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Show lll'titl1rtlg'''ir1Trf' i 1ht Citrus-3rtJppfitbn- Thursday, Oct 23, 1997 AS rt, at Canyonlands Field Services scheduled Oct. 27 for Cranes night spend Moab resident Myrtle Holyoak Birds on their This the second year an experiment involving a ground is way to wildlife Myrtle Marie Anderson Holyoak passed away at the home of Ollie and Roberta refuge in N.M. Knutson Oct. 21, 1997. She was 85 years old, bom Aug. 20, 1912. She moved to Moab in her teenage years and met and married Arnel Henry Holyoak, Aug. 20, 1930 in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. They have lived in Moab since that time and were the parents of one son who died in infancy and three daughters. Myrtle has been an active member of the LDS Church, serving in many various ways. She was active with the Senior Citizens and RSVP. She has always e been a wife, mother and grandmother, assisting her husband in all his duties including state brand inspector for 34 years. Alove of her life was quilting and she left a great legacy of quilts for all of her posterity to by Carrie Switzer Apparently, a gang of four whooping cranes werent compelled to follow the eight sandhill cranes leading an experimental migration formation through southeastern Utah last Thurs- day. One of them fell victim to a marauding eagle as a result, and will make the rest of his trek in a trailer on the ground. full-tim- Myrtle Holyoak enjoy. Myrtle was preceded in death by her son, husband, and brothers and sisters. She is survived by her daughters, Mrs. Wynona (Neal) Dalton, Mrs. Roberta (Ollie) Knutson, and Washington and many nieces and nephews. She was loved by many and will be greatly missed, especially by her many dear friends at Senior Citizens. Funeral services are scheduled for Monday, Oct. 27, 1997, 11 a.m. at the LDS Stake Center on Locust Lane. Viewings will be held Sunday, Oct. 26, 9 p.m. and Monday, Oct. 27, 9:30-1- 1 at the Moab Memorial Mortuary on 4th East and Locust Lane. Mrs. Sheryl (Jim) Nyland, all living in Moab. She is also survived Veda by three sisters-in-la- Pehrson, Ruth Holyoak and Helen Holyoak. She had seven grandchildren, 18 (one on the way) and two wav. a sister, The birds and a crew of wildspecialists are on their way to the Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge south of Albuquerque, New Mexico. Starting out from the mountains of Idaho, where they were hatched with the aide of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the entourage spent Thursday night at the Moab Airport just hours after a straggler was hit hard by an eagle. Its leg was injured and bleeding, and the bird was treated with antibiotics by a veterinarian in Price. life 7-- on the Irene Robrecht of The Library Board will meet Wednesday, Oct. 29 at 7:30 p.m. in the librarys conference room. The public is invited to attend. Although the library does provide Internet access to paservice trons, there is NO available. You may sign up to use the Internet at the circulahour intion desk for crements up to one hour if no one one-ha- is lf waiting. We now have a suggestion box. It is located at the circulation desk. We have added to the collection two new sets of encyclopedias. We have reorganized the childrens area with new shelving. We have also added ffiany more audio books and videos to our existing collections. The library will be closed November 11 for Veterans Day. New titles include: Words I Wish I Wrote, by Robert Learn more about employee motivation , employeeemployer relations , and employment legal issues. Join us at this seminar Monday, October 27, 1-- 4 aircrew and two ultra-ligh- t with leading a planes charged flock of sandpipers followed by the young whoopers through a new migratory route for the hatchlings to safety in southern New Mexico. There are reportedly only 371 whooping cranes in existence, and the only migratory flock numbers 180. These fly between Canada and the Arkansas National Wildlife Refuge in Texas. While in Moab, the flight and ground crew set up a mobile aviary on the airport grounds last Thursday night while the injured bird recuperated. One of the planes leads the flock, another follows, to assure none of the cranes falls out of line. The ground crew acts as support for those in the air. Just before the eagle attacked, the whooping cranes were flying low and following the ground crew, rather than their sandhill brothers and sisters. They left Moab at approximately 9 a m. on Friday The experiment was the subject of a television movie last ultr- a-light Pope John Paul II, by Jonathan Life Kwitny; Gladys Knight-MStory, by Gladys Knight; The Kingdom of Shiva Irons, by Michael Murphy; Born to Rebel, by Frank James Sulloway; The Passion of Emma, by Penelope Williamson; Every Tenant's Legal Guide, by Janet Portnan; Child Custody, by Mimi E. Lvster; Nolos Will Book; The Art of Dying, by Patricia Weenolsen; Celestine Vision, by James Redfield; by Ray Driving Blind, Bradbury; Practical Intuition, by Laura Da); and Degree of Guilt, by Richard North y Mikulski; p.m. Moab Higher Education Center Cost: $10 - Refreshments served 7 to register Call 259-725- Sponsored by the San JuanGrand County Small Business Development Center, USU Extension and Department of Workforce Services. "The Utah Small Business Development Center is partially funded by the U.S. Small Business Administration. In events of this nature, views and opinions that are not necessarily those of the may be expressed. The SBA's cooperation does not constitute or imply endorsement of any opinions, products andor services. All of the SBA's programs are extended to the public on a basis. Reasonable arrangements for persons with disabilities will be made if re- quested at least two weeks in advance." Owlflight, year, and the flock is making headlines nationally as reporters the mark its internet. Acclaimed authors to present public reading at CFI writers workshop Nov. 6 g auThree thors - Richard Shelton, Ellen Meloy and Louis Owens - will present a public reading of their works on the opening night of Canyonlands Field Institutes Desert Writers Workshop. The reading, set for 8 pm. Thursday, Nov. 6 at Pack Creek Ranch, is free of charge and open to the public. The authors will also be available to sign copies of their Grill. The money raised will help underwrite CFIs ongoing scholarship program. Each year, one Moab high school student receives a full scholarship and one educatorinfluencer receives a half scholarship to the Desert Writers Workshop. For the past two years, B. Osborns has generously provided underwriting for the high school student scholarship. The Desert Writers Workshop is sponsored in part by the Utah Arts Council, the National Endowment for the Arts - Washington, D.C., B. Osborns Books, Main Street Flowers & Gifts, Moab Brewery, The Write Shop Boulder, Colo., and Pack Creek Ranch. To RSVP for the Meet The Authors reception, or for more information about these events, call CFI at or stop by award-winnin- books, which will be made available for purchase at the reading by B.Osborns Books. The same evening, prior to the reading, CFI will also hold a Meet the Authors reception at the Pack Creek home of Guy and Jean Saperstein. Because of limited parking space, CFI will provide shuttle service from the Pack Creek parking lot to the Saperstein home. Tickets for the reception are $20, including drinks and a gourmet hors doeuvres menu by the Sunset fund-raisin- g -- 259-775- the office at 1320 South Hwy. 191. MEXICAN TILE & INTERIOR 595 Westgate Grand Junction, CO 81505 970-245-14- 48 OFF 25 ON ALL FURNITURE IN STOCK SALE STARTS OCT. 17 TILL OCT. 31 WE HAD A LOAD OF FURNITURE ARRIVE A MONTH AHEAD OF SCHEDULE. WE RE OUT OF ROOM 8 A.M. HOURS RION.-FRSATURDAY 10AML.-- 4 I. - 5 P.M. PJVI. Patterson. ItA-- O r.t-- t NORM SHREWSBURY For Mayor Fulghum; Dragonseye, by Ann McCaffrey; Amber Beach, by Elizabeth Lowell; Flood Tide, by Clive Cussler; Dirty Jokes and Beer, by Drew Carey; Capitol Offense, by Barbara Small Business Owners: of by Mercedes Lackey; The Grilling Season, by Diane Mott Davidson; Everyone is Entitled to My Opinion, by David Brinkley; Unfinished Tales, by J.R.R. Tolkien; How Few Re- main, by Harry Turtledove; Raising a Family, by Jeanne Elium; The Dancing Floor, by Barbara Michaels; Desert Between the Mountains, by Michael Durham; Century-Th- e Man of the Life and Times of u A At Your Moab EACH For Medicare Beneficiaries and Medicaid Recipients 8.00 ALL OTHERS YOU MUST BE 21 YEARS OF AGE OR OLDER TO RECEIVE FLU SHOTS. PLEASE BRING Medicare or Medicaid Identification Card. SATURDAY, OCTOBER want to put energy Into our community for those who live here, not just those who visit. In a thriving community, recreational and business opportunities will expand as well. The Moab Arts and Recreation Center needs to be comfaciltities for swimming, skate boarding and other activipleted and year-roun- d ties made available to all. Our elders need to be better cared for. These worthwhile undertakings will benefit us well into the future. Support moderate change; in four years youll be glad you did. Vote Norm Shrewsbury, Mayor, for a fresh start. I 25, 1997 8:00 A.M. 5 :00 P.M. For More Information, Contact: Grand County Homo Health Agency Ext. 251 At Allen Memorial Hospital 259-7191, t 'C"1 tAAikm & im m m Maa ii rn nn nHTnTifi niff rrufiimTTii |