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Show & E The Salt Lake Tribune, Sunday, June 17, 1973 Annual music clinic draws 200 to USU fessor of music, directing the choir. Special to The Tribune LOGAN Utah State Univerannual Summer 33rd sity's Music Clinic is scheduled to get under way Monday when more than zuu secondary school musicians from over k the nation gather for a workshop. Hepworth, a member the Utah Symphony of Orchestra, will be in charge of the workshop orchestra and Bill Silvester, director of bands at Bountiful High School, will conduct the concert band Fern Davidson, College of Idaho in Caldwell, is Loel two-wee- The clinic, open for university credit, will be attended by junior and senior high school students, undergraduate and graduate university students and teachers of music. The program includes private instruction, concert and clinic band, orchestra and fhoir, ensembles, music theory and conducting. Deadlines nearing on music contest Deadline for the annual Contest, sponComposition sored by Composers Guild, is June 30. The contest, open to anyone, will be divided into three categories, vocal ensemble, instrumental and childrens music. . Frizes ottered m the contest include $100 for first prize in vocal and instrumental and $35 for childrens. Those needing should further information contact Geneva Holt, 705 N. 750 East, Bountiful, or the Institute of Fine Arts 609 E. South Temple, Salt Lake City. Bob Mr. Alexander Mr. Anderson The Emperor Waltz, by This is Utah, by Strauss; Harold Orlob and favontes from "Fiddler on the Roof.' The event is sponsored by the Salt Lake City Parks Department and by the Music Performance Trust Funds of the Recording Industries. Free tickets for the program may be obtained at all ZCMI stores, Daynes Music Co., Belvedere Hotel, The Salt Luxe Tribune Building and South East Furniture Co. Mr. Anderson is for his musical hits, Lovely Hula Hands, "On a Coconut and Island, Cockeyed Mayor of Kaunakakai." A medley of his songs, arranged by Mr. Jelesmk, will be featured on the program. Other include selections concert well-know- n Noted humorist , author due at poetry meet A Satirist two lectures, at and "A Light Look at Work, that evening at Mark Life, H. Greene Hall on the campus. The annual National Federation of State Poetry Societies Convention will get under way in Salt Lake City July 4 with Richard Armour, American humorist and author, as special guest. Jean Jenkins, Orem, president of the national federation. said that prior to Dr. The convention, scheduled through July 7. will include convention sessions July 5, workshop sessions with Dr. Armour and an awards banquet July 6 and a final luncheon and awards presentation July 7. Armours lecture, evening awards will be presented to winners of the 14th annual National Poetry Contest. All winning entries will be published in "An Anthology of Winning Poems. an annual iederalion publication now retired years of teaching, is the author of more than 45 books and a contributor of over 6.900 peces of light verse Armour, 38 and bght magazines England H " 1 J ' i , J Baugh, begin June 21 at 145 S. State The classes, continuing through 6, Mrs. Baugh nearly 2 000 are Sept. sched- weeklv uled on Thursdays from 7 to 9 p m. Mrs. Baugh has directed choruses and choirs since 1940. She has studied nth numerous prominent musicians including Alexander Shreintr. Mable Borg Jenkins, Lowell and Naomi Farr and the late Emma Lucy Gates Bowen. Classes in the course, sponsored by Daynes Music Co., include vocal methods and conducting. Mrs. Baugh will give instructions on how to get the best results from available voices, developing pure singing tone, organizing choirs and and developing how to control and inspire a choir. Class members will direct and play each week. For more information on the sessions those interested may write to Mrs. Baugh at Daynes Music Co., 145 S. State, Salt Lake City, Utah 84111. Special to The Tribune D.C.-- The WASHINGTON, has Intermountain Region been allotted a total of $72,400 in grants from the National Endowment for the Arts for The allotfiscal year ment came in the first round of grants totaling $2,236,200 to be funded by the endowment and the Bureau of Indian Aflairs 1973-197- He is professor emeritus at three universities and. holds Dr. six doctorate degrees Armour has fellowships in England and France and has (aught at the University of Texas. Northwestern University. Wells College, the University of Hawau and Univer- SUNDAY Human Bn Mon in the Meadow, Arrow Theatre sembie Reoertory Press Souare Glass Factory, 8 30 m p MONDAY sity of Fneberg currently trustee at Claremont College. Tw o of his books are scheduled for publication this year, "It All Started with Freshman English, and The Strange Dream of He is Rover Jones. a workshop at the University of Utah July 6 and will deliver will conduct Dr. Richard Armour, Workshop Lecturer Poetry Corner JUICY AND NOURISHING Poetry is when I wake you up at 2 a.m. to see my sketch and you eat my peanut butter L jelly sandwich. Then you look at me and smile as if I know what youre thinking. Connie Bumes 660 Contez Sa't Lake City, Utah 84103 Tne Salt Coke Tribune will oav 5? tor each original poem not esceedmg 20 tines in length ouoiShed here Contributions snouid be mailed to Poetrv, Tne Salt Lore Trioune P O Boa 8g, bait oe returned lake Cit Utah WHO Poems cnoi Talent isnt everything! instruction important Continued from Page E-- l tory She studied for four years at the Curtis Institute of Mumc in Philadelphia, Pa , with Ival Galamian spending three of those years as his special assistant. Mrs Richey graduated from Curtis Institute in 1958 and went on to win the coveted Walter Naumburg Prize in her New York debut. During the first week of the workshop, she will give daily lectures on instructor techniques and perform with other artists and faculty members. Special Lecture The first weeks events include a special lecture on instrument repair and mainte- Do It Yourself, at 7 in the Music Hall, Room 393. The lecture will be given by Paul Schu-bat- k who has studied the exten craft of violin-makin- g nance, ture a lecture by famed cellist Leonard Feldman on FounMr. dations of Cello Playing Feldman is a graduate of both the Juilliard and the Eastman schools of music has He taught at Wilmington College Ohio. State University of New York at Potsdam, the of Imversity of Canterbury in New ZeJand, and since 1962, has been an associate professor of music at Pennsylvania State University. Saturday s agenda includes a lecture by Homer Wakefield, ancient instrument specialist, entitled A Survey of An quartet concert will be given Sunday at 8 pm in the Park City Resort Activities Center. The concert will feature Elaine artist-facult- InstruHistorical Musical at 3 p m. in the ments, Music Hall and an outdoor celio recital, Bach Is Love. under the direction of Utah Symphony cellist David B Freed at 6 30 p m. y itecture Build'ng's auditorium. The recital will feature Mrs. Richey on violin and pianist Gladstone Gladys playing y violin. Norma Lee violin; Dr. David David and viola, Freed. cello The group will perform works by Hayden, Shostakovich and Beethoven Richey, Madsen, Dalton, events begin at with a bass recital by conference bassists under the direction of Audrey Bush, principal bassist w.th the Utah Symphony, in the Music Hall, Room 303. A 3 p.m. chamber orchestra concert, conducted bv Dr. Richard Dickson, will 2 30 sonata recital will be given Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Art & Archartist-facult- be held in the Art & Architecture Buildings auditorium Soloists tor the concert are Tom Baron. Meredith Reed Clark. Elizabeth Morley and Jean Sudbury Faure and Sunday's Sonata Recital An works by Mozart. Prokofiev pm. 25 The program is under the direction of Dr David Dalton, head of the string department at Brigham Young University, Alison Dalton, with Kelly Clark, Ruth Xlonson and Dana Maiben as soloists representing each of the four seasons at 7 39 p m in June the Music Hall. Room 200, a special student solo and ensemble recital will be fea-td. And June 28 at 8 pm L .Architecture in the Art Building's auditorium, a special student honors recital w dl 26-2- 7 be Chamber Concert presented 7 he workshop's orchestra concert June 29 at 8 pm. m the Mus'C Hall. Room 200, directed bv John Kendall. pm. Wednesday sively throughout Europe. In 1968, he won the Annual Contest in Phoenix, Anz Violin-Makin- g Thursdays session Olympus Hills . . . Foothill Village . . . Fashion Place . . . Downtown . . Valley Fair . . . Ogden . . . Provo will fea- - Dance music topic of wo rkshop Utah Dance Repertory Theatre will be hosting seven musicians for two weeks beginning Mon- day as part of RDTs Dance Accompanist . f Workshop. Special guest will be Stanley B. Sussman, a faculty mem- ber at Juil-liar- t i i J S d School. workThe Sussman shop, first of four this summer, will focus on improvisational techniques for dance accompaniment. In daily sessions with company members, students will improvise on piano, cello, guitar and percussion. Mr. Sussman will serve as musical director for Workshop 73, RDTs annual summer workshop following the accompanists seminar. Summer Sundonte Rouin Hood, Provo Canyon. 8 15 pm, Theatre. dates on odd calendar continues through Sect 8. Pet Core, Sot Cake Public Li brory Story Hour, Room, 209 E 5th South, 2pm Melodramas. Old Barn Playhouse 8 jQ Konob Old Barn Playhouse 30 June p m , continues through except Sundays Salt Coke Acting Co Goloxie, East. 8 pm, conEliot Halt, tinues through soturdov -BabThe Princess ond the Pea, Pioneer Theatre downstairs. cock 2 Memorial Theatre Building, pm. continues through Friday TUESDAY Lagoon Ooero Guys ond Dolts, House, 8 30 pm. continues through Friday, Saturday, 7 ond 9pm Brooch Keorns River Series 7 30 p m WEDNESDAY West Side Story, Wasatch Pioneer Mom Players, old Heber Tabernacle 8 Heber, Street, pm, continues 30 Sundays, except June thtough Mondays and Tuesdays THURSDAY Sonata Recitol, with Elaine Richey, vioim, Glodvs Gladstone, piano, Utah Museum of Fine Arts Auditorium. 8pm Fiddler on tne Roof, Pioneer Me8 pm; continues morial Theater, through Soturdov FRIDAY Utah Bond Directors Concert, Utoh State University Chose Fine Arts Center. Cooon, 7 30 p m Sor Chondu end the Megic Isle, Coke Public Library lecture holi. 2 ond 7pm June Conference, sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-doSaints, continues through Saturday Mormen Youth Symphony end Chorus. Salt Coke Tabernacle, 8 pm.; continues Saturday Mormon MIA Dance Festive!. University of Utoh stadium, 9 pm., continues Saurdoy. Festival, Mormon MiA Roodshow Valley Music Hall, $ and 0 30 p m., continues Saturday. Mormon House of Many Rooms, ValMiA Speech Festival, Promised contin5 ona Ptovhouse, pm., ley ues Soturdov. The Carst of An Aching Heart, Silver Wheel Theatre, Pork City, I m June 30 on , contmjes through p Fridays and Soturdov? SATURDAY Boch I Cove," with David Freed, cellist, Ctam s Gu,ch, University of Utoh, 4 f A graduate from Eastman School of Music, Mr. Sussman is known to Salt Lake audiences for his score to Bill Evans in "Five Songs August which premiered in the January RDT Concert Senes. Mr. Sussman will conduct during RDT's concert July 20 and 21 at Pioneer Theatre. Two w orkshops in dance open Monday at BYU Special to The Tribune PROVO Two dance workshops. one for junior and senior high school students and the second for college students and dance teachers, begin Monday at Brigham Young University. The workshops are spon- sored by the Department of Physical Education for women and the Department of Special Courses and Conferences. The youth seminar will continue for two weeks under the direction of Linda Ollivier. an instructor of modern dance at BYU, and the advance workshop, for fiv e weeks under the direction of A1 Huang, teacher at the Krannert Center for the Performing Arts at the I of Illinois Theater session designed for young students Special to The Tribune PROVO Junior an! senior from high school students throughout the United States will attend the five-wee- k Thea- at Brigham Workshop June 27 University Young through July 28. The seminar, directed by Dr. Charles W. Whitman, associate professor of dramat," arts, will include ter acting, voice, lighting, scenery construction, painting and design, makeup and sound. Dr. Whitman is a veteran actor with the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Cleveland Plavhouse and Dallas Theater. Piano recital Students of Gladys Bullock will be presented in a piano recital W ednesday at 7 p m at the lecture hall of the Salt Lake Public Library, 209 E. 5th South. The public is mvit- - 'four-pa- rt concluding event will be an The concluding week of the workshop will feature a chamof ber orchestra concert Vivaldis Four Seasons June k Nancy Hanks, chairman ol the Endowment, said Utah is Idaho, $17,200, receiving $18,000; Wyoming, $22,200, and Nevada, $15,000, from the Endowment for aid in dance, poetry, and visual arts Breaking the figures down even further, Ms. Hanks said Utahs Division of Fine Arts would receive $5,000 for poetry and $12,200 for visual arts; Idaho's Commission on Arts and Humanities would receive $13,000 in dance and $5,000 in poetry; Wyomings Council on the Arts. $10,000 in poetry and $12,200 in visual arts; and Nevada's Council on the Arts. $10,000 for dance and $5,000 for poetry The grants come trom a total program fund of $3 million, up $500,000 from last year The program places professional artists m elementary and secondary classrooms in all 50 states and five special jurisdictions. Puerto Rico. Virgin Islands. District of Columbia. Guam and American Samoa. Calendar of Events prose to leading m the L S. and Dr. Armour will Area to get funds for use of arts i Guest artists participating on the program include George Alexander, San Francisco, a baritone billed as the and Continental Troubador. Alex Anderson, composer Honolulu. Dr. f t 4 Utahs pioneer days celebration begins this year with the Days of 47 Pops Concert July 10 at Highland High School auditorium at 8.30 p.m. The 23rd annual concert is free and features Eugene Jelesmk as conductor of the Salt Lake Philharmonic Orchestra, Billie after Summer school master classes for church musicians, directed and taught by Lucy ensembles Pops concert opens pioneer celebration and to offer choir advice responsible for piano USU staff members participating include Max Dalby, Uassermann, Alvin Irving Glen Field, Betty Vardle, Beecher and Dennis Gnffin. Workshop instructors also will include Clarence Saw hill, retired director of bands at the University of California in Los Angeles, m charge of the symand Bernell phonic band, Hales, University of Utah pro- - Loukas, soloist, Davis, pianist. New classes harmony in a perfectly planned wardrober Four parts that get together and sing in perfect harmony beautifully attuned to stay in town or travel around the world with equal ease, anv time from now right on through fall! Jacket, pleated skirt and cuffed pants are 98 polyester, 2 silk, in a denim-loo- k weave of Navy, accented with white plaid and crisped with white stitching. Beneath the easy jacket, a short sleeved white overblouse of 100 Dacron polyester. A true sophisticate, handsomely designed for your life style, in Mr. Dresses, sizes $98 (X)! 6-1- 6, I |