...that I know what the answer is supposed to be. However, there are a couple of problems. The first, as LochnarITB already pointed out, is that too many letters have been provided (13 instead of 12). Second, the solution would require two letters which have not been provided. But I wouldn't be surprised if, somewhere along the line, someone has made a bit of a boo-boo, either in the original puzzle or in transcribing it to e-mail.
The clue sounds suspiciously like one of those given in Jumble-type puzzles, the game where you're given a bunch of scrambled words and are required to unscramble them to give you the letters to the final answer. The final answer always turns out to be a play on words, usually a bad pun, and I can usually figure out the answer they're looking for without needing to unscramble all the words.
In this case, given the letters and the clue "What a photographer needs when shooting a sports event", my guess is that the answer is supposed to be "snap judgment". This would fit with most of the letters given, except that it would need a "p" and a "u" instead of an "r", "e", and "g". Try running this past your grandmother and see if it's possible that a slight error has been made somewhere along the way.
-G.
The clue sounds suspiciously like one of those given in Jumble-type puzzles, the game where you're given a bunch of scrambled words and are required to unscramble them to give you the letters to the final answer. The final answer always turns out to be a play on words, usually a bad pun, and I can usually figure out the answer they're looking for without needing to unscramble all the words.
In this case, given the letters and the clue "What a photographer needs when shooting a sports event", my guess is that the answer is supposed to be "snap judgment". This would fit with most of the letters given, except that it would need a "p" and a "u" instead of an "r", "e", and "g". Try running this past your grandmother and see if it's possible that a slight error has been made somewhere along the way.
-G.
Even the mountains
Last not forever:
Someday they, too, shall
Crumble to dust.
Last not forever:
Someday they, too, shall
Crumble to dust.