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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 56

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St. Louis, Missouri
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1 i.STUlUlS POST-DISPATCH VzfZfa I 1 vici iiimTftDiiiM nornH unncr 1 nihta mm Ml win will wr ki.n iivNOk1 'Light Up the Music And Music Makers A Frenchman i TOMORROW, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY THE ONE AND ONLY BALLET nUSSEdeMONTE CARLO S4m fcr AUXANDtA BANILOVA. FRtDCRIC FRANK. tUTHANNA tORIS. MART RUIN MOTLAN, Olid TUPIN, ROMAN JASINSRT Md Carps 4 loll.t m4 Symphony Orchestra. Comedy, at American Art and Artists Feininger on Werner Drewes By Howard Derrickson i Limns Manhattan MOST GLAMOROUS BALLET IN THE WORLD TOMORROW SWAN LAKE, fAS DE DS.UX.

MUTE WIFE. 8:30 r. M. GRADUATION I ALL. TUESDAY COPPELIA.

PAQUITA. FRANKIE nd JOHNNY. 8:30 P. M. WEDNESDAY CIRQUE 4 DIUX.

PAS de DEUX CLASSIOUE, 8:30 P. M. 1IRTHDAY, IEAU 0ANUIL By Thomas B. Sherman ANUEL ROSENTHAL, the French composer- whose at Aaallaa Cffie. 1004 OII.

and Kl Aaaitmaa SEATS NOW SELLING AN EXHIBITION of 24 new paintings by Werner Drewes, "Musiaue de Table" was Tickah: $1.22. S1.IJ. $2.44. $3.05 Utl Aasalcas: INTERTAINMENT mTfiwmt A who directs the freshman pro gram of studies at the Washing ton University School of Fine i PAGANINI Arts, will open tomorrow at Pen SHOWBOAT Palette, 24 North Brentwood A boulevard, Clayton. Drewes's friend, Lyonel Feininger of New Vnrk- on nf th nioneers in mod DANCE SEXTET FROM THE GAY "nil TUI TOWW" MUSICAL "ON THE TOWN, GlaN Red Presents SWITCHMAN'S DAUGHTER SdO P.

M. tMory Mlfhl IA. t75 FMt ot LMnit St. NnM fUtu OrfMtntlM ern painting, haa viewed the pic- R-Jloi Rlicce at nri ha written an intro-1 DO II CI IxUiiC a I STRING QUARTET Jan. 16, 8:30 p.

m. SHELDON AUDITORIUM 3648 WASHINGTON BLVD. Admission $2.40 (tax incl.) Tickets at Sheldon ana Taraa Arts Shop. 6501 Dolmmr ductlon to the catalogue NEXT AT LOEW'S STATE. FROM LEFT.

BETTY ARRETT. ANN MILLER. VERA-ELLEN. AND (BACK ROW) FRANK SINATRA. JULES MUNSHIN.

OENE KELLY. Opera House Three The display is to include paint flayed by the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra In the fail of 1946 haa returned to program music in a piece called "Magic Manhattan." Though net intended as this symphonic poem might Ibe regarded as a Frenchman's response to George Gershwin's "American in Paris." The Gershwin piece undertook to reproduce the sights and sounds of the French capital as they were filtered through the sensibilities of a Yankee visitor. "Magic Manhattan" is. a report on New York iy a traveler who never forgets that he is a Frenchman.

The piece will be given Its world premiere -by the St. Louis orchestra under Vladimir Golschmann this coming Friday afternoon. Here is the programmatic "scheme of the score: 3 (A) The excitement of a large railway station in Paris; conver ings done during Drewes's Euro- CITY ART MUSEUM Forest Park Dean tour of last summer in aaai Nights This Week tlon to others completed at his farm in New York. Prints ana additional water colors will be in THE Ballet Russe de Monte rrario with a cast headed by The Night Spofs portfolio. Danilova and urewes, waose wu in wavy its an- nnai visit to St.

Louis with per- Batty Grotsman will talk en Chtnest Pottery TOMORROW NIGHT AT 1:00 P.M. Dna at the Museum Rastaurant before attending tne lecture. CHASE CLUB Xavier Cugat, his at me caunaus, weimar, wr- vi.i iiirfitnrhim On-many, where he studied with the formMcw at Wei AudnumP-n xri osma tn I era House at 8.3U.ociock lomor VI am. R. oamo tn I era ouusc and Tuesday ana a In ian mnA tn Wnshfnff-1 TOW night, wi Art Ghnni each night.

The ballets win De vTr bv a symphony or Latin-American rhythms and revue, continue through Wednesday. Then Harvey Stone, with Buddy Moreno and his orchestra. CRYSTAL TERRACE "A Toast to the Twenties," the Park- Plaza's own musical revue, starring Paul Haakon and Harry Fender. With Robert Moonan's orchestra and piano. CLUB CONTINENTAL Billy Romano, "balloon sculptor," the Spaulding Trio, adagio dancers, SI II i ana Mi ALL-STAR REVUE SHOW TIME sations between the friends of the traveler.

The traveler arrives, agitated, anxious about his gage and about his impending "discovery" of the New World. Shakes hands, accepts the good wishes of his friends for pleasant voyage and relapses Into a faint spirit of melancholy. The engine thistles, the taoat-train starts with a shuffle and a roar intermingled FRIDAY THE FAMOUS INTERNATIONAL AWARD WINNING PICTURE COMES TO THE SHADY OAK MARGIE HART (SEATED), GLENN ANDERS. BARI AND SAM LEYENE IN A TENSE MOMENT IN "LIGHT Ul THE SKY," A COMEDY ABOUT A THEATRICAL TROUPE OPENING TOMORROW NIGHT AT THE AMERICAN. versity and Chicago Art Inst-tute.

chestra directed by Lucien caii- He has had previous one-man let and Paul Stea Ctther lead- shows at the Smithsonian Institu- ing dancers wiU be BUttnM jH tlon Washington, D.C., New York ris. Leon Danielian, Mary Ellen galleries and he Washington Uni- Moylan, Oleg Tupine and Roman versity Student Center. The Pen Jasinsky. Palette exhibition will close Tomorrow night program will T.r, sn include "Swan Lake," "Pas de 8:45 and -Mi, World Premiere Deux Classique," and "The Mute iririvrvr: ktatfment is Wif a new work based on a with the cries of farewell from relatives and friends. The trip Kathryn Hammona, pianoiog-uist and Warney Ruhl's band.

TERRACE ROOM Art Devan-ey's orchestra. CROWN ROOM The Harvey Of Music Poem across the ocean occurs without Incident; it Is nothing more than 'A interesting because it foretells a change in the style, a departure from abstraction, in one of St. By the Symphony a long rest so It Is indicated nere Louis's most influential artists Maher quartet. CIRCUS SNACK BAR The Crewcuts, novelty instrumental 1 by a long, soft rolling 01 tne cymbals. Moreover, these words are worthy 01 of consideration because they ex auartet.

A CAROL Wtt PRODUCTION ZODIAC Maurice Rocto with (B) MANHATTAN emerges into View suddenly through the mists press a seminal minas concepts about artists' ways of seeing THE Moss Hart comedy, "Light Up the Sky," which contains some acidulous caricatures of some of Hart's friends (maybe ex-friends by now) in show business, comes to the American Theater for a week beginning- tomorrow night. The play, which ran 214 performances on Broadway last year, tells of the all-out displays of temperament of a theatrical company on the opening night of a drama in Boston. Sam Levene, stage and screen character actor, plays the producer, who Billy Rose thinks was meant as a dig at him. Margie Hart, ex-strip teaser, plays the role of the ice-skating star who is the producer's wife, which some people, including Rose, thought was a take-off on Eleanor Holm, Rose's wife, and former his explosive piano, and the Novel-Aires. Of an "autumnal morning, me skyscrapers create a terrifically things.

Feininger, now 78 years old. is known for his personal MERRY-GO-ROUND Edo Lu- contribution to cubism, certainly one of the significant ways of seeing things for artists of our time. He writes: eJltttttl TWENTlt. PAUL HAAKON HARRY FENDER One Snow Nightly ot 10 ROBERT M00NAN ORCHESTRA Wax r'Vf "Werner Drewes is known to bich and his continental songs through Saturday. Lee San-guinette.

pianist, opens Friday. RENDEZVOUS Jimmie Caldwell, pianist. ROSE AND CROWN Glenn Young's orchestra. 1 i in Spain in the Napoleonic era. Wednesday's program will be: rjrmi de Deux." "Pas de Deux critics and the public as an artist chiefly of non-objective paintings.

Therefore his first show of paint THE St. Louis Symphony Orchestra will present a world premiere of Manuel Rosenthal's symphonic poem, "Magic Manhattan," at its regular concerts at 2 p.m. Friday and 8:30 p.m. Saturday in Kiel Auditorium Opera House. Vladimir Golsch-mann will conduct.

The program will be -rounded out with Brahm's Fourth Symphony and the suite from Gretry's ballet, "Cephale and Procris." The orchestra has announced that when Lauritz Melchior and Helen Traubel sing with it in a concert version of "Tristan and Isolde" in Kiel Auditorium Convention Hall Jan. 24, the program will include the Prelude, Isolde's Narrative, and the duet of the first act; the Vorspiel, and Love Duet in the second act, and the Prelude, Tristan's Death, Interlude, and the Love-Death of the Third Act. ings after nature may come to i T. fv if- vaajn many as a surprise. swimming champion.

Lynn Bari, "The capacity of the artist for Theatre Carteln Dinner $3.50 AT THE who has been heroine or heavy FKIDHY being deeply moved by visual ex strong impression of power and audacity. The ship has scarcely tied up at the dock before the -Gallic visitor is ashore and overwhelmed by the crowds, the mad traffic and varied voices of the monster city. New lYOrk, however, offers many con-trasts and the visitor passes from ithe near-hysteria of a main traf--fic artery to a narrow, peaceful -street where a barrel organ is After a little the visitor leaves this little island of real pose with its suggestion of departed days, takes a streetcar and at Times Square. (C) At this point the music 'undertakes to present descriptively one of the noisiest and 'brightest and most fascinating (to ithe composer) places in the world: fTimes Square with its millions of Irianrinr sterns and other kinds II in 50 movies, plays the star, in whom some observers think they Classique," "Beau Danube," and nnmhnr "Rirthdav set to perience, combined with specula' tive thinking, may be, in an ab SHABY OAK 11L TT music by Rossini, about the reminiscences of a former belle on breviated form, one of the many explanations for creative thought. 1 FO.

3100 EeULAR PRICESI her fiftieth birthday. PARK PLAZA HOTEL "THE SOURCES OF visual ex- recognize elements of Gertrude Lawrence, Tallulah Ban khead and Katharine Cornell. Glenn Anders has the role of the precious director. Levene and Anders are of the original Broadway cast The author in the play is supposed to mirror Hart himself RUTHANNA BORIS oerience always derive from na story by Anatole France, with mu Ingrid BERGMAN C0TTEN APOLLO UNDER CAPRICORN' ture. The greater one faculty to realize these experiences in their completeness and to translate them into pictorial form, the sic by Scarlatti, and a Spanish setting.

in his early idealistic stage. DeBniv.er sn Witerma Plui 'CLAY PIGEON' Orttr CARSON Crrel FLYNN The company will offer on Monty Woolley, the bearded A MOST IMPORTANT ADDRESS ON EDUCATION DR. BENJAMIN FINE New far Tfmae MaeeHeiiel Dfrecter who will oppoor before the LIBERAL FORUM Y.M.H.A.-Y.W.H.AVCnleii oae inrlqlit "IS AMERICA'S PRESEfrr EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM ADEQUATE FOR THE NEXT BO YEARSr SUNDAY IVENINA JANUARY eth 8:30 P. M. SI .00 Inc.

Ta 0'FALLON BADEN Tuesday "Coppelia," "Frankie and of electrical displays, its amuse-1 Ljf a stronger will be the impressions conveyed to the beholder. .1.,. A ..,111 acient galleries, motion picture ihZ 3520 N. houses, taverns and rusnmg ASHLAND week beginning Monday, Jan. 16, THAT FORSYTE WOMAN Co.

Murphy. Riterdo Menjelbtn. -BORDER INCIDENT 6ery COOPER Jane WYATT TASK FORCE Shelley WINTERS Howard DUFF JOHNNY STOOL PIGEON frwstead in a revival of the Moss Hart- Johnny, and a new number, "V-quita," with choreography by Mme. Danilova, and based on the third act of an original ballet of that name first performed in Paris in 1846, depicting a grand ball George S. Kaufman smash comedy success, "The Man Who Came Woollcott's waspish and rude wit, goes to dinner in a midwestern home on a lecture tour, slips and breaks a leg, and ruthlessly takes over command of the family from his wheel chair during his enforced stay.

Woolley, a former Yale English professor, did-the role in the movie version released in 1942. The American management announced that "Mister Roberts," in its last week ending New Year's Eve. set a new record for the PAULINE cft. SALISBURY PLAZA IhHCI W. Floriuant to Dinner." Woolley starred in it "This statement is vana lor whatever form the painter may choose for his work, representative or non-objective.

Whatever we are capable of experiencing in a work of art, we have, either consciously or sub-consciously, gained through observation. "Our theories are evolved out bf these experiences and observations. This fact cannot be disregarded. The more alert our eyes for two years on Broadway Merle WILSON John LUND 'MY FRIEND IRMA' Burt LANCASTER Paul HENREID 'HOPE OF SAND' ASiSJSS'ar'Jl V'221 ONI WEEK ONLY SEftlNNIN TOMORROW Ml-HT when it was originally produced, but was not seen In it here. The QUEENS M4.7fc,fn itwaiatiiw IPl Til IT MIAUTLY AT 1:30 MATINEES 2J, 61c, 1.22, 1.83, 2.44j; BrnDOE 1.22.

1.83. 2.44. 3.05. 3 road company which played here for two weeks in October and November, 1940, starred Clifton crowds. The visitor is over--whelmed.

But after awhile his "nerves quiet a little and in relaxed mood he listens to a singer vocalizing a la Bing -Crosby. The visitor obeys the impulse to imitate the singer by parody. After a while he moves XAWay and walks down Broadway -in search of a more quiet spot. Eventually he finds itN as his per- ambulations take him to the 'strange peace of Chinatown. (D) A BIZARRE concert of Asiatic instruments accompanying a singer amuses the Frenchman twhen he stoDS to admire the toy EDDIE RICH presents playhouse of one week of eight LJD ELL Bro.d-ay Webb.

(by rrnq.mtnt with JOSEPH M. HYMAN A BERNARD HART) Atteciati Producer, ARTHUR J. BROWN The play is based, as is well I Line TURNER. Gene KELLY. 'THREE MUSKETEERS' I Ruth Werriea.

Frankie Laine. 'MAKE BCLIEVI' BALLROOM I F. MaeMemy, S. Sidney. 'Trail ot the Loneaomo Pine' I Preston Andy DEVINE.

'GERONIMOJ Oennit O'KEEFE -Or Gail RUSSELL 'THE GREAT DAN PATCH' I tizaheth SCOTT. Do DeFORC. 'TOO LATE FOR TEARS' I fiery COOPER, Jane WVATT. TASK FORCE' I Shelley Dan 0urya.VI0HNNr STOOL PI0E0N' Cherokee Jl lew. performances" for a play.

It was, however, $1000 under the record CINDERELLA known, on the late Alexander MOSS HART'S Greatest Comedy Hit VIRGINIA 5117 Vireinia set last season by the Lunts's Woollcott. The central figure, comedy, "I Know My Love," which played nine performances SAVOY Fen esen. Me. Sheridan Whiteside, a famed radio story teller with all of Aaf0 11 and senses to observe ana to ao-sorb, the richer will be the background out of which works of art are conceived and formed. "Viewed from this angle, the paintings of Drewes in this exhibition are legitimate documents as segments in the process of his constant advance toward the final work." A COLLECTION OF pictorial 6237 Oeeni 1 OQ STUDIO Bridie Cary GRANT Ana SHERIDAN 'I VAS A MALE WAR BRIDE' Richard Conic.

Barbara Lawrence. 'THIEVES' HIGHWAY' like children, the mysterious food mm UP thesej in the shop windows LEMAY8f," MELDA MICHIGAN 2'Rebert John LUND Oiena LYNN 'MY FRIEND IRMA' Burt LANCASTER. Cleede RAINS. 'ROPE OF SAND' Starts 1 :00 St.rte 1:00 -and to look about him at the '4 'v 1 manv evidences of spiritual tran 2912 ouilltv. After dinner in a Chinese Lerette'YovnfV Coleite 'COME TO THE STABLE' Edw.

B. Roblnien. Sul.n Hayward. 'HOUSE OF STRANGERS' MELVjrchf panels in applique by two contemporary women artists of Of wa he continues his walk into a poorer section of downtown Starring LYNN BARI 73 S. Breedway SOUTHWAY yr'S' sam LEVENE COLORADO TERRITORY' 'J0NNNV 6T00L PIGEON' Joel MeCrea.

Vlriinie Mare, Shelley Dae Duryea, fenbach, Germany, will go on -Display Tuesday at the City Art WHITE HEAT Jimee CAfiNEY, Vireinia MAYO NORMANDY "ti.M.lu Museum. The panels, now on a Buy Rery CALHOUN. 'MASSACRE RIVER MARGIE HART GLENN ANDERS A LA HIGH APALOOZAP Walter Wlnehall tour of American museums, were BARRACKS MacMurray, H. Fonda. 'Trail ef the Lonenome Pine' (Color) Preeton FOSTER.

'6ER0NIM0' shown most recently at the cni-cago Art Institute. 2r)tli and Bremen BREMEN Gary COOPER. Welter BRFNNAN. -TASK FORCE Dana ANDREWS. Shelley WINTERS.

'JOHNNY STOOL PIGEON' York, walking siowiy in xne night he is oppressed by the misery and squalor of the East Side (El Farther on he sees some tdrunkards leaving a cheap, dirty tavern and through the opened door he can hear the plaintive sounds of Jewish folk music plaved by two or three musicians. The exhibitors are veronica 'HELLFIRE' (Color) CONGRESS IZl William Mar'e ELLIOTT WINDSOR Jamee CAGNEY. 'G-MEN wj Malata, who originated tne project, and Gustel Rivoir, curator of the Offenbach Leather Mu 7 NIGHTS MON. JAN. 16 THRU SUN.

JAN. 22 Bereela Matinee Jaa. IS Ja. SI Jen. 22 "A SMASH HIT!" "A ROARING EVENING" N.

Y. HaraW Tribune N. Y. Timet NATIONAL TOUH OklGWAL STAQ IN HIS COMEDY VK7 MiCOWBER AFFAIR' cuMgs doVlVvy 'MONTANA MIKE- IIBCCT 8800 UnCO I Graveit Start 2:00 Park Free seum, who was so impressed by Miss Malata's early results that Jin 'RED STALLION IN THE ROCKIES' Color she helped complete the work. DAVIS KING (F) Now he penetrates into a "section that is not only squalid but full of the sinister evidence at human degradation and the Binf CROSBY, 'TOP O' THE MORNING.

Cartoon Hamnered by postwar snoix- MAM GOOOOri LOVES OF CARMEN ITerhnlcolor R'ta Glenn I HAYWORTH FORD FAIRY Eittea already twisted lives of child I F. ManJURRAV. 'TRAIL OF THE LONESOME Newe ages, tne artists usea wieir ingenuity and a wide variety of materials, including scraps of old silk, wool, handwoven linen, bits of lace and tulle, pieces from an I jam i WHITE HEAT Jamee Vlrfinle CAGNEY MAYO Ct. 2:00 criminals. Much affected by this bitter spectacle, the traveler goes to places where life is easier Carteea Gey MADISON.

'MASSACRE KIRKWOOD Kirtwocd. Mo. OSAGE KlrttwftfxJ. M. and brighter.

He crosses uroaa THE FIGHTING KENTUCKIAN John WAYNE wav and reaches the Hudson Heword DUFFSholley WINTERS. JOHNNY STOOL PIGEON cestral trousseaus and fragments of liturgical vestments. Miss Malata planned color schemes and figures. Miss Gustel CLAUDE JARMAN. ELIZABETH PATTERSON.

AND DAVID BRIAN IN "INTRUDER IN THE DUST." FROM FAULKNER'S NOVEL OF THWARTED MOB VIOLENCE IN THE SOUTH AT THE ORPHEUM. rn-fll FLYMM fnw CltnN -it Welter PID6E0N frf CnRflrtM -O- river (presumably well uptown) THAT FORSYTE WOMAN' (Tech.) mmmm mm a a a a at mWm aW af llflk OZARK Wakitor Grove. Me, Cent. Fren 2 P. M.

I CG) HERE he is soothed by the the composition of the pictures. -oSTAaAM-5Yor7WA 'BORDEB IKCIDEJir 40.T:S0, -itttb MAN UHU fLMHlz lUVIHKLK MIIARIOUS COMEDY AMOSS calmness of the scene, the silence. a Both executed the careiui sutcn-ing, after each piece was pinned 'MR. SOFT TOUCH' Serial Chae. II BATMAN A ROBIN Ihe distant lights of the skyscrapers, the flow of the river.

Now Glenn Fve'rn FORD KEVES J-ifnifer IONE8. SEAT SALE THIS WEDNESDAY Mail Orders Accepted at Matinee Only PORTRAIT OF JENNIE 1 4 HIT CI. i 11 I OO i Jf Jt jnore than ever he feels the magic tho great city. At last the ALL NIGHTS lea 4 44 i ai 2.44, 3. Ethet tui: Ben nuBiiRC -30- 1.22.

1.SJ, OS. 3.44 IflM I SUN. (Jaa. 22) I.UWt-.Tf EON BARnVAtORE 00-9 30 lactate remittance with addressed, itomptd envelop- with mail orders. mmi STOOL PICEDR' tlawn breaks over prodigious Man iiattan 'IV miltC.

ewar DUFF SWTh stocVwell 'THE SECRET EARDEH' lYIlP AKAII PRAI TODAY PlIJfLTOVV I I I Cm. Haata ImIIbMi I Ifit 5UILtK5 JO John WAYNE S. TraV Kath. Hhern DR I ESS' CtA AE r- ACC irlllllUtOO terette Voet Celerto Hoi CT I nillC CVMDHflMV tinnficrTnn LEXINGTON TflMC TO TUt (TitlCI "-n wr wr. 2841 Pettalazzi 340S Union Ann SOTHERN NELSON 'UNDERCOVER fVAISIE' VLADIMIR GOLSCHMANN.

Conductor 'HOUSE OF STRiSSERS totae HAYWORTH LYRIC ALM iMARIE WILSON- dr Rokort MITCHUM RED PONY ttfc SOIOU.iea JOHN LUND in place without the aid ot Dack-ground sketches." Larger panels took many months of concentrated effort, smaller ones several weeks. Miss Jaquelin Ambler, museum lecturer, will discuss the exhibition Jan. 16 at 8 p.m. Closing date is Feb. 7.

THE MUSEUM, ordinarily a whirl of activity, recently addressed an unusual communication to a Post-Dispatch reporter. Since be was unable to work any of it into his department, we print it in ours, having treasured it for. such time as this, when we have- room in the column: CITY ART MUSEUM OF ST. LOUIS Office of the Director Tomorrow's Events Editor Dear Sin Here are the City Art Museum's activities for the week: Wednesday, Dec 21, to Tuesday, Dec. 27, 1949: Saturday Dec 24 No Programs a- Jotiney WElSSMULLER TARZAN AND THE HUNTRESS' JESUS MARIA SANR0MA, Piano Soloist PROGRAM: Salt fa 9 Mlaer far Plate eJ Strhtee, Seek; plea Ceacerte.

Revel; Taralerte Nacet. Saweeabere): Salte freta the belief. "Tea Firebtra'." StrarelastT. FRIDAY AT 2 P. SATURDAY AT 8:30 P.

ALLRCHISTRAL PROGRAM: leltet Salte. "Caebele emel Pracrls." Gretry. Nattl. SyaoBhaoiec Pem. "Meele Mentbsftea." Reeentbel: SYonpbaey Na.

4. eVabOM. 'MY FRIEND IRMA' Bert LANCASTER Paul HENREID ROPE OF SAN D' If Rosenthal's "Musique de Table" may be regarded as typical of his style, the new score Vill be very busy, ornamental and highly colored. The composer was n. corporal in the French army In World War II.

After being taken prisoner by the Germans he escaped and made contact with the underground resistance. He wrote the music for "Musique de Table" While hiding in a Marseilles, cellar and thinking of the wonderful thing3 he would like to eat. "Magic Manhattan" was completed in 1948 at Tacoma, where Rosenthal was composer in residence at the College of Puget Sound. Notre Dame Glee Club In Concert Here Feb. 5 Macklind 5419 Arsenal ALL-COLOR SHOW -K.

M. Lanza. J. Itend 'THAT MIDNIGHT KISS mrw Willlem HOLDEN William BEN DIX STREETS OF 'Carteea HI-VAY iinW tri I lllft en Aaa Haa Baa Office. 1004 OHva, Kial AecJi.

otAI HUW StLLIHU torimm, TtckaH: S1.20. Sl.fO. S2.S0. S3.00. TASK FORCE' War" Morrit Jani.

Palfe 'V0UN6ER BROTHERS' 2705 N. Fler. aa-ej KID ISIeea FORD. Clerle DeHAVEN i irNAIn j)0CT0R THE GIRL ,7 2100 Peetalonl' T.rlll.t I dr At the Movies By Myles Standish INTRUDER IN THE DUST Brilliant interpretation of "William Faulkner's novel about the thwarted lynching of a proud old Negro in Mississippi. Excitingmelodrama, mood, color and thoughtfulness in a frame of raw realism.

Good performances by Juano Hernandez, Claude Jarman David Brian and others, and superbly directed by, Clar-' ence Brown. ORPHEUM. MLLE. DESIREE Sacha Guitry's tour de force as producer, writer, director, narrator and actor in this French account of Napoleon's love for a Marseilles bourgeois girl is glib and sardonic tut it also is jerky, fragmatic, and often like an illustrated lecture. Guitry makes an excellent mature Napoleon.

ART. BATTLEGROUND Robust, human and often humorous account of an infantry squad in the Battle of Bastogne. Down to earth and with surface realism, but its character portrayals are too shallow to allow it to be more than a good war movie. With Van Johnson, James Whitmore, Douglas Fowley and others. LOEWS STATE.

THE RED SHOES Beautiful ballet by the Sadler's Wells troupe, headed by Moira Shearer, in this English film, but stock back-stage story. SHUBERT. HOLIDAY. AFFAIR Appealing little romantic comedy, with a Christmas background and Janet Leigh, Robert Mitchum and Wendell Corey forming a triangle. Also THE GREAT LOVER fun and murder on shipboard with Bob Hope.

AMBASSADOR. THE INSPECTOR GENERAL If you think Danny Kaye is funny, okey, but he left us cold in this farce about mistaken identity in Napoleonic times. MISSOURI. SPECTER OF THE ROSE Return of Ben Hecht's account of a mad ballet dancer. Over-arty, but with some good dialogue.

SHADY OAK. ttrta Tim HOLT 'STAGECOACH. KID 'JUNGLE JIM Brd- a Mt. ARlAZDn QUEST LAURITZ HELEN, MELCHIOR and TRAUBEL 10 I Jehnny WElSSMULLER RIVOLI Irene 0UNNE LADT IN A JAM' St Olio WITH C. Grant.

Wee a Male War Rlohard Cento. 'Tklveot Cte. See. Mat. Serial U-CITY S324 Barrator yTuns 'LADY FROM CHEYENNE Sunday Dec.

S3 Museum J. Lend. S. Ford Ptymouth Frtoed Imie. Ttie Deeter and UJCDtTCD IBine CROSBY.

Cenneeteet VVCDOlCri Yankee' color). Eest Side Closed 117S Heatirtea tne Cirl. Hewt, Carleea. Honier 4 Cl'nti-n 'BTr. ot tne rt.

The Notre Dame Glee Club will give a concert in Kiel Audi SHENANDOAH Monday Dec 28 Museum Closed. Sincerely yours, Publicity Assistant. i -jungle jim IPeetetle S0D0ARD. Jeha IRELAND. 'ANNA LUCASTA Ctn.

1227 S. Breaeva torium Sunday night, February 5. under the auspices of the THE MORNING BRENTWOOD 252 Bretrtweee sR)SBY FITzVeTaLdTGI O' I See. RAFT. Akin.

TAMIROFF. 'I Kirkwood Council, Knights of OUTPOST IN MOROCCO' John TuTts Recital Columbus. The club is directed na terse winrxat I7ta ST. LOUIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA UNDER THE DIRECTION OF VLADIMIR GOLSCHMANN iff A CONCfKT WtSION Of X.CH4XD WAifiirS IMMORTAL LOYf CRAM A TRISTAN and ISOLDE Chalet Lxcirtls far Jsloltlt ani Orckistra Fran This TferHllRf Optra CONVENTION HALL KIEL AUDITORIUM TUESDAY NIGHT, JANUARY 24. AT 8:30 P.

M. SEATS NOW SELLING AIOUAN BOX OFFICE. 1904 OLIYE. AND KIEL AUDITORIUM POPULAR PRICES: U0, S1.S0, S2.49 end I Fred MaeMarray. TRAIL OF THE LONESOME PINE (Too.) I ertea FOSTER.

'6ER0NIM0. Carteea ntaj RiLnni Hiuwn cnoorteae tone by Prof. Daniel H. Pedtke. head Of the.

Notre Dame department L0NGW00D 9514 Breadwa of musics 1 1 Tecnnleeler D. On.try. A. Baxter, 'YOU'RE MY EVERYTHINS' I Hrta Mart tT EVENS. Celooe CRAY.

Carteea 1 'ABBOTT AND C0STELL0 MEET THE KILLER' I Aedrty Lent. Warren olaa. -HOMICIDE FOB THREE. Cta. Beat." Miteaaet.

Barkere Bol fioddoa. 'Bleed en the Meea I Eee- Kennedr- Loon Errel. VARIETY TIME. Cnrteoe Since the war the club has traveled an average of 7000 miles MARYLAND John Tufts, tenor soloist at Eighth Church of Christ Scientist and Temple Shaaxe Emeth, will give a recital at 4 p.m. next Sunday at; the Wednesday Club auditorium under sponsorship of the Artist Presentation Committee.

He will sing two selections from Haydn's "The Creation," and groups of songs. a year ia its concert tours. PEERLESS 1911 S. Breedvey 4G Jan. 8.

1950 ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH WANT THINGS? WATCH THE YAHT ADS! iLifaV4i''IJ'.

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Pages Available:
4,205,792
Years Available:
1849-2024