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Show I! ... J Barber Sunday, July 30, - ' Paintings i , Bill Barber will be exhibiting 24 of his oil paintings at the Provo Utilities Building from Aug. 6 through Aug 31. An artist's reception will be held in his honor from 3 to 6 p in. on Aug. 13. Mr. Barber was born in Southern California and was raised in a small farming community which has grown beyond recognition today. He was always aware of the natural beauty of the Western States. His travels as a youth with his parents through these states took him to many places, such a mining camps, , i ' .' i V ' ' ... HI' I vil , ...... j '; 1 i - S .. s , Ke has learned oil painting E3S -t- f. I If '"?".:.: -- WWWWIWW I , 1 ' '"tX' s" Imf 1 f BILL BARBER, who has captured scenes of the Old West on canvas, will be exhibiting his paintings during the month of ' Ij t 4 v II August in the Provo Utilities Building. An artist's reception will be held in his honor on Aug. 13. Champion Teaches Baton As Part of 'Sounds of Summer' ' A Miss Displayed Springville majorettes at the - Springville . Museum of Art, 126 E. 400 S., Aug. 6 to 31. An opening reception will be held at the Museum Aug. 6 from 2 to 5 p.m. if-- ' i- s, "Hey, There," "Hernando's k Hideway" and "Steam Heat," is scheduled to open August 3 as the concluding production of the University of Utah Theatre Players at the Lagoon Opera hit of House. This the 1954 season in New York has never been produced in the Salt long-runni- runnerup to California preparatory to the Miss America pageant. The 5'6" beauty queen gave up her amateur standing in 1969 to perform with Trini Lopez and Donald O'Connor at Harrah's co-sta-rs slow-dow- This exhibit brings to Utah the widest variety of watercolor paintings by many of America's best known living artists. . u mmmmtttirmim hi.iimiiii DAYNADIGIRNO Quintet Present BYU Recital To Mi Young University's Summer Lyceum series on Wednesday. Scheduled for 8 p.m., the recital will be held in the HFAC de Jong Concert Hall. Warmly received both by audiences and critics, the American Brass Quintet has performed in some of the major musical centers of the world. Will Be CLOSED 'TILL 2 P.M. Harold I. Hopkinson, the father, was raised on a ranch near Fort Bridger in southwestern Wyoming. When he showed an early interest in art, Harold's hard working rancher father answered this interest with words like, "If you want to starve to death, just keep painting on." Mr. Hopkinson graduated from Mountain View, Wyo., high school in 1936. He served as an intelligence yeoman in World War II with the Navy where he recorded on canvas many of his impressions of the war. He found that combat photographers just "couldn't tell the whole story" with pictures. Many of the things he saw happening in combat defied photography and had to be put on canvas. Following his Naval service, he enrolled in the University of Wyoming intending to stay for only a quarter or two, but he earned both a BA and a Master's Degree in art and administration. After teaching at the Reliance, Wyo., high school, he went to Byron, his present home, where he served as superintendent of schools for ten years, then as principal and administration member in the high school. He also taught extension art classes for the University of Wyoming. to an article According published in the Casper 2 Star-Tribu- on April 8, 1972, Harold decide to give up his school may work entirely because, "I can't keep it up. It takes too much time." He works about 60 hours a week on his cowboy western paintings. Harold has studied at the Los Angeles Art Center, Famous Artist School in Connecticut, with Connie Schweiring and Paul Branscom in Jackson and with the late Ed Grigware in Cody. In 1955 he became Grigware's assistant in painting 1 A'"" lr to t i HAROLD I. HOPKINSON the mural in the Garden of Eden room in the Los Angeles IDS Temple. His murals also hang in the business administration building at Arizona State University in Tempe. Harold has many to his credit and his paintings are displayed all over the country including Oldtown Gallery in San Diego, Saddleback Inn near Los Angeles, Desert Gallery in Houston, Maintrail Gallery in Phoenix, Gallery 85 in Billings, Mont., Trailside Gallery in Jackson and Desert Southwest Art Gallery in Palm Desert, Calif. This spring he exhibited with the foremost Western artists at the Desert Southwest Art Gallery's "Spring Round-u- p of '72." His work has been compared to that of such oldtime favorites as Remington and Russell, and it sells "as fast as I can paint it." A willingness to stand up and "slug it out!" with his first abstract-oriente- d art teacher and his continual "belief" in his type of art has more than paid off for this successful man whose dream has been "to spend all my working time painting." Library Schedules Tun Party' Plans are underway for a Great Big Fun Party in the Children's Department at the Provo Public Library. Many children have been participating in the summer reading program and are looking forward to the annual summer party where they receive their reading certificates. Booklets in which children have recorded titles must be returned to the library by Friday, August 4, so that reading certificates can be prepared. Arrangements have been made for a magic show for all children returning their booklets. The date for the show is Tuesday, August 15. Information on show times is available at the circulation desk in the Children's Department and will be published prior to the day of the party. Whole rtZ& Whistling while they go off to class ... the boys 'n girls who wear our fresh 'n carefree school clothes from a er The American Brass Quintet will present a recital in Brigham 245 North University group. young-minde- d two-we- The quintet is comprised of Gerard Schwarz, trumpet; bass Robert Biddlecome, trombone; Louis Ranger, MONDAY trumpet; Herbert Rankin, tenor trombone; and Edward Bird-wel- l, French horn. for INVENTORY 1 SACK,-T- have ensemble types ' rlead2uarers According to a review in the New York Times, "Few other the historical spread of the brass chamber music group, and that should be worth something to any music lover." SUMMER SALE FOR WINTER WEARING V two-wee- Miss Lake area. as Craig Stephenson the Sleep-Tit- e Pajama Factory is superintendent whose love-lif- e complicated by a labor dispute with Claudia Archuleta as the Union Grievance Committee in Headliner Room Reno, leader he has to fire when she Nevada. The following year in leads n strike. a 1970, Miss Digirno flew to Lora Davis, who recently Mexico City for two perin the Lagoon as over Mexican appeared of:Lucy formances "You're A Good production national television. Man. Charlie Brown," will be She closed her amateur career featured as Gladys, the of record a after only securing three consecutive wins as president's secretary. California state champion and Rounding out the list of winning the national cham- leading players in the large cast pionship conducted by the are Randy Milligan as the States United Twirling president of the union local, Association, in 1963, 1967, and Vicki Andersen as another 1968. secretary, and George Delhoyo Miss Digirno joined the BYU f" the pompous president of the Others in the cast include Cougar Marching Band in the txii. Christ fall of 1971 twirling at the head of Rhea D. Bottomly, G. Christina Fletcher, Holt, directed the group Gordon Ayers, Keith Grant and by Grant Elkington, James Steven Groff . Brague and drum major Tim Jackson. The book for the musical is by Winner of 450 trophies and 120 George Abbott and Richard medals, Miss Digirno will join a Bissell, based on "7 Cents," list of over a"do:en distinguished Bissell's novel about his exmembers of the faculty for the periences in his own pajama clinic. factory in Dubuque, Iowa. The music and lyrics are by Richard Registration for the clinic may Adler and Jerry Ross. be made through BYU Special Performances are scheduled Courses and Conferences, 242 Herald R. Clark Building, August 3 to September 2, Provo, Utah, 84601. Room and Tuesdays through Fridays at board accommodations are 8:30 pjn. and Saturdays at 7 and 9 p.m. available on campus. fourth - The traveling exhibit will feature the works of 51 outstanding watercolorists including Utah favorites George Dibble, Homer Clark, Harrison T. Groutage, Thomas Leek, Arleen Gaell Lindstrom, Ruggeri, Adrian Van Suchtelen and Richard Van Wagoner. til "The Pajama Game," the musical comedy which in troduced the famous song-hit- music clinic' July 31 through August 12 at Brigham Young University. Miss Digirno, who began twirling at the age of two, twirled her way to the Miss San Leandro crown in 1970 and was SPRINGVILLE The Fourth Annual Watercolor West will be l Dayna faculty of the BYU "Sounds of Summer" program to teach classes for twirlers and drum in at the Pajama Game Ends Season Digirno, a national champion baton twirler since the age of 10, will join the Watercolcrs shown 1 through September 24. An opening reception honoring the pair will be held August 6 from 2 to 5 p.m. at the Museum, 126 E. till he sold mtmtmmimsmmm 400 S., Springville. i. 19 . ed moved to Utah where he could own horses and work with them again. The memories of his travels and his love for the American West have inspired his paintings today. v, - reservations. Following his marriage, he and his wife, Janice, traveled in Mexico, Arizona and Colorado. During this time he painted and w uwMiwf By ONEITA SUMSION SPRINGVILLE Harold I. and Glen Hopkinson, father and son artists, will be featured as guest exhibitors at ingville Museum of Art from August 6 v'lk P'J : I- Utah-P- age Father and Son to Exhibit Paintings in Springville ! ranch country, and Indian He also did prospecting on the Mojave Desert and hunted and horses that had not been ridden for years. THE HERALD, Provo, Arts and Letters Exhibits si 19 I o "for - School Fashions .. . ! the washable Low NOW NOW -- 34" For "fall and PRICES INCLUDE STYLING AND CUTTING JUST FOR YOU. Coll now Ho?E... ' hand crochet Capped Elura Wigs 'f' VI Med. Reg. $40 28 95 Long Reg. $45 Vol i scry lie 6 cut Levrs new plaids, sol'ds qals in stnpes... w3m Kmm fin..lL All Major Credit Cards (or on Appointment WARDROBE j Howard Jacobson Accepted WE ALSO 1 FEATURE THE COMPLETE 82 West Center, LINE OF EVA GABOR PROV0-0RE- AND WIG STORE WIGS r SiSiir-w''M 1116 S. State Ph. 225-687- 4 SHOPPE DONA FICHELBERGER Mgr. 260 NORTH UNIV. AVE., PROVO 1 |