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Show Page Two - The Springville Herald - January 3, 1980 Oriental exhibit to be displayed The rich culture and history of China is captured cap-tured in the Republic of China's National Exhibition to be displayed for the first time in the western United States at Brigham Young University, Jan. 7-29. The exhibition, on loan from the Chinese National Museum of History in Taipei, Taiwan, will be in the B.F. Larsen and secured galleries of the Harris Fine Arts Center. A reception opening the exhibition will be in the Secured Gallery at 7 p.m. Jan. 8. The exhibition includes many traditional and modern Chinese paintings, pain-tings, ivory carvings, wood carvings, bamboo carvings, jade works, ceramics, embroidery and photographs. "There are 64 paintings by famous Chinese artists, ar-tists, young and old," said Benjamin Ho, an editor for the National Museum of History. "Many of the paintings are modern, yet traditional." Ho, who accompanied the exhibition to Provo, said the key to understanding un-derstanding Chinese paintings and other art pieces is to know about the culture and its predominant symbols. "The Chinese have a saying that, 'In every painting there is always a poem, and in every poem there is always a painting,' pain-ting,' " he said. "For instance? a pine tree means longevity, because it is evergreen; bamboo means humility, because the higher bamboo grows, the lower it bows; and the plum blossom means perseverance, because it is the only flower in our country that blooms in the winter." Ho said there are 54 ivory, wood and bamboo carvings in the display. While the wood carvings are generally very large, he said, the ivory carvings car-vings are very often just the opposite. DANCING WITH MISS QUINN FROM JAN. 4, 5, TO MAY 10 17 WEEKS FRIDAY 4:00 to 4:50 Ages 7-1 1 5:00 to 5:50 Ages 7-10 6:00 to 6:50 Ages 7-10 7:00 to 7:50 Ages-Adults SMALL GROUP INSTRUCTION 8:00 to 8:50 DISCO SAMBA, DISCO JIVE, Ages-Adults WEST COAST SWING, LATIN HUSTLE, NEW YORK HUSTLE SATURDAY 9:00 - 9:50 Ages 6-7 10:00-10:50 Ages 8-10 TAP, FREE-STYLE BALLET, HAWAIIAN, DISCO, CREATIVE DANCE, TUMBLING TAP, FREE-STYLE BALLET, CHARLESTON, HAWAIIAN, DISCO, CREATIVE DANCE, TUMBLING BOYS DANCE CLASS TAP, DISCO, TUMBLING 12:00-12:50 AGes 7-10 Cost: 17 Weeks $34.00 Class limited to 10 person REGISTRATION: Friday 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Pioneer Museum Or Call 377-8383 "The ivory carvings are exquisite and delicate," he pointed out. "They include tiny Chinese characters so small that you often need a magnifying glass to see them." The 39 jade works in the exhibition are exact replicas of ancient jade works. Ho explained that although there are many ancient jade pieces in the national museums of Taiwan, they are too delicate to be included in the traveling exhibition. He said that master jade craftsmen from the island nation have replicated to the finest detail many jade works several hundred years old. "Jade is a very precious stone in our culture," Ho commented, "because it is considered to be good for your health. When our Chinese forefathers would die, their friends would bury some jade with them so they would have good health in the after-life. "With the jade, people were also buried with ceramic funeral objects," Ho said. "Some of these tri color ceramics from the Tang dynasty are included in the exhibit. The ceramics are decorated with horses, camels, civil officers and other characters who would serve the person in the after-life." The exhibition and the opening reception are open to the public free of charge. The B.J. Larsen Gallery is open Monday through Saturday, 7 a.m.-10 a.m.-10 p.m. The Secured Gallery is open Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. The exhibition is sponsored by the Department of Art and Design. Performing 17th - and 18th - century music on instruments of the same era, the Amade Trio will present a concert at BYU, Jan. 9. The concert, sponsored by the university's JUNIOR COUPLE DISCO including DISCO SWING, LATIN HUSTLE, AND NEW YORK HUSTLE TAP, FREE-STYLE BALLET, CHARLESTON, HAWAIIAN, DISCO, AND TUMBLING BOYS DANCE CLASS TAP, DISCO, TUMBLING ADULT COUPLE DISCO GW cr eft Hue IRree Department of Music, will be in the Harris Fine Arts Center Madsen Recital Hall at 8 p.m. The trio is composed of . Sonya Monosoff, Malcolm Bilson and John Hsu. The group is trio - in -residence at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, where they have concentrated their efforts on the trio literature of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven. Individually and as a group, the Amade Trio members have given many concerts throughout the United States, Canada and Europe. The musicians have also recorded several albums, with Miss Monosoff's recording recor-ding of the Bach Sonatas with James Weaver, harpsichordist, receiving the 1970 Stereo Review Award for "Best Record of the Year." Bilson performs on a -fortepiano replica by Philip Belt, built in 1977. It is an exact copy of an instrument built by Anton Walter of Vienna in the 1780s. Miss Monosoff's Baroque violin is by Joseph Klotz, 1795, and Hsu's Baroque cello is by an anonymous French cello - maker from about 1750. The ensemble will open their performance with Haydn's "Trio in G Minor, Hob. XV: 19." A product of Haydn's years in London, the trio was published in late 1794 as the middle work of the three trios, Op. 70. These trios are dedicated to Marie Therese, Princess Esterhazy, the widow of Haydn's former patron, Prince Anton. The second number on the program will be Mozart's "Trio in C Albert G. Dattge Albert George Dattge, 73, S. 17th St., Las Vegas, died Dec. 12, 1979, in Las Vegas, where he had lived for-35 years. Several relatives live in Utah County., : He was born April 2, 1906 in Eureka,"to George ' and Eliza Dattge. He worked as a public accountant. ac-countant. Survivors include his wife, Rilda, Las Vegas; two sons and three daughters, Deron Dattge, Alan Dattge, Verla Jean Purdy, all of Las Vegas; Carolyn Marin Seither, Sacramento, Calif.; Lois Gwen Engiehart, Bur-fordville, Bur-fordville, Mo.; 12 grandchildren; grand-children; five great grandchildren; two sisters, Bessie Smith, Orem; Carol Canfield, Provo; a step sister and three stepbrothers, May Gabbitass, Springville; Lavell Croft and Herbert Croft, Provo. Services were December 17 in the Las Vegas Fifth LDS Ward chapel. Burial was in the Memory Gardens Cemetery. Mideval knights rode European Great Horses, ancestors of the modern Belgian breed. B-6 B-10 1-29 1-22 -J 1980 Pizza Hut. Inc. Major, K. 548." Written in Vienna in 1788, this trio is one of six late piano trios Mozart composed only a short time before his death. The cello part is particularly notable in this piece because of its great degree of independence in-dependence from the bass line. The trio's final number will be Beethoven's "Trio in G Major, Op. 1, No. 2." This composition, which may have been sketched while the musician was living in Bonn, was finished after Beethoven moved to Vienna in 1792. The three trios, Op. 1, were published in 1795 with a dedication to Prince Karl von Lichnowsky. It was through these trios that Beethoven, alread known as an accomplished pianist, came to the attention at-tention of the Viennese public as a composer. The Amade Trio's concert at BYU is open to the public. Tickets are currently on sale in the Music Ticket Office of the Harris Fine Arts Center. This Lyceum Series performance is co-sponsored co-sponsored by the BYU Lyceum Committee and the ASBYU Culture Office. Kathy Quinn, shown here teaching dance classes Friday. Dance classes to start Friday The former dance soloist for the BYU Ballroom dance team, Kathy Quinn, will be teaching dance beginning Jan. 4. The classes will start this Friday 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. for children and adults on Saturday 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. for children. Miss Quinn will be teaching adult couples disco, including the Latin and New York Hustle. She will also teach boys ages 7 to 10 tap, disco and tumbling. Classes offered to girls age 7 to 11 are tap, ballet, Charleston, Hawaiin and disco. Also, she will teach junior couples Disco dancing, ages 7 to 11. Interested persons may call Miss Quinn at 377-8383 377-8383 or register on Friday 4 to 8 p.m. or Saturday 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Pioneer Museum, 175 S. Main. Miss Quinn's accomplishments ac-complishments include winning Utah Star Adagio championship. For two consecutive years, When two Englishmen meet, their first talk is of the weather. Samuel Johnson "Wit is the sudden marriage of ideas which Deiore tneir marriages were not perceived to have any relation." Mark Twain Connie Chang and Benjamin Ho, representatives of the Chinese National Museum of History in Taipei, Taiwan, uncrate a few of the many artworks in with a partner, will be in Springville starting touring Europe and winning third place in team competition in Blackpool, England. She has also taught and judged dancing in Utah and California. Music workshop starts Jan. 1 9 OwenRowewill sponsor a special workshop for church music people on Jan. 19, in Payson. The workshop will feature the reading of many new choral publications representing over fifty music publishers. All participants par-ticipants receive a free packet of music and reference materials. Displays of new music for organ, piano, children, etc.; will also be featured. Guest clinician for the event will be Jerry Jackman, president of Musicart West of Orem. Rowe said ' the workshop will start at 9 a.m. at Ye Olde Organ Shoppe, 11 S Main, Payson. There is no charge, but reservations are necessary. For more information, call Rowe at 465-4482. Organist Sunday, at 7 p.m., organist David N. Ord will play a recital at the Springville North Stake Center, 400 No. 400 East. Ord was born in 1955 in LasCruces, N.M. Both his parents are from Utah, however, and the family now resides in Brigham City where his father works as a physicist. David has six brothers and two sisters. He has studied organ since he was 13. While in high school he participated par-ticipated in a large Northwest North-west Area Music Festival in Spokane, Washington. He came to BYU on a music scholarship as an organ major,-studying with Dr. Parley Belnap. He is now a fifth year senior student at BYU, pursuing two majors at the same time; electrical engineering and organ performance. (f New litem Special! QUARTER LOW FRENCH SHRIMP STEAK CHICKEN CALORIE DIP BOAT AND DINNER PLATE SANDWICH DINNER LOBSTER $1.49 $1.79 $1.99 $2.99 $4.99 OUR CHILDREN'S MENU SERVED TO ANYONE - ANYTIME Closed Sundays OPEN DAILY FROM TZZ FRIDAY A SATURDAY 11 T09 SPANISH FORK 935 North Main Street Phone 798-2W5 cluded in the Republic of China's National Exhibition, to be displayed at Brigham Young University beginning Jan. to play Sunday From 1974 to, 1976, David served as a missionary in the Germany Ger-many - Munich LDS Mission. While in Germany, Ger-many, he had the opportunity op-portunity to play some of the great German organs in Freiburg, Augsburg and Munich. Upon his return to BYU he has continued to study with Dr. Belnap. , He was a participant in the Utah organ contest this year in Salt Lake City, and has played at the BYU devotionals and convocations. .t-. Ord's program this Sunday will feature the works of Buxtehude," Bach, Frank, Schroeder, Reger and Robert Manookin. The last three are contemporary musicians. . ffnyaisn Deep fried shrimp and charbroiled hibachi beef brochetteo served with our special shrimp and teriyaki sauce. A FEW OF OUR OTHER SELECTIONS ' M 7. If , David N. Ord "According"" to the National Fire Protection Association, five seconds is the safe speed for each person to pass through a revolving door. if aaaaaaaBBHiB an w Crisis line needs volunteers Crisis Line for Utah County needs volunteers. An open meeting will be held Jan. 10 at 7:30 - 9 p.m. in the south courtroom cour-troom on the third floor of the county building, 100 E. Center, Provo. Crisis Line is a nonprofit non-profit organization, funded by the United Way of Utah County and the Department of Social Services (Title XX). The agency serves as a listening post to help callers solve their problems by helping the client to find solutions themselves, through personal and community resources. It provides confidential listening and emergency referrals. Other types of calls deal with drug problems, family or individuals in-dividuals seeking counseling, depression, : suicide, spouse and child abuse, rape or people who are lonely and just want to talk. Crisis Line is a service for all county residents, all ages, with problems of almost any nature. The line operates with the help of 68 volunteers, 24 hours every day, seven days a week. Anyone interested in volunteering may attend the meeting, call Crisis Line 375-5111 or write P.O. Box 1375 and request an application. A training session for new line workers will begin soon. Exchange program needs homes On Jan. 22, South American students will be arriving in the U.S., to participate in Pacific Intercultural Exchange's semester homestay program. PIE is in need of interested in-terested families who wish to participate in this exchange of cultures. If you would like to join in this experience, please contact Douglas (Rick) Hutson, 187 W. 200 South, .American Fork, Ut 84003, (801) 756-7789. TNtdtitckous pMfWr M MfVM with choice of baked potato or ooioen rrencfi inee ptueour (Reg. Price $3.99) 1 1 TO 9:30 Ecsy Freeway Access Plenty of Parking |