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Show THE SAN JUAN RECORD Wednesday, November 28, 2001 - Page 14 Four Comers School releases 2002 Ed -Venture schedule Four Comers School of Outdoor Education released its schedule of year 2002 Southwest in Monticello, Utah last week. The forty-tw-o page, schedule offers descriptions of The non-prof- Two brand new programs for it which includes itineraries for all programs. Itineraries include a description of daily activities, general travel requirements, and staff credentials. More extensive information is available in "briefing packets which contain complete program details, equipment lists, adults in 2002 are Moving Water--a TYip through Desolation and Gray Canyons on the Ed-Ventur- es Green River and Navajo Mountain to Rainbow Bridge Llama TYek. Another new proits adventures with a mis- gram focuses on exploring the sion in the Four Comers re- Grand Canyon in Winter via gion, including ski tours of traversing from the north to mqjor national parks, rock art south rims by skiing and backexplorations by river raft, ar- packing. The educational adventures chaeological surveys of ancient run by the ruins, rock art explorations on Lake Powell, and more. These school range from six to nine programs are for learning, not days in length and cost from just getting away from it all. $95 to $2195. A portion of your Four Comers School is one tuition goes to support the of the oldest and most re- other programs of the school spected eco tourism operators including the Canyon Country in the Southwest. The school Youth Corps and the is dedicated to educating Bioregional Outdoor Education Project. Discounts are people of all ages and backgrounds about the natural and available to members of Four cultural treasures of the Comers School, for those regSouthwest and beyond. Field istering as a group, and those programs designed for adults, taking more than one in a year. Programs rangwomen, and families are led by foremost experts in the fields ing from van tours to river of archaeology, biology, geology, trips to backpacking accommonative cultures, writing, pho- date a wide spectrum of intertography, and others, offer op- ests and skill levels. Custom portunities to leam about the programs can also be arranged land and the prehistoric and for private groups or organizanative cultures of the region, tions. while exploring its beauty. A free catalog is available full-col- or (Ed-Venture- travel specifics, itinerary, background reading and more. Briefing packets are available separately for $12 each, which can be applied to program tuition when you enroll. For a free catalog, or for further information, call Four Corners School of Outdoor Education at (800) s) 525-445- 6. Booster club hats available Monticello Buckaroo State Football Championship hats are still available. Hie Booster club will take orders by December 1 for $15 each. The team is also getting black with team scores on the back and State Champion on the front Contact Paul Curtis Ed-Ventu- re at 587-200- Mill neighbors net $41 million tion Agency declared the mill a Superfund cleanup site in 1984 after radioactive contamination was found in the drinking water wells of the nearby Lincoln Park neighborhood and in the dust and soil around the mill site. Cotter, based in Lakewood, property owners near the Cotter Corp. uranium mill in Canon City, Colorado will share more than $41 million and seven other people will receive medical monitoring under a federal court judgment entered by U.S. District Judge Zita Wienshienk. Cotter is expected to appeal the judgment to the 10th U.S. Twenty-si- x began operating the Canon City mill in 1958. The mill crushes ore then leaches out radioactive uranium. Declining orders closed the plant in 1987, but it reopened recently. Cotter now is a sub- Circuit Court of Appeals, where another multimillion-dolla- r judgment in a similar civil suit also is pending. The plaintiffs contended uranium from the Cotter mill contaminated their neighborhood and damaged their sidiary of General Atomics. Wienshienks judgment' follows a jury trial last summer. (From an article in the Rocky Mountain NewsJ health. The Environmental Protec- - Honor band to play tonight Band students from area Tuesday and Wednesday, Nohigh schools are involved in a vember 27 and 28, the group two-da- y workshop under the will present a free concert at 4 direction of Dr. Greg Bensen, p.m. on November 28 at the band director of College of Monticello High auditorium. Eastern Utah. The presentation is free and After two days of practice on the public is invited to attend. 2. s r t ii I i i I.;.; i 'I': ' i j srrrrrriTji - LJ's Quilting Bee IT d Custom Machine Quilting Hand-Guide- by Lora Nash Aztec 75 CR 2581 I -- 1 ; ; ; ; 1 j j I ;,8 ; 8 C3 NM i : ;.s Hollingsworth Construction General Contractor New Home Construction 435-587-29- 81 587-26- 23 or 877-419-07- BLUE HERON APPLIANCE REPAIR Most makes and models Monticello Tires Service Brakes State-Of-The-A- & 65 Monticello mCenterj irmja NAPA Alignments Conditioning Safety Inspections Gasoline Pwn 435-587-25- 38 Monticello 217 N Main GRAND VALLEY OXYGEN, Inc. VacuurMlrw. Reconditioned 24 Houra Household Appliances 435-587-30- 59 u Air 446 S. Main, Sulla C Moab 435-ForAB Your Home Medical Needs Lift Chairs Waters Diabetic Monitors WheelChairs Diabetic Supplies Commode Incontinence Chairs Supplies Hospital Beds Midfc Inwimct Bng . Madrid Homy Oygyn Siypty I 8n Appliances S. Main Ws rt Maintenance Exhausts 84 Small Engine Repair Monticello Car Care Needs JAutoCare 1480 East Central Remodeling CAR CAFE CENTER Specializing In All Of Your ALANS BODY SHOP Complete auto body & frame Most advanced paint system Windshield replacement & rock chip repair Additions 259-788- 5 Harris Appliance 263 & Refrigeration rg. , ; Can Put New Life Into Your t Pay 7 Pays Ailing Appliances Week (Emergency We alee aerveyour welding needs. We carry NCG cylinder. Oiygai - AcMytans (Mum - COS - NSrogai - Agon And turn -Voiir COMMJH SEHVICr WnMm k InftmtM luppWn Wr Schrirc All Make A I Domestic end Commercial 774 N. 400 W. Blanding, Utah 678-272- 7 |