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Show P3, HER-UX- 50-T- HE Pnno, Utah, Smdart March . IS Mormon Exhibit Choir to Present Special Concert from a" ecvsful lour 4 tXlrenidy CaMorma, the Brigham Young will University A Cappeila Cnctr in conjunction concert a present with the Seventh Annual Mormon Festival of Arts. a:"i-famous , choir, The conduced by Dr.-- r Ralph travelled to San Woodward, Francisco to perform at the prestigious Music Educators National Convention MENC) . . Yne the me fcr the p.rf ornjanc sill be "F My Soul lvlighteth in the Song ol the jteart," written by IX , Pubert Cui tO k An entry far the Mormon Arts returned Recei!li - Some of the selections sung for the tour will be performed a! the BYU concert, Wednesday, at 8 p m in tie de Jong Concert Hall. A mass wrUten by Frank Mnrtin will be ,rfomwd in its entirety. Dr. Woodward said it was ''one of the most moving pieos I've ever worked wi h." Festival will also be performed. The author, Truman Fisher, chose the subject of Mary's A!BHsrtiai from St, Luke for his work the "Magnificai." Spiritual: and Spanish folk songs will conclude the program. Sioist v& be featured in these songs, indudings, Jeff Coletti, ! - Planned W tC w-- .. i , i Mormon Festival Art will be held Mroh 30 through April 31 in the Harris Fine Arts Center at Brigham Young University. The exhibit, which will be held in both the B.F, Larses Gallery and the Secured Gallery, wii! feati works by Mormon artists and is a major part of the The fta-b- Choruses Slafe Tuesday Concert t 1 the rs ss part of ihe Seventh discted iuf the paa eigist ABial Mormon Festival of the by Margaret Woodward, ihe wife Dr. Woodward, is mads up erf Arts at Brighsm Young from Provo ana ine ehidren Uiiverstv. The BYU Male Chorus and the surrounding areas. Several of the in the BYU BYU Ouldiwj'i Choir wiil children sang of the opera. "Boris perform at 8 p.m. in the de Jong productsofi Concert Hall is the Harris Fine Godunov" Other attractions on the Arts Center. will be a piano solo by program Dr. Ralph Woodward, for 16 Jane Gibson, accompanist for of the Male the direetar years the male chorus, and vocal solos Chorus, said the pro jam will Mrs. Woodward. include many kinds of choral performed by J J: if Mormon Annual -- f Festival of Arts. Mormon works of Nielsen, Cynthia art in all Prichard, Cecelia Hams, and areas, including painting, Michael Gibbs, sculpture, ceramics, still Students with activity cards photography &;;d motion picture wfii be admitted free and photography will he featured in will be charged an the exhibit. adi mttance charge at the door. Two tew areas will he t Til at CUETiC fjrSt Seating is eovrred in Use exhibit. One area serve basis. will focus on the celebration of Mormon beliefs, values, history, and genre as well as artistic excellence. The other area, will deal with works by Mormon artists which solely celebrate significance and excelleisee in Diana BRIDES REGISTERED fi" Vrf li i SNOOPY. Diaved tv Scott Larson, shown at left, is quiet- - ! Arts. The display will fee held March 20 through April 31 in the Harris Fine Arts A PAINTING, "Building the .Nauvoo Temple," by Gary Smith wili be one of many on display during the Mormon Fes!w?l of ' , -- 19-2- Center at lip 1 r:C I ; , , 7 - y 1 open Titer '' v .Hi --iJ.. A -- n W s - - ' yt , u oii pi - BANKER yA A ivv n ., ' ..: 1 1 m j r, AA !i Ci a f lie Brown' Pro duciion Sel by Characters from BYU Cultural Office Matinees will be March 22 and 29 at 2 p.m. When the original production Theater Stage this Wednesday at of "Charlie Brown" went into 7 p.m. in the hit musical comedy rehearsal there was ten songs "You're A Good Man Charlie and no script. The actors relied Brown." totally on their ability to Tickets will be sold at the improvise in bringing the ELWC third floor ticket offiee "Peanuti"..- characters to lift, and at the door Lemuel Harsh, a Harsh hopes lo create 'that same senior in Theatre and Cinematic spontaneous feeling of Arts is directing the musical. improvisation in this production. 'ihe ASBYU Cultural Office i, The script used for this show is producing the musical and it will rrore or less a description of run March 1922. at 7 p.m. what finally ended up on the Charles sihulz's "Peanuts" comic strip will come to life on the Varsity 2&-2- xThe fifty foreign expiries. Charlie Brown books have now passed the fifty million mark in sales around the phenomenon history. world a in the publishing Samue! Taylor s' Money-Changer- production of the musical. Since opening night in 1967 "Charlie Brown ' has played throughout the world. Today the "Peanuts" comic strip appears in one thousand newspapers in the United States and in over 3ook Gets Tells of Big Business By JOAN HANAL'ER New Printina Will the ruthless executive vice United Press International The Moneychangers, by Ar- umi ,U- . ' ; r o .' C. Uodsng Brands Of Gifts Crystal - Silverware - China 1 Co) 's i . Peggy Waigren trrnr- - rinnrrriiinnnrnnn"irinrrnTTrin-inrrnrrinririirinnnti- u Stanton Evelyn Diane Robinson Ail BYU. i , he Dl Wednesday at 7 p m m the Wilkinson on the BYU campus. 250 West Center, Provo Chen Ann Berr Berfe Jane Corson Teresa Joan Puckeff with Charlie Brown in the BYU production of "You're a Good Man Charlie Brown. ' The play will run March 26 29 at 7 p m on the third floor of the WilMnson Center. LUCY AND LINUS, played by Linda Plialer and Lynn Frobt, n'ake preparations for BYU's "Charlie Brown" production. The hit musical comedy is being sponsored by the i At art According to Peter Meyer. Secured Gilltiy director, at least 205 works erf art are expected for this year's exhibit. Meyer said ordinarily more than 500 works are submitted for display. An opening reception for the festival exhibit will be held March 26 at 7M p.m. in (he scored Gallery, Harm Fine Aits Center. Awards for the various works wiM be presented the same evening at S 30 p m. ? Tuesday it Seventh music, "from the worts of Bach to Negro spyuuais." Tochonjse? one of male and uuitt ef childrai's votcw, wsii praiem a joint concert on ft 3 iiaiiC'. (Doubled?y,ilO In reading Arthur Haik'y's latest novel, the bare !ones of think show quickly what '.the reader can expect in the next 472 pages. Instead of "Airport" or "Hotel," vie ait thrust into one of Americas great banks and spoor, fed facts on how the . modern opeia-itmoney-change- ' Yet Hailey's slight of hand is sorhihat the reader keeps presidency? !W did the $6 000 disappear and is there more to it meets the eye? Vili tne bank continue to the urban housing support '? project so imporunt to the euy twists ar,d plot ILiiley spews e tiirr with profes?:'"-"- 3' Tle rtr.uli is tliat demands entertainniertt nothing of the reader but the . .. t u. IL' mi tuv c uiu aiau:.J Ikliltlictr i. J - edition, 'an .fn,:-n'"- I oarse. plougtung tiiiujfch h"1 iM'l'"V ".intl!n '''eil of unexciting prose, caught up in the wnifie peoole ar..i evenls to b:g business as til snyt'&ef . wliich 1 . popular writer. luxe, exposed. ! Samuel W Taylor's "Family Kingdom" has been reprinted arid is available in the area. A . J "i .nlnrn president beat out the loveable executive vice president in the competition for the bank -- complete with supplement and index is now in punt. It has been published by Wostcn. Epics. Inc. and can be pUiuaM?d at book stores in Salt Lake. The trnok i? a story of Mr. ' Taylor's mother who hitched a n.ie ior time and eternity witn a human rocket, John W lajlor" and his five other wives and children. The wives and chiifiren make up hia "f amily Kingdom," a?"4 Ihe book is reported to be one cf s ';tj-.Jliter in!f;(".?StUlg3lkS " Pioneer Mayor J. W. Guthrie Opens Our Doors For the First Time. H? wjs there svhen they drove the golden spike at Promontory Point in 1W9, and he founded Utah's first railroad '.own the same year. Six years later he founded one of Utah's oldest con tinufmsly operated banks, the present Commercial Security Bank. He was John Wiiham Guthrie, Jr . - butcher, mayor, banker. A native Kentuckian, Guthrie ues lured westward by the gold rush in the 1800's. His wanderings through the early-damining tovtns of Montana and Idaho showed him there u.as a constant peed for more supplies, yet no viable means cf transportation to get them there. He had the foresight to reason that the railroad would someday provide that transportation. And when the Union Pacific and Souihem Pacific railroads joined th. nation with bands of steei at PromonOnth'ie tory Point that May of was there, ihe plans for Utah's first rail Wl, 1875-1975.- A road town (Corinne. Utah) already under way. Corinne was named for the daughter Gu'.'rle was of one of its named its first mayor. In time, however, Guthrie's intuitive mind sensed that nearby Ogdan was to be the area's future center of business. By 1876 he had a branch of the A W. Guthrie & Co. Bank built just west of what is now the corner of Washington and 24th Streets. in 1S78 Harkness & Co. boughi uui Guthrie and changed the name of the biiiik-f- he first m a history of successors wUch would adhere to his original banking principles and parlay a handful of assets into the present Commercial Security Rank, with assets surpassing $20 million In 1884 Harkness & Co. changed to Commercial National Bank and a merger with Security State Bank in 1925 completed evolution of the bank's pres ent name. century; of Commercial Security jor Utah residents. Commercial Security SanEt WMua ' ' |