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Barbara Chase Riboud, whose story opens the movie, is a graduate of Temple University with a master's degree in Fine Arts from Yale. She's a sculptress now working in Paris.

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Mrs. Gardener Cowles(left) of the Museum's Festival committee, artist Betty Blayton Taylor and Seagram's Dominick Albi.

Charles White is that most typical of 20th century Americans-a man who migrated to California. He teaches there now, while continuing his own career, a career that's included winning major fellowships and awards since the 'thirties.

Betty Blayton Taylor studied at the Art Students League and at the Brooklyn (N.Y.) Museum. As a member of the faculty and the Board of Trustees at the Studio Museum in Harlem, she's a leader of the Children's Art Carnival it sponsors.

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Charles White (left) and Romare Bearden, two of the "Five."

Richard Hunt, whose work was on view at the Museum of Modern Art at the night of the screening, is a sculptor now at work in his native Chicago. He's held fellowships from both the Guggenheim and Ford Foundations, and has taught at Yale, Purdue, and the University of Illinois.

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Seagram Spotlight. 13