Show - I E6 tional Register of Historic Places becoming the cornerstone for an Elko historic district" The Elko location facilitates programming "We'll spread things out instead of putting our efforts into a few days extravaganza" Two years and a big cowboy mercantile displays exhibits and center and ara Western-studchives could be in place Three to four years and visitors can sit back relax and enjoy a audio-visuWestern adventure ground for Mr Cannon As a boy he rode along on business trips with his father Warren Cannon Utah and Elko share an economic history "Salt Lake is the closest major city to Elko There's been backand-forth trade for years" To his wife Teresa Jordan horsewoman and Cowgirls Doubleday author who grew up on a Chugwater Wyo ranch the Elko connection is a chance to get back to ranch life They're looking at property in Star Valley Nev and will divide living time between Elko and Salt Lake The next few days are a good time to let your fingers do the walking and phone Elko motels and hotels for a place to stay Many with reservations cancel at the last minute The Elko Chamber of Commerce can assist For those with a spirit of advenr ture Elko's a drive from Salt Lake Leave by 5 am Saturday stop in Wendover for breakfast and be there for a day packed with poetry and music A $10 guest pass is admittance to daytime events a separate ticket is required for the various evening performances Tickets are available for shows Wednesday Thursday and Sunday Besides rubbing elbows with year-roun- d y big-scree- n al tour Mr Cannon likes Elko "Elko's a generous town People call asking to help Elko has incredible public facilities — the Elko Convention Center Northeastern Nevada Museum and the community college" The westward expansion complements the center's goal — the cultural exchange of pastoral people The gathering's popularity proves Mr Cannon's intuition — that people were ready for an honest authentic look at cowboys was right on !'Everyone but cowboys and cowgirls did the interpreting — novels advertising Hollywood TV The center said 'Tell your story We'll help you' That's why the gathering keeps growing People keep finding things to say" And grow it does — both in numbers involved and how long they can stay This year's gathering beginning Tuesday runs longer offering poetry and prose writing illustrating photography and workshops As in the past the emphasis is diversity — the Hispanic cowboy his poetry and music rope artistry braiding gear making — and ecology stewardship of the land Outreach is not new Mr Cannon is putting together a cowboy ' five-hou- famous from E-- 1 Wednesday at 8 pm (and on KBYU Feb 7 Preceding "Empire" that evening at 7 will on KUED at on KUED be a 1982 m OE 701) ":- AFIM144A4 : i 00 1 7211P al I 4401010 ase del lesIkriit ' 4 1114 CIMIV in E Fort Union Blvd 566-398- is sub-histo- ry - oeb t4KV ANSINc oviovimuftfrotsovrotterorv -1' --- :: —4750T)---iiii:ii2- E 7""4-'-'itIt!:t- ' 4- ' k116Amoram-- ail (0) 4th gff3E'Lli:j INDECISION r J ( Le Alaska C:17 CO 2 SHOWS 7 & 10 8's CIRCLE 1115816 You'll Save I System Carpet with a unique dual fiber system and the famous VO N) orr Wear-Date- FeiR SYSche Always! 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Id" CRAZY pJU IONd - N Fa ERIC LIAREIITHAL d :f: Italian and Liberian Registly British KILLER BEES TUES FEB insil Traffic Control Fiber ' 121 CIL FEP Featuring Wear-Date- 41 71 5 Ira 4 - :t flDm at wholesale prices A- MAI 4 Z4 C?:t JOHN LIAYALL Allman's Discount Carpets Quality namebrand carpets 4I''''' 1" 4 V5 It 11 takxw44 e :::::711172VGIVZ44 :: " '''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' :44— - 2illAGPl29 E Ken Burns is a busy busy man "Oh I've got more than that in the hopper" he said "a bunch of biographies to work on after 'Baseball' There's Thomas Jefferson Lewis and Clark Frank Lloyd " Wright FDR Lemorji -- the Family Center behind Metvyns 0 people" five-ho- Mar 291 iFeb 22 & Mar 28 I I $8200 $2300 Foods of Mexico afl "The West" reunites Mr Burns with "The Civil War" director Ste-hphen Ives and writer Geoffrey Ward "The West" will run 10 hours and cost $2 million a stantial budget by PBS standards But it is the planned "Baseball" film that is his pride and joy of the moment one he considers to be the Rosetta Stone of American experience That project will have nine segments 23- - & r 5 ol m - 5 : con-To- popular culture of women's rights of tensions between labor and management I think its a wonderful story besides it's just a hell of a great sport" As Mr Burns sees it "The Civil War formed modern America Baseball more than anything expresses it" From that paint of view this documentary project "is so complex and wonderful it truly is what I had hoped it would be: a story an epic of America Baseball holds up a clear and at times a joyous mirror of who we are as a O'relte ys Feb to oversee "The West" project Recently announced "The West" is a series being mentioned as other Burns masterwork But he dispels that notion "Such is the way that media and public relalions works these days that my name is the one everyone gravtates to I will be the executive producer and senior creative sultant on the project" ivdifg-- 4t i Mr Burns said his main thrust now is to focus on "Baseball" and Book by Valentine's Day or miss the Love Boat : 4n) ik sugar-coate- two-ho- U: -- 11:11I:t:t:e "I was planning to segue right out of 'The Civil Via? into a history of baseball" he said "but I couldn't resist 'Empire' No one knows that behind the essentially d saccharine tale of the golden age of radio beats a pretty ferocious beast that is the invention of the 20th century" Shakers: Hands to Work Hearts to God" which aired last November "The Statue of Liberty" and "Huey Long" scheduled for next July on RUED Mr Barns was sidetracked on a pet project the definitive history id baseball to work on "Empire of the Air" based on the book by Lewis and narrated by Jason Robards In a telephone interview from home in Walpole NH Mr doc- Burns described the a as "not umentary special general of radio or a 'golden age of radio' nostalgia program but rather tells the often dark back- stage drama of three remarkable lives in collision — David Sarnoff Lee deForest and Edwin Howard Armstrong We can learn from their powerful stories of the age I : or "innings" each detailing an era in the game The first inning will encompass the founding of the sport through the turn of the century and then each subsequent inning will focus on a specific decade When he speaks of the project Mr Burns' voice becomes impassioned It is a subject he obviously feels strongly about "All of the questions raised in 'The Civil War' are played out endlessly in baseball Questions cf race of nationality and emigration questions of tratsform" he they helped to said "Brooklyn Bridge" and "The & i4F:17 and under) eats free from our kids' menu Choice of 2 enchiladas or 2 tacos or hamburger Includes french fries or rice or beans expire forcing PBS to scramble for several months to restablish the claims) One of his documentaries "Lindbergh" aired last Monday and will be repeated tonight at 7 as an "American Experience" pre- sentation It recounts Lindbergh's remarkable solo flight across the Atlantic to France in 1927 and his struggle to adjust to being an in- ternational hero Encore presentations in the ret- rospective series in addition to Doily Bus Tours to the I Sunday Night 4 pm- -9 pm With each adult meal purchased one child (10 1 Sunday January 26 1992 63Z3549 I 1 4'111 71 - :ILIA' owilh I '2 pm) spective of his outstanding earlier productions presented by General Motors the sole corporate underwriter of "The Civil War" series in conjunction with WETA Washington DC The idea of a television retrospect being shown under the GM Mark of Excellence banner is flattering the filmmaker admitted but it leaves him a bit uncomfortable "It makes me feel a htte old around the edges" he said PBS's desire to honor its champion is noteworthy but some writers felt it was belated arguing the success of "The Civil War" could have been anticipated and his early films brought on as an encore during the weeks irilediately following "The Civil War" triumph when 38 million ecstatic viewers were clamoring to see more more more of his work It was frustrating for him in a way because critics were saying he had invented the wheel with "The Civil War" while he was insisting "I've been making films for 15 years you can see the same techniques that I've pioneered not only in 'The Civil War' but in all the documentaries I did over the past dozen years" (The sad truth is the rights to those films had been allowed to all-nig- ht ENDS EAIT 8 Ken Burns work "Brooklyn retroBridge" one of a four-fil- celebs y cowboy-poetr- Wallace McRae Paul Zarzyski and Waddie Mitchell and hearing Riders in the Sky Michael Martin Murphey and Ian Tyson & the Chinook Arch Riders at the gathering Red Steagall is at Stockmen's and Riders in the Sky at the Red Lion Inn and Casino Local inforcasinos encourage mal poetry and music sessions "Plan your day so you can stay up all night" Mr Cannon said ranch-cookin- g g 0 Continued Elko is familiar stompin' - - Ken Burns tunes in to radio's history in new documen tary poetry exchange to Melbourne Australia for the "Moomba Fest" Australian drovers were featured at last year's gathering Continued from Eel gear-makin- THE ARTS The Salt Lake Tribune Cowboy bards are home on the range in Elko CI --- -- - I Jei ti i r--? 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