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Show Page B4 Thursday, July 29, 1982 The Newspaper KAC Art Auction to be held Friday EQUAL HOUSING LENDER AND LOAN ASSOCIATION COME TO SUMMIT SAVINGS FIRST FOR: W4 Checking Account Summit Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 1 750 Park Avenue. P.O. Box 25 19 Park City, Utah 84060 Telephone 801-649-9335 FSLIC j' fc A-.MEBMfc- fo)f?f?fo)f?SMfffS 3 1 o help you cool the sultry heat of JLsummer, we've put together THE SUMMER COOLING HANDBOOK. It shows you the best and the most economical ways of cooling your home. And it's free at any Utah Power office. Over 200 items have been received for this Friday evening's Kimball Art Auction. The event, to be conducted by internationally-renowned internationally-renowned auctioneer Don Kennedy, will feature art work by Park City artists, Art Festival participants and artists whose work has been exhibited at the center. cen-ter. In addition, a number of non-art items, including such diverse things as a Chinese dinner prepared by Ann and Mac Macquoid and windsurfing lessons from the Timberhaus, will be auctioned. The auction, sponsored by the Kimball Art Guild, is traditionally one of the largest fund-raising events of the year for the center. Music will be provided by Craig Kaelin. Deer Valley will cater the event, and decorations will be provided by Kerry Hale of Quality Interiors. The art items to be auctioned include works by such persons as Clifford Beck, Ed Maryon, Manuel de Arce, Alice Hendrickson, Diane Balaban, Sally Rosenblatt, David Fernandez, Linda Myers, Kathy Cartier, Lark Lucas, Francesco Pierobon and George Dibble, among others. All items to be auctioned may be seen prior to the event. Seating is limited and early reservations are encouraged. en-couraged. Tickets are $25 per person. The event is scheduled to begin at 6 p.m. with a silent auction. Dinner Din-ner will be served at 7:30, and the live auction will begin at 9 p.m. For reservations or information, call 649-8882. - A Classic Recommended Good double-feature double-feature material Time-killer For masochists only Author, Author Director Arthur Hiller has a little trouble with the few slapstick scenes, his handling hand-ling of Tuesday Weld is cold. (Her I-gotta-be-me philosophy philoso-phy is a thin excuse for ditching marriages.) Dyan Cannon, as Ivan's leading liiliiSliilllfciPilli )z , -.rsi by Rick lady, gets a fine opening scene and a few idiosyncrasies idiosyncra-sies of her own. (She takes aspirin with champagne to head off the hangover.) But her role gets short shrift, and she's dropped into the weird gang of supporting characters. charac-ters. (This includes Alan King's pushy producer, and Bob and Ray as two dim, amiable theatrical backers. "Author, Author" is a little rough in spots, but, its freshness and humour call for an ovation. Al Pacino, as playwright Ivan Trevalian, heads a family that's like a Foreign Legion squadron it's made Qnrjalto RGDEHflilP U & LIGHT COMPANY ..-.-XjMJjnifitiwuWiiiJiNiia'iii XT No, there wasn't an explosion at an arts and items are waiting to be auctioned off Friday night. Brough up of the left overs from old romances. Out of the five kids, four are from the previous marriages of Ivan's wife (Tuesday Weld), who has left for yet another man. And though Ivan is the best possible father for the kids, his legal claims are shaky. Like Dustin Hoffman's role in "Kramer", this is Pacino's effort to get his Merit Badge at playing comedy and warmth, and the usually-intense actor passes with honors. The script by Israel Horovitz makes Ivan a genuine eccentric a Broadway Broad-way talent who can't tie his own ties; who is prone to disorientation (he answers the phone when the doorbell rings); and has the Woody Allenish ability to throw non sequiturs about his married life to casual acquaintances or strangers. Despite a tendency to use Method Mumble, Pacino's appeal comes through with a fine bunch of child actors. (Especially (Es-pecially good is Eric Gurry, the oldest son and only blood offspring, whose unspoken loyalty says, "If the worst happens, it's still the two of us against the world." The Secret of Nimh A group of ex-Disney animators, ani-mators, led by Don Bluth, turned out this enjoyable animated film in the best traditions of Uncle Walt. The story starts out with a simple field mouse, Mrs. Brisby (voiced by Elizabeth Hart-man) Hart-man) trying to move her deathly-ill son before their home is destroyed by the spring plow. But it moves on from there when she seeks aid from the Rats of NIMH a band of rodents whose intelligence was in- Trivia Test Trivia corner stumps stars No one out there, apparently, has a good recall for '60s television. As a result, the free sandwich from the Main Street Deli went unclaimed this week. We asked about the TV star who drowned shooting a movie in South America about 15 years ago. He was Eric Fleming, better known as Gil Favor of the series "Rawhide". (You might remember his co-star, a fellow named Clint Eastwood, who went on to fame in spaghetti Westerns.) Apparently, no one recalled the incident. in-cident. We also couldn't find anyone who knew that Bonnie Bedford's racing mule was named Felix; or anyone who knew the three arch-villains we were looking for Dr. Moriarty (Sherlock Holmes' opponent), Emperor Ming the Merciless Mer-ciless (for Flash Gordon) and Dr. Miguelito Loveless (for secret agent James West) . Your trivia I.Q. will surely be higher this week. If it is, contact The Newspaper at 649-9014 or at our offices at 419 Main Street, before Tuesday noon. This week's questions are: 1. Who gained fame for shoving a grapefruit in a woman's face? In what movie? 2. How was Elvis Presley "censored" during his 1950s appearance on the Ed Sullivan show? 3. Who won the Parkie for Best Supporting Musical Actor, and in what show? A China Ridge Open Mon. thruFri. 11:30 a.m. Sat. 4 Sun. Egg Take out X ... m ' ' ' crafts fair. The above creased by experiments conducted on them at the National Institute of Mental Health. The expense of current animation has reduced most cartoon characters to walking stick figures. But Bluth returns to the Disney tradition of well-defined drawings, creamy colors, bursting detail, and fast-paced fast-paced action. The characters charac-ters are not always visually expressive, but there are two examples of the right voice matched with a well-drawn personality. John Carradine is the rheumy-eyed Great Owl, who seems to inhale and exhale cobwebs; and Dom DeLuise is very funny as a yappy, accident-prone crow. Peter Strauss and Paul Shenar (as heroic and villainous rats, respectively) respec-tively) have a fine duel to the death, and the farmer's feline, Dragon, is so ferocious it should win new advocates to the "101 Uses for Dead Cats" school. Bluth and Associates have drawn "NIMH" with the right blend of sentiment, action, and comedy. Restaurant 7 days a week, i -11:00 p.m. 3:00 to 11:00 LUNCH SPECIAL Monday - Friday 11:30a.m. -3:30D.m. Roll, Chicken Chow Mein, Pork Fried Rice $2.95 available mini bottle service. |