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Show Park Record Thursday, September 24, 1987 Page B7 O Off-season entertainment at clubs mmmm mmmmammmmmmmm By RON GEORG Record staff writer Autumn Aloft marked the end of the summer tourism season in Park City, and the snow won't be here to ' usher in winter night-life for a while. Local entertainment spots, however, will still be offering a good time to those of us still left in Park City. At Cicero's, near the top of Main Street, members and guests can find something to do most any night. On Mondays Cisero's features the standard entertainment, Monday Night Football, assuming the players decide to participate. On Wednesdays, Cisero's offers more unique entertainment, a Local Jam. Led by ownermanager Don Ruffatto on quitar, anyone with any musical proficiency is welcome to participate. The professionals take over on Thursday, with Joel and Marty, an accoustic duo specializing in blues. Weekends at Cicero's are usually pretty laid-back. Contemporary jazz is the prefered style over the weekends, and the Joe Muscolino Quintet is the prefered band. This weekend, Joe Muscolino will play at 9:30 Friday evening. There is a $2 cover charge on weekends, but weeknights are free. Weeknight performances, per-formances, except football, also start about 9: 30. Down the street from Cisero's, and across from the Post Office, The Alamo and The Club fill up with members and guests every weekend. The Alamo is currently offering live music, featuring the Block and Tackle Band. The band performs hard country rock favorites by the likes of Charlie Daniels and Lynyrd Skynyrd, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday nights at 9 p.m. Next door, at the Club, there is a d.j. and dancing on the weekends, and dancing every night (the bartenders spin the discs when the d.j. isn't there.) A membership is good for either club, and there is no cover for either one. Near the resort, at Shadow Ridge, Lloyd's Place, a dinner club, combines com-bines eating, drinking, and music for a complete evening. This weekend, Lloyd's will bring Laura Vida, a piano entertainer, to the club Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. She will perform from 5 to 9 p.m. each night. - -V- r Ron Georg Joe Muscolino at Art Festival. He's playing with his quintet at Cisero's this weekend. wifely. jaq&Twi " '-Laura '-Laura Vidarcurwutly playing at Lloyd's private club - JL J iTftkM i i i i;.rp l ,i " r& UV ill 't Ron Georg The 'Alain o-'if you can't find the sign, look for the motorcycles motor-cycles out front. Egyptian Theatre's First Nighter Organizers of the Egyptian Theatre's first First Nighter party. From left: Marti Hud son, Park City Performances Board of Trustees; Ann MacQuoid, chairperson of par-ty par-ty ; Steve Hooker, general manager of the Main Street Mall. Bon Georg Spike's Grill, in the Main Street Mall, with its chrome stools and '56 Chrysler front end, is the perfect place for Park City Performances Per-formances first First Nighter's party of the season, in anticipation anticipa-tion of the 50's musical, "Grease." The theme of the party is "Bebop," "Be-bop," a term that evokes an era of D.A. haircuts, Wayfarer sunglasses, and chrome. Spike's will put out a "prom-night "prom-night buffet," featuring ribs, chicken, and burgers to represent the favorite foods of a pre-health food generation. Every era is identified by music as well as food and style, and the introduction of rock and roll in the fifties set the tone for future eras. The party will celebrate this heritage with favorite fifties selections Buddy Holly, the Big Bopper, Chuck Berry, etc. spun by d.j. Michael Phillips. The party, Sept. 26 at 7 p.m., is for First Nighters only. First Nighters are people who hold the Egyptian Theatre Gold Card. The card entitles the holder to attend First Nighter parties and Meet the Cast parties, covers admission admis-sion to all Park City Performances Perfor-mances productions, and gains the holder membership to Park City Performances. A Gold Card costs $125, and can be obtained by calling the Egyptian Egyp-tian Theatre at 649-9371. Ron Georg Downstairs at Cisero's. Old-time radio show live from Park City in a Constitutional awarness: on file at the library Reviewed by Denna Wright Four hundred years ago, Sir Francis Fran-cis Bacon had said, "Always let losers have their words." In the creation of the United States Constitution, Con-stitution, every loser had been allowed allow-ed to have his words. No one's protest pro-test or opinions had been stifled. Every idea, every disagreement had been brought out into the open and aired, and because of it, the Constitution Con-stitution was stronger than it could ever have been otherwise. 1787-1987, two hundred years of history wrapped wrap-ped up in one thin document. , The library, along with other public institutions, is commemorating com-memorating those two hundred years of guaranteed rights and freedoms. The staff has compiled a bookljst for readers. Be an informed citizen; take time to study or browse through some of the materials relating to the creation of the Con- Between the Covers stitution, and the men who labored over its contents. Both adult and juvenile titles are included. The Constitution, Con-stitution, history The Story of the Constitution, by Sol Bloom; Miracle at Philadelphia, by Catherine Bowen; The American Constitution, by C. Herman Prit-chett; Prit-chett; The Supreme Court, by David F. Forte; Encylopedia Britannica's The Annals of America, Vol. 3; The Growing Years, by Margaret Coit; Our Independece and the Constitution, Constitu-tion, by Dorthea Fisher; Framers of the Constitution, by James H. Charleton; Shh! We're Writing the Constitution, by Jean Fritz; We the People: The Way We Were, by Suzanne Hilton; If You Were There When They Signed the Constitution, by Elizabeth Levy. Constitutional rights and liberties Where Constitutional Constitu-tional Liberty Came From, by Alfred H. Kelly; Constitutional Liberty and Seditious Activity, by Jack Peltson; To Secure the Blessings Bless-ings of Liberty, by Barbara Bonham; The Bill of Rights and What it Means Today, by Edward Dumbauld; The First Freedom, by Nat Hentoff . Biographies Individual biographies of Benjamin Ben-jamin Fraklin, Alexander Hamilton, Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and George Washington are available in the library. Other general reference sources can be used for background information. The book, Miracle at Philadelphia, details the birth of the Constitution the disscussions, the dissidents and the final compromisesOhow the framers fulfilled the mandate they received from their states. As a final note, Ms. Bowen quotes from General Washington's diary, "the business being closed, the members adjourned to the City Tavern, dined together and took a cordial leave of each other... I returned to my lodgings.. lodg-ings.. .and retired to mediate on the momentous work which had been executed, ex-ecuted, after not less than five.. .and sometimes 7 hours sitting every day, except Sundays, for more than four months." Check out the Constitution displays in the lobby and downstairs in the Children's room. The fifth in a series of stories adapted to radio will be broadcast live, Sunday, Sept. 27 on FM 88.1 and 91.9 KPCW. A special grant from the Utah Arts Council and the National Endowments En-dowments for the Arts allows KPCW to dramatize eight stories from great American authors. The local Mountain Bell office provides coporate sponsorship. There will be three more "Radio Tales," each broadcast live on the last Sunday of October, November, and December. This Sunday, you are invited to go on a safari hunt back 60 million years in time with Ray Bradbury's time machine, in his short sci-fi story, "A Sound of Thunder." Safari guide Travis (voiced by Dan Ward), and his assistant Lerperance (by David Nelson) take three hunters into a world where man has not made a difference. Could man's travel into the past change the present, and is our en-viornment en-viornment at the mercy of man's foolishness are two questions Bradbury Brad-bury looks at in this adventure. Additional Ad-ditional cast members include Amy Regan and Sherrie Acerson. Sound effects are by Steve Phillips, and the show is directed by Denna Wright and Jo-Ann Collin. "Radio Tales" brings alive again those oft-remembered nights of times past when friends and family would huddle about the radio, enjoying enjoy-ing the pictures in their minds instead in-stead of the video images of a television televi-sion screen. The difference here is that the voices are also friends and maybe family. Anyone interested is invited to participate in "Radio Tales." The routine is less complicated than a theater production and the finished product is 30 to 45 minutes long. A director creates a script from a short story, then compatible voices are chosen through auditions. Three to five rehearsals are scheduled, one of is geared to instruct in-struct people in the technical aspects of broadcast. The live broadcast broad-cast originates from KPCW in the Marsac Building, although other sites may be chosen for upcoming "Radio Tales." For now, "Radio Tales" is speculative, its future dependant upon financial and community support. sup-port. Interested parties can contact any staff member at KPCW at 649-9004. Ti mm aim mi 7-"Tt if- 1 S- a"1 -- |