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Show Page Four - The Pyramid - January 19, 1994 Soprano returns for encoreStuff,performance ettas Waltz" and "0 by Dean Silly Stuff, Psychological Stuff, Sad Stuff, Sentimental "Same Stuff' and Old Stuff". Mitchell recently made solo with the National appearances Chorale Council at the prestigious Messiah Sing-I- n at Lincoln Centers Avery Fisher Hall and the first annual Holiday Community Sing at Grand Central. The BYU alumnus will feature some of the same "Sacred Stuff" songs presented in her New York concerts, including the BachGounod "Ave Maria" and Handels "I Know That My Redeemer Liveth". Her Same Old Stuff category includes Puccinis beloved "Mus- - ODriscoIl star is Mitchell returning Debralynn to Snow College by popular demand to perform in a recital at Snow College Sunday, Jan. 23 in the music building at 8 p.m. Tiekets are available by contacting Dean ODriscoll at ext. 616. EPHRAI- M- Singing time-honor- , 283-401- 2, .Mitchell wants to make fun of the. notion that concert and opera singers are stuffy so she is calling her performance the "Stuffy Singing Recital," according to a Snow College press release. Her whimsical family-styl- e programming will divide the evenings selections into "Sacred Mio Bab-bin- o Caro". Her "Psychological Stuff will include Haydns "LIsola Dis- abitata", in which she recently performed the star role at a New York City gala socialite evening for such stars as Barbra Streisand, Martin Short and Calvin Kline. Mitchells operatic touring has taken her throughout the west and as far as Guam to spread musical theater to children. She will continue in this tradition by including in her "Silly Stuff the "Six Songs for Naughty Children" by UtahNew York composer Royce Twitchell, as well as the zany Adeles "Audition Aria" from "Die Fleder-maus. Mitchells "Sentimental Stuff" will render Villa-Lob"Sentimental Melody", Broadways Robert Nasifs "Ah, Vienna", and a medley of selections from os three musicals. Mitchell moved from Provo to the New York area in 1990, and shortly thereafter performed at the NYC and North American "The premiere of Girl From the Clouds", two recitals at the New York Mormon Visitors Center Concert Series at Lincoln Center, and repeat engagements with the Ars Musica Orchestra and Chorale. Mitchell was a member of the voice faculty for BYU Music Department between 1979 and 1987. During that time she was also director of Utah Vocal Arts Institute and President of the Central Utah Chapter of the National Association of Teachers of Singing. Her operatic roles include engagements with both the Utah Opera Company and the Nevada Opera Company, as well as Opera West, Grand Junction Symphony. Mitchells concert work includes Utah Symphonys "Beethoven Ninth", "Messiah, Mount of Olives" and "Mozart, Faure, and Dvorak Requiems". Villa-Lob- KT Rhodes Megan Reimer Ashley Thayer Wasatch students inducted into Natl Honor Society MT. PLEASAN- T- Senior Megan Reimer, and sophomores KT Rhodes and Ashley Thayer have been inducted into the National Honor Society at Wasatch Academy. Members were selected by a faculty council for meeting high standards of scholarship, service, leadership and character. Megan has been involved with WAs community service program including work with Habitat for Humanity in Salt Lake City. She tutors at Mt. Pleasant Elementary. Megan also contributes to numerous church activities: she is on the Episcopalian Diocese Youth Coordinating Team, a g for church has attended the National camps, Episcopalian Youth Event last summer at the University of Massachusetts, and the Provincial Youth Event in Spokane, WA. She has a 3.1 grade point average. She is the daughter of Doug and Susan Reimer, Mt. Pleasant. KT Rhodes is the sophomore class president, has been on the Deans and headmasters Honor Roll with a 3.7 grade point average, and is participating in a special Honors Program. She is involved in community service working at the Mental Health Center and tutoring at the elementary school. She is also in the choir, yearbook staff, Youth Fellowship, cheerleading, and the Tigers Club. KT is an experienced dancer, having numerous roles in the Central Utah Ballet performances, including Sleeping Beauty, Coppelia, Giselle and Clara in the Nutcracker. She has also performed with the Utah Regional Ballet, and the Peteetneet Academy in Payson. KT is the daughter of Tom and Keri Rhodes, Mt. Pleasant. Ashley is the recipient of a Headmasters Scholarship, has consistently been on the Headmasters Honor Roll with a 4.0 grade point average. She is a Tigers Club member, and is participating in a special Honors Program. "Ashley is involved in a variety of sports including basketball, the Pony Club, WAs competitive riding team, and cheerleading. She was captain of the WA tennis team, and 2 singles region champ, was voted most valuable player. In addition, Ashley taught tennis last summer at Chatham Beach, Massachusetts, and was given the Sportsmanship Award. Ashley is the daughter of Jack and Caroline Thayer, Mt. Pleasant. os Beatty completes cavalry training counselor-in-trainin- FORT KNOX, K- Y- Army Specialist Jay T. Beatty has completed the cavalry scout course here. Students received basic combat and reconnaissance training, camouflage and concealment, communications, demolitions and first aid. Beatty is the son of Cameron and Jean Beatty, Ephraim. Mike Canfield Euleda Cook honored on Xllfh DirtnaaV Calendar ' FOUNTAIN GREE- N- The family of Euleda B. Cook honored her on her 80th birthday January 15 in the Fountain Green Ward Chapel. Afterwards, a dinner for family followed. She was bom in Moroni to Thomas and Lizetta Lauritzen Bailey on Jan. 18, 1914 and lived there until she married Scott Cook on April 22, 1932. They moved into a new home in Fountain Green on Thanksgiving Day of 1934. They lived there until they moved their sheep business to Meeker, CO for three or four years in the early 1960 and then moved their business back to Fountain Green where Euleda still resides today.' She makes beautiful quilts, likes to sew, and enjoys attending the temple. She is the mother of eight children: Carolyn and Sonia, Clearfield; Doris, Salt Lake City; Frank and Lynn, Moroni; Paul, Madison, GA; Louis, Fountain Green; and Beatrice, Chester. She has 33 grandchildren and 15 Communications class set tonight Wednesday, Jan. 19 Utah Watercolor Society Sportsmen for Wildlife & Exhibition, on display in Snow Habitat Conservation public Humanities College Gallery through Feb. 1. Medicare information program, 1:30 p.m., Snow College catering room next to cafeteria. Communications" "Family classes begin, 7 p.m., Snow College Family Life Center. Thursday, Jan. 20 Lunch discussion with Lynn Poulson, 12:30-- 1 :20 p.m., Snow College Blue Room. Phi Theta Kappa induction in Humanities Bldg. Art Gallery, 5:30 p.m., Snow College. Ken Baxter art exhibit begins, noon to 6 p.m., Tuesdays thru Saturdays, Central Utah Art Center, Ephraim. Exhibit runs thru Feb. 23. Friends and FAIR VIEW family of Thelma B. Anderson will celebrate her eightieth birthday with an open house at the home of Lowell and Jeanne Anderson, 35 South 300 East, on Saturday, Jan. 22, 1994 from 2 to 4 p.m. She was bom in Garfield, Salt Lake County, on Jan. 26, 1914, to William Aclof Bohne and Maud Bertha Peterson, the third in a family of eight children. In 1919 the family moved from Monroe to Fairview. She attended grade school and the first two years of high school in Fairview, then completed Grades 11 and 12 and seminary in Mt. Pleasant. She married John Elam Anderson of Fairview in the Manti LDS Temple on Nov. 10, 1937. They lived in Fairview where John farmed and went into the Grade A milk business. In 1958, they adopted two little girls, sisters Yvonne and Sherry. John died May 17, 1978. Quilt making is Thelmas main hobby, having produced over 200. She also enjoys crocheting and sewing. She still maintains a vegetable and flower garden. She worked at the parachute plant in 1945. She has been an active member of the LDS Church and has served as a visiting teacher, secretary in MIA and Relief Society, taught Primary for 25 years and was Primary presimanifest itself in various forms of dent in 1955, was a Relief Soci- expression, dance being one of them. Music and words are other forms. This performance offers an evening of integrated expresGeorge and Valene Cook sion. from Sandy, along with three of their children, spent last weekend A picture is a poem without with Booth and Eulalia Cook. words. Prevention Team will sponsor a class on "Family Communications" for all interested persons of high school age and older. Classes will run eight to ten weeks on Wednesday evenings beginning tonight, Jan. 19, at 7 p.m., in the Snow College Family Life Center. For further information, contact Kay Jensen at ext. Lynn Poulson at 247, or any member of the Child Abuse Prevention Team in the local high schools. The focus will be on family life techniques that foster more effective communication and discipline skills to enhance the quality of home life and general relationships with others in all areas of life. Time will also be spent on further understanding and preventing child abuse and ' teen pregnancy. The class will be taught by Lynn H. Poulson, associate professor of home and family studies at Snow College and author of "Uncommon Common Sense," a book on marriage and parenting skills for engaged and married couples. MT. PLEASAN- T- Mike Canfield was chosen by his coworkers as the Employee of the Month for Sanpete Valley Hospital. Mike has worked as the laboratory director for the past 10 years. He also helps in Radiology as an technician. Canfield says he enjoys living in Sanpete Valley and getting to know and enjoy the people he has met over the years. According to the hospitals news release, he loves to garden, backpack, watch football, golf and vacation with his family. Mike lives in Spring City with his wife, DeeAnn, and the five of their eight children that are still at home. He has two boys in college, a married daughter and and two granddaughters. Mike has been active in the LDS Church and community, especially enjoying the scouting programs and coaching boys basketball. X-r- ay . son-in-la- w Gayla Jean, S.l.P.A. Nod that you're 40 Grit your Dig Tyler tutli ii your litals in tbo Diwibill iife You're pity fei't walla Tkera'jilatta iwallaw 1 by Dean ODriscoll EPHRAIM Orchesis, Snow dance Colleges performing company, will perform "Words That Move - Sounds That Dance" on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, Jan. 26, 27 and 28 in the Crane Theater at 8 p.m. Orchesis director Toni Bosch said, "The impulse to create dance is a matter of spirit and this years Orchesis Company is full of it!" The concert is a collaborative effort bringing together not only the talents of the Orchesis members but others as well. Denise Ivory, who teaches with the Continuing Education evening program at Snow, taught signing to members of the company that is integrated into the piece "Hallowed Be Thy Name." Gary Chidester, a faculty member at Snow, who teaches Broadcast Communication, created a video that will be used as a backdrop for the piece "Creation Praises Its Creator." Amy Naranjo, a soprano who attends Snow, will be performing the vocal for the piece "Why Friends Are." The Snow Drift, the school newspaper, will be used as a prop in the piece "Good News." Members of the Clogging Club will be joining the company to perform in the piece "Intertwining Attitudes." 1 But pall take it til ii strife! i Edwards, Mt. Pleasant LDS Stake Boy Scout merit badge 8:45 a.m. to Noon, at the Stake Center. Manti Regional Singles 6:30 family home evening, rooms. club p.m., Ephraim City pow-wo- Sunday, Jan. 23 Soprano Debralynn Mitch- ells "Stuffy Singing Recital," 8 p.m., Snow College. ety teacher for 15 years, and was the agent for selling the Relief Society magazine for many years. She has five grandchildren and six n. 1, s, Fountain Green Thelma B. Anderson HEALTH TIPS Psychotherapy lelving into Multiple Personalities: Multiple personality disorderis currently estimated to affect 1 to 2 of Americans. Developing these personalities is a psychological response to severe, often repeated, childhood trauma. Common signs of this disorder are not remembering large blocks of time or finding oneself in strange, often dangereous places. Psychotherapy that may lake several years aims at helping the person face and deal with the trau ma, which usually allows the integration of the personalities into one. Good Housekeeping (August) Treating Leg Pain Walking Toward Less Leg Pain: The pottery on this table is the work of Osral Allred whose art has been featured by the Central Utah Art Center in Ephraim. It includes a sampling of his watercolors as well. Allred is a native of Spring City. In peripheral vascular disease, blood flow is lessened by plaque that narrows the artery, and small collateral vessels try to reroute the blood flow arou nd the blockage, but they cant handle the load. The result is oxygen starvation in the muscles of the extremities, which usually results in leg pain when walking and eventually even when resting. Smoking is the great' esl risk factor, followed by hypertension and high cholesterol levels. The primary treatment isagraduallyincreasingwalk ing program, with stops for pain, then resuming the walking. Only one drug, pentoxifylline, has been approved for treatment. If all else fails, su rgery can be employed to remove plaque or to bypass the arterial blockage. Harvardllealth Letter (August) Epilepsy Update Breakthroughs for Epilepsy: Many, but not all, people have epileptic seizures controlled by currently available medication. Three new drugs (one has received FDA approval and the other two approvals are expected soon) will offer relief or treatment alternatives to those who suffer side effects from current medications. Felbamate appears to block chemical signals that stimulate brain cells, while lamotrigine and gabapentin appears to enhance the activity of chemicals that calm brain cells. Time (August) new-fou- Tony Kevin Brotherson, Cloward, Lincoln Judd, Daren Overdone and Ryan Morris will be performing in a collaborative piece, "Reflections," which offers some exciting lift work. Mike Helms, Crane Theater technical director, will be designing the lighting for the concert and adding his skill to create exciting environments for each of the dances. Expression is an integral part of our human development. Knowing and understanding can Manti Regional Singles fireside, 7:30 p.m., Ephraim 1st & 5th LDS Ward Chapel. 1, Mike Canfield named SVH Words move, sounds dance; top employee Orchesis performs at Snow ; East. Open house to honor Thelma Anderson on eightieth birthday EPHRAI- M- The local Child 835-817- meeting, 7 p.m., Ephraim Middle School library, 555 South 100 Saturday, Jan. 22 Abuse 283-402- Friday, Jan. 21 Saturday, Jan. 22 lto3p.m. Mt. Pleasant City Courtesy of SKYLINE Fire Department Dr. King Veterinarian PHARMACY 1 W. Main, Mt. Pleasant 462-243- 4 |