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Show Page Eight - The Springville Herald - January 1992 SPORTS Jr. shooters start Springville Jr. Shooters started their season competition last week with a practice air rifle match and a .22 rimfire practice match. These matches were open to the state. Springville Jr. Shooters did very well. In the air rifle competition, Kabe Barton placed first, John Tobler placed second and Lisa Warnock placed 3rd in the junior division. Sub-juniors included Weston Barton, 1st place; Jacob Killpack, 2nd place; and Chad Marshall, 3rd place. In the .22 rifle match, teams from University of Utah, Brig-ham Brig-ham Young University and Springville Spr-ingville Jr. Rifle Club competed. Intermediate team members from Springville included: Kabe Barton, Bar-ton, John Tobler, Liza Warnock and Suzzane Warnock. Sub-Junior team members are Weston Barton and Jacob Killpack. Scores posted were U of U, 13942400; BYU, 16612400; Springville Jrs. SHS Wrestling The Springville High School grapplers had a very positive week. Highlights of last week's competition are as follows: As a team, SHS lost to the Redmen, but Mike Robinson (who is ranked 3rd in the state) faced an opponent from Cedar City who was ranked 2nd in the state in his weight, and Mike won! John Deveraux took first at the American Fork Tourney, and was voted by the opposing coaches coach-es as the tourneys most outstanding outstand-ing wrestler of the eight team tournament. This is a great award and it speaks of John's wrestling ability. Today the team faces Spanish Fork, one of Springville's region rivals. The JV matches will start at 5:30 p.m. and the varsity will start at 7 p.m. Friday the team will travel to St. George for the Pineview Tourney. The coaches encourage everyone to come and support the Devils at their home meet. This week's Outstanding Wrestler of the Week is John Deveraux. This is Johns senior year, and it has become apparent that he is going to make the most of his last year. Congratulations John! The JV Outstanding Wrestler of the Week is Melvin Attwood. Melvin placed 3rd in the JV Caveman tourney last week. This is the second time that Melvin has been awarded this recognition. It shows that he is a leader. Congratulations Con-gratulations Melvin! Early Bird Ladies January 6, 1992 League Standings TEAM W L Mulletts 25 7 Brailsfords 24 8 H.E. Nite Crawlers 19 13 Steiners 17 15 Vaud Hanks 14 18 E.D. Brain 12 20 J.J.'s Too 12 20 Individual High Series Creeper 13-801 g8 Art City Auto Supply 14 North Main Springville 489-3666 17862400 to capture the winning title. Other highlights of the match included that the top shooters shoot-ers of BYU were previous members mem-bers of Springville's Jr. Shooting Club and Springville's Sub-Junior Shooters posted higher scores than some of the shooters from the universities. The Springville shooters are presently shooting a nine-week match with other shooters in the state. Early scores as compared to last year's, indicate wining teams and individuals from Springville. The Junior Olympic Air Rifle and Rimfire matches will be held at the end of the month with teams from Utah and Idaho participating. par-ticipating. Team Coaches Karl Barton, Dean Hutchison and Donna Warnock War-nock are very optimistic with this year's shooters. Top shooters in the stateregion area will again be from the Springville shooters. John Deveraux Melvin Atwood Julie Bird, Mullets, 513; Deb-bieGatley, Deb-bieGatley, Nite Crawlers, 498; Jo Cutler.Steiners, 478 High Team Game Brailsfords, 637; Nite Crawlers, 632;Steiners, 626 Individual High Game Julie Bird, Mulletts, 180; Jo Cutler, Steiners, 179; Jeri Linsday, Brains, 178. i - cS rU t Li 1 Former resident doing ive in Ohio sports Starting as point guard for the Springboro High School Panthers in Ohio this year is Sophomore Chris Christensen, former Map-leton Map-leton resident and Springville student. Returning from an international inter-national basketball sports exchange ex-change in Shanghai, China this summer, Chris is leading the team in scoring, averaging 12 points per game. He also leads the team in assists. Chris has also recently been selected as a member of the Cincinnati Storm Club Baseball Team for 1992. Four weeks of tryouts were conducted at Haub-ner Haub-ner Field in Cincinnati, where Chris successfully competed with area athletes to be one of 15 y ung men selected to play with the amateur club this spring. The boys signed baseball contracts and will receive extensive regional region-al exposure. The Cincinnati Storm Club won the 1992 World Series in the 16-18 year old league, and recently re-cently participated in a host dinner din-ner with the World Champion Minnesota Twins and the President Presi-dent of the United States. The club has produced several major league players including Barry Larkin, Dave Parker, Roger McDowell and Ron Ostler. Pool News Lifeguard Training Course will be offered starting Thurs., Jan. 23 at 6:30 p.m. Prerequisites for this course are: you must be 15 years of age; be able to swim a quarter of a mile using the four basic strokes; know front crawl, side stroke, breaststroke and elementary backstroke; you must be able to do a standing front dive; tread water for one minute; surface dive to a depth of eight feet; and swim 20 feet underwater. underwa-ter. lifeguard Training is now required for all pools in the state. Classes will run Thursdays, 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. and Saturday mornings morn-ings from 8 to 1 1 a.m. for 30 hours. A CPR and Standard First Aid Class will be offered at the end of the course, these are required to receive certification. You must pre-register at the pool and pay your fees. For more information call 489-2731 489-2731 from 6 to 10 am. or 3 to 9 p.m., Monday through Friday, or stop by the pool at 1015 East 900 South during the above listed hours. Hunter education instructor training Training for new Hunter Education instructors will be given at the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources office at 1115 North Main Street in Springville. The six certification classes are at 7 p.m., Jan. 22, 29 and Feb. 5, 12, 19 and 26. Call 489-5678 to register for the training. Instructor certification qualifies quali-fies people to teach basic hunter education, safety and outdoor ethics. The course is required by Utah law of all young hunters born after 1965. Lenny Rees, State Hunter Education Training Specialist, will conduct the course. He said the training is an excellent opportunity oppor-tunity for men and women to help young people understand their outdoor responsibilities and recreational recre-ational safety. For more information contact Ray Remond, 489-5678. Snowmobiler's Snowmobilers' seeking information infor-mation on snowmobile laws and state's "Know Before You Go!" operator certification course can find it by calling the Utah Division Divi-sion of Parks and Recreation. The division's Off-Highway Vehicle (OHV) Information Center Cen-ter is staffed Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The center's statewide number for those living outside Salt Lake is 1-800-OHV-RIDE (648-7433). "We're here to answer people's peo-ple's questions about off-highway vehicle riding in Utah," said OHV Training Specialist Garth Taylor. Division personnel can answer questions about snowmo-biling snowmo-biling laws, and also provide information about the "Know Before You go!" operator certification certifi-cation course. "The course is required for all children between the ages of eight and 15 before they can operate any type of OHV on public land," Taylor said. Class materials and information about the class are available by calling the two telephone tele-phone numbers. Chris Christensen Chris will play middle infield for the team at shortstop and second base. The 1992 team will travel to Florida, Alabama, Tennessee Ten-nessee and Kentucky for competition, competi-tion, as well as playing four to five games every week in Ohio. Chris is the son of Lee and Jeanene Christensen, former residents of Mapleton. he is the grandson of Neal and Joan Thorpe of Salem and Nelda Christensen Chr-istensen of Spanish Fork. School lunch Wed., Jan. 15 Manager's Choice Thurs., Jan. 16 Barbecue hamburger on a bun, potato wedges, chocolate chip cookie and milk. Fri., Jan. 17 Tacos, fries, catsup, chilled applesauce, sweet roll and milk. Mon., Jan. 20 NO SCHOOL Tues., Jan. 21 Barbecue rib sandwich, french fires, catsup, finger foods, snick-erdoodle snick-erdoodle cookie and milk. DWR unviels proposal for new deer hunting license Division of Wildlife Resources Director Tim Provan will submit a proposal to the Utah,r State Legislature to remove the deer tag from both the big game hunting hunt-ing and combination licenses. The old hunting license would be replaced by a new "basic big game hunting license" which would sell for $5. A basic combination combi-nation license for both hunting and fishing would be available for $25. Deer tags would be sold separately sepa-rately at an additional cost, similar simi-lar to how elk and other big game permits are sold now. Deer hunting hunt-ing fees would be adjusted so that income from deer hunters would remain "revenue neutral". In other words, there would be no net income loss to the Division of Wildlife Resources as a result of these changes. To accomplish this, the total cost to hunt mule deer during the 1993 general season rifle deer hunt would increase by $4, from $15 to $19. Combination license holders would pay a total of $39. Serviceman's news Pvt. Michael L. Faux has completed basic training at Fork Jackson, Columbia, SC. He is the son of Carolyn and Eugene L. Faux of Springville and is a 1990 graduate of Springville High School. One termite queen produces about half a billion offspring during her lifetime. A Free Family Life Education Course Developing Responsible Children With funding support from Alpine Provo and Nebo School Districts Learn seven proven keys to raising happy, capable children 3t Gafering Place Common questions on little known wildlife lows Recently there have been a few calls into the wildlife office asking about hunting privileges for juveniles. Most of the questions ques-tions are on what age they can legally hunt, what can they hunt, what licenses and permits they need and if they need adult supervision. super-vision. What is the legal hunting age? Juveniles can legally hunt upland game and migratory birds such as waterfowl and doves at age 12 and big game if they turn age 14 during the year. They need to have completed a hunter education course prior to applying for a license. A person under the age of 12 is not permitted to hunt for protected wildlife except as provided by the wildlife board. This provision only applies to a few nongame mammals Do juveniles need supervision? Children under 14 need to be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian or another responsible person twenty-one years or older who is approved by his parent or legal guardian while hunting. "Accompanied" means the adult needs to be within both visual and verbal communication distance at all times for the purpose of advising advis-ing and assisting. While hunting big game, a hunter between 14 and 16 must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian, the same way those under 14 must be accompanied. accompa-nied. For other game or protected wildlife, hunters between 14 and 16 just need to be accompanied by an adult or a person twenty-one twenty-one or older while hunting. What about when hunting for jackrabbits, coyotes and raccoons which are protected? The term "hunting" means to take or pursue any reptile, amphibian, am-phibian, bird or mammal by any means. So this term includes any animal and any means such as firearms, bows and arrows, BB The cost for deer archery and deer muzzleloader rifle hunting fees would be reduced from current levels. The change was recommended by the Board of Big Game Control Con-trol after a 1991 survey of hunters hunt-ers revealed that hunter crowding during the general season deer hunt was a major concern. The proposed change would reduce hunter crowding on the rifle deer hunt and allow for more flexibility flexibili-ty in deer management. A choose-your-hunt deer management manage-ment strategy will be implemented implement-ed in 1993 to more evenly distribute distrib-ute hunters and reduce the total number of hunters afield. The proposal will be presented to the Utah State Legislature during the upcoming session. If approved, the changes would be implemented in 1993. DAVID LUDLOW, M.D. Announces His Practice In OBSTETRICS and GYNECOLOGY I r. 1 -Routine and High-Risk Pregnancy f--Urinary Tract Problems & Incontinence -Laparoscopic Surgery . .1 -Infertility m-, For Appointments Call jJ Xj SPANISH FORK CLINIC 325 West Center Spanish Fork ; 'f) 798-7301 K.W Mary Urban Mother of 6 Course Leaders -A nine-week .pree classes course with 1 materials and two-hour session childcare each week i, : mute iiuui iiiauuu uu uaas uiucs ui guns, sticks, stones and even by hand. A child under 16 must be accompanied by a adult twenty-one twenty-one years of age and for those under 14, this adult must be a parent, legal guardian or someone approved by his parent or legal guardian. What licenses and permits are required? For any game animal, a juvenile juve-nile needs the proper licenses, tags and permits as any other hunter. For nongame mammals and non-protected wildlife, no special permits or licenses are needed. A person under the age of 12 is not permitted to hunt for any game animal, not even when he is accompanied by a licensed adult. Are songbirds protected? Under the State Wildlife code 23-17-2, all wild birds are protected. pro-tected. It reads: It is unlawful for any person to take any birds not held in private ownership legally acquired or to rob or destroy any nest, egg or young of any bird except as provided in proclamations proclama-tions of the Wildlife Board. The Proclamation for Non-game Non-game Birds reads: All birds in the State of Utah are protected. It is unlawful for any person to shoot, shoot at, poison, kill, take, net, trap, ensnare, hunt, or possess any birds or to rob or destroy any nest, egg, or young of any bird except as provided in this proclamation procla-mation or by appropriate Board action. The Board has determined that European starlings, house sparrows, rock doves also known as feral pigeons, magpies and crows may be taken by the following fol-lowing methods; firearms, nets traps (with the exception of steel traps) Snares and raptors... or by lawfully registered bird damage chemical controls for reasons of human health protection, nuisance control or control agricultural damage. Simply, all birds, their nests and young are protected both by state law and by federal law except when the numbers of a few species get so large they cause a human health risk, major nuisance or agricultural damage. What about road-killed birds or birds already dead? Can they be taken homeir to a taxidermist? taxider-mist? By federal law, the only groups that may possess, transport trans-port anor dispose of any migratory migra-tory bird, alive or dead, or any parts, nests or eggs of a bird, are state and federal wildlife agencies and a few authorized educational facilities. The federal list of migratory birds includes almost everything from song birds to eagles. The only exceptions are the upland game birds which are protected by state law. Taxidermists Taxider-mists are only allowed to work on legally taken game birds such as ducks, geese, pheasants, grouse, quail, etc. take by a licensed hunter during the proper season. Similar laws apply to game animals ani-mals and other protected wildlife. Norman Smith Father of 4 : iu icgisici, call Judy at 226-2255 |