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Show BOX ELDER 3 NEWS, Brigham City, Utah Sunday, July 2, 1972 MARCH ON! Preparing for Brigham City Communi- Theaters production, Little Mary Sunshine", are these forest rangers, (I to r) Michael ty stout-hearte- d Carver (Captain Warrington), David Page, John Kevin Oliver, Rich Hollist, Jon Christensen, and Os-bur- n, Bill Hall (Corporal Jester). The play will be three nights, July 13, 14 and 15. Players Slate Production Little Mary Sunshine, a delightful musical melodrama by Richard Besoyan, has been cast and is well under way for production July 13, 14 and 15 in the BEHS auditorium. The cast and crew are rehearsing weeknights under the direction of Robert Macek, a professor at Weber State college and a professional actor and director. ( ; t.i ia ' The players and the technical staff have been working since May, and the pieces are finally j , Drauca Holmes, Linda Knavel and Michael Cox are Mrs. assistant directors, Holmes and Mrs. Knavel are also stage managers. beginning to fit together. The set, designed by Nels Carlson and under the technical direction of Ralph Raisor, is a whimsical portrayal of the Colorado Inn, owned by Little Mary, and the surrounding countryside. It is colorful and lends itself to the fanciful atmosphere of the show. The costumes, researched and .'designed : by Sandra Burridge . arei .beautiful reproductions of those worn in the 1914 era. Gallery Sets y These amazing phardepict paintings maceutical milestones from true-to-lif- e in- cidents in the past and present of the pharmaceutical world. But it wasnt until 1949 that he could intensive, begin exhaustive research on the paintings, and this work continued until the 45th painting finally was approved. Benders responsibility was that of project director, including editiorial and art research and the writing of all historical matieral Rasmussen, ac- companying the oil paintings and their reproductions. Series Artist Artist Robert A. Thom of who Mich., Birmingham, became internationally famous as a result of the series, teamed with Bender in the tedious to research necessary authenticate even the smallest They help to coordinate the cast members and produce some semblance of uniformity in song and dance. Theirs is a rough Job! The position of make-u- p and costumer is aptly filled by Dave Christensen. He has to make certain that everyone looks right come curtain time. No job is easy is a performance like this! With everyone working together though this is apt to be a performance that you wont want to miss. choreographers. Firm Splits Stock, At the annual meeting of Champion Home Builders Co. held in Dryden, Mich., the approved Champions stock authorized common from 10 to 75 million shares in order to effect a stock split. In addition, Champions president, Henry E. George, told meeting shareholders that both sales and earnings for the companys first quarter, ended June 2, 1972, were record high. Shareholders also elected two new members to the companys Board of Driectors. On April 19, 1972, Champions board of directors approved the split to be made on July of 28, 1972, to shareholders record on July 7, 1972. detail Art of these exceptional oils. and critics maceutical autorities ;i u The boards action then was to the vote by shareholders for the necessary authorized shares to actually effect the now official split. For the first quarter, ended June 2, 1972, George said Champions total sales rose 73 subject percent to $75,110,000 from $43,468,000 for the Because of a new government ruling, you can now travel daily between Brigham City and OgdenSalt Lake on one of three convenient Trailways schedules. LEAVE BRIGHAM CITY AT 6:40 A.M. Reports Top Sales increasing Pharmacy Art dramatic and significant Kirsten firms shareholders Exhibit of Brigham City A prehistoric caveman, a Roman centurion, a French explorer and a Persian scientist will make a monthlong special visit to Box Elder county soon to highlight a showing at the Museum-Gallerin the Community Center here. These unusual tourists will appear just as they did in bygone eras hundreds and thousands of years ago, but will only seem lifelike. Actually, they will be traveling as figures in a series of 40 oil paintings. The exhibit will be introduced to the public at a reception slated for Saturday, July 8, from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Museum-GallerHosts for the reception will be the Hamilton Drug company, who will also display of a collection antique equipment. pharamaceutical Promotion manager is Bill Hall and Rebecca Fleming of Ogden, is serving as staff assistant to the director. Most of the hard long rehearsal hours are spent under the direction of Margaret Hutchison, musical director, and Karlene Bywater, and performed same year-ag- o quarter. Its net earnings, he said, rose 121 percent to $4,465,000, or $.64 .per share, from $2,024,000, or $.29 per share, for the same comparable quarters. "Our first quarter is especially gratifying, George said, "because historically our first quarter is only our third or fourth best fiscal quarter. i and youll be at 7:10 A.M. or Salt Lake at 8:00 A.M., time for a full days business, shopping or visiting. in Odgen LEAVE BRIGHAM CITY AT 2:30 P.M. and youll arrive in Ogden at 3:10 P.M., Salt Lake at 4:00 of Warner-Lambe- after a full days work, and youll be by 10:15 P.M., rested and relaxed. in Odgen by 9:20 P.M., of " Intmissions. experts in all related fields were contacted, wherever they were. have hailed the History of Pharmacy in Pictures. as the most authentic, extensive and comprehensive series ever undertaken and completed in behalf of their profession. . Outstanding as the oil painwith their depth and tings are feeling blended with an Old Master's use of color they become even more outstanding when one considers the vast, almost insurmountable, amount of research required before a brush touch the canvas. Bender and Thom, the editor-artis- t team, estimate they traveled more than a quarter-milliomiles in their various n For example, the artist spent more than four months in several European countries talking to authorities and doing planning for six of the paintings, And this research is one reason why the explorers, cavemen, soldiers and scientists look so realistic. "We didn't want the paintings to be mere artists conceptions of what these historical scenes might have been. We wanted to be as accurate as humanly possible. Thats why three to six months of painstaking research went into each painting, Bender said. Three new schedules, brought to you by the same people who take you straight through from Salt Lake to Denver, Kansas City, Dallas and Seattle. And on the only scenic routes through Utah and Colorado. And offer direct routes to Albuquerque Phoenix and other sun cities of the Southwest. And convenient departures to Boise, Portland and other Northwest points at 3:35 P.M., 8:43 A.M., and the good old red-ey- e special, 1 rt SERVING UTAH BETTER THAN EVER History Pharmacy in Pictures exhibit will be held during the month of July. More than one million persons already have seen the paintings, which have been exhibited at the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, D.C.; national conventions of both the Canadian and American Pharmaceutical Associations, various state - and provincial pharmacists conventions throughout the United States and Canada, and the Detroit The Museum. Historical Smithsonian Institute showing alone attracted more than 350,000 persons. George A. Bender, retired Parke-Davi- s executive, now on the faculty of the University of Arizona College of Pharmacy, first conceived of this famed series more than 25 years ago. He envisioned setting on canvas iTh v .irrir '"he One of the most difficult of the paintings in the History of is one series showing Avicenna, the 11th century Persian whose pharPharmacy maceutical teachings were accepted as authorititative in the West until the 17th PERSIAN PHARMACY and Salt Lake research During July "Million-dollar- ready for a LEAVE BRIGHAM CITY AT 8:40 P.M. company, to the heritage of pharmacy. The P.M., full evening. by Parke, Davis and Company, subsidiary oftr, ernationally-known phar- Before the Dawn of History" to Pharmacy, Today and Tomorrow, and are a tribute a in plenty :55 A.M. |