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Show THE SAN JUAN RECORD Wednesday April 13, 1988 - Page 14 Canyon Country weekend workshop Canyonlands Natural His- tory Association is pleased to announce their 13th Annual Canyon Country Weekend 4 in Workshop on April Moab. The workshop celebrates the special magic of the Colorado Plateau through informative lectures by leading authorities on canyon country themes. One hour, of college credit for workshop attendance is available through the biology department of the College of 22-2- Eastern Utah. Registration for this years program will begin at 6:30 p.m. on Friday, April 22, at the Moab Community Center. The lecture The series begins with Return of the Mammoth Dung Sleuth by Dr. Larry Agen-broadirector of the Quaternary Studies Program at Northern Arizona University. The workshop continues on Saturday afternoon, April 23, at 1:30 p.m. with Dr. Paul Cox, associate professor at Brigham Young University. Dr. Coxs specialty is ethnobotany, the study of the cultural relationship between plants and people. His topic, A Float-i- Pharmacy, promises to be both entertaining and informative. At 2:45 p.m. Dr. Steven Carothers will present The Latest Study on the Big Ditch, a discussion of the effects of the Glen Canyon Dam on the plants and animals that live along the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon. He is president and director of SWCA Environmental Consultants. Saturday evenings program, Images of the Supernatural, will begin at 7:30 p.m. with Polly Schaafsma, an eminent rock art researcher. As an artist and an anthropologist, definitions and inter pretations of canyon country rock art should be of interest to Sch-aafsm- as anyone interested in the human history of the Colorado Plateau, The Canyon Country Weekend Workshop concludes on Sunday, April 24, with Canyon-land- s Field Institutes presentation of The Canyons Edge. slide producThis multi-medi- a tion features nationally recognized landscape photographers Bruce Hucko and Tom Till and award-winnin- g charge. For further information contact Canyonlands Natural History Association, 125 West 200 South, Moab Utah 84532, (801) Names and faces Third District Congressman Howard C. Nielson was pre- sented with the Golden Bulldog Award by the Watchdogs of the Treasury, Inc., for his 1987 voting efforts to cut federal spending, eliminate waste and reduce the deficit, the Watchdogs announced recently. It is the congressmens fifth Bulldog Award. The award is presented to members of congress who vote to contain unnecessary government spending at least 75 percent of the time, based on a compilation of selected votes on economic and fiscal issues published in the Economy Voting Record. Watchdogs of the Treasury is a Washington D. C. based nonpartisan organization whose awards for fiscal integrity in government are presented annually. author Terry The Hitchin Post Heartlife Second Surgical Opinion Program Announcing Lee Plaskett, d.c. . . . Boot Shop Colorado n BOOTS FOR LESS ! Need boots or shoes repaired? Leave work at an Juan Record located in Moab Family Health Center 267 North Main - Moab, Utah Come in and let me help you y 801-259-MO- career with the telephone company. A career that has The Monticello Centennial Committee and the San Juan Record invite you to submit your recollections for publication. Articles of approximately 300 words are preferred. Help us remember when. ACROSS 1 5 9 12 13 14 15 17 18 19 21 Moist Poker stake Knock Hebrew month Irritate Wine cup Sullen Parent: colloq. Aeriform fluid Festival Time from dusk to dawn 23 27 Faeroe Islands Harsh-soundi- ng whirlwind 28 Greek letter 29 Distress signal Use the entry blank below to nominate your favorite senior citizen. Submit to: SENIOR CITIZEN, Darlene Low, P.O. Box 545, Monticello, Utah 84535. Entry deadline is April 18, 1988. San Juan County 1988 Senior Citizen of the Year Nomination Age Address Nominated by . Please attach a sheet with the following: 1. Name of nominee 2. Resume of nominees community and church service 3. Photo of nominee 4. Brief history of nominee 5. Reasons why you think nominee should be named San Juan County Senior Citizen of the Year 'Monticello You Know Us. We Know You. Member F.D.I.C. 3UGF . AB CROSSWORD PUZZLER spanned almost 25 years and many changes in the telephone industry. Vanita Harral Hunt Phone number Cortez. Chiropractic Clinic acquired a phone and I began collecting messenger fees. When I would go to the telephone office to collect my messenger fees, I was fascinated by the operator and tne switchboard. My favorite pastime was playing operator with a switchboard made from a large cardboard which had holes poked in it and nails and string for cords and plugs. Thus began my long love and mip Phone number Steers, calves and yearlings, weighing 200 to 300 pounds sold for $107 to $126.80; 400 to 500 pounds for $105 to $110; 700 to 800 pounds for $78.70 to $81.25. Heifers, calves and yearlings, weighing 200 to 300 pounds sold for $98 to $102.50. for cardiovascular information The telephone Name $650 to $750. National Health Information Clearinghouse d, n Helpful Numbers MONTICELLO CENTENNIAL Not everyone in town had a telephone and children were paid 10 cents messenger service to call people to the phone for a long distance call. Remember when there were only party lines and people had numbers like 30R3 and 74R4, and you cranked the handle to make it work. Remember when Mrs. Belack lived behind the telephone office and was available 24 hours a day. When I was a very young child, my father was working for J. W. Corbin, who owned the Midland Telephone Company, and he asked Mr. Corbin about getting telephone service at our home. Mr. Corbin said that he would get the line to our house but didnt have a phone for us to use. My father then went to Art Holt, who had brought a phone from Texas when they came to Utah. My father traded him a radio for that phone. Thus we Slaughter bulls sold for $62 to $65 on April 6 at Valley Livestock Auction in Fruita, Colorado. Feeder bulls sold for $57.50 to $61; slaughter cows for $44 to $65.50; cow-cal- f pairs for 259-600- 3. Toll-Fre- e Tempest Williams. The slide program will be held at the Western Plaza at 59 South Main Street. Admission to the lecture series and slide show is free of Remember when Valley auction 31 Obscure 34 Three-toe- , 54 FIRST WESTERN national bank Answer to Previous Puzzle Possesses 55 Prefix: down 57 Simpletons 61 Time gone by 62 Hockey score 64 Trade 65 Playing card 66 Goals 67 Wife of Zeus DOWN 1 Blandifig 678 324 22,8 banking, PEOPLE still make the difference. 39 Execute ' 40 African antelope 42 Organ of hearing 44 Badgerlike mammal 46 Compass point 48 Cloth 50 Commonplace 53 Groan d sloth 35 Pigpen 37 Choose In 587 Obstruct 2 Fuss 3 Deface Gains 5 Rugged mountain 4 crest 6 Negative 7 8 9 10 1 1 16 Gratuity Verve Uneven Oriental nurse Time gone by Sober 20 Abstract being 22 Maiden loved by Zeus 23 Antlered animal 24 Slender 25 Concerning 26 In addition 30 Scatter 32 Mental image 33 Gunmans girlfriend 36 Sweet potato 38 Lose luster 41 Harmony 43 Male sheep 45 Agave plant 47 Latin conjunction 49 Labors 50 Conjunction 51 Rant 52 Brim 56 Vast age 58 Be in debt 59 Sailor: colloq. 60 Health resort 63 Paid notice |