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Show DAILY University of 1 : Lake City, Friday. February 28, 1958 President Hosts At Gala Union Event dollar Union Building to free by alumnt, faculty and Un: sity seniors and partners Friday ntght for the annual ~~ reception. Dr. and Mrs. A. Ray Olpin will personally greet the guests for the open house, which will run from 7 to 11 p.m. In the receiving line also will be the presidents of the Alumni Association, Associated Students, and Faculty Club. The entire Union will be open for "Operation 108," and hosts and hostesses will be on hand to operate exhibits and answer any questions that visitors may have. There will be dancing in the Center Ballroom, the games area will be open, and refreshments will be served in the cafeteria The facilities of the games area may be used free of charge, and those who care to may inspect the cafeteria lines and the kitchen Those who ; publications will find interesting and informative exhibits in the Chronicle, Utonian, and Pen offices. The crafts room also will display its ware The Browsing Room will offer reading, conver with its record listing facilities Foreign Student's Program Sunday featuring folklore of foreign countries will be presented Sunday evening at 7 p.m. in the East Ballroom of the University of Utah Union, according to Carolyn Johnson, Students From Abroad committee member. Foreign students who are attending the University will do numbers that represent folklore their individual countries, followed by an explanation of how it fits into the thinking o£ the people, Miss John- ; full swing; several of the Pro-will book of previously honored people will be featured by the This Week We Honor committee which plans to honor Mr. William J O'Conner, chairman of the Boarri of Regents. The "Ute Cinema" will operate, and floor shows will be presented in the Panorama Room at 10 and 11 p.m. There will be strolling throughout the building guests. entertain Ilka Chase In U Theatre 'Constant Wife' Ilka Chase, noted stage and screen personality, will star in the University Theatre's presenta tion of "The Constant Wife," which opens Monday night in Kingsbury Hall. Mr. Robert Hyde Wilson, acting of local players including Harry Nelson, Pershing Howe, Lile Eccles Brimhall, Midge Price, Dorothy Wilson, Florence Levine, and Chester K. Dowse. Miss Anne Cullimore will understudy Miss Chase in the role of Constance Middleton. The first performance Monday night will be for University students and faculty only. Students present activity t the door Monday night, urday afternoon they ci change this ticket at room Kingsbury Hall for balcony seat, Tuesday and Wed-sday evenings. The Gab and Gobble committee will hold an after-theatre party e and members of the University of Utah Union, according to Trish Pipkin, commit-' tee chairman. GO GET 'EM HAL!-Dean Lowell Durham tries to catch forty winks while Dean Harold Bentley brandishes a rifle to frighten off intruders. The two deans are practicing: up to keen vigil over valuable art exhibit. No Vandals Please Art Extremes Shown Professor Alvin Gittins, head of the art department, announced today that the Fourth Annual National Invitational Exhibition will be In the main gallery of the Union from March 2 to March 23. "This show," said Dr. Lowell M. Durham, dean of the College of Fine Arts, "represents in art what the Bartok-Stravinski block rep ¦sents in the field of music." Since the paintings in the show e valued at about $200,000, it as felt by Dr. Durham that eans of securing the paintings against damage had to be found. Noted Violinist Spivakosky At Symphony j Tossy Spivakovsky will appear as guest soloist with the Utah Symphony Orchestra in a concert to be presented on Saturday eve- j ning, March 1, at 8:30 p.m. in the Salt Lake Tabernacle. This will be the 9th concert of the current Mr. Spivakovsky is a Russian born violinist who was educated in Berlin, Germany. He made his American debut in 1943 with the New York Philharmonic Symphony. At that performance he introduced to the world, Bartok's "Violin Concerto." It is this same work that he will perform Saturday evening. Schubert's "Symphony No, 9 in C Major" and Bernstein's "Overture to Dandide" will accompany the featured con- The Los Anreles Times said of Spivakovsky, "If Paganini was called a demon in the early part SYMPHONY SOLOIST-Tossy Spivakovsky will appear Saturday with Utah Symphony Orchestra, He will perform Bartok's "Violtn Concerto.'* of the 19th century, then Splva- tovsky is Just about the nearest ;o one yet produced in the 20th century." Tickets for the available at Bennett's 55 W. First South. The Utah Symphor y will fea- March 15, Jose Iturbi. This will be the last of the subscription t the season. Tickets for it are avail- As the budget for the exhibit was limited and would not permit the employment of an official guard, a substitute was found. Dean Durham, and Dean Harold W. Bentley, of the Extension Division and Summer School, volunteered to sleep In the Union at night as a protective measure if necessary. Mr. Clayton Kimball, head of Buildings and Grounds, offered his services also, as did several campus service organiza- Sallee Snell Reigns At Fri. Night Dance Ringing down the curtain Founder's Day week for anoi year will be the dance-jazz cert scheduled for Saturday ¦ two attendants, Janice Nelson and Judy Engelmann, will reign over the last social affair of the week. The three campus lovelie 9:30 p.m. The featured band, the Y's Men, will give their interpretation of "The Story of Jazz." Celebrated disc jockey, Al "Jazzbo" Collins, and one of the creators of "Teenage Hop" will do honors as the emcees. half-hour break to allow time for the chairs to be cleared from the ballroom area. Student co-operation in clearing the ballroom as soon as possible will facilitate the speedy removal of chairs and the dance starting at 9:30 p.m. as scheduled. Tickets for the festivities will be on sale at the Huddle ticket booth in the Union from 9 to 5 p.m. today. Admission to the jazz concert and dance are on the same ticket. If purchased prior to the affair, the ducats will go for $2.50, at " irday night, The Annual National Invitational Exhibition is presented by the University art depart-; it is titled, "Nine American Painters." It represents contemp ' American painting from the ight-wing of representational i the left-wing of abstraction, matures the artists Andrew Wyeth, Ben Shahn, Rico Lebrun, Hans Hofmann, Stuart Davis, Jack Levine, Max Weber, Abra-Rattner, and Robert Mother- The official opening of the show will be Sunday, March 2, at 2 p.m. 'AH students, faculty members, ,nd interested persons are especially invited to attend," Dr. Git-tins said. Ceramics Engies Cop Top Honors The winner of the University Utah Engineering week dis- iay contest was the ceramic en- neering department. Second went to the electrical en- ;, and third place went to the chemical engineering depart Other, departments entered in tmpetition included the mechanical, metallurgical, and civil en- Pusey Analyzes Bennett Policy, Dulles Program By Nigel Hey journalist Merlo J. Pusey, analyzed much of the controversy over Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson, as "a matter of politics." Mr. Pusey, associate editor of the Washington Post and Times Herald, lauded Secretary Benson's efforts in getting the nation's farms out of "a very bad situation." However, he said, the farmers are "put out" by parts of Mr. Benson's program. The Pulitzer Prize winning journalist described Mr. Dulles as rather unpleasant personality . gruff and abrupt." But, if Dulles eventually is to be removed, Mr. Pusey warned, the nation must find a suitable replacement. He added, "I don't think anyone in the nation has better idea of what's going on . the world." Mr. Dulles, he said, has "dragged his feet" in the Soviet-proposed summit conferences; but he to be "rather anti-Dulles." "On the domestic side," he said, there is a great deal of opposi-ion-mainly in the press." Over-eas opposition to Mr. Dulles, he said, "is on the surface only." The Chronicle, as always, was the only way to stay in touch with the latest happenings on a campus of over nine thousand students. It was the first thing to see on the way in to any one of the University's buildings, and almost the only thing some people occupied their time with during the first period class. Gathering the news and getting the pictures was the responsibility of the budding editors and reporters who kept the Chronicle running. Almost any Utahn could find something to interest him between the daily sheets even if it were only "The Little Man on Campus" series. If it was controversy that was desired, this year's Chrony had more than the old campus had seen in many a moon. But the editors, the writers, the photographers, in fact everyone involved with the paper had tried to do their best for the student body, and glancing back, one could easily say, they had a most successful year. |