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Show I'agc 16 Thursday August 2. 1 I he Newspaper by It if k llrough Prospector Athletic Club 649-6670 III SEPTEMBER CLASSES Racqiietball Steve Coray September 2-25, Member $10, Nonmember $35 Men's League Women's League Adult Co-Ed League Juniors (12 yrs. and over) League Play is 1 hr. instruction with 1 hr. of supervised matches. Private and Semi-private lessons are also available by appointment. Tue. &Thurs. 9-11 a.m. Tue. & Thurs. 11-1 p.m. Tue. &Thurs. 7-8:30 p.m. Tue. &Thurs. 4-5 p.m. Tennis Ronn Cooper September 1-29, Member$10, Nonmember$35 IntermediateAdvanced Adult Tue. & Thurs. 6:30-7:30 p.m. BeginningIntermediate Adult Sat. & Sun. 9-10 a.m. Advanced Junior Tue. & Thurs. 4-6 p.m. BeginningIntermediate Kids Mon. & Wed. 4:30-5:30 p.m. AerobiCS Val Cowan September 2-25, Member $10, Nonmember $35 Dance Aerobics Mon. & Wed. 6-7:30 p.m. Tue. & Thurs. 9-10:30 a.m. Jazz, Ballet Mary Jane Bird Sept 16toOct 29, Members $10, N6nmembers$50 Registration Wednesday, Sept. 10 4-7 p.m., Ballet & Jazz (Adult) Mon. & Wed. 10-1 1 a.m. Ballet & Jazz (Adult & Teens) Tue. & Thurs. 7-8 p.m. Ballet (children 6-8 yrs.) Mon. & Wed. 3:45-4:45 p.m. Ballet (children, 8 yrs. and up) Mon. & Wed. 4:45-5:45 p.m. Gymnastics Cathie Corrie September 22 to October 24 Member$10, Beg. Gymnastics Nonmember$42; Adv. Gymnastics Nonmember$50 Beginning Gymnastics Tue. & Thurs. 3:45-4:45 p.m. Advanced Gymnastics Tue., Thurs. & Fri. 5-6:30 p.m. FREE ROLFING DEMONSTRATION EVERY MONDAY, NOON-1:00 p.m. Rolfing & Massage available by appointment Mondays & Thursdays Members $30, Nonmembers $35 If you wish to be listed in our Professional Services please call 649-9014.. DENTAL Dr. Pamela K. Hilbert Located in the Brent C. Hill Building across from the Holiday Inn. Monday through Thursday, 9-5 Saturday by appointment. 649-6066 The Dental Clinic Dr. Richard Barnes North Park Avenue across from Golf Course Call for appointment We're Open Daily, Evenings & Saturdays 649-6332 For emergency call 649-6786 Preventive Dental Service Dr. DaneQ. Robinson 405 Main Street Hours 2 to 10 p.m. daily Call for appointment 649-6116 CHIROPRACTIC Dr. Kelly 13. I.irvi, 906S. Main. Suite 3. Ililni. I u, 654-3032 or 654 14o8 ' MEDICAL DOCTORS (i Middle Age Crazy" Defies Diagnosis MpMMIMMMIilMMMMIMMiaW "-PSOFESSIONAL lppifife Park City Health Center Holiday Village Shopping Mall Robert I. Evers, M.D. Family Practice Thomas L. Schwenk, M.D. Family Practice Robert T.Winn, M.D. Pediatrics Monday thru Friday, 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. and on Saturdays 9 a.m. to Noon Office appointments and 24 hour emergency care Call 649-7640 OPTOMETRISTS Dr. John Gleave 160 S. 100 W. Heber City, Utah Eye Examination By Appointment Contacts & Frames Available 654-1863 ATTORNEY'S AT LAW Palmer & Saunders P.C. Suite 204 . Silver King State Bank Building Call for Appointment,.. T Office 801-649-6653 ' Home 801-649-7475 A Classic Recommended Good Double feature material Time-Killer For masochists only -- Middle Age Crazy Bobby Lee Burnett ( Bruce Dern) is not leading what you'd call a fulfilled lifestyle. life-style. On the eve of his 40th birthday, he finds himself exhausted by the insatiable sexual demands of his wife , (Ann Margret), a flibbertigibbet flibber-tigibbet who yells "Bingo" after every orgasm; the family video-tapes a round of empty, cheery birthday greetings on Bobby's new Betamax; and the neighborhood neigh-borhood swarms over the jgatio of lis Houstjjnjhome, wniie nas Dusiness partner (they make.taco,stands for a fylexichain called Senor Abe's) wallows in his hot tub. ; No wonder Bobby Lee indulges in-dulges in fantasies of escape. I just keep wondering why the picture's name is "Middle "Mid-dle Age Crazy." It should be called "Middle' Class Crazy," but we're told that Bobby's problem has little to do with the superficial lifestyle surrounding him. His trouble, it seems, is that he doesn't want to be responsible. He's had no trouble providing the material goods and trendy trappings for his family. But when his father (Eric Christmas) dies, Bobby Lee suddenly finds himslef unable to replace him as the emotional anchor of the family. "I don't want to be the daddy," is the way Bobby Bob-by puts it. But his son is unsure un-sure of life-after-graduation, especially since his girlfriend girl-friend might be pregnant; preg-nant; friction is developing devel-oping between his wife and bereaved mom. Somebody has to be the daddy! dad-dy! Bobby dreams of escape, buys a Porsche, and gets involved in-volved with a Dallas Cowboy's cheerleader ( Deborah Wakeham ) . Ultimately, the chastened i Bobby Lee returns to his hot tub, realizing that while relationships with strings may be painful, they're the only relationships that are worth it. What makes it wor- Mum.jM&.ia .follow him , along that rather familiar .StOfyJinel, Through the process, we never learn what we need to know about Bobby Lee. What is he running from? Is he scared of the emotional commitment his dead father could manage, but he can't? If so, we never understand why father and son differ from one another in this The picture doesn't delve into individuals that effectively. effec-tively. More than anything, it's a cheerless picture of sterile, middle-class comfort video recorders, nice clothes and human beings snarling at each other with Trivia Test We finally stumped the stars this week, and even Debbie and Jim couldn't come up with Crazy Feelin', Prisoner of Second Avenue and Carrie Lee Morecraft as the answers to last week's Trivia Test. So the lunch at the Main St. Deli-Market went unclaimed. To win your free lunch, be the first to correctly answer this week's Trivia Test. Submit your answers an-swers to The Newspaper office at 419 Main or call 649-9014 by noon Tuesday. This week's questions are : 1. Frank Sinatra appeared as the stage manager in the '50s TV musical version of "Our Town." What now-famous song was written for ,the program? 2. What movie did President Nixon see in 1970 ust before ordering the "incursion" into Cambodia? Cam-bodia? ' 3.What's the name of Park City's new city manager? PROFESSIONAL (MANAGEMENT Houses, multiples, commercials, and condominium association management. All services available including in-cluding accounting, evictions, repairs, maintenance, investment in-vestment and tax counseling. Servicing the business community since 1964. Senicev op.),. GprOrSPrtVl p Mon.-Sat. 8-6, Sun. 10-2 V,; J i SERVICE PROPERTY MGMT. Management isseso .Mam m 14 .5 KPCW the TV blaring in the foreground. It's enough to make us run out of the theatre, and we wouldn't blame Dern if he tried to escape the movie's surroundings. surround-ings. But Dern isn't fleeing his lifestyle. Running from suburbia to the Dallas Cheerleaders is just jumping from the oven to the microwave. What's Bobby Lee's problem? The script, quite explicitly, says it's a problem of accepting his identity as "The Daddy." The atmosphere of the film says it's his lifestlyle. Along with these two conflicting signals, there are other mysteries, like why does Ann-Margret turn from stupid peacock to devastated, betrayed wife as the film's mood shifts? The film's solid virtue is its acting. Bruce Dern is working off his image as the long-time master of screen psychosis, with a portrayal of neurosis that is quietly sympathetic. Eric Christmas Christ-mas (as Bobby's father) and Geoffrey Bowes (his son) ably show the problems of the generation gaps on either side of Bobby. And Graham Jarvis, as his buddy, carries on a running dialogue with him about bedroom problems prob-lems that discomfits Bobby Lee when it's carried on in crowded bars and restrooms. "Middle Age Crazy" also has this year's candidate for Bad Credit Line: "Based on a Song by Sonny Throckmorton." Throckmor-ton." The syndrome is more than a song, it's a common problem; but the confused diagnosis of this movie promises no cure. A. , The following is a partial list of new books purchased in recent weeks for the Park City Library on Main Street. Some great changes have been made at the library, and a long list of new books, paperbacks and magazines are waiting to be taken home! Scruples; Silmari-llion; Silmari-llion; Smiley's People; There's No Such Place as Far Away; Thorn Birds; Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy; Two Towers; Adolf Hitler; All Creatures Great and Small; All Things Wise and Wonderful; Wonder-ful; America's Forgotten Architecture; Anasazi Ancient An-cient People of the Rock; Angus and the Cat; Another Roadside Attraction; Archi tectural Graphic Standards; Atlas Shrugged; Audo-bon Audo-bon Society Field Guide" to No. American Birds; Be Here Now; Ben's Trumpet; Bleeding Heart; Building Construction Illustrated; Illus-trated; Culture of Narcissism; Narciss-ism; Daniel Martin; Drac-ula; Drac-ula; Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain; Even Cowgirls Get the Blues; Far Tortuga; Farthest Shore; Field Guide to Rocky Mountain Moun-tain Wildflowers; First Twelve Twe-lve Months of Life; Foundation; Founda-tion; Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television; Foxfire; French Lieutenants Woman; Gathering of Zion: The Story of the Mormon Trail; Gold Hunter's Field 'A Cast Named For ' ' Harvey 99 Memorial Bidg. Park City 649-9004 The cast for the upcoming production of "Harvey" has been announced. This classic class-ic comedy by Mary Chase will be the season opener for the Kimball Art Center and Park City Players 1980-1981 season. The play will be presented in the theatre at Prospector Square Hotel, October 3, 4, and 9-12. Scott Graham will play the lovable Elwood P. Dowd, who has an invisible companion com-panion - a six-foot rabbit named Harvey. Scott has appeared in the Park City Players' productions of "Romanoff and Juliet" and "The Odd Couple." Brenda Bensch, Park City High School drama teacher, will play Veta Simmons, sister to Elwood. Brenda was last seen in "Cactus Flower" and in the University of Utah production of "A Delicate Balance." Others named to the cast include a number of Park City Players veterans. Ruth Ann Fitzgerald appeared in "Fiffler on the Roof" and "Company;" Madeline Smith has been seen in several Park City Players productions; Robin West-phal West-phal played in "Mousetrap" and "The Odd Couple;" Bob Toy appeared in "The Odd Couple." "Fiddler" and "Oliver;" David Fleisher played the "Fiddler" and appeared in "The Odd Couple. Others named to the cast include a number of Park City Players veterans. Ruth. Ann Fitzgerald appeared in "Fiddler on the Roof" and "company;" Madeline Smith has been seen in several Park City Players productions; pro-ductions; Robin West-phal West-phal played in "Mousetrap" and "The Odd Couple;" Bob Toy appeared in "The Odd Couple," Fiddler" and "Oliver;" David Fleisher played the "Fiddler" and appeared in "The Odd Couple;" Cou-ple;" Linda Martin was seen in "Fiddler" and the recent I.A.E. production of "Once Upon A Mattress." David Fleisher, Madeline Smith and Robin Westphal were recently presented awards by the Park City Players for their fine performances this past season. Some new faces, at least to Park City Players' productions, produc-tions, include Fred High-tower, High-tower, Mike Phillips, Connie Boyle and Arnie Carlos. The production will be directed by Don Games, Kimball Art Center Theatre Director Gomes noted this is a very strong cast. The characters and the rehearsal schedule are challenging, but this is a group that can handle it. I am looking forward to a good show." Gomes added that anyone interested in working on set construction or stage crew should call him at the Kimball Art Center, 649-8882. |