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Show Sun Times, December 26, 1 979, Page 6 Ben Anderson to speak 3 ' DtiyLi'iLdL GKiOibdo ttO I Noted columnist and v tf described muckraker Jack Anderson heads up the list of noon convocation speakers College at Weber State during the winter quarter. Anderson will speak Jan. 10 in the Austad Auditorium of the Val A. Browning Center for the Performing Arts. He is a Utah native who gained national prominence in the fifties when he and the late columnist Drew Pearson uncovered some of the famous scandals to come out of Washington, D.C. , OVIR rtOM se or ranilino to choom TYMS MOietMOS AND IAROCIT QUANTITY AND VARIITY IN TNI MTIRMOUNTAIN WRIT. COIORIO NAIIS CASTLI GOLD NEW HOPI 4xS 31x4S 2nd grad unwtaltd on lauon plywood Simulated (nidi an bardboord bodting 599 49 CASTLE FLINTLOCK r48 Simuiotwd finish louan plywood. 6" on 0 CROSSCUT IAIN BIRCH 4 1 MNCEMKIN 31 Simulated Knidt on lauon 4 8 lit Grad badung Real Wood Vonoar li He S Indudot icroon, boot, dompw, grata and boon pot ft- in the Other convocation H795 speakers scheduled for the rest of the year include: Dick Casting for Weber State MARCO CIRCULATOR Fl 'fi' musical Broadway has been com- Oliver! pleted by Dr. T. Leonard Rowley, director. The cast will perform the musical in the Mark Evans Austad Auditorium of the Val A. Browning Center for the Performing Arts Feb. 11 through 16. The title role of Oliver Twist will be played by Darin Gates, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Gates of Ogden. series; noted attorney Leonard, Weinglass; and Zaro deorance heat built-i- n circulating fireplace. Wilson Bryan Key who will discuss :he, influence of subliminal-- i advertising. Reg. $238.95 r CHAIN LINK & $27.95 $54.93 $42.93 son of Dr. and Mrs. George Flores of Ogden. Nancy, Oliver's friend and protector, will be played by Ronda Bickraqre,: a senior theatre arts Student; , from Brigham City. Nancy's young sidekick, Bet, will be played by : 'US .it cardio-pulmonar- ew PMenwet ArNaae DISCOUNTED COMUOATKD OOD & KND FI1U0USS CABINETS PANELS 24"r Sovt 60 Sf1... 1 life. . f DAMAGED GALVANIZED PIPE DEPENDABLE mmTIM ie 1141. length Vs inch $4.30 $99 iinch Sl2.lt I, inch and Up. auiRura n 1.....SS.41 I inch "la $19.53 CC3A1 GATES Any site made mSBiOi OALD most to order standard siias in stock ON FIREPLACES BOO BUNS OECJOXT i bewiboel lumbar end iencleg Dlnilani Are Anarolmelw student Jane McBride. Bill Sikes, the villain, will be played by Brian West. Mr. Brownlow, who turns out to be Olivers grandfather, will be played by Jay Wiser. Mr. and Mrs. Sowerberry, the comic team that runs an undertaking business, will be played by Ken Flamm of Pleasant View and Teri Campbell of Ogden. Charlotte will be played by Angela Dittmar, and Old - . , , tl j -- . CUfllHiHililte p ITGUSid tation will far exceed anything we have ever done, Clark said. The productions will feature Donny, Marie, Wayne, Merrill, Alan, Jim and Jay presenting a selection of the best elements from many shows, he added. The concerts, which are being by BYU and KSI, radio with Danny Kramer of KSL as emcee, are being given to the University as a token of appreciation for what BYU has done for the Osmonds, Clark said. lie noted that all of the wives of the Osmonds are BYU gradua cs, and Donny, Marie and Jay have attendeed the University. Tickets are available through mail order only on basis, Williams said. They are $7 for adults and $6 hr youth and younger and for BYU College stiuk'iits. ; Bequests, together with a check or money order to cover lie cost of tickets plus a $1 handling fee, should be sen! to the Marriott Center Ticket Office, BYU, Provo, Utah 84602. ( rders should include name, address and telephone number and indicate the number of tickets requested in each price category. Williams explained. Persons who already ordered tickets but whose requests were returned after the sellout was announced last week should remail theirordersassoonas possible, hesaid Tickets for the additional seats are now being printed and should he ready for mailing after the first of the year. We weren't prepared for ticket sales, and as a result of tlie thousands of new requests we are going to have to handle in addition to the thousands we have already sold, it will Ik absolutely impossible for the ticket office to handle exchanges or refunds," Williams said. afirsl-in-first-o- 1 Sally by Carolyn Briscoe of Roy. Dr. Grimwig will be played by Jeff Harding of Tyler Shaw, Gary Stevenson and Paul Taylor. Children cast as dancers include Kenny Tanner, Alan Taylor of Farr West. Mrs. Bedwin will be played by Mary Lesher of Ogden, and Charley Bates by Taylor Shaw of Pleasant Chris Johnson, Lisa Curtis, Emily Crookston and Wendi Ward. Adults cast as dancers include LaMonte Draney, Jeff Harding, Chris Neeley, Garth Snyder, Jay Wiser, Washington Terrace and Noah Claypool by Bryce View. y Chorus members Jami Palmer, Bischoff, Briscoe, Jana Britt Heifer, Paulette Herman and Julie Carolyn will include Nella Det Allen, Nancy Bauer, Marcie Cole, Tom Cowan, Brian Creager, Jeanne Day, Johlyn Dunn, Paulette Herman, Craig Jackson, Raejean Lewis, Nelson Mahter, Kriste Mortenson, Shirley Rose, Robert Schmidt, Kelly Smith and Rhonda Stoddard. A chorus of young boys will include Jonathan Burns, Brinley, David Matthew Flores, Wynn Gates, Troy Shaw, Braden Shupe, Kertby 'rtfiinfff Darrell Burns, Mark Cook, Darin Gates, James Hill, Doxey, Y Murray. According to Dr. Rowley, the show has a great cast and an experienced and capable staff. Musical direction will be by Lyneer C. Smith with by J.D. choreography Stokes. Costumes and sets will be designed by William A. Earl, with Scott L. Jensen, as technical director. The stage manage is Drew Benson, assisted by Caren Jones. -- The hydrogen bomb may be one of the answers to the world's energy crisis, according to a Weber State College chemistry professor. Dr. Spencer Seager, chairman of the WSC chemistry department, said Hydrogen-fusio- n, which is essentially a harnessing of the hydrogen-bom- b reaction, is a passible future. to this But, he added point it has not been proven feasible. According to Dr. Seager, If it is proven feasible, mast estimates indicate it would be from 20 to 25 years before a that utilizing technology could produce energy for general con- plant sumption. Hie professor said, there's no doubt we are in the middle of an energy crisis. For years weve been living in a fool's paradise.' Many people dont belive it, he said, but when we examine the situation scientifically, were simply using.. energy at a much greater rate than it is being discovered. solar energy, he said. According to Dr. Seager, In fact there wont be that the currrent stage of much left to discover, he development is good enough :o use on a small plaue. warned. The reason for the current But industry requires an inWeve tensive concentrated energy energy crisis? a become very source. socitechnologically-orienteHe said the popular theory ety and technology depends of using collecting ponds is upon very intensive energy feasible but not adequate for d use. he said. When confronted with the question of solar energy as a possible energy source in the future, he said Its the only alternative that has yet proven feasible and is essentially inexhaustible. industrial use. To get a concentrated form, he said, you would need lenses or mirrors to focus large amounts of energy on a smaller space. The professor said the future may hold a lace for the But, he said, solar development of nuclear energy is expensive. There energy. But, he added, will necessarily have to be with the attitude of the advances in solar technology population as a whole, its before it can become futire is clouded in some widespread. people's minds. the Dr. Seager claims The Three-MilIsland irospccts for the future of incident may have hindered solar energy depend upon the development of nuclear tk'vcloping techniques for energy, along with some collecting it." peoples general fear of that To get the same energy energy source." we find in a small pond at oil, Anything we don't unit might take many, many derstand we tend to he fearful acres of land collecting that of he said. e if UEMODIL YOUR KITCHEN Wv'll show you bow to do fourwlf rim wRwty un H ms RCA ecBfiaaaie XL-1- 00 25 aBonx 444 ii RClr: tf ATMKQUNT SSntM & Chris "W1 PINtUtO KSftSt" WAU 1155 Wa Wa Madar Chntge led Card Open ta.ia.le Tea. 3844 (atfkO 6PM NMAYI XL-1C- 0 color TV ELECTRIC TUK2R AUTOMATIC FINS TUNING TO Vis Card RCA 23 OGBCG003 00033 MlNdMedMI IRe-e- . Ulsm i1 t 3 Bomb source of energy source of energy in the , i6"x14'j'. S4.5S 26" 16'.... $7.S2 C002S y $3.6 26"x10'.... $4.6 26" 12'.... $5.64 While Stock h and senior theatre arts Darin's understudy for the role will be Matthew Flores, Fire Escape Every family should plan and practice fire escapes from every room. Learn how to operate every door and window latch, and be sure children can use an object to stand on if a window is too high for them to reach. Choose an assembly point in a safe spot outside where you can count noses and assure yourself all are safe.. J CPR Review If you are among the millions of Americans who have learned emergency resuscitation (CPR) it may be time for a review. A researcher suggests refresher courses every six months to keep the skills in top form. Even a short review and practice at home might help you save a 11 Vs GAUGE 4 It. x SO ft 5 ft. x 50 ft 6 ft. x SO ft "ft pick-pocket- s, WSC Brenda Lodi, j arts sophomore theatre student who ' will be com- - 185 'I' peting for the Irene Ryan Award at the Acting American College Theatre Festival Festivention in Missoula, Mont, on Jan. 22... Fagin, the head of agang of young and the Artful Dodger, one of Fagins best pupils, will be played by Alvin Baker and Donald Glover. Mr. Glover, a sophomore theatre arts major, is a graduate of Weber High School. Mr. Bumble and Widow Corney will be played by music major Rick Givens Theatres production of the job-huntin- tel Irko Oliwsr slotted for WSG g expert Gregory; Ruth Bebee Stanet; Kirby Hill, author of the best-sellHanta Yo which is being made into a television movie $ - started newspaper business at the age of 12 as a reporter for the Murray Eagle and got a job on the city desk of the Salt Lake Tribune when he was 18. HEAVY DUTY FRANKLIN STOVE AU CAST MON 354 LU..NR WT. KIOARFROVIO d His publishing ot the grand jury in the Watergate Caper caused Nixon to do an about-fac- e on Watergate; and blew the lid of an attempted cover-u- p which led to the resignation of some of Nixons top officials. lit Grada. 49 5W Merry-go-Roun- in 1969 and won the Pulitzer Prize in 1972 for his exposure that proved the had Nixon Administration lied to the American public when it said there was no bias toward India during th Bangladesh controversy. lit grada 314x4x4 'iimutofed woodqram on t.o'dboofd backing column "Washington GOLD 1st Grode Bonald J. Clark, public relations director for the Osmonds, flew home early from an Osmond concert tour in the East to coordinate plans for the productions. lit noted that the Osmonds have already developed a format which they have used highly successful m playing to sellout crowds on their current eastern tour. Wc are very confident that we can accommodate the entire Marriott Center, he stated. Sound and lighting technicians from throughout the coun ry are being flown in to make this one of the finest concerts ever given by the Osmonds. The visual presen over took Anderson Pearsons OR In response !o ticket orders which have continued to flood Brigham Young University in spite of an announced sellout las1 week, the Osmonds have decided to do their Jan. ' 2.'i and 26 .YU concerts in the round. i makes about 8,000 more seats available each The ricgii aivo.cjmg toScott Williams, manager of BYU Special Events. Wc liav been overwhelmed with ticket requests, Y illiams said. Never before in the history of BYU have we had such a quick sellout with contunued demand for tickets. Bequests have come from throughout the United States and Irom as far away as England and Japan. Until concerts will be staged at 8 p.m. in BYUs 23,000-sea- t Marriott Center, the largest arena of its kind on any campus in the nation. Originally only one concert was slated to be given at BYU. hut when that sold out within three days, the Osmonds consented to do a second, Williams said. "That sold out quickly also, and now we are having to go in the round to meet the continued demand for tickets. at WSC Chris & Dick's Clearfield Courier, December 26. 1979. Page 6 Lomond Beacon, December 27, 1 979, Page 6 |