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ALEXIS
ALVARO
ANDY
CHARITY
CLAUDIA
EULALIO
JACQUELINE
JESSICA
KAK
LEA
ROBERTO
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Many
Wilderness scholars, historians, and managers are concerned
that our increasingly multi-cultural society might not value
wilderness in the future since most of the people that visit
and work in wild places are European-American. Please respond
to this concern from your own perspective. .
I
THINK THAT
our multi-cultural society does value wilderness. Most European-Americans
own companies or have a high status in their jobs and can
take vacations whenever they want and with those vacations
they can visit those places. People from other cultures
usually migrate here and have low English skills and have
to work in jobs that don't give them much vacations. For
example, my father works in agriculture and he gets very
little vacation. Also, most of the information about wild
places is in English and if other cultures can't read English
then they never find out about these places and they never
go. More information
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needs
to be given out in other languages so that other people
can find out about wild places. "People from other cultures
don't work here because they have very low English skills
and information is not provided in their language. "If we
want more multi-cultural visitors, we need to encourage
them and give them info in their language.
Artist's
Corner
The
Sierra Nevada, how quiet it is
The
Sierra Nevada, how quiet it is With
the water so clear that no pollutants are in it.
Lots
of wildlife so peacefully lives here with
millions of plant life that exists only here.
The
mountains have become the clouds rest that's why this is
the best place in the west.
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