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Show Eighth Season Starts Friday - American West Festival Opens LOGAN. The frontier life of the Old West will be resurrected on the Utah State University campus award-winnin- displays, reconstructed during the eighth annual Festival of the American West, which opens tomorrow (Friday). The festival will re- create 19th histor- g ical pageant, a western fair with pioneer and West. It employs a cast of 200 with Burch n a century James Stewart. hibits, on a The West: Americas Odyssey Sunday, when the a is historical pageant illustrating major events during the festival will be closed. The week-lonfestivities will involve an multi-medi- a settlement of narration by actor Americas States covers the floor of the stage, upon which The pageant is staged high set which extends 100 feet long. The multi-medi- a 40-fo- projection equipment historical farm. pioneer and Indian lifestyles, being presented through Aug. 9, except Manns American Folk Ballet and the recorded frontier street, a pioneer quilt show, western art ex- a western cookout with 15 pioneer and Indian foods, plus a won a Freedoms Foundation Award during its first year on stage. A map of the United the adventures of Lewis and Clark, Indians, pioneer wagon trains, the California gold rush and the joining of the used for visual effects is with a synchronized transcontinental Premiering in 1972, the pageant was written by festival producer Gerald R. Sherratt. It pageant is performed nightly at 8 o'clock in the USU Spectrum. Admission is $4.75 for railroad are portrayed. historical The adults and $3 for children under 12. The Great West Fair is on the open Spectrum field daily from p in It features an Indian village, mountainman camp and 50 pioneer and Indian crafts of the late 1800s. Original pioneiT quilts from private Utah collections will also display at the fail The 1980 design theme of the quilt show is Flora and Fauna. (See Page 15, Col. 8) m & m) PAGEANT . . . Making it 1980 debut tomorrow (Friday) on the Utah State campus Police Investigate the Festival of the American West, which features "The West: America's Odyssey." I - to date him anymore and asked him not to visit her again. Man Suffers Stab Wounds VALLEY. WEST A the ing stabbing early Thursday at 4177 W. 3280 South left a man hospitalized with multiple puncture wounds in the abdomen and left arm and a collapsed lung. West Valley police officers responded to the site for a fight in progress call to find Mark A. Wheatley, 24, 1300 So. 350 East, lying at the top of a stairway of an apartment complex. Officer Kurt Imig applied first aid while ask Police said the suspect reportedly forced a window open and confronted victim what happened. County paramedics responded to the scene and transported Wheatley to Valley West hospital where he was later listed in stable condition. Wheatley had been visiting a woman at her apartment when the suspect also arrived. The woman told Officer D. L. Lopez she had informed the suspect earlier in the evening she did not want Wheatley and the woman with a knife and threatened to kill them. She attempted to leave to call police, but was struck twice by the suspect before she could drive life blocks to her sisters house to call for VSnOR MOWWFICN . Swr LAKE FOR A fight ensued with the suspect reportedly stabbing the victim. The suspect left the scene in an early model, white sedan. The victim had run across the street seeking help from neighbors and returned to the second floor of the apartment complex asking for help where he collapsed and was later found by police. At midweek, police were still searching for the suspect, described as being a 140 male Caucasian, pounds with brown hair and brown eyes. The suspect also had a scar on his left cheek. Special events Vehicle Burglaries Reported ' WEST VALLEY. Police investigated two auto burglaries in which In Salt Lake Valley tor the week of July 30th thru August 6th - - CONCERT Rita July 31 Cooiidge performs under the stars on Snowbird's Pavtliion at 7 p m $6 in advance, S9 at the door. pianist is Alan Ball 1st Symphony Hail, 8 p m $6, $8 & $10; 2nd Snowbird, 5 p m $6 CONCEPT Country August 1 music artist Moe Bandy m concert at Lagoon's Stadium 8 30 p m. Admtss'on is free with admission to Lagoon The August 1 A 2 THEATRE hit musical. The Unsmkable Molly Brown ', is presented on stage at Lagoon Opera House Showtimes are 8 30 p m on the 1st and 7 and 915 pm. on the 2nd. Dance Company is in concert at Pioneer Memorial Theatre For time and ticket information phone Park August 2 & 3 FESTIVAL City s 1 1th Annual Arts Festival features entertainment and artists displaying and selling their works along Mam Street Christian Tiemeyer Utah conducts an Symphony Pops Concert Guest CONCERT articles valued at nearly $200 were stolen last DANCE August 2 week. Prescription glasses, a leather bound note- - - - Call our TIPS phone for a complete Hating of special events In Sett Lake Valley sy-- , 7. Saif Lake Valley Convention A Visitors Bureau Salt Palace Suite 200 Sait Lake C'ty Utah ed. The items taken had been left on the seat. 2 (601) a pocket calculator and a construction measuring tape were taken from a vehicle owned by KNT Construction parked at 4536 W. 4120 South. Jackie Enman told officer Jim Crowley she heard a dog barking at about 11:30 p.m. The vehicle was left unlock- book, The Dave Auguat 3 CONCERT Brubeck Quartet brings jazz to the Snowbird Pavillion in a 5 p m concert. $8 admission West Valley City, UT. Wetf Valley View Thurs., July 31, Visit a Stereo equipment and tapes were left untouch- SAVE UP TO 50 (ASK OUR ON DUTY 2, 1980 GOOD JULY ON YOUR CURRENT DRUG BILL BY USING GENERIC DRUGS PHARMACIST) T PC. DINETTE SET ed. A purse containing a wallet, $10 in cash, identification, a belt, keys and mace was stolen from a car parked at 2470 So. Redwood Road. A friend of the victim discoverd that the car had been broken into. Burglaries Foiled By Alertness VALLEY. WEST Police here during the week investigated four different burglaries 2 FOR Only H95 CiS U ODD & END Samsonite COFFEE fi END BAB STOOLS TABLES II L 2 which had been foiled for various reasons. An audible alarm Price Prices (O 5195 Begin At scared off a would-b- e burglar Saturday from a residence at 2950 Appleton Dr. Neighbors told officer Richard Sweeney a male Caucasian blonde was seen fleeing the scene. A possible burglary was avoided at 2367 So. 1360 West, when a. neighbor heard a window broken. When he approached to see what happened a suspect fled on a motorcycle. The rear window of . the apartment was broken, but no valuables were found to be missing from the residence. A night janitor arrived at Arctic Circle, 4100 So. 4073 West, to find two male suspects wearing cowboy hats trying to pry the rear door of the building open. When the suspects saw the janitor they fled in a 1971 green pickup truck. The suspects did not damage the building nor gain access into it. Dean K. LaGrave told officer Joseph Iovino he heard noises in the back of the Thermal Systems warehouse, 3055 W. 2100 South and went to investigate. When LaGrave looked around a stack of boards he was hit from behind with the bristle end of a broom. LaGrave said he was knocked to the ground and did not give chase. Nothing was found to be missing from the PRICES DIRECTORS 7 1980 assistance. 5-- vT HOME OF UTAHS LOWEST PRICES warehouse. Cyclists Starting Journey BEAT THE HEAT With WRIGHT WHOLE HOUSE CLOSEOUT COOLER Power Draft and Window Mounts Available A LITTON MICROWAVE Keep the Kitchen Cool Use a Microwave Oven - i Model COOLER 95 Prices Begin 1570 Meal in One Save At SAVE ON GIBS0U APPLIANCES . GRANGER. from the Bicyclists Granger 14th ward will start a trek 150-mi- le homeward today (Thursday) from Preston, Idaho. The riders three-da- y Rock NOTE - SINK) CITIZENS " AetmTMINC Blue Cross Blue Shield TEAMSTERS SFCURITY FUND TTandothfrs LOCATIONS LAYTON, Layton Hill Mall, 766-347- 7 BOUNTIFUL, 1756 South Main, 292-055- 1 SALT LAKE, 21st So. & 23rd East, 487-101- 8 17th So. & 9th E., 484-878- 2 20th E. & 39th So. 272-529- 8 SANDY, 10600 So. 8, 13th E., WIST JORDAN, 27th W. & 78th So., 571-979- 4 3765 South 27th West, 250 North Main, GRANGER, TOOELE, c COPTRIGHT 561-421- 7 969-149- 4 882-355- 0 1910 SAFIWAT STORES INCORPORATE of about 16 start the trip at Red Pass, 20 miles will north of Preston. PRICES EVEN LESS Federal law prohibits dispensing without prescription. HARMACtUTICAl group ofutah Another 29 persons will travel along the route in less physical modes of transportation, a tour director said. Participants will to Hyrum Dam on ride the 17 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator Modal RT17F3 ONLY 18 lb. Capacity 13 Cu. Ft. FREEZER 444 319 WASHER 29995 first day of the trip. The second day will end at the Cherry Hill camp ground in Layton before the trek winds up at the ward. A picnic to welcome the riders home will follow, the director said. The distance of the ride was selected to commemorate the LDS mm Ml i iga ami m churchs Sesquicenten-nia- l celebration. I |