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About Dillon Tribune (Dillon, Mont.) 1989-current | View This Issue
Dillon Tribune (Dillon, Mont.), 13 Oct. 1993, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/2015269516/1993-10-13/ed-1/seq-10/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
iii'M,'fw,!!, 'f , íí1,,,1 1 1, a ì Page A*8 ■ Dillon Tribune - Wednesday, Oc{. 13, 1993 ERE TOGO • WHAT TO DO «WHATTOSEE »WHERE TO EAT V -A T T E N T IO N - + Moose Poker Room Open: Mon-Sat 7 PM • Sun 2 PM * - Texas Hold ’Em & 7 Stud - Moose Bar • Dillon, MT ♦ Saturday Odyjfit Special Baked Ham, Scalloped Potatoes & Salad Bar L I V E W E E K E N D DXT7SIC OCT. 15 & 16- OCT. 22 & 23 - Last Call Robbing Banks & The Mob COMING A JIRAGIlQtJS X-CITEMENT Female Exotic Dancers N o v . 2 • 9 :0 0 PM BIG SCREEN EflQT.fi ALL Sunday & Monday SPECIAL PRICE on Beer & Food MILE HIGH MEN Male Exotic Dancers N o v 11 - 9 : 0 0 PM ¿mule you. to- enjoy, the p n e d in dinuty and lodcfin^ i*t SoutJuoed Montana.! Enjoy the exciting video poker & keno machines too In the Western ñrdu Inn for good drinks and friendly folks 683-4214 6$0 N. Montana also enjoy our generous wine selections Lounge Hours: 11 A M - 2 AM Happy Hour: 5 PM - 6 PM D ining Hours 6 AM • lO P M By Donna L. Owen Donna Owen, a student in Utah, is studying for her doc torate in films. A former Dillon resident, Owen writes a regular review of movies showing in Dillon, or those set for release soon. Mr. Jones <R) Mr. Jones • Richard Gear (American Gigolo) Dr. Elizabeth Bowen - Lena Olin (Some Bergman films) Mr. Jones has a psychiatric disorder called manic depression. At first he seems to be a carpenter in a good mood. He sings odd tunes, dances and generally entertains everyone until the day that he walks along the edge of a roof... that is the day he meets his new psychiatrist, Dr. Elizabeth Bowen. She violates most ethical codes to help him through the inevi table down side of his manic phase, his depression. The film is cliched... all crazy people; nice, warm sages; and all mental hospitals are unfeeling institutions. This film tries to make us believe that the cure is worse than the disease. Highlights for 105.5 FM M u n it TKroiifA the S i g h t In b r o a d c a s t from IÌ.-O0 to A. 00 a .m . r e try m o r n in g on KRIC IHO 200 630 730 8 3 0 9 3 0 1020 1120 Thursday, October 14 Be&Iilk VgaCJibyyn Pian o Cctn petition Clnrinnatj Pops or, the Air. R Sisson* Im Krapfrnwnld I’olkjt; Banditen Galop, Op 318. On the Beautiful Danube Waite, Op 314 Saint-Saena: Danse Marnbre, Op. 40 Khachaturian: Sabre Dance Falla; Ritual Fire Dance Offenbach Gaite Parisienne Dracula JaizacL Tribute to Drummer Ed Blackwell N ight Soyrvda Friday, October 15 Audiophile Audition: All Munie laserdisc» II ft'rcfandJkdi? »nh feted-Caarad G u e rrertr Laudate Dominum Geeualdo: Two Reaponaorlea for Tenebra« ; Recent Releasee RCA Preview Hour The Cal lag Legacy. Verdi: La Traviata, I Monitor Radio Newa Pipcdreama: M a rieM ade leine Duruflé in Concert Devotional Archive»: Elder L. Tom Perry Pi tteburgh S vm phon v: MendejMchn Choir of P it taburgh Beethoven: Fidelia, Op. \¡2 and Theodore Arm, violina: Steven Toncnbom. viola: Fred Sherry, cello Dahl: Concerto a Tre T. Greatbflleh: Scene* from Brothers Grimm Brahma: Q u intet in b for c la rinet & airings 1030 1120 The T h w Shamrock Night Soypds Saturday, October 16 6 3 0 Weekend Edition 1 8 3 0 C a r Talk 9 3 0 Sound M oney: Inventing in Japan 1 0 3 0 Weekend Edition jj 130 ppora: // Pirala 430 A P rairie i b m c Companion 7;15 Ricks football: Dm« in S l 130 Folk Sampler: Old Friends - Tried & ' Sunday , October 17 6 3 0 Edigisua M usic 730 Focus on the f e n .’y 8 3 0 Music a n d the Spoken v-'srd 930 £i s t b z j s x 1030 S t Paul ?.Tvfsy ?A7rpj»r Ta!!« Schd: Pale^tnna- Tu n Petrus Padiil«' larnenintis.-u Al^na-i I y lyr V*r»z e-t m Monday, October 18 130 The Record Shelf: Collector's Franck, Part 1 6 3 0 Cleveland Orchestra: I -are Vogt, piano Beethoven: Fidelia Overture; Piano Concert No. 2 in c, Op. 37; Symphony No. 7 in A, Op 92 8 30 Music at Ricks: Rick« A Capped* Choir 9 30 Portrait of a Lady 1020 The J a rz Dccsdps: Bunnic Rerigan with Dirk Stable 1936; Dixieland Rhythm King* of Ohio 1853; Bill Brown a n d hia Brownie« 1927-29 Tuesday, October 19 130 A Note T p Y pjt Rachmaninoff Memorial. 11 2 0 0 A 8 30 Kicka.College Devotional; Elder J a rk II. Goaslind 6 3 0 Salzbu r c F ttliv a l: Yuri BarhneL viola Stravinsky: Firebird Suite (1919) Bartók: Viola Concerto R Strauss An Alpine Symphony, Op 64 9 30 The J a c k - lknav Shew Wednesday, October 20 1-00 St Pgul S*^ndpy Morning (So* Oct. 17) 2.30 SpeakingEf^ivsjs 6 3 0 Am.2C3 Hhi z?z 7 . £yir. r I £ w ■ Vp r 1 f U ? A'JXvbiijPU- 1*17 Brrth~vrn Lerino^e Overture No 3, Op. 72. Sj inpHorry .ho 7 m A. Op 92, Piervi C^rvp-^T, No 5 in F. Hat, Op 73 ^KmperorJ ~ 30 fluaTVrdeck (. 'nm e ef 5 no U s A r t J iI 's r h n « s 1020 FLv£T»'r^k.Li'-c frem The Lending; - -------- - «W p x t \ You'll find it in the Scott Yoo Violinist Yoo opens concert season The first Dillon Community Concert Association performance of the new season features American violinist Scott Yoo. The concert will be 8 p.m., Sunday, October 17, in the Westerh Mon tana College auditorium. Admission to the concert is reserved for those with association membership tickets. In 1989 Yoo won the the Young Concert Artists International Auditions when he was 17 and gave his New York recital debut in the 1990 Young Concert Artists Series at the 92nd Street Y. In April, 1992, he was presented in Washington, D.C., on the YCA Series at the Kennedy Center. He won first first prize in the 1988 Josef Gingold International Violin Competition in Brazil. Yoo has performed as a soloist with numerous U.S. orchestras, including the Boston Symphony, the Hartford , New Haven and Norwalk Symphonies in Connecticut, the Pasadena and Modesto Symphonies in California, the Papides Symphony in Louisiana, the Reno Chamber orchestra, the Tallahassee Symphony Orches tra and the Virginia Symphony., He has also given many recitals. Abroad, he has soloed with the Korean Broadcasting Sym phony Orchestra in Seoul; the Maracaibo Orchestra and Orquesta Sinfonica Municipal in Venezuela, as well as with the Orquesta Sinfonica Nacional of the Dominican Republic. He performed as a soloist in the Brahms Violin Concerto with the Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra on their 1992 European tour. Yoo began to study the violin at the age of three and gave his first public performance at the age of five. Following studies with Roman Totenberg at Boston University and Albert Markov at the Manhattan School of Music, he continued his violin studies with Paul Kantor of the University of Michigan and with Dorothy Delay of the Juilliard School. He also participated in the 1988, 1990 and 1991 Aspen Music Festivals. He is a fourth-year physics student at Harvard University. He is an acclaimed, young and exciting violinist. Red Cross class Saturday A Red Cross first aid class is being offered in Dillon this Saturday, October 16, in the conference room of the USDA Center just south of Barrett Memorial Hospital. The community first aid and safety class will teach adult, child and infant CPR, as well as basic first aid techniques. The class begins at 8 a.m. Pre-reg istration for the class is re quired. To register, call Jackie Howery, 683-5878, or Cathy Speich, 683-4520 evenings. WMC Rodeo Club announces sale The Western Montana Col lege Rodeo Club’s annual All- Class Horse Sale is set for Sat urday, October 30, according to Wayne Else, rodeo club director. The horse sale includes top of the line ranch and rodeo horses, featuring 30 head of horses from the Delbert Carter ranch in Hamilton. Included are suckling colts, yearlings, two-year-olds and brood mares. Proceeds from the sale go to benefit the Western Rodeo club. ’A n W**' \ \ M o S P ‘ t f t 'V C P * * ” „f 0 c ^ s LEW»* c u « v R ® 0 * ’ 9 W i n O * • O V t ^ * ; Tlor* « 0 ^ ' ü R t S Ö * Î L , f i o 1 » .rTtfrfßJ t a t L * * * ? ^ * ^ ' • o * * * * ™ All commissions are donated by the Beaverhead Livestock As sociation, said Else, to fund the club and to provide scholarships for student/athletes involved in the program. The sale will begin at 1:00 p.,. at the Beaverhead Livestock Auction arena. Performance horses may be shown at the J.B. Anderson arena, one mile south of Dillon that morning. For more information on the sale or consignments, call 683-2002. Eastern Montana College rep Shelly Beatty visits Dillon Shelly Beatty, Assistant Di rector of Admissions/Enroll- ment Management at Eastern Montana College, will visit with Beaverhead County High School students and interested parents on Friday, October 15 at 10:30 a.m., regarding educational op portunities available at Eastern. She will discuss and answer questions concerning academic programs, career opportunities, scholarship availability and how to apply for financial aid and scholarships. Eastern Montana College is a comprehensive, multi-purpose state college with programs in the arts and sciences, teacher training, business and econom ics, human services and several professional areas.