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Show Symphony draws string student ., vanish!" Carolee Grubb...vk Caroee Grubb...vktm of college algebra ckx cello won by default Jim Rose...plays bass because he was tall in the ninth grade, w 'Hair' there-in Spanish!" MT Ro e also toured for a short season th the North Carolina Symphony. He with the Norm Mahef 'TS on th ciaiical side and he 5 ten tr nSisoh, joplin, Leon RuJ Joe Cocker and George Harrison on KRSP for balance. , was worried about a friend of mine who sidTehadaheartmurmer. 'How are you doing? I asked. -Just fine,' he said 'How about you?"l'm okeh,' I said, and then all my career in music," said j.m i Rose, year old senior English major at the Univer sity. Mr. Rose has played bass with the Utah Symphony for six years. Unhassled and straightforward, he has the appearance of a rock musician-wire-rimmed g asses Jon hair-but he is totally committed to the symphony. "I like Maurice Abravanel s altitude towards youth," Mr. Rose sa:d. An expense paid trip to South America if you're a member of the Utah Symphony By ARNOLD TUCKER Chronicle Staff of a sudden everything just went. I started spinning and blacked out on the plane. That was my entrance into La Paz, Bolivia," Boli-via," said Carolee Grubb, musical performance perform-ance senior at the University. Miss Grubb is starting her second full year with the Utah Symphony. Her first season with the symphony was three years ago when she was a freshman. She took a leave of absence to concentrate on school. A math major on entering the University, she soon fell by the wayside, a victim of college algebra and the cello won by default. "With luck, I can find middle C on the piano and I can even play a little classical guitar. But I don't have much spare time," she said. "I have eight hours of class, I teach 10 students, give eight services (concerts (con-certs or rehersals) a week with the symphony sym-phony and tour locally with a string quartet for young audiences." She breaks loose occasionally with motor- "He's trying very hard to involve the students at the University with they symphony. He's tried to student orient the season this year as much as possible with two contemporary music concerts in King-bury King-bury Hall, an all Stravinsky concert on Oct. 23 and of course, Strauss' "Thus Spake Zarathustra" (the theme from 2001) which is part of the concert on Wednesday. A graduate of Highland High, Mr. Rosens hobbies range from trying to graduate this year, to looking for new and clever ways to transport his mammoth string bass. In his spare time, the little he has, he is trying to convert his ancient apartment into a devastating devas-tating townhouse, if possible. He holds the third chair in a section of seven with the symphony and traveled with them to Latin America this summer. "It was very cold," he said, "the concert halls we played in were unheated. The tour was hectic too (30-odd concerts in five weeks) but Bueno Aires was great! It has an exciting international city atmospher. We cycle rides, flying mode airpfc listening to all kinds of jazz $V listen to KALL radio because they h' most professional disc jockeys 1 course," she added, "the entire argot ar-got a break on our Latin Americt "Everything about the tour wa. lanned and enjoyable, except for she said. "It rained in Rio, fc Islands were ultra-humid and fa, central heating in the concert1, hotels. Everyone's bow strings and one cellist with a very old telle a whole concert with big clamps instrument, hoping the cracks .. open." How would you like a five week all expense paid trip to 13 Latin American countries and a salary for doing something you like? Two students at the University did just that this summer. What kind of people picked up on this? People with connection? connec-tion? Lucky people? No. They were students stu-dents who are members of the Utah Symphony: Jim Rose and Carolee Grubb. "It's very funny actually, I was walking down the hall when I was in the ninth |