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Show Page 197 Sunday, April HERALD, Prove, Utah 20-T- HE K'vSOvXvK Glimpses of Indian Culture To Be Provided by Art Show vslue of these photographs in conveying a truthful image of of approximately 20,000 black the American Indian in contrast and white negatives and 30,000 to the stereotype and distortions is perpetrated by the popular black and white prints of illustrators. made up primarily The exhibition is stark in photographs taken by the of presentation and rich in content, Bureau Smithsonifn' a American Foiklife. Images," which consists The Archives exhibition photographic "Indian providing an authentic glimpse of tradition, life and culture of North American Indians from 1847 to 1928, will be on display in the Secured Gallery of the Harris Fine Arts Center at Brigham Young University April 7 to 23. Ttie display will be brought to BYU under the sponsorship of the Smithsonian Institution as part of a national tour. This exhibit, the first selected exclusively from the unmatched deposit of American Indian photographs of the National Anthropological Archives, was shown at the National Museum of Natural History in with the 1970 Festival of American an Ethnology, organization founded in 1870 to study the history, languages, and culture of North American Indians The exhibit includes portraits of individuals and groups as well as pictures showing clothing, ceremonies and crafts, such as weaving, basketry, and pottery making. Archives staff member Joanna Scherer, in an intro- the show's catalog, points to the duction for written commercial and government like Alexander photographers Gardner and William Henry Jackson. also emThe Smithsonian ployed noted photographers on its own, such as DeLancey Gill who is represented in the highly appropriate for the exhibition by portraits that he subject of Indian culture. Mrs. took of official Indian visitors to t, Scherer and William C. Washington and also by pictures curator of the he took in the field. It is the field photographs that Smithsonian Institution Division of North America Anthropology, make the Smithsonian's are selecting a larger group of collection historically unique. photos from the Archives for a Other large collections of Indian book to be published by the photographs are based to some Smithsonian Institution Press. extent on shots of objects in the Under the leadership of Major museum, but the Archives John Wesley Powell, the bureau consists of portraits and field acquired early collections of pictures that give an unequaled photographs taken by noted glimpse cf Indian life of the past. Stur-tevan- Cash Prizes Set For Poetry Contest Reception To Open Art Show SPRINGVILLE the recepaon Cash prizes in excess of $1,500 SoeietT Of Texas with over 1,500 being offered by The members; it celebrated its 50th The National Federation Of State anniversary last year. for Forty-eighopening The 1972 Nf SPS slate of Poetry Societies, Inc. in its 12th annual Springville Annual National Poetry Con- contests is now ooca for entries Museum of Art Spring Salon will tests. In addition, a book and offers over 30 categories be held today from 2 to S viuch cover a wide range of pjn. at fiublication competition is the museum, 126 East 400 South, poetry manuscripts, subjects, such as Indian Springville, announces Mrs. sponsored by South And West, heritage, love, ecology, and Peggy Forster, museum Inc. of Fcrt Smith, Arkansas music, and all poetic forms, director. Tie Federation annually including free verse. Tne Background music to today's publishes a National Poetry number one contest, which is the reception will be performed by Anthology comprised of winners NFSPS Grand Prize, came: Springvilie High School sting in the annua! contests. $500 first prize, with flOO tor orchestra under the direction of The National Federation Of second place. The Federation Harmon Hatch. State Poetry Societies, Inc. was will hold its annual convention in . April 16, Mi-- Hatch will direct organized in 1959, at Baton Kentucky during June. the Middle School string orInformation on the annual Rouge, Louisiana, and is chestras and on AprU 23 composed of over 7,000 poets and prize poem anthology can be background music will be played poetry enthusiasts who are obtained from one of the by the Springvilie Junior High members of over 30 official state Federation's past presidents, School string orchestras also poetry societies all over Dr. Hans Juergensen, 7815 Pine directed by Mr. Hatch. America. Largest member of Hill Drive, Tampa, Fls. The The show runs throughout the the Federation, and one of the Contest Brochure, detailing month of April. most active, Is The Poetry rules and prizes, may be obtained by sending a stamped, envelope to I are NFSPS To r-- - - y TZi J, 'SVi , pU f Mm , d . grfcS r . w , 'rM?rml RIB i esaafcEs; La, canvas-covere- meat-dryin- Indians between 1847 X U tt m c C li ...J f 't x& y .Mr !wtb J j . sfS W Ul I 1 Hi GLENDA JACKSON as the voung Elizabeth. By HELEN BOILN HELEN BOHN: Miss Jack- son, I understand that the Elizabeth R series was very successful in England, and received with yrcat enthusiasm . . . GLENDA JACKSON: The story of its success is interesting. Ycu know, there had been The Six Wives of Henry VIII which was an immediate success. The critics adored it and the public adored it. Then, although the Elizabeth series wasn't a the BBC direct follow-on- . publicized it with great fanfare. The first episode got marvelous notices, but then there was a backlash and the critics started hating it and talking about how boring all the Tudors were. But the public liked it even more than The Six Wives of Henry VIII. Elizabeth R was an enormous popular success even th oughthec ritics didn't like it very much. Jt i icuti u pitxe ,n u l in wincn you newspaper were quoted as laying that the series was "posh escapism" . . . 1 think it is. It's a historical story, of course, which from a technical poi.it of view is beautifu'ly done: The costumes are marvelous, and so are the sets. And the actual detail of practical life in Tudor England was researched and represented meticulously. I think the series accomplished what the English enjoy most: being entertained while feeling, in fact, that they're educating themselves. In that sense, I think it probably is "posh escapism." You can actually learn something from it which the English love, it appeals to our Puritan streak. Also. I think Elizabeth R aired at a time when England was feeling a bit down, and it shows the country at. its prime as a great nation. I'm not for nationalism in any sense, but I feel that this series started a fc-tiny blazes of nationalism in various hearts. It could do this because r and 1928 which will be on display in the Harris Fine Arts Center from April 7 until AprU 23. Interview With Glenda Jackson: Series Continues Posh Escapism For Middle Class it's far enough removed from reality and deals with people who, in the main, lived within a very clearly defined code of behavior. There were absolutes of behavior to which everyone subscribed: everybody knew very clearly who they were and where they were. Which is not a situation we find ourselves in today. That sounds somewhat parallel to The Forsyte Saga, in the sense uj presenting a social order governed by strict codes of behavior. Well, I hated The Forsyte Saga. I must admit. I found it became really dreary and boring. Rut it did become a great cult here. Again, you see, it appealed enormously to middle-clas- s ideals which exist in all strata of society. And in The Forsyte Saga, ves. they were living according to a purely defined code. Nowadays, there are no arly defined codes for any us. We realize that there re no blacks ana wnues, re; illv there are only rather snuidgv gras. But don't you think it's rather comforting to look back nostalgicall drama at to a y least through time when things were less complex, and therefore easier? Yes. But in Elizabeth R vou are seeing people who took the responsibility of action upon themselves. Whereas most of us today are so adept at seeing the other side of the argument, or the oossible variances of that we may be solution, and in plays that slow to act; deal with modern-daproblems often nothing happens. In the Tudor period, however, something was always happening. It was a time of immense energy, when people took action because that was the thing to do. One also thinks of the metaphysical life in which the people of this time were involved, the series doesn't though touch on this at all. There's no metaphysical life in our society any more because God. as Vjch. has ceased to exist. As j,"! say, tlic current fashion if you can call it that of trying to see every n A point of view does sort of paralyze people. Yes, there POTATOES i R.2. A Corresponding FtnMr fok. . RADISHES and 1 GREEN ONIONS A I Poets' 3(orl5(j mfc. If Appear connection ORANGES ICECREAM Rsenu 39 kgiIIm L T8 SKIN . NOT A Iread 134 M 00 STRAWBERRY PRESERVES Imperial lib. . . NOODLES 69' '?tb. SNACK PACK K 49 MAC. & CHEESE SINNER AT ITS BEST KntbiiM, N frtn uara--- . O for JVtQi CALLSTIAMWAY - . 14 Royal . Ife Royal BEDDING. N I GELATIN 2258337 12 30!. ONE OF THESE GOOD VALUE $100; lor M lor Salad Dressing ft f uuori 43 , . 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Award-winnin- i CELERY Utah's fourth statewide governor's conference on the arts, two events are on g actress (see GLENDA JACKSON, Academy story below) in various stages of her role as Elizabeth R, The transformation was a triumph for make-u- p artists. I GRAPEFRUIT di J dZB IS' is a paralysis in many situations today. The Elizabethans, though, were not a paralyzed generation nor was it a paralyzed age. T (.ttSMtl Two Locations - d A CHEYENNE CAMP showing wagon, tepee g on racks. The picture is one of the collection and entitled "Indian Images," photographs of North American irrn d Jtrnu ci campuses. The Poets, who consider to be comthemselves municators more than entertainers, are comprised of AlaSa Pudim, Suliaman and percussionist Nilijah, will be making appearances at various universities around the country. They will be at the University of Utah April 7. In I TEAK 89 Easter Music Presented in V' I 63 The Last Poets, after having 1 completed the bulk of recording iZPii for an album on their own newly Rtg formed label, "True Sound" will begin another tour of College, ' IriUr rUKIv 1M At U. of Utah - I f Route 2, Box 151, Bonduel, Wisconsin, 54107. Deadline for the 1972 slate of contests is April 15, 1972. Winners will be an- l I PORK ROAST Secretary, Mrs. Marcie Leitzke, 'i, ' it h iMTKi th last f- - -- J nounced in June at the Federation's Awards Banquet. -- ftl 1 f ADD OiKiwt Pkarmocy 4 f OWY I0H TO rr i mytfummnntnu I |