Cache Magazine

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The Herald Journal June 17-23, 2011 Magazine Cache Magazine Cache An eye for art A look at Summerfest artist Larry Winborg

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June 17-23, 2011

Transcript of Cache Magazine

Page 1: Cache Magazine

The Herald Journal June 17-23, 2011

MagazineCache

MagazineCache

An eye for artA look at Summerfest artist

Larry Winborg

Page 2: Cache Magazine

I tried my first gyro yesterday thanks to Summerfest. Since I’m a really, really slow eater it was easy

to tell I loved it when it was gone in just a few bites. The meat was delicious, especially with the veggies, sauce and yummy bread wrapped around the outside. It makes me wonder why I haven’t devoured one before.

I’m a huge fan of Summerfest food. It’s the same stuff you get at small town celebrations and fairs. Funnel cake? Yes please. Fried Oreos? I’ll have four.

One of my favorite Summerfest memo-ries in recent years consisted of my best friend’s family coming into town and eating one fattening food after another. We shared frozen bananas, snowcones, a navajo taco and cotton candy. Yum.

This year there’s a whole slew of ven-dors selling everything summery from

fresh-squeezed lemonade and pulled pork sandwiches to fried Twinkies, kettle corn, cinnamon glazed almonds and mini cake donuts. Don’t judge me if I try all of these things this weekend. You will, too.

Of course I love Summerfest for all the art, too. People amaze me.

This week Kate Rouse DuHadway interviewed Larry Winborg, one of the many artists who will be showcasing their work at the Tabernacle this week (page 8). I’ve been familiar with Winborg’s art for the last few years and especially love his paintings of Utah State University in the fall.

Winborg has been painting since he was a child and has work in several galleries throughout the United States. This year he was chosen as Summerfest’s featured artist and has dozens of new paintings on display this weekend. Go check his work as well as more than a 150 other artists at Summerfest. And why not have a crepe and caramel apple while you’re at it.

– Manette NewboldCache Magazine editor

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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.

Cache From the editor [email protected]

“Early spring” by Larry Winborg.On the cover:

Magazine

The Herald Journal’s

Arts & EntertainmentCalendar

Cache What’s inside this week

Cute pet photo of the week

This cat is available for adoption!

Pet: KohlFrom: Four Paws RescueWhy she’s so lovable: Kohl is a beautiful, silky, solid black female cat. We believe that she is about 2 years old. She was left at the old Ogden Animal Shelter after it closed down. She is very sweet and loving, but would prefer to be an only pet. Kohl needs to be an indoor-only cat, as she is declawed on all four paws. She is looking for a loving, forever home.

Books .......................p.13Crossword ................p.14

‘Green Lantern’ not a great character

(Page 7)

Mind reader coming to

Logan

Noon Music schedule

(Page 10)(Page 10)

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All mixed up

The Bridger Folk Music Society pres-

ents a concert with singer and songwriter Jen Hajj on Saturday, June 18, at 7:30 p.m. at Crumb Broth-ers Bakery, 291 S. 300 West in Logan. Tickets are $13 and are available by calling 757-3468, or take your chances at the door. Seating is very limited, so advance purchase is rec-ommended. The concert is sponsored by Import Auto and Utah Public Radio.

Hajj has performed at bluegrass jams, open mics, or and folk music camps. She spent her childhood in Tempe, Ariz., taking piano lessons, chasing lizards, and singing in church and school choirs. She made an early con-nection with composition as a child, noticing that music notation wasn’t just for interpreting what other people created, but

it could be used to express her own musical ideas. She took her first com-position, “Mazurka,” to her piano teacher, who patiently played through the poorly notated piece, and gently introduced music theory into Hajj’s instruction. This is where her songwriting began. She moved to Utah in the mid-1980’s where her musical career began to take shape, singing with various choirs and moving her way into the church music scene.

While working with various churches, she rediscovered her desire to write her own music. She entered music school and studied vocal perfor-mance and composition.

For Hajj, being a part of the folk music scene is like coming home. She hopes when you hear her sing, you feel it too.

Crumb Brothers to host Utah songwriter Jen Hajj

Cache Symphony Orchestra will perform its

second of three summer pops concerts Sunday, June 19. The concert will be held at 7 p.m. in the Kent Concert Hall in the Chase Fine Arts Center on the USU campus. The third concert in the series will be held in the same venue and at the same time July 3. Admission is free.

Music Director Robert Frost will lead the orchestra in a pro-gram of light classics, Broadway tunes and popular songs. The program will include an arrange-ment of Steve Gibb’s “She Believes in Me,” Tchaikovsky’s

“1812 Overture, and “Nimrod” from Elgar’s Enigma Variations. The orchestra will play selec-tions from the musical “Grease” by Warren Casey and Jim Jacobs, Leroy Anderson’s “Serenata” and “Harlequinette” by Michael Leckrone. Johannes Brahms famous “Hungarian Dance No.1” and “What I Did for Love” from

“A Chorus Line” by Marvin Hamlisch and Edward Kleban will also be performed.

Featured soloist will be trombonist Steven Hunter. He will be playing the third move-ment from Richard Strauss’s Horn Concerto. Steven is a proud native of Cache Val-ley. He is currently teaching

music at Utah Valley University and Snow College and will be joining the Brigham Young University faculty in the fall. He holds degrees from Univer-sity of North Texas, Manhat-tan School of Music, Brigham Young University, and Snow College. His teachers include Vern Kagarice, David Finlayson, Dave Taylor, and Rusty McKin-ney. In addition to his collegiate teaching, he has appeared as a guest clinician and maintained an active private studio during his time in Utah, Texas and New

York.Steve has performed on

stages across the United States and Europe, including a recent appearance as a guest soloist at the College Band Directors National Association confer-ence in Reno, Nev. He has also performed with the Park Avenue Chamber Orchestra, San Angelo Symphony Orchestra, UNT Wind Symphony, and Key-stone Wind Ensemble. Steve has recorded with the Mormon Tab-ernacle Choir, Tantara and GIA recording labels.

Pops music to fill Kent Concert Hall

Seniors celebrated in upcoming concertome celebrate and honor what has been called “Our Greatest Generation” with the

“Best of Broadway” community concert. Come pay tribute to our seniors who overcame so much in their lifetime, such as “The Great Depression” and WWII, with a fun night of inspira-

tional music. The trio “Music that Heals the Soul,” will be performing Broadway favorites. In addi-tion, they will be performing many popular and inspirational favorites along with their own original compositions. Come hear vocalist and composer Jeremy Threlfall, pianist, composer, and arranger Kevin Kula, and violinist Mami Matsumoto.

The concert will be Monday, June 27, at 7 p.m. at USU Performance Hall. Tickets cost $10. For tickets or information call (435)797-8022, or online at www.kevinkula.net, http://arts.usu.edu. Tick-ets available Monday through Friday at Caine College of the Arts Box Office located in the Fine Arts Building, or available at the door one hour to concert.

The tribute is sponsored by Hallock and Hallock Attorneys, Spring Creek Dental, Realtors Rus-sell and Christina Hallam, Mondell Ward State Farm, Fresh Market, Maya’s Corner, Alphagraphics, GraphiXpress, School of Hard Knocks, and NayDean Park C.H.A.

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Mentalist and magi-cian Paul Draper will

be making a special appear-ance in Logan on Tuesday, June 21. Draper will be giv-ing a 45-minute public show at 7 p.m., followed by a private lecture for magicians only at 8 p.m. at Magical Moon Toys, 1940 N. Main, North Logan.

In “Mysteries of the Mind,” which Draper calls

“a combination of lecture and performance,” he teach-es the audience members some of his techniques and lets them try to read each others’ minds. Draper says his ability to read minds comes from his knowledge of people, which he’s spent a lifetime acquiring in his work as an anthropologist, an actor/director and a diver-sity trainer. He also takes to heart the advice he heard from fellow mentalist Max Maven to “read everything.”

“I do not see how anyone can be truly successful in mentalism if they do not love learning,” Draper said in an interview with Magic Magazine. “If we have the skill to read people’s thoughts, we should know a lot about a lot of differ-ent subjects and areas. We must know about astronauts and bus drivers; we must know something about the South if he is from Atlanta, or about Wisconsin if he is from Appleton, and hope-fully something about those exact cities. We should know details about peoples’ hobbies, interests and ideas that we could only know if we were peering into their minds.”

Draper’s stage shows often include stories about his anthropology field work with the Navajo in Arizona, the Yanomami tribes in South America and Spiri-tualists in Louisiana. Many

of his mentalist techniques come from his observations of shamans and diviners across different cultures. Often the simple sleight of hand tricks Draper does between his mind-reading feats will be imbued with deeper meaning by a story Draper tells from one of the cultures he has studied. In performing both simple and complicated tricks, he is careful to preserve “the moment of awe.”

Draper’s stage show also draws on his experi-ence in theatre as an actor, director and singer. He has performed for the Venetian Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas which sent him over-seas to perform at its Macau location. Now a regular at

the Magic Castle in Los Angeles, Draper takes every possible opportunity to per-form live.

“Mentalism must be prac-ticed in front of a live audi-ence,” Draper said. “It’s not like performing a billiard ball routine, which can be polished in front of a mirror or video cameras. Mentalism is fluid. It is interactive by nature. The mentalist must be aware, in the moment and capable of making instant choices. This can only be learned under fire.”

Admission is $10. Advance purchase tickets are available from Magi-cal Moon Toys, Peewee’s Sweet’s and the Hatch Acad-emy of Magic and Music.

Can he read your mind?Mentalist Paul Draper makes stop in Logan

Photo gallery continues through next WednesdayThe Brigham City Museum-Gallery is hosting an

exhibition entitled “A Broad View,” which offers a fresh perspective on even the most recognizable subjects. Photo-graphs by 10 members of the Northern Utah Camera Club will be hanging through June 22.

Participants are David Hurst, West Haven; Gary Hurst, Roy; Pat Hurst, West Haven; Debbie Keesler, Perry; Kaye Martin, Tremonton; Brett Mosley, Clearfield; Nard Nebeker, Layton; Don O’Leary, Providence; Barry Parsons, Wellsville; and Rod-ney Snyder, Sunset.

There is always another horizon beckoning in the distance for members of the Northern Utah Camera Club. Some of the places they have photographed as a group are Saltair, Antelope Island, Hill Aerospace Museum, Promontory Point, Bear Lake and Hogle Zoo.

The museum is located at 24 N. 300 West. The facility is open Tuesday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturday from 1 to 5 p.m. Admission is free. For further information, please call (435) 723-6769 or visit brighamcitymuseum.org.

“Two-bit Street at Night” by Nard Nebeker

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MEET TRACIBelly dance instructor

Photo by Eli Lucero

Shimmering Sands Belly Dance

will perform “Sand-storm” Friday, June 17, from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. at Utah State Univer-sity’s TSC Auditorium.

“Sandstorm” is one of Shimmering Sands’ largest productions of the year. The show will feature two special guests who will perform a special blend of liquid fusion and hip-hop belly dance. Shimmering Sands will also enchant

their audience with a diverse range of belly dance styles from Egyp-tian Cabaret to Tribal.

Tickets are available at Indian Oven, by call-ing 615-306-2654, or at the door for $12.

Those wanting to learn how to belly dance can sign up for a begin-ning belly dance class that starts July 5 at the Whittier Center. For more information email [email protected].

Belly dancers to perform tonight

Former journalist speaks next weekThe Cache

Valley Visitors Bureau presents Vic-tor Hogstrom, the new general manager of Utah Public Radio, on June 22 at 7 p.m. in the historic Cache County Courthouse.

Hogstrom is the second speaker in the Visitors Bureau’s annual speaker series and will talk about the value, purpose and role of public broadcasting, and contrast public radio and commercial radio.

Hogstrom became general manager of Utah Public Radio six months ago after a career in radio and television manage-ment across the United States. He is a former journalist and educa-tor. He holds bach-elor’s degrees in mass communications and

international relations. He holds a master’s degree in mass com-munications from BYU.

Four additional talks round out the summer speaker series.

All presentations are free to the public and held at 7 p.m. at 199 N. Main Street. Seating is limited. For more information, call 755-1890 or log on to www.visitloganutah.com.

• “My sister began taking classes, and brought me to one of her performances, and the music movement and costuming was so beautiful, I think I was hooked at that point.”

• Shimmering Sands started as a USU club and grew from there into weekly classes and practices. The ensemble per-forms in Logan or Salt Lake City at least once a month, with soloists dancing frequently in various venues. Shimmering Sands also performs one night a month at Indian Oven.

• “I have traveled extensively with belly dancing. Some places like Southern California, Portland, Orlando, Chicago and St. Louis are the few that come to mind first.”

• Shimmering Sands has competed at Wiggles of the West, Belly Dancer of the Universe and Double Crown. As a group they placed each time they competed.

• “As a troupe we hold six national awards. As a soloist I hold three national awards. In duets we hold two national awards.”

• Shimmering Sands has beginning and intermediate level classes and group performance practice.

• “We do not care about body type or age. With belly dancing it is nice because the focus isn’t on age and body type. It’s on musical interpretation and emotionally connecting with the music. We have students from teenagers to grandmothers and everything between. We welcome anyone who wants to learn the art form. Women really are attracted to this feminine expression and literally get hooked once they begin to take lessons.”

With a full-time job and family, 46-year-old Traci Hanzalik doesn’t have a lot of free time. But when she does, she’s dancing. Hanzalik picked up belly

dancing, or Raks Sharki, 13 years ago and has been teaching women of all ages and levels how to shake it for 10.

“This art form is beautiful and one of the oldest document-ed dance forms still alive,” she says.

Because there may be some misconceptions about belly dancing Hanzalik encourages everyone to come to a show and give it a try.

“Many folks will assume it’s one type of dance without really ever seeing it,” she says. “I think they would be sur-prised on how artistic and enjoyable this is.”

Hanzalik, of Smithfield, has been able to travel and com-pete in belly dance throughout the years and says she enjoys the different styles, mood costuming and interpretation.

“You know it’s a good performance when the audience is really connected to you and what you’re doing. When you hear them cheer you on, or are clapping along, it makes the whole experience exhilarating for you and the audience.”

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“Super 8” Rated PG-13★★★ This is the rarest of things this time of year: a summer blockbuster that’s completely earnest and irony-free, not filled with cheeky pop-culture refer-ences or cheesy product placement. The effects, while spectacular, also hap-pen to be germane to the plot, and they have an inti-mate, tactile quality, rather than seeming too glossy or removed from reality. So all you’re left with is ... story. And strong performances. And well-developed char-acters. And a believable emotional arc. And genuine thrills. And that’s apropos, given that it’s a love letter to the man who skillfully wove

together all those elements in inventing the modern blockbuster. J.J. Abrams has crafted a loving, meticu-lously detailed homage to Steven Spielberg, who’s one of the film’s producers

— specifically, the director’s work from the late 1970s and early ‘80s — but it never feels like a rip-off, and it certainly never lapses into parody. As writer and direc-tor, Abrams effectively con-veys a mood — a mixture of innocence, fear and ulti-mately hope — that Spiel-berg managed to create again and again. He also captures a familiar sense of childhood loneliness — a need to escape and belong

— and the adventures that can spring from that yearn-ing. And the kids at the center of this small-town, sci-fi thriller (Joel Courtney,

Riley Griffiths and Elle Fan-ning), many of whom had never appeared in a feature film before, are total natu-rals and bounce off each other with effortless, goofy humor. PG-13 for intense sequences of sci-fi action and violence, language and some drug use. 112 min-utes. Three stars out of four.

– Reviews by The Associ-ated Press

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“Mr. Popper’s Penguins” Rated PG★★

1⁄2 One assumes that when Hollywood gets its hands on a charming children’s book like Richard and Florence Atwater’s 1938 classic, bad things ensue. But direc-tor Mark Waters (“Mean Girls,” ‘’Freaky Friday”) surprisingly has turned in some-thing with its own charm. Yes, it’s a sac-charine family film with predictable story lines and glossy studio veneer. But thanks largely to Jim Carrey’s deft, funny per-formance, enough wit slides in between the cracks that it avoids becoming the kiddie schmaltz it would seem destined to be. Tom Popper (Carrey) has been trans-ferred from the country to the Big Apple,

from the poor house to the penthouse. He’s a shark of a real estate developer, and his commitment to work has lost him his wife (Carla Gugino). He sees his kids (Madeline Carroll, Maxwell Perry Cotton) on the weekends. But when his father bequeaths him a penguin and five more follow, the tuxedoed ones — and you saw this coming — turn his life upside down. Slapstick and flatulence jokes follow, but Carrey continuously inserts clever lines and rubbery faces. Waters mixes it well, avoiding too much cheese ball humor, and the film maintains a light breeze despite its wintery environs. With Angela Lansbury as the owner of Tavern on the Green. 95 minutes.

Page 7: Cache Magazine

We know we’re neck deep in the

summer movie season when we finally get to the third comic book movie. This summer has already seen two decent comic book movies in “X-Men: First Class” and “Thor.” Those two films were fun, energetic and full of lively characters. That’s why they made such good movies.

“The Green Lantern,” sadly, lacks in just about every category.

Hal Jordan (Ryan Reynolds) is a hot-shot fighter pilot who apparently has no fear when it comes to fly-ing. Superheroes are interesting when their alter-egos are timid and afraid of the power they possess. It’s over-coming that fear and harnessing the power that makes them great. A cocky superhero that thinks he’s all-power-ful to begin with is a bit of a turn off. Hal has no real inner strug-gle with himself. He isn’t like Peter Parker who was a nerdy young man thrust into being a superhero without wanting it. By all accounts egoma-niac Hal Jordan craves attention. That really isn’t the mark of a hero. That’s the mark of a celebrity.

After Hal’s hot-shot maneuvering crashes an expensive jet, he finds himself wallow-ing in self-pity. The only inner struggle going on with Hal is the fact that he just can’t get over himself. He’s too wrapped up in himself to care about the world or people around him. Then, well, here’s the cliffnotes

version. A green ball picks Hal up, trans-ports him to a dying alien who has just come to earth, the alien gives Hal a ring and a green lantern, and pres-to change-o, Hal is now an intergalactic protec-tor of the universe. The ring gives the wearer the power to create anything his imagina-tion can conjure.

The Green Lanterns are protectors of the universe, which has been split up into something like 3,600 quadrants, each con-taining its own protec-tor. Am I boring you yet? Well, I’m just get-ting you ready for the movie, which spouts exposition ad nauseam. That’s all these charac-ters do. When Hal trav-els to a far away planet to train to become a superhero savior, they tell story after story. After all, we are appar-ently too dumb to fig-ure it all out, right? We need to be guided step by step through the whole intergalactic his-

tory book.Of course earth will

be in danger, and, of course Hal will have to save it. Of course the girl he cares about the most will be put in harms way, and, of course he’ll have to save her, too. So, if

“The Green Lantern” is going to churn out comic book movie cli-ché one after another, there has to be some-thing that sets it apart. Sadly, there isn’t. The movie’s herky-jerky tone shifts violently from one CG-laden action scene to the next punctuated by cheesy scenes with Hal talking to his girlfriend, or Hal talking to aliens, or Hal talking to himself.

One has to wonder what a great actor like Peter Sarsgaard is doing in this movie. He plays Hector Ham-mond who, in the grand scheme of things, ends up being a throw-away villain that never mattered in the first place. Sarsgaard has been given a makeover.

His hairline is receding, and his melon grows to abnormal proportions after an “incident.” None of that matters though, because the man with the most act-ing talent in the movie has been reduced to a sniveling ingrate who shuffles around snarl-ing at people.

When all is said and done, “The Green Lan-tern” is one of the most anti-climactic mov-ies out there. We’ve spent so much time on exposition that when time comes to save the world from utter destruction, the film-makers have to fast-track it and hope we didn’t notice. Unfortu-nately, for them, we do. I wish I had the power to imagine that I’d never seen “The Green Lantern” in the first place.

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‘Green Lantern’ boring and predictable

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Page 8: Cache Magazine

In addition to featured artist Larry Winborg’s work, additional things to look for at Summerfest this year, according to Summerfest executive director Marianne Sidwell, are:

• Recycled art gurus Rich Brooks from St. Louis, Mo., and Michael Bing-ham from Cache Valley

• A silent auction and scholarship program to benefit a local artist

• The Plein Air painting contest and local photography contest

• 150 different artists displaying and selling their work

• 24 food vendors• Performances by Way Way East

Bay, Salsa Brava, the Dry Lake Band and others

Summerfest performance schedule:Friday, June 1711 a.m. - Old Barn Theater Review12 p.m. - Sassafras-Folk1:30 p.m. - Cold Fusion-Jazz3 p.m. - Danielle Vaughan-Contem-

porary4:30 p.m. - Avalanche-Youth Blue-

grass6 p.m. - Austin Weyand Band-

Acoustic Jazz8 p.m. - Way Way East Bay-Rock

Saturday, June 1811 a.m. - Lyric Theater Review12 p.m. - Leaping Lulu-Celtic1:30 p.m. - Citrus & Sage-Jazz3 p.m. - Libbie Linton-Contemporary4:30 p.m. - Dry Lake Band-Blue-

grass6 p.m. - Double Wide-Country6 p.m. - Grassroots Shakespeare-

Theater (South East side of Tabernacle grounds)

8 p.m. - Salsa Brava-Salsa

Cache Valley painter Larry Winborg is always taking photographs wherever he goes, he said, gathering ideas for what may become his next masterpiece.

“Whenever I see something, I’m driving down the road and I look out the window, or I see a tree or a sunset or a cloud or something, it gives me an idea for a painting,” Winborg said. “I have lots of reference material, I could prob-ably paint here the rest of my life and never leave. ... I have hundreds, well, thousands of images.”

Winborg, who has made a good living producing artwork for almost 50 years, goes to work each day in the art studio he built above his garage in Hyde Park. The studio is peace-ful and comfortable, with his and his son’s artwork displayed around the room on muted burgundy walls. A few armchairs are gathered in front of the fireplace, and a pool table in one corner overlooks a spectacular view of Cache Valley to the west.

With the panorama a constant reminder of one of the rea-sons he chose to come back to Cache Valley 16 years ago, the Utah State University alum paints mountain landscapes, harbor scenes and images of Cache Valley’s iconic landmarks such as Old Main, the tabernacle and the Logan temple. His main media are oil and acrylics, but lately he’s been doing a

lot of watercolors and even some nonobjective art.“People say, ‘well, what is that all about?’” Winborg said

of his nonobjective work. “I like to call it the music without words, just the melody.”

For Winborg, the best part about art materials is they don’t come with an instruction manual. Whether he paints from a photograph or goes outside to paint a scene, he said he always adds his own creativity and imagination to the piece.

“My best painting is my next one, always,” Winborg said. “I’m always learning. I’m learning when I look at other art-work that people do, and I look at nature, and then I discover something for myself, I figure out how to do things a little different.”

Winborg told his parents he wanted to be an artist in the first grade, and although they had their doubts, Winborg graduated with a master’s in fine arts from USU in the late ‘60s, and went on to a successful career as an illustrator for Sports Illustrated, Readers Digest, Audubon Magazine and other publications. He returned to Cache Valley and in 2002, partnered with Judge Kevin Allen to open a gallery inside the Coppermill Emporium. Winborg’s wife now runs the gallery, selling her husband’s and her son’s work to locals and collec-tors who travel from Salt Lake and even Park City to buy the paintings.

Of Winborg’s four children, three are professional art-ists, he said. Jeremy Winborg paints alongside his father in the studio in Hyde Park and two of his daughters sell their work on Etsy and Target as Winborg Sisters Design. Another daughter does photography as a hobby, and Winborg’s 15 grandchildren love to come to the studio and paint with their own brushes and art supplies.

“Art is something that’s always been in our family,” Win-borg said. “When they were little, I gave (my kids) materials and supplies and didn’t try to tell them what to do, I just let them do their thing, and encouraged them.”

As a full time artist, Winborg said he produces a couple hundred paintings in a year, and his total body of work is numbered in the thousands. For Summerfest this year, he said he and his son will have roughly 40 to 45 new pieces of art that have never been shown. And Winborg doesn’t plan on quitting anytime soon.

“Somebody said, ‘oh, you ever going to retire?’” Winborg said. “Well, no, I’m not going to retire because what would I do when I retire? Same thing I’m doing now. So I won’t retire, I’m going to continue to paint the rest of my life.”

– By Kate Rouse DuHadway

An eye for art One of many Summerfest artists,

Larry Winborg says he’ll never stop painting

Page 9: Cache Magazine

In addition to featured artist Larry Winborg’s work, additional things to look for at Summerfest this year, according to Summerfest executive director Marianne Sidwell, are:

• Recycled art gurus Rich Brooks from St. Louis, Mo., and Michael Bing-ham from Cache Valley

• A silent auction and scholarship program to benefit a local artist

• The Plein Air painting contest and local photography contest

• 150 different artists displaying and selling their work

• 24 food vendors• Performances by Way Way East

Bay, Salsa Brava, the Dry Lake Band and others

Summerfest performance schedule:Friday, June 1711 a.m. - Old Barn Theater Review12 p.m. - Sassafras-Folk1:30 p.m. - Cold Fusion-Jazz3 p.m. - Danielle Vaughan-Contem-

porary4:30 p.m. - Avalanche-Youth Blue-

grass6 p.m. - Austin Weyand Band-

Acoustic Jazz8 p.m. - Way Way East Bay-Rock

Saturday, June 1811 a.m. - Lyric Theater Review12 p.m. - Leaping Lulu-Celtic1:30 p.m. - Citrus & Sage-Jazz3 p.m. - Libbie Linton-Contemporary4:30 p.m. - Dry Lake Band-Blue-

grass6 p.m. - Double Wide-Country6 p.m. - Grassroots Shakespeare-

Theater (South East side of Tabernacle grounds)

8 p.m. - Salsa Brava-Salsa

Cache Valley painter Larry Winborg is always taking photographs wherever he goes, he said, gathering ideas for what may become his next masterpiece.

“Whenever I see something, I’m driving down the road and I look out the window, or I see a tree or a sunset or a cloud or something, it gives me an idea for a painting,” Winborg said. “I have lots of reference material, I could prob-ably paint here the rest of my life and never leave. ... I have hundreds, well, thousands of images.”

Winborg, who has made a good living producing artwork for almost 50 years, goes to work each day in the art studio he built above his garage in Hyde Park. The studio is peace-ful and comfortable, with his and his son’s artwork displayed around the room on muted burgundy walls. A few armchairs are gathered in front of the fireplace, and a pool table in one corner overlooks a spectacular view of Cache Valley to the west.

With the panorama a constant reminder of one of the rea-sons he chose to come back to Cache Valley 16 years ago, the Utah State University alum paints mountain landscapes, harbor scenes and images of Cache Valley’s iconic landmarks such as Old Main, the tabernacle and the Logan temple. His main media are oil and acrylics, but lately he’s been doing a

lot of watercolors and even some nonobjective art.“People say, ‘well, what is that all about?’” Winborg said

of his nonobjective work. “I like to call it the music without words, just the melody.”

For Winborg, the best part about art materials is they don’t come with an instruction manual. Whether he paints from a photograph or goes outside to paint a scene, he said he always adds his own creativity and imagination to the piece.

“My best painting is my next one, always,” Winborg said. “I’m always learning. I’m learning when I look at other art-work that people do, and I look at nature, and then I discover something for myself, I figure out how to do things a little different.”

Winborg told his parents he wanted to be an artist in the first grade, and although they had their doubts, Winborg graduated with a master’s in fine arts from USU in the late ‘60s, and went on to a successful career as an illustrator for Sports Illustrated, Readers Digest, Audubon Magazine and other publications. He returned to Cache Valley and in 2002, partnered with Judge Kevin Allen to open a gallery inside the Coppermill Emporium. Winborg’s wife now runs the gallery, selling her husband’s and her son’s work to locals and collec-tors who travel from Salt Lake and even Park City to buy the paintings.

Of Winborg’s four children, three are professional art-ists, he said. Jeremy Winborg paints alongside his father in the studio in Hyde Park and two of his daughters sell their work on Etsy and Target as Winborg Sisters Design. Another daughter does photography as a hobby, and Winborg’s 15 grandchildren love to come to the studio and paint with their own brushes and art supplies.

“Art is something that’s always been in our family,” Win-borg said. “When they were little, I gave (my kids) materials and supplies and didn’t try to tell them what to do, I just let them do their thing, and encouraged them.”

As a full time artist, Winborg said he produces a couple hundred paintings in a year, and his total body of work is numbered in the thousands. For Summerfest this year, he said he and his son will have roughly 40 to 45 new pieces of art that have never been shown. And Winborg doesn’t plan on quitting anytime soon.

“Somebody said, ‘oh, you ever going to retire?’” Winborg said. “Well, no, I’m not going to retire because what would I do when I retire? Same thing I’m doing now. So I won’t retire, I’m going to continue to paint the rest of my life.”

– By Kate Rouse DuHadway

An eye for art One of many Summerfest artists,

Larry Winborg says he’ll never stop painting

Page 10: Cache Magazine

Friday, June 17

FREE CONCERTS FOR EVERYONEAT lOgAN high AudiTORium

NooN Music Saturday, June 18

Susan Baker, soprano, has enjoyed many opportunities to sing for the Noon music series. Originally from Los Angeles, her perform-ing experiences there included musical theater, opera, recital singing and being a regular National Anthem performer for the Los Angeles Dodgers. She is a graduate of Cal-ifornia State University Northridge and of Utah State University. Her two red-haired sons are her proudest accomplish-ments.

Sylvia Kirkland, accompanist, is a gradu-

ate of USU, having stud-ied under Betty Beecher and Irving Wassermann. She studied organ with James Drake. She teaches piano and organ in Logan.

Susan Baker

Irishfre Celtic Dancers

Ted is a professional storyteller, so you can be pretty sure that whatever he tells you has probably been beefed up a bit. But he has stayed true to the promise he made with his wife, Meg, when they got engaged. He told her he’d make every day an adventure. Ted has told stories all over Cache Valley and along the Wasatch front. He is a banker with Cache Valley Bank has three wonderful kids, an incredible daugh-ter-in-law, and grandkids that are the joy of his life. He lives in Providence with his family and 16 chickens. He tells original tales as well as those authored by talented writers.

Storyteller Ted Erekson

All photos taken by Sid Perkes. From left: The southern sky from the Bou-levard in Logan; The LDS temple

and a smoky sky; Clarkston Mountain

from Benson.

Page 11: Cache Magazine

tueSday, June 21 WedneSday, June 22 thurSday, June 23

Old Lyric Repertory CompanyNoon Music is proud to present Utah State Uni-

versity’s Old Lyric Repertory Company (OLRC). Returning to Northern Utah this summer with four entertaining stage productions at the historic Caine Lyric Theatre, the OLRC, led by artistic director Dennis Hassan, is a professional theater program based in the Theatre Arts Department in the Caine College of the Arts at Utah State.

“We are looking forward to the 2011 season,” said Hassan. “We’ll be showcasing our upcoming musi-cal ‘Little Shop of Horrors.’”

The musical is based on the book and lyrics by Howard Ashman and music by Alan Menken.

Vocal performance by Emily HeapEmily Heap is a graduate of Utah State University with

a BFA in acting and has appeared on stage with the Old Lyric Repertory Company for several seasons. Past cred-its include: “Percy in Spitfire Grill,” “Madge in the Dresser,” and “Mabel in Chaps!” Heap grew up acting in the Uni-corn Children’s Theatre Company and went on to teach some of their drama classes. Currently, she is working backstage at the Cache Valley Center for the Arts. Heap has performed in the Noon Music concert series in the past and is delighted to return this summer with accompa-nist Amber Dawn Labau.

Mark GibbonsMark Gibbons is a singer/songwriter/dairyman known

for his unique talent and dairy adaptations of country songs. He has been the Master of Ceremonies and enter-tainment for many dairy princess pageants and other events all over Utah and Idaho. He has performed for conventions in California, Washington and Oregon and loves to share his talent and sings all kinds of music. Gib-bons owns and operates a dairy farm in Lewiston, and is president of the Dairy Producers of Utah. He loves to sing and can often be heard serenading the cows early in the morning.

The Alterniscapes Garden Tour will be held Saturday, June 25, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. This year’s self-guided Alterniscapes garden tour features seven gardens in Providence, Mill-ville and Nibley. The focus this year is on gardens with native and water-wise plants. Tickets can be purchased for $5 for the tour at Cache County Extension (179 N. Main Street, Suite 111, Logan) Monday through Thursday, The Master Gardener’s booth at the Cache Valley Gardener’s Market (75 S. 200 East, Logan) on Saturday mornings, and June 25 at the Alterniscapes Tour information center at Zollinger Park. Maps to the gardens are only available June 25 at Zollinger Park. For more information contact the Cache County Exten-sion office at 752-6263. The event is sponsored by the Cache Valley Mas-ter Gardeners and the Native Plant Society.

Garden tour

Art on the Lawn

Ceramics camps

Art on the Lawn’s seventh annual event will be Sat-urday, June 25, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at 1491 E. 2300 North. Art on the Lawn is a nonprofit organization under Dean F. & Bessie C. Peterson Foundation for Cache Valley Arts. This is their only fundraiser and is held on an old homestead property in North Logan. The event is an interactive art event featuring nation-ally known Northern Utah artists. Entertainment will feature the Dry lake Band, Sasafrass, Speakeasy and Fathom. More than 40 artists and artisans will be par-ticipating.

Painting by Trent Gudmundsen

Come play with clay during CVCA’s Summer Ceramic Camps. The four-day camps for children, pre-teens and teens run June 20-23, June 27-30 and July 5-8. Ceramics Camp at the Center caters to all ages and all skills, though children under 5 must be accompanied by an adult, and adults can take classes too. The adult ceramics camp begins June 15 and run every Wednesday through July 6.

For details or to register, call 435-752-0026, click www.CacheArts.org, or visit CVCA at 43 S. Main. Children and pre-teen/teen classes are $46 plus *$15 for materials; Adult classes are $51 plus $15 for mate-rials. Children may register for multiple camps and only pay the materials fee once. Space is limited.

Ceramic skills are a part of the creative environ-ment of CVCA Art Camp but they are also offered year-round.

These programs at the Cache Valley Center for the Arts are sponsored in part by funds from the Marie Eccles Caine Foundation – Russell Family; Logan City Cultural Arts Grant; &Utah Division of Arts & Museums.

Page 12: Cache Magazine

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* This week’s New York Times Best-seller List *

Books

GET YOUR STUFFPUBLISHED!

The Cache Magazine Bulletin Board is a place for our local community to share, well

... anything! From short stories to poems to recipes to photos to unique tips when it comes to rearranging your closet, Cache Magazine wants your stuff! Send it all to

[email protected], or mail it to Cache Magazine, 75 W. 300 North, Logan, UT

84321. We’ll be waiting!

The Cache Magazine Bulletin Board

“Fishing the ‘Bear Paw’”

by Arther L. Olsen

I thought I’d try fishing the “Bear Paw”

Way up in the Idaho wild.An area that’s tough to get intoAnd rugged is putting it mild.

The dead trees were down by the hundreds

So thick one could barely get by.I crawled on my belly and climbed over limbs

And twice almost put out an eye!

When I found the stream – what a beauty!

A picture no artist could match.And the trout – ah, the trout had gone crazy

Consuming some strange-looking hatch.

In spite of it all I was nervousAnd fearful about that first cast.I turned for a quick glance around me

And froze in my tracks, hard and fast!

A huge cat was half-crouched and waiting

With that ominous twitch in his tail,All ready to pounce on his quarryAnd finish me there in the trail.

I carried no weapon for safety;That seven-foot fly rod, a joke!But having no more for protectionI might scare him off with a poke.

And then, without thinking it over,And desperate for something to try,I cast the small Captain right at himAnd it caught in the flesh near his eye!

He snorted and pawed where it struck him,

Then turned and ran down the trail.He continued to paw at that fly near his eye

But the twitch had gone out of his tail.

The fishing trip ended in failure;I made a beeline for the car!The episode made quite a story –I told it nine times at the bar!

Well, I see by your face you’re a skeptic;

The story is one you reject.You admit, though, it gets some attention

And it buys me a lot of respect!

“Second Chance”

by Glenda Grindeland

I walked in the valley of the shadow of death

That is when I wished I had no wealth

I drank, smoked, and I did drugs

I was to blame when they came and pulled the plug

I wished that I had a second chance

No one I knew would give me a second glance

I had two visitors one day

I listened to what they had to say

I was told of a second chance for me

Someone would have to do the deed

I didn’t know anyone who would do things for me

The men told me not to worry all I had to do was believe

With this second chance waiting for me

It was a blessing that I received

Now I know I am on the right track

God in his mercy took me back

Wealth has no meaning here

There is nothing for me to fear

My second chance came to me

Would you take a chance and believe?

“Pretence”by Billy Bird

White shirt and tie,A saint does not make.Proud high success,Can give you quite a break.

Spiritual pygmy,In fine expensive clothes.Pretending self importance,Making quite a pose.

The great are humble people,Treating others with respect.Don’t preach a lot of sermons,Their lives you can inspect.

The great are kind and civil,Treating all with dignity.Don’t exalt themselves with boasting,They are friends to you and me.

Page 13: Cache Magazine

By Christine ArmarioFor The Associated Press

In his novels, Pulitzer Prize winner Oscar Hijuelos

captures the loss and triumphs of Cuban immigrants in tales of displaced dreams, lovelorn beauties and eternal music. Now he turns the pen to his story, the inspiration for many of his characters, and a candid, often heartbreaking portrait that reveals another layer of the Cuban experience in America.

Growing up in New York, Hijuelos’ identity as a Cuban seems constantly stacked against him. With his blond hair and light skin, he is com-monly confused as a German or American, even among

fellow compatriots — what might seem like an insignifi-

cant shortcoming, but a sort of jab to his already fragile iden-tity each time he is mistakenly addressed in English.

After an enchanting trip with his mother to Cuba as a young child, he becomes ill with a kidney disease and is hospitalized for a year, dur-ing which he loses, and never truly recovers, his Spanish. Once released, he is limited to a strict diet of bland food and forbidden from eating Cuban staples like crispy lechon or fried plantains that his family cherishes.

“For the longest time, all I would know was that I had gotten sick in Cuba, from Cuban microbios, that the illness had blossomed in the land of my forebears, the

country where I had once been loved and whose language fell as music on my ears,” Hijuelos writes. “Of course, diseases happen anywhere, and children get sick under any circumstances, but what I would hear for years after-ward from my mother was that something Cuban had nearly killed me and, in the process of my healing, would turn my own ‘Cubaness’ into air.”

It’s an experience of dis-placement and a never ending inability to reach an identity he inherits, but cannot truly grasp, that many Cubans of his generation, along with anyone who has felt divided between two homelands, will understand and relate to. It also defines much of his

development as a writer, as he initially hesitates to embrace his story, and that of his fam-ily, as a source of inspiration for his fictional characters — too ashamed to put them on paper, believing the world was indifferent to his tale.

Indeed, Hijuelos himself acknowledges the unlikely course his life has taken and the near impossibility of becoming a writer. Raised in a tough Manhattan neighbor-hood in the 1960s, countless friends fell into a fatal spiral of drugs and alcohol abuse. He wasn’t surrounded by books, often picking up comic strips instead, if he read at all.

Yet his life is rich with sto-ries and characters that later populate his novels.

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HARDCOVER FICTION1. “Dreams of Joy,” by Lisa See2. “Dead Reckoning,” by Charlaine Harris3. “10th Anniversary,” by James Patterson and Maxine Paetro4. “Buried Prey,” by John Sandford5. “The Jefferson Key,” by Steve Berry

HARDCOVER NONFICTION1. “The Greater Journey,” by David McCullough2. “In the Garden of Beasts,” by Erik Larson3. “Unbroken,” by Laura Hillenbrand4. “Bossypants,” by Tina Fey5. “Those Guys Have All the Fun,” by James Andrew Miller

and Tom Shales

PAPERBACK TRADE FICTION1. “The Help,” by Kathryn Stockett2. “Water for Elephants,” by Sara Gruen3. “Room,” by Emma Donoghue4. “Cutting for Stone,” by Abraham Verghese5. “A Visit From the Good Squad,” by Jennifer Egan

PAPERBACK NONFICTION1. “Heaven is For Real,” by Todd Burpo with Lynn Vincent2. “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks,” by Rebecca Skloot3. “Life,” by Keith Richards with James Fox4. “Thank You Notes,” by Jimmy Fallon with the writers of “Late Night”5. “Born to Run,” by Christopher McDougall

Keep your reading list updatedat www.nytimes.com/pages/books/

* This week’s New York Times Best-seller List *

Books

‘Miss Peregrine’s Home’ enchants and terrifiesBy Michelle WienerFor The Associated Press

As a child, Jacob loved hearing his grandfather’s

stories about the orphanage off the coast of Wales in which he grew up and all the friends he had — children with unusual abili-ties, like the invisi-ble boy, the girl who could create fire and the boy with bees in his stomach.

But kids grow up, and Jacob realized that his grandfather was telling tales, masking his experiences as a Jewish World War II refugee in the guise of fairy tales. The monsters the peculiar children feared were in reality Nazis; the children themselves Other in religion only. Or so Jacob believed,

until his grandfather is killed under mysterious circumstanc-es and Jacob swears he saw a tentacle-mouthed creature lurking in the nearby woods.

Everyone thinks he’s delusional from grief, but Jacob decides to follow his grandfather’s dying wish and go to the island to investigate. What follows is delightfully reminis-cent of my favorite childhood books, ones in which the protagonist dis-covers a hidden passageway into a

strange world where everyone has been expecting her.

It’s a thrilling moment for Jacob and the reader alike to find out that the supernatural really exists, in more Tech-nicolor detail than previously suspected.

Oscar Hijuelos pens memoir on search for identity

Page 14: Cache Magazine

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Stokes Nature Center invites curious toddlers, ages 2-3, to join them for Par-ent Tot from 10 to 11 a.m. Friday, June 17. Explore animals, plants, and nature through music, crafts and games. This program is parent interactive and all toddlers must have a parent present to participate and explore along with their child. The program fee is $3 ($2.50 for SNC members). For more information call 435-755-3239 or visit www.logan-nature.org.

Singer/songwriter/guitarist Isael Tor-

res will perform on Friday, June 17, at Pier 49 San Francisco Style Sourdough Pizza, from 6 to 8 p.m. There is no cover charge. Pier 49 is located on 1200 South, across the street north of Maceys, near Stadium 8.

The “Westernaires” live western dance band will be playing at Pioneer Valley Lodge, on Friday, June 17, at 7 p.m. It will be hosted by Integrity Home Health and Hospice. We’ll be serving hot dogs, pulled beef sandwiches, nachos, drinks and a variety of desserts. The address is 2351 N. 400 East in North Logan. Join us for this free event open

to the public. For more information please call Julie or Cody at 435-792-0353.

Clarkston Pony Express Days will be held Friday and Saturday, June 17 and 18. There will be a turkey shoot at 6 p.m. Friday at the Clarkston gravel pit. For more information call Dan Godfrey at 535-5331. An outdoor family movie will be played at 9:30 that evening in the park. On Saturday there will be a flag ceremony and Citizen of the Year Award presentation at 7 a.m., breakfast at the fire department at 7:30 a.m., the Gunsight Gallop (3-mile race), Giddyup

Across1. Top dog6. Support group?10. Country singer Tillis13. Iroquoian family

member19. Farm machine20. Engineering science

branch22. Reverent one23. Displays nervous-

ness26. Lab gel27. Dark green mineral28. Lawn base29. 1968 Chemistry

Nobelist Onsager30. Badger’s burrow31. Chinese dynasty32. Contemptible ones35. Violin named after

maker Antonio, for short37. More farinaceous39. Moorbad Gmos, for

one42. Word with band or

wrestle45. Encouraging word46. Trickles47. According to49. Summer treat55. Purposeful56. Military engineer57. Art medium58. Hindu holy man60. Hard knocks61. Hawaiian tuber62. Popular TV show63. Nutrition shake

maker65. Game and tape pre-

ceders67. Nae sayer71. Airhead

72. Actor Green of “Buffy the Vampire Slayer”

73. Zealous78. Yellow flower native

to the Alps80. Kind of talk82. “___ of My Heart”

(Janis Joplin song)83. Items in a food stor-

ers’ inventory86. Skirt87. NASCAR thrill88. Scriber89. Put it to90. McCarthy quarry91. Spark95. Part of 42-Across97. Plating alloys98. ___ Street99. Opposin’103. “Cogito ___ sum”106. French vineyard107. Snoopy, for one109. Mysterious char-

acter110. Triggered a frisson115. Savannah Bird Girl,

for one116. Dumps117. Put in the cup118. The prince in “The

Prince and the Pauper”119. Leaves in a bag120. Mix-a-Lot et al.121. Diary bit

Down1. Old Jewish scholars2. The “L” of XXL3. Kilt feature4. Card game5. Tablet holder6. Katzenjammers7. Reddened, in a way

8. Simple protein9. “Saturday Night Live”

highlight10. Elhi org.11. Hyperbola part12. Globulin13. Course attendant14. Much spam15. Cat calls16. Carbamide17. Word with box or shift18. Bell and Carney21. Charlotte-to-Raleigh

dir.24. ___ laws25. French novelist

Pierre32. Prank33. Microprocessor type34. Inhibit36. Cough drop37. Disease of old38. Reduces to bits39. ___ rotten40. Pasta choice41. Sharp spur42. Makes a scene?43. Mother of Hera44. Influence greatly46. Kick out48. Destroy disk data50. Massenet’s “Le ___”51. Two-dimensional52. Semi or RV53. Emerald Isle54. Distant59. Not warranted61. Belonging to the

peerage64. Persuaded65. Smooth66. Floral leaves67. “60 Minutes” corre-

spondent

68. ___ ball69. Companion of Arte-

mis70. Seven up, e.g.72. Personality aspects74. ___ cage75. A constellation76. Locks up77. Escritoire79. Central European80. Diarist Samuel81. Indefatigable

84. Cuba’s ___ of Youth85. Coils around92. Like some passage-

ways93. 3-D figures94. Charm95. Musical Richard96. Silvery game fish97. Baked, in Bologna98. Haka performers100. ___ trip101. Intrinsic

102. Strapped103. Sum, ___, fui104. Abbr. after many a

general’s name105. Bite like a beaver107. Long ride?108. Body of verse111. Surly sort112. Heavy-duty cleanser113. Last word of “Ameri-

ca, the Beautiful”114. A mare, familiarly

Crossword www.ThemeCrosswords.com

Answers from last week

By Myles Mellor and Sally York

CalendarFriday

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Gallop (1-mile race for kids), and softball tournament at 8 a.m. Throughout the day there will be a Pony Express Horse Relay Race, 3-on-3 basketball, a parade, lunch, vintage car show, team roping, kids games, bounce houses, Minute to Win It, barn-yard animal chase, a fireman’s soak, bingo, dinner, dancing and more.

Join us Friday, June 17, to hear from the author of “Your Future Demands Greatness: A Soldier’s Inheritance.” Jacob F. Roecker will speak in the North Logan City Library meeting room at 11 a.m. Roecker is a USU graduate and 13-year Army vet-eran. He will be selling books and autographing after his presenta-tion until 2 p.m. For more informa-tion call 755-7169.

Square dance lessons will be held Saturday, June 18, at 7:30 p.m. at the LDS church located at 1650 E. 2600 North, North Logan. Join us for lots of fun and great company. Round dance lessons will be held from 6:45 to 7:30.

Stokes Nature Center invites adults to Backyard Harvest: Chickens in Your Future? held from 2 to 4 p.m. on Saturday, June 18, at a local coop (call SNC for directions). Participants will learn the ins and outs of keeping backyard chickens and tour three local coops. Registration required. The program fee is $5 ($4 for SNC members). For more info, call 435-755-3239 or visit www.logannature.org.

Dads, come get a free hot dog lunch Saturday, June 18, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Fresh Market Bakery in Logan, 49 E. 400 North. Come check out the great deals and win your dad a cake at the cake walk from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. every hour on the hour in the bakery.

The Bear River Chapter of the Daughters of the Ameri-can Revolution invite you to their closing social on June 18 at 10:30 a.m. at the home of Marilynne Wright. A potluck luncheon will be served after a

program which will include a flag retirement, recognition service awards and honored guests from the DAR state board. For direc-tions and information call Mari-lynne Wright 881-0458.

Street Def presents Logan Hip-hop series #9 on Saturday, June 18 at 8 p.m. at Why Sound. Artists to be announced. Cost is $5.

Spencer Jensen will perform from 6 to 8 p.m. on Saturday, June 18, at Pier 49 San Francisco Style Sourdough Pizza, located at 99 E. 1200 South. Spencer’s easy listening voice and wonder-ful guitar work are a wonderful combination. Everyone is invited.

Colleen Shaffer will be entertaining on the piano at 3 p.m. on Saturday, June 18, at the Pioneer Valley Lodge, 2351 N. 400 East in North Logan. Please come and join us for this free event that is open to the public. For more information please call 792-0353.

The 10th Annual Pony Express Days Car Show in Clarkston will be held Satur-day, June 18 at Clarkston Town Square. Entries are free and registration begins at 10 a.m. Drive in the parade at 11 a.m. There will be a prize drawing for all entries at 2:30 p.m. Refresh-ments will be provided for exhibi-tors. For more information call Dan Cooper at 563-3519.

A Father’s Day bake sale will be held Saturday, June 18, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Sam’s Club in Logan. All proceeds will benefit deaf and hard-of-hearing children and their families who are spon-sored by Utah Hands and Voices.

USU’s Museum of Anthropol-ogy will present three folktales with professional storyteller Ona Siporin on Saturday, June 18, as part of the “Saturdays at the Museum” summer schedule. The museum is open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Neighborhood Nonprofit Hous-ing is pleased to announce an open house celebrating the completion of eight houses built by owner-builders in the Mutual Self Help Housing Program. Pre-

view of houses will be Saturday, June 18, from 10 a.m. to noon and Tuesday, June 21, from 6 to 8 p.m. The open house main event will be Thursday, June 23, from 4 to 6 p.m. The homes are located in the Park Place Subdivi-sion at 600 W. and 100 North in Smithfield. Open house signs will be posted in front of participating houses. The community is invited to come and walk through these homes and learn more about this affordable housing program that makes home ownership possible through sweat equity. Please go to www.nnhc.net or call 753-1112 for more information.

Sundays at the Park will con-tinue June 19 at 1 p.m. on the lawn adjacent to the Old Main building on USU campus. Carol Secord, author and lecturer, will address the group on “accent the positive, eliminate the negative.” Bring your own lawn chairs. In the case of rain we will be meet-ing indoors. For more information call Norman Palmer at 787-1406.

Mary and the Giant will per-form bluegrass/acoustic music with The Pretty Darns and Fast Company on Monday, June 20 at 8 p.m. at Why Sound. Cost is $5.

“Lilium” will perform a free concert in Providence Monday, June 20, at 7 p.m. at Zollinger Park, 61 N. 200 West. Bring your blanket and picnic and enjoy a night of great music.

The iris in Cache Valley are finally getting serious about blooming. The Logan Iris Soci-ety invites you to visit four iris gardens that belong to members of the society, this Tuesday, June 21, beginning at 6 p.m. until sundown. The “open garden” is the equivalent of an open house in that you can drop in any time. The first garden is in Hyde Park at 171 W. 300 North. A map will be given at that location for the other three gardens. Cameras are welcome. Additional information is avail-

able by calling Bryan at 757-5102.

On Tuesday, June 21, at 7 p.m. St. John’s Episcopal Church will hold a community prayer service. June 21 is the Summer Soltice and is an espe-cially fitting time for prayer. You are invited to join us as we pray for people who are suffering in a variety of ways. Prayer includes both speaking to God and lis-tening for God, and so there will periods of both speaking and silence for listening. Songs from the famous Taize Christian com-munity in France will be sung. There will be candles to light, bread to share, and objects such as ribbons and leaves to hold during short guided medita-tions. For more information call St. John’s at 752-0331 or email [email protected]. St. John’s is located at 85 E. 100 North in Logan.

Stokes Nature Center will host two Play with Your Food half-day camps: June 21, 9 a.m. to 12 p.m., for ages 4-7, and June 23, 1to 4 p.m., for ages 8-12. Participants will learn where food comes from and how seeds grow into plants, and will use fruits and vegetables to play games and create art. Cost is $30 ($25 for SNC members). Registration required. For more info, call 435-755-3239 or visit www.logannature.org.

Common Ground Outdoor Adventures will be hosting a summer barbecue Tuesday, June 21, at 6 p.m. For more information call 713-0288.

Chef Whitney Olsen from Rhodes bake-n-serv will help us get a great start to our day with fun breakfast ideas at Macey’s little theater Tuesday, June 21, from 7 to 8 p.m. Seat-ing is limited, so reserve a seat at the Service Desk or by calling 753-3301.

Local easy listening group “City Heat,” featuring Bill Gabriel on guitar, performs each Wednesday at 6:30 p.m.

at Pier 49 San Francisco Style Sourdough Pizza, located on 1200 South across the street north of Maceys. Everyone is welcome.

Michael Robinson will be performing cowboy music and poetry at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 22, at the Pioneer Valley Lodge, 2351 N. 400 East in North Logan. Please come and join us for this free event that is open to the public. For more informa-tion please call 792-0353.

Free Love and Logic par-enting classes for parents of children 1-6 years will continue Wednesdays, June 15 and 22, from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Logan Family Center 50 S. 400 East, Logan. Some babysitting avail-able by pre-arrangement. All participants must pre-register. Call 755-5171 for more infor-mation.

Scott Bradley will teach a free constitution class, “To Preserve The Nation,” on Wednesday, June 22, at 7 p.m. at the Book Table. For more information call 753-2930 or 753-8844.

A free seminar entitled “Do I Need a Trust? Why Good Estate Planning Still Matters” will be held Thursday, June 23, from 7 to 8 p.m. at the Riverwoods Elm Room, 615 Riverwoods Parkway, Logan. The seminar will be presented by attorney Todd N. Hallock. Seating is limited. To reserve a seat or for more informa-tion, call 753-2335 or email [email protected]. Refreshments will be served.

Priory will perform acous-tic music with Boots to the Moon, The Shuttles and Brit-ton Noel on Thursday, June 23 at 8 p.m. at Why Sound. Cost is $5.

Common Ground Outdoor Adventures will be hosting a hiking activity Thursday, June 23, at 5 p.m. For more infor-mation call (435) 713-0288.

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