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Show toDAjAjumi, m 6A Sunday Herald Kalt Concert Slated Music, Art, Drama Ancient Instruments Concert Set sev-erand ancient instrument enancient instrument en- sembles have been in existence sembles awaits BYU students 20 years and now even elemenand townspeople following the tary education classes use plastic recorders for basic instructholiday season. The affair is scheduled ion. The concert will present a Wednesday, Jan. 8, at 8:15 p.m. of ensembles playing selection of Hall F.ecital in the Madscn the Harris Fine Arts Center. the works of Renaissance and The groups, all drawn from an- Baroque masters such as Pur-cel- l, Handel, Bach, and cient Instrument classes con- A novel concert featuring Tele-man- ducted by Homer Wakefield, will play such oddities as the the effect is often organ-likThe nasal quality of the inkrummhorn, a double-reestrument described as an oboe with adenoids, combines well with the recorder. The harpsi chord was first used in the 14th century, but was popular in the uaroque era. In appearance somewhat like a tiny piano, the instrument is so constructed that the strings are plucked rather than struck, giving a harp-liksound. The vielle, a "medieval fiddle" is the common ancestor of today's stringed instruments, and has been played d Carol Goodson will be soprakrumm-horsoloist in Bach's "Stone no recorder, harpsichord, vielle, viola d amore and Above All Others Treasured." The recorder is a straight viola da gamba. Prof. Wakefield said there flute with a sweet, gentle tone. has been a boom in ancient in- It comes in all sizes and ranges strument music since World from soprano to bass, and when under the chin, .War II. BYU's recorder classes an entire ensemble performs against the chest or between the knees like a The viola de gamba is also played like the cello. From the Reviewing Stond e variously mini-cell- Of 'The Valachi Papers' Valachi went straight home Valachi recalling. "1 was just married a couple of months, and I didn't want Mildred to think I was already starting to By United Press International The Valathl Papers by Peter Maas (Putnam's, $6.95): "Like almost everyone who has spent I any time with Valachi of him . . . fond quite grew Valachi would sit opposite me and take on a positively an 1 benign appearance at startled to be never ceased ... fool around." Lucky Luciano wasn't quite so sentimental. In the old days, Cosa Nostra members used to kiss when they met. Lucky ordered them to shake hands instead. "After all," Maas quotes Valachi quoting Lucky, Ve would stick out kissing each other in restaurants and places like that." Unfortunately, crime too oiten does pay. But why let it pay more, specifically $6.95? Maas is a competent, lively writer and doesn't need Valachi to make an honest living. With old James Cagney movies on need we don't television, Valachi either. Now, Cagney there was a really lovable "gangster." (No hard feelings, Joe, Vito, etc. And Peter Maas --stay out of jail!) Joe O'SuMvan (UPI) ... somehearing myself saying time last the thing like, 'Joe, tmii were telllne me how Steve Franse was strangled in your kitchen. Could we go over mai again?"' Maas writes. Joe Valachi is the Cosa Nostra-Maff- o mediocrity who became a crime celebrity by is turning Informer. Maas described as the first to break the Valachi story and the only inter-VieJournalist permitted to him in his maximum aecurlty cell. Another sentimental Interlude !n what the jacket boasts is the first Inside account of life in the Cosa Nostra: Valachi, given a 'contract" to loll a man ne knew only as "Little Apples," unlistM two other mob "sol Memoirs, Sixty Years on the diers" to heta him. Quickly Firing Line by Arthur Krock & 110): WagnaUs, Itriking up an acquaintance (Funk fmlth "UtU ApptoJ, tie jureo observations on presidents and the victim to a tenement, sue or other men In government from to the an Imaginary crap game. As Theodore Roosevelt "Little Apples" entered the present. tenement, Joe heard the shots It appears that someone must .'and "naturally kept walking have been taking attendance at down the street," Maas says. any event of historical note and "After all," Maas recalls made certain Krock was there. Krock was an intimate of Presidents during his 40 years w -- for the Times in Washington, He drew the wrath of thre- eFranklin D. Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. John (UP1) son. Roosevelt went so far as to Week (Complied by Publishers' that the Times BEST SELLERS :: "suggest" replace him. iy) Fiction , -- then-couns- ar -- -- -- -- -- S Ferdinand - Lund-ber- All-Uta- Art Show To Be h Held Springville Hall In Andre Mal-rau- - - .y. t f ; i n show of 31 MODERNS AND LANDSCAPES are included in the Utilities l'rovo at the Building by Mrs. A. C. pieces which will open Sunday n e artist. Spring-v(Inez) Chader, well-know- Noted Springville Artist Pottery And Weaving Will Displays In Provo Gallery Chader, artist, well-know- n Springville is opening a one-mashow of her paintings. who Mrs. Chader will be displaying of her paintings in oils and casein. Her subjects are moderns and landscapes, most of which were painted in Utah and Colorado. The Utilities Building will be show week open for the days from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tlie show will continue through the month of January. one-ma- n EVACUATION'S EXTENT The Allied evacuation of Dunkirk during World War II was begun May 26, 1940, and was completed June 3, when some 338,000 British, French and Belgian troops reached English ports safely. Sooner or Later Your Favorite Carpet Store!! nd e. iKODEL CARPET NOW - Sq. yd. $)79 fl ' now KODEL POLYESTER ! Sc- NOW CANDY STRIPE CARPET v.4tv $fii 88 $ P& 95 ACRILAN CARPET an, Sq. yd. ttfloT I 1 Outstanding Resilience and Texture Retention NOW Reg. 15.95 YMIN SALE DRAPERIES UllH " FREE Knitting Worsted $1129 NOW j LABOR SEE OUR BRING U IN Dresses, Smocks, Capris, Skirts reduction W and 3 more to Brcnze, Reg. 7.95 ! 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It's not how long you MATS Letitia Baldridge wear it, but the style that O.N REFLECTION "Helen counts, however. Coats are and trims, such as j Hayes with Sandford Dody IBERIA James A. Michener fur, intricately worked buttons, I THE AMERICAN CHALana pocKets are tne LENGE J.J. Servan-- 'hreiber "extras." I i M Be On Display Noted Pianist Orchestra Broadway Soloist Has New -- f J I rff, ; SPRINGVILLE Entries for reported by Bruce Braithwaite, Art curator. the fifth annual Show at the Springville Gallery All professional and amateur are due Jan. 10 and 11, it is artists of tne state nave been A reception will be held today An exhibit from 3 to 6 p.m. at the Provo invited to contribute works to SPRINGVILLE the show. Each artist may en- of pottery and weaving by Utility Building, 250 W. 800 N., ter two pieces, such as two Crescent B. Deru, instructor in honor of Mrs. A. C. (Inez) paintings, two sculpture pieces, in art at Weber State College, two items of ceramics, etc. will be shown at the Spring International Exhibit in New Entries will be received Jan. ville Art Gallery beginning York. 10 and 11 from 12 noon to 9 p.m. at the gallery. A small entrv Sunday, Jan. 5, according to She has exhibited in a numUtah Symphony with Maurice in Utah, Texas. fee will be charged. representatives of the Spring- - ber of shows Abravanel conductinc will wel and California, and Nebraska, Association. Art vine All entries will be iuried and come pianist Garv Graffman n of Mrs. Deru will be honored at has held a number classified in amateur or pro as soloist in its next cor.iirt written She has also shows. GAVER JACK By fessional divisions, and first, a reception Jan. 12 at the gal- for a number of scheduled for the Salt Lake publications. UPI Drama Editor lery, it is reported. Tabernacle Wednesday, Jan. 8 NEW YORK (UPl)-T- he There will be more than 50 se second, and third prizes will be Mrs. Deru has degrees from items in awarded in both divisions. at 8:30 p.m. her Springville show. cond half of the Broadway Weber State College, the UniThe annual show will men Mr. Graffman's return visit theater season got off to a of Utah, and a master's marks his third guest appear- rousing start with the opening Feb. 2 at the gallery, and will versity in fine arts from Utah State BOUNDARIES run ance with the Utah Symphony. of "Promises, Promises" at the through the month of Feb University. She has received He will play Tchaikovsky's Con Shubert Theater. The Isthmus of Tehuantepec ruary. awards from the American certo No. 2 in G Major for The David Merrick production The show Is one of Craftsmen's Council, Utah De forms the northern boundary Piano and Orchestra, a premier is especially distinguished so far two major shows held at the signer Craftsmen, Utah State of Central America and the both for Utah and for the Utah as I am concerned because it is gallery, the other being the Fair award, Utah State Insti Isthmus of Panama forms its Symphony. a reminder that it still is April National Exhibit. tute of Fine Arts, and Women's southern boundary. ' Gary Graffman has had an possible to have a musical international career ever since comedy that is "written runny. his debut at the age of 18 with In this case, the librettist is Eugene Ormandy and the Phil- Neil Simon, the dominant! He has adelphia orchestra. comedy writer of recent years1 toured six continents, and in with such tremendous non-London alone has played over musical hits as "Barefoot in the two dozen orchestral eneaee- Park," "The Odd Couple" and ments. -A tne current riaza auue, In America Mr. Graffman is which is still selling out after regular fare as soloist with all almost a year s run. of the major orchestras. He With all due respect to Bert has been heard recently as Bacharach and Hal David, top soloist with the New York songwriters nere marPhilharmonic under Bernstein. popular ine their first stage contribution with the Philadelphia under with a score notable for ormandy, with the Boston Sym- freshness, make no mistake and about it this show works as phony under Leinsdorf, with the Cleveland orchestra well as it does mainly because under Szell. of Simon's writing. Coincidentally, Mr. Graffman The show is oasea on tne has also made recordings with script for the motion picture, eacn of the above orchestras "The Apartment," but little as well as with Chicago and more than the bare idea is San Francisco, playing works The stace script mieht be by virtually all of the great called almost Simon-purHe is the only composers. Jerry Orback, who has some pianist to have recorded with good credits, really comes into six of America's leading or- stardom as the man with the chestras; the albums regularly apartment Much credit for the li J appear on classical laugns aiso musi De given n. a charts. Larry Haines in the role of It was Mr. Graffman who re- doctor; he darned near steals vived Tchaikovsky's "dazzling" the second act. And Jill O'Hara Concerto No. 2, which had been is a love as the girl. The Vital Fiber for Carpet largely ignored for the last Robert Moore's direction and Reg. 11.95 generation, and which he has Michael Bennett's staging of the virtually restored to current many attractive musical numLast season he bers make the show a polished repertoire. played it over two dozen times, production. and he will play it for the first I ROLL EXCELLENT QUALITY time in Utah with the Utah NEW ORLEANS Yoshio Toy- Green. Reg. 11.95 n Japanese 1azz musician Symphony. Also highlighting the program playing in New Orleans, predict. for Wednesday's concert is the ing the future of jazz at tne Symphony No. 3 funeral of clarinetist George in F Major by Brahms, a favor- Lewis: ite of many music lovers, and "No young Negroes are taking Nylon Face Carpet one of Brahm's most lilting up the playing of traditional Reg. 4.98 New Orleans jazz. Rock n' roil symphonies. "tf6ir.l',. Mr. Abravanal and the or- and other types of music give X. 4, chestra will open the concert them more money. In 10 or 20 with the dramatic and imagi- years, when the men playing at native Night on Bold Mountain this funeral today are dead, 3 Rolls Heavyy Duty, their music w'U die with them." by Moussorsky. frightened." g if one-ma- Paul Robbins (UPI) BETWEEN PARENT CHILD Haim G. Giimtt INSTANT REPLAY . BYU's master violinist Percy the contemporary composer: Kalt will be featured in recital Honegger, and "Poeme" by on Thursday, Jan. 9 at 8: 15 p.m. Chanson who studied in Paris in the Madsen Recital Hall. with Cesar Frank. Mr. Kalt, who has appeared The Romantic era will be repas soloist with numerous or- resented by Brahms' third and chestras in Europe and the U. last sonata. Brahms skillfully 5 , recently performed the dif combined tradition, classicism, ficult Sibelius "Violin Concerta" and absolute music with the with the Utah Valley Symphony heart and spirit of the Romantic Orchestra in the Provo Taber- era. nacle. A Fulbright scholar, he Mr, Kalt will be accompanied is the first violinist of the BYU by Paul Pollci at the piano. Mr. Faculty String Quartet and this Pollei is known for his solos with January will tour the western the Utah Valley Symphony and states. his frequent lectures on piano The Thursday evening pro- pedagogy. Along with his teachgram will include "Sonata in D ing responsibilities, he is direcMajor" by Corelli, one of the tor of the BYU artists bureau foremost violin virtuosos of the and this winter will tour the 17th century, a selection from western states and Hawaii. best-sellin- g The include a memoirs Z THE SALZBURG CONNEC confidential memor previously ,TION Helen Maclnnes andum prepared for President AIRPORT Arthur Hailey PRESERVE AND PROTECT Truman in 1946 by Clark Clifford, which helped Allen Drury s post-vvT poli A SMALL TOWN IN GERMA shape Truman the Marshall ' cies, including NY Jonn Le Carre Plan and the "Truman Doc THE HURRICANE YEARS trine." Cameron Hawley The memorandum outlined THE SENATOR - Drew Russia's basic fears and how TESTIMONY OF TWO MEN - they could be met by the United States. Taylor Caldwell "Even though Soviet leaders " COUPLES John Updike profess to believe that the - THE FIRST CIRCLE conflict between capitalism and AIeksandr Solzhenitsyn is irreconcilable EVA TROUT Elizabeth Bow- - communism and must be resolved eventually en by the triumph of the latter, it Nonfiction THE MONEY GAME Adam is our hope that they will change their minds and work Smith MEMOIRS: SIXTY YEARS out with us a fair and equitable ON THE FIRING LINE Arthur settlement when they realize that we are too strong to be Krock THE RICH AND THE SUP- beaten and too determined to be ER-RICH On Thursday Evening h Mafia Henchman Subject '.....; , 3732134 |