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Show 1- NORTH DAVIS LEADER, JUNE 3, 1981 DAVIS NEWS JOURNAL; WEEKLY REFLEX - m ByDAVEWIGHAM Awards were given out this past week at the high schools with the top athletes honored. . V TS iVf - -- ... ,iv: ...... ;. ;..oar .aftv vw. v9"cs?? ,. ... j. :Waw. &W,''!Ofii 2Siv..,v.vA ,.,.... .sww.s,v- w,. ' . -- V !!& usr idd w. - By HARTT WIXOM With most of the first weekend angling swarm lifting so many limits from, northern Utah waters, where does an angler go now for the wild trout and wiser hatchery rainbows? ONE ANSWER is back to the same places. But, this time youll have to go where the hordes didnt: farther away from roads, beneath brush and cutbacks, moss beds, wherever it requires extra effort. As past surveys usually show, many of the larger fish are still there. But, despite rain on the opener, most of the anglers remained out long enough to remove the easy ones. g Top bets for the Davis County angler are the Weber River, although high, in brushy sections from Peterson to Morgan, above Echo to Rockport, and above there in the Peoa sector; South Fork of the Ogden above Pineview, Cache streams and reservoirs, in- -, eluding the Little Bear below Hyrum Dam, and many others within an hours drive. Along with Strawberry. Soldier Creek, Rockport, East Ca- nyon and Echo which yielded good trout on weekend one, albeit requiring a mite more gasoline, all are waters where a lunker might be lurking. LOST CREEK Reservoir and creek were particularly popular over the first few day s.. But. the inch trout were there. 2 However, the advantage now is that the angling hordes have passed. There are really more fish per angler from here on out! There is also a tendency now to overlook waters open year around, like Pine-viewhich is yielding some Tobacco may be hazardous to your health if smoked but not if applied to buises, according to a Brigham Young University researcher. DR. RULON S. Francis, a professor of physical therapy in the BYU Human Performance Research Center, said studies he has conducted on rats show that bruises treated with tobacco heal 20 percent faster than untreated bruises. In a report published in maga- zine, the professor said lj was prompted to investigate the healing effects of tobacco after BYU athletic trainer Marv Roberson returned from the 1971 Balkan Games in Yugoslavia with stories of the successful use of commercially manufactured tobacco substances on bruises of basketball players. ROBERSON obtained a few cans for use in the United wgssssss' 4TL a trout lair beneath Angler Terry Anderson works over a likely brown a bridge above Morgan on the Weber River. Weber is high, but fishable. It should be even better after dropping, and clearing. WEBER FISHING "Athletic Training" V ya .,5 electro-shockin- WOODS CROSS also picks the top athletes and this year they selected a senior and sophomore. Senior Kevin Nitzell won the boys award while sophomore Maren Hansen won for the girls. Kevin is heading to USU for football while Maren will remain at Woods Cross. Speaking of awards, did you notice that Darrell Griffith of the Jazz won the NBA Rookie of the Year award. For this Darrell received a $25,000 bonus from the Jazz. It was in his contract. They pointed out that he led the rookies in scoring but failed to mention he also led them in shots taken, shots missed, prayer shots taken, prayer shots missed, minutes played, minutes played without guarding anyone and turnovers. v, s , .. ... av' "Vl''Tf' h lb. trout, and many bass. You can catch large-mout- more of them at Mantua, although rules require release of those over 13 inches. Reason is simple: Mantua is in trouble, and needs all the game fish it can hold for a race against carp and chubs for control of the lake. ECHO HAS always been a sleeper, with more trout in there than most realize. Try the deeper water on west side, inlets and outlet channel. Another hot spot for warm water anglers is Willard Bay, with larger channel cats expected to gorge on any bait tos- sed their way. However, chicken innards and "smell" offerings are preferred by specialists. YOU MIGHT also entice an occasional Willard walleye in deeper water, with strings of crappie a possibility any time. Some of the fresh water inlets to Great Salt Lake also contain oversized carp for the kids who just want to catch anything so long as it fights back. Incidentally, trolling Willard on the eastern Weber River side is not a bad idea, since some big browns are taken that way. But, right now trout is the center of attention. The angler with a boat did well on East Canyon Reservoir on the opener, and there is no reason to think the horn of plenty wont continue there. Baits such as salmon eggs, worms, combinations with swill baits such as marshmallows-chees- e work well on hatchery holdov- ers, and even some hungry browns-cutthroat- s. LATER IN the season, grasshoppers. fresh water shrimp (fished on size 14 hooks), rock rollers found under the darker, flat stream rocks, and lighter fare will be trout favorites. man-mad- e stretches neled and dredged, looking instead for natural areas little disturbed in the shadows, and at this time of year, go deep where heavier-than-norm- currents dump most food. THERE IS one exception to the advice: bridges which have been in place for years seem to be brown trout favorites. : With a saturation campaign aimed at educating anglers, most were not tripped by the trout regulations. But, to repeat, only two creek-rive- r trout over 13 inches are allowed in the toal eight-troper day limit. Also check the proclamation for waters opening July 1, like the Wild Strawberry below Soldier Creek Reservoir. ANOTHER tip for good fishing is right under the nose two-strea- flies-onl- y of metropolitan Salt Lake fishermen: Big and Little Cottonwood Creeks, lakes at the head of both, and Tooele Countys Willow Creeks in the northern Stansbury Moun- tains. They have never been more fishable. The Jordan River from 90th South in either direction is an excellent place to take the youngsters for rainbow trout. Then, too, keep an eye on the high country, including the north slope of the Uinta Mountains which should all be fishable in another two weeks. sick cattle, to be used with judgment and skill. DURING THE middle ages and on into the years immediately preceding the era of modern medicine, tobacco in va- tobacco juice was then painted on the thighs of 40 of the for a period of two weeks. The other 40, the were painted with distilled water. "medicinal" for maladies THE MAGAZINE article says Dr. Francis set up an validated traumatizing unit" to uni- formly bruise the thighs of 80 anesthetized rats. Commercially, distilled speci-men- ts said. Today, tobacco is negatively associated with such notorious maladies as carcinoma and emphysema." He was further intrigued by a statement of Mormon prophet Joseph Smith who, in 1833, said the "tobacco is not for the body, neither for the belly, and is not good for man, but is a herb for bruises and all WOODS CROSS named a new football coach this past week when they named Coach Eldrocher from Highland to take over the Cats. The Ram man was a varsity assistant in football and the head baseball coach at the school. This marks the second man outside the district to be named a head coach with Viewmont naming Mark Pearce several months ago. Pearce comes from Bear River High. SEEMS TO me the track and field coaches need to put their heads together and come up with a different date for their state meet. Most of them complain that the fast athletes are playing baseball and that their state tournament finals are the same Saturday as the track. Seems logical to move the track and get these athletes running. Now is the time for all these high school athletes to take it easy for the summer right? Wrong. Now they get to go to football camps, basketball camps and play in the summer baseball leagues. Its no wonder they cant find employment when theyre gone most of the time. Pressure By PETE FRITICHIE 'TJTnB Baseball owners are holding firm and are hoping Marvin Miller will decide that, this time, he has pushed too hard, without enough compromi- sing. BUT MARVIN has fooled them before and in the past a few owners have always been unable to stand the pressure, capitulating at the very last minute. They may happen again this year, of course, but as of now it looks like negotiations will go on up to the 29th. Theres likely to be a settlement at the last mintue or a strike. If its a strike, its expected, now, to be short. That is, the owners are not likely to risk losing too much. THE BETTING, then, is on a strike of short duration. That may leave the final answer to 1983, when the contract expires and a new one is written. Owners are now saying thats when theyll take a firm stand and hold out against a strike for the whole ' year, if necessary. Whether they can do this or not is the question since all must stick together to make the position effective. Surprisingly, players have in recent years stuck together better than the owners, and thats why super salaries have the owners over a barrel today. multi-y- ear IR THE The excitement of the high school athletic year is over. The last second shot at the buzzer, scoring the winning the run, making the great play are now all memories. The glory of those moments, the excitement of high school sports is only as real as your memory. But now, for the first time, to help you share and e those moments of glory, the Davis County Clipper is offering vivid color pictures of those exciting athletic re-liv- achievements. you played in any of the following games, maybe you have been "caught in the action." If Bountiful vs. Davis State Soccer Final Bountiful State Basketball Bountiful vs. Viewmont State Baseball Viewmont State Basketball C.learfield State Basketball Clearfield Track The professor said further research needs to be done to determine exactly what it is in Nicotiana tabacum that causes the healing. It may be due to one of several alkaloids, but because so little research has been done, "one can only theorize as to the reason," he stated. (Order from the Layton Office) DR. FRANCIS is conducting additional research to deter- mine the effectiveness of tobacco compared with traditional mustard and linseed poultices and other bruise ranging from rheumatic pains to toothache, the professor JUST WISH someone who played a little better team ball could have won. I dont blame Darrell for gunning the ball when $25,000 is on the line. David Draper, the Cross pitcher, is back in town and had a sad tale to tell. Seems like the chan- States, and after they ran out, he began making his own tobacco poultices. When Dr. Francis decided to scientifically evaluate the effect of tobacco on healing, he was surprised to find practically no previous research on the subject. rious forms was employed as a Baseball Managers And The With wet weather, nigh crawlers wont be difficult after dark on most golf courses, in rose garden soil, and even back lawns. Most anglers also did fairly well on Birch Creek Reservoir, Woodruff Creek, and reservoir, et all, off the beaten track. There are overlooked brown trout in South Fork of the Ogden, and for that matter, on local creeks. But, avoid any AT BOUNTIFUL High the only top award is the Hale Award which is given to the outstanding male athlete, usually a senior. This year Mike Woodbury won. Mike played football, basketball and track for the Braves and is headed to BYU for football. At Viewmont they go beyond the athletic field and pick what they term as exemplary athletes. This includes scholarship, leadership and athletic ability. To be elibible, an athlete must have at least a 3.0 gpa. The male winner was Robert Yancey, a swimmer and water polo player. The female, vote was a tie with Paula Johnson and JoyLynn Williams both being honored. club he was with, Utah Technical College, coached star Dave Nelson had a little probby lem with a player. Draper reports that going into the final weekend of league play his club was only one game behind the leaders, Dixie, and had a good shot at winning all four of their remaining games and going onto the playoffs. Dave Nelson is clear, he called the college from which the records came and was told the guy was legit. What happened was the guy took 12 hours but failed three of them. They gave Dave the guys GPA over the phone for nine hours, they should have counted the other three which made him ineligible. The thing that gets you wondering is why the kid didnt say anything, after all you have to figure he knew which classes he failed and what his GPA was. BOTH THE number of heal-- . ing cells (granular white blood cells, lymphocytes, plasma cells, macrophages, etc.) and the size of the bruises were monitored. Dr. Francis discotisvered that tobacco-treatesue contained 20 percent more healing cells and the size of the bruises decreased 20 percent d faster than in the tissue. d treatments. Familiar Mrs. Well, what excuse can you offer for coming home this hour of the night? Chief Well, I was playing golf with some friends. Mrs. At 2 a.m,? Chief Sure. We used used night clubs. Just stop to the Davis County Clipper, look over the pictures and order your memories. YOU'LL NEVER GROW TIRED OF THESE PICTURES. Prices begin at $2. In |