Capitol times. (Middletown, Pa.) 1982-2013, October 26, 1998, Image 12

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    12 Monday, October 26,1998 ENTERTAINMENT
Exhibit features area’s top-notch photography
By Barb Roy
Entertainment Editor
“Paparazzi 7” is on display now through
Nov. 27 at Hershey Philbin Associates Inc.,
a marketing communications agency on Or
chard Road, Camp
Hill, that has ongoing
exhibits of local art
ists
The exhibit is a col
lection of photos
taken by seven pho
tographers who
worked for Allied Pix
from 1950 to 1995.
Their photography
appeared in the Har
risburg Patriot-News
and national publica
tions during those
years.
Allied Pix was
started in 1952 in
Harrisburg by Tho
mas Leask who was
bom in Scotland, but
emigrated to the
United States and was
a combat photogra
pher for the his new country during World
War 11.
He was the chief photographer for the Pa
triot-News for over 40 years and won over
30 national and state photo awards before re
tiring in 1994. His son, Stuart Leask took over
Allied Pix in 1995 and was a newspaper pho
tographer for thirteen years. He now works
Crossword Companion
Answers on page 6
16 Took out
17 Admirer
18 Spanish
ACROSS
1 Place for
experiments
(abbr.)
4 Sink
9 Knock
12 Sick
13 Cheer
14 Age
15 Visualize
monetary unit
20 Resigned
(abbr.)
21 Liability
22 Cut
24 Dog
25 Article
Rock of Ages, by Francis Smith
27 Fast
30 Cam
33 -eer (variety
of)
35 Flower
37 Extravehicu-
lar activity
(abbr.)
38 Sand below
in the commercial realm.
The other photographers whose works are
included in the exhibit are Norman Arnold,
Gene Visconti, James Bradley, Francis
“Smitty” Smith and Charles Blahusch.
They comprise a collection of famous
people who’ve vis
ited Harrisburg, as
well as ordinary per
sons or local scenes
of the area. They are
31 dramatic, black
and-white artistic
portrayals of candid,
unposed, “in-the
moment” occur
rences displayed in
large portrait-like
format lining the
walls of the gallery.
The tonality of
black and white en-
photos are pure art,
with the effect of
“chiaroscuro,” or the appeal of a subject seen
bathed in light coming out of darkness. Such
as “Olin Harris,” a picture of a gospel musi
cian whose hands are lifted in heavenward
in prayer.
Some moments are poignant, as in “Purple
Heart.” This gripping shot shows a boy fac
ing the camera in the foreground, wearing a
40 Story
41 Square of any
type size
42 Drag
43 Ooze
46 Map; chart
48 Ova
50 Beak
53 Sup
54 Assembly
place (Gr.)
56 Mat
57 out
(complete)
58 Gemstone
weight
59 Of the kind of
(suf.)
60 Lead (p.t.)
61 Swelling
62 The letter C
DOWN
1 Speech defect
2 Toward which
the wind blows
3 Bless (p.t.
5 One who
scares
6 Stuff
hances the nuances
of meaning that
speak the story as it
is captured through
the subject’s expres
sions. Some of the
7 A follower
(suf., pi.)
8 Man's name
9 Umpire
10 Semitic
11 Huff
19 N.W. state
(abbr.)
21 Dig (p.t.)
23 Lupino
25 Broadcast
26 Bom
28 7th letter,
Greek alphabet
29 Message
31 Maria
32 Male sheep
34 Akin
36 Dream stage
(abbr.)
39 Obese
44 Not out
45 Subject
46 Pare
47 Erie, e.g.
48 Mild oath
49 Stab
51 Rational
52 Rim
54 High card
55 glance
brave little smile and a military beret as his
family is gathers around a relative’s grave un
der umbrellas in the background.
There are some interesting pictures of a
young-looking John F. Kennedy and Rich
ard Nixon (separately) on the campaign trail
through Harrisburg in 1960. Also featured are
some humorous moments, like former Gov.
David Lawrence's spill off of a stool while
milking a cow at the Farm Show in 1960.
Similar is a timeless photo entitled “Diner.”
A shot you would not be able to place in time
if you had to guess without seeing the date it
was taken.
This is a rewarding diversion to your
school-sapped time, especially if you would
like to see a little of Harrisburg history in a
visually satisfying manner.
Hours are Mon.-Fri., 9 a.m.-4 p.m., and by
appointment. Call 975-2148 for more infor
mation.
’Urban’ artists will host
Gallery Lounge reception
An artist reception and talk will be held
from 5-8 p.m. Qct. 29 in the Gallery Lounge.
This event coincides with the closing of the
current three-person exhibit, “The Urban
Landscape.” Two of the participating artists,
Michael Allen and Judith Stone will discuss
their work and answer questions. The infor
mal talk is set for 6 p.m. All are welcome.
The show features three artists’ interpreta
tions of the urban landscape. Judith Stone
confronts us with stark juxtapositions of con
struction and demolition machinery, Robert
Andriulli constructs panoramic bird’s eye
vistas of unnamed cities and Michael Allen
offers a mixture of approaches to street and
highway scenes.
Judith Stone, who recently moved from
Philadelphia to Burlington, Vt., is interested
in “incomplete structural states and with all
And a Halloween ghost story
Bucknell dorm residents tell tale of 'Haunt Hall'
LEWISBURG, Pa. Eerie events have
cropped up often enough at Bucknell
University's Hunt Hall to earn the women’s
dormitory the nickname “Haunt Hall.”
According to college lore, if a student in
Hunt hangs a dress on the back of the door to
her room, the ghost of a former resident will
climb into it.
Cara Mickelsen remembers one bizarre
night last autumn in her fourth-floor room in
Hunt. The Holmdel, N.J., resident said she
was lying in bed with her eyes closed, when
she felt someone watching her.
“I opened my eyes and saw a hand reach
ing for my face,” she said.
She screamed, got up and turned on a light.
The Capital Times
Photo courtesy of Paparrazi 7
Straw Hat, by Stewart Leask
that is kinetic and transitional, constructive
and destructive.” The cities she’s visited in
clude Nagasaki from which she makes a pow
erful reference to the destructive-construc
tive.
Unlike Stone’s confrontational images,
Robert Andriulli’s impressionistic paintings
are of cities seen from afar. His powdered
graphite and wash drawings are sensuous,
painterly evocations of distant planes. He
teaches art at Millersville University.
Michael Allen, a Palmyra resident, exhib
its tightly rendered views of familiar-seem
ing streets and highways and more very sen
suous charcoal drawings in which patterns
of light play an important role.
-By Linda Ross
For the Cap Times
No one was there. Suddenly, Mickelsen said,
a bottle of pills shot off her dresser.
Some at Bucknell believe the dorm is
haunted by the spirit of a woman who died
in a buggy accident in the school’s early
years. Others say she was a student who was
waiting for her parents to pick her up for term
break when she fell in the small stream near
the hall and drowned.
One of the woman’s sorority sisters wrote
of the legend in Bucknell World alumni
magazine in 1989: “To all of you who won
der, greet her with love and calm her fears.
She always found friends on third Hunt.”
-From the Associated Press