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Show "Lion in Winter Opens Friday at PC H Page 14 Thursday, May 1, 1980 The Newspaper f '"Ill , ,,JIuMMM.ulll,M, , "The Lion in Winter" is a strong, difficult play, written for adult audiences. It's a sort of play usually chosen only by experienced acting companies, not high school drama classes. Yet this Thursday and Friday, May 1 and 2, the Park, High drama depart-j mflnt will nresenr the nlav , ...... r- r .j 'in "', a . round.' , Sound ridiculous? It' isn't when one considers . Park High's record in ' drama, as fas epitomized by this past week at the state drama meet held . - I, I, , 1 1 a i j mmwmmmim - , -- - " - " -' -( fk (AM . . 1 at BYU. - 1 Park City Racquet Club 1200 LITTLE KATE ROAD - PARK CITY, UTAH 84060 ANNOUNCING. THE PARK CITY RACQUET CLUB MEMBER-GUEST TENNIS TOURNAMENT To be played at the Racquet Club - May 15,16, 17, & 18, 1980 EVENTS: Men's, Women's, and Mixed Doubles: A, B, C Classification ENTRY FEE: $10.00 per team includes: Trophies, consolation tourney, 7 balls, and 2 drink tickets to the cocktail . party to be held after the final ' matches on May 18. PRIZES: Trophies will be awarded to the winners and runners-up in each event, including consolation. At that meet, the Park High students, under the direction of drama teacher Brenda Bensch, earned 'a third place overall rating among the , 1-A schools. More impressive, the students' .., rendition f of Eugene Ionesco's onect play "The Chairs," was awarded a superior rating. Park High was the only 1-A school to receive such a high rating "for its play. And sophomore Wade Wallin, who will be performing in "The Lion in Winter" was awarded best student actor award and a $485 scholarship scholar-ship to BYU. Drama coach Bensch ad-, mits "The Lion in Winter" is difficult, but she adds the cast is "one of the strongest we've ever had." The cast includes: Heather Landis, as Henry's mistress; Scott Chantry, Wade Wallin and Darrin Cummins as Henry's sons; and Mike Jarvis as Philip, King of France.. The , leads of Henry II and Eleanor of Auitaine, will be j played by, respectively,, ENTRANCE RULES: Members are requested to use discretion in selecting f their guests. Teams will be classified according to the strongest player. For example, a "C" player playing with an "A" would be put ifi the "A" division. CONSOLATION: A Consolation Tournament will be held for all first round 1 I :"Z losers.:, nv. r-r.r;. ' '"" ". :. : ;f A m ih t; Xfi v $ ix:i MATCH: TIMES':; Matchsii IV be heldetween lOjOOa.m. and5 7:00p.m. oneVA. Thursday & Friday and 8:00 a.m. and 5:00p.m. on Sat. & Sun. ENTRY DEADLINE: Tuesday, May 13. PLAYERS MUST CALL FOR THEIR TIMES ON WEDNESDAY MAY 14. PHONE NO. M NAME EVENTS ENTERED i DOUBLES PARTNER p DETACH AND BRINGSEND TO: Park City Racquet Club -k. 1200 Little Kate Rd. Park City, Ut. 84060 The Car 19 Restaurant & Shannons Restaurant at the Car 19 will be closed for the off season. We would like to thank everyone for their patronage and support during our first winter of business. We will reopen the Car 19 Restaurant on May 30th for the summer season. We hope to see many of our "local" friends on opening night. Thanks again from everyone at Car 19 and Shannons. Members of "The Lion in Winter" cast, left to right are: Uarnn cummins, ivorey ewis, oiun vu...- ry (Seated), Wade Wallin, Heather Landis and Mike Jarvis. David Sargeant and Korey Lewis. -, -I , For those unfamiliar with the play, it deals with the; future of England and France and the naming of a legitimate legit-imate heir. Political necessity ne-cessity forces an uneasy truce between a "matchless . King and Queen." ,; Tickets for the play will be sold on a first-come, first-served first-served basis, In-the-round seating, whereby : the audience circles the stage of action, will be limited to 150 people per show and an early arrival is advised. Performances Perfor-mances start at 7:30 p.m. each night. , The following list describes the ratings earned in each category by Park High's drama students at i last weekends state meet, the plays each student or team used also is given. v Humorous Interpretation. Amy Finegan, Superior Rating for the play 'AEloise" Dramatic Interpretation Heather Landis, Excellant Rating for "Rebecca," Mono Acting " . . Korey Lewis, Superior, "The Crucible-;" Mike Hunter, Hun-ter, Superior,- "Hamlet;" Robin Friedman, Excellant, "Diary of Anne Frank." Scenes from Plays Mike JarvisKim Weaver, Excellant,. "The Bald Soprano," Collyn Adarnson ; Julie AnstedDebbie Thoma-fson, Thoma-fson, Excellant, "Bell, Book jand Candle;" John New-. landTim BroseCindy .Steward, Excellant, ."Of1 : Mice and Men;" Pantomime Scott PirragilioJamie Puckett, Superior; Dave Hof'fer, Excellant; ,Dan Nestel, Excellant. One Ail I'lav 1 Wade WallinSusan Mann Brent . Kimball, Superior, "The Chairs." Trivia Ts -" - ,,.( "i 1 I by Jack Rash There are no bad words in the Hopi language. That is to say, there are no curse words, no swear words, no words to exalt and commemorate those loftiest of human moments. From every other angle, the Hopi language is the equal of any language on earth, but in its capacity as a scourger and reviler of the human condition, of fate and the gods, it is a dead loss. A Hopi Indian Sun Chief, who was sent to school in Sherman, Arizona and received the larger part of his education at the local YMCA, said that the fog of boyish blasphemy that he ran into there was so thick as to wear him out, mind and soul, before he ever got his locker open. But he reported that as soon as he had got '-into the habit of defiling the celestials himself, then he was alright, and soon recovered. Many of us have felt that way on our first introduction to the language in its leaps of inspriation. Gradually we overcome our initial shock and horror, and may eventually transcend modesty to where we scale the heights of greatness on our own. Ashley Montagu, in his book "The Anatomy of Swearing," says that just as we need from time to time "a good cry" or "a good laugh," so do our spirits sometimes require "a good swear." However, there are times when "a good swear," in its raw form, may not be practical, because of an uncongenial environment-such environment-such as one peopled by mixed company,; or visitors from the IRS, or your mother. It is in this corner that "heck" comes in handy. . !. "Heck" has been around since 1865. A Dr. Van Loon has suggested that "heck" is1 a Dutch transplant. The Dutch, he says, often put "bai je gek?" meaning "are you crazy?" at the end of a sentence. This merely an intensifier, on the order of "you know?," "get it?" and "if you catch my drift." "Heck," Dr. Van Loon says, is an . American attempt on the translation of ,-gek." I "Blazes" is another popular euphemism, ;and has been in service since 1837. No one feeems to have inquired very closely into its roots, though anyone can see that it bears a certain ethnic, tie to conflagrations of a higher or a lower order, and is probably some near relative of "hellfire." Its immediate family includes "as cool as blazes," "as hot as blazes," "as blue as blazes,." and Vas black as blazes," as-well as .t'like blazes,',' ?yhere in blazes," and "what in blazes." Except for some controversy mf its color scheme and temperature, "blazes" seems to be agreeable to everybody's idea of "the other place." The English, who haven't yet reached our high degree of linguistic desecration, despite their headstart, have managed to-rise to the euphemism challenge, though with admittedly admitted-ly flat and pale results. To match our dexterity they have entered into the race "go to Halifax" and "go to Guinea," which are not, by our standards, among the primest examples of wit to spring out of human . ingenuity. - In 1927, a person who signed himself "anonymous" attempted to draw a certain connection between the aforementioned Halifax and the Nova Scotian capital, which, : for reasons best known to itself, fell into a . 'tarnished repute in the 18th century: the; English are ever diligent in their efforts to assign all malign influences on the language to places on this side of the ocean. In point of ; fact, the Halifax in question was the English one, which was famous for its gallows in the 17th century. JimKennecott Jim Kennecott was the first with the right answers an-swers this week, coming up with Rosemary Clooney, Checkerboard Square and Ford Country, Coun-try, For that wealth of knowledge, Jim has been awarded a free lunch compliments of the Corner , Store. To win your free lunch, answer this week's Trivia Test before noon Tuesday at The Newspaper, 419 Main Street, or 649-9014. This week's questions are : 1. What were the names of Howdy Doody's brother and sister? 2. Who sang, "The Hissing of Summer Lawns?" 3. Who is. Park City's newest" Planning -Com-v rhissioner?. i'"X, Answers to last week's puzzle phrase is meant as no reflection, but is The New York Times Magazine CiraiswoF(! IPiissIl IIJtTrTe Jw e a l lJa k a Is .0 oLh.? Tic H0NjETRUSCAil8UCHAs ill El. E 0 U H 'lAHSjO liOGENt ERIETjf IHE Tl PEAR L r"W I L L I AjM F 0 Tl D ; S ADj lliitr IiFF aUe EljA V Al SAT YjRl IT CEFjtRiSCAwl A R T H U rTd E C 0F C O I I C 0Ca . C I T Y y AllIT - 5.1.1. RIu" L L I F Tn ANNA S If I V E TJER IaTb e s 7 s c a p n sTa l e n h o s pR E A T J. 0 1 Mj A MM E R jj .1 ;j1 ea"r n j cTl a r otSiMltS lH0O iaTT tHpoo pYj op e ctT ,JLo ill Ire" F M R 0 B j E R T S O C KjTLfs A L V e I R ETFk i" IE I T H Tjuffj? N S I X Ib r e In t r pse1horae1tee I R I U ste D 1 R. A.J1 C Jii U R.l.lilj jOSEI lR00Dj mm Globalony By William LutwiniakPuzzles Edited By Eugene T. Maleska ACROSS 1 Eschews food ( Fitzgerald specialty 10 Cumulus 14 Balances 20 Active 21 Memorable hostess 22 Hep 23 Taxonomic categories 24 Thames Tugboat Co. 's slogan? 27 Abaft 28 Ending with myth or iron 20 Brier 30 Tumuli 32 Conceit 33 Caused turbulence 35 Pied-a 36 Tree-lined walk 30 One or more 40 Lackaday! 41 Not so 42 Daedalian 43 Norm: Abbr. 44 Cnemisor , ; zygoma 45 Thrall 46 Used an ottoman 40 Jell 52 Avotresante! 56 Material for some mills 57 Sierra Nevada . resort ! 50 Dau.,e.g! 60 Arctic explorer 61 Southwest wind 62 On in years 63 Kennel sounds 65 Scrape the windshield 66 Former 68 Abrogated 70 Smithy 71 " Street Blues" 72 School threesome 73 Went up the Irrawaddy 77 Whiffenpoof word 80 "Angelique" : 1 composer: 1927 82 City on the -Rhone 83 Cowardly, lyin', fictional fatso 85 When Grundy was born , 87 Networks 88 Sends soaring 90 Do handwork 01 Prior (to) 02 Doughboy's ally 93 Prefix with form or cycle 04 Marianne or Thomas 05 Election winners 96 Tequila? 102 Ending with part or vint 103 Trevanian's "The Sanction" 104 Sedans 105 Worn-out horses 106 Harp on 107 Dress ornament 100 O.T.book - 111 Folklore figure 112 Tire-gage reading 115 Gross injustice 117 Held and Neagle 118 Rock-drilling tool 120 Numerouno 121 Burgeon 123 Large white goose 124 Field, Dallas airport 125 Luster 128 Subsidized housing in Riyadh? 131 Michenerbook 132 Pierrot's Pierrette, perhaps 133 Brusque 134 Undergoing vertigo .135 Abandon 136 Uses a shuttle 137 Viet 138 Hotbeds DOWN 1 Bluebeard's last wife 2 Depth charge 3 Unshaken 4 Kind of deed 5 Sellout notice 6 Word on a dollar 7 Gators' cousins 8 Codeword forA 9 Aviv 10 Bridge assets 11 Undergo 12 Reconciled 13 Mallard's milieu 14 Org. for Trevinoetal. 15 Followers of ens 16 Eventually 17 Farmers outside Beirut? 18 Misdid 10 Mideastera capital . 21 Imbue 25 Opulence 26 Fooyong 31 Pay i 34 Fritter 35 Sunbathes 37 "Hello, Dolly! "name 38 The birds 41 Paddock ' youngsters 42 Farrell's . "Bernard it 44 Smuts, e.g. 45 Spread out 47 Martian: i Comb, form 48 Duration 40 Brenda or Kay 50 Gung-ho 51 Cardiff memorabilia? 53 Traffic 54 Gluck's output 55 Put on 58 Parabasis 61 Trouble. 63 Kudos 64 Triton 65 Crowns of furnaces 66 Stripes from strokes 67 Famed film official: 1879-1954 1879-1954 69 Environs 70 Collapse 71 Squawk 74 King of Persia 75 Warble - 76 Subjoin 78 Flaming 70 Pursuing 81 Army unit: Abbr. 84 Ringwindup 85 Letters 86 account 87 "Dead Souls" author T" T" T" " T" j e ' T" m """ io it 12 w 17" "i?" T" TT" TT" 20 " ii " IT" J ; mm J ; 24 25 28 j, :' 27 M P- 29 ; ni U- 32 - mmi ffnffl t J3 34 I 1 35 36 37 38 nvf LJm " T45 &T 4?" 4" j SO 151 "52 53 ' ' S4 TsS ' ! i 56 L ; lj H M lzJ''- 60 " CmiI 61 1 62 Tm" 64 ' its yrftfn M- t mmlmm fm' w-Wfl Ui-tJ . UJ L;fw 73 74 75 , 76 " 77 78 79 ; 80 81 82 , " " "jj 83 84 85 86 p87 I'" SB 80 " jpj 05 96 9 7 98 99 100 101 102 M 104 u"",li5 " JWi06 -mtmi-Hv -l hmMt LUM.l"inifttWi ' -"A HWMlAiliHfiffllf;- " 107 108 f "109 110 rl 111 JI12 113 114 ITuMMMMwi fcJ m-J fdMC 115 116 TT117 I 1111 119 20 LZI J23 T "dl24 ' W 126 127 128 129 130 ' 131 132 133 !" 134 ' 13J ; T3T J 137 r1 138 88 Dollops 89 Persons 92 Flower features fea-tures M David 06 Recital 97 Maui dance 98 Elaborate 99 Smyrna export 100 Hybridize a shrub 101 Keel-shaped part 108 Regard highly 109 -all (smart aleck) 110 Hardens . " 111 Tea type 112 Inquiries 113 Muscovites' : council 114 Paragons 115 Swift 116 Playaclay 117 Scent 118 Ship's officer 110 Iceblink 122 City map 123 Commune near Caen 126 Letter opener, 127 Boater, e.g. 120 Media network 130 Managed : |