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Show I vdT ( M ) t .... , i i . .... IM mim Violist Clyn Barrus and pianist Mack Wilberg will combine for a BYU faculty recital Sept. 15 at 7:30 p.m. in the Madsen Recital Hall of the Harris Fine Arts Center. They will repeat the performance perfor-mance Sept. 18 at 7:30 p.m. as part of the Temple Square Series in Salt Lake City. Admission is free. BYU faculty musicians set recital Two Brigham Young University faculty musicians have prepared an evening of Brahms, Bloch and Benjamin Ben-jamin for their first recital in the 1987-88 season. Violist Clyn Barrus of Provo and pianist Mack Wilberg of Orem will give a joint viola-piano performance Sept. 15 at 7:30 p.m. in the Madsen Recital Hall. Admission is free. They will repeat the recital as part of the Temple Square Series Sept. 18 at 7:30 p.m. Planned for performance is Brahms' Sonata in F Minor, Ernest Bloch's Suite for Viola and Piano and Arthur Benjamin's Sonata for Viola and Piano. The Brahms' work is one of a pair of sonatas that comprise the last instrumental in-strumental works he wrote before his death. Barrus characterizes the mature composition as being "full of joy and optimism." The Bloch suite is generally considered con-sidered to be among his greatest compositions. ' 'While it is filled with the Jewish idiom that identifies all his music, it features its own originality," says Barrus. "The work is a penetrating portrayal of one's deepest feelings and goes from bright blue colors to the dark maroons in tonal presentation. presenta-tion. It is also an extraordinarily vir-tuosic vir-tuosic piece, requiring great technical demands of both instruments." Benjamin was strongly influenced influenc-ed by the styles of such early 20th-century 20th-century composers as Goldmark and Korngold, who wrote film music. ONCE AGAIN ON ITS GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY, SNOW WHITE HAS SHATTERED BOX OFFICE RECORDS AND HAS BEEN SEEN BY MORE MOVIE GOERS THAN ANY OTHER FILM IN AMERICA. DONT MISS THE MOVIE EVENT OF A LIFETIME. SHARE IT WITH SOMEONE YOU LOVE TOOAV. cnowWhite 50tf 'niin'erxari' WlJy t Utiut; M.lm..t Al 1:00, 2:45 4:30 J Niahllv At 7:00 S 8:45 .SCcR1 a? NOW two : BIG HITS TOGETHER i 1 1 II 1 1 J I rjVnvVrJ SPORTS CARDS ETC. 117 T 1 we iuy ami oen Baseball Cards Football Cards Posters & T-Shirts All Kinds of Cards Etc. Plus SUPPLIES TO MAINTAIN YOUR CARD COLLECTIONS Bring in this coupon for 10 Discount 749 North State, "Though his music may have dome of the characteristics of Hollywood, it is nonetheless an expression ex-pression of individuality," says Barrus. The composer is best known for his much performed "Jamaican Rumba." He wrote several serious compositions, however, but each had a lightness and flair that the rumba seems to possess, according to Barrus. "The drama is expressed by the demands on the instruments as well as beautiful and lyrical melodies." Both Wilberg and Barrus are relatively new to the BYU music faculty. Wilberg joined in 1984 to direct the Concert Choir, an audition ensemble that is one of the most prestigious chorales at the university. universi-ty. Barrus left a 20-year performance career in 1985 to conduct the Philharmonic Philhar-monic Orchestra, the premiere instrument in-strument ensemble at BYU. "We discovered early that we have common goals as far as our music and its interpretation is concerned," con-cerned," says Barrus. "We both taught at the Salt Lake City-centered Utah Academy of the Arts and combined com-bined for numerous on-campus performances per-formances this summer. No doubt we will perform again together in the future." Great ideas saved through assertiveness Many great ideas are never voiced because people lack the assertiveness asser-tiveness to speak their opinion. Also, sometimes people are not assertive because they confuse it with aggression; when in essence, the two are very different. "Assertiveness is a direct statement that does not include aggression, nor is it passivity," said Margaret Hoopes, core faculty member of the BYU Comprehensive Clinic. The clinic, which will be starting an eight-week assertiveness training group, is concerned with helping people learn new responses that communicate personal rights, , feelings, and desires. People who are interested in assertiveness training should contact con-tact the BYU Comprehensive Clinic at 378-7759. Space is limited. STARTS 8:30 ADULTS $3 KIDS UNDER 12 FREE Orem Expires 10-2-87 'idm Montana faculty show featured at BYU gallery The University of Montana Art Department Faculty Show, which features a group of artists working with many diverse topics and media, opened Friday, August 14, at BYU's Gallery 303 in the Harris Fine Arts Center and will continue until September Sep-tember 30. The six faculty members par-, ticipating include Stephen Connell, James G. Todd Jr., Beth Lo, David James, Robert Kiley, and Donald L. Bunse. The exhibit is open Monday through Thursday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Friday and Saturday from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Connell, who began working in ceramics, is probing multi-media effects ef-fects and the use of neon light as symbolic reference. Todd, whose art is devoted to political and social themes, has exhibited in East and West Germany, China, Bulgaria, Spain, South America, and throughout the United States. Lo, who recently received the American Craft Museum Design Award, works in ceramics, mostly porcelain and white ware. James, who has shown nationally at juried competitions, works in spray painting, pain-ting, mixed media assemblage and installation. Kiley has exhibited his paintings, prints, drawings and photographs throughout the U.S., Europe and Japan. Bunse, whose work was " recently reproduced in "The Complete Com-plete Collagraph," was one of the inventors in-ventors of the collagraph form of printmaking. Carillon Bell recital Sept. 8 The associate organist and choir master at First United Methodist Church in Lubbock, Texas, has : prepared a series of carillon bell recitals Sept. 8 and 15 at 6:30 p.m. at , Brigham Young University. The BYU Music Department has -brought Don Cook to campus for a month to instruct students, and the .performances are part of that training. The 45-minute Tuesday recitals ; will be at the Carillon Bell Tower. The j audience is invited to bring lawn chairs and blankets for seating convenience. con-venience. Following the recitals, '. those interested will be welcome to . come to the base of the tower and ex- ; amine the console. Cook performed the first of the series last evening; Russell Sorenson, an advanced student on the carillon, will play Sept. 8, and another veteran student player, Kelvin Smith, will perform Sept. 15. Cook played as a student carillon-neur carillon-neur while at BYU between 1977 and 1982. He also received advanced training train-ing on the bells from Albert Gerken at the University of Kansas while he earned a DMA in organ performance. In 1984 he passed both a tape and performance per-formance audition by the Guild of Carillonneurs in North America to be included in its membership. ; Attention IBM Owners: Your old Correcting Dual Pitch Selectric and just $199 will uprade your office to electronic typing! brother. NEW FULL SIZE OFFICE ELECTRONIC TYPEWRITER Compare your present typewriter with these advanced electronic features built into the new Brother EM-701! Brother I IBM EM-701 1 . Selectric 500-character memory correction YES' NO 4-line format memory YES NO Boldface YES NO Automatic centering YES NO Automatic underlining YES NO Decimal tabulation YES NO Automatic relocation YES NO Computer compatible YES NO 10,12,15 pitch with spacing YES NO . .-riMG ANMSOR OF " rw - IMB Correcting Selectric Models 893, 895, 6703, 6705 in good working order. 1 Your BROTHER HEADQUARTERS in Provo. We stock all Brother supplies I "We Service What We Sell" SCERA Shell J. Golden Kimball show portrays real folk hero As an early 20th century General Authority for the LDS Church, J. Golden Kimball gained legendary status for his frontier cowboy candor, wit and comic timing. While the legend still lives in the mythology of Mormon folk tales, wir-terproducer wir-terproducer James Arrington has gone beyond the stories to create a one-man show that combines Kimball's Kim-ball's humor with his genuine spiritual acceptance of the LDS faith. The show, "J. Golden," will be performed with Dallin Christensen in the role Sept. 4, 5 and 7 at 8 p.m. at the SCERA Shell in Orem. Tickets will be available at the door. Arrington developed the play four years ago after hearing James N. Kimball, a great-nephew of the early 20th century leader, provide narration about his well-known relative. "I laughed and laughed when I heard the show," says Arrington, "But I felt there was probably more to the man than I was seeing. My research yielded a multidimensional multi-dimensional man, and material for an entertaining and informative show." As he prepared its premiere at Brigham Young University in 1983, Arrington says some BYU professors Auditions for staged musical Mountain View High School Performing Per-forming Arts Department will be hold auditions for younger boys within the community for their upcoming musical production of PETER PAN. The aduitions have been slated on ; Wednesday, September 9, and Thursday, Thurs-day, September 10, from 3 to 6 p.m. in the Mountain View High Schoool auditorium. The production is under the direction direc-tion of Charles Lynn Frost, with Brian Petersen handling the vocal music, and Robert Bird the orchestra. The ' production staff is looking for 12-16 Orem area boys, that range in age ' from 8 to 15. Varrious sizes, shapes, : and voices are also heeded. The boys ' will be required to sing two minutes from any fast-paced song at the audition, audi-tion, preferably from a Broadway musical. They will also need to participate par-ticipate in a brief dance audition that will be taught at the time of auditions. The production will be performed perform-ed for six total performances the first week of November, 1987, at Mountain View, with professional stage flying by Peter Foy, who flew the Broadway productions of PETER PAN. For ad-. ad-. dition information concerning auditions audi-tions or roles, please contact Charles L. Frost at Mountain View High School during working hours-227-8759. . Sug. Retail Lets Trade-in $699.00 $500.00 YOUR NET COST '199 plu, tax 2 WEEK SPECIAL Brand now fully guarantood! Many mor footuroi, loo! 324 West Center Provo 374-0725 Orem-Geneva Times Wednesday September 2, 1987 Page 8- were a little nervous, thinking he might offend people. They kept asking me the number of times I used swear words, something for which Kimball is famous," he says. "I had to say I didn't know;' they rolled their eyes and walked away." The result, however, was euphoric for Arrington, who saw it received enthusiastically without a single complaint. "It later occurred to me that anyone coming to see 'J. Golden' would know something about him. What I didn't think anyone reckoned on was that I would bring forth the historical man, the real J. Golden. He was dedicated to the church and the saints." Arrington rejected many of the stories told about Kimball because "it was clear they weren't true." Even Kimball once said people often put into his mouth what they'd like to say. As he wrote the play, Arrington emerged with clear and strong feelings about how he wanted Kimball Kim-ball to be played, and has carefully directed the show to get the desired effect. Christensen had his first experience ex-perience playing Kimball when he Historic flags fill museum bicentennial exhibit An impressive array of historic flags and banners fills the foyer of the Museum of Church History and Art in a new exhibition celebrating the bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution. Installed as a companion exhibit to one opened this week at the North Visitor's Center on Temple Square, the Museum exhibit builds upon the theme, "Title of Liberty." A mola created by Cuna Indians from the San Bias Islands in Panama in the 1960s and a painting done by Minerva Teichert a decade earlier depict the Book of Mormon story from which the exhibit takes its theme. The mola and painting show the Nephite army commander Moroni hoisting a banner atop a pole to rally his people to the defense of their religious and political freedom. The banner declares, "In memory of our God, our religion, and freedom, and our peace, our wives, and our children." J ' A ....... I -"XCl s "j"?1'! ' ,yj gj snJ Orem Community Hospital's Emergency Center is open 24-hours a day with a physician always on duty. Nearly all injury or illness can be treated at the center. New Emergency Center at Hospital After treating over 12,000 people with injuries or illnesses in 1986, the staff of Orem Community Hospital's Emergency Center was glad when their new emergency cenler was recently completed and opened. "The old Emergency Center was adequate in 1981 when the hospital was built," said Larry Layne, Center manager, "but over the years as we started treating 1,000 people a month, with as high as 1,300 a month during the summer, we needed a larger facility." The new Emergency Center, open 24 hours a day, is located on the south side of the hospital and is double dou-ble the size of the previous area, allowing treatment of up to nine patients pa-tients at one time. It has trauma, cast, suture, ear-nose-throat, endoscopy, GYN, and general examination rooms, each with specialized equipment. equip-ment. A larger and more comfortable waiting area was added and a more accessible ambulance entrance was constructed. A physician, specially trained in emergency medicine, is always on duty. "Most any type of injury or illness il-lness can be treated at the new center," said Layne. "In part because of the recent addition of special performed at City Repertory Theater in Salt Lake City earlier this summer. sum-mer. "Dallin creates a strong image of Kimball, and people who know the leader have told me how well this show portrays him," says Arrington. "J. Golden was a cowboy from Bear Lake; Dallen was raised on an Arizona ranch. He inherently understands under-stands the kind of man Kimball must have been, and gives a great performance perfor-mance that is a little tougher, a little more humble, and a little more ragged around the edges that previous shows." Arrington says he's pleased with the effect because J. Golden wasn't a sophisticate or intellectual in any sense of the word. "Dallin has captured him so well that I have brief moments when I believe this is the real guy. Dallin brings elements to the play in a very honestway." Arrington says he welcomes the opportunity to bring back this portrayal por-trayal of an "honest-to-goodness" folk hero, and invites people to see a portrayal where "the man of mystery actually becomes a man of history. I want people to see the real man as opposed to the myth. That is what makes this show succeed." Surrounding the mola are minature versions of early American flags, mostly from the Revolutionary War period. Larger versions of the flags hang over the entrance foyer. Featured over the information desk is a large Civil War camp flag from the John L. Cross collection, and a small version of the flag that flew over Fort McHenry when Francis Scott Key wrote "The Star Spangled Banner." A reconstructed 1951 State of Deseret Flag completes the historic backdrop. The exhibit will also include a selection of exact replicas of selected historic American flags in- portable screens that can travel to other locations loca-tions when the ehibit closes in late November. Museum hours are 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekdays and 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on weekends and holidays. medical care units to the hospital However, the big advantage is that the new center is more convenient and accessible to the patient. We can now see and treat our patients more quickly. Also, they never have to worry about whether we're open, because we never close. The Center also offers a low-cost plan for minor injuries or illnesses For a minor cut or scrape, or a nagg ing cough or sore throat, patients can often use the "30-30 plan." The plan guarantees that the patient will be seen by a physician, treated, and on his way in 30 minutes or less, all for $30. A nurse will determine if the oa tient can be seen under the plan, and payment must be made at the time of treatment. As a public service, to assist the Orem residents to be prepared for emergencies, a 64-page emergency handbook is being offered free to the public. It addresses topics such as first aid, and home and weather emergencies. One copy per family may be obtained from the Orem Com munity Hospital Emergency Center. For additional information call 224-4080 Ext. 126. This article provided as a com munity service by Orem Community Hospital |