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Show Poetry Month Celebrated To One Who Would Be A Poet Re-issu- ed ... This is the hour of the hearth a time Om empty nests and naked trees, of smoking Leaves and embers of the heart. A cloak Of golden rust becomes the autumn clime, But yet, there is a frosted breath of rime That pales my dawn. Now taut with chill, I poke The hearth but nothing warms my wintry strike Of loneliness. Your pillow's cold and I'm Adrift, a restless leaf from yesterday. This is the hour of the hearth but fate Has drained our room for you have gone. You say It's not goodbye. Believing not, I wait, For wait I must . . . and vvatch the fuming way A single log just smolders in the grate. Fred Forbes. You must hear the crunch of leaves And d snow, And ache with the awareness The annotated know. sequin-encruste- must hear the whine of the wind Through the barren tree And cry out in anguish You affinity. You must thirst forever. At beauty's silver spring. You must fall beaten to the earth, Then rise again and stag. Christie Lund Coles. Poetry Day Fireside Keep On Trying Set Tonight Looking ahead in the days of youth How long stretch the gay tomorrows, So many years to work and to play With no thought of grief or of sorrows. A Poetry Day fireside will be he.d tonight at 8:30 in the Harris Fine Arts Building Recital Hall, where selections will be read from works of prominent Central Utah poets. The fireside is under the auspices of the Central Utah Arts Council as a part of the annual Arts Festival, and is sponsored by the Poetry Society of Utah, the Utah League of Writers and the Brigham Young University Englisn Department. Eve ryone interested in poetry in Central Utah is urged to attend this event. Now, looking backward, the yesterdays Were longer than are the tomorrows And we feel how little time remains To accomplish the things we hoped for I often think it is not the result But the effort we make that matters It is not the fame or fortune won But the loving, giving and striving. So though we may lose, yet we may gain In characters we are creating, And though frustration oft makes us sad, Let us follow our stars and keep trying. Elsie Moore Lott. 'JESUS REDISCOVERED' Recording October Mourn must bear loneliness, silence, And the starless night, You must see darkness as The counterpart of light You And Debussy SAN TELLS By DELOS SMITH NEW YORK (VPI)-Si- nce the early 1950s professional pianists have been playing Debussy less and less. A cogent reason could have been Walter Gieseking. He was then emerg ing from the shadows of World War II and again asserting his mastery of this composer of such pianistic subleties only with pianists very strong realize amnities their full values. -u usii. lucm, uiuugll uuia nun. u is more ftn likflv that man,. pianists, after listenine to 4 UI Like sequins tinkling brilliance Gieseking, dropped Debussy irom Startle the shadows of my repertories. Tne definitive Debussy re ,r?omn!t cordings Gieseking made a few Clinton F. Larson years before .lis death in 1956 have been reissued under the PIi label OdVSSey fnmpHian .TaMri Vornn the popular rock recording f11 Jftifythe stock I .nJi1"1' ' group "Smith" join Jim Nabors as guest stars on "The Leslie Uggams Show," tapii.g this at T0i0,ic;n in Hollywood for airing on the CBS Television Network. Vernon joins Miss Uggams for a comedy sketch about strangers on a train and Smith reprise one of their big hits, "Baby, !0021) o "Legendary ri rf 52?,""? JJey Sk? " K yL suite and masque. , tj tJk 4 Nik rn "-- "6 u- i1 Q Gieseking had the affinities. His used label, commonly "Debussy specialist," was earned. Many felt they had never really heard the pianistic uebussy before they heard Largo fci TM x H I rr n numwuiHii,, 1 1 WENDELL JOHNSON, Mapleton, has been named first place winner in the SprinRville-Mapleto- n Fall Festival of Art, with his oil painting-- "Hunter on Other winners are K. W. Davidson, Mapleton, second and. Flat." Sajrebrush Judy Law. third. Honorable mentions went to Oneida Sumsion and Omar Hansen. The show is now in progress at the Sprinjrville Art Museum. First annual exhibit of the fine arts, to be held in connection with the October Festival of Arts sponsored by the Central Utah Ans Council opens today. A reception will be held this afternoon for all participants. , prC" Corner the Suite Berga- PI .n, - It's You." mli "The Leslie Uggams Show" is by Saul Ilson and Ernest Chambers. WaMt Ad. SUNDAY,OCTOBER 26, 1969 Sun(joy HerQ,d James Cash Penney, 94 yrs. Founder of kJ. C Penney Company, Inc. FRANCISCO-Televis- ion personality A r t Lmkletter, 20, daughter Diana, to her death earlier this lumped TRUE STORY OF CONVERSION month, testifying about drugs to the House Select Committee on by Malc-col- not extend to the standard Crime: Jesus Discovered Christian churches, which he Muggeridge 'I think every parent under regards as moribund. (Doubleday, $5.95) estimates what is going on, I is a "Most of the Jesus Rediscovered heard from her and my son, profession of faith from an (Protestant) denominations are Robert, that they had done a Malcolm at their last gasp ... little experimenting, but they unexpected source as a "It wih be surprising now if didn't like it. It was a bad trip. renowned Muggeridge, deflater of the most cherished the Koman Church does not "What we didn't know was find itself in a similar case in a that she was having involuntary balloons of pop culture. Muggeridge was reared by matter of years rather than flashbacks. It was in one of shared the lack of decades like NATO, a head- these flashbacks that she killed and conventional religious faith of quarters withoyt any armies." herself. She was insane." an agnostic father. He was well Jesus Rediscovered is an Detective on in vears when he went to the intensive exploration of a very volumes of Best BBC YEAR of on the a that he work to Stories Land faith somewhat unev Holy personal selected. series about the New Tes- en In presentation but tament. He suddenly found he and revealing. Ranging from parodies of had become a Christian. Doug Anderson (UPI) Sherlock Holmes to travesties "A curious, almost magical, of James Bond, they are all certainty seized me about Boucher's Choicest, selected superior examples of the craft. Jesus' birth, ministry and by Jeanne F. Bernkopf Romain Gary, Shirley Jack crucifix'on ..." he says. "I ... (Dutton, $5.95) son and Jorge Luis Borges are became aware that there really This is a vastly entertaining represented with tales of had bejn a man, Jesus, who collection of the two dozen delicate brutality. was alsi God: I was conscious stories that the late Anthony A fitting memorial to a first of His presence. " Boucher, according to his rate critic and writer of His devotion to Christ does editor, liked best from the six mysteies whose v iLWAYS FIRST QUALITY ngi PROVO STORE Phone 373-450- 0 I I N I 1 II II ni l 1 ii it I thought-provokin- -- 373-450- i: i yT3!! PROVO STORE Phone vraiv J ready for winter end outwit the elements with o smashing new coat. All smartly designed in your (favorite silhouettes in single and double breasted styles, as well as belted, trench and many more. Some witft lavish fur trims. All with extra warm linings. Fashion colors too, in worsted, fleece and Shetland wools, tweeds, plaids or boucle woolnylon. 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