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Show i Wednesday, X Team Trains In Tar U.S. Nordic Director John Bower has announced that the national Cross-Country Ski Team w ill move to Grand Targhee. Wy.. immediately to begin their last on-snow training before the FIS Championship Year racing I season opens. Besides the Red, White and Blue men's jX-C teams, the women's health studio 1505 empire 649-7232 Ski Instructors Ihiining Coarse PH. (801 - SEND TO: PARK CITY SKI SCHOOL November 23, 1977 White, Blue and Baby Blue teams will train at the Wyoming area. They will be joined by two top Nordic-Combined Nordic-Combined competitors who want to log more distance on snow before traveling to another area for jumping practice. "We plan to clock as many kilometers as possible 4 On-The-Hill Sessions 9:00 a.m. -4:00 p.m. 4 Classroom Sessions 1. Ski Teaching As A Profession 2. The Evolution of Skiing and Technique The ATM Method and Skill Development 3. Physics and Biomechanics in Skiing 4. MethodologyClass HandlingPsychology COST - $60.00Lift Tickets & Manual Included WHEN Beginning Saturday, November 26, 1977 at 9:00 a.m. ENROLLMENT FORM Name. Age .Phone. Address. City .State during our two weeks at Targhee," said Head U.S. X-C Coach Marty Hall, "and with good snow conditions the men should be able to get 700 kilometers under their belts, the women around 500." Men's team participants are: Red Team: Tim Caldwell, Cald-well, 23, Putney, Vt.; John Mike Downey, 23, Butte, Mt.; Stand Dunklee, 23, Brattleboro, Vt.; Bill Koch, 22, Guilford, Vt.; and Doug Peterson, 24, Hanover, N.H. White Team: Tim Kelley, 20, Middlebury, Vt.; Kevin Swigert, 23, Ketchum, Id.; and Bob Treadwell, 23, Amherst, N.H. Blue Team: Randy Kerr, 28, Auburn, Me.; Fritz Koch, 19, Guilford Vt.; Tim Moerlein, 19, Anchorage, An-chorage, Ak.; Don Nielsen, 26, New London, N.H.; Bill Spencer, 21, Anchorage, Ak.; Mark Wagner, 20, Livermore Falls, Me.; and Craig Ward, 23, Free Union, Va. It is likely that some :. Panthers 3rd In The Park City Panthers dropped a 4-0 decision to Pioneer Calvary in the fading evening light Thur Zip 649 - 8111) BOX 39, PARK CITY, ghee Mwm- Junior racers will joing the national team members during this period of time. Women scheduled are: White Team: Mitzi Cain, 20, Bozeman, Mt.; Pat Engberg, 27, Seattle, Wa.; Joanne Musolf, 21, Wenat-chee, Wenat-chee, Wa.; Terry Porter, 24, Concord, Ma.; Alison Spencer, Spen-cer, 24, Anchorage, Ak.; and Lynn Vonderheide, 23, Anchorage, An-chorage, Ak. Blue Team: Liz Carey, 19, Rumford, Me. Baby Blue Team: Leslie Bancroft, 18, Paris, Me. ; Becky Forbes, 17, Anchorage, An-chorage, Ak. ; Susan Forbes, 16, Anchorage, Ak.; Betsy Haines, 17, Anchorage, Ak. ; Beth Paxson, 17, Charlotte, Vt.; and Tracy Valentine, 18, E. Wenatchee, Wa. Nordic Combined Red Team member Jim Galanes, 21, brattleboro, Vt., and White Team member Walter Malmquist, 21, Post Mills, Vt., will also be training at Targhee. sday to end up tied for third place in the Utah Junior Soccer Soc-cer Association knockout tournament. i UTAH 84060 Wild River Policy Shifts By Kim Crumbo The passage of the 1968 National Wild and Scenic Act marked a significant shift in policy and attitude towards f Tourney According to coach Sandy Holmsen, the game was completed in near darkness at the Bell View Elementary School in Sandy and many penalties went undetected. He said goalie Alex Holmsen had the ball knocked from his hands by the fist of a Pioneer player who then pushed him aside and kicked the ball in for a score. Center forward Steve Toly, hampered by a sprained ankle, managed the only shots on goal for the Panthers in the highly physical contest. Pioneer jubilation was short-lived, however, as they were downed 2-0 by the Germania Eagles in Saturday's Satur-day's championship match. The Panthers shared third place with Wasatch. A soccer dinner honoring members of the Panthers the Astros and the High Rollers will be held jn.the Memorial ; Building .. on y. A movie on famous soccer star Pele will be shown courtesy cour-tesy of Pepsi-Cola of Utah. HAPPY r -A free flowing rivers. Congress finally admitted that "the established national policy of dam and other construction construc-tion at appropriate sections of the rivers of the United States needs to be complemented com-plemented by a policy that would preserve other selected selec-ted rivers..." There are now 15 rivers within the system. None of the famous Whitewater sections sec-tions of the Colorado and Green Rivers are protected as a Wild or Scenic River. Utah has over five hundred miles of these two rivers within her borders, including the famous Cataract, Split Mountain, Westwater and Desolation Canyons. Other scenic canyons include Stillwater and Labyrinth Canyons on the Green River and two unnamed sections of the Colorado. The Wild River Act provides for three separate classifications of rivers. "Wild Rivers" are wilderness wilder-ness rivers that are free of impoundments and generally inaccessible except ex-cept by trail. "Scenic Rivers" may have existing limited road access, but must have shorelines largely undeveloped. "Recreational Rivers" allow for some development along their shoreline and may have undergone un-dergone some impoundment or diversion in the past. Most of Utah's scenic and THANKSGIVING, PARK CITY i till . '. ' 649-9739 Whitewater canyons, such as Desolation and Westwater, would qualify for the more restrictive "Wild River" status. Inclusion within the system would guarantee the "free-flowing" character of river. Westwater Canyon, sometimes referred to as the "tabloid edition" of the Grand Canyon, is a short 18-mile 18-mile stretch on the Colorado River in Eastern Utah. Famous for its challenging whitewter, Westwater is a beautiful canyon carved from red sandstone and black precambrian schist. This section is an official "study" river and is currently curren-tly under evaluation for in-cludsion in-cludsion within the Wild River System. Jumping Coordinator Through the funding of a U.S. Olympic Committee grant, the U.S. Ski Team has appointed, for the first time, a national jumping development coordinator. Seppo Hyvonen, LaCrosse, Wi., was named by U.S. Nordic Director John Bower to fill the new position. "Seppo is known to the ski jumping community as a very accomplished jumper IsWeU ayJ3tg4tkd tlreisnWitivffiClthe Finnish National Jum-'J me . h Mti . 'int. .i.r .jr . ... rtrefa the sport, said Bower. "He will have a variety of responsibilities with the sport including improving Page 7 President Carter has recommended that the en tire Green River below Dinosaur NatMln.il Monument in Utah be studied. This would include two extremely important sections: Desolation and Labyrinth Canyons. Desolation Canyon, as its name implies, is a remote wilderness canyon. Deeper than the Grand Canyon, Desolation cuts through the heart of Utah's finest wildlife area, the Tavaputs Plateau. Here is the home of cougar, black bear and numerous birds of prey. The canyon is considered critical winter habitat for deer. Antelope An-telope and elk are found on the plateau. Coal and oil shale development are considered con-sidered the most pressing threats to preserving the canyon's environment. , Labyrinth Canyon, another stretch recommended recommen-ded by President Carter, is an intricate redrock canyon reminiscent of the lost Glen Canyon.- Most of the gran- deur of Glen Canyon is j beneath Lake Powell Since j Labyrinth Canyon is devoid") ot rapids, it is ideal family canoe trip. Utah is fatuous for its scenic canyons and impressive im-pressive Whitewater. Not onlv do these rivers 'provide recreation for thousands each year, bu the canyons provide important habitat for Utah's dwindling wildlife resource. The threats to our rivers are real. The National Wild and Scenic River system provides the mechanism for preserving these- "vestitfes of Driinitive America." For more information on ' Utah's rivers, contact The ' Wild River Coordinating Committee, P.O. Box liS(il). Park City, Utah. 84()ii0. I the technical knowledge of jumpers and coaches and surveying ski jumping in-' terest and involvement ' around the country." Bower ' also indicated that Hyvonen, ' originally from Finland ' with strong competitive and I coaching credentials there, 1 will evaluate local facilities t and programs with special I attention to the unique needs ! of each. 1 i Hwnnpn was a meinhpr ol I ping Team irom 19f8-o and is a graduate of the Vuokalti ' Sports Institute in Vuokatti, Finland. I C 1 1 wiim ii i hi ii in i 1 1 i i i i j |