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Show Natural History Museum displays color photos several photographs leaturing dragonflies and damselfies, to pan oramic views of hillsides and valleys. val-leys. In the introduction to "Woodland "Wood-land Portraits," Miss Klute writes, "Experiences such as ramping ta thfi to some reacti : tions which we can r mon. I hope that m! will find the taJT-these taJT-these pictured clour common bonds''! "Discovering Color in Nature-is Nature-is the title of the traveling exhibit now on display in the Utah Museum Mus-eum of Natural History. Fifty-four Fifty-four photographic color portraits by Jeannette Mute have been loaned to the Museum by the Smithsonian Institute, and will be on display until February 22. Miss Klute achieved fame with her bcok, "Woodland Portraits." " In addition, she has had over 200 cne-man shows in the United States and abroad. Miss Klute is a native of Rochester, Roch-ester, New York. She has studied at the Rochester Institute of Technology Tech-nology and she received her Bachelor of Science degree at the Univehsity of Rochester. She is employed with the Photographic Technology Division of the Eastman East-man Kodak Company as Research Photographer. The present exhibit include several sev-eral classes of photographs ranging rang-ing from a "humming-bird's eye view" of individual flowers and |