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Show e14 THE WHOLE WORLD IS AN HMF FTT I V I 1 I Eat it at the CORNER STORE Join us at the mountain daily from 8 to 1 0:30 for breakfast Our omelettes are: famous fluffy & - ill!vs"f ... - iiiiii m Egg McMountain ham, swiss cheese, tomato & sour cream Egg McBump v swiss cheese, tomato & sour cream Copout ham, s,wiss cheese & tomato Bumpout swiss cheese fctomato Sitzmark German sausage, bleu cheese, tomato & sour cream Racing Green asparagus, jack cheese & ranch dressing Californian avocado, jack cheese, tomato & fresh mushrooms Downhiller green pepper, onions, tomato & jack cheese Freestyle choose any 4 ingredients & we'll supply the sour cream at la I delicatessen restaurant Meet you at the Corner Store! 649-8600 The Corner Kick 1 II i Vf I II I I I r-l 1 I Youth Soccer wtthcraigAitsdTu! By Bruce Henderson The C-Bones, Park City -under-14 youth soccer team, opened the spring soccer season Saturday with a 5-0 shutout over the District 3 Aces at Riverside Park in Salt Lake. The C-Bones were led by center forward Shawn Glieden as he accounted for all five of Park City's goals. Glieden opened the scoring early in the first half with an assist from Park City newcomer, new-comer, Randy Dyer. Halfbacks Half-backs Randy Kennard and Steve Holmsen assisted on two other Glieden goals. At Sunnyside Park later in the day, the Capson, Morris & McComb Pacers were defeated by a very strong, veteran Pioneer spitfire team, 7-0. The Pacers, Park City's under-12 team, showed a lot of potential and despite the loss, cannot be counted out of the league race. Pacers Kenyon Kennard, Ken-nard, Mike McComb, Erik Low, and Glenn Conner were all playing their first soccer game ever. In the second week of soccer action, only the C-Bones will see action when they play a District 4 team Saturday at 12:30 p.m. at Riverside Park. The Pacers have a bye. Park City's six other youth soccer teams and the High Rollers, Park City's senior team, will open play on April 1. "The Corner Kick" will become a regular feature of this paper during the soccer season. Yours truly, Bruce Henderson, will keep you up to date with the scores and highlights of Park City soccer action. Along the way, we'll try and include some items that will give all you soccer neophytes a little better insight into the fastest growing team sport in Park City and America. Each week, "The Corner Kick" will select a player of the week for his, or her, outstanding play. Our first Player of the Week is Mike jarosz, goalie for the Capson, Morris & McComb Pacers. In Saturday's losing effort, Jarosz frustrated the Pioneer Pion-eer forwards constantly by blocking one shot after another. Congratulations Mike! On Tuesday, March 28 at 7:30 p.m. in the Memorial Building, there will be a Soccer Parents Indoctrination Indoctrin-ation for all parents of Park City youth soccer players. Three short films will be shown: "What is Soccer," "How to Watch Soccer," and "Coaching Youth Soccer." These films will help you understand this new game your kids are playing. Attention girls and women above 18 years of age. The Park City Soccer Club will be starting a senior women's soccer team. Watch this column for further details. Peggi and I stood on the "Shady" turn of the Olympic Bobsled Run at Lake Placid. Members of the United States Ski Writers Association were here in this tiny, upstate New York town for their annual meeting, and a progress report in person on work leading up to the 1980 Winter Olympic (James. The public address announcer called the bobsled bob-sled run like it was a horserace. "And, they're rounding turn three into the zig-zag and coming into 'Shady'." Remember 'Shady. You'll hear of it for two solid week in 1980. Shady is one bear of a curve And, bobsledding is one bear of an event. The sled hurtled through the turn and I snapped snap-ped my camera. "I didn't see a thing," Peggi said. "Didn't you see the blur?" I asked. "Nope," she answered Then, she wanted to ride one. Last summer I had to plead with her to ride the Alpine Slide at Bromley Mountain in Vermont , but now she wanted wan-ted to be a passenger in a bobsled. Luckily it got too dark and we had to pass up the chance. I breathed again. We took a tour of the Olympic venues from the site where the housing is going up (it will eventually even-tually be a juvenile detention center and is being paid for by the Department of Justice), to the jump hill. Let's talk about the jump hill for a moment. Just for a moment. Because I get nervous talking about it any longer than that. The concrete towers are in place. Both 90 and 70 meters. I wouldn't jump off one of those babies if they were seven meters. I can't ever remember remem-ber seeing a more awesome sight. Jpzzzjzz zrzza: Fot Your Dining Pleasure j1" """l 1 J? we present -"v 1 I DOUGWARR g I AND GUITAR I 1 Enjoy Doug's gentle range of modern 1 country and new and old standards from 1 7-11 p.m. every Wednesday thru Sunday. 1 Appetizers L'Escargot 3.00 Oysters on a Half Shell 2.75 Sauteed Mushrooms 1.50 Shrimp Cocktail 3.00 French Onion Soup 1.50 Clam Chowder 1.50 'Entrees All entrees include Salad, Vegetable du Jour, baked Potato with Sour Cream, Chives or Butter or Rice Pilaf and Beverage Fresh Sole Filet poached in Herbs & Wine 8.95 Trout Amandine Cfhe traditional Western Rainbow 3 rout 7.50 Darnes de Saumon Grillees au Beurred Escarots Salmon basted in herbed butter 7.95 Poisson Farcia a la Florentine "Florida 'Red Snapper prepared with Jresh spinach dossing & sen'ed whole 10.50 Coquilles St. Jacques a la Parisienne Scallops presented in the shell simmering in a white wine sauce 7.50 Lobster 7 Wo broiled 'Australian lobster tails 13 .95 Alaska King Crab Sen'ed with lemon Sr butter 9.50 Crab & Steak 'Alaskan King Crab leg combined With a prime fillet 10.95 Roast Duckling Montmorency One half duckling served with wild rice cohered With cherry sauce & jlamed tableside 10.50 Veal Madere Gender ieal seasoned With mushrooms, shallots & Madere 8.95 New York Steak Charbroiled to your specifications 9.95 Charbroiled Tenderloin Filet Carge 9.95 Medium 8.95 Turnedos Henri IV et Choron Escoffier A tour deforce in Trench cooking. Medallions of beej on artichoke bottoms cohered with bearnaise & choron sauces 1 2 . 95 Boeuf Wellington Ohe classic combination of beefi, pate Sr1 pastry. "Please nlloW 35 minutes for preparation 13 . 95 T)esserts Banana Flambe 2.50 Peaches Cardinal 2.75 Italian Rum Cake 1.25 Cheese Cake with Strawberries 2.00 Please ask yir .;ter about children's dinners Fifteen percent gratuity added to bill for groups of six or more Wednesday, March 22, 1978 I've seen the jump at Squaw Valley, but it was built onto the mountain itself. These towers just stand up there daring anyone to go off them. If anything ever begged for the agony of defeat, these things do. Environmentalists complain com-plain they are going to be a visual eye sore. Wrong. They will be a living monument to lunacy. The speed skating oval is in place and a group of skaters were making the rounds when we stopped by for a look. That's a bit more on the order of sanitv. t hough not by much. The nordic area, where the cross-country races and the biathalon will be held, are already functioning. It seemed like thousands had already taken to the hills to begin using them. In fact, organizers tell us the course is set so the racers will pass the spectators three times instead in-stead of just at the start, as in many past Olympics. Olym-pics. We just chalked that up to a short course. The Olympic arena, originally built for the 1932 Games, is in place, and a new wing is being added ad-ded to accommodate a total of three ice sheets. Whiteface Mountain will be the site of the Alpine events. If you recall 1932 (and we kids can't do that), there were no skiing events as we know them. Whiteface just sat outside town a few miles and brooded. . This time, the venerable mountain and skeptics skep-tics will note it is one mean mountain will be the site of the slalom, giant slalom, and downhill events. The first test was during the US Nationals and things went well. Some 200 volunteers were in training as gatekeepers, assistants, packers and all those sorts of things. They had to submit resumes and pay their own expenses, but they figure if they did a good job, they would get to stomp down the snow for the big show. As we got to the hill, Peggi backed off. "How can I ski on a mountain where they are going to hold the Olympics?" she asked. "My name is not Cindy Nelson." That, I figured, was an understatement. under-statement. It was the start of her 'I'm not going to ski today rationale.' I knew the symptoms. "Oh, you can handle it," I said. "Just pretend you are Franz Klammer's sister." That got her up to the race course where we watched a bright, new hope Becky Dor-sey Dor-sey win her slalom title. Believe me, the view of the course will be better on television. On the way down the hill, there was a slalom pole sticking out of the snow. It looked lonely. So, Peggi skied past it in a wide arc of a turn. "Not bad for Franz Klammer's sister, huh?" she said. I ignored it. The whole thing is dramatic. It's. building to what will probably be a successful scaled-down Olympic climax. Ron Mackenzie, president of the Lake Placid Olympic Organizing Committee, probably said it best this way: "There are things cities can do for the Olympics Olym-pics that mountain towns cannot; but we will prove there are things that mountain towns can do for the Olympics that cities cannot." I just wonder if he can slow down the bobsled on 'Shady.' Our eyes don't have stop-action. Keep your SKI TIPS up. i - i LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Friday & Saturday TRY OUR NEW POOL TABLES! PXOTCEUPHY V1HNIE FISH SAME DAY COLOR PHOTOS FOR NASTAR PARK CITY RESORT PLAZA 649-7070 OPEN DAILY it |