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Show - In my school year at college, I signed up for another series of classes. My courses in physical geology and biology were exciting and instructive. However, my major was destined to be in the business management area, and so I took several business classes which included economics and bookkeeping. Algebra, psychology, health education, and sociology classes helped fill my requirements. . My anthropology class was outstanding. Taught by Dr. Charles Dibble, its subject matter dealt with the treatment of the Indian people of the Great Basin—the Goshute and other tribes. I was so taken by my geology class that it really affected my future life. Never had a subject moved me so as the historical study of the earth and its landscape. My geomorphology class, taught by Dr. Ray Marsell, provided me many pleasurable times and led me to the canyons. And my geography class, which dealt with the geography of Utah, gave me much interesting and essential information of our own state. It was one class that I felt I had the knowledge to teach myself. Looking back from this day, I wish that I had majored in Geography as it encompassed so many fields of which I am interested. I would have enjoyed working toward a teaching major. Later classes included many exciting courses. A heavy load indeed. It's no wonder that it took me six years to get through a four-year course. CANYONLANDS REALTY 131 N. Main St.-P.O. Box 400 Moab, UT 84532 ty JOU (435) 259-7870 Fax: 259-7294 < www.canyonlands.net Lenore Beeson: 259-9419 Dave Bierschied: 259-8217 My whole life seems to have been wrapped up in years of conflicts and wars--I he Great Depression, World War II, the Cold War...and now the Environmental Conflicts. But interspersed... there have been some pleasurable experiences I will never forget. I enjoyed my political science class that I took from Dr. G. Homer Durham. It laid the base for a knowledge of the political system we have today. Durham was a dynamic teacher, and from him | developed much of my interest in politics. My botany class that I took from Dr. Walter P. Cottam, the founder of the Red Butte Garden and Arboretum, was highly enjoyable. He had written a book that he used for his lectures, Is Utah Sahara Bound ? and its message still sticks with me. My whole life seems to have been wrapped up in years of conflicts and wars. First it was the Great Depression, then World War II, then the Cold War, then the Korean War, then the Vietnam War, and now the Environmental Conflicts. But interspersed with these heartaches, there have been many pleasurable incidents and experiences that I will never forget. Whether we are a product of our environment or our ee I don't know, but this is surely an interesting journey. Those days are but memories now and I'm but a beneficiary of it all, like it or not. So with my well-worn copy of Dale Morgan's Utah, A Guide to the State, the best guide book ever written about Utah, I'll continue to head out to explore this wonderful state. Lenore Beeson--personal realtor to Gregory Peck SUBSCRIBE TO THE ZEPHYR Details on Page 3 d And check out the web site— Email The Zephyr. zephyr@moci.net COFFEE COWBOY IN TELLURIDE, COLORADO www. canyoncountryzephyr.com the Sf, Salt Lake Roasting Co. CALL TOLL-FREE: YOU CAN'T MISS US ON. COLORADO AVENUE. Ken's Complaint-John's a morph and I'm still a cartoon.. I'm solo over here and he has Lauren Bacall? What kind of - justice is that? \. fom,Ni ! i ae Kus S 800.748.4887 Wedee, Beiere don't have? |