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Show Wednesdoy, April 11, 19S4 Vemfll ExpfCSS 25 .fO Women's Basketball Tournament, Thusday. Inter-Tribal Sports I V j ( .1 1 beat the Southern Ute Indians for first place honors. I I ( I IT'S OFF to the races and two points for Big O's Sandy DuShane, right, during a second round basketball contest in the All Indian Oregon fie cam wins tournament The Inter-Tribal Sports of Warm Springs, Oregon thumped the Southern Ute Indian Chiefs 80 to 30 Saturday in the championship game in the All Indian In-dian Women's Basketball Tournament at the Multi-Purpose Building in Fort Duchesne. A 36 to 14 lead was grabbed by the Inter-Tribal Sports in the first half. Wilma Gardner and Kathy Pretty Weasel led the Inter-Tribal team with eight points each in the first half. Gardner fired in four field goals and Pretty Weasel popped in three field goals and two free throws. Sarah Robinson and Pam Littlewolf scored seven points each in the first half for the Inter-Tribal Sports team. Suzie Carlson added four points. The top Southern Ute Indian scorer in the first half was Sandra Navaho at six points on three field goals. Delia Thomas added four points. Lorranie Begay and Vodene Whiteskunk scored two counters each. Oregon's Inter-Tribal Sports outscored the Southern Ute Indians, 44 to 16 in the second half. Gardner led III iffiti HWOT5 1 jcf' . B ft' Mi the Oregon team in the second half with 14 points on seven field goals and Carlson pumped in six field goals for 12 counters. Pretty Weasel added eight points on four field goals and Robinson Robin-son and Littlewolf scored six counters each. Begay, Navaho, Thomas and Whiteskunk led the SUI team in the second se-cond half with four points each. Gardner of the Inter-Tribal Sports was the top scorer at 22 points. She pumped in 11 field goals. Pretty Weasel and Carlson added 16 points. Carlson popped in eight field goals and was 0 for 1 at the foul line. Pretty Weasel fired in seven field goals and hit 2 out of 2 free throws. Robinson and Littlewolf scored 13 points. Robinson fired in six field goals and hit 1 out of 3 free throws. Littlewolf put in six field goals and hit 1 out of 2 free throws. Navaho was the top SUI scorer at ten points on five field goals. Thomas added eight points. Begay and Whiteskunk scored six points each. The Inter-Tribal Sports team had a bye in the first round and then beat the Ute Jayhawks, 97-48, in a second round game. The Inter-Tribal team downed Nevada Bullshead and advanced into the title game with a win over the SUI Chiefs. First round game wins were netted by the Ute Jayhawks, Jicarillas, New Mexico and SUI Chiefs. The Jayhawks beat the Provo Eagles and Jicarillas downed the Rookies. The SUI Chiefs defeated the Randlett Eagles. Nevada Bullshead toppled the U & 0 Pacers in a second round game and Big 0 downed down-ed Jicarillas. SUI Chief beat the Pacers and Big 0. The Inter-Tribal team downed SUI Chiefs for first place. Nevada Bullshead placed third on a 6046 loss to SUI Chiefs. Begay led the Chiefs with 16 points and Ivy Christy Chris-ty was the top Nevada scorer at 25 counters. Big 0 of Fort Duchesne placed plac-ed fourth on a loss to Nevada Bullshead. Big 0 beat Jicarillas to reach the battle for second and third place. The Nevada Pacers placed fifth on a win over Jicarillas. The Jicarillas team nabbed sixth. BIG 0 's Gay St. Clair, right, receives heavy pressure from an enemy hoopster. The Big 0 team placed fourth and Inter-Tribal Sports of Warm Springs, Oregon nabbed first place in the All Indian In-dian Women's Basketball Tournament in Fort Duchesne last week. Coming Sports Events Baseball, Uintah at Timpview April 14 Baseball, Provo at Uintah April 18 Uintah Baseball, Union vs. Utes in Vernal April 24 UHS Baseball, Utes at Duchesne April 25 Baseball, Uintah at American Fork April 28 UTE RUNNER Alec Clark, left, darts down the track during the medley relay event at a track meet in Vernal. If you've tried everything and still can't moke ends meet, raj TIT ITEM WWT ADSI .Hn Wait Ad cotti m SMALL.. Vernal Express Call 789-3511 Sports Calendar net SUNDAY (CBS) SPORTS SATURDAY Boxing: 12-round WBC Super Lightweight bout between defending champion Bill Costello and Ronnie Ron-nie Shields; Tim Ryan and Gil Clancy provide live commentary from Municipal Auditorium in Kingston. Kings-ton. New York. Also: "Paris-Roubaix Bicycle Race," a grueling one-day, 173-mile race from Paris Par-is to Roubaix, France, reported live by John Tesh. (CBS) GOLF Final-round live coverage of the 48th Master Golf Tournament, with Pat Summerall, Ken Venturi, Frank Glieber, Ben Wrighl, Steve Melnyk, Verne Lundquist, Clive Clark, Gary Bender and Bob Murphy Mur-phy reporting and Brent Musburger as host, from Augusta National Country Club in Georgia. . (NBC) TENNIS Coverage of the Twelfth Annual Family Circle Cup women's championship round from Sea Pines Racket Club in Hilton Head, South Carolina. Hosts are Dick Enberg and Bud Collins. (NBC) SPORTSWORLD Highlights: Boxing: live coverage of scheduled 15-round 15-round International Boxing Federation lightweight championship bout between Charlie "Choo Choo" Brown and Cornelius Boza-Edwards from Atlantic City, New Jersey. Also: World's Strongest Men competition on tape from Magic Mountain, California. Califor-nia. (ABC) THE AMERICAN SPORTSMAN (ABC) USFL FOOTBALL SATURDAY ; (NBC) TENNIS Semifinal action of the 1984 NutraSweet WTA Championships from Amelia Island, Florida, with hosts Dick Enberg and Bud Collins. (NBC) BASEBALL New York Mets at Philadelphia Phillies or San Diego Padres at Los Angeles Dodgers. (ABC) 8P0RTSBEAT (ABC) PRO BOWLERS' TOUR (ABC) WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS (CBS) GOLF Third-round coverage of the $350,000 Heritage Golf Classic with Pat Summerall, Ken Venluri, Ben Wright, Steve Melnyk, Clive Clark, Frank Glieber and Tom Weiskopf providing live commentary from Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina. (CBS) NBA BASKETBALL PLAYOFFS First weekend of the 1984 NBA playoffs (best of five series) . STRIKE In case anyone noticed, about the only time ABC took out from its ice-to-ice coverage of the winter Olympic games (aside from the Saturday morning cartoons) was to present the weekly "Professional "Pro-fessional Bowlers Tour." Why the network bow to the professional bowlers? It could be the high ratings of the bowling show, or it could be because of its expert bowling commentator, Nelson Burton Jr., who this year marks his 10th consecutive year with the touring show. Actually, Burton had been just about to retire from competitive bowling when ABC asked him to try out for the master's chair in 1975, replacing the late Billy Welu. He's been in that spot ever since. As he critiques the various bowling stances and the players' performances, Burton is in a unique position compared to other sports commentators. Unlike the former jocks and managers on many sports shows, Nelson not only analyzes his fellow bowlers, but also competes with and against them he bowls in about half the big professional tournaments. tour-naments. "I have tried to call the action as fairly as possible without being overly critical, unless the action calls for criticism," the Professional Bowling League hall-of-famer says. "People I'm probably most critical of are those I'm closest to. "For instance, there's Marshall Holman. We have become pretty good friends in the last couple of years. I remember when he came up to me after he had bowled poorly and said, 'You know, I watched the tape ol the show and you were hard on me, but I deserved it,' "That's typical of the reaction I get from other bowlers, too," he says. How do the other guys "get back" at him? "It seems they always try harder against me," he says, laughing. "They must say, 'I've got Burton coming up and I better play a little harder because I don't want him to say anything bad about me.'" Compulofl n HJIP JLk ' ,r-,. UXP.,, C.MtA- S, . Business Let us help you with your move. BASIN MOVING & STORAGE ROOSEVELT 722-5555 Wade Needles |