Show ’ k ' T s V W ' ' w v - - ' V iw v w f V rr'V 11 16 W Ths Salt Lake Tribune 8 on day March 221959 Moat Painted Thing in - V -- r i 4- t - Artists Can’t Resist Weathered Barn - By George Dibble barn has Osguthorpe’s been painted more frequently j than any- other bam In the valley It Is also a fa- l4s£L C By Lowell Durham The Western Division of the Music Educators National Conference began Its biennial sessions in our city Saturday During the next four days delegates will be busily engaged in meetings group discussions banquets and a variety of musical programs King pin of the sessions Is Dr Roy E Freeburg San Francisco president of the division who conducted a series of as a feature of last fall’s annual meetings of the Utah Music Educators- - Other divisional officers are Alex H Zimmerman San Diego and Robert Holmes Hollywood j-The several state presidents of the division Include Carroll A Rhinehart Arizona Joseph V Landon California Edward Kan-ay- a Honolulu TH Darrell S ’ Dr Durham Winters Nevada and Max F Dalby of USU Logan The Salt Lake City Convention Committee Is headed by Dr M Lynn Bennion superintendent of city schools as chairman Serving with him are Marvin L Pugh directing chairman Vernon J LeeMaster supervisor of music In the city schools Dr Lorin F Wheelwight and Mrs John Boyden Committee Heads Unsung committee chairmen who have been involved for months with such details as membership registration transportation housing public relations ushers printing tickets stages etc are the following per sonnel from the city school system: A J Limb Naomi C Evans Zelma Sperger Mary E Caffey W Jeffrey Joseph Richards Spencer Bennion Donald L Taylor Lt CoL J E Stacy and Vera J CasseL j Saturday’s opening sessions found Gladys Tipton pro fessor of music education at Columbia Teachers College In the driver’s seat as featured lecturer in both morning and afternoon sessions Sunday’s agenda Includes attendance at the Tabernacle Choir’s weekly broadcast a concert Sunday afternoon at South' High by University of Utah Band and the Orpheus Male Chorus from Phoenix Sunday at 8:30 pm Prof Richard P Condie will conduct the Tabernacle Choir In a Sacred Concert for delegates and public Monday’s sessions include a morning concert hour de voted to performances by the Northern California Honor Orchestra and the North Phoenix High School a cappella choir Dr Leroy Robertson will preside at a Composers’ Workshop in the afternoon assisted by the U of U Faculty Woodwind Quartet and the Utah String Quartet Also slated are orchestra and choral clinics featuring the East High Orchestra and a cappella choir under direction of Dow Young and Lorraine Bowman respectively Major Event In Tabernacle f Monday’s major musical event occurs in the Tabernacle at 8:30 pm when a Gala Festival Concert will be presented Under the supervision of Vernon LeeMaster It will include an Jr High School Band 6th Grade Elemen- Senior High a cappella choir - - -tary Chorus and Utah musical organizations in the Tuesday spotlight will be the BYU Male Chorus and Symphony Orchestra USlTs Madrigal Singers and the Olympus High School Orchestra Tuesday night the convention will shift to the U of U campus for an "Evening of Ballet’ in Kingsbury Hall where Prof Wiliam Christensen’s University Theatre Ballet and an orchestra of Utah Symphony members conducted by Harold Wolf will present a special performance for the delegates and visiting student performers In addition to meetings on Wednesday the convention’s final day two daytime concert hours are scheduled the afternoon program will be presented by the South High Alumni Choir Armont Willardsen director and the Weber High School Band The combined a cappella choirs of Ogden and Weber High Schools perform earlier in the day At 8 pm "finis” will be written to the proceedings with a Gala Festival Concert by the MENC Western Division Chorus Band and combined Band and Chorus Or- - miliar 'feature in art painters and photographers Inspired by the doughty old pioneer structure that stands at the head 'of Millcreek Canyon enter studies of their favorite subject in prize winning competition Located Just off Wasatch Blvd the seventy-fivyear old veteran which once entertained a large herd of cattle In - stalls beneath the capacious hay loft now harbors a single cow and her calf The drafty walls and roof afford scant protection from the strength of the canyon' breeze forcing these tenants to huddle together in the small shed on the sunwinter ny side during lecture-demonstratio- Hard-workin- 1 f -- tI I i ! I t If - t t 5 - e weather Plank Is Missing Jorge Bolet native of Havana Cuba brings his piano talents to Brigham Young University for Wednesday concert g g Gal-brait- all-cit- y h Y Concert Wednesday — The music of Beethoven Haydn- -- Mendelssohn— Liszt will Actor-Auth- be I t ! performed by or John Fostini To Speak On Y Series John actor Fostini autho- and producer launch the forum lecture series for spring quarter r-director will at Brigham Young University when hs speaks Mon- day in the George Albert all-cit- y chestra and SmTth Field-hous- e - ' lecture begin at The will 10 am Mr Fostini a native New Yorker was educated at City College and the Guild School of Dramatic Arts Meschinl Institute in Rome and the London Academy He began his career as a child actor in radio and appeared in the originaLBroad-wa- y Rat” production of "Brother I research into the lives of famous men and women has resulted In an unusual and highly personal lecture His series y Concert presentation Wednesday The concert will be given at 8:15 pm in the George Albert Smith Fieldhouse Mr Bolet will play Beethoven’s "Thirty-twVariations In C Minor" Haydn’s o "Sonata E Flat Major” Mendelssohn’s "Varia 1 o n s Serleuses” and "Rondo In 1 and seven move- ments from the “Transcendental Etudes” by Liszt The pianist has appeared with the orchestras of New York City Philadelphia Boston - Dallas Cleveland Chicago Pittsburgh Cincinnati San Francisco Los Angeles Detroit Minneapolis and with the Berlin Philharmonic the Royal Orchestra of Copenhagen the Royal Philharmonic of London and the Havana Filarmonica A native of Havana Cuba Mr Bolet began his career at the age of 10 when he appeared as soloist with the Havana Sinfonica v- - ‘ Piano Recital ' Lydia Cheshire student of Mabel Borg Jenkins will be presented in' a piano recital Friday at 8:15 pm in the main salon of the Clark Music Store 28 E 1st South SI ff $ i r the gray-whit- e same color as the underside of the ' clouds that hover around nearby Mt Olympus The storms that sweep the brow of the hill behind the bam are not the only squalls that have troubled the stolid oldtimer When John Osguthorpe built t wry-weath- the structure in 1884 he could scarcely have realized that the building would become a shrine for artists Since the structure passed the the site has attracted uncounted of - photographers legionsa n d landscape painters When devotees ' are organized in instructional classes they often appear as a horde This has occasioned discomfiture to residents in the area Mrs- - Tom Osguthe barn’s thorpe wife-o- f present owner says that a number 6f students staring kt the site disturbs her while working in the garden Raises prize Iris Mrs Osguthorpe who raises prize iris and peonies in the garden east of the Lam is not- - the only one who has been annoyed however4 Neighbors have complained of the invasion — particularly when It has assumed trespass proportions When conspicuously posted signs have been flagrantly ignored police help has been sought The instructor of a large class of landscape painters unacquainted with the travails of a previous group escorted his eager pupils to the site The deputy sheriff Who appeared with a war- - University of e Utah concert band will conduct its annual spring tour this week with performances Wednesday through Friday Under the baton of Forrest D Stpll assistant professor of music the band will present concerts In Fill- O 4 ‘ I ! i v I 1 I G A P’4 rf J Jj r Cowboy or Sr FREE CATALOG S - plow-bo- y ' of 10 lier choice in Sterling is ' y Aak for demonstration $ 12500 Down tan ? i I f ' Payment make a Knaba yoursl Only $2500 a month SUMMERHAYS MUSIC I t of ths 10 reasons why is the choice of the Metropolitan Opera In 10 minutes they prove the superiorities" of ths Knabe r pleasant with Reed & Barton sterling F 4 Knabe right before your eyes YouTl know why Knabe is your best choice you dine on chicken-©pheasant it will be that much more c npificent -- “just Whether more St George Cedar City Beaver Richfield Gunnison £ and Nephi A different program will be presented at each concert The first performance will be given in Millard High School at Fillmore Wednesday at 11 am The second will be at 8:15 pm that eve- ning in the Church of Jesus Saints Christ of Latter-dahall in St stake recreation ' ’ George Thursday concerts w$ill be presented in Cedar City High School 10 am Beaver High School 1:40 pm and the LDS stake tabernacle in Richfield 8 pm Gunnison Valley - High School will have a concert Friday at 10 am with the concluding performance of grands and consoles Reed & Barton Tors Tft Froncli tiomoMt firtt Autumn Leove Chmit Vrhaot 3719 So State AM 2-10- dreds years of SL area artists old Painting by v Barn is 75 Georgs Dibble rant accepted a hasty retreat Ueu of arrest- -' ' in A member of the group however of the lines at the checked property loca-tio- a City and County Building After he the set 'His triumph until a patrolman dehint a traffic nui- sance The road is narrow but today an artist may work anywhere - ln—the— vicinity provided he exercises respect for property rights Property owners have been gracious to courteous appli Out Up area-- — artists who cherish a peculiar affinity for such obJects Defying the elements virtues of honesty-s- ultimate-- trengthand " ' triumph in the affray known as life Torturing heat and agon- - ‘ Izing cold have warped the timbers and curled the sheathing on the Osguthorpe ? barn A special patina has materialized from the bleaching rains The mellow” ing power of age has added charm to a fundamentally good design and this alchemy has pleased the artists Its lineaments - have- - bee- n- ex- -pressed in many idoms and varied artistic media Mr Osguthorpe grandson of the builder who in recent years has moved his family to a new house beside the brick hometall stead declares that he ha$ no immediate plans for razing the bam Meawhile the artists delightedly set up easel and tripod "It is a good barn” say v ' -- 4 -' and unshamed by more ornate structures an old barn mb EASTER MIRACLE of the dry brown clod a spear of green from the dungeon expresses permis- two-stor- careful measurement up his easel alongside highway lasted clared cants who ask for sion to paint in the Planned the way you've always wanted itby kitchen planning earth resurgent life — more spring’s touch has rolled away the stone Once experts Built to your Individual order by St Charles That locked men In the cold tomb of defeat! by Pansye H Powell Salt Lake City The Tribune will pay S3 for etch original poem published in this column Mail poems of 20 line or less to Poetry The Salt Lake Tribune Box 867 Salt Lake City Utah Poems will be returned if accompanied by a stamped envelope University Band Readies Annual Spring Journey The l t Osjguthorpe’s weathered barn at mouth of Mill Creek Canyon has been painted by hun 4 pianist Jorge Bolet in a Brigham "Young University-Communit- A plank is missing here knd there and the light filters through the widening spaces between boards The door sags downhill on the valley side Sudden - swift storms and slow melting snow have bleached the roof to a soft - — all-cit- ’ ex- where hibits ieq-ture-s hard-wofkln- the Valley Dale Johnson student of Oscar Wagner will be presented Thursday at 8 pm In room 203 of Music Hall on the pus University of Utah Mr Johnson Bach-Silo- in E wiU ft ft ft ft f J Visit our showroom soon— i for the planning advice you want— and tKe planning service you need Wum Mont MUlctt ruw t Remodeling Kitchen Designers Specialists i ft ft ft ft ft ft ft play Minor” by in C Sharp" by i i ir t tr and "Prelude ti Fugue 4 6 i cam- - t k The event is presented by the department of music and the college of fine arts "Prelude 4 Bach "Sonata In D’’by Beethoven "Jardins sous la pluie” by Debussy Winds" “The Night ft i T by Charles Griffes "Menuet sur le nom d’Haydn” and "Jeux d’eau” by Ravel and "Nocturne in E” and ‘‘Ballade In F” by jou 2425 Highland Dr Chopin ' 1 - Sugar House Hanl the finest Ph IN 68644 v ft ft -- ft- ft e h ’ i 8 I the tour Friday at 1:30 pm in Juab' High School at 61 -Nephi A piano recital featuring i fc 60 ’SYtiuiKf riiiUl JAST 'SOUTH TEMPOS wtwfntf I HAS A I ltfcW m JfcMJfr AVNftV&ftt TCPAKTME Jf T FORo ROMIg "WITH U DECOJtIKS KIWLN vYOGUEJS'fik - si 4 OFFICES TK IX if SftU UYrt CT( : I a jr AftAAA 4r Jit 1 A rt rj rpt ftAiii suPedft a A A - A A A ak ik I A V'A aJ W r |