The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 2, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 4, 1966 Page: 3 of 6
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Dorati To Appear
With SA Symphony
0n« of the most illustrious! after DoraM tire a me permanent
names in the musical v< >rl<1 to conductor of the Dnlbv- Pam-
ela; Antal Dorati chief r0ft-1 |>Tk n\, KCA V.rtrr offered t!
ductor of, the BBC Syrt^jjbonv ;'orr hestfd 1 recording contract
Orchestra, will appear as guest' In 1'D-^fl, Dont-i h-"vnr mu no
conductor next Saturday night director of the Minneapolis
with the 'lan Antonio Sym-] Symphony Orchestra Dunns
phony . |.his It. years there he was re-'
Bom in Budapest in $906 i sponsible for numerous Shorn-,
Dorati's parents, both music- -missions, world premiere- and
ians, recogn.zed his talent and jAmerican premieres of ifhpor-
««nt him, at the age of l*t, to j tant. works
♦he Budapest Academy of Mu?-■ Antal Dorati's stature in the
jr, whe-e he was a'student, efjihu ie world :.s not bused sole-i
Zoltan Kodaly. Bela liartok, and ly on his conducting rrhteve-
\*f> Weiner. When he- gradu-j merits, but"also on his activi-
*’ed at the are of ;-18, lie was!,tiff as a comp -er. Since JD-13,
the youngest person in the his-(Dorati has leen guest eondur-
tory'of the Ae-idemy to receive | tor of nearly every import.int
a degree Following graduation, J orchestra of the United States,
he was immediately named ' irope and Latin Arneri'ca.
roach and soon after conductor One of-Die greatest names ah'
rtf the Royal opera Ilou <• <>! the recording field pbr-aM- has
Budapest In 1B2S. he. went t, ^ire than ISO lcng-plax :ng' re-
Dresden on the aw' dion of j-fords. tcjjjvis cr«t -iriohidin the
Fritz Busch, as hi4 assistant. niv-v famous "I'lit Qydrture”
from 1928 to 1233, he was per- (made -will the ■ -M-fflnttapolis
nanertt first conductor of the : Symphony.
Opera House in Mun-'Cr nh'-f s'"turda- n.cm ihe will enn-
f'uest conductor at .xevcraljdu,'t the San An’mco Symphony
other opera houses iri Cor many. , n Beethoven - Lene-rh Ov-
m well as symphony orchestras :enure No. 3. Concerto Jot ’Gr-
in many musical enters; In. eh«-<;tra by Bari ok , and the
1934, he joined the Ballet Russo : World Sxrhpoony" by
de Monte Carlo a? :ts star eon-; f'wak
d'jetor. a position .he held un- Reserved sent t:- ids are. new
-til 1941 when he became Music ' ,n sale at the Sym phony Box
Director of the Bnifei, Theatre 'Offuv in. the Municipal Audi-'
His American debut as a lorium
symphonic* conductor came in
1937, -. wltcn he toc-k over the GARBAdt; III NT
National Symnh. nv Orcliestr; yoi.'K fpi r h->
of Washington, D. <’ for >m al.i sweet smell <4 mi cess-faned to
Beethoven concert. In 1939. j C(mje ,ifo Mrs. K wan Land
Tv,rati made an rxtensive tour n!nt, frjt,n(Js r,vat , v , ,
of Australia. Returning to the
l nited States, Dora . became , After scar-'Jit'- un>-tcce •
direetor of Me New Opera Om- iv r,„- ,,vo del-'
pnny of Nt»v York 1 lar.m Staten ,M-,. 1 thiinpn
The demand for -h s xeryve; ; D,:n? Mrs. Ia, ,„;-r ,n0
»s a • symphonic conduct m..’ hun{ m „ b(,own r Kv,
however, increased, and fe- ^ft«ontaining J6.7»0 in' jewels and!
the Bsdet Theatre in !9i> to j money which her son unknow-1
organize the Dallas Symphony jns^lv threw on* with the re t
Orchestra. Less than a month l.of* their garbngb. '•
M ■>. Lee. f-.cm;; .hu'-glirs
■might enter her apartment, had
(hidden the ha.-' in her kitchen
i garbage pail when she went out
I to visit--a friend.
OBITUARIES
WASHINGTON UP! Bu- ;
iilzer Prize-winning war corre-1
pendent Marguerite Higgins!
red "Monday at Walter R e e d i
.Army Medical Center a n
;-*:rn vnt c'ic,rv]t;.' of a fftent 1
trip to co’.er the fighting in'
! Vie* ‘i i.m. j
Mt«s Higgins, 45, had been
n th*'*'hospital -nice last Nov. 3'
for treatment of a liver
infection eaiised by a tropical,
para site Doctors attributed ban
death to eomplications caused I
by the ailment
Die v-eteran reporter He
ramo ill a short tmie after re-
turning, from a month-long trip
*o South Viet Nam India and
Pakistan „
She delayed entering the
hospital- to complete a series of
columns and rontinued to
I supply eopy for the Tying Island 1
I 'newspaper New-,day and other ;
pipers ryrn after lv-in™ placed j
in the crdleal list Her la*t
column appeared Fridriy
When the Korean war broke
out in 19V), Miss Higgins went
*o Tokyo.to head -the New York
ITcrn'd Tribune bureau there j
Hhr won a PnMac- Prize f« r
her roverage of tke'^.-ar
IIIGin.AND PARI4 M J
T’PT A hinera! sriwiXe will
He held in New BmnswXl c k j
N J today - for ArthurV C. !
P,',]Sch former ev«cutix-e of the
,\rth''ilser-R(ioc'h Drmving Go :
Busoh died Saturday in |
Kdisop, N .1 He was 73
GLKNDALE. Calif rrr'-
Genfly Eased Lines
SKCTRITY PAYMENTS
WASHING-ON UP! Die.
i ‘racial Scpurity Adniimstrat i on
i announced re- • ntly that a
(record J18.3 bgi< n in benefits'
• had Ix-en paid out in 1965, it'
: 12 1 billion increase over last'
l year
I A 7 per rent r-ji-e in hi no-,
| fits approved in July but* retro*
Funeral arrangements- w e re
pend'nr today for mox- 1 e
producer 1 >on.i!d F Taylor
wtdoxs-er of . nelress , Marie
MeDortald
Authorities sain Taylor ap-
n irentlv ki’lyd ' himself with an
.river-lose of barbiturate' H i s .
body w-»s found la?! 9tinda> in
hf<r ViiddOn hills home h\
sii-pdatighder Denise Karl. 16 j
T>KTtNK ALIBI
5 AN FTtANCISfY) ITT
Thom as F. Budd, an Oakland
janitor who has bop ^prr'teri
7t? times for drunkenness, asked ,
the California Supreme Court,
recently to set aside his
latest conviction er, the ground
that dmnkpfjess Is a sj-mptom
of fWoholism. which is a dia-.
e,-|--e
Budd through' his attorneys, I
said if is unconstitutional to i
punish someone for the syrup- ;
tom of a disease._ !
active to January aceounted for 1
about half the increase the
administration said.
326!!
141*7-24) i
Here s e front-buttoned dress,
dart-fitted for subtle shap.ng;
and all the softer for its rnelan
shoulder and flip-tie collar No
32«3 come? in size? 14Vi, 16’J,
18h. 20W, 22Vt, 2414. Size 16>*
takes 3’j yards of 41-inch. fab-
ric.
pattern to IRIS LANK <care of
this newspaper', Box 1190, New
York 1. N. Y. Add 15e for first
elnss mail and special handling.
Free pattern is waiting for you
“end 50 cents for our Spring-
Summer Pattern Rook which
contains eoupon for pattern of
your choice.
LIFE INSURANCE TRENDS IN 1965
LIFE INSURANCE
OWNED BY AMERICAN FAMILIES
I$a35 0 billion*]
$797 ? billion
l$372,3 billion
PURCHASES OF
NEW LIFE INSURANCE IN U.S
1965 \mniniimmmMimwm 142.5 wiHon*]
1364 \nni7i/iinimniinnmim $ 1 m «bnnor
1955 WmillllinK $48.4 billion
1965
1964
1955
1965
1964
1955
1965
LIFE INSURANCE BENEFITS
PAID TO AMERICAN FAMILIES
^J$11.4 billion
zizzzirz' ’ !■ f h Dn
Jicin.Mi $5.4 billion
INVESTMENTS OF
U.S. LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES
2Z222j$158.4 billion
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fuss , Jan 4, 1966 TH* CUERO R*CdRD f*fe S
_ alee Inventory
Count your Printing Meeds
for 1966
mayor t.rvrmv sti dies tr ansit pro
WLEMS — Newly elected New York Mayor
John Lindsay frentcrl huddles with his coni
mlasleners at Citv Hall to study the transit
•trike called by TH IBs Mike quill. Left to
right arc: Hospital Commissioner Alonzo
Yerbv; Traffic Commissioner Henry name*:
l.lnd«ay; Both o ( omnUssioncr T incent Bro
derick, and Fire < ormnlasloner Robert Ivow
ery.
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 2, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 4, 1966, newspaper, January 4, 1966; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth697889/m1/3/: accessed May 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.