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Show I Page B8 Thursday, July 31, 1986 Kl8lUliigB.WnjU9gl3 nUnnfirr ., r , HOLIDAY VILLAGE MALL - riioo Wed - Ladies & Seniors $2 SENIORS Thurs-Men & SeniorsALL OTHER TIMES w 7 Jrapped CHI Howird TIM Duct it I 900 -410 DUCK Hi I T7" e j Tr 1 14 Qram Kin tt XllU, XJklVA. :tl K 1 V A 1 Irx" VSAT.-SUN.; 1:10. 3:10. 3 lof 5 H fi- 7:20,9:20 I ft A m m klWITO REINHOLD RUTHLESS DAILY: 5:15, 7:15, 9:15 SAT.-SUN.: 1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, Ralph Macchlo ran XX The wgy yQU mus, (igh, , Pat Morlta when only the winner survivesi 9:15 . starts Friday" I Lw iCf cr Anthony Michae UrVf M r7V OA,LY:9:30 11 f fl t i ,-s s, SAT.-SUN.: 1:10, ( ml city MUM M)F, :" TftK .iV . Vf ? W -iiwwiiwiiiiiriiMi n ii ii : WK--- m '.v. 5 "Christmas Cactus" by Kim Whitesides now on display at Half Moon Gallery KIMBALL ART CENTER The Kimball Art Center will be presenting Gr3yce E. Cutler in the Main Gallery from Sunday, August 10. until Wednesday September 3, 1 986. Cutler, a native Utahn, has spent many years in Utah painting watercolors and oils of the mountains, rivers and desert in the four seasons. The Lower Gallery will be exhibiting the watercolors of Carl Purcell. His early years spent in the rock canyons and sand washes around Kingman. Arizona have left an undeniable mark on his personality and aitwork. The Kimball Art Center hours are: Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sundays, 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. HALF MOON GALLERY Featuring many regional artists exhibiting various types of sculpture, oils and watercolors. We are presently showing recent acquistions from three Internationally known New York artists. Daniel Long. Gerome Wilkin and Robert Jordan. The gallery is open Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday, and Sunday 10 to 5 and Friday and Saturday 10 to 6. Call 649-0442 or 649-2567 for appointments. 301 Historic Main Street Park Record PARK CITY -649-6541 in a world he never mad: Spedil Mntigi Evtry Day daily: sms. rs d. IW, 9.19, I '' ear .at 141 . .. a... ... 'ill SLATERMIDLEia PEOPLE R "STARRING 1 "Anthony Michael Hall 9:30 i a -pi mm 1 IRS?:: II nfrnarMMfc I " f X 1 Hy- Life is tough above by PATRICK CONE Kecord contributing writer Few people have ventured above the Arctic Circle and fewer yet have tried to describe this region of great contrasts. Barry Lopez' most recent book, "Arctic Dreams; Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape," Land-scape," is a lucid and subjective exploration ex-ploration of this enigmatic land. While primarily known for his desert writings, Lopez enters this icy desert and finds it teeming with life, drama and history. After spending several years living, liv-ing, exploring and observing the Arctic, he paints a broad portrait of an ancient land in transition. His observations focus on the animals and humans who have inhabited the area; their adaptations and cycles. "I came to think of the migrations as breath, as the land breathing," Lopez writes. "In spring a great inhalation in-halation of light and animals. The long-bated breath of summer. And an exhalation that propelled them all south in the fall." Seasonal rhythms discomfort human visitors with the simple lengthening of the day, the sun drawing draw-ing ellipses against the blue sky. Winter nights combine with crushing cold and darkness to intimidate in-timidate all life, either to flee or hide. In a world fueled by solar radiation the Arctic gets its share all at once, and has to take quick advantage advan-tage of it. In the far north vegetation consists con-sists of miniature trees and low tundra, tun-dra, with expanded vistas in all Bachauer Devotees of Beethoven will be richly rewarded at next week's Utah Symphony program at Deer Valley. The all-Beethoven program features the "Leonore Overture No. 3", the Fourth Symphony and the Piano Concerto No. 3. - The Saturday, Aug. 10, concert will begin at 7 p.m at the Deer Valley resort. Soloist for the Piano Concerto No. 3 is pianist Thomas Duis, who received the silver medal in the 1986 Utah Symphony Gina Bachauer International In-ternational Piano Competition. The program will also be presented at Symphony Hall in Salt Lake (123 W. So. Temple) on Friday, August 8, at 8 p.m. and on the plaza at Snowbird Resort on Sunday, August 10, at 4 p.m. On the occasion of Duis' first performance per-formance in Salt Lake City, a reviewer noted that he possessed "a blazing technique annd passionate convictipn." A native of West Ger-V . w a VHS hi-fi Beta hi-fi PO i3nuniTMMUMiiTiauto WVU etween the Covers directions. This land is above timberline even at sea level. "Much of the tundra appears to be treeless when, in many places, it is actually covered with trees," Lopez writes, "a thick matting of short, ancient willows and birches. You realize suddenly that you are wandering around on top of a forest." Other areas are reminiscent of the temperate deserts of the southwest with eroded red and old arroyos, the land along "the lines of a desert landscape; spare, balanced extended extend-ed and quiet." Arctic Dreams is classic travel writing. After a physical description of migrating magnetic north poles, pack ice and unique geographic features, Lopez concentrates on the inhabitants of the land, the people and their history and observations of the wildlife. If you want to know how a polar bear keeps warm, Lopez will tell you of the "ice bear's" black skin and light-transmitting fur, which has no color. His descriptions of the lives of the narwhal, lemming arid polar cattle, cat-tle, the muskoxen are fascinating. People who are curious about the natural world will find the book a fine collection of information, coupled coupl-ed with Lopez' exquisite descriptions descrip-tions of the landscape and the impressions im-pressions and images it forms for him. Lopez also details the human exploration ex-ploration which has taken place in winner to r Thomas Duis, left, is all smiles around his neck following the Duis will play at Deer Valley on TTTTTTTl HOME VIDEO COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS o Sally Field 'J James Garner In t a i:im Available at Park City Home Video 1 82 1 Sidewinder Drive, Park City 649-2572 Park City's Oldest and Largest Full Service Video Store Authorized Distributor Video One Video, A Division of Video Trend, Inc. the Arctic the last 300 years and the direction it is carrying this fragile but fierce land. Stories of now legendary whaling whal-ing ships are told, as they sat encased encas-ed in the winter's ice waiting for the sun and warmth, and tales of terror and death punctuate the wilderness. Men had found that the world had no edges, but there was a tip and a bottom. bot-tom. As he traveled and lived with various groups, Lopez observed Indian In-dian walrus hunts and spent time in the steel igloos of the oilfields, a world of fluorescent lights and hanging hang-ing ferns. At another time he tells of life in a yellow survey shack with three other marine biologists and their battles with boats and the icy seas. "The four of us were dressed, as usual, in heavy clothes and foul-weather foul-weather gear," he writes. "You accept ac-cept the possibility of death in such situations, prepare for it, and then forget about it." Hemmed in by a closing icepack the men hauled and forced their boat from opening to opening searching for the sea. Finally, Final-ly, "we were out, and the seas were running six feet. And we were miles now from a shore that we could not see." As technological advances finally reach their way northward, change here is becoming more rapid; aircraft, air-craft, rifles, oil heaters and batteries bat-teries are the real narcotics of the Western World. Lopez finds clusters treat Beethoven fans X -7 as the silver medal is placed Bachauer piano competition.. AugaO.cs; ft Clout captioned by lh Nihonil Ciphonino Inttilult UftPd with peimisbion ... HUB HI onatit n .,irti.aflii..rtf.t trtir iH. tMk nt jf atffl .ifrfli iimil.nnffl Circle of dead batteries in the middle of the wilderness like the droppings of another exotic animal. Natives must make social readjustments and reorganize their economics as well. At this time of falling oil prices, the Canadian effort to develop their frigid north, the largest area of arctic arc-tic landmass outside of Siberia, has slowed but will re-immerge at another time. Lopez warns of the threatened devastation . "at the hands of the bivouacking southerners." Up here human markings take a long time to dissappear, the cold dry air preserves millenia-old com-psites. com-psites. Heavy equipment creates intricate in-tricate scars and designs across the . tundra, cutting into the permanently frozen ground, and valleys of rusting oil drums are on display. "Its likeness to a stage suggest impending impen-ding events," he writes. Lopez set out to solve three questions; ques-tions; how the arctic feeds our imagination, im-agination, secondlv. our use of the land influences our attitude towards it, and what is considered wealth in an unknown land. To the Inuit people the good life means a good family life and an intimate knowledge of one's homeland, to others it's different things. Unless you have the time to spend the next few years up north, Arctic Dreams is an exciting alternative, very good reading and might even stimulate readers into discovering the arctic, or to view their, own homes with a different perspective. Barry Lopez gives "north light" a new interpretation. many, Mr. Duis has won prizes in numerous international piano competitions com-petitions and has concertized in England, Italy, Greece, South Africa, Australia and the United States. The program will be conducted by Utah Symphony Associate Conductor Conduc-tor Charles Ketcham. Commenting about the concert program, he said, "Because of the tremendous diversity diversi-ty of mood in Beethoven's music, he is one of the few composers who merit a full program. You can listen to Beethoven and hear the entire range of human experience." General admission for the Deer Valley and Snowbird performance is $10, and a family pass is available for Deer Valley at $29. Reserved seats for the Symphony Hall performances perfor-mances are $10-12-15. Tickets are available at the door, Kimball Art Center or Central Check-In in Park City, Datatix outlets and the Symphony Sym-phony box office in Salt Lake. Me a Joy Ride... . . . rlsm ncra In Psrt City! For pure pleasure, take a ride on the Alpine Slide! It's Park City's most exciting form of summer recreation. A scenic chairtift ride lifts you to the mountain top. There, more than 3,000 ft. of twisting track await you. Grab a sled, put it in the track and you're off I Go as fast or as slow as you like, you control the speed. Hours: Monday thru Thursday: Noon to 10 p.m. Friday: Noon to 10 p.m. Saturday: 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday: 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. For further Information call: 649-8111 Group rates available Dollar Discount With this coupon receive $1 off the price of a single ride ticket. Offer valid through summer of 1986. Pi iifAr tur. ir- rhjAj i "ifmt iiri mrlti n -"t iir - |