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Show Page 5 THE GARFIELD COUNTY INSIDER CLASSIFIEDS HELP WANTED MEDICALASSISTANT PART-TIMECOOK Bryce Valley Clinic is looking fora Medical Garfield Memorial Hospital has opening for Assistant or someone with one year Clinical an as needed part-time COOK. Apply on line experience to assist Medical staff in work- ww.intermountain.net or call 435-676-8811 ing up patients. Apply at Human Resources. www.intermountain.net or call Human Resources at 435-676-8811. BUSINESS PROPOSAL BEST WESTERN RUBY'S INN Hiring Front Desk Workers, Immediately For Fall Season. Generous Starting Wage, Year Round Work Available. Call Riley @ 435834-8002. PAKT-TIMETEMPORARY MAINTENANCE ASSISTANT POSITION available at Garfield School District. Interested individuals need to submit a Garfield Classified Application, 3 current letters of recommendation, and a resume. Contact: Justin Baugh or Annie Eldredge, 676-8821. Deadline August 31,2006,4:00 p.m. BRYCEVALLEYINN is looking for front desk help. Call 679-8811 for info. XANTERRAPARKS & RESORTS BRYCE CANYON LODGE Seeking General Maintenance Technician for Summer Season. Must have valid drivers License and prior experience. Interested; "-JRlease contact Frank Joseph 435-834-5361 >Cxt#720oj-email'ijoseph@^lante(Ta.coim( * , •_ POSITIONAVAILABLE: Brycc Valley High School Sweeper 2-3 hours daily, p.m. Salary based on 20062007 Garfield School District Salary Schedule. Contact Earl Slack, 679-8835. Deadline: September 7,2006,2:00 p.m. SEASONAL COWBOY WANTED Flying V Bar Sweetwater Ranch in Johns Valley is looking for a seasonal cowboy to help us through the fall season. If you are interested, please call (435) 616-4678 after 7:00 p.m. Learn Tax Preparation And possibly earn extra money doing taxes.* H&R Block Income Tax Course Enroll Now! For information and locations call 435-676-8328 or visit hrblock.com/taxcourses Panguitch City and Garfield County are considering privatizing the concession stand at the Triple "C" Area in Panguitch Utah. We are currently accepting proposals from private individuals or groups to run the concession stand as a private business. If you are interested please contact Scott Christefisen at 435-6768949 or 435-616-2282, you may also contact Allen Henrie at 435-676-8585 for more information. Proposals should be returned to the Panguitch City office at 25 South 200 East, Panguitch UT, 84759. By September 15, 2006 at 5:00 P.M. YARD SALE , , , 4 A G A . v. Jt September 7th-£uY •** Inflatable rafts, snowblower, wood stove, hutch, drop leaf tables, edger, picnic tables, lots of misc. 109W. 100 N. Panguitch. MISC. WAMED: OLDCOWBOYMHvIORABILIA Old Cowboy Boots, used tack, saddles and spurs. Call (435) 676-8060. 30 HEAD BARBADOS SHEEP Located in Panguitch, Lamb twice a year, usually have twins, shed their own wool. Call Wildlife Museum Call. 834-5555 HEAVY EQUIPMENT JOHN DEERE LOADERS Garfield County is accepting separate sealed bids until 5 p.m. Friday, September 29*. 2006 for two 2006 John Deere 621 Loaders. Both are in excellent shape, low hours. Minimum bid will be required. Call (435) 676-1101 for bid information SCIENCE SYMPOSIUM KICKS OFF GSENM ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument (GSENM)is kicking off its 10th anniversary celebration with a three-day science symposium. Tuesday through Thursday, September 12-14, 2006 at Southern Utah University's Hunter Conference Center in Cedar City, Utah. Since the 1996 designation of the Monument, and the inaugural 1997 science symposium, scientific inquiry has been an integral component of the Monument's mission. The "Learning from the Land 2006" symposium focuses on completed or ongoing research on the Monument, as well as relevant science from outside areas. Scheduled sessions will be presented throughout all three days and will- cover topics in geology, paleontology, archaeology, history, botany, wildlife, range, hydrology, climate, soils and social sciences. Dr. Jayne Belnap, a U.S. Geological Survey scientist with the Biological Resources Division in Moab, Utah, is the Symposium's Keynote Speaker for Tuesday's opening event. As a USGS scientist, Dr. Belnap's work has focused on how different land uses such as hiking, biking, military training, livestock 'grazing and energy exploration affects the fertility and stability of desert soils and how to sustain these lands. She is also researching the linkages between soil organisms, soil nutrients and the composition of desert vegetative communities. Wednesday evening, the Symposium's Plenary speakers will present their programs. Outdoor writer Craig Child's will take the stage at 7 p.m., followed by Western historian Dr. Patricia Limerick. Childs — naturalist, adventurer, desert ecologist, and frequent contributor to National Public Radio's Morning Edition- has spent entire winters walking the canyons of Utah, and has vanished without a trace into dune seas and vast deserts only to emerge tattered and dripping with sands at book events around the country. Hisfirstfew books were written in Laundromats and libraries, wherever he could find to plugin his computer. Mostly though, his work FALL IS FOR PLANTING!! ALL REMAINING TREES AND SHRUBS FROM OUR 2006 SHIPMENT ARE 20% OFF DURING OUR SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE. Bilingual students are encouraged to enroll iKtiL in. or (.•'miplelimi of. llw flock IncunifT:ix <'oiin*- is lu-iUirr :m olTcr nor n j;uunimc^ nf <.>mploymcuf. EnrolJnu-niivsirk-iii'HiN ;unJ (tfjurw lW-f.Jil.-fy n SEPTEMBER 7,2006 378 WEST CENTER STREET • PANGUITCH, UTAH PHONE 676-8301 • CELL 616-8301 is written by hand. His journals are filled with words and artwork, and his stories come pouring out of the land like flash floods. His books include Crossing Paths, The Desert Cries, and The Secret Knowledge of Water. Limerick taught at Harvard University as an Assistant Professor, before joining the faculty at the University of Colorado at Boulder. At CU she teaches a variety of courses; both undergraduate and graduate, on the American West, as well as the introductory American history survey course. She is a recipient of numerous awards and honorary appointment - State Humanist of the Year, 1992, from the Colorado Endowment for the Humanities; a recipient of the University of California, Santa Cruz 1990 Alumni Achievement Award; and Official Fool of the University of Colorado from 1987 to 2008. In 1995, she was named a MacArthur fellow. Limerick has published a wide variety of books, articles, and reviews. Her best known work, The Legacy of Conquest, has had a major impact on the field of Western American History. In addition to numerous scholarly articles and book reviews, she writes frequent columns and op-ed pieces for "The New York Times", "USA Today", "The Denver Post", "The Daily Camera", and "The Rocky Mountain News". Her recent books include Something in the Soil (a collection of essays) and The Atomic West, (in progress). As an advocate for bringing academic knowledge into the community, Limerick has spoken to audiences as diverse as the American Association of Law Schools, the Bureau of Land Management Summit Conference, the Australian and New Zealand American Studies Association, the Mormon History Association, the International High Level Radioactive West Conference, and a National Aeronautics and Space Administration conference on the future of space exploration. ' Registrati6n for the entire three-day Symposium" is $125 and can be made either at the door of the Hunter Conference Center's Great Hall, or by going online at www.leamingfromtheland.com. A special "One-Day-Only" pass is available for $40. These special passes may not be combined to pay for the entire symposium. GSENM is making 15 passes available daily free of charge to students with a valid student identification card. These passes must be picked up by 9 a.m. each day. Wednesday evening's event is open free to the public and does not require prior registration to attend. |