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Show 4 ' r 5 . H L rt - f r' J J . : ' I r v i Aw ! i , 'its .I . i ijiI u t a". 18 deliver mum 1 i 1 m v Uiri 1 r ' , r ' ' Iil'if id ,j 1 I y r ; (irv as! f ! I ant g a ' 1 ( ast n an r av t lit) - t ! u , ! i auJ bu 6 s s;.i.ki sn an fur "u a tors s Pu1 J li i e of'. r I r i I P i It v r in 0,1 1 u i w , , . , t , i tie f n " j a s tiring i Pa i j r t ) ( t I an y J i t i' Ins ai i 'n t 1 r a v tun s w r t hi mi turn !i i s a It e ass cessive i arrivi at this 1 a ' f i - i MtNf.Tt'N lasts ( mint communities signed a nun binding local annexation ments moetirg Nov ju IIB I P( . ii.- - mayors of most agreement during their regular Council of Govern 15 THRTE mayors didn't sign the agreement either be ause their councils were opposed nr hadn't decided on the mat High quarterback Mark Vigil (10) Ls about to be smothered by West Highs Craig Child (78), Handy Peterson (76) and Brian Johansson (77) Lancers, howevt r, bounced bac k to defeat West and win the State 1978 Class Lay-to- LAYTGiJ WINS STATE 4-- A By DAVE WIGHAM - SALT LAKE CITY After years of frustrations and near things, the Layton football team finally came away with the big trophy last Friday, as the Lancers defeated the West in front High Panthers of a large crowd. 28-2- 1 WEST WAS the third Salt Lake team the Lancers had to beat in order to win the 4 A title. For a while it looked as if the entire tournament was set up for the Lancers to take on all comers from Region Three. First in the quarterfinals the Lancers had a field day in beating the third place club from Region Three-Ea- st Then last week in the semifinal game the Lancers did their thing against the two-tim- e defending state champion Skyline club ASIDE from dominating both their two previous opponents, the experts were still picking West, who else, to win the crown It never happened The Panthers started out the game as if they were going to prove that their preseason win over the Lancers was no fluke, as they tixik the opening kickoff 68 yards down to the Layton four yard line JUST AS the Lancer faithfuls were willing to concede a touchdown, defensive back Scott Call stepped in front of a would-b- e receiver and picked off a pass in the end zone to end the West threat From then on in the first quarter both clubs seemed to be testing one another to try and find a weakness Near the end of the quarter the Lancers did something they're not known for, pass the ball A thirty yard pass to Robert Cameron and a twenty yard screen pass to Dave Burke put the Lancers in business on the Panther 32 yard line. ON FIRST down quarterback Mark Vigil handed off to fullback Todd Stapley who bolted off right tackle for a touchdown. Once Stapley cleared the line of scrimmage Council Approves Right Of IJay For Layton Hills Pali LAYTON - Transfer of part of the old Bamberger railroad right of way from Layton to developers of Layton Hills Mall has been approved by the Layton City Council. THE MAJORITY will probably be utilized for parking, said Mayor Lewis G. Shields. The state will deed the northwest corner along the mall property along the freeway to Highway 232 to Layton and then we give it to Homco. The mayor said he could see no problem with the action and added that it had been, cleared through City Attorney Bruce Barton. IN OTHER action, the council opted to interview area candidates for position of e engineer Dec. 14 There are nine applicants from the Wasatch Front. The position involves taking supervision of the city's water department. The council also set a meeting with the planning commission for Nov. 30 to discuss the recently completed Hill Air Force Base Noise Study and its implications for adjacent property. Architect-cit- y planner Ken Millard and state officials will also be to attend the meeting prompted by a letter from a full-tim- Layton resident .clarification, tb seeking football championship. won Stapley then changed shoes and kicked the fust of four extra points to give the Lancers a 7 0 lead at the end of the first period IN THE second period the Layton offensive line, Ehm, Flint, Overly, Roath, Gray and company took control of the game as the Lancers put together one of their now famous grind em out scoring drives With Burke, Vigil and Stapley taking turns with the ball the Lancers soon found themselves on the Panther two yard line Again Stapley was called on and the likeable senior responded with his second touchdown of the day The extra point was good and Layton was cruising with a lead 14-- 0 WEST DIDNT get whera they did without some talent though, and the Panthers werent going to go down without a fight With just under three minutes left in the half, the West club struck for paydirt with Reggie Wilson going 54 yards with a screen pass The extra point was good and it was 14-- and a new ballgame For some unknown reason the Lancers couldnt do much right in the third period while the Panthers tied the score and even went ahead thanks to some errors on the part of the Lancers In fact on the day the Lancers fumbled four times and lost three of them which was one reason the game was so close. minutes left junior quarterback Mark Vigil had the club 'rolling near midfield On second down he went down the line of scrimmage like any other option play and vc hen he gathered a crowd he smartly lateraled to Burke w ho outran the defense for the touchdown Stapleys foot gave the Lancers a tie 1 STAUNCH A 1 THF AGREEMENT will result in mayors presenting annexation proposals to all COG members and will allow for coordination, especially between cities of close proximity such as North Salt Lake, Woods Cross and West Bountiful or Fruit Heights and Kaysvtlle County Planning Director Joe Moore said his office would cooperate in preparing go tnrough " THE MATTER has been undt r discussion for several momhs and Mayor Boyd Thurgood indicated he want understand these word gamts Among features of the agreement COG will be notified of annexations with affected cities submitting a uipv of the annexation petition, plat or map with description of proposed annexation area, statement listing purpose for annexation and an outline of the city's timetable to provide services to the area IN OTHER business, the mayors approved an enaf- gineering services study fecting West Davis County four-lan- e where the West Valley freeway is planned for completion before the year 2000 turnovers this game wouldnt have been close. The Lancer runners rolled up 288 44 carries, Stapley Burke (94) and Vigil while the Panther yards m (103), (91) runners could only muster 41 yards on 32 attempts Passing the Panthers fared better, but in total offense the Lancers won the battle 341-22- MANY WEST observers who had witnessed the West couldn't victory in believe the difference m the pre-seas- Layton team. That comes from coaching and the Lancer coaches along with the players should take a bow. After all theyre the best football school in the state. rg In f Ul p i ! i 'll, i In, t . e i g S., , i , i 1' iti n Vi. i i s s ! n i as' I By TOM BUSSELBERG fathers in Sunset appear to be looking favorably to development of a supermarket and small commercial area just off Highway 126 between 2300 and 2400 North, Mayor Norman Sant said. SUNSET -- - City of Bowin Kaysvtlle has discussed plans for a food market in that area within the next year. Some rezomng and adjustments would be necessary because all of the area is not presently zoned commerDICK Bowman man's Market council approved purchase of two additional bullet-proo- f vests for the police department The police department has become very concerned with another recent shooting in an apartment complex where bullets went into adjoining apartments and hit a bystander and the police had to come in, Mayor Sant said. "We already have two bullet proof vests but by buying two more we can have one tn four vehicles. They cost about $110 each, he said, tb cial, Mayor Sant said It would be the first food market in the northern part of Sunset. The city council has also received positive news in the form of a small surplus in II vuidivjot is i " res, j t ,ur tha ' 'c untrai nrx t a j i 'e tx r ds or ti'he-fvs grits to ms me Pa- - The freeway will tentatively run from the Sd.t lake Inter national Airport akr.g the present airport road through Davis ( ounty into Weber ( nuntv Bunding for the $160,000 study, expected to uke one ear, will come from the county's road collector funds Actual freeway construction will be paid by state and federal highway funds, said County Commissioner Glen Flint HE SAID actum was necesnow because builders may want to build in areas where the freeway might be built And Mayor Lov Blake of West Point said, "Either we make plans for this or well have houses sary Commissioner Flint said cities could hold action on subdivision or other projects for up to one year. The study will designate a probable route and would enable the county to buy the right of way as far as is possible with existing funds Cities could then plan for future needs with knowledge of the proposed freeway incorporated in their plans budget funds, the mayor said. The auditing firm of James Poulsen and 1977-7- 8 Dugger of Ogden reported a surplus of $7,000 m the nearly s of a million budget that ran from July 1, 1977 - June 30, 1978. three-quarter- IN OTHER action, the Mr. R. -- Do you tell your wife everything? Mr. Z. -- It isnt necessary. She knows everything. THE RIGHT KIND He certainly made an after-dinn- unusually good speech. What did he say? Waiter, give me check. the e uni t s is hired ",1 nil's IS t , 'i punsiti i i - 1 t it i : v if .,r IIR V M f d st u s s mi i.i i .1 ret urn mi nd .1 v si ra! ri v is t be rtia le in "ir pi m d ri rti'isal ord ti in. i 1 e or.) e w ul n e up f ir a ! t e Ion 1 J i I xs oiitu il rt s r i in i p e res h rts i f u r c ail en louraged to attifJ a mass rieetirg on the t it s j r- post d Mas'er Plan The mis 'mg w.ll he h Id (mm 7 (n at the! ( King S huol dn g in N is last I a v tun ipm HE SAID some action is sxm m the West Gen r.ie area ir. lavun to 1J North in Clinton because fatmers are pushing Weber Basin Water Conservancy District for construction of a canal The county should purchase land for a freeway right-o- f way from Weber Basin and could use dirt removed for the canal in road base It may not be needed f ir 10 years but otherwise we would need to buy more dirt 1) Speaking specifically oi Bluff Road, the commissioner said that road could be utilized with in the new freeway feel added for a four-lan- e road 40 IN OTHER business the mayors approved an application to the state from Clinton for a juvenile crime preven- tion program costing $17,777 Mayor Keith Cisney said 76 percent of his citys crime is committed by juveniles The funds would allow hiring a person to work with juveniles in school and athletic programs and a vehicle would be rented tb Layton 0iays fezoninn Of Tuo Of THE FIRST parcel contains acres owned by Jack Van Dehie located west of U S. 4 62 Highway 89 and east of Diamond Oaks Subdivision. Zoning was changed from residential suburban, to l, allowing single family R-R-- dwellings. In requesting the change Property connecting onto Highway 89 by that and adjacent subdivisions would create a heavy traffic problem with high numbers of cars trying simultaneously to gain access to the road. THE OTHER rezomng involved about one acre at West Gentile and King streets north of Cook subdivision and south of the Union Pacific tracks Requested by Pete Fondano, action changed for a subdivision, Mr. said, The land is quite flat compared to adjacent areas and water and sewer will be tied into adjacent systems Most of the surrounding property is zoned R-- zoning from A, agricultural, to CP3, commercial. A steel building for use by a contracting firm will be built on the site There was no opposition to either proposal, tb WHILE BOTH zonings permit residential uses, parcels allowed in must be larger than those for l. .R-- S lots must contain 15,000 square feet minimum, or just over THE WEEKLY REFLEX 197 B". North Main SL Layton Van-Deh- R-- A HUSBAND SPARED W I 4, an of ii f A ( R-- S e ! r , I II LAYTON Approval has been granted for rezomng of two pieces of property by the Layton City Council. h i ii t n II I, t hi ; n t st Was, I 'I ' Ml ild em mrii,' s n I g tljs 1. SM S d n s ul f i I ' i, a w ' I . s i - I x s! a J, q a. r s h ii ' id i 'h'li nijr in W ' t in s i il! d"i nd r n nil l , e i - u o ' . !, I ' f ml luti biJ"' u . Pisces 28-2- own a, it le i m' nt would rt (a ed to pet it resolved when he said, We should either agree on it or drop the whole thing If the intent is there, I can t tic holes the Lancers soon found themselves on the Panther ten yard line Key play in the drive was a 32 yard jaunt by Stapley off right tackle again On first down Vigil went to his right, faked the pitch and turned up field to paydirt Fxtra point was good and the Layton club ready celebrate yet, not after past years But this time the Lancers got the ball back when Brandon Flint sacked the West quarterback for a loss on fourth down. Layton simply kept control of the ball for the next two minutes and the state championship was theirs STATISTICS bear out the fact that if it werent for their ' Mayor Duane Johnson of bast ayton declined signing because his council had tabled the proposal for further study Layton defense held West and when the offense got their hands on the ball they scored winning points. With Vigil and company running through gigan- NO LAYTON fan was Layton LAYTONS players, had especially the seniors,near-misses had enough of those and they werent pionship up Trailing by seven with eight to THE PANTHERS tied the score on a 12 yard scoring pass from Jeff Tttmus to Wilson, then they went ahead a about to give this cham- led 7 after recovering Robert Mayors Pa'mquist of North Salt lake and Gar Elison of kavsville said thev favored the agreement but weren't given approval to sign bs the r councils it was a foot r'ate betwc en him and two defenders, Stapley fumble on the Lancer three yard line when Randy Schrieter scored. Fear struck the hearts of the Layton backerswas this to be another near miss? ter t f a,r 1 ' is I it m ' i pi s , ' , : Tiff COl M 1 i a w i di a ' x i il II X .11 Si i ; r t t e ri a -i e an r r nor r I r x tot lt t till ! 1 i ini t'l.r mi !. ) t', it'll u' 11 II Pis 1 maps and (ompilmg information for presentation if t. ' n su'fint nt notu e prior lo fh meetings We hope this will hi Ip give an ind'cation of what is going on (in the i mints ) and probably !h) peril m of the annexation will BUS' B) TC.M - h- i studv as' i tal ai i mints v i. r Jut nsun explain d it. w is n s arrf, ri! im ul ret or d i to dt ter J P'e bi s are ri ally x s , t He i xpiain the , s m the uu'tv fun is a ' of p ist mistakt s in - , fast t ' if r tnitifiue a . a a il bv Pr f.rst of l - fv P'l fin s rn rir g sU.J wilt) i i i e i a st ! k V ? (X , (i it la t? i I rid H u fi) I I Wruul .i ' u i Si Hun i i "u , r- - nil Mtltm r i . (I - . h ' ) Lx Vx V aX ' ' T J r i ks M H u "n i i i Ii . r i s i art h m s ( r mi i ! i , r III f I u i . r''X I , v ( ' u li ACCORDING I '1 g r fc I t a 1 h 1 4n u X M 4 i ( a . inn 1 WuM h , I v i W nr-n- p if y i! in irufn s It mint! i f T - t vV J j fci J V i ( e Hun KV ( a I i irii t DU Hi f j . it !'U M ' Till Hi' i j x .1 , i f , tiv ' ) i . . if m , . , gist r - I. M .X rJ -- v j .X . H1 '"v . , (it'ii 'i' 14 with biuitli iv U , i t r - ill,-!,.,- 1 , ! i ) i i , m V. v r L XJi X t.JUJ v n I . u i ll'l-- v J id --- -- I1- I m f ' : ' r fj 1 acre without animals and 20,000 square feet, or acre, with animals. l zoning allows one-thir- d one-ha- lf R-- 12,000 square foot lots. Both types of lots must have 100 foot frontages In approving the rezomng, council members said they would like to see road connections onto Antelope Drive which presently terminates iwest of the site. They felt that ie Phone 376-913- 3 Pubtlabad Weakly by CUPPER PUBLISHING CO. John Stahla, Jr., Publisher Second Class Postage Paid At Layton, Utah SUBSCRIPTION $4.50 per year CM of Stale Subscription SS JO Overseas Sibscrtption SI 5.00 (Payable In Advance) |