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Show auc 4 - SOCIAL November 20. 2001 Uintah Basin Standard CowffurtP . vetfps In a short story called The Real Thing, American writer Henry James suggests that realism is achieved in the arts more through suggestion than verisimilitude (utter A painter in his story discovers that an elderly couple who are bonaflde ifthreadbare aristocrats (the real thing) do not render well in a set of illustrations he is doing for a novel on aristocratic lift. They simply do not come across on the canvas November 20 Grandparents Day, Duchesne Elementary, 1 1 :20 a.m. Golden" Couples to be honored at Crossroads Center, Meal, 7 p.m., dance, 8 p.m. Girls' Hoop, Juan Diego at Duchesne Boys' Hoop, Union at Carbon High School TUESDAY, s). WEDNESDAY, November21 Thanksgiving Story Hour, library, 1 1 : 1 5 a.m. to noon Ute Thanksgiving PowWow, Ft. Duchesne gym, 10 a.m. THURSDAY, November22 Thanksgiving Day-E- at Plenty of Turkey SUNDAY, November 25 Greg Hunherg Travis Rohror reg I Linburg, son rtf Wayne and Jun Iliinixirg, bus been culled to serve in the Idaho Boise mission. Gregs farewell will be in the Bridgelund Ward on Nov. 25 at 10 a.m. He will be entering the MTC on Dec. 5. ( Truvis Roll re r, son of Garry and Terry Rohrer, is returning from the Fortaleza Brasil mission Nov. 2 1 . His homecoming will be held Nov. 25 at 1 p.tn. in Roosevelt 9"1 ward. Monte Hardinger homecoming, Roosevelt 2nd, 9 a.m. Greg Hanberg farewell, Bridgeland, 1 1 a.m. Quincy Brokaw homecoming, Myton 1 1 1 a.m. Travis Rohrer homecoming, Roosevelt 9 1 p.m. Enrique Bartlett homecoming, Duchesne 1 1 1 a.m. Boyd & Dorothy Powell homecoming, Roosevelt 7th, 1 1 a.m. TUESDAY, November 27 Wrestling, Duchesne High School at Union High School WEDNESDAY, November 28 Girls' Hoop, Duchesne High School at Union FRIDAY, November 30 December Enchanted Forest in Roosevelt-Al- so eitioning and coaching on the port of the artist, and they appear aa royally as convincingly aristocratic. On the other hand, a working girl and boy, having no sophistication whatsoever, being nothing in themselves, as James puts it, prove "everything on canvas. They an Protean, like the minor deity in Homers Odyssey wlio can change himself at will into all aorta of shapes vegetable, animal, and mineral.You want royalty? These working class youths strike a pose, perhaps with some po- - as one could wish on canvas. Tom Stoppard, a British playwright, makes a similar point in his wondcrfiil comedy Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (which turns Shakespeares Hamlet inside out). A member of a company of traveling players is convicted of stealing a sheep. Thinks the head player, here is a chance to have a real hanging scene in a play calling for an execution. With the convicted players conhangcurrence, the official real-lif- e ing is incorporated into the play. Are the audience wowed (they do not know that this is the real thing)? No! They boo and hiss. It does not e to them. seem sufficiently The players go back to shamming death, and audiences find that more convincing, more realistic. Art creates, aa has been said in this column, parallel lives, art lives, that convince ua through their very artificiality and go on convincing ua and moving ua long after real-lif- e occurrences have faded into the musty past. life-lik- 1 November 8 Festival of Light Parade, Roosevelt Boys' Hoop, Grantsville at Union, North Summit at DHS - and Thomas Emily Ann Kosmack Allen Kosmack, Roosevelt, boy. November 9 - Tassy Ann Scott and Scott Clinton Hammond, Roosevelt, girl. November 10 - Kimberly Pearl Moore and Kevin Clinton Moore, Roosevelt, boy. November 12 - Amanda Ann Mart and Kelly Connor Chapooae, Ft. Duchesne, giri. November 13 - Danielle Batty and Tony Albert Batty, Vernal, boy. December 1 Duchesne City Parade of Lights SATURDAY, historical site attracts 45,000 in 10 months LDS More than 45,000 people toured the Mormon Handcart Visitors Center through October, nearly matching the total for all of last year. The center, about 60 miles north of Rawlins, Wyoming had drawn at least 45,060 for the first ten months. Last year, 45,939 toured the center, dedicated to members of The Church ofJesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints who pushed handcarts across the West to reach Utah in the 19 Monte Hardinger Enrique Burllett Monte Hardinger is returning home from the California Santa Rosa Mission. He will report at Roosevelt 2" ward 250 West 200 North at 9 a.m. on Nov. 25. Enrique Bartlett, soil of Fred and Kainme Bartlett and Suzy Gomez, has returned from the Texas Fort Worth Mission. His homecoming will be held on Nov. 25 at 11 a.m. at the Duchesne I" ward. Justin Dean, Bon of George and Mary Beth Dean has received his Eagle Scout. There will be a Court of Honor on Saturday Nov. 24 at 8 p.m. at the Roosevelt West Stake Center. For his Eagle project he built Upland Game Bird Feeders, for the Division of Wildlife Resources. century. hike Many visitors take a four-mito Martin's Cove, the site where a handcart company took shelter during a blizzard in 1856 that claimed about 150 lives. le Bob and Rea Taylor have been called to serve in the Santo Domingo West Mission, Dominican Republic. Their farewell will be in the Myton It ward at 9 a.m. on Nov. 25. Quincy Bmkuw deadly blizzard. Remnants of the fort, founded in 1852, were excavated last summer. Quincy Bmkaw, son of Blaine and Gwenn Bmkuw, is returning from the California Roseville Mission. He Liz Wool ton Woollen, daughter or Doug and Adi iAiin Wont I mi, n't urnetl from the iiuloM?ndnnce, Missouri mission. Her homecoming wus held Nov. 1 1 in the Ranillett Branch meetinghouse. Li Elray Titeneor of the Farm Management Co., a division ofthe church, told county commissioners that 37,010 people visited the site in 1999, the lowest in the five yean since the site has been open. In 1998, 46,068 visited, after 70,710 toured the site in 1997, when it first opened. Plana are in the works to build a replica of Seminoes Fort, a trading post on the Oregon and Mormon trails that was abandoned just before the i willbcspeakingintheMyton on Nov. 25 at 1 a.m. 1 Randy Arnold, son ofBob and Della Arnold will receive his Eagle Scout award Nov. 30 at the Uinta River Lapoint LDS Chapel, next to Lapoint Elementary at 7 p.m. Friends and family are invited to attend. Randy built and constructed a tether ball pole, and horse shoe pits at the Neola Community Park, for his Eagle project. youre getting pretty old when . . . Your first job was parking covered wagons. All the names in your little black book are doctors. Getting lucky means youve found your car in the parking lot. You ait in your rocking chair, but cant get it going. Your toupee turns gray. Your memory is shorter but your stories are longer. The candles cost more than the cake. You get out of the shower and youre glad the mirror is fogged up. You can whistle while you brush your You know f Tuesday, Nov. 20th 3-- 7 p.m. BfISS 0DC31LV Boyd and Dorothy Powell have returned from the Albuquerque New their mission report at 11 a.m. in Mexico mission. They will be giving Roosevelt 7 ward on Nov. 25lh teeth. nitlimCti RC AIRPLANES RC BOATS wrT Inspirations 1 QMtas 563 E. Hwy 40 Roosevelt, Utah 435-722-21- -- PLASTIC MODELS 60 '0 inOoff All SLOT CARS Chirstmai Items & Candy Coming Soon- Everything in the Sturt nOAff )LMO team associated RC Car Clubs RC Racing Track down Layaway Now For Christmas 10 RC Vehicles 152 N. 200 E. M-- 725-30- F Sal 10-- 6 10-- 2 r rr.-wH- - You order a three-minut- e egg and they ask for the money up front. Your social security number is 2. Your birthday is declared a fire hazard. You remember when Eve was just a rib. You still owe Moses two dollars. Tyler Farnsworth, son of Mark and Holly Farnsworth will receive hia Eagle Scout award on Nov. 30 at the Uinta RiverLa point LDS Chapel, next to Lapoint Elementary at 7 p.m. Friends and family are invited to attend. Tyler built an ironplexi-glas- s information center at the Gusher Cemetery for his Eagle prqject. it |