OCR Text |
Show Page 22 The Thunderbird Thursday Miry 26, 1983 SALES HELP UnrJTED Successful wrestlers and long distance runners wanted for summer jobs. Average $6,000 for 3 months. 586-751- 1 50 West Center, Cedar City Opus I performed on the quad last week, and in a Monday evening concert. It will take part in the Utah Lifetime Achievement Awards gala Friday. Salad Bar Homemade Bread Soup Specials f ! ! ! j Free Medium Drink With Purchase of Meal Over $2.50 wcoupon Opus I turns in fine performance previous performances, it seemed that the whole group was full of energy and excited about performing. The College Chorale and College Choir followed A concert of American Music, is what Ronald their conductor, Ronald Aden, very closely to D. Aden, conductor of the concert, told the audience to expect from Monday evenings perforcreate a very tight and full sound. This was mance. And that is what they got, from a powerdisplayed best in the handling of The Creation, a jazz piece that consists of a musical interpretafully beautiful rendition of America to the modem sounds of the Oakridge Boys. tion of the seven days of creation. The College Chorale, College Choir and Opus I Duke Ellingtons Mood Indigo, performed by the Chorale and Opus I, captured, very adequately combined to create a very fast evening of music at the Thorley Recital Hall, and it was the style of the great composer, with the accomone that left crowd satisfied. panists and singers really feeling and the interNeil Diamond, Duke Ellington, the Carpenters preting the music very well. All in all The Spring Fling, was just that, for and George Gershwin were some of the American the audience and performer. This concert was a composers whose music was performed by the combined groups. great way for Opus I to gear up for this Fridays Opus I gave its strongest performance of the performance at The Utah Lifetime Achievement Awards. year. Even though its song' were the same as in Concert review by Bret Sevy y I Expires 6583 I Send The Thunderblrd Home For only 700 per year, you can send a mail subscription anywhere in the world. Jazz Ensemble to perform Friday The SUSC Jazz Ensemble will perform Friday at noon on the Student Center Patio. Several members are on the program, according to ensemble director Joseph G Lamoureux, some jazz, some rock, some old favorites and some new additions to the musical repertory. The public is cordially invited to attend the springtime concert, to enjoy a variety of musical selections and the musical accomplishments of the ensemble, Lamoureux said Susan Bond and Denise Hoyt will be featured on tenor saxophone and piano, respectively, in Speres Make a Joyful Noise Bond will be featured again in Leonard Bernsteins West Side Story along with drummer Kelly Graham and in Papes For Richer or Poorer with trumpet soloist Morgan Evans The jazz ensemble concert will continue with Dedricks Heres That Rainy Day Trumpet soloist Roger Seegmiller will be featured student musician Evans will be featured again on trumpet, along with alto saxophone soloist Sherrie Olson, in Bahia He will solo for the third time with alto saxophone player Carrie Hadfield m Holmans Malaga, a piece made famous by Stan Kenton and his band Still another number is Akiyoshi's I Aint Gonna Ask No More featuring trombone soloist Rob Evans. Chat-taway- Aton to attend summer seminar want the folks back home to know whats going on at SUSC, or if you want the paper delivered to your mailbox, send your remittance to SUSC box 384 today. So, if you SUSC faculty member James M. Aton has received a $2,700 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to attend a June 27 through August 19 seminar on New England writers. Aton, assistant professor of English, and 11 other NEH grant recipients will attend the at the seminar New England Transcendentalists Thoreau Lyceum in Concord, Mass. Walter Harding, professor of English at State University of New York, Geneseo, is the seminar instructor. Harding wrote the definitive biography of American essayist and poet Hehry David Thoreau and has chaired the Thoreau Society for 30 years. The study of New England writers, Aton said, will include Thoreau, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Amos Bronson Alcott, William Ellery Channing and other writers of the period from about 1830 to 1850. Aton wrote his doctoral dissertation at Ohio University in 1981, a study of Thoreau and contemporary nature writers. He has presented several papers on nature writers including presentations in Louisville, Ky , at the Popular Culture Conference and at the 20th Century Literature Conference. The SUSC faculty member teaches courses on the American Renaissance and will teach a course on American nature writers at the college next fall. 's |