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Show & S8S3 The Summit County Bee September 17, 1999 and 4 Utah ABC Team Up To Encourage Utahns To Volunteer for Utah's Kids Repertory Dance Theatre Opens Its Season With Worldview III KUED-- 7 and 4 Utah ADC are collaborating with the Utah Mentor Network for the fifth annual Volunteer for Utaht Kids, a major broadcast event encouraging you, family members, and friends to become mentors to Utahs youth. Dine in anytime between 2:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. on Saturday, September 18 and volunteer to make a difference in the life of a young person. In a special broadcast arrangement, the program will be simulcast at 6:00 p.m. for an hour on both Channel 7 and Channel 4. Volunteer for Utahs Kids profiles a variety of agencies that match' kids in need with mentors. Special care is taken to find the best match" between a mentor and a young person. The event highlights a variety of groups and programs, including Dig DrothersDig Sisters, the Dridges KUED-- 7 live solutions to the difficulties Program, the Easter ScalsFamily Friends Program, Volunteer Youth and Youth Corrections, Families with Promise, Hand in Hand Mentoring Program and the Village Project When you call in to the studio, youll be able to specify the age range of the child you want to mentor, the time commitment you are able to give, and the most suitable geographic area for you. Youll find it doesnt take special training to be a mentor - just a willingness to share your interest and time. Ken Verdoia of KUED--7 and Kimberly Perkins of 4 Utah ABC will host the event. Were thrilled that once again both commercial and public television Can join forces to offer substan- - SUMMIT COUNTY is cuficnily accepting bidi for the following confiicated vehicles: 1M Ckrvtold Silvan MX toa IMS OUhwM CmIm, Ckn, 4 Dm 11449. Mika INjOnT. Milaa Fair CnadMim Fail Coadpjioa SUMO) , (Mu. 1917 ftwtiac SsahM SE 127J65. Milaa Fair GmdKicM (Mm. Bid S4UXB) (Ma.BidSl.tlU.O0) M I9B7 Chavmlal 0 rick-u- fac- ing many of Utahs youth," r say Elizabeth Smart of KUED's community outreach program. One mentor from the Village Project shares her viewpoint on mentoring in hopes that others will get involved: 1 began to mentor as a way to give back to my community, thinking I would be able to train and mold' a youngster into an upstanding member of the community. It wasn't long before I realized how much she makes me reconsider my own priorities. 1 now smile at my initial intent to 'train and mold.' 1 have received far more than I have given. Would I mentor again? Yes, definitely." You can make a difference. Watch Volunteer for Utah's Kids Saturday, Sept. 18, by tuning in anytime from 2:30 p.m. until 8 p.m. The broadcast event is made possible by a grant from the Herbert and Elsa D. Michael Foundation and the Emma Eccles Jones Foundation. CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocates), the Utah Division of Cm an PVMk 355-278- Heart in 1943 based on a poem by John Malcolm Drinin. After its debut in New York, the piece was described as the finest solo work in the entire modem dance repertory of this decade..." RDT continues by imagining the future with Glacier. Choreographer Zvi Gotheiner and composer Scott Killian have created a piece to take the company into the millennium. Glacier comments on the 21st century. and a civilization coping with resources, expanding shrinking technology and the global environment. This contemporary dance ritual honors the life giving element of water. Zvi Gotheiner's choreography Chairs and Erosion have met with great success with Utah audiences. Mr. Gotheiner is a teacher, choreographer and artistic director of his own company, and has an exceptional international reputation. Dased in New York since 1978, Gotheiner currently serves as a company teacher for the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater and teaches regularly at his own school in Manhattan. Scott Killian, composer of RDT's Eroon and Turf, has had works presented at the Joyce Theatre, Lincoln Center, Jacob's Pillow and the American Dance Festival. He has composed- (or both television and theater, and .as a composer for dance, has scoredi works for Shapiro and Smith, David Dorfman, Susan Marshall, Ralph Lemon, JoAnna Shaw, Dcbe Miller, Mark Taylor and Stephan Koplowitz. Repertory Dance Theatre is supported in part by grants from the Utah Arts Council. Salt Lake County's Zoo. Arts and Parks Program. Salt Lake City Arts Council, National Endowment for the Arts, foundations, corporations and individuals. - Takes Viewers on a "Long Days Journey Into Night SuBscriBe Picfc-a- p (Mia. Bid SMUDO) (U3) C wti FanMy Miwaat POl Bob I3S CMiiHa UM Repertory Dance Theatre opens its 0 Millennium Season with classic repertory and a world premiere. Worldview III runs Friday, Oct. 1, and Saturday, Oct. 2, at the Capitol Theatre, 50 West 200 South Salt Lake City. Tickets are S14 with a $2 discount for students and seniors and are available from 7 ArtTix, (ARTS). RDT salutes the past with three master works from 1940s and 1950s. Fantasy and Fugue, choreographed by Doris Humphrey, is set to music by Mozart and was premiered at the New London Dance Festival in 1952. Helen Tamiris' Dance For Walt Whitman (1958) reflects Whitman's prophetic insight into the prublems of the American people and the rest of mankind. Tamiris loved the poetry of Walt Whitman whose poems die used throughout her career as a for choreography. springboard Valerie Dettis , created Desperate 1999-200- p KUED S9.SM.Waa FavCmMna WlaiSalSIi wSirtn. Page A7 To The In the early summer tBee! a17 llWMaaSItaHak THE ,CG of 1939, three yean after winning the Nobel Prize zio for Literature, Eugene O'Neill, aged 50, began work on what he called a play of old sorrow, written in tears and blood.1 It took him two years to complete this autobiographical masterpiece in which he summoned the courage to write the truth about his own family, a family long ago lost to He him. ghosts of the past. his wife Carlotta to me," explained once said, "that he had to write the play because it was a thing that haunted him and he had to forgive his family and himself." Now, 43 years after its Droadwav premiere. "Long Day's Journey into Night" comes to Great Performances in an adaptation of a production that the New York Times called perhaps the finest 'Journey' ever." The special, airing on KUED-Chann7 Sunday. Sept. 19, at 8 p.m., stars William Hull and Martha el Henry. Two of Canadas finest actors, Hull and Henry reprise their roles is James and Mary Tyrone from the critically hailed 1994 Strafford Festival revival of the work. Joining them are Tom McCamus. Peter Donaldson and Martha Bums, also from the production, which played houses for two consecuto sold-otive seasons. David Wellington directs, inspired by Diana Leblanc's Strafford concept. O'Neill chose his family's summer home in New London. Connecticut, as the setting for his tortured tale of deepening crises. With stark candor, he lays bare the souls of those nearest to him, exposing his Other's bi.tcr frustration and miserliness, his mother's descent into madness and morphine addiction, his olJcr brother's self-- ULTIMATE CD ut APY Intnuhn'tiuy rate until 102799 It allows you to add money at any time. Opportunities to withdraw without penalty.00 .It pays high market rates. loathing cynicism and acute alcoholism (which eventually claimed his life) and his own struggle to sur--v ive, not only against his illness, but also against the torment of his alternating hate and love for his own family. For most of my adult life, 'Long Day's Journey' has been an obsession of mine," confesses director Wellington, whose creative and inspired devotion was instrumental in bringing the work to the small screen. He attenJcd the Stratford Festival production and was overwhelmed. "In Strafford. I saw something miraculous." Wellington says. Never before had I witnessed a group of acton so successfully portray the humanity that lies at the heart of this tragedy." The revival's their roles cast agreed to but the for camera, only as an ensemble. Says leading man Hutt. It was understood, right from the beginning. that all five of us were to be involved. We had become such a close-kn- it family that, had any one of us been approached to do the adaptation w ith four other people, it would never have been made." Made it has been and exultantly so. bringing O'Neill's battling Tyrones to ferocious life and Ranks high among poignancy. of major stage works." adaptations wrote Variety of a special preview at the Toronto Film Festival. This is a paean to great theater and the classics: It translates with luminous warmth and inspired skill." A Long Great Performances: Into Night" airs Day's Journey 8 at 19, p.m. Sunday. Sept. American Heart Association FOR VOJRUFE WERE FIGH I ir n?T tUdmi 4 Ldultv I S4.M Skl VU.V ffjggMMft Hedver The CD has changed. Typically, mild-manner- And with Ultimate CD, cash can !c dejxwited CD rates are arbitrarily determined. The Ultimate CD, however, is tied directly to the interest rate of U.S. Treasury Note. a higher yielding Ihis creates two advantages: First, the interest rale can be higher. 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