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Show i & Ifl -jy V I GREGORY PECK assays an entirely new kind of role as Atticus, the gentle father and fighting attorney in the screen version of Harper Lee's best-seller, "To Kill a Mockingbird." Mock-ingbird." Left and right are Mary Badham as "Scout" and Phillip Alford as "Jem." The film begins Friday at Uinta. To Kill a Mockingbird' is film masterpiece opening at Uinta ren. This film's popularity will be endless; it will most certainly cer-tainly return again and again by popular demand to fill the desires of those who will want to see it again and again. Young heifers need salt just as much as mature dairy cows. Be sure they always have access ac-cess to it. Hollywood, in its brightest moments or artistic triumph, has never brought to the screen a finer motion picture than "To Kill a Mockingbird," starring Gregory Peck. To be unveiled to a most fortunate' audience Friday at Uinta Theatre, this Alan Pa-kula-Robert Mulligan-Brent-wood release by Universal literally lit-erally sparkles in its own brilliance, bril-liance, attaining the magic of majesty, the heart-tugs of nostalgia, nos-talgia, the stratling shock of sudden surprise, the glowing warmth of homespun humor and, above all, the penultimate of a motion picture's responsibility respon-sibility to entertain. More than 9,000,000 book-lovers book-lovers haave already thrilled to the beauty of Harper Lee's Pulitzer Prize novel, "To Kill a Mockingbird," a modern classic of American literature. Many times that number will savor the equally brilliant adaptation ad-aptation for the screen of the tender, moving tale of a Southern lawyer's efforts to minimize the traits of hatred and prejudice in the growing minds of his two young child-) |