OCR Text |
Show T0 Park Record Tuesday, December 21; 1999 C-4 For Rent: Commercial Moab Utah's finest Main Street location 970-925-4474 Thera'i lomttbisi abort four first piect. .C ; ' - ' ' ' V'.1 ' ' A LOOK fOR IT ON VIDEO AND DVD! mmm iimn vair ra obci Bill M1" Previously Viewed Video Blowout Sale over 500 to choose from Conveniently Located Next to Pavless Drug Open 7 days 10 a.m. to Midnight 645-9234 The L.A. Times Crossword Puzzle '2000 A.D." By Frances Hansen Edited by Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS 97 Afternoon affair II Anthony of 34 Culpability er and family 91 State firmly I party aka 101 Winding shape "Doctor 35 Tiny toiler 64 Menotti's crip- 92 Song division slecpovcr 102 Form of rummy Dolittle" 36 High school. pled child 93 Williams of 7 Spins ingrcdi- 106 End ol verse 1 2 Lou Grant por- highlight 65 " camera..." "Happy Days" cnls 1 1 1 Small drums trayer 37 Two : tan- 66 Christmas can- 94 Nerve 14 Girl Fri. 112 Ahhott and 13R.R. stop dem dies networks 18 Lacking vigor Costcllo film 14 Balance sheet 38 Legal order 67 Roof over 95 Oriole Ripken 19 Metric foot 113 Spring bloomer entry 39 Memorable one's head 96 Ryan or Tatum 20 Make : begin 114 Heaven, to 15 For men only actrcssAda 68 Out 97 Fairy queen 22 Start of a New Israelites 1 6 " Prayer for 40 Eye: Prefix 70 Mole 98 From : the Year's verse 115 NemoorBligh Me Tonight": 41 Hindu "World '72 " . With works 25 Outer 1 16 Places for bou- "Gigi" song Soul" Love" 99 Novelist 26 Arti or parti tonniercs " 17 Disney film. 43 "Maria " 73 Cook a capon Morrison ending 1982 44 Appear as if 74 " , 1 know the 100 Classic villain 27 Herb shell label DOWN 20 Boult, Zmed 47 Slash out of muffin man..." 102 Extended family 28 Writer Lc Shan 1 Crony and six popes sight 76 Small piece of 103 Cookie 29 Painl pigment 2 Over again 21 Ring decision 48 Wings: Latin sugar 104 Mah-jongg 31 Oscar Wilde's 3 Ballet jump 23 Baseball sial 49 Hose hookups: 77 Moore poem piece forte 4 He's "Famous" 24 Remote Abhr. starter 1 05 "Clan of the 32 Commenced for cookies region 50' Bakers get a 80 Small villages Cave Bear"' 36 William S. of 5 Winter wear 29 Hops healer rise oul of it 81 Twiddling one's author CBS 6 Longed (for) 30 Shakespeare's 51 Most torrid ' thumbs 107 Grampus 37 Na Na 7 Home for grande 57 Raged 82 He sees the 108 Hamm of 38 Outrigger heifers amoureuse. 58 He purchased future soccer 42 Faulkner's 8 Reply, briefly for short The Last 83 Nobelist writer 109 "Lord, is ?": "Requiem for 9 Dissenting vole 32 Like ABC Frontier Andric Matt. " 10 Cochise or 33 Gay: WW fl 59 Plant blight 90 Diocese digni- '110 Bed and Kettle 43 Scots Gaelic Gcronimo plane 62 Yankees manag- tary 44 Observed 45 Parallelogram: Abbr. 46 More of verse 52 Under ihe weather 53 Kind of sch. 54 Golfer Calvin 55 Florida city 56 Certain x-ruy 58 Opening word? 60 Mortise insertion 61 Picked up the lab 63 They can he dire 66 Rapids crufl 69 Is indebted 71 Toscanini's lillc 75 Cancel, NASA style 76 Swimmer's concern con-cern 77 Paisley toppers 78 Gasp of delight 79 More of verse 84 Songbird Adams 85 Not up yet 86 Bargain 87 Squeezer 88 Dispatch 89 Pronouns 90 Does a cotton-pickin' cotton-pickin' job 92 Separates the laundry 93 The works 94 Stair part 95 Definitely not a four-poster 1 2 5 T5 S 6 "T7 8 19 110 111 112 113 """114 ,115 J16 J17 i " , , , , yt" : '. ; 20 1 '21 W, i 23 . ' ' !24 , ' """jST ' j W ' ""27 i j j j j J" Jr"30 i ' 32 ST" 34 135 r"-36 j mm$nl j ""j 38 (39 10 !41 42" " r4T j j "'L44 j 45" j j . . 47 143 11 ; ; ; "ilso j 51 j ' j si rj53 ; ; jsT I i i rn ss-1 ' j j 56 JS7 ' ' rj"59 ' i i jH j ' ' j IZZIZi ' 'M ; Fj63"j l 64 ,65 j i 75 1 --jTr j : mj "n 79 80 . ' ' 81 B2 : ' ' i '83 ' i j Bigg ' '" 86 ': ' '""l8f" j . , ii 1 . 88 : 89 "T90 81 32 , ; i rib"!-"--" :nT5r -I 97 8 99 100 jlOl 102 i 103 104 105 1 106 ', I ' 107 ' 10aTl09 ' ' ' ! " 110 iTi ; "rir ; "qm" TiT ; vis" ; ; : " jTrs" ! j ; : j 71899 cam nus no naioim iBjj y Kick Brough 12 "Deuce Bigalow Male Gigolo" Rob Schneider's first movie as a lead makes his "Copy Guy" sketches on Saturday Night Live look like classic comedy. (On the other hand, given the success of his SNL buddy, Adam Sandler, who produced this movie, "Deuce" will probably rake In the bucks.) . Bigalow is a loser who makes a living by cleaning fish tanks, although he's also an expert on domesticated fish and their diseases. dis-eases. (Why didn't they call the picture, "Deuce Ventura: Fish Doctor"?) After making the acquaintance of Antoine (Oded Fehr) a high- rushstrokes by Sedona Callahan RECORD GUEST WRITER Rich Haines Gallery holds a Grand Opening at the bottom of Main St. If you have been looking for the Richard Haines Gallery on upper Main Street, then you must not know it has moved to a new location. loca-tion. After weeks of refurbishing the building at 625 Main, Haines and his manager Gregory Chaly have opened the sleek new gallery, with its smartly designed oval display dis-play windows and stepped arches to display Haines' bronze sculptures, as well as the paintings and other sculptures of Haines' talented friends. "I'm friends with all the artists 1 Reel! - MS. Main St. I Toy Story 2 bully 5:30, 7:20 ( :15pm Sat., Sun., Thure., 4 Fit Mat 3:45pm Heel 2-115 N.Mdln"sT Anywhere But Here Dally 5:00, 7:00, 1 1:00pm Sal., Sun., Thura., I Fit. Mat 3:00pm 1999 Lot Angeles Times Syndicate I! living gigolo who's an Idiot concerning con-cerning the exotic fish he owns, Deuce is left as an aquarium-sitter while Antoine goes out of town. Our hero steps into deep sushi when he accidentally trashes the gigolo's apartment, so he's forced to go into the trade. To avoid over-using the word "gigolo," the movie provides Deuce with a pimp who cutely calls it "man-whoring." Since Schneider walks through the whole movie looking like a little lit-tle wart-hog (couldn't he stop for 10 minutes and shave, fer cryin' out loud?) you're waiting for the central joke to show how he becomes a successful gigo 1 mean, man-whore. The only explanation we get is whose work is displayed here," says Haines. "We've done shows together." togeth-er." Haines says his motive for opening his gallery was his weariness weari-ness with doing as many as 16 art shows a year In addition to Haines' whimsical bronze sculptures, which depict images of a boy on a bench with a puppy, and another boy riding rid-ing a bicycle, there are the sculptures sculp-tures of Chris Navarro. "I studied with several artists," says Haines. "One of them was Chris. I learned a lot about art and life in general from him." Combining his love of rodeo, skiing, wildlife and the Cowboy-Indian Cowboy-Indian mystique with his love of art, Navarro produces sculptures of mood, movement and power. So powerful and well-crafted are his images, his first bronze piece was entered in a Cody, Wyoming art show and won first prize, and he has been awarded the Young Sculptors Commendation Award by the National Sculpture Society. Navarrols 15-foot memorial monument monu-ment of Lane Frost, a world champion cham-pion bull rider who was killed during dur-ing a rodeo, is installed at Cheyenne Frontier Park in Wyoming. Dominating the lobby adjacent to Haines' gallery is Colorado artist Bobbie Carlylels well-known monolithic mono-lithic bronze sculpture "Self-made Man," while sm.ajler versions are to be found inside the gallery. Mark Lundeenls playful "Water Balloons" sculpture is representative representa-tive of the Colorado artist Is natural storytelling abilities. His sculptures depict highly detailed real-life and symbolic figures. The beginning of Lundeeh's successful career began with the installation of his first major piece, "The Mighty Casey," at the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. The authenticity of Jim ' Gilmore's wildlife sculptures is derived from his knowledge of I HOLIDAY VILLIAGE CINEMA A. I The World Is Not Enough James Bond (pg-13) Sat. and Sun. 1:10, 4:00, 7:00, 10:00 pm toon.-Fri. 4:00, 7:00 and 10:00 pm The Green Mile (R) Mon.-Frl. 1 :1 5, 4:1 5, 7:1 5 & 9:50 pm Toy Gtry 11 Li (G) Sat. & Sun. 1:15, 4:15, 7:15 & 9:50 pm Mon.-Fri. 4:15, 7:15 & 9:50 pm. Answers for December 18, 1999 JLJLA c.Ji AJ5. S M arx iiJ?,Jii-EU JLAl-J1AAHL JLAJLJLJL AHA-tAH S 1 T A R Ljfs l U T O l"7JB e t R T s S E A T O nIa P L E S R A ? E E INT eTnTs IDh A. L LJN A Efjl- E N 1 gjTjg lTZjT ATj A ROmU ISA C l JC L A R A Isjljsl A MMj O S I A E AjM a c c o u t e IrlTt u x 1? o s ImUAA GARAGE Dp P E N 1 T E N t,Z l S U GRATE R CsTt" A R M A InQT" oTnTT A N i o n ZTjO n t I aJ R H a nJTh o M 1 W 1 d XJr-JLAl I e a .b. Cl AlK A A A hll iJAXMEliJAAi!!' A AAA Jien, Ijr" o pT Jt" o gjg r e a: t Zl cTLTTm lAluyU!. I g Ijpp oDshaTna n a o t s lTg e n ojA mo ran S Tf Et N on AAA AAA 0 ZZ3AAAA1 11 b e a t i t AAAAAATaAAAA m A AAA T AAA e AAAAA iMAAAAn AAAljn AAA J D 1 E L j E D j j S k I A I T Y j Y j 0 1 R 1 E j j ADS that Deuce's clientele is a collection collec-tion of "funny" female grotesques. They include a huge, croaky-voiced croaky-voiced fat woman; a tall Norwegian whose face is always out of the frame; and a narcoleptic narcolep-tic who shouldn't be around heavy machinery, or even a bowling ball! Even the nice, sweet, leading lady who snatches Deuce's heart (Arija Bareikis) has a secret of her own. The moral, though, is that Deuce is a hit with these women because he "makes them feel good about themselves." In one of the picture's few halfway-decent halfway-decent gags, he lakes a Tourette's victim to a baseball game, where her spontaneous epithets fit right in. iwwiMMiMiiiiiiwiwwiMinffl'i'Ww nmmmmw - h Sarah Rogers' water colors are anatomy, learned through his application appli-cation of taxidermy. GiLmore has combined his interest in anatomy with his love for wildlife and lifelong life-long fascination with art to produce the bronze elk, bear and cougar sculptures that are sought after by naturalists and art collectors. While bronze and alabaster sculptures sculp-tures dominate the floor and table-top table-top display spaces, the walls of Haines' gallery exhibit the enormous enor-mous talent's of watercbldr arid oil painters, namely SaraH Rogeiii ! Hans Schiebbld, Stephen Day and Vladimir Zolotsev, whose depictions depic-tions of the McPolin or Osguthorpe) Bam are prominently . displayed. , , Dramatic bursts of vivid color define Sarah Rogers' watercolors, which she describes as "tropical western wildlife", because of the hot-colored Rocky Mountain-area animals she creates. Rogers combines com-bines her watercolors with graphite and applies several layers of heavy lit J Happy j ii.ej l Schneider's performance is one of those take-it-or-leave-it affairs. The undistinguished direction is by Mike Mitchell. . And the script by Schneider and Harris Goldberg includes a collection of weird, unsavory types, including Deuce's father (Richard Riehle) a men's-room attendant oblivious to the grimy aspects of his job; a hasty cop (William Forsythe) who keeps flashing his sexual inadequacies; and a hooker (Gail O'Grady) with the agility of Jackie Chan. The only reputation enhanced by this flick is that of Mario Thomas, who plays a kinky matron in lacy black lingerie. Thirty years after "That Girl," we should all look so good. PHOTO COURTESY OF RICH HAINES GALLERY displayed at the Rich Haines Gallery. color to create the bright tones found in her pieces, such as "Crows" and the red-cheeked "Lobo Rojo." " East Germany-born Hans Schiebold, listed in "Who Is Who in American Art," creates his highly sought-after landscapes with unconventional uncon-ventional techniques and materials. Using palette knife, trowel or spatulas spatu-las to apply the mixed-media paints of his own making, Schiebold has cohtribUted large-scale, softly hiied depictions of Utah geological formations, for-mations, such as Mount f ! Timpanogos and southern-Utah Zion scenes to the Haines gallery collection. Plein-air artist Stephen Day, trained as a Methodist minister like his father, began to study art formally for-mally while assigned to a church in Casper, Wyoming. Taking a "leap of faith," he left the ministry to be able to devote himself full-time to the luminous oil landscapes, producing pro-ducing the soft winter scenes, aspens, sunsets and snow-banked rivers for which he has become known. "The painting process itself is like a prayer, a meditation," says Day. "For me, it's about beauty." Painting landscapes in oik on location loca-tion give Day his greatest challenges chal-lenges and primary inspiration, ""frying to render the landscape) with spontaneity and accuracy sometimes can be a struggle," admits Day. "But when it clicks, iVs wonderful." Rich Haines Gallery is located at 625 Main Street. Have you met this agent? You should rrieet him, get to know him. We has the answers for your 'insurance problems -Auto, Life, Business, Home. We may save you money, too. Call him soon. Ri3cteny leny Insurance Agency 1745 Sidewinder Dr. Suite 101 649-0152 WlFIHaiiv T POOR CC j!! JSsL jfy J Jmit,.jt |