of time, Adam Sandler and Co. sit around a New Eng-land lake house goofing on each other, telling stories and remi-niscing about old times. Given that these other characters are played by Kevin James, Chris Rock, David Spade and Rob Schneider, you would hope that some of the lines would work (from James and Rock, at least). One gets the distinct impression that these guys, four out of five of whom are “Saturday Night Live” alumni, improvised most of their insults and one-liners, and there just happened to be a camera or two rolling. The plot, which is essentially “The Big Chill” with jokes about flatu-lence and bunions, finds these

five childhood friends reuniting for the funeral of the basketball coach who led them to a cham-pionship in 1978. PG-13 for crude material including sugges-tive references, language and some male rear nudity. 98 min.

“Toy Story 3”Rated G★★★ This is what happens when you’re good at your job: Everyone expects excellence from you, and anything even slightly short of that feels like a letdown. “Toy Story 3” is a gor-geous film — funny, sweet and clever in the tradition of the best Pixar movies — but because it comes from that studio’s nearly flawless tradition, including two “Toy Story” predecessors, the expectations naturally are inflat-ed. The storytelling in no way is in question; it never is at Pixar, which is the fundamental reason their films are so strong. Neither is the voice cast, led once again by Tom Hanks, Tim Allen and Joan Cusack, with formidable newcomers like Ned Beatty thrown into the mix. The details are as vibrant and tactile as ever: the textures and expressions, the use of light, angles and per-spective. And the core concept

— that toys have a rich, complex interior life when people aren’t around — still resonates all these years later. If “Toy Story” hadn’t come out in 1995 and “Toy Story 2” hadn’t followed it in 1999, “Toy Story 3” would stand on its own as a breakthrough. Trouble is, those earlier movies do exist. And by comparison, this third installment — in which Andy heads off to college and the toys end up in day care — doesn’t feel quite so fresh. G. In 3-D and IMAX 3-D. 98 min.

“The A-Team”Rated PG-13★★★ “Overkill is underrated,” says Hannibal Smith, leader of “The A-Team,” while planning a particularly elaborate and explosive scheme to trap a bad guy. Director and co-writer Joe Carnahan apparently subscribes to this school of thought, as well. If you’re looking for subtlety, look elsewhere. Carnahan’s big-screen version of the ’80s TV series is ridiculously over-the-top, full of wild helicopter chases and exploding sport util-ity vehicles and tumbling cargo containers. At times it feels like little more than a cacophony of automatic gunfire and shat-tered glass. Then again, you shouldn’t really expect anything

else given the source material. Mainly it’s just flat-out fun, with a cheeky sense of humor — way more enjoyable than you might expect when you consider the ignominious history of movies inspired by TV shows. Carnahan keeps things moving; the film’s fluid editing is especially notice-able during the big set pieces — impossibly complex, intricately timed missions that the team makes look easy. The strength of the cast helps: Liam Neeson as Hannibal, the team’s cigar-chomping mastermind; Bradley

Cooper, an ideal choice to play charmer Templeton “Face” Peck; and “District 9” star Sharlto Cop-ley, bringing equal amounts of humor and danger to the role of “Howlin’ Mad” Murdock. Even mixed martial arts star Quinton “Rampage” Jackson offers a solid presence, filling the intimi-dating shoes of Mr. T to play B.A. Baracus. PG-13 for intense sequences of action and vio-lence throughout, language and smoking. 118 min.

— All reviews byThe Associated Press

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Still playing

New this week

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SAY WHAT YOU will about Tom Cruise and his tirades over

the past few years, but he’s got charisma when he’s on the big screen. So much charisma, in fact, that he can carry an entire movie on his back without flinching. Such is the case with the new romantic-action-com-edy “Knight and Day.”

Roy Miller (Tom Cruise) is one of those spies who makes everything — from death-defy-ing motorcycle chases to run-ning along rooftops — look easy. Like Jason Bourne, Roy is a lethal weapon all by himself, but unlike Bourne, Roy has fun doing it. While Bourne wears a scowl on his face for much of the trilogy, Roy goes about espionage with a giant grin.

June Havens (Cameron Diaz) is the innocent bystander. Try-ing to get a flight home for her sister’s wedding, Roy uses the unwitting June to sneak an item past airline security for him. (Why he does this isn’t really clear, though, since Roy seems like the kind of guy who could have snuck the object past secu-rity without any problems.) It’s OK though; we aren’t supposed to question much here.

Turns out Roy is being hunted down by the U.S. government. He’s gone rogue, or at least that’s what the government says. The plane June and Roy ulti-mately get on is full of deadly assassins who have been hired to kill Roy and retrieve whatever he has in his possession.

As Roy is fighting off one attacker after another on the plane, we soon realize this is much more a comedy than an action movie. That’s good news for us, because Tom Cruise has the timing of any great stand-

up comedian. He fights off his attackers as he cracks jokes, but the jokes never seem forced or badly written. It’s a laugh-out-loud scene that only leads to more hilarious scenes down the road. Take, for example, a chase scene involving June in a car with devious agents, while Roy chases them down. We only see what June sees, which is a fun take on a chase scene in and of itself. As we see Roy fly past one of the windows he disappears from view, and the only thing we see after that is his motorcycle slowing drifting into a lake without him. The effect is one of surprise, but it’s also just darned funny.

“Knight and Day” isn’t a perfect comedic-action movie in the vein of the early “Indiana Jones” movies. The third act gets far too serious for its own good, giving us flashbacks of the dreadful “Mission: Impossible

2.” CG scenes run amok, it’s true, and at times the movie feels sloppy because of all the blatant computer-enhanced graphics. Planes, SUVs flipping end over end — there’s no stop to the CG here. Thankfully the shaky-cam, which has infected most every modern action film, is kept at bay. Fight scenes are quickly cut, yes, but they give us more of a feel for the actual space being taken up by the actors.

Cruise is a delight here.

Whatever you think about him as a person, it’s hard to deny his uncanny screen presence. It’s been a while since we’ve seen him take the reins of a comedic role (not counting his hilarious, but brief, role in “Tropic Thun-der”). Cruise and Diaz do have chemistry, and their building fondness for each other seems genuine. “Knight and Day”’ is a pleasant surprise, but don’t be surprised when the third act fizzles out.

Film critic Aaron Peck has a bachelor’s degree in English from USU. He also writes for BlogCritics.org and HighDef-Digest.com, and is starting up a new movie website called TheReelPlace.com. He lives in Logan. He is among a num-ber of freelance writers whose columns appear in The Herald Journal as part of an effort to expose readers to a variety of community voices. Feedback at [email protected].

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The Reel Place

By Aaron Peck

‘Knight and Day’ a pleasant surprise★★★

“Knight and Day”Rated PG-13

Page 8: Cache Magazine

Portrait by Alan Murray

Artist Bob Bissland sits in his office in Logan on Wednesday. Bissland’s work is featured in the 2010 Graphis International Poster Annual.

‘Edgy’G

etting a classical art education doesn’t necessarily mean carv-ing your future in stone.

For Bob Bissland, a degree in landscape architecture was one step to a lifelong career in graphic design and the start of many friendships with clients and artists that have changed his life.

The Michigan native graduated from Utah State University in 1973 and today designs the artwork on the coffee packag-ing for Caffe Ibis Roasting Company. Bissland also landed three of his posters in the 2010 Graphis International Poster Annual — a journal of visual communica-tions by world-renowned graphic artists.

Walk into Caffe Ibis or a Whole Foods store and Bissland’s work is visible on seven different coffee bags.

“I came up with the idea of splitting the 57 varieties into seven different cat-egories and designed a different label for each category,” he said. “It’s been a year-long project meeting with the own-ers and consultants.”

The work is currently on display through August at DesignArts Utah ’10 at the Rio Grande Depot in Salt Lake City.

Bissland is reluctant to call himself talented but says his work has something of an “edge” that he attributes to his for-mal study of landscape architecture.

“I think I’ve been extremely lucky,” he said. “Even if you have talent, it’s about being at the right place at the right time.”

At a recent art show, one of his posters caught the eye of a man who organized a John Wayne film festival at the Univer-sity of Utah. Bissland was commissioned to design a poster for the event and was instructed to steer clear of the typical “western look” used so commonly for John Wayne-themed gatherings. The final design was stylized after the 1958 film “The Barbarian and the Geisha,” and included subtle aspects of East meets West.

The artist secured the necessary legal rights before printing the poster and shortly after the event, received a corre-spondence from Wayne’s proprietor. What

Bissland thought was a written notice of copyright infringement was actually a Christmas card signed by John Wayne’s son, Ethan, who praised him for the work.

Another of Bissland’s award-winning designs promoted a 2008 Logan concert where guest jazz musician Chris Vadala played with the Utah State University Jazz Orchestra.

Vadala played in the Chuck Mangione Quartet and was best known for his abil-ity to pick up and play any woodwind.

Bissland captures the man’s musical talent in the jazz poster, blending what he calls “Three Muses” around the musi-cian, who offer him a variety of instru-ments as he entertains the crowd.

Graphis published the poster in its 2010 worldwide edition.

“There were thousands of entries this year,” he said. “And in my little life, it’s a very big deal to get in this.”

Earlier this year Bissland was rec-ognized in THE magazine in Santa Fe, N.M., for his poster tribute to Little

Milton Campbell, a Grammy-nominated blues and sole singer who died in 2005. Bissland created the work as part of a memorial to Milton.

Success for Bissland didn’t come easy, or even quickly. He’s had 22 Graphis submissions rejected over the years.

“You do something long enough and it’ll finally work out,” he said. “I first started in Logan in 1986. That first month people would ask me to do some-thing and I’d think, ‘Oh, that will be my community service.’ But then other peo-ple asked for help and it went on and on and my first month of work I made $8.”

As he built his clientele, Bissland found his niche in graphic design and realized he always had a passion for poster making.

“The first poster I remember was when I was in the fourth grade,” he said, recalling how his teacher asked the class if anyone would volunteer to spruce up the school’s bulletin board. “Nobody raised their hand so I did the poster.”

Knowing that design was in his blood and running the risk of being a starving artist, Bissland opted for a classical art education.

“I went into landscape architecture partly out of respect for my parents, who probably thought I was going to end up some drunk Bohemian beatnik if I became an artist,” he quipped. “Land-scape architecture allowed me to do art that I was interested in but could still make a living.”

After graduation, Bissland worked for a Washington, D.C., architecture firm and was consistently asked to design graphics for projects and presentations.

He eventually left the field, taking jobs in graphic design at USU and work-ing for clients including the Tibet Fund in New York, the Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art, United Way and the National Organization for Women.

Bissland runs a studio at 100 Church St. in Logan where he has been located since 2003.

“I did this poster for the R&B band my wife played in for four years in Logan, Badly Bent. This advertised an out-of-town gig at Beatniks in Ogden. This poster won a gold award in the Creativity 31 annual competition in 2001.”

“I did this poster in a limited signed edition in honor of Brent Fluckinger’s longtime Logan business, Custom Muffler and Speed, which has since closed ... and also because 37 years ago he didn’t care that I had long hair and was the only one in Logan that would work on my ’66 VW Bus. ... This poster was accepted into the Graphis Poster Annual competition in 2009 and DesignArts Utah 2007 Exhibition.”

“This poster was pub-lished in a signed limited edition to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the Bridger Folk Society as a fundraising vehicle. It was also printed by Herald Printing of Logan in an unsigned edition of 400. The numbers have the name inside of every artist that performed over the span of 30 years.”

“I did this poster for the Tin Angel Cafe in Salt Lake City when they were kind enough to give me a post-er show last year in their cafe. They purchased the rights to it and use it in advertising the cafe. This poster has been accepted into the Graphis Poster Annual competition and will be published in 2011.”

“I did this poster of the Dar Nour Guest House in Tangier, Morocco, after my wife, a friend of ours and I stayed there in the fall of 2005. They treated us like roy-alty (as they do all of their guests).”

“I did this poster for the Cache Valley Gardeners’ Market in 2006 to help adver-tise the market in any way it could.”

“This poster is from the new Caffe Ibis coffee bag. There are seven different labels for dif-ferent regions where their coffees are grown and/or type of roast or blend. The new bag, and labels blown up to poster size, are currently in the DesignArts Utah 2010 Exhibition in Salt Lake City at the Rio Gallery.”

“I did this poster to advertise a concert by Larry Smith’s Jazz Kicks Band. They play one or two con-certs a year in Logan. Larry had the idea of doing a “retro” poster for their “Nutcracker” Christmas con-cert last December. I designed this in the style of Jim Flora, a record album artist in the ’50s and ’60s. This poster has been accepted into the Graphis Poster Annual competi-tion and will be published in 2011.”

designs

Artist Bob Bissland’s degree in landscape

architecture was one step toward a lifelong

career in graphic design.

>> By Matthew K. Jensen <<

Page 9: Cache Magazine

Portrait by Alan Murray

Artist Bob Bissland sits in his office in Logan on Wednesday. Bissland’s work is featured in the 2010 Graphis International Poster Annual.

‘Edgy’G

etting a classical art education doesn’t necessarily mean carv-ing your future in stone.

For Bob Bissland, a degree in landscape architecture was one step to a lifelong career in graphic design and the start of many friendships with clients and artists that have changed his life.

The Michigan native graduated from Utah State University in 1973 and today designs the artwork on the coffee packag-ing for Caffe Ibis Roasting Company. Bissland also landed three of his posters in the 2010 Graphis International Poster Annual — a journal of visual communica-tions by world-renowned graphic artists.

Walk into Caffe Ibis or a Whole Foods store and Bissland’s work is visible on seven different coffee bags.

“I came up with the idea of splitting the 57 varieties into seven different cat-egories and designed a different label for each category,” he said. “It’s been a year-long project meeting with the own-ers and consultants.”

The work is currently on display through August at DesignArts Utah ’10 at the Rio Grande Depot in Salt Lake City.

Bissland is reluctant to call himself talented but says his work has something of an “edge” that he attributes to his for-mal study of landscape architecture.

“I think I’ve been extremely lucky,” he said. “Even if you have talent, it’s about being at the right place at the right time.”

At a recent art show, one of his posters caught the eye of a man who organized a John Wayne film festival at the Univer-sity of Utah. Bissland was commissioned to design a poster for the event and was instructed to steer clear of the typical “western look” used so commonly for John Wayne-themed gatherings. The final design was stylized after the 1958 film “The Barbarian and the Geisha,” and included subtle aspects of East meets West.

The artist secured the necessary legal rights before printing the poster and shortly after the event, received a corre-spondence from Wayne’s proprietor. What

Bissland thought was a written notice of copyright infringement was actually a Christmas card signed by John Wayne’s son, Ethan, who praised him for the work.

Another of Bissland’s award-winning designs promoted a 2008 Logan concert where guest jazz musician Chris Vadala played with the Utah State University Jazz Orchestra.

Vadala played in the Chuck Mangione Quartet and was best known for his abil-ity to pick up and play any woodwind.

Bissland captures the man’s musical talent in the jazz poster, blending what he calls “Three Muses” around the musi-cian, who offer him a variety of instru-ments as he entertains the crowd.

Graphis published the poster in its 2010 worldwide edition.

“There were thousands of entries this year,” he said. “And in my little life, it’s a very big deal to get in this.”

Earlier this year Bissland was rec-ognized in THE magazine in Santa Fe, N.M., for his poster tribute to Little

Milton Campbell, a Grammy-nominated blues and sole singer who died in 2005. Bissland created the work as part of a memorial to Milton.

Success for Bissland didn’t come easy, or even quickly. He’s had 22 Graphis submissions rejected over the years.

“You do something long enough and it’ll finally work out,” he said. “I first started in Logan in 1986. That first month people would ask me to do some-thing and I’d think, ‘Oh, that will be my community service.’ But then other peo-ple asked for help and it went on and on and my first month of work I made $8.”

As he built his clientele, Bissland found his niche in graphic design and realized he always had a passion for poster making.

“The first poster I remember was when I was in the fourth grade,” he said, recalling how his teacher asked the class if anyone would volunteer to spruce up the school’s bulletin board. “Nobody raised their hand so I did the poster.”

Knowing that design was in his blood and running the risk of being a starving artist, Bissland opted for a classical art education.

“I went into landscape architecture partly out of respect for my parents, who probably thought I was going to end up some drunk Bohemian beatnik if I became an artist,” he quipped. “Land-scape architecture allowed me to do art that I was interested in but could still make a living.”

After graduation, Bissland worked for a Washington, D.C., architecture firm and was consistently asked to design graphics for projects and presentations.

He eventually left the field, taking jobs in graphic design at USU and work-ing for clients including the Tibet Fund in New York, the Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art, United Way and the National Organization for Women.

Bissland runs a studio at 100 Church St. in Logan where he has been located since 2003.

“I did this poster for the R&B band my wife played in for four years in Logan, Badly Bent. This advertised an out-of-town gig at Beatniks in Ogden. This poster won a gold award in the Creativity 31 annual competition in 2001.”

“I did this poster in a limited signed edition in honor of Brent Fluckinger’s longtime Logan business, Custom Muffler and Speed, which has since closed ... and also because 37 years ago he didn’t care that I had long hair and was the only one in Logan that would work on my ’66 VW Bus. ... This poster was accepted into the Graphis Poster Annual competition in 2009 and DesignArts Utah 2007 Exhibition.”

“This poster was pub-lished in a signed limited edition to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the Bridger Folk Society as a fundraising vehicle. It was also printed by Herald Printing of Logan in an unsigned edition of 400. The numbers have the name inside of every artist that performed over the span of 30 years.”

“I did this poster for the Tin Angel Cafe in Salt Lake City when they were kind enough to give me a post-er show last year in their cafe. They purchased the rights to it and use it in advertising the cafe. This poster has been accepted into the Graphis Poster Annual competition and will be published in 2011.”

“I did this poster of the Dar Nour Guest House in Tangier, Morocco, after my wife, a friend of ours and I stayed there in the fall of 2005. They treated us like roy-alty (as they do all of their guests).”

“I did this poster for the Cache Valley Gardeners’ Market in 2006 to help adver-tise the market in any way it could.”

“This poster is from the new Caffe Ibis coffee bag. There are seven different labels for dif-ferent regions where their coffees are grown and/or type of roast or blend. The new bag, and labels blown up to poster size, are currently in the DesignArts Utah 2010 Exhibition in Salt Lake City at the Rio Gallery.”

“I did this poster to advertise a concert by Larry Smith’s Jazz Kicks Band. They play one or two con-certs a year in Logan. Larry had the idea of doing a “retro” poster for their “Nutcracker” Christmas con-cert last December. I designed this in the style of Jim Flora, a record album artist in the ’50s and ’60s. This poster has been accepted into the Graphis Poster Annual competi-tion and will be published in 2011.”

designs

Artist Bob Bissland’s degree in landscape

architecture was one step toward a lifelong

career in graphic design.

>> By Matthew K. Jensen <<

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WHAT WAS THAT whooshing sound? I think it was Father’s Day passing

more quickly than the first day of summer.Women are all wrong about men

being insensitive. We’re easy. All you have to do to get a man crying like he’s wearing onion contact lenses is to ask him about his dad. Of course, the out-come is probably not going to be what you expected or wanted. You’re still going to want the guy to talk about feel-ings, but what he is going to talk about is playing catch, fishing, rude fireside jokes and a generally squandered youth. You are not going to fathom our flaccid-hearted mixture of pain and indifference any more than we are going to under-stand your fixation with “American Idol.” Still, you better take what you can get because that is as close as you are going to get to a Hallmark moment on the guys’ side of the holidays.

Father’s Day is just an afterthought in the sentimental planned holiday business anyway because we really don’t know what to say or who to say it to in cards, advertisements or otherwise. We give our fathers ties, guns and barbeque equip-ment while mothers get flowers, dinners and rough-hewn poetry. True, dads are generally more distant both emotionally and geographically than mothers, but they are still part of the genetic thread that affects our future as much as our environment. What’s the difference in the two holidays? With the exception of the small percentage of orphans, most of us are certain who our mothers are.

“Who’s your father?” isn’t just a rude or inane question. Given the flip-a-coin divorce rate and the 35 percent of children born out of wedlock, it is more than just a dilemma of terminology. Let’s have a more realistic view of modern family life and celebrate fathers, not Father’s Day.

I grew up with a dad in the house, but I didn’t meet my father until I was 30 so I’ve dealt with “yes, but” explanations for years. This one is my biological father and that one is my stepfather, but he’s my “real” father. No, Hinkamp isn’t my birth name, but it is my real name on my birth certificate because that’s what they do when only one parent adopts you. Con-fusing, but it’s a reality many of us share.

It’s going to get even weirder as

more people choose to procreate using donated sperm and eggs. Grown-up test-tube babies and children of arti-ficially inseminated mothers will just have to send a card to a post office box at a hospital. Fatherhood is the biggest pink elephant in most people’s family rooms already; why not give the beast a name like Fathers Day? Then at least Hallmark and hardware stores can profit from the added gift-giving occasion.

One of my lowest points in my long-term affair with academia was asking an honored professor if there was any-thing we could do to help non-custodial fathers learn to be better parents from a distance and having the response be, “They don’t deserve any help.” Kids have kids and really young people make really big mistakes sometimes and there isn’t much you can do to legislate against it. We let most people out of prison eventually, but we’re still having a tough time with this father thing.

It’s easy to be a father, but it’s hard to be a dad; or is it the other way around? Many of us can have multiple dads while only the polygamous few actually grow up with more than one mom. Let just celebrate having either.

Dennis Hinkamp is neither. Feedback at [email protected].

SlightlyOff CenterBy Dennis Hinkamp

Fathers, not Father’s, Day

By Liz Hunsaker — Taken June 7 in Providence.

“Take It” by Brenda Schoenfeld

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AFUNDRAISER TO support the Wanan-avu Kadavu~Water

Project’s efforts to bring clean drinking water to the Navautu Village will be held from 5 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 30, at the New Yorker Restaurant, 40 W. Market St., Salt Lake City. Event will include a silent auc-tion and light refreshments. Tickets are a suggested dona-tion of $50 and can be pur-chased at wananavukadavu.org or at the restaurant from 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. through June 29. Donations to the silent auc-tion can be made by e-mailing [email protected].

In June 2009, Logan native Nancy Thompson Mahler made her first trip to Fiji to visit her sons, Ben and Scott Sorensen, who had been living with families in the villages of Drue and Navautu on Fiji’s Kadavu Island while volunteering on a school-building project.

Through the friendships Ben and Scott developed during their stay in Fiji, Nancy and her husband, Heinz, discovered despite the breathtaking beauty and images of abundance that Fiji conjures, many rural vil-lages in the Islands lack basic necessities such as one of the most critical to health and well-being: potable water. Although Fiji has plentiful sources of fresh water, more than half of the country’s population does not have access to safe drinking

water; typhoid and other water-borne illnesses are major health concerns.

On Kadavu, available water supplies exist above the rain-forest canopy, at the top of the mountains in natural springs and artesian aquifers. However, in the Fijian Islands, there is no means accessing these sources from many of the coastal vil-lages where the people largely make their living from fishing and subsistence farming.

Inspired by the villagers she met, Nancy returned to Utah determined to find a way to bring clean water to Kadavu. Working with Ben and Scott and partnering with the local community in the villages, they developed a system to channel water from its source to Nuku based on water management practices employed in other communities in Fiji, and set up tanks in the village for water storage. With the generous sup-port of private donors from the Utah community and around the globe, as well as her own per-sonal funds, Nancy turned this vision into reality.

While Nancy was busy rais-ing funds for the effort, Ben stayed in Fiji to work side-by-side with the inhabitants of each village as well as coordinating with the Fijian government to start laying down the pipes to bring water to the village and building the foundations needed to support the water tanks.

As Nancy and her family spent more time with the people of Fiji, she realized the need for clean drinking water in Fiji extended beyond just Kadavu Island to other villages in the chain of islands that comprise the country. With the support of her husband, sons and daughter, Erica, Nancy formed Wananavu Kadavu~Water Project, a non-profit whose goal is to provide clean drinking water to rural villages throughout the Fiji Islands.

“In Fiji, ‘wananavu’ means ‘everything is good,’ (and) Kadavu is the name of the island in Fiji where our water project became a reality,” explains Nancy. “Wananavu Kadavu~Water Project is the perfect name for our water proj-ect — everything is good and we hope to help make it better.”

Nancy returned to Kadavu in April to celebrate the comple-tion of the Nuku project with the installation of the water tank and plumbing to provide a constant flow of clean water. With the successful completion of the Nuku project, Wananavu Kadavu~Water Project con-tinues its work with a new undertaking to bring safe water to Navautu village. As Nancy’s motto says, “One village at a time, together we can.”

To learn more about Nancy and her family’s work to bring safe drinking water to Fiji, visit wananavukadavu.org.

All mixed up

Utah family helps bring safe water to Fiji

Ben Sorensen and his mother, Nancy Mahler, stand next to one of their water projects in Fiji.

THE FOLLOWING ARE ceramics classes available from

the Alliance for the Varied Arts, 35 W. 100 South, Logan. For more informa-tion or to sign up, call 753-2970, con-tact Beth Calengor at 764-2286 or visit www. centerforthearts.us.

Children’s Play with Clay!• For ages 5-10• Mostly hand-building projects;

some wheel-throwing taught• June 29 - July 1; July 6 - July 8

• 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.• Cost: $10 per class, plus $15 per

25-pound bag of clay, glaze and firing the projects

• Minimum enrollment six students

Pre-Teen/Teen Summer Ceramics

• For ages 11-18• Wheel-throwing• June 29 - July 1• July 6 - July 8• 1 to 3 p.m.

• Cost: $10 per class, plus $15 per 25-pound bag of clay, glaze and firing the projects

• Minimum enrollment six students

Adult Ceramics• For ages 19 and older• June 30, July 7, July 8• 3 to 6 p.m.• Cost: $14 per class, plus $15 per

25-pound bag of clay, glaze and firing the projects

• Minimum enrollment six students

AVA offering ceramics classes for kids, pre-teens, teens, adults

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THE SIXTH ANNUAL Art on the Lawn will be held from 10 a.m. to 6

p.m. Saturday, June 26, at the old Crookston Homestead in North Logan, 1491 E. 2300 North. This year’s Old Home Art Show & Silent Auction will be open from 2 to 7 p.m. Friday, June 25.

Artists in the Old Home Art Show include Colleen Howe, Trent Gudmundsen, Michael Bingham, Kristy Grussendorf, Kathy Ashcroft, Andi Jor-gensen, Suzanne Teuscher, Dick Spencer, Ned Weinshenker, Alexis Tate, Matt Larsen, Aaron Smith, Richard Garland, Shane Larson, Kevin Davenport, Lee Parker, Linda Thorne Probert, Sharlotte Andrus and Lucy Peterson Watkins. Classy Cuts & Company will be in the sun room featuring the glass art of Chris and Jay Garr, Ginger Pay-ant and Nancy Bingham.

Live music at Saturday’s event will be provided by Dry Lake Band, Déja Vu, Saddle Serenade (Craig and Chris Mortensen, Jan Riddich) and Sathom (Tom Koch). Art on the Lawn is an interactive art event unique to Cache Valley and is the annual fundraiser for the Dean F. and Bessie C. Peterson Foundation for Cache Valley Arts. This foundation has given more than $40,000 for local art and educa-tion in the last five years.

Because of its success last year, a Chili Cook-Out spon-sored by Rocky Mountain Power will start around 4 p.m. Ceramic bowls will be for sale for $10 from Logan High ceramic students and Lee Burn-ingham. Funds raised from this event will go directly to Logan High arts department. Chili bowls will be sold all day. Pot-ters’ Field, a ceramic interactive event, is hosted by Burningham and will feature some of North-ern Utah’s best ceramic art.

This year’s event will have more than 40 participating Cache Valley artists and arti-sans on the lawn and in the old home. Plein-air artists are always invited (bring your easel and paints). Already scheduled plein-air artists this year include

Trent Gudmundsen, Kathy Ashcoft, Colleen Howe, Shane Larson and more.

Michael Bingham will host a community paint-out with huge canvases stretched under the 100-foot pines, so come pre-pared to paint and wear casual, comfortable clothes.

The Daniel Robert Lynch Memorial Scholarship fund will be sponsoring face painting and ceramic painting and selling Aggie Ice Cream. Friends of the North Logan Library will be selling hot dogs and drinks from the Pepsi truck. Gia’s Restau-rant and Southern Blends will also be on site.

Quilters and fiber artists Sue Baddley, Beverly Borchert Lewis, Lucy Peterson Watkins and others will be displaying their art in the quilt garden and in the old home.

Local artwork will be avail-able, plus items donated by many local sponsors of Art on the Lawn, including a six-month family membership to The Rock Haus, 19 nights of dining out in Cache Valley and more. There is plenty of free parking and leashed dogs are welcome.

For more artist information and an event schedule, visit www.artonthelawn.net or con-tact Lucy at 752-4749.

Find your inner artist at Art on the LawnStage

• What: “Blithe Spirit” • When: 7:30 p.m. June 26, July 15, 23, 29; 2 p.m. June 26

Page 13: Cache Magazine

R ich with warmth, heart and passion, the musical “Always

… Patsy Cline” relives the career of the beloved American country music singer as seen through the eyes of her biggest fan, Houston housewife Louise Seger. The OLRC production is directed by Adrianne Moore, a faculty member in USU’s theater arts department.

The style of “Always … Patsy Cline” alternates between Seger’s hilarious monologues character-ized by her strong Texas persona

and Cline’s miraculous vocal abil-ity, giving the show an extraor-dinarily intimate connection between the two characters and audience, Moore said.

Joining the OLRC company in the title role is Erica Hansen, an actress who has portrayed Cline three times for the Grand Theater in Salt Lake City. She said playing Patsy is the most thrilling, reward-ing thing she’s ever done.

Actress Colleen Baum, who plays Seger, said her “spitfire char-

acter” will have audiences rolling in their seats.

And, according to Hansen, the musical isn’t just for country fans.

The show features country, blues, pop and rock ’n’ roll songs, including “Crazy,” “I Fall to Pieces,” “Your Cheatin’ Heart,” “Sweet Dreams” and “Waking After Midnight.”

Mike Christiansen, noted musi-cian, recording artist and professor of guitar at USU, is musical direc-tor for the OLRC production.

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Stage

Your choice of three plays from the OLRC

W ritten by English playwright Noel Coward, “Blithe Spirit” tells the

story of novelist Charles Condomine, who is haunted by the ghost of his dead wife as she stops at nothing to reclaim him. Charles is the only one able to see the ghost, and the comedy unfolds as Charles’ dead wife does her best to dis-rupt his current marriage.

Director Lynda Linford said although the play is whimsical, there is a deeper meaning behind the comedy. Written in England during World War II, “Blithe Spirit” is a story of hope, regeneration and rejuvenation, she said.

Linford teaches theater at USU and has both acted and directed for the OLRC for 20 years.

First performed in 1941 in London, “Blithe Spirit” enjoyed success in Brit-ain and on Broadway. The play has also been revived and performed on Broad-way throughout the 1970s, 1980s and, most recently, in 2009.

Featured in the major roles in the OLRC production are Keri Hostetler Larsen (Madame Arcati), Phillip R. Lowe (Charles Condomine), Colleen Baum (Ruth) and Amanda Mahoney (Elvira).

“T he Complete Works of William Shakespeare

(Abridged)” features three actors who take on the Herculean task of re-enacting the entire repertoire of Shakespeare in less than two hours.

Jim Christian, director of musi-cal theater studies at Weber State University, is directing the play; it is his first time to direct for the OLRC. Christian described the performance as “structured impro-visation, like what you would see if ‘Saturday Night Live’ got its hands on Shakespeare ...

“It’s Shakespeare at warp speed,” he said. “Shakespeare purists will love it, and those who have never read Shakespeare will consider it a light, user-friendly version.”

• What: “The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)”

• When: 7:30 p.m. June 25, July 10, 14, 22, 30; 2 p.m. July 10

• What: “Blithe Spirit” • When: 7:30 p.m. June 26, July 15, 23, 29; 2 p.m. June 26

For more information on the OLRC’s 2010 season, visit csa.usu.edu.

Want tickets?Tickets are available by calling or visiting the Caine School of the Arts Box Office in the Chase Fine Arts Center on the USU campus, 797-8022; at the Caine Lyric Theatre Ticket

Office, open from 1 to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday; or online at boxoffice.usu.edu. For more information on the OLRC’s 2010 season, visit the csa.usu.edu/olrc2009.aspx.

• What: “Always ...

Patsy Cline” • When: 7:30 p.m. June 30,

July 1-3, 16, 21, 24, 28; 2 p.m. July 3 & 24

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Answers from last week

Crossword www.ThemeCrosswords.com

Across1. Second person4. Secret societies10. Bouquets16. Egg holder19. Rest20. Old-style revolutionary21. Actor Robert22. Lawyers’ org.23. He defeated Napo- leon at Waterloo27. Contemptible one28. Emaciated29. Byrozoan and hydrozoan, e.g.30. Facts and figures33. Epic space opera franchise36. Small crown37. Budget rival39. Beach40. Gametes producer41. Unfavorably42. Window ___45. La Scala highlight46. “___ Doubtfire”49. This group restored the veneration of icons in 78755. Jewish month56. Quad building57. Misses58. Senior member59. Musical half-step61. Cougars62. Meal63. Kudzu, for one64. Gemstone65. Atmosphere66. Morning prayers69. Dry out

70. Passenger train74. Jibe75. Energize76. C.I.A. worry77. Amounted (to)78. Spacial properties82. Beldam83. Part84. Mighty hunter in the Bible85. ___ Dee River86. Torment88. Inner circle90. “Lohengrin,” for one92. Geological formations95. Wisdom98. Enumerate99. Careful observers100. Breathing problem101. Diamond Head locale103. Constitutional protections110. Antiquity111. Limp112. Small types113. Hole maker114. Whiskey ingredient115. Places to sit116. Wanderers117. Rapture

Down1. Little helper2. Seven, in ancient Rome3. Poetic contraction4. Chess ending5. Chilean range6. Rock fracture7. Be a pain8. One-spot

9. Hackneyed10. Some computer programs11. Stinks12. Unique13. Bag thickness14. Mesa resident15. Ground snake16. Gown material17. Dwelling18. Art able to24. Bogus25. Foreboding26. Yummy30. Rostra31. Cause of hereditary variation32. Fine-grained mineral34. On land35. Rhubarb36. Hai styles38. Hold40. Caves43. Extras44. Bakery treat45. Cover46. Deli jarful47. It holds the line48. Reasoned50. Actor Lawrence51. Vouchers52. Commingle53. Expression54. Lead60. Having prongs61. Eucharistic plate62. Second part64. Flood embankment65. Back biter66. S.A.T. section67. Title of respect

68. Math subject69. Murkily70. Cheats71. Chiang Kai- shek’s capital72. Foreign dignitaries73. Move audience members75. Celebrities76. Wavelike design79. Soft return

80. Large sailing ship81. Chapel vow86. Maple genus87. Brooks et al.88. Film festival site89. Parodied91. Ballyhoo92. Deduce93. In a calm manner94. Short musical piece95. Period of time

96. Baked, in Bologna97. Dog-___100. Early pulpit102. Blow off steam?104. ___ system105. Conceit106. “China Beach” setting107. Pilgrim’s journey108. First prime109. Guileful

By Myles Mellor and Sally York

Calendar

Booth applications are now being accepted for the 2010 November-fest Arts and Crafts Fair, an annual Christmas craft and entertainment show scheduled to run Nov. 26 and 27 at the Logan Rec Center. For more informa-tion, call 512-9745 or 752-8142.

Free True Blue Cheese tours are held at 1:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday. For more information, contact Lisa at 797-2112.

The psychology department at USU is seeking individuals ages 7-12 with symptoms of obsessive-compul-sive disorder to participate in a study assessing the effectiveness of a psy-chological intervention for these prob-lems. The study will involve 14 hours of your time. There will be no compensa-tion for participation, but you will receive

Ongoing events

The sixth annual Malad Valley Welsh Festival will be held Friday and Saturday in Malad, Idaho. For more information and an updated schedule, visit www.welshfestival.com or call 208-766-4010.

It’s Cooking & Foodways Week for Daily Adventures at the American West Heritage Center with five sites open for hands-on, living history activities. There will be a focus on antique machines and other things that go. A children’s Victorian tea party will be held at 2 p.m. (reservations required). Pony rides and train rides take place all day. Most activities are included with admission. Also, the Wild West Shakespeare pro-

Friday

a free psychological intervention. If you are interested or have questions, contact Jennifer Yardley at 770-1931 or [email protected].

duction “A Whole Lotta Fussin’ Over Nothin’” will play at 7 p.m. For more information, visit www.awhc.org.

The sixth annual Corinne Pageant will be held Friday and Saturday in the Corinne city park. Read more on p.3.

The Franklin County Theatre Arts Council will presents its live production of “Annie Jr.” at 7:30 p.m. Friday and 1:30 and 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Worm Creek Opera House in Preston. Tickets are available at True Value Mart, 44 S. State St., Preston. For more information, visit www.wormcreek.blogspot.com.

The second annual Cache Val-ley A.L.S. Golf Challenge to benefit the Muscular Dystrophy Association’s Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Center at the University of Utah and ALS research will be held Friday at Birch Creek Golf Course in Smithfield. All monies raised will be earmarked for ALS research. For

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Calendarmore information, contact Angela McBride at 801-438-0278 or [email protected].

Drake & The Sea will perform with Julius Brown and Mason Johnson (acoustic) at 8 p.m. Friday at Why Sound, 30 Federal Ave. Cover charge is $5. For more information, visit www.myspace.com/whysound.

Hyrum’s 2010 Star Spangled Celebration kicks off with a rodeo at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. There will be bull riding, steer wrestling and more. For contestant or ticket information, contact Jeff Burnett at 245-3704.

Daily Adventures continues at the Ameri-can West Heritage Center on Saturday with five sites open for hands-on, living history activities. A tepee party will be presented at 2 p.m. with Shoshone games and activities. Art Every Day is at 3 p.m. Pony rides and train rides take place all day. Also, the Wild West Shakespeare production plays at 7 p.m.; activities start at 5 p.m.

The sixth annual Art on the Lawn will be held from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday at the old Crookston Homestead in North Logan, 1491 E. 2300 North. This year’s Old Home Art Show & Silent Auction will be open from 2 to 7 p.m. Friday.

Hal Crimmel will present “Understanding Utah’s Lands Through Books” at 1 p.m. as part of the USU Museum of Anthropology’s “Saturdays at the Museum” series. Passages from books written by Edward Abbey, Terry Tempest Williams and Ellen Meloy will be used to discuss topics including conservation and preservation, pollution, water issues, tour-ism and energy development in Utah. A mini-exhibit will showcase the differences in land use throughout Utah, and there will be books and coloring pages for kids. Admission is free. For more information, call 797-7545. An explanation of benefits available to veterans will be available from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday at Pioneer Valley Lodge, 2351 N. 400 East, North Logan. Crimson Rose will per-form and refreshments will be served. Every-one is invited. For information, call 792-0353.

Four Paws Rescue will hold a dog adoption day from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at the Logan off-leash dog park, 400 W. 700 South. Bring your dog and let him pick out a new best friend! To see available dogs, visit www.4paws.petfinder.org. If interested in meeting any of the dogs, call 752-3534 and leave a message or e-mail [email protected].

A Family Fun Triathlon will start at 8:30 a.m. Saturday. To register, call the Sports Academy at 753-7500.

Madison Lights will perform with Four in the Mourning (pop/punk) at 8 p.m. Saturday at Why Sound. Cover charge is $5.

The Cache Valley Gardeners’ Market is open from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. every Saturday at Merlin Olsen Park. Come enjoy locally grown produce, handmade crafts, artisan foods, live

Saturday

music and more. Now accepting SNAP, credit and debit cards. For more information, visit www.gardenersmarket.org or call 755-3950.

Summer Aggie Ice Cream tours will be held at noon, 1, 2, 3 and 4 p.m. Saturday. Cost is $3 per person.

The Utah State University Alumni Band will kick off its summer season at 7 p.m. Sun-day on the USU Quad immediately east of Old Main. Admission is free and everyone is invited.

The Summer Citizen Group’s Sunday Afternoon Series continues with Julie Hollist, director of the Cache Valley Visitor Center, at 1 p.m. on the great lawn adjacent to Old Main on campus (in case of rain, meet in Old Main). Bring your own chairs. For more information, contact Norm Palmer at 787-1406.

The Cache Hikers will hike up Summit Creek to Tony Grove on the Wind Cave Way Trail on Sunday. This is a strenuous hike, about eight miles and a 3,200-foot elevation gain, plus a car shuttle. Bring water, lunch and appropriate clothing, and a donation for gas if carpooling. Meet at 8 a.m. in the southwest corner of the Smith’s Marketplace parking lot at 700 N. Main. For more information, contact Dave or Jane at 750-5913.

The Post-Mormon Community is a non-sectarian organization of individuals and families who have left Mormonism. The Cache Valley chapter meets for dinner and socializing every Sunday at 6:30 p.m. at a local restau-rant. Newcomers welcome. For more informa-tion, visit www.PostMormon.org/logan or call 770-4263.

Sunday

A free meditation/self-awareness class is held from 7 to 9 p.m. every Monday at the Cos-mic Nudge, 843 S. 100 West, #309, Logan. For more information, call 435-363-7173.

Monday

A special workshop on using a pioneer run loom will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday as part of “Things That Go!” week for Daily Adven-tures at the American West Heritage Center. Also, a children’s Victorian tea party will be held at 2 p.m. (reservations required) and pony rides and train rides take place all day. Most activities are included with admission.

Sher Anderson will present her “Girls Grow-ing Up” class at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the home of Jenny Ray near Preston. This class is for girls around the age of puberty and their moms. Topics include menstrual cycles, how they work and ways you can take care of yourselves to stay comfortable. Cost is $25 per family. For directions and to RSVP, contact Jenny Ray at 208-852-3094 or [email protected].

The Cache Chamber of Commerce will host a free open house from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday at the Chamber, 160 N. Main St., Logan. Find out about the many benefits of chamber membership and how you can get

Tuesday

involved in the community. There will be dis-counts, door prizes and food.

Ruby Hill will perform with Warbird and Beacon Hill (rock/blues) at 8 p.m. Tuesday at Why Sound. Cover charge is $5.

Teresa Osborne will talk about whole-body health from 7 to 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Providence Macey’s Little Theater. There is no charge. There will be refreshments and giveaways. Seating is limited; call 753-3301 to reserve your spot. For more information, visit www.maceys.com.

OPTIONS for Independence will go to lunch and take a trip to Gossners’ Cheese at 11 a.m. Tuesday. Lunch prices will vary. To sign up, schedule transportation or for more infor-mation, contact Mandie at 753-5353 ext. 108.

Things That Go! Week at Daily Adventures continues Wednesday at the American West Heritage Center with five sites open for hands-on, living history activities. A mountain man party will be held at 2 p.m. Also: pony rides, train rides and living history activities for all ages. Art Every Day is at 3 p.m. Most activi-ties are included with admission.

Scott Bradley will lead a “To Preserve the Nation” Constitution class at 7 p.m. Wednesday at The Book Table (upstairs). There is no charge. For more information, call 753-2930 or 753-8844.

The Cache County Food$ense Program will present “Pleasing Peas” as part of its Viva Vegetables class series at 7 p.m. Wednes-day. Other topics include food safety and how to prevent foodborne illness. For more information or to reserve a spot, call 752-6263.

A fundraiser to support the Wananavu Kadavu~Water Project’s efforts to bring clean drinking water to the Navautu Village will be held from 5 to 7 p.m. Wednesday at the New Yorker Restaurant, 40 W. Market St., Salt Lake City. Event will include a silent auction and light refreshments. Tickets are a sug-gested donation of $50 and can be purchased at wananavukadavu.org.

Why Sound will host Cuddlefish Comedy Club Presents at 8 p.m. Wednesday. Cover charge is $5. For more information, visit www.myspace.com/whysound.

Natalie and Chalene from Camp Chef will share some of their outdoor cooking from 7 to 8 p.m. Wednesday in front of the Providence Macey’s. There is no charge. Seating is lim-ited; call 753-3301 to reserve your spot.

Wednesday

RRR Auction — Reuse, Reduce, Recycle will open for browsing at 11 a.m. Thursday at 244 S. Main St., Logan. The first auction will be held at 6 p.m. July 7. RRR Auction is a store for recycled items only. The storefront holds many recycled items created by local artisans and craftsmen. The back of the store

Thursday

is for locals to bring in their no-longer-needed items to sell at the weekly Recycle Auction, held at 6 p.m. every Wednesday. For more information, call 512-6880.

Shauna Flammer will share some “cool” recipes for your Independence Day get-together from 7 to 8 p.m. Thursday in the Providence Macey’s Little Theater. There is no charge. Seating is limited; call 753-3301 to reserve your spot.

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, cross-stitch projects and more. For more informa-tion, contact Cathy at 752-3923.

Daily Adventures continues Thursday with Things That Go! Week at the American West Heritage Center. There will be a special workshop on using a pioneer rug loom at 1 p.m. and a pioneer party at 2 p.m. with classic games and activities. Pony rides, train rides and hands-on living history activities are offered for all ages. Most activities are free with admission.

A “Comedy Night Out” featuring Keith Stubbs (Eagle’s Famous Morning Guy) and Brad Bonar Jr. will be held at 7 p.m. Friday, July 2, in the Lewiston Theater. Admission is $10 for ages 16 and older. Seating is limited; purchase tickets early at Lee’s (Logan and Smithfield), Hall’s Store, K&B Service, Lewis-ton city or at the door. All proceeds go toward the Lewiston July 4 fireworks.

Hyrum’s 2010 Star Spangled Celebra-tion will be held July 2-5. Activities include a baseball game (Hyrum Hornets vs. Aggies) at 8 p.m. Friday at Hyrum East Park; Saturday events include a Freedom Run/15K at 7 a.m. (register at www.topofutahmarathon.com/15), Youth Parade at 10:30 a.m. at City Square, and a water fight with local firemen at 11 a.m. at East Park; a patriotic program will be held at 7 p.m. Sunday at City Square; and Monday events kick off with a chuckwagon breakfast from 7 to 10 a.m. at City Square. Other events include the Main Street Mile at 11:55 a.m., a parade at noon, booths and entertainment from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., fireworks and enter-tainment from 8 to 10:30 p.m., and a teen dance at Elite Hall.

The Cache Hikers will hike to Gunsight Peak on the west side of the valley Saturday, July 3. This is a strenuous hike, about four miles one way and a 3,100-foot elevation gain with some bushwhacking. Bring water, lunch and appropriate clothing. Meet at 8 a.m. in the southwest corner of the Smith’s Marketplace parking lot at 700 N. Main. For more informa-tion, contact Brian at 753-0253.

Next weekend

Do you have an upcoming arts or entertainment event you would like listed in this calendar? Let us know!

Contact Cache Magazine Editor Jamie B. Nielson at 435-792-7229. All calendar items are run on a space-available basis.

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