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Show Page Two The Springville Herald July 25, 1974 Entertainment Ella, the Chimney Sweep, (Tamara Fowler) tells dreams of being a movie star in song from BYU's musical comedy "The Apple Tree" playing August 1-10, 20-23 and Sept. 6-20 at 8 p.m. on the Pardoe Drama Theatre stage. The Apple Tree' Tamara Fowler has been given the leading role in Brigham Young University's musical comedy, "The Apple Tree," as Eve in the first act's Adam and Eve play and as Passionella in the second act. Opening August 1, the production is under the direction of Preston R. Gledhill of the BYU drama faculty. "Apple Tree" plays Aug. 1-10, 20-23, and Sept. 6-20 in the Pardoe Drama Theater of the Harris Fine Arts Center at 8 p.m. nightly. A matinee is scheduled on Sept 16. The other two lead parts as Adam, played by Dave Checketts of Bountiful, and the Snake, played by Walter Berry, a graduate in drama at BYU. Dr. Gledhill says of the show, "It is a delightful musical based on stories by Mark Twain and Jules Pfeiffer, and enjoyed a long-time run on Broadway a few years back with Barbara Harris and Alan Alda." Miss Fowler is a graduate student in drama and has a long list of musicals and dramas to her credit, including Marion in "The Music Man," Molly in "The Unsinkable Molly Brown," Lola in "Damn Yankees," etc., which were performed for the Bluth Brothers Theater in Southern California. Locally and for BYU she has played Nancy in "Oliver," The Springville Herald published weekly by Art City Publishing Comany at 161 South Main Street Springville, Utah 84663 Martin Conover, Publisher Entered as second class matter at the post office in Springville, Utah' under the Act of Congress March 3, 1879. Subscriptions in advance,' per year, per copy, 15c. ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo 0 rFOOD FOR THOUGHT "I I by G. Steve Allen j J In Hollywood, they don't sell wedding J rings they rent them. j It's great to grow old if you can keep I young while you're doing it ! j Creditor, a man who has a better I memory than a debtor. ' Give some folks an inch, and they'd want . to be the ruler. i Things are getting so bad that the I j looses are hairing a tough time keeping I ' up with themselves. j j You're always ahead at the Hi-Spot j ' Drive-ins. See us for an Animal friend ! Cup today. I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 (S) to be presented Rosmary in "How to Succeed in Business," Maria in "The Sound of Music," and others. She is currently announcing evening news on station KIXX with Mike Rawson as Utah Valley's first man-woman news team, and plans on a career in local radio. Of her part in "The Apple Tree," Miss Fowler says, "It looked like such a simple part, but what a production! It's the most difficult show that I've attempted in the last ten years, but, like many difficult things, it is therefore the most enjoyable when it comes out right." A 60-second movie sequence of Passionella is used in the second act and Miss Fowler went to the BYU Motion Picture Department Depart-ment to pose for it. Grant School plans activities The Grant School will resume its program of good education and fun activities on Thurs. morning following the 24th of July holiday. On the morning of Friday, July 26, the second and third grades will take a nature walk to the Mill Pond. On July 30 the fourth and fifth grades will begin a three day camp out at the scout camp in Hobble Creek Canyon. There they will study ecology, plant and animal life and have a great time camping together. Regular school will be held for all those not desiring to attend the camp out. That day the rest of the school, including kindergarten, will join them at the Kiwanis Fire Place in Kelly's Grove for DELUXE SANDWICH TURKEY CORNED BEEF PASTRAMI BEEF 89' VALUE PROVO - OREM - SPRINGVILLE - AMERICAN FORK Phone 489- Wasatch County to hold three day fair The annual Wasatch County Fair will take place in Heber City, Utah, July 29 thru Aug. 3. The activities are scheduled to open on Monday, July 29th with the FFA and 4-H Horse Show. During the four main days of Wednesday thru Saturday there will be Demolition Derby, Fashion Show, Horse Show, Flower and Art Exhibits, Livestock Show and Sale, Tractor Driving Contests, Horse Races, and Calf Roping. "Paradise of the Rockies" has been named the theme of the two big Parades which will stop traffic on Highway 40 Friday and Saturday evenings at 6:00 p.m. Bands, riding clubs, commercial, church, and novelty floats are all scheduled to participate according to Clair Norton, Fair Board Chairman. Young and Young, Producers of championship rodeos, will be in Heber City on Friday and Saturday, August 2 and 3 for RMRA (Rocky Mountain Rodeo Association) approved roping, bulldogging, Braham bull riding, as well as bare back and saddle bronc riding. Top Cowboys from all over the in-termountain in-termountain states will be competing. The rodeo will begin with a grand march at 8:00 p.m. on both nights. Jack pot calf roping has been scheduled for Friday at 2:00 p.m. and horse racing Saturday at the same time. Exhibits of foods, art, arts and crafts, needlework and other hobbies will open at 12:00 noon on Thursday and again on Friday and Saturday at 10:00 a.m. at the High School. A talent Show will be held on Thursday evening at 8:00 p.m. in the Wasatch Civic Auditorium. There are two divisions a junior and senior. Another highlight of the Fair will be the Junior Livestock .show. Judging will take place Thursday and Friday and the auction will be Saturday at 10:00 a.m. at the Fairgrounds. Other events which will highlight the Fair will include Heber City's 8th annual Sidewalk Sale Friday and Saturday, sponsored by the Retail Trades committee of Wasatch Chamber of Commerce. Com-merce. Other events which will highlight the Fair will include Heber City's 8th annual Sidewalk Sale Friday and Saturday, sponsored by the Retail Trades committee of Wasatch Chamber of Commerce. Com-merce. The City of Fun Carnival with rides and concessions will be located at the Fairgrounds. Local concession stands will provide food for those who attend at-tend this celebration. Everyone is invited to come out and have fun with the citizens of Wasatch County. lunch and some canyon activities. ac-tivities. On Wednesday July 31 the second and third grades and those fourth and fifth graders who stay at school, will have their usual swim in the afternoon at the Spanish Fork Pool. Plans are completed, and over half of the reservations have been made for the Heber Creeper Family Day excursion on August 8. While government agencies are focusing increased attention on the dilema of unwanted noise the problem is hardly new, officials of-ficials of the Beltone Crusade for Hearing Conservation point out. Noise banning ordinances prohibiting metal work and the penning of roosters within city limits date back 2,500 years to the ancient Greek community of Sybaris, officials add. 7S THURS. FRI. SAT. SUM. V J.'ti Mr. Glen Ruff of Springville Utah got his second hole in one of the 1974 golfing season on Friday evening July 19th at the Spanish Fork Golf Course. He got his ace on hole number 8 using a 7 iron. Witnesses were John Schouten and Roger Dedrickson. BYU Sounds are successful in South Africa Performances by the "BYU Sounds" in several cities in South Africa have been widely acclaimed for their high level of professionalism and polish-drawing polish-drawing two standing ovations, an act literally unheard of in that country. In the first three weeks, more than 7,000 people have seen the fast-moving show under the direction of creative director Harry Schultz. The troupe will return to Provo the first week of August. At the performance in the University of South Africa auditorium in Pretoria following a standing ovation, Isaac Swartzberg (a Pretoria professional man) said: "In all my years in Pretoria, I have never seen a standing ovation!" Pretoria News critic David Carte, who visited with the show directors and students after the first show at the Voor-trekkerhoogte Voor-trekkerhoogte Auditorium, said: "Usually I take out all the adjectives ad-jectives from any advance news releases, but this show has been vastly underplayed. "I can't believe the polish and professionalism of , these amazing young people. I just wish you were going to be in Pretoria longer so that my review could bring out more people to see what you have," he concluded. In his review, Mr. Carte said: "They're pure, they're clean, ; they're fresh. Children of the American dream we thought was dead; they stepped right out of a toothpaste ad! They're a , Norman Rockwell painting of decent, middle-class American youth come alive. . . . This was one of the finest variety shows ' professional or amateur this city has ever seen." This is the first tour of a BYU Program Bureau group to South Africa and is sponsored by the South African Mission of the LDS Church. Reg Nield, prominent South African businessman who is a Mormon, made most of the arrangements for the tour. The show is not a religious production, and includes such numbers as a Carpenters' medley; numbers from the 20's, 30's, 40's, 50's, and 60's; contemporary con-temporary big band numbers; and comedy. Happiness is to be found along the way not at the end of the road for then the journey is over. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4006 Three musical events slated to be highlights of 'Days of '47' Three musical programs featuring the Salt Lake Mormon Tabernacle Choir, the Mormon Youth Symphony and Chorus and a combined Young Adults chorus are planned as tributes to Utah's Mormon Pioneers Wednesday and Thursday, July 24 and 25. Sunrise services at the Salt Lake Tebernacle and at the site of Brigham Young's grave will open Salt Lake City's Pioneer Day activities Wednesday, and the concluding event in the Days of '47 celebration will be a concert Thursday night in the Salt Lake Tabernacle. The events are: Pioneer Day Sunrise Service, 6:30 a.m. Wednesday, Salt Lake Tabernacle, featuring Mormon Youth Symphony and Chorus, Elder Marion D. Hanks, speaker. Sponsored by $ons 0f Utah Pioneers. Sunrise Program, 7:00 a.m. Wednesday, 140 First Avenue, featuring Roy M. Darley, speaker, music by combined Young Adult chorus from two branches of Ensign Stake, sponsored by Ensign Stake. Concert, 8:00 p.m. Thursday, Salt Lake Tebernacle, featuring Salt Lake Mormon Tabernacle Choir. A choral performance of William Clayton's famous pioneer hymn of the plains, "Come, Come Ye Saints," is included in each of the programs. All three are open to the public without charge. For the fourth consecutive year, the Pioneer Chapter of Sons of Utah Pioneers is presenting the 450 singers and instrumentalists of the Mormon Youth Symphony and Chorus in their traditional service at 6:30 a.m. in the Tabernacle. The program also includes a flag ceremony by the SUP auxiliary, the Mormon Battalion, whose HERBIE BREAKS ALL RECORDS AT THE PIONEER DRIVE IN YOU MAY JUST WANT TO SEE HIM The greatest HELEN KEN -STEFANIE JOHN KEENAN I HAYES BERRY POWERS MciNTSRE WYNN I . v,.v, BILL WALSH .BUI WUSH OTRTSTEOSON NOW PLATING AT jS BOTH THEATERS U DKIVe-IN i i. ilATi. PROVO- Complete Shoow 9:20, IhOOl Uisney Co-hit: DUMBO" CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE r Ahh JUST FOR THE FUN OF IT! ONE WEEK ONLY! HURRY You neveMI met a pair like iAMtii Butch and The Kid!?'. r .. JOth CcrtWv f"" p' PAUL NEWMAN ROBERT REDTORD KATHARINE ROSS m BUTCH CASSIDV AND ACTION PACKED CO-HIT DENNIS HOPPER WARREN OATES PETER BOYLE BEN members are descendants of the original Mormon Battalion, of 1846. Musical selections will include the National Anthem, an original march by Robert Bowden, "By the Waters of Babylon," by James, and selections from "Grand Canyon Suite," by Grofe, conducted by Dr. Jay E. Welch, the organization's musical director and conductor. The concluding work for the program is Howard Hanson's "Song of Democracy," based on poems by Walt Whitman, under, the baton of Dr. Had Gundersen, who is retiring as assistant conductor of the organization after nearly six years of service. Elder Marion D. Hanks, assistant to the Council of the Twelve, of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, will deliver the address, according to Edwin C. Skeen, program chairman. Program narrator will be Byron Openshaw. Thursday night's Tabernacle Choir concert marks the first appearance of Dr. Jay E. Welch as the new conductor of the 375-voice 375-voice choir. His appointment was announced by the Church's First Presidency last month. J. Spencer Kinard will introduce the Choir's program, and Dr. Robert Cundick, Tabernacle organist, will be at the console of the organ. A speaker representing the General Authorities of the Church has yet to be announced. Featured on the program will be a trilogy of choruses from Mendelssohn's oratorio, "Elijah." Dr. Welch selected the numbers because they suggest similarities between Old Testament Israelites and the Latter-day Saints as they faced hardships, turned for help to God, and found joy and peace. In addition to the traditional hymns, "Let the Mountains love (hug) story ever told! UIRliT 0!S0E! PRuDOCTIQnS' in!. TECHNICOLOR I Show time weekdays 7:30, 9:30 f I Sat.-Mat. 2:30 - 5:00 fiihi 1 Pen 8:30 DRiNyspf'"9-M'J Show 9:15 LAWARDS THE SUNDANCE KID JOHNSON V.i j A. ! ! WINNER OF Vl FOUR ACADEMY Shout for Joy" and "Come, Come Ye Saints," the Choir will present the work of two contemporary con-temporary composers, inspired by the pioneer experience, "The Gathering," Dr. Cundick's musical setting of Edward Hart's poem, "To Utah," and "Keep the Wagons a-Rollin," by Larry Bastian. The Tabernacle Choir itself boasts a tradition beginning four weeks after the arrival of the Mormon Pioneers in the Valley of the Great Salt Lake. I'm- m I 1 paul m mc NEWMAN 1 ROBERT 1 f REDFORD I $L f ROBERT T ! A GEORGE ROY HILL FILM t I TmrilPr V V II 2H HILL 1 NOW I United Artists I 1 PLAYING I I Co-Hit iU L-""'"'' 'I COPS & ROBBERS II I I IFOX'fc J Weeknites from 6 p.m.l """TSTTi37' Sat. & SurKjrom I p.m. rTloBODY, BUT "NOBOl I JKx . KNOWS THE TROUBLE I SI II ' v ' I gj m MJJiniKuii& vnHlml ill fcSS y J:- 8ejreqa.d Nobody I I I ii k. X-kn "nArun n If V ; I.. Shows 7: 1 5 and 9:30 : If ' J VS . jjpfe MANN THEATHES I I 1 I u ACADEMY J Httll IWIHIIMI 373-4470 IWIUJAM KAYLENZ ."BREEZY Mlbc tw MICHEL LEGRANO Witten lw X) HQMS Drected by ClINT EASTWOOD Produced by ROBERT DALEY TECHMCOIDR. UMWfSW .z-i-rc:- Whip DRIVE-IN asatch County Monday Thru y 29 - R FLOWER SHOW ART SHOW EXHIBITS WASATCH HIGH SCHOOL Jul EVENTS: TALENT SHOW Thursday at SrOO p. m Tractor Driving Contest LIVESTOCK EXHIBITS t JUDGING CITY OF FUN CARNIVAL II th Annual Jr. Fat Stotk Show aODEO mid AUG. 2-3 -8:00 P.M. West's Clicmpion Cowboys T0UNC i YOUNG. PRODUCER STEER WRESTLING Tough CALF ROPING Precision SPARKLING SPECIALTY ACTS ClOWNS CLOWNS CLOWNS WEST'S TOP RODEO EULL RIDING - Dangerous BRONC RIDING - Thrilling Summer earaches and headcolds should always receive proper medical attention officials of-ficials of the Beltone Crusade for Hearing Conservation warn. Earaches and infections which are improperly treated or left unattended could be hazardous to your hearing ability, they warn. swings m HOLDEN -MARJ DUSAYJOAN HOTCHKIS MAlfflSO CO. PRODUCTION J rT ft.- Showtimes Zlb-Mwp&.gt THEATRE Saturday - F Aug. 3 GITY HORSE RACES SATURDAY JACKPOT CAlf A STtlk ROPING FRIDAY 2fl)P.M. RODEO GROUNDS 2 DIG PARADES 'it FRI. & SAT. 6:00 P. At Demolition Derby WEDNESDAY 7:30 P. M. oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo "KID BLUE PANAVISION color by DE Umm CITY RODEO GROUNDS |