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Show Outstanding Program University-Communit- Music, Art, Drama y Concert Series Planned Continuing the traditional fine Miss Curtin, the leading so- with the New York City programming which has brought the world's finest musicians to Opera, was catapulted into Provo for more than 40 years, fame over night with a perform-- ) the Brigham Young University-Communi- anct of 'Salome" during aer Concert Series his debut season at the New York nlanned an nutstandin?O 1110- - , Cty Opera in 1954. Z She has performed at the ' j the. ccrding to Dr. Wendell Vance, Vienna Stafp vw.w finera V ... M, UJ Tootrn llOUU newly-electe- d president of the Colon in Buenis Aires, in Italy organization. England, Belgium, the artists outstanding Among and throughout South America, already scheduled are Phyllis grace and intricacy of the ty Utah Valley Writers to Participate In State League Roundup Sept. 5-- 7 orchestra, rombined with dow puppets and live actors with masks and painted faces, The Paul Taylor Dance Conv pany is rated on the highest scale of performing arts. Paul Taylor has studied at the Mar- tha Graham School of Dance. Sallpt- U'fxrt - mill mwcont " .Ufe f. WtfU tha P31 ballet classic by "The Nutcracker" on kovsky Jan-e nd 10. Music will be sha-pra- Members of Utah Valley, junior ballroom at t a.m. and lier will he chairman of this League of Utah Writers, will 1 p.m. A panel discussion will lovely event. Dr. Lueders wiU participate in the 34th annual feature all five guest speakers be guest speaker and winning Writer 'i Roundup which will be Saturday afternoon, with Xir. poems will be read and prizes held at the Hotel Utah, Salt Nichols as moderator. t warded. .- -J ' fibs v.ij, Cant c , 0e auu ua&c l. lirc Mr. McLean will discuss Assisting Miss Emmertson in Salt Lake Chapter of the League article writing and Dr. completing arrangements for Utah SymP1! of Utah Writers will host the Lueders will by Xic speak on the im- the convention are Ruth G. Indonesian Curtin. soprano: convention, with Bernie of for the serious Rothe. Payson, first dance will be pact poetry Japanese dance troupe; "Nutcracker Dal-- ! display.; ke who Salt Lake City, League janice Dixon, secretary. poet at the morning session. let ; Byron Jams, piaiust, and ca oy me jnaonesian uance the orchestra into one of inter-president, as general Roundup Mrs. Curry will discuss "Cre- Salt Lake City; board members j the Utah Symphony Orchestra. Troupe. The American Society national stature in his 22 years chairman. ating Fiction From Experience" of the state and Salt Lake City Miss Curtin will "raise the cur- for Eastern Arts (ASEA) in co--1 at its helm The Roundup will begin Fri as she addresses writers in the units and chapter presidents tain" this season with her perPianist Byron Janis, at the lnrithtt 6 ntoesH day evening with a reception afternoon session, with Mr. Alice Ojlor, 'Ogden Blue Quill; formance on Oct 8 at 8:15 bring the Menton FeUval to for members and gues speak- Nichols subject to be "How to Dcrothy Buchanan. Sevier Val 40 p.m. at the de Jong Concert boxWce at- - ; ' the ley Chapter; and Betty G. Spen4 - i er at the Utah Historical So Get Your Book Published." f Hall of the Harris Fine Arts His The awards banquet will be cer, Utah Valley Chapter. (traction. ciety. performances Center. The Indonesian adncers The trouDe will present a show affirmea Guest speakers at the three held at 7:30 p.m. in the Emstrength and a will perform Oct 27 at 8:15 broad n of Indone- - tightened touch which an meet wil' include Luther pire Room, with Mable Harmer gives day p.m., and tlw ballet will be pre- sia's performing arts by relat- -' elliptical quality to his interpre-in- g Nichols, West Coast editor of as chairman. Mrs. Brooks will sented four times in January.; the story of the Ramaycina tations. In Paris in 1967, he Doubleday & Co.; Peggy Sim-so- n relate experiences of the writnt VMH Mr. Janis is slated for March! through different arts forms, only interpreted but also Curry, noted fiction writer, er after publication as she adand the orchestra for April of! forms include the spell- -' ducted the Lamoureaux Or- the dresses audience. Herbert E. McLean, author of banquet SLT LAKE CITY (UP1) -' next year. Awards for the prose writing bmding music of the gamelan chestra in Prokofieffa Third more than 400 published maga The operation of Valley Music zine articles- - and Edward Lue-- contests and the special Sam Hall will be taken over bv Clif- ders, a prize winning poet, edl Taylor Regional Literature Con- for J. Barborka Jr., president of The annual membershio drive test will be presented at the National Theatre Productions ;AL,it.3i tor and teacher. wm Degin 6ept , Dr. Vance with gold quills, dia- Oct. 1. banquet, the winner of Juanita Brooks, reported. BOARD MEMBERS WHO WILL DIRECT the 1 C Utah State Institute of Fine monds, cash and books to be Russ Ballard, president of Officers this year besides Ds. University-Communi- ty Concert series for the new Arts award for the best novel given as prizes to winning au Family Achievement Institute, Vance include Dr. Harold Goodseason, include, from left, standing, Dr. Wendall of 1969, will be current owners of the facility, speaber at the thors. vice man, president; Mrs. Fred Vance, president; Dr. Harold Goodman, vice of the convention has h presicompleted V. Jackman, membership chairSaturday banquet and awards Final event Mrs. Robert Petty, hospitality, and Mrs. Fred ceremony. will be the Poet's Breakfast neeotiations with the comnanv. dent; G. Bruce man; Braithwaite, Sunday at 9:30 a.m. at the which spokesmen describe as Jackman, membership. Others are Bruce BraithRegistration will begin Satur- Jade Room. Beulah Huish Sad-publicity chairman; Mrs. Rob"sensitive to this community. " ert Petty, hospitality chairman; waite, publicity; Dr. Clifford Barnes, education; day, Sept. 6, at 8 a.m. at the Mrs. Max Hamilton Elliott, secretary, and Calder, Hotel Utah mezzanine, with Dr. Clifford Barnes, education SntDAY, AUGUST 31, 1969 Sunday Herald 7A Prove, Utah treasurer. seminars to be conducted in the chairman; Mrs. Max Elliott, executive secretary; and Hamilton Calder, treasurer. C K Tschai-German- , non-ficti- pro-Th- n, f ' VL y, bit fa v cross-sectio- Theater Group Takes Over con-The- three-mont- f h ft lilllllIliil r Reviewing Stand sisPiiis " 'ZZx.- - . ' True Spy S 7 v Story I I- MONDAY Intriguing X S ONLY! The Red Orchestra by Giles Perrault (Simon & Schuster, $6.95) This is the story of the Soviet spy ring that operated in Germany and lands in the first half of World War II. The book errs in calling the most Red orchestra "the successful spy ring," but it was very special, and fascinating. It was one of the largest rings in history so Dig tne executioners Gestapo had to swing their axes on heads 41 times in Berlin alone to snuff out the band. The book is built around Leopold Trepper, the "big chief" who built the orchestra and, like some of its member, "cooperated" with the Gestapo in its destruction. He got away to Moscow where his reward was 10 years in a Stalin jail, The book tells of the American the Belgian foreign women, minister's sister, the French shoemaker and the German aristocrat who fell into "the big chief's" band and died for it. It tells of the cat and mouse game - between the orchestra and the Gestapo with the dividing line blurring as hunted became hunter. The author has plucked up marvelous detail but perhaps the most fascinating facts are what happened to the survivors including V. M. Molotov's nephew and the daughter of a Hollywood designer. The author admits to some coloring. But The Red Orche stra is a spy story to beat the band. orai ii go Nazi-occupie-d DISPLAYING HIS PAINTINGS at the Springville Art Museum during September will be Oliver head of the art department at Ricks College. A variety of oils and watercolors will be shown. Par-Bo- n, " suk-hatt- 1-- Art Show Opens Sept. 7 in Springville - n He is the father of nine chilA SPRINGVILLE most of whom are major of head dren, Oliver show by Parson, the art department at Ricks Col- ing in art. His wife, Myra, is sched-- ! also an art major and teaches lege, Rexburg, Ida., is ai me in the elementary grades. uled to open sept. one-ma- Art Museum, acBraithwaite, to Bruce cording curator. A former resident of Springville, Prof. Parson taught art in the junior and senior high schools of Springville and also served as curator of the art gallery. A native of Kansas, he spent his early life in that state and in Arkansas. At the age of 12 he received his first award in art at the Mitchell County Fair in Kansas. He moved to Utah, attending Weber College and the University of Utah, where he received his B.S. and M.A. degrees. Since that time, he has attended BYU, University of Southern California, University of Colorado, Colorado State, the National Academy of Fine Arts, and the Art Student's League Springville in New York City. He taught school in Salt Lake beCity, Ogden and Springville fore moving to Idaho. He was also president of the Utah Art Education Association for a year. moving to Idaho, he has served as president of the Upper Valley Art Guild, president of the Idaho Art Association, and member of the Idaho Commission of the Arts and Humanities. For 11 years he was superintendent of fine arts for the Easteni Idaho State Fair, and for six years was superintendent of fine arts for the Madison County Fair. He was a member of the representative assembly of the National Art Education Association in Washington, D.C., in 1966. Mr. Parson has had several shows in Utah, Idaho, Colorado, Wyoming and Montana, and has shown in the Museum in San Francisco. He has received numerous awards and honors in water, colors, oils and sculpture, and his work is represented in churches, schools, and private collections throughout the United Slates. Since one-ma- n 2 Orchestras To Be Led By Dr. Gates Dr. Crawford Gates noted composer, symphony orchestra coinductor, and former Brig-haYoung University Music will Department chairman have an unusual instrument to rely upon in his conducting work this year. That is the jet airliner! Dr. Gates will rely upon this modern "instrument" because he has been appointed music The Maiden Voyage by director and conductor of two Geoffrey Marcus orchestras simultaneously in (Viking $8.95) two different states for the 1969-7- 0 On April 10. 1912, the riant season. These are the Beloit liner "Titanic" that "even God (Wisconsin) Symphony Orches- couldn't sink" set forth on its voyage. tra, for his fifth consecutive maiden season; and the Quincy (Illin- Five days later the "floating hotel" of tlie White Star Line ois)) Symphony Orchestra. The two seasons run concur- lay at the bottom of the rently for 33 weeks, requiring At antic Ocean, the victim of a Dr. Gates to commute by jet collision witb an iceberg. mat Could this tragedy round each week for an the lives of more than claimed with performintegrated trip ances and rehearsal schedules. 1.500 persons aboard the vessel have been avoided? Education In The ' Maiden voyage, Dr. Gates, a professor of while observing that music since 1948 at BYU until Marcus, that the full is "it improbable going to Beloit, earned his B.A. truth about the Titanic will Coldegree at San Jose State ever be known," presents an lege in 1944, his M.A. at BYU saga from embaika-tio- n engrossing the from Ph.S. in 1948, and his to the final inquiry Eastman School of Music at the in the United States hearings 1954. in University of Rochester and England. He will guest conduct the Why did the "unsinkable" in Utah Symphony Orchestra vessel go down? Among the two contemporary music conpoints the author presents are certs in Salt Lake City on Jan. staff overconfidence and a 27 and 28. In the early part of Hesire to set sneed records that August he was guest conductor sent the vessel full speed into at the national convention of the an ice field about which it naa National School Orchestras As- been warned; the failure to sociation in Holland, Mich. supply lookouts with binocum mp COTTON AND NYLON: SNEAKER SOCKS g f &l VJ Sizes7&toll. UMIT:3p.,reustonr nifc-- 1 g'tr . . wM llM'Ti UMIT tvuniyy: 1 L - S 2. ft, .T 5L Sept. J i 52 ?s FAMILY-SIZ- E CREST TOOTHPASTE I Hi Large G&oz. size. Regular or mint Cavorea. LIMIT: fa mt 3 itti-- y i Sale & g0 v ill i seamless run-r-e Sept. Only. IP 3k Beg.39rfea. ws noveltieSi GRANTS PLASTIC STRIPS LrMrT:2ptrcustomw. PLAZA-PRO- VO, UTAH - OPEN EVERY S Reg. 68 Giant size 75 plasflo bandages, Assorted sizes. LIMIT: 2 dot customer IMWWWMMJm RIVERSIDE i ur & m talL 4.1 skeins-1- , ivir 01(0) sistant mesh in basic fashion colors. Nudo m fiDAMT PRCQT 'CS I fay JS tstL nnhf wheels. LIMIT: 2 psr customer unrt ...,...t. ....... 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