| Show r-- -4 i I IN Puzzu ANSWERS EIT itDittplA 310 II E t I S A I -- rs- SWI 01 r IIN OLIO -- E D I T- I E S T I - TIO I N E MI E -- 6 L Ifill YlA1A II BIAISIEOS A S E I TIN 0 W BY GERALD P NI ERRELI lin Billiinume Slat 0 R S MOM 0 111111 E N V 0 Y T 0 R 0 6IMIF N E T4015 loim Elinumm E E D --I INtil - H 11 You don't know what to expect from the I tred? voices Regret? Anger? - ?s11018 Barnum 9:1 TARREID OPT01 A'CiP -- 1 i S LID I R R MOO VIE) P S LI - SI H IIIIIMINt NIA- B P 0 S 'ir'4 0140 I 'ti 11 I F E -- i R 0 L E NI S 111 N 1 0 mum 0- 8 N E S H G Li I S E LA -AIP:1AIT P S I E A D AIN A I SIO N L4I0 CUIrTIT49 A I I141!silPIL4EL T I (51-- TIRIAIFALL!GtAtR S LI I A LJIGt--4- INS II 1 A I ios A1H--t- P VA ME I A I SIA-R11SIC- AIFIEIPILIA ljt Z (http:memorylocgoviammemi EA SIE S vfshtmlo What emerges is a myriad of tales some disturbing some amusing some reflecting on life as a slave some discussing life after emancipation Alice Gaston interviewed in Gee's Bend Ala in 1941 recalls the instructions given her as fear of approaching Northern troops gripped the South during the Civil War: "I can remember when my missus used to run ill the garden from the Yankees and tell us if they come don't tell them where they at They all come and they told me don't get scared now and tell them where they is" Joe McDonald interviewed in Livingston Ala in 1940 recounts the day when his masters rejoiced in how they had raised him " 'When we are dead and in heaven' they said we wants to raise you as an intelligent 'colored We wants you to have good friends like we have got Say you'll never be 4OZE-- GE LT HD1:::: U4114PTSC'H AIT1E ID - TieLA10 Aildn tiSIA'R i 7 EIEIP Ell) C4H I Congress The collection — "Voices From the Days of Slavery: Former Slaves Tell Their Stories" is available on the library's Web site R E IWH'A MAG'US A1A'RIP RIG!E134LIIP IE Ni EID'D N0 1 ll : I I 1 LACtAtS 11ZOS'HEIA cis A A PILE A IA P EC I BL I 0 011 QIJIHE1R I b VU'SE1DA - TIAITIE'R E I ti7R E— i1 iEiL :AA!ELR 1 I t- C S T O'N E' L IN T L I TIIIAINA NINA ENJS OLip41RE EILitTlIS r1114AINIEnBIAIICIAL AlIJA N K tt15-- A -- R1E Y EiC41EXT 0 E'RIR -U 0 T- 04ft ns -E D E- R DIY jfliaLt3T Answer Puzzles on D12 Page 1tittiiii!(01 the 711eSah Lake Tribune 2 Subdivit10(1 Answers 0201 TI I E VAT° 'Schindler's List' coming to DVD 111 I ‘sse ot Paul Osborne's play "Mornings at Seven" a gentle comedy about aging opens Friday at the Grand Theatre 1575 S State in Salt Lake City Richard Scott directs a cast of 11111 acting veterans that includes Tony and Marie Larimer Anne Cullimore Docker Gene Pack Marilyn troll Joan Erb and Robert Wood In conjunction with "Mornings at Se en" ttee GGaadd Imithes 111111 INI I I)(XS Reporters Dan !faille IZ41)vcca Walsh and NNGEIE SiPven ()cal- winning spioihorvs "Schindler's 11t one of the most acclaimed ilms about human survival amid the hor I - ( I REMOVE (ni 1 PET I k URINE I I to DVI) t Pvt° k has developed I' rat !) ti a new proven method for removing pet urine from carpets Upholstery te Carpet Cleaning I IN 7 t!Fratto &Sons' I The (Ilse set planned lot: release Ntirch U will bp iicriim itaniett lv inte viows with stale of the people v hi lived throtwh the movie's (ory real hie Village Quilt Shop 1 i 'es mining 5 1262-148- 23 Years of TnAted E min Sweet Love Lixow I lkt MILDEW day Taf wa OrE froi froi ScIi Ion Cal EVE Tin cer Hal cle Tin the Voc Sin Per 801-355-24- 44 Volunteers ofArneticr Utah wwwcarshelpingpeopleorg AlA r— Dustmites cling dust particles in your home DATE rutt Trust Of i Godspell (College 25-2- 6 Romeo 26-2- Strauss 26-2- Chkar Kai) 1 1 I I 1 This offer expires February 29th t - 7 ' t 1 I I I I 467-544- 4 or visit us at Theatre) Jeanne Wagner KingsbutY Hal East Studio Theatre IGngsbury Hal (University nands Experiments 212-21- 4 Modem 213-22- 1 The Sleeping 213-21- 4 Wizard of Oz Sing Along 213-21- An Evening virth Linda Eder (Utah Symphony) 2113 Bruce Codcburn (United 214 Haleakak How Maui Snared the Sun (Ut3h Symphony) Abravanel Hal 214 Leona Wagner Biadi Box 214 the Rose (Repent fy Dance Theatre) Winte(ideRamsey Lewis Tip (Park Oty Jazz) 215 BE 218-21- 9 A Few Good 219 Barbara Bonney (Uoftl Dept 219 The Vienna in Ink V (UofU Daxe Senix Concert Lab Theatre) (UofU Modem Date) Beauty (Ballet West) Kingsbury Presents) Ring Around Men Dancin' Kingsbury Presents) Choi Boys (Incandescent Bands Pot Dept Buy online 355-ART- Call Hours Monday t - 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Theatre Institute and Salt Lake County Aging Services will sponsor a series of events for senior citizens Watch for Monday's cover article and event listings in The Salt Lake Tribune's Home and Family section The plays runs Mondays through Saturdays at 7:30 pm with Saturday matinees at 2 pm through Feb 21 Tickets are $10 to $1850 with senior and student discounts Call for tickets and information By CELIA R BAKER MANEUVERS I Sk3 sic e 'Mornings at Seven' at Grand Theatre Etlioyed by the sailors on shore leave - "NAVEL': rIjllIFS fea Don't trade it! Volunteers of America Utah helps those most in VICUNA INVADE NETHER sax c : BOI ERO LATEST JUMBL E nor Sqt Ifl Hughes is just one of 25 former slaves whose recollections are available through an extraordinary project by the Library of PilliE P S I On giv ma the I 11114Tson" Theme Crossword Answers Yol did! Bewilderment? Then they speak and the voices from the past are unsettling They aren't those of actors in "Hoots" pretending to be slaves but those of actual slaves all dead now but all reflecting on when they and every member of their families were held in bondage in the United States Fountain Hughes who was interviewed in Baltimore in 1949 at the age of 101 proclaims: "I Was born in Charlottesville Virginia My grandfather belong to Thomas 1111 iJratiqp I) P AIC -- E '7 ns BUBO N H I 111D R on African-America- somEna HD E 01:31)1E- G Congress makes available a collection of recordings of recounting their experience in slavery in the US EH§ Bo A'NIDIAiRID-E:1- N LE N40 RIM' 0 H T -- S C10 I 8 -r I EILIE UraltP Flo I I M ( scratched by good rich sensible white folks Most are taken from dictation" says Taft because they can tell who you are by your "But very little in the way of audio of acturaising and your compliments That show ally hearing the voices It's one thing to read that you been raised' he said not by the accounts of slavery it's quite another to hear colored but by the white' " the voice to hear the people who lived Sarah Gamer interviewed somewhere in through it" Virginia in 1935 remembers how the slaves The former slaves tell their stories in the on the plantation always tried to complete dialect of the day and while some voices are their chores or risk becoming victims to the faint most are clear and strong whip Surprisingly they They "moved fast often talk of slavery in because if you didn't almost matter-of-fac- t do he was at liberty to tones lres he whip met whip us" she says The passage of time Asked if she was mere was six rowsfrom the may explain the lack of ever whipped Garner bitterness Taft says end ofthat house out yonder replies: "Yes he did he "Remember" six rows There was old were "these to them me Six says rows for of from the end of that people often in their house out yonder" she work a day but wasjust 14 90s when they were insays "Six rows of them couMn't get it terviewed It may re--for me to work a day years old flect the kind of perbut I was just 14 years done why he whop me" spective you gain on If I couldn't get old your own life as you it done why he whop Had you get older me" SARAH GARNER interviewed them the The Former slave recorded in an interview in 1935 presentation was developed by the day after emancipa- MIE tion it might have American library's Folklife Center's Arbeen quite different" chive of Folk Culture The stories of the It required a year and at least 15 people to former slaves are gripping nonetheless Not complete the project said Michael Taft head all of them' are limited to the issue of slavery of the archive of folk culture They also reveal the influence music had on The recordings were made beginning in them and their values 1932 Three were recorded by educator and Hughes for instance can be heard lectursociologist Roscoe Lewis working with the ing young people against unbridled Federal Writers Project consumption Nine recordings were commissioned by "Don't want everything somebody else 1300-disc Linguistic Atlas and are part of has got" he says "Whatever you get if it's collection donated to the library by the yours be satisfied And don't spend your American Dialect Society till you get it So many people get in The other interviews were recorded by a money I never bought nothing on time in debt variety of people including educator and aclife" tivist Mary Elizabeth Barnicle and John my Another common theme is the imporFaulk folklorist and radio and television tance of faith made were personality They mostly using Susanna Rebecca Wright interviewed in direct-to-disrecorders and the quality varies greatly For that reason the library offers Oldhams Va in 1935 seems to sum up what ultimately was most important transcriptions of the interviews "Do as he the Lord say do" she says But the impact of the collection comes "Lord comes see everything grind up Better from hearing the voices "We have a lot of narratives to get your soul right" accounts: Library of First-pers- P A- E -- I Ftlnian 12004 Sunda 013110 I C11 8 Silo Pula H PIA 14T H - R 0 7771-TIO- C Z I Former slaves tell their stories Washington Post Crossword Answers DS'TR AR1S 1akcTrihtnic 1 iv Salt 451-278- 7 or through showtirno on porformance days v V |