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Show But we have a limited but magnificent resource within the Moab community, the people who live here and make this place home. Tourism can’t carry the load alone. A college campus would make Grand County’s year-round community stronger and wiser, maybe even a little wealthier. I hope that we can continue to make Moab a Desert quality community for the working community to live well into the future. I hope all of our economic needs are not placed in just one basket. For the sake of us all. POINTBLANK Ecology SUBMISSIONS An Introduction to Life in the Arid Southwest Submissions to The Zephyr may be on any topic even remotely relevant to its readers. They must be between S00 and 1000 words. Authors of essays ae in this publication receive a five year subscription and our ae John Sowell A comprehensive and accessible introduction to - how organisms live in the desert, including the Intermountain, Mojave, Sonoran,,. and Chihuahuan Deserts. ae CAll ANDRINA. (ANDD for all of your NA NEEDS An AVEDA: Salon : : : “Students and instructors of a alee eS come John Sowell’s book. It is timely and more comprehensive than any volume currently on the market.” : 2 = | 36 illustrations, 44 photographs For Hair appointments, Call Robert or Michelle im 50 North 100 West ¢ Moab Paper $17.95 3 THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS (800) 773-6672 © www.upress.utah.edu SUBSCRIBE TO THE ZEPHYR Page ieifan’ A Season optchonee * 259-6902 4o | Deta ils on ; —Peter J. Marchand, author of . If you pick up a starving dog and make him prosperous, he will not bite you. This is the principle difference between a dog and a man. Twain In the back of your mind, do you cherish a dream of the pericet desett hideaway, a small inn on a little-traveled highway, with miles and miles of beautiful, lonesome country between it and anywhere else. Around it are high red mesas and sensuous slickrock canyons, undiscovered by the crowds, retaining their mystery and timeless meaning. In the calm of mid-day, there’s not a sound except the occasional flitter of a hummingbird and the quiet buzzing of the old ice machine on the front porch. When the breeze blows, you hear it in 100,000 juniper trees that dot the broad, sweeping benches all around. At evening, the sunset lingers over distant buttes. Though it’s wonderfully comfortable, the place hasn’t changed much in spirit since the 1950’s. Guests return again and again and feel it’s like a second home. Staying here, you could pretend that TV’s, phones, and drive- up windows were never invented. (L) Kenneth Ferree taking : oe mail to post office at Fry Canyon, Utah. Plane landed near store on muddy landing strip. (R) Waren oe spring ncar Virgi Allen mine—formerlyThe Maybe Mine. May 1961. Photos courtesy of Bobbi Adamson who lived at Fry Canyon asa child. She is the daughter of Kenneth & Mabelle Ferree. Grandmother, Sadie Black documented all the photos = : Your dream is a reality at Fry Canyon Lodge, The Inn at Utah’s Wild Heart. Majestically isolated on State Highway 95 between Natural Bridges and Glen Canyon. (435) 259-5334 a |