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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, JANUARY 22, 1965 Andre Kostelanetz Will Appear With Symphony Utah Symphony Will Play Tw o Bach with Douglas Craig as soloist; and a Piccolo concerto by Vivaldi with Ralph Gochnour as soloist. Saturday Concerts the same hall and for entirely different audiences will highlight activities of the Utah Symphony Orchestra this week. Saturday morning at 10:00 a.m. Maurice Abravanel and the Andre Kostelanetz, conductor, will appear as of the Utah Symconductor guest phony Orchestra in a special concert Saturday, January 30th, in the Salt Lake Tabernacle. This will be the first Salt Lake City appearance of Mr. Kostelanetz, and it will be another highlight of the Utah Symphonys 25th Anniversary Season. The demand for tickets for this concert has been heavy, but good seats remain in all prices. Tickets at $1.75, $2.75, $3.75 and $4.75 are on sale now at the Utah Symphony Office, 55 West First South. Ever since Andre Kostelanetzs first appearance before the American public he has held a nique position in the music world. Numerous citations were bestowed upon him for having contributed much to the widening of the listening audience of classical music through his radio world-renown- ed programs, which for many years were the principal musical attractions on the air. One of the truly outstanding conducting careers in the recording field, his name is a musical in practically every country in the world. During the past twenty years about of his recordings have been sold. His career in the concert field is equally distinguished. He appears regularly as guest conductor with the most important orchestras in the United States, Canada, and abroad. He also appears annually on the BBC, England's television network. by-wo- rd 50,-000,0- 00 Dr. Keith M. Engar Utah Symphony will present the second of three youth concerts in the Tabernacle sponsored by AG and Foodtown markets. Saturday evening they will present the eighth subscription concert at 8:30 in the Tabernacle. The major work of Saturday evenings concert will be Tchaikovskys Symphony No. 4 which contains the celebrated pizzicato movement. This symphony has long been a favorite of Utah audiences. It is one of the works Maestro Abravanel conducted last summer at the Hollywood Bowl with resounding success. In his review of the aforementioned performance, Patterson Greene in the Los Angeles wrote: This (the Tchaikovsky Fourth Sym- Herald-Examin- er phony) is a composition that often walks heavily in pretent- iousness. Under Saturday mornings concert will feature a program of excerpts from the great classics selected with the youth in mind. It will 3egin with the exquisite Suite n D No. 3 by Johann Sebastian Bach, from which the orchestra will play the Air. This will be followed by excerpts from MoAG-Food-to- Two concerts the same day in Abravanels baton it danced sometimes as a melancholy ballet, sometimes in high spirited abandonment, but always with lyricism. The first half of Saturday evenings program will be devoted to three highly interesting solo pieces: the Variations on a Rococo Theme by Tchaikovsky for cello and orchestra which will be performed by our principal cellist, David Freed; a bassoon concerto by Johann Christian wn well-round- zarts Symphony No. ter). Con-inent- al MIH State Fair winner Ellen will then appear as soloist with the Utah Symphony to play the Finale of Beethovens Was-serma- n Piano Concerto No. 4. Maestro Abravanel will then conduct the Utah Symphony in a performance of R. Vaughn Williams Fantasia on Greensleeves. The concert will conclude with the pizzicato and finale from Tchaikovskys Fourth Symphony. Free tickets for the youth concert may be obtained at any AG or Foodtown market, and the teiket entitles the bearer to a free bus ride via Salt Lake City Lines to the Tabernacle. Though open to everyone, the youth concerts are primarily for children eight years and older. Very small children and babies are not admitted. Tickets for Saturday evenings concert are on sale at the Utah Symphony office, 55 West First South. Consumer power rates have been cut by more than $3.8 million per year since 1961. A bit of fragrance clings to the hand that gives flowers. FJv cate Lane. Mrs. Judd has long seen active in community affairs and a member of the UF board of directors. Harold Molitor, 1832 Prince-o- n Ave., vice president, Agency Insurance Co. Mr. Molitor has been general campaign chairman of the fund. Herbert L. Price, 574 E. Capi-o- l Blvd., personnel manager, Newspaper Agency Corp. Mr. Price has long been an active member of the UF program having served both as a campaigner and as a public relations chairman. Hugh Bodam, 7915 South 2700 West, West Jordan, District Rep. Operating Engineers, Local No. 3. Mr. Bodam is a newly elected member of the UF Board. Charles H. Dixon was treasurer of the Fund. Mr. Dixon resides at 1060 Vista View Drive and is president of the' John Klas Elected President of S.L. United Fund 41 (Jupi- re-elect- ed First Security State Bank. Mr. Kastler expressed appreciation to the 1964 officers and standing committee chairmen for their support during the year. JOHN H. KLAS He called on each of his chair John H. Klas, 1802 Yale Ave., men for a final report and then Friday was elected President of presented them with an apprethe Salt Lake Area United Fund ciation plaque for the services for 1965-6rendered. He succeeds B. Z. Kastler, Jr. Mr. Klas was elected by the United Funds 60 member board Jlf.Tfs . at a special luncheon meeting held at the Hotel Newhouse. Call Mr. Klas is vice president of Continental Bank and Trust Co. Other officers are: Elder Robert L. Simpson of Personal Aqnaintance Service P.O. Box 6046 the Presiding Bishopric Church Lake Salt City, Utah 84106 of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Want a sweetSaints. Bishop Simpson resides heart or wife, husband, Send pen pal? stamped at 4561 Loren Drive and is a re- self addressed Confienvelope. elected vice president. dential and free information. Mrs. Thomas G. Judd, 2939 Tol-(1-- 8 6. Printing EM 4-8-464 9) County Hopping in . MORGAN AND RICH COUNTIES Pastoral beauty and serenity mark these two northern counties, where the people live in rural valleys sheltered by lofty mountains. An abundance of streams and lakes make them favored above most other Utah counties. MORGAN COUNTY AREA 610 square POPULATION 1960 miles RICH COUNTY AREA 1,022 square miles POPULATION 1960 1,685 MAIN TOWNS (1960 populations) 2,837 MAIN CITY (1960 population) 1,299 Morgan ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES Cement, - Randolph 537 Laketown 211 169 Woodruff Garden City livestock (mostly wool), dairying, wheat and barley. 168 ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES Will Lead 4th Broadway Tour Livestock (cattle, wool), barley, recreation and traveL LAKETOWN Dr. Keith M. Engar, executive DEVIL'S SLIDE director of Pioneer Memorial Theatre, will lead the fourth annual University Theatre Guild Broadway Show Tour in May. Dr. ed Page T RANDOLPHS Engars selection as tour leader was announced by Mrs. Raymond S. (Marian) Fletcher, Guild president. A to pdraw on the May tour will be a new Richard Rodgers musical, Do I Hear a Waltz? scheduled to open in WOODRUFF 8-- 16 March. Other major shows for which reservations have been made are Fiddler on the Hello, Dolly, Baker Street Luv, Roof, and an optional title to be announced at a later date. The tour is open to all interested parties, and further information may be obtained by contacting Mrs. Richard W. (Frances) Muir, the tour chairman. Army Specialist Four Joseph W. Youngblood of 1252 Elgin Ave., participated in Exercise Desert Strike, a joint Army and Air Force maneuver involving 100,000 troops held in Arizona, California and Nevada. Canyons and valleys of Weber River and its tributaries, surrounded by high mountains. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND Created 1862 from Davis County. Named for Jedediah Morgan Grant Morgan settled in 1860. O TOPOGRAPHY POINTS OF INTEREST AND ACTIVITIES East Canyon Rtsarvoir water sports Davils Slid curious natural formation in Weber Canyon Mormon Pionoor Trail through East Canyon Chinatown weird erosion Wobor River fishing Como Springs Resort swimming, roller skating, other recreation County Hopping sorios published through tht cooperation off the Utah State Press Association and this newspaper. Materials furnished by the Utah Tourist and Publicity Council Council Halt State Capitol, Salt Lake City. , . ft- t s. - - Valleys of Bear River and Bear Lake, adjoined by high mountains. TOPOGRAPHY Created In 1864 as Richland in 1868. Named either for Rich County; name changed to Charles G Rich or rich soil of Bear River Valley. Settled 1870. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND POINTS OF INTEREST AND ACTIVITIES Boor Lake and Boar Lako Stott Park -- boating, fishing, beach resorts camping, Boor Lako Sconlc Overlook on US 89 Boar Rivor Volley charming rural drive Monto Criito Woodruff tconic drive through Wasatch Mountains, Bear River Valley 4 |