Show Lifestyle t Salt £ake Sibuue Section W nf - Pre Sunday i ebraary 4f 1990 a - KKr Staff Relnette Semim Salt Lake h c Snowbird Women ho-hu- t m& M ' V lis — Photo 6y Will Stsgafs 1984 co-lea- -- I ¥ retrace J- 'a' i ' 1i il M is i " 4 6 If t ii fl ff — photo &y Moify faat? f Antarctica wiTf fee challngft adventure for members of 3 five-woma- lIHow& Adwiturs Ey Tirt&ttaft 'w'l nwn v r'f V 0 n S"aurk it's an advcrture and a v rs-- tifstyU sevr hsiv Sftis-t- raw that iify att minus ant a 'VIli fhrt rs:u:nsf ' mmuii Etition camyr? w kav orf-fain Vakcn was e t cnu'd &acn m-- w mak a mn's But watt tuvzcL Gtficr?fipKic t'Ad Ms Snarn sh was corsnirvn? fom-ifan to go alcrg th fiasadian Arctc Circle in lS'il Mnnota IOC 5 ia wni Sit chilli sntarri fKt'rff St Kf i3 F'arl Et1-tcyj5 nnt said wasta-Afln IjtsM u 9 ii "-- Barr-f- t 5- - f'r:ir to f? f ''ii to ran N:rrS) C" ai pff''fsprr fv Vi- - and da- - w ra ir ar d ?aih i id to a ard s"t3"" -j in enthim-as- tr-e- m as is br Bancroft Ms rfent t!phor pe of a Beatles weight of the rreda-h'"reunion " Everyone will want so More than they can T'Mit from possiU? give perhaps Uses knew that back m 'Tis when they splt tap Perhaps that had something to An with why they plit up r They They and we have g'me jir separate ways We have music We have vir memories ft s :wugh f et it be Please Ard so t goes l" iatAroiew ffftmplwwrt tro afher Wmr(rs ha- - Mrwi a toara w7h a git V'"i'f7 3:1 sk'' is a Sue plars rxt rrad anywhere anymore I know that if they try both the music and the mewiftry will be burted under the " to pro-pi'a- "OiT ittftmr jfrn the - I yla popl diversity ftf vi a cr-- prurrfr duta-- l ft 's "riccsyn hla-c- W r 'ili'' tnf p?f ft gvrg to This past summer we had a slew of dinosaurs on tour The Who The Rolling Stones The Jefferson Airplane and that band in America The Grateful Dead Some were comebacks Some never quit Some I enjoyed then and enj"y now Some I didn't and don't But they were all about music whereas The Beatles were in memory if not in fact about something else — and because they stopped making their music in 1970 The Beatles have stayed lost in the '60s They didn't survive the decade Their music did Their legend did They didn't Well neither did I The Linda Jane that loved the Beatles is lost somewhere back there with them The person who thought she could change the world split up over money herself when she left the commune to get a job to raise her children I ask my son who was born the year John Paul George and Ringo broke up if he would like to see Paul George and Ringo play it again Sam "No" he says Then "WelT maybe If they got Julian Iennon to sit in as a fourth The other three could learn a lot from him about the '60s"' Interesting notion In the '80s we had a fine old time remembering the '60s — asking ourselves what it all meant — and where had all the flowers gone other than jogging of f to Wall Street Wondering how we ould bring it all back But it didn't work The Woodstock Nation wouldn't be revived Which is not altogether bad Tt might be pretty fa think so but even this veteran of the chance movement has come to realize that today's ills won't be cured by yesterday's pills NothLove is in fact not all we ing' that simple anymore Maybe if wasn't that simple then Or maybe as much as my genera tion may not want to admit it my son is right I remember asking Arlo Guthrie in l&iH what he thought the 60s meant and hearing him say ' ft s too late to know and to soon to find cot'"' Well if we are ever to find out perhaps it won't be by examining that time but by examining this time b: asking our children By looking at our children Maybe the only way to final-lknow what we were is to see who they are And to hear the rnus:c mad by their lives Who knows'' Different jrummers hane been right nefore The heat? And so rt goes On And maybe that's don t want George Paai and Ringo v do it in the ovsr th hfinrs sprt fwr Ms fii'nam said Ms EancT'ift likd th pians and aspwd -to eivlead-- th svpditior sa-- Mi dun t 5i anvthing ' 6- show you m? ersv-rsc- 'am"" "?a: "I said isrtil-- bi- in fh rist d"ipir3far'! ft! fit 3K "I rrtpfnattonal f cru!dn't Pal Su $70 Hi' ewjuird- to n?ak trfO: hut ti synwwe chinhwat Mv:rt Ewinir ard a-n IW-pnna- a worn tam whsa Craia4 wia th iwtnf sriss ewmfry ska hauantr iHi8 mar? la drea?rasf ahnut fta's in acpfViawMly 3'A5wiJwt 6v jnutus a' "I start r- - arjTHntis t73ft miv eftal- - Wrtife? tornth of sf iav w'nlrt d fv f4 crvss ATtarctr3 flit naiTli's PWttJi' Enefci-Rliiaa- NftivycWf team which expects to cross 1700 miles in 120 days n frkdt Mahor rests at So'Jth C! Mdtmt Everest She was inem-!- r of 1947 S'iunubfc'd Everest Zxpdltim and 1S4 American Everest Expedition KeKie Linda Is that jt? Is it just because John Lennon is dead that I find myself totally unimpressed by thoughts of a Beatles "reunion"? Partly But I think I might feel the same if Lennon hadn't died Maybe it's my age Or maybe it's just the age I'm 45 This is 1990 It's been a long and winding road Maybe too long and winding to d 6 The stark Jivl Intamaflonal Poiarfopsdltlon si T m The beat we like to say goes on True or false? Consider the Beatles Paul McCartney said recently The Beatles (or what left of them both as a group and individually! may get together again in 1000 Imagine There was a time I might have cared After all The Beatles we said — hell after awhile everybody said — were important They meant something A British pop invasion turned counter-cultura- l phenomenon turned legend Or something The Fab Four Fab Three? Ann Bancroft first woman to travel over Ice on foot to North Pole jumps crevasse In rare photo of her on that trip She will Snowbird group er 5 event of year 1 Hartmann Al for Expedition Trans-Antarcti- W Phote by W-- The Beatles reunion may he the £0'?y — Wbur 8 1 Ekpeditfon Jt W-- BILL HALL Antarctic " " FOOD (V''tr OA's ha |