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Show The Salt Sessions For Singing The National Association of Teachers of Singing will open a summer workshop on voice production solo or in chorus Aug. 6 at the University of Utah. The workshop is one of five being held in the nation. U. of U. faculty member Jessie M. Perry will direct the workshop and John Marlowe Nielson is Nationally known musicians and singing teachers will comprise the workshop faculty, and registration for the session has been received from all oyer the United States. ' William Vennard, Unlver-cit-y of Southern California voice department head, will teach voice physiology. John Toms of Northwestern University will give courses In demonstration lessons. Former Metropolitan Opera Company singer Ralph Errolle wiIl teach courses in Italian diction and Leroy J. Robertson, U. of U. music department head, will lecture on the composer and song literature. S. L. Crawley, U. psychol-og- y department chief, will speak on performance as related to fear, and William Fowler of the U. music department staff, will speak on the acoustics of music. X A f a 1 yip AT ' 'X Paul Giacoma, left, af &, r 4mhm Thyne Rasmussen, center, and Ber- tha Wright practice for this year's "Valiantly Onward. Annual Pioneer Pageant To Expand Schedule The traditional pioneer pageant, Valiantly Onward, produced annually as a feature of the Days of 47 observance, is growing this year. Now in its 24th year, the pageant will be seen on two nights for the first time in .Its - history, - according - to Glenn E. Sacos, pageant dl- rector. Utah-boractress Laraine Day, who will narrate the pageant, and the more than 1,000 participants in the event, will be seen both Monday and Tuesday nights at the Salt Lake Tabernacle. Mr. Sacos reports that according to police estimates, some -- 20,000 people - were gathered on Temple Square during the 1960 production. The growing demand over the years, he notes, has ret sulted in the presentation. All admissions are free and no seats are reserved. Rehearsals for the more thah' 1,000 persons in . the pageant have been in progress for months, Mr. Sacos reports. New features this year will include the e Sacra Dulce Chorus, directed by Ronald Pex ton; a pioneer brass band under the direction of Leo Dean, and a performance by 60 Indians of the Inter-Tribof Indian Pow-WoUtah. Other main features-wil- l include a representation of Christmas an in the Salt Lake Valley, a pioneer wedding, and the familiar depiction of the hardships suffered by the pioneers as they crossed the plains. A company of 500 girls' dressed identically in white will introduce the pageant with a choral reading presentation. Mr. Sacos reports that the Tabernacle will be outfitted with more staging levels this year than in the past, and to provide realism, pine trees will again be broughtr to Salt Lake City from southern Utah to set the scene. Choreography for the 1961 pageant is being created by Karen Burkinshaw, and Murray Allen Is in charge of scenic aspects of the production. - two-nlgh- Frontier Artists Depict Wests Wild Grandeur By George Dibble Inspired painting and mere illustration are contrasted in the American Federation of Arts "Artists of the Western Frontier Collection at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts. y Wm Charles M. Russells small water-coldepicting a buffalo hunt affords an Interesting comparison with another in comparable size - and medium by Frederic Remington. The latter, Army Scouts on Patrol resembles a cover design for some early mail order catalogs. Swashbuckling figures neatly arrayed in colorful uniforms of the day, peer anxiously across a phony landscape looking for signs of trouble. Overlong walrus moustaches curl beneath broad brimmed hats in real comic opera Mr. Dibble fashion. Admittedly not one of Remingtons best studies, the drawing serves however, as an excellent record of detail regarding the habiliments of frontiersmen a function served by a considerable number of the prints and drawings in the collection. Every line, gesture and fleck of color in the Russell mass around painting seems devoted to the energy-charge- d which sky and plain are oriented. Reportorial in his own right, the artist nonetheless conveys a sense of personal excitement. Wild Grandeur . Thomas Moran, painter of western scenes who influenced a number of his contemporaries, is represented by the ochre splendor of The Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone. Preoccupation with details doesn't submerge a feeling of wild grandeur in the scene. Ralph Albert Blakelocks Silvery Nifeht has charmed viewers of the University collection for nearly half a century. The romantic canvas achieved in fluorescent monochromatic values conveys even more of the artists personal mannerisms than the small landscape displayed in the traveling show. It is a style that caused the artist to lose favor in academic circles. A few years after he died in poverty (1919) his canvases were in demand at excellent prices.Accurate Documentation Albert Bierstadt, who painted in the Western States and Naon the Pacific Coast, found increasing favor with-th- e tional Academy to which he was elected to membership. Documentary prints dealing with the American Indian are from a folio prepared for the report of the Alexander Maxmilian Scientific Expedition. Artist Karl Bodmer subsequently took up residence in France where he became Influential in the Barbizon School. ' William Tyler Ranneys large oil Boones First View of Kehtucky includes fantastic detailed treatment of two dogs effects in painting. that virtually approaches In notable contrast to the" plethora of tight painting from an era that found the painter sentimentally recording the genre scene, are the broadly painted Frontiersman and Indian Woman by Jules Tavernier and the concisely expert drawings of Charles Wlmar. The latter artist, German by birth and training, did much to further academic Instruction In his adopted country. Student Displays Two university of Utah students; are being featured in displays this month. Lynn O. Freeman is Currently having his first one man show of oils and drawings at the Tower East Theater. Carolyn House pens a note that she is slated ..tpr a one man show.of her watercoloraat Sun Valley, Idaho, or - -- 3-- Specializing in- - Teas Utltmsf Open House tn fin ld 1111 ZZZ Co. Catering Jltf It SmHi 150-voic- -- listen without response. It was in appreciation of Williams silence, I am sure, that Hemingway presented the guide the bound galley proofs of For Whom the Bell Tolls." Even then Hemingway may have expounded thoughts for manuscripts he left upon his death last week in Hailey, Idaho, and Cuban banks. Williams never said. Annual Invitation Subsequently, Hemingway established r e s i dence In Cuba. He invited Williams for cm annual April-Ma- Salt Lakes Band Sets 2 Concerts Salt Lake Citys Municipal Band will present two concerts for the Days of 47 weekend; one 'Sunday at 6 p.m. and one Monday at 4 pun. in the bandstand of Lib- erty Park. Flutist Ralph L. Gochnour and clarinetist Dow H. Young will team as a duet for Lo! Hear the Gentle Lark and tenor Glenn H. Johnson will sing "Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life and Little Grey Home in the West Sunday. Mondays concert will feature many Utah pioneer songs in honor of the Days of 47 celebrations, including Utah, We Love Thee and Come, Come Ye Saints. The Forbidden Voyage, by Earle Reynolds, David McKay CoIncwNeW York, $4.95, Balt Lafc Municipal Band. Sunday at 6 pm. and Monday at 4 pm. In Liberty Park Banditand. L'nlveralty of Utah Summer Orrhentra. Concert Sunday at 3 p.m. In concert room of Music Hall on U. of U. campus. Ocmcart Annual Pioneer Paieant. Performances Monday and Tuesday at 8:15 p.m. in Salt Lake Tabernacle. Barry Lynn. Dane performance Tuesday at 8.30 p.m. In Prudential federal Auditorium, 3261 S. State St. (100 East.) . Lecture Walter Terry. Dance critic lectures and dancers Thomas An t I which- - Involved Dr. Reynolds and his family arrived in Hawaii In April of 1958 on the last lap of a cruise round-the-worl- on their yacht, the Phoenix It was Just before some Pacific nuclear tests were scheduled. Anthropologist Reynolds had Just come from Hiroshima, where he had been studying effects of radiation on children. Already a foe of nuclear tests his convictions were strengthened by the four Quakers who had been prohibited to sail Into the test area as a moral protest Novel Details City Siege Unvexed to the Sea, by Gerry Morrison. St Martins Press, New York, ; $5.93. Dancer Slates Performance The title of the book is taken from Lincolns saying, The signs look better, the Father of Waters again goes unvexed to the sea, after the Norths successful siege of Vicksburg. And the book is indeed another Civil War story, replete with Southern belles, Yankee spies and irresistible octoroons. It is full of battles and intrigues. Author Morrison is a television director and producer, "and one suspects, writes with a view to the camera. This reviewer predicts it will go unvexed to the movies. H.H.J. . Former Salt Lake dancer Barry Lynn, familiar to Utah audiences for his sum--7 mer perform-ances in the Arena Theatre in Emigration Canyon, will make his only appearance here this sea-?son in a pro-X- j gram of new dance works ' Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. at Mr. Lynn the Prudendential Federal Auditorium, 3261 S. State St. (100 East.) Mr, Lynn currently makes his home in Arizona and plans to use this as a base during tours around the country with his dance show. The Tuesday performance will feature selections which he plans to dance during the coming season. The program will Include Pretty BalPerson Reaching, loon, Shy Man on the Loose, Bach Minus Halo and Day of the Beachcomber. arrest and com" plicated trials. The author attempts to defend his actions as manly and courageous in an age gone wild and savage because of its technical advance; he Joyce Hatton and Stephen Barnes appear in rehearsal for doubts the ability of his The Rainmaker, fledgling production of Gully Players. countrymen to Judge rightly how their new weapons Utah Theater Week ought to be handled. He hurls serious charges at American leadership, but ; he relies not so much upon his own verifiable research as a scientist to support his convictions but on a mass of unverifiables. This Is apt to raise a suspicious eyebrow on the disBy Richard O. Martin criminating reader, and dethe When obvious plays the thing, the art will flourish even in spite Dr. Reynolds a gully. sincerity, no sound JudgTo wit, the Gully Players. ments on the effects of nuclear testing or radiation can This fledgling organization ilbe made from this book lustrates-the - lengths to which alone. people fascinated by the theater will go to put shows on the boards. Its originator, Allen Cook, combines study as a graduate student in theater at the University of the Utah with work at KUED-TV- , "The Crowning Experiuniversitys educational television ence, edited by James W. station. Hardlman. Random Last summer Mr. Cook found House, New York. that he had nothing to do in the In This book is a series of mornings. Missing active work decided to round up as he theater, of film the from stills story the life of Mary McLeod many friends as possible who were interested in acting and technical Mr. Alar .at . Bethune, noted Negro educawork, and use the free morning time to produce some playi tor. It shows how she startof his own. ed with $1.50 and created a - On the Brink university within ten years and was special advisor to Now it Just so happens that Mr. Cooks house is perched President Herbert Hoover on the brink of a gully. Hence, the Gully Players. ' and Franklin D. Roosevelt. The group of theatrical volunteers ensconced ' Starring in the film are itself thespianically in the gully, and before the summer Muriel Smith and Ann was out had produced two plays before invited audiences. Buckles. And this year the group is going in search of larger gullies. On Friday and Saturday the Gully Player will' temporarily forsake their Emigration Creek gully in Salt Lake City for the considerably larger gully sliced by the Colorado River at Moab. And It will be a big step in more way than one. The organization will play before its first paying audi- Rainmaker In Gully Volume Relates EducatoFLife . ences. Serious Venture While levity may be permissible In regard to the organization name, the venture i a erlou one for Mr. Cook and other members of the company. The Gully Players will open at Moab Friday in a two-nigproduction of The Rainmaker by N. Richard Nash. The' production, directed by Mr. Cook, will play in Moab Saints recreation new Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-dahall. The comedy will include in its cast a list of veteran student ,actors who have been seen in many U. of U. produo tions. Playing featured roles are Stephen Barnes and Joyce Hattonrwith Jarvis'Anderson, Par Hunt, Gene Pack, Lynn Miller and Mr. Cook. Summer Stock Potential Mr. Cook expresses the hope that this production will eventually lead to the formation of a permanent summer stock company to be situated In Moab. He points out: Moab has a Teal potential for summer stock theater. It is Ideally located in the heart of beautiful country. Future highway developments are underway." n artists from New ... I y Dance Critic Slates ' Lecture on Styles Two 1 Indignant, Dr. Reynolds sailed into the test area him-sell- ,, - " Yorks Metropolitan Opera Ballet will provide the for dance demonstrations n critic Walter Terrys on "Styles in Dance," Friday at 8:30 p.m. in Kingsbury Hall on University of Utah campus. Mr. Terry Is dance editor for the New York Herald Tribune and Encyclopedia Brltannlca. He often lecture in the United States. The dancers will be Thomas Andrew and Judith Chazin, both currently appeartngwlth the Santa Fe Opera Company. v Andersen Exhibit"' Pastels and paintings on velvet by Salt Lake artist Anna Lee Andersen are currently on display at 1125 Wilmjngton Ave. (2190 So.). Nine works on Indian themes will hang to the end of July. Hours will be 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Luaclne Pingree . . . Portrays domineering mother in play. drew and Judith Chazin demonstrata Styles In Dance Friday at 8:30 p.m. In Kingsbury Hall pn U. of U. campus. Cast members for the University of Utah Playbox production of Thomas Wolfe "Look Homeward, Angel have been announced by Director Robert Hyde Wilson. The tage adaptation by. Kettl Frings will be the summers final "Gallery of Greats production at the Playbox The dates are Aug. Playing Eugene Gant will be Ogden actor Larry Roupe. The role of his dominating mother, Eliza Gant, will be taken by another Ogden resident, Luacine Pingree. Jame Kay Lowe has been cast as Ben Gant, and Marvin Boyer will appear as W. O. Gant. Capitol Exhibit. Utah State Institute of Fine Arts show open Sunday through Saturday 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. in rotunda of Utah State Capitol. Pino Art Museum. American Frontier artists exhibit open Sunday 3 pm. to' 5 pm.; weekdays 9 a.m. to 11:45 am. and 1 p.m. to 4:45 p.m. on fourth floor of Park Building on U. of U. campus. Art Bara. California Drawings, open Sunday 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. and Tuesday through Saturday 1 pm. to 5 p.m. at 54 Finch Ln. (35 South.), Other members of the company announced by Mr. Wil-- ' son include Ken Jenks, Ralph Carlsen, Carolyn Conwell, Ted Dansie, Barbara Sine, May Green Davis, Neil Warren, Eudora Zarr, Pat Cony' Rood and Jeff Jacks. Zu-'wic- Fiction THE AGONY AND THE ECSTASY Irving Stone. TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD Harper Lee. THE EDGE OF SADNESS Edwin OConnor.-- ' MILA 18 Leon Uri. carpetbaggers Har- old Robbins. THE WINTER OF OUR DI3-CONTENT John Steinbeck. THE LAST OF THE JUST Andre Schwarz-Bar- t. the A Tower-mldtow- East.) BURNT-OU- CASE T A SHOOTING Stegner. STAR Wallace incredible j o u R N e Y Sheila Bumford. Monday-- st SdL Beil Graham Greene. Anne Lee Anderson. Pastels and paintings on velvet at 1125 Wilmington Ave. (2190 South) open 7:30. a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday. Tower-eaTheatre. Lynn O. Freeman exhibit open theater hours at 867 E. 9th South (900 South.) , n Theatre. Franc Johansen exhibit open theater of Broadway corner at hours (300 South) and State St. (100 East.) Eighth Day Book Gallery. Bob Foster exhibit open 12 noon to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday at 72 E. 2nd South (200 South.) Hanging Tree Gallery. Mixed exhibit open weekdays 12 noon to 6 p.m. at 10 N. State St, (100 through Art Exhibits Larry Roupe , . . Plays lead in Look Homeward, AngeL Director Names Angel Cast Music and Art Calendar Music '"' Book Sails Stormy Sea On Forbidden Voyage . one-ma- ac- ceptance telegram to his author friend,) a Havana fisherman, Interviewed, said: He comes to see us no more. He has no need. He has completed his story. Until then dally takes to keep thinking for the story almost painfully acute were the order. "5 Would you care for a daiquiri? Then, without waiting for I an answer, comment think It would be appropriate. With Jhat, he would rise on legs strong as steel even at 70 to mix the drink at the comer cupboard- I had-- written several stories about this Interesting man and had taken photographs of him for another when hi collapsed from a burst stomach and died. Hemingway was a pallbearer. Hemingway, who bought a home nearby 20 years later, went to un Valley In 1938 to complete his Spanish' novel,. For Whom the Bell ' Tolls. V! Rose, Wrote Rising with the light, or before, he wrote in his room in the lodge until noon, lunched, spent afternoons hunting or fishing the Wood River area with Williams. Ordinarily, Hemlng way would not talk about a story, He didnt want Interjected thoughts to spoil Its pureness. - a mes-senger- the publishers y lecture-demonstratio- Theater Wedding Receptions HUS-11- A T Utah Art Week ZZ Th talk becouse Williams would quire! yS stay, saw to his every comfort Trained as a newspaper reporter, Hemingways forte as a novelist was keenness of observation. After Hemingway had written "The Old Man and the Sea, (Williams was proud he himself had But to Wiliams he could By Carl E. Hayden Tribune Staff Writer Down deep, was Ernest Hemingway a devout hunter? Or were his gunning trips, whether short or long, mostly opportunities to mull and meditate? Idahos Taylor Williams, beside whom Hemingway is buried," knew the truth. I knew Williams well. To me, at least, he would talk only when conditions were purposefully right. Bear Track . Bear Track, as Hemingway called him, affectionately would In the years he was head guide for Sun Valley, retire to his room in the Challenger Inn, and, after sitting a few minutes, straight backed as a pine, on bed quietly inthe cot-like 8-- Duflin-Wakcfic- J 1 Tenor to Sing y i i Tenor Richard Rohinson, who has appeared as guest soloist with the New York Philharmonic and the Los Angeles Philharmonic orchestras and recently soloed In Berlioz1 Romeo and Juliet in Hollywood Bowl, will present concerts Wednesday at 8:15 p.m. and Thursday at 10 In Joseph Smith Au-- . ditorium on Brigham Young University campus in Provo. .0 W7 Tribune, Sunday, July 28, 1961 Hemingway Hunted, Mulled Teachers Set V lake Non-Flrtlo- n --THE- RISE AND FALL OF THE THIRD REICH William Shlrer. WilA NATION OF SHEEP liam Lederer. RING OF BRIGHT WATER Gavin Maxwell. THE NEW ENGLISH BIBLE: The New Testament. RUSSIA AND THE WEST UNDER LENIN AND STALIN George Kennan. my years back- - thirty TltE WHITJ HOUSE yF. Rogers Parks With France. 8patz Leighton. W mirror on the Japanese' iNNUver ter. i stat- - j BOOK OF THE ESKIMOS is a loses his wife he is immediately fitting memorial to Peter Freu- destitute . . . chen who lived "in and out of "On the other hand, a woman the Arctic for almost three quar- who loses her husband, and is ters of a century." Compiled by not taken to wife by another his wife Dagmar Freuchen from hunter, is reduced to the state of ; by. Peter. at his a beggar." writings death, the material is in truth Thus marriage among the Eski ! mos becomes a matter of mu- stranger than fiction. Peter Freuchen of all white men tual Interest and great neces-- ; has probably been closest to un- sity. Interestingly the criterion derstanding the Eskimos. His for beauty among the Eskimos is ! study reveals the tremendous quite different from the white stamina of these strange peo- man's, for with the Eskimos ples whose habitat creates a stoutness is identical with beauty wife is a sign desperate - fight against the and a well-feforces of nature. The lonq night, of a prosperous husband. for instance, lasts from October As long as Peter Freuchen lived . 19 to February 24. Animals, among the Eskimos, he knew and aeoaraohv become a practically nothing about their I man, triple threat to existence in the inner thoughts. Even though he Arctic. Yet the goal the Eskimo had lived there, married one of seeks is peace, and he has a real them, hunted and hungered with desire to please in order to keep them, they did not confide too peace. Because of this quality much in him or In any other the white man is sometimes white man, partly out of contempted to think that the Es- tempt and partly out of fear. kimo is insincere or even dishon Mr. Freuchen found on Innate and r, wisdom among the Eskimo est.. Often the, Eskimo wi.lt "Yes," because he thinks a willingness to learn that is that is the answer the white changing them from a backman wants. He wouldn't think of ward, nomadic life to an indusoffending by answering, "No. trial culture. He concludes by Since Eskimos live in a world saying, "I look forward to the where danger and death ore day when the Arctic will help constant companions, they want man to realize his dream of making the earth a better and quiet from mental distress. Both men and women lead a more happy place in' which to . ,. live." $6.50 at Deseret Book rigorous life. Their work ! is each and divided, ticulously Company, 44 East South Tern-- . 9rotV dependent on the other, pie, Salt Lake City; 2472 Wash- ' j A Freuchen stated. "If a man Ington Bouleverd, Ogden, . left d .Qn-swe- me-mirr- t |