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Show T Page B3 - ffllie (Etmeg-3hthcpcnhg- - Thursday, March 24, 2005 nt which was located in a small town I Utah. Grayson, (Blanding) use to ask Albert R. all kinds of questions and he was always kind to me. He was working on his book Indians and Outlaws." Lacy goes on to tell, He asked if I was related to Mrs. Isaac Lacy who owned the LC Cattle Company, I said I dont know, little knowing that she was the first independent woman of San Juan building in down County. Lacy continues, I was always fascinated with his little Steve Lacy, the late Pearl Baker teamed up on Posey book After 28 years of research and 43 years of interest on the subject of Wm. Posey, former San Juan County resident, Dr. Steve Lacy and the late Pearl Baker of Green River, have a new book soon to be released, called, Posey, The Last Indian War. This book will trace the life of Wm. Posey the Paiute Indian who led his small band of Indians, and raised havoc among the early settlers and cattlemen of San Juan County. Lacy became interested in the subject of Wm. Posey when he was in the and 5th grade when he visited with Albert R. Lyman in his little museum museum and his writing. I now have a museum in my home. I have more things in my bathroom than he had in his whole museum. When I brought out my first, book, The Lynching of Robert Marshall, in 1978, 1 had to type it on a 1912 Underwood Typewriter. Just like Alberts, I finally felt I had made it, I have never used it since. This will be Dr. Lacys ninth book. His current book out is Last of the Bandit Riders Revisited, about the life of outlaws Matt Warner and Butch Cassidy who spent time in Bluff, Utah and worked for the LC Cattle Co., in Recapture Utah and the Carlisle Cattle Co. near Monticello, Utah. Pearl Baker and Dr. Lacy started this book in 1977 after thousands of hours of research and locating 3,000 photos concerning Wm. Posey and early San Juan County. Lacy said, We had to pare them down to over 300 photos and documents. The second to last Indian War took place in Bluff, Utah in 1915. Just recently the Lacy family discovered that most of the two hour battle took place on their 40 acres of land there. That battle revolved around whose names translated as Cry baby, who killed a sheepherder in Colorado in the fall of 1914. Toni Shumway Lacys did all of the drawings for the book and did some restoration on the original Tse-Na-G- at sister-- in-law photo of Dr. Lacy is remembered best from his TV shows on KTVX where he did 339 shows Tse-Na-G- called, Centennial Photo. Dr. Lacy has been nominated Southern Gospel quartet to perform in Moab on April 5 The Moab Baptist Church will host a tradition Southern Gospel quartet, Liberty, in concert on Tuesday, April 5, 7 p.m. Liberty is known to be the only professional full-tim- e, quartet based on the West Coast. The group travels approximately 50,000 miles a year ministering in approximately 200 performances for church services, large conven- - Soccer team lost to Christian Heritage The Grand County High boys soccer team lost their only game last week, falling 1 to Christian Heritage Acadcontest at emy in a Ogden last Friday. Ben Wilson scored Grands only goal in the first half as the 2-- non-regio- n Red Devils fell to in preseason play. This week, Grand is scheduled to play at Delta on Wednesday, March 23 at 4-- 2 3:30 p.m. The following Wednesday (March 30), theyll face Carbon at Moab, also at 3:30 p.m. Sen. Hatch receives Health Defender award Senator Orrin Hatch was honored this week with the National Association of Community Health Centers (NACHC) 2005 Community Health Defender Award for his leadership in expanding health care access to millions of uninsured and medically underserved Americans. Community Health Centers are doing a fantastic job in providing quality services on a virtual shoestring, especially in the rural and underserved areas in Utah, Hatch (R-Uta- h) tions, nursing homes, prisons and other ministries. Liberty has shared the stage with groups such as Legacy Five, Great Vision, Band, Poet Voices, Dixie Melody Boys, Florida Boys, Palmetto State Quartet, and many others. The group has averaged two recordings per year since 1996. Their ministry bridges generations, is sometimes contemporary, and always enthusiastic. The show is open and free to the public, however donations will be accepted. For more information about the Liberty ministry, visit the Ib-c- groups web site Liberty will perform at the Moab Baptist Church, located at 356 W. Kane Creek Boule- Health Centers, said NACHC President and CEO Tom Van The church also has a web site at moabbaptistchurch.org. vard, Coverden. 259-848- said.. Senator Hatch should be commended for his active sup-po- rt of Americas Community for two Emmys for his produc- Old Fights, Good The J. Bracken Lee Times, on KUTV which aired Story, won best documentary for 1989, and The Governors of Utah, which aired on KTVX in 1993. He has also done a number of specials for the old Prime Time Access show on tions, KSL. The new book will be out some time in late spring or early summer just in time for the 100th birthday of Grayson, Utah. For more information contact: Dr. Steve Lacy, Footprints from the Past Museum, 820 Jefferson, SLC, Utah 84101, phone 4. BROADCAST STATIONS' LASS ELDgC&r We Meal M-- F 8 to 5 at libertyquartet.com. fiuh Glass" (435) 1030 South Bowling cz 259-871- 4 Alley Lane, Moab |