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Show vwwwwvwwwwww Bluff Stuff by Dorothy Nielson Arlie a long time Hooper, resident of Bluff, died on Sunday, July 25. Opel Hooper and Miriam McCleery, who had been in Salt Lake with him, returned home shortly afterward. Opel then went on to Oklahoma for the funeral. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Howell were called to Oklahoma, after being notified of the death of her son. They returned on July 26. Mr. and Mrs. Doug Pehrson joined friends one evening this week for a cook-o- ut on the Blue Mountains. Clemma Arthur and Clarence Johnson spent a couple of days in Salt Lake City this week. Marge Scott, mother of Mrs. Ray Johnson, is visiting with the Johnsons. She acted as baby sitter to Katy and Nathan while Kathy went on a camping trip with the Stake Mutual near the Dude Ranch. Blue Mountain Melissa Richmond also went on that trip. LeRoy Atcitty took time off Births Ricky and Mary Schenck BOY THE SAN JUAN RECORD Thursday from his duties as postmaster here in Bluff to attend a postmasters meeting in the Salt Palace at Salt Lake City. Mary Atcitty is very ill. Her family had a sing for her across the river last week, and she is now in the hospital at Monticello. The has been engagement announced of Mary Beth Foushee, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Foushee of Bluff, to Donald Rex Keller, son of Grace Keller of California. They will be married on August 28. Harriet Dmitruk and Marie Lockett drove down from Salt Lake for the weekend. Harriet will be starting radiation treatments this Monday. There was a break-i- n at the Twin Rocks Store on Friday night. the Evidently, perpetrators wanted to have a party. They took some cases of beer, the nickles and dimes left in the cash register, some bread and some doughnuts. Deputy Rudy Cook is investigating. One more note Channel row had about T.V. is on that tomorstage again. We havent Two it for about a week. Evidently the rainy weather was too much for it. Alvin and Vivian Reiner are back, so I will be turning this column back to Alvin. From all accounts, they had an interesting summer. August 5, 1982 - Page 7 Moussorgsky, Annie and Rocky in one concert The first half of the free August 12 Utah Symphony concert in Monticello will feature the Ravel orchestration of the Pictures at an Moussorgskys Exhibition, originally composed as a set of piano pieces. The idea for this composition came to Moussorgsky after a visit to a posthumous exhibition of paintings by his friend Victor Hartmann. It was a marvelous bit of tone painting, in naturalistic which the composer musically describes himself wandering about the exhibition looking at various pictures. and Rimsky-KorsakoIn his The music suggests paintings of a gnome, a medieval castle, the Paris Tuileries, a wagon drawn by oxen, baby chicks hopping about, a scene from Jewish ghetto life, a French marketplace, and the Catacombs all actually derived from the works hung in Hartmanns exhibition. Considered one of the greatest Modest Russian composers. Moussorgsky, is best known for his opera Boris powerful He became known as one of Four Days Only - Wed thru Sat 4-5- S- 7 group of composers which Five, --- nationaUstic included Mily Alexander Borodin, a Balakirev, Cesar Cui v. music Moussorgsky a reveals passionate interest in and concern for the peasant masses and their conditions in life. There is irony in this, for Moussorgsky was the son of a landowner, and the emancipation of the serfs impoverished his family and forced him to earn a meager living as a petty bureaucrat in the czarist government. He struggled bitterly to avoid complete destitution and of died at the age of forty-tw- o nervous disorders aggravated by alcoholism. Moussorgsky had a gift for setting everyday Russian speech to music and composed many series of songs. His harmonies were so daring that much of revised work after his Moussorgskys death. Fans of the animated film will recall a Fantasia Rimsky-Korsak- ov composition, Moussorgsky Night cm Mountain Bald as a the Walt Disney in sequence A classic. For the second half of the San Henderson Juan Concert, Robert will conduct the orchestra in Gliers Russian Sailors Dance, Trail the On Strouses by Pomp and Annie, Circumstance No. 2 An Nobis by Old-Fashio- ned Grofe, by Sing-Alo- Elgar, ng and Henderson, of Beethoven, Murphys Fifth and Rocky by Conti. TTie free concert which begins at 8 p.m., Thursday, August 12, in the Monticello High School auditorium is underwritten in part by the state legislature with matching funds by Annaley Redd of La Sal and Provo with an assist by a grant provided jointly by the Utah Arts Council and the National Endowment for the Arts. Mark your calendar now. A will assure response good the continuation of funding for Utah Symphony concerts in San Juan County. i Utah creates Medal of Valor Godunov. Born in Karevo, Moussorgsky took piano lessons as a boy. He was sent to a military academy by his parents and entered the army in 1856, which he left in 1858 to devote himself to music. Mighty The State of Utah has created a Medal of Valor. It will be to who risk their people given lives to save the life of another. The Medal was originally pro- as an incentive to posed of Public Safety Department employees for action above and beyond the call of duty. It was expanded to recognize citizens of the State as well, who may be involved in heroic acts. The Medal of Valor is designed to characterize strength of mind or spirit, personal bravery and heroism. Medal will be The awarded by the Governor upon recommendation by the Commissioner of Public Safety. Department of Public Safety Commissioner Larry E, Lunnen appointed a committee in March of this year and directed them to develop the Medal of Valor. He asked the committee to sponsor a contest among Department of Public Safety employees for design of the medal. During April the Committee offered a $200 savings bond for the best design. The winner was Norman P. Brown, a Highway Patrolman from Roosevelt, Utah. An additional $50 bond was to given Duane Richins, Salt Lake City, Utah, for an idea to present the Medal on a wall plaque. The medal will be detachable to allow wearing it on a uniform. Latest 4 - H news FREAKY FRYERS Our boys baking club has met two more times and each time we made three batches of bread. if Boys Shirts ALL FABRIC , ALL JEANS All Ladies and Girls Blouses 7-1- (except 501 s) Big Bells and Boot Cut Levis 4 St s,' Everyone got lots of experience kneading bread and shaping it. We also talked about judging appearance of loaves. On August 2 we made French bread and French rolls, applesauce bread and bread. we did Between batches experiments with balloons to see how fast yeast expands with and 90-min- 5 ) NFL Pencil packs Duffle Bags Reg. $1.79 Reg. $6.98 off Reg. $1.65 Sale price $1.29 Sale price $1.19 MONTICELLO T0Ol BACk-TO-SCHO- Ot BACK-TO-SCHO- QL worked on their skirt project. The next meeting will be August 4. Refreshments were served. ( ( ( 8-1- Bargain Pack Garfield Notebooks Meeting was held at the home of the club leader, Barbara Redd. The Butch Craftys made animal cookies and the Sundance Sewers Monticello Swimming Pool ( 2 p.m. August 6 ( $2 singles 7" $3 couples ( Dress Hawaiian Bring Swimming j V suit Thererwill be refreshments Sale price $4.99 Samsonite Luggage Bic Pens 50 BUTCH CRAFTYS AND SUNDANCE SEWERS Hawaiian Pool Dance Mens, womens and childrens Selected Styles Boys Shirts ute without sugar and with and withwarm out water. We also experimented with baking soda the same way. Reg. 99$ Sale Price 85 i MERC. V Sponsored by Monticello High School Yearbook v tl ( |