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Show 4L rTr r Bv HAROLD LUNDSTROM sees at regular symphony or chamber music recitals. And it consisted largely of young people. It also included a scattering peseret News Music Editor an Those who concert in the avant-gaidhope that they may come across something worthwhile have good reason to justify attend e the Utah of Sym- amending Orchestra's Rockefeller phony Week Concert in Kingsbury Hall Friday evening. The Utah Symphony. Conductor Maurice Abravanel, and his two guest conductors, Ardean Watts and Ralph had an audience of respectable proportions. I was told that the two previous this week of the same program at Weber College in Lay-coc- s The Friday evening audience, like most avant-gard- e .audiences, was made of individuals that one almost never enough to be a skilled craftsman who can trot out a succession of sounds and, infrequently, funny noises? In Mr. Lazarof's work we were hearing music of 30 years ago. Mr. Lazarof discloses the skill diat helped lay die foundation for an art based on new insights, but the mere exhibition of old insights is, I think, wearing rather thin. HOLD OX YOUTH the progiam's composition, was longest, truly avant-garHenri L a z a r o f s Structures Sonnies. It was played extremely sensitively. Tite other Wo numbers d contemporary composers for example. Dr. Leroy J. Robertson and Alexei Haieff and some of our most faithful including Seymour Solomon, president of Vanguard Records who is hete to dnect activities next week. I have emphasized attendance because I was forcibly struck that this largely youthful audience was listening to a piogram composed of music of tiie generation of its grand- were RFC VI.LS PAT Tins type of music greatly excited progtessive audiences back in the 1920s and early 1930s (when l was an usher), but it is still considered avant-garone However, only merit. M o z h sym- Darwin Wolford's Symphony No. 1 conducted by Ardean Watts and Merrill Btadshaws Symphony No. 3, conducted by Ralph Lavcock. These two symphonies were also sensitively performed. It is to the high credit of tite symphony that its musicians were able to perform three major works that were new to them in one evening. This is an of great accomplishment phonies: fathers. Ogden and at BYU in Proo also enjoyed good attendance. I'M SEAL GROUP 59 Press Concert justified Avant-Gard- e whether composed yesterday or years Avant-gar- ago, obviously has a particuoil youth, rebellious or otherwise, and thus, undoubtedly fufills a function of some sort. During thee past years of avant-gard- e composing, let no one imagine that diere hasn't been much of the other kind of music being composed. By die other kind, I mean such larly hold three pieces, Mr. Lazarofs was the most (,.r out, to use die phrase in its best meaning. The composer, a professor at UCLA, is an excellent craftsman. But is it Of the music DESERET NEWS, Prokofieff, and Poulenc. It is this genre that Friday's two symphonies belong. If one were to give a comparison of the we heard new symphonies last night it would be that Dr. Wolford's Symphony No. 1 has the rugged sound of Sibelius, and Dr. Bradshaw's Symphony No. 3 has the shimmering and delicate approaches of some of Debussy's best. I am not suggesting that the symphonies are In any way derivi-tivjust that diey have similar sounds. I think that Mr. Abravanel could include either of these symphonies on any regular piogram and diat Ins listeners would find them both interesting and enjoyable. Dr. Lowell Durham of the University of Utah Music De- ToWomen in B3 Regional Plan Gains Support Awards examples as Richard Strauss, Saturday, April 20, 1968 Fifteen Utdh Pre Woieen , announce as "lnnols o1 .w awards in the stale writing contest at an awards luncheon today at tbe University Club. Utah s Coordinating Counnli The Little Hoover Commission lor Health ami Welfate this recommended in January, 196.3. week commetidtxl Iho WelLuo that regionalization ue instituted Division for its beginning a pl.ui as a means of saving clerical to regionalize oeiatnms. and secretarial services, elim1- some rend spu.ce .and Murray Moiei, chairman of However, tne council agreed O'.11! some directoi ay pe Ithe Utah Travel Council, was that regional operations and the hst read guest speaker oiw Ul inneis'mended by the Little Homer jof -The state opciations me Commtssioh. Five were pto- Taking top honors was Edith' lor servicing re- p,)spd N. Ridge, editoi nf the Magna tHllKamzed recently by the Welfate gional operations instead of Division. with six Times, county operations A DICE OPPOSITION a watds, two seconds ami SPADE AAOKh tint,;. Hearings on the proposed reluithei spade woik is coniconducted were THREE FIRMS m be m- plied and the plan nl 9 in p.ichfield and Cedar ednm- - stituted without violent protest. Cjtv and plans were generally or the Weekly Mard C. .photographer Holbrook, execute assailed. Reflex-Davt- s News Journal in llr.tnr said everyone on the Franklin K. Brough, executive partment served as chairman Kaysville, won three firsts, four council agrees that using a re- - director of the Utah Tuberculo-giona- l of Rockefeller Week acdvites. seconds and two thirds. will save money but sis and Health Association, told plan e Five avvards went felt that considerable prepara to- - the council that cuts in meas-t- o B. J. Pursell, publisher, State to prevent tuberculosis py work will be required befoto ures of Utah Guide. Ethel Bradford, d can be would be dangerous. It costs 400 put into action. staff writer for the Murray We wiU have to t)(, able to times more to hospitalize a and News Advertiser, case than to employ benefits and economies prove won four firsts and three sec- treatment on incipi- Mr. and ork graduaily;011 s' ent cases, he said. brook said. Darlene Galbraith, statf writ- er for the Salt Lake Tribune, Jvvon three firsts, three seconds and one third. Winifred Jones, women's editor of the Provo Daily Herald, took four ' ain- we-ret- e, - - e first-plac- - Betty Fisher, first-plac- Home Often Start Of Teen Trouble berc-ulosi- The basic psychological task Dr. Nestor the adolescent, is to relinquish infantile said, .love ties with parents. Problems result when parents end moral failures of them at the Qedipal situation.- nts, Dr. Byron Nestor, psychi-arM- j avoid concrete realization afric consultant of the San of their childrens sexual lives. tYariciSco Psychoanaly tic Insd- - The child must turn his sexual aid Friday nigh- 'energy to his peers, and must Dr. Nestor spoke at the Fifth nize his parents dont need Annual, Psychoanalytic Work- - him because they love each Community Mental Health Center, 156 Westminster other, Dr. Nestor explained. STEADY SUPPORT Ave. The center and the Utah Association for Mental Health The adolescent, during this were sponsors. crisis state, must be conscious STUDIES CASE of steady predicatble parental - . . When parents contradict Parents at this time, . fessed religious values or are must feel pleasure at the childs hypocritical in marriage, crises growth and must have a satisfy-suc- h as pregnancy, running jng marriage, the psychiatrist 3 why. suicidal attempts nr sajd physical attacks on parents will Too often parents with unhapoccur- in the adolescent, Dr. py marriages use the child as a Nestor said. 'substitute partner. Dr. Nestor He cited case studies of a col- - said. child is then The ' Jege' student who threatened his trapoed; he is carrying one par-- toother with a knife and shot- - cnt around on his back. gun, and of a child who dumped The therapy for the troubled a pdt of flowers over his mot- adolescent. Dr. Nestor recomhers head. In the first case, the mended (1) that parental mar.mother had pretended her mar- riage crises be exposed, (2) that riage was successful, but later both parents must cooperate she wanted a divorce. and participa,e in treatment, Ja the second case, the mother that the therapist must church faithfully, but vide for the ..pg0 support , was an alcoholic. jchild, (4) that the child should : MUST LET GO . be consulted before the analyst Dr. Nestor noted that the talks to parents, school teachers mother of one run away girl, or counselors, (5) that the had been pregnant twice lescent, with the therapist, must ' before 16 years old, was en-- ! take a bird's-ey- e view of his affairs, and his parents past. gaged in extra-maritI first-'plac- of NEWS WRITER Dorothy O. Rea, staff writer for The Deseret News, won two first place awards and two seconds. Other News staffers win- par-sco- u : I ning awards were: Evelyn today Sen. Bennett said, Mazuran. womens editor, two ,ac F- h e admin istr firsts and one second; Jane Wil- - voiced strong preference for thej staff writer, two firsts Percy housing bill to help low- - sponsored housing plan now'be-an- d two thirds; Maxine Martz,: income families emphasizing subcommittee contains staff writer, one first; Lillie assistance from the private eco-- , f M'e private enterprise some Miller, womens department, nomic sector as opposed to one embodied in a bill I federal one first, and Sherma Lind featuring government Yeates, womens department, volvement. along with Sen. one third. last Charles Percy, The Utahns remarks came as he said, Gladys Mike, associate editor lyear, of the. of the National Wool Growers the housing subcommittee question Com- and full Senate Banking one won first and Magazine, one, However there are fejerai second-plac- e scheduled award Joyce merce Committee consid- isions slbsidy Stout, staff writer for the Salt further drafting sessions of a ered t0 Which I do not sub- Lake Tribune, took one second g housing bill for scribe the Utah lawmaker place award, and Violet Boyce, Tuesday. Sen. Bennett is rank- - a(ded e one free lance, ing Republican on the commit- Bennett continued; ..The tee'real question is whether the ad- Categones included news and THE PROBLEM ministration is willing to let tite jfeature stories, articles, intermost pressing magical formula of personal of One the edit-linviews, reviews, makeup, facing our nation is tiative coupled with private publicity, advertising colwork its wonders in of assisting more umns and photography. income families to obtain their solving the housing problem, or e e entries have own housing. Persons who have whether the The 35 been sent to the National Feder- - a share in America through federal housing schemes of the ation of Press Women for a pjece 0f jt are morejpast will again choke life out of petition in the national contest. 'likely to be constructive citizens, a promising cooperative idea. alion-liamso- n, taMhe ., real rt wjde-rangin- first-plac- - en-th- at first-plac- Deseret Photo bye Don Grayston An Eye For Detection o top-heav- red-tap- g, A Salt Lake eye specialist applies tonometer painlessly to eye of person undergoing test for glaucoma, which if undetected or untreated, can blind its victims. The tonometer measures pressure within the eyeball. Clinics for detection of glaucoma and diabetes will be held Tuesday at Olympus Junior High School, and April 30 at Cyprus High School. Diabetes blood tests at both schools begin at 5 p.m., and glacoma tests begin at 7 p.m. About half the estimated 20,000 Utahns with diabetes and 7,000 with glaucoma dont know it. -- ado-wh- e awards. U. Aide Sen. Bennett To Announce? Cites Lag Despite Utah.; resilience dur- ing the lengthy copper strike, Utahs economy may be lagging behind the nations, a Universi-- . . ntbiued rom Fae issue, which is of major concern ty of Utah economist said session of Congress. .this Friday- rather than bid for the gover- - He was first elected to the L. Ralph Mecham, vice presi- chair. Senate in 1950, defeating tite dent for Economic and Commu-- , . Sen. is well up late Sen. Elbert D. Thomas, Bennett, PSC secretary, said, to his nity Development, told Salt knowledge, the case was un- - Lake Exchange Club members the Senate seniority ladder, is He was reelected in 1956 and equaled in Utah history. that unhappily the nation can ranking Republican member on 962-tUP&L originally offered prosper while Utah lags. the Raking and Currency Com- - Sen. Bennett is a former presserve Magnesium Project at a The states dent .of. income .the fNational ,Asfcia; per capita GOP mittee and rate o.a mills on a firm delivery airt10UBh eenerallv tion of is . increasine of 1116 Finance Com basis, then lowered this to 4.6 is far below the national avermills on a 75 per cent availabil mittee. 'Bennett Motor Company. age, Mr. Mecham said. ity basis. COMMITTEE POSTS He has been active in many He noted Utah dropped from! The PSC order found that . . in and rank- - civic and community functions, He is ui ho ofi ai to numbef 30 among the states rt ti v .n 'g . 1964 to number 34 in 1966 in per ing Republican on the Senates, is treasurer of the Sunday ... ures- on Standards School General Board of The income Committee of .Select state!03113 the terests the of Utah ani .onuinant with onK.1 The unemployment picture for and Conduct (Ethics); is a Church of Jesus Christ 1968 showed Utah at 5 member of the Joint Committee Latter-daSaints, has authored invonionno anti neeesitv Inarch iio 06111 unemployment, not on Atomic Energy and top Re-- j two Church books, for the Masnesium Proiect to lPer in publican on the Jf'int Commit- involved Sen. Bennett is married to tite those 'ncludinS ho ahto tn Wat its niant on thp while the nation-te- e Frances Grant. They former on Defense Production. .labor disputes, G r eat S 3 it Lake He is considered one of the have three sons and two daugh- al average was 3.6 per cent. The two PSC orders in C on the gold ters. combined instrument allows. Mr. Mecham said Utah's bust- - Senates top experts the rate is Raft River to serve the ranch ness bankruptcy in the nation. region northwest of Box Elder, highest of the1 comprising county. All of eastern and southern Box Elder was awarded tc UP&L. The orders also excluded Tooele County enturely from Raft River service. i'00 diat be had a committee to consult with the A delineating boundary left appointed Raft River 35 miles from the Highway Patrol. R. LaVaim Cox of the Utah Petroleum Council proposed M.P. site. this committee. Others on heads 55 Among pages listing major tests for qualification was dam- this committee are a representaging testimony to the effect ative of service station retailthat Raft River had no way of ers, major oil companies, the 4.400 some of contains pages brine lake's hearings, ed to result in a $50 million MPthat the 227 exhibits were delivering Columbia power sup- Automotive Trade Association testimony and development within perhaps two'minerals worth $81 billion. and the automobile dealers' asC. R. of amassed. ply to the cooperative. Openshaw three Jr., almost estimated years During years. It has been sociation. About 400.000 cars remain to be inspected befoie the May 15 I deadline. Uatt Bedsiomi Soes To UP&L Continued from Page ' -- B-- l based in Malta, Idaho, had to serve the area with power from the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) generated in the Pacific North- west. COUNTY DIVIDED 'In-j- ts written decision, the commission essentially divided Box Elder County in half. UP&L .Is granted authority in the eastan area completely ern half embracing the northern half of t Salt Lake. , .Also it is granted authority in strip lying north of the Elder line and .Tpoele-Bo- x extending from the lake shore -- , 6f-ea- to live Utah-Nevad- border. a The order denies Raft River's .application for authority to .extend its authority into a strip just soutli of the Box ' Elder-TooelCounty line. ..The Magnesium Project had originally proposed situating its plant at Timpie, 10 miles but later changed its t site Jo lie within the strip Raft Rivdtvfras seeking to serve. ttl&IIER RATE IF'MP should switch its site Chuck 'to the Timpie area, the Utah vSC left the door open for Possible higher power rate. The power decision is expect- six,-mil-e, e C 0 third-rankin- g ? J i one-thir- d I Ruling Pleases All But Raft the powe.for Utah Power & Light can now 80,000 kilowatts "This could lead to perhaps a R a m p t o n service to several ranchers near the million investment $100 its negotiations with separation. lake. the of end by continue north on die PSC decision the Lithium Magnesium Project, us thev what gave Mjtgr.esium Project to provide a Actually Magnesium Project in for electrolytic nncto. In Cu,- e'ecly.vml magnesl-- Hansel Valley area at the not th link everyo,,,, j process to produce through creation of new jolts, not much c)iance of anything by Dow Chemical Co., which is de' um. of the the states under govand broadening jend o ti,e lake would currently study, evpr deveiopjng i the way be- service of electrical continued. MP said the Max base. He iernor powerjprived expansion. , com-are somewhat jeause of restricting Raft Rive to A vast support and "F4m pleased that the E. M. Naughton, UP&L presi-- ! Imissioti ruled as it did and that ton)- - on the other hand, said iary industry should develop, unusual in requiring heat the region west of there. He stated he was aware that ;l'tah fower & Light Co. and f1P assignment of territory as along with these major plants, Ipart of its processing. Magn)tilum Project have been 0.'(prpd by the commission which could perhaps double the p'or this heat it (MP) will private utility service to some of able tx negotiate a sound agree- - "should he satisfactory to all initial investments, he added, have electric generating capac- - the ranchers would require of about 40,000 to pay from $6,000 to ) Mr. Naughton said: "We are ity mput.. " parties." Tite decision by the PSC and particularly pleased and think it watts to supply its firm electri- - '$30,000 each - The' manage of Raft River depending on ' to bring pow- commented somewhat bit- - the assurance of Utah Power & significant that Utah Power & eal requirements, Mr. Naugh- - length of lines that they will provide Light Co. has been awarded the, ton said. er into their area. 'itorty that the Utah PSC decision Light that Mr. Schlender chai-gcpower wil! have a huge impact right to serve lake front indus-- j He explained that separation Jiadvnot only deprived the bl tite privilege of serving the on the economy and industrial try, tiie development of which is'of magnesium chloride, dried, the decision cut us out of the said Gov. so essential to tite continued! lake salts, into magnesium; best irrigation area potential for Trtinenrt extraction industry but growth of Utah, Imetal and chlorine "will require expansion also. lso excluded it from extending Ramptou. growth and welfare of Utah. ts fj (on-site- Co-o- If you axe the father of aboy 12 years or older, Co-o- p L. 'said y Drive the "NEW" 1968 VOLKSWAGEN Today . . . With AUTOMATIC Stick Shift!!! kilo-the- VOLKSWAGEN Oy W INTERMOUNTAIN South co-o- p Main . . PHONE HU 6-2- 1 11 there are many tilings you have to think about One I to make sure your son has all the advantages he deserves and all the opportunity he needs to grow into worthwhile manhood. One of the best ways for a boy to learn howto get along in the world is to have a newspaper route. 'Many famous and successful men started out delivering newspapers perhaps yourself. Much about budgeting, income, pyifit and expenses can be learned from handling a newspaper route. The bo j , who deliver a daily newpaper learn thesi things and more . They learn dependability, incentive wiih gopls like trips to Disneyland, and manv otherexeiting prizes and rewards. T Honestly, isnt this the kind of training you would like your j son to have? Have your boy phone Newspaper Agency Cor- or come in . poration Circulation Department, 522840 and see us at 143 South Main, Salt LakeCtty. -- |