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Show f. ' - KENTUCKY FILM TO BE SHOWN "Rhapsody in Bluegrass," wildlife wild-life adventure film in color, is the next presentation of the Audubon Aud-ubon Nature Screen Tour series. Walter H. Shackleton, distinguished distin-guished nature photographer, will present this unusual film November Novem-ber 28 at 8:15 p. m. in Kingsbury Hall. The bluegrass state, Shackle-ton's Shackle-ton's home, is a photogenic subject. sub-ject. Kentucky's scenic contrasts lowlands in the west, the famous bluegrass region, and the mountain moun-tain gorges of the Appalachians in the east offer a view of nature that Salt Lake audiences will find startlingly different from the local terrain. Here are scenes characterizing the individuality of the southern landscape: ancient spring houses and mansions that are typical of classic southern architecture, old stone slave fences, and sleek thoroughbreds and their wobbly foals in the famed bluegrass. Naturalist Shackleton's high-quality high-quality films have always stressed the unusual in nature events in small creatures' lives that go on regularly, but unnoticed by people, day after day. The wild animals which flourish in the Kentucky Ken-tucky countryside are the real subject of Rhapsody in Bluegrass. Tickets for Rhapsody in Blue-grass Blue-grass may be obtained after 6 p. m. on the night of the performance perfor-mance at the box office at Kingsbury Kings-bury Hall. |