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Show A little bit of growth in La Sal This is to announce La Sals mountain was brought down newest citizen - Ivy Kay to the La Sal Store, stabilized, THE SAN JUAN RECORD Wednesday, October 9, 2002 - Page 18 jfrom tfje 60 years ago Men wanted: Truck drivers $1.82 per hour, laborers $1.60 per Meat for everyone and not hour. W.W. Clyde and Company. a favored few! Meat rationing can be expected soon only on federally inspected meats and not on meat farmers slaughter for their own use. 50 years ago Uranium Ore Producers Assoc, accuses the Atomic Energy Commission of hindering instead of helping the production of uraNorthside Grocery and Service Station, owned by Edley nium. Pearson and Jake Reese, is sold to Howard Nielson. 40 years ago Air Force personnel in Monticello the past few weeks have been dismantling and moving to Hill Air Force Base the boilers and other equipment at the Monticello AEC mill. Houses and equipment have been moving from the Mill site recently and two boiler more houses will go to the Navajo reservation. A n AEC there. to the be used by was shipped to Puerto Rico 22-to- 30 years ago More than 100 Navajos are training for key construction trades in the lYade Training Center in Mexican Hat. The program trains students for apprenticeships in pipefitter, carpenter, op- erating engineers, bricklayer, electrician and metal fabricator unions. Youngs Machine Company hosts more than 40 representatives of mining and machinery companies from eight clinic on operation of Deutz Diesel engines. states for a five-da- y 20 years ago From Monticello City Council meeting: Mayor Keith Redd said every effort should be made to carry out the 3,000 acre proposed City reservoir. The estimated cost is $5 million. Councilman Rice submits a list of property owners to be contacted for serious weed neglect. The city will clean the property and bill the property owner. Benny Musselman is given permission to install 800 feet of water pipe on the Spring Creek City water collection system. 10 years ago Mexican Hat residents express concern over the possibility of a Monitored Retrieval Storage Facility at a meeting with a mediator for the Western Network. Rebecca Benally, Montezuma Creek Elementary School teacher, is appointed by Governor Norman Bangerter to serve on the Utah Interagency Coordinating Council Committee. Taylor 2) Made Wooden W s e Custom Cabinets Furniture Hardwood Flooring Custom Knives Reservoir Road vw .stew from sierra la sal by Maxine Deeter recently great grandparented Ivor and Bradshaw. The Bradshaw posterity has increased some in the last few Wendy weeks! Miss Ivy Kay comes home to join three sisters and a brother. Welcome! It must be fall, because everything is turning orange. The foliage is orange. Lots of folks in town, both locals and strangers, are dressed in orange. The MHS Bucks and their fans wear orange a lot lately. The pumpkins in the garden are turning orange. And I suspect that the old historic car in Devils Canyon will be sporting a new coat of BUCKAROO orange paint! Way to go Bucks! Two years in a row youve won the right to paint the DC car orange! If this game really means nothing, why does victory taste so sweet?! Cant wait to view the fall colors in Devils Canyon! Speaking of hunters, Darla Martin says her quite sparsely populated neighborhood on Pine RidgeOld La Sal looks like a small community with all the hunters camped there. Yes, it is definitely fall! One incident involving a hunter Saturday required the La Sal first responders to first respond to an apparent heart attack. The victim on the rushed out by ambulance and to Jprand Junction. Not the best way to start the hunting season. I greatly feared that I would have to be using the F" word and S word in this weeks column. But I was not in La Sal life-flight- ed as the precipitation came down in fluffy, white flakes on Thursday. They did not stick to the ground and were not visible by the time I got home -so I refuse to use the S word this early in the year! Despite the 31 degree tem- perature that night, the garden foliage and produce looks none the worse for the wear. The tomatoes are still turning red. Of course they are warm and cozy, along with the peppers under their little blue tarps. Therefore, I also refuse youngsters. Ask me about how smart and cute they are. Just be sure you address me as Grandma when you ask! Each Saturday in October, the BLM will host a different field tour highlighting the human and natural history resources that make the San Rafael Swell a special place. Each tour will leave at 10 a.m. from the Museum of the San Rafael in Castle Dale, Utah. Tburs are free to the public; however, anyone going on the tours will need to provide their own transportation and gear necessary to prepare for a safe, g outing on the desert. Tbur schedule and topics include: October 12: day-lon- Paleontol-ogyArchaeologyGeolo- gy Oc- tober 19: Modern uses of the swell October 26: Mining and pioneer heritage In order to properly prepare for the tours, reservations are required. Please contact the BLMs Price Field Office at 0 to RSVP or (435) learn more about trip details. These field trips are two of the components of the multifaceted community dialogue process developed by the BLM, Emery County and the State of Utah to further explore the 636-360- question of national monument designation for the San Rafael Swell. For more information about this information program and public feedback visit opportunities ww.ut.blm.govsanrafaelswell. CANYON LTTVE mv Si SES ft 5ATOR MvwC.... IS cover! 64 S 300 E mStm Blanding The irayculit leones PUuQ.tJtlUd Mom Licensed In Utah and Arizona UT Lie 100020 AZ Lie 9901004 you tusf V&L Enterprise HOT TUBS GRAND TIRE us 435-587-2- 71 AAAUCAN 0 flying around tearing their britches! Sounds like a fun time for these smart little San Rafael Swell field tours offered LWOtAi a .'.& News parents are the 6 C&aA Propane-S- Northern Lahusai Locally owned & operated fe Heritage N. Schultz. She entered this world Saturday afternoon. Proud parents are Mandy and to use the F word just yet. Come on sun, keep on shinin! The littlest ones at La Sal Elementary welcomed their new teacher last week. She is Mrs. Redd, known to the parents as Barbara. Mrs. Redd taught at LSES a dozen or so years ago. Fortunately for all, besides all her other activities over those years, she kept her elementary certification current. These little folks have had a fun week. Friday they made bread and butter. This was a hands-o- n lesson. They got to knead their own bread and took turns shaking the jar containing cream until it turned into butter. Also, theyve been singing songs about witches onditioning (SftnnramiitaCTmnra CHEMICALS GAZEBOS ACCESSORIES SumAomc S SwmttutoUn SptU Darrytl & Lynne Darlington SPACEfaVAILABLE errjUAfr RECORD 970-560-26- 42 MOAB UTAH or 970882-541- 312 NORTH MAIN 435I587J2674 435-259-79- 09 (SHSQft 800-698-06- 97 (0) oiXBnnfflirft 76 S. Veach B 2 Cortez http:www.dandlenterprise. sundancespas.com VOLUNTEER We JReit Tvtxcdos Hart's Specialty Shoppe 360 12 W. 1st St OPPORTUNITIES SRACEJAVAILABLE Make A Difference A Youth's Life. In Your Community. In SANrJUAN RECORD HW435-587-2277Z- B &ln You Life SAN JUAN Cortez 565-088- I 8 la la HER alHarkMain Su k KiuUi Jr UjSMt extension VOLUNTEER CENTER 678-2201x- 173 |