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Show r k oik I mi; 1 1 1 1 1.'. ..u. !! .... -v- - TURNBOW Continued from page 9 tj-- - earned Pardon, based on the 1857 Utah War, and in 1977 his play Sam Brannon, the catalysts for the California Gold Rush, played at BYU for two weeks. He has written three one act plays, each with a moralistic theme about abortion. None of the three plays have been subjected to public scrutiny. Im reluctant to give my stuff to the public. I think I want to work on them a little more, he explained. Oneof Reed's greatest actingchal-- 9 occurred during his only movie formance. He was shot and killed movie Buffalo Rider. A fly who it he was dead nose. Turnbow children are still at home, and Reed farms his family farm in Tabiona to make sure the weeds are controlled, but he doesn't fish in the nearby Duchesne River. The river is too close, Reed explained stoically. i ON DISPLAY AT USU UINTAH 11 ASIN This beaded dress is on loan from Utah Jpcra. The dress was created Jenks furthe finale nflhe 1 996 prnduc t ion of DreamKeeprrx. It will be on display through Friday, April by the at USU 9, Library located in the south end of USU's new Student Center. Pictured left to right: Bert Jenson, USU Uintah Basin librarian; Lyn Eckels, Basin ArtsCouncil president; Edwin Uhey, Utah Opera apprentice artist; and Roland McCook, Utah Opera Board member and Ute Tribe Business Committee member. (Not pictured is 1 Jenks.) Utah Opera apprentice artists to perform in the Basin this week! missioned by Utah Opera for the Utah Roosevelt City Mayor and City Councentennial celebration. On loan from cil Members; Frontier Motel; Basin Utah Opera, the beaded dress created Arts Council; Mixin Lake Electric UBTA Communications; by Fabian Jenks for the finale of the 1996 production will be on display and liic Duchesne County CommisMonday, April 15, through Friday, sioners. Utah Opera wishes to acknowledge April 19, at the USU Library located in the south end of USUs new Stuthe following for special assistance dent Center. The display case is lowith the residency: Roland McCook, cated on the east side of the library, Lyn and Marc Eckels, Fabian Jenks, between the library and the hall. To Carolyn Wilckcn, Irene Hansen, visit the exhibit, you may enter diNorman Davis, John and Jackie Felt, rectly from Lagoon Street through the Bert Jenson, Terry Terrell, Basin Arts southeast door of theStudent Center. Council, the Duchesne County Area Thcdress will also be on display at the Chamber of Commerce, West Junior April 19 public concert. High School, the Uintah Basin Stan' Utah dard, and Utah Slate University Sponsors of the week-lon- g Opera residency include the Charles (Roosevelt). and Annaley Redd Foundation; The Jurrius Group; Questar Corporation, Questar Gas Company, Questar Pipeline Company, and Shenandoah Ute Tribal Business Enterprises; Inland Production Company; Tin; apprentice artists from Utah Opura have taken up residency in Roosevelt this week, and their tour of area schools is well underway. The schedule began with a visit to Myton Elementary and Con Amore students on Monduy morning, followed by a workshop with the Union High choirs, additional Union students, and Roosevelt Jr. High choir students on Monday uftcnioon. A busy Tuesday will include as semblira at Neola Elementary in the morningand Roosevelt Middle School in the afternoon, plus a short concert ut Crossroads Senior Center in Roosevelt at noon. The five Utah Opera artists will spend Wednesday at East Elementary. Thursday they will visit Lapoint Elementary and then West Jr. High ScIhmiI, with Uintah River High students invited hs well. resiThe finale of the week-lon- g dency will be a free public concert on Friday, April 19, at 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium of West Jr. High , located immediately north of Todd Elementary on East Highway 40 in ft. Duchesne. Thcconcert, which borrows its title The Best of All Passible Worlds from the opera "Candide," will include operatic works ranging from classic to modern, as well as familiar musical theatre selections and a hit of the less familiar early music from which musical theatre devrlo)cd. The Roowvelt-Ft- . Duchesne Utah 0mtii residency is an outgrowth of "Dmankeepera", a Ute opera com MAGGIE Continued from page 9 Lady, a female Border Collie owned by Deputy SherifTMark N iclson. Lady was donated to the team by a woman in Meeker, Colorado. The two young dogs will train for several hours each week, leamingto locate human scents while obeying commands from their handlers. The Uintah Mountain Search Dog Team responded to 50 calls in four different states last year. According to Heath, moat of them involved searching for lost persons, but the dogs are also used in murder cases to locate human bodies. The case that has brought the dogs and their handlers tiie most notoriety involved a murder victim, Triah Autry. Last April, thedogs were taken onto the grounds of the United States Department of Agriculture research facility in Milleville, where officials believed Autrys body was disposed of. The dogs successfully isolated the exact location of her remains even though the case was more than a year old and Autrys remains were buried more than 11 feet deep. TEACHING A DOG NEW TRICKS Lady is a female Bonier Collie that has joined the Uintah Mountain Search Dog Team, along with her handler, deputy sheriff Mark Nielson (pictured at right). She is being trained to locate human scents and to assist law enforcement officers locate lost or deceased persons. Deputy sheriff Mark Heath poses with Maggie, his old Bloodhound. Maggie was recently acquired by the Duchesne County Sheriff's department through a grant. REUNION Continued from page 13 their story, Irish related. Dad told the producers they had better treat his daughter! right, but he also warned them that when the three of ua get together and start talking we may be kind of hard to control! she said. Taping fordfi Hours will go on for several months, said Triah, while members of both families and others involved in the accidental switch at birth are interviewed. They talked about keeping up with us and seeing how things go over the next few months, she Baid. 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