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Show Page B2 Thursday, September 3, 1981 The Newspaper I , . b. - - - L I. -u , f JL'&e. INTRODUCING THE BAGLEY PLAN: NOW! BAGLEYCORP WILL BUILD YOU THE HOME OF YOUR DREAMS ON THE JEREMY RANCH WITH FINANCING AT 9'2! . :) "7 .4 ''J 'if1 I if HI 5 t H M i f "I f-l f -t ' i 1 5 j I This is The Bag ley Plan: the home you've always dreamed of owning, built to your specifications for an astonishing 9'i interest on a 25-year contract. Imagine the savings! No closing costs, no burdensome points paid to the bank, no appraisal fee and best of all no excessive interest rate. The Bagley Plan's 9'2 interest chops off nearly half of today's conventional market rate ol 17. A staggering savings. How to qualify for The Bagley Plan: to have your own home built by BAGLEYCORP. BAGLEY-CORP. using one of their designs (example (exam-ple shown here) or any other design you favor, all you need is a Jeremy Ranch home-site and $ 12,500 as a deposit against the down payment on your home. The balance of the down payment is to be paid out during construction. If you lived on the Jeremy Ranch: you'd be in the tops of the Wasatch Mountains, with 12,500 acres of private Jeremy land around you, the freeway nearby, and you'd be next to your own exclusive golf course, tennis, swimming, etc.. just 10-minutes drive from Park City or 12 minutes from Salt Lake City. Arnold Palmer designed the fabulous 18-hole 18-hole Jeremy course. It's been two years building, but Arnie says, "Well worth it . . .world class!'' Now the grass is up, five lakes created, 10,000 trees planted, and the grand opening date for play is September Sep-tember 10th. Completion of the $2.5 million club house is just weeks away. ha - -.jr. 4 fe '3 ! ELEGANT VAULTED CEIUNGS (PLAN 80-10) Two-story home with dining room, family and living rooms, kitchen, master bedroom and one and one-half h '.Uis on main floor. Two bedrooms and playroom and full huh on upper floor; full height vaulted ceilings in living .ind dining rooms; stone heatilator fireplace and three-car q irjge. (2700 sq. ft. living area) flfr Our cost to build on your lot: $155,000 Down payment: 975,000 Balance: $80,000 9'2 interest for twentv-five years Monthly payment: S698.98 For complete information on homesites phone the Jeremy Ranch sales office, 1-649-5148. In Salt Lake City call 943-7676. Homesite terms: 50 down, five years for the balance at 12 BAGLEYCOkP DEVELOPMENT 5 ' ( I 1' ' m, - - Toyo qualily-cratted tiri for passtnger cart, trucks, vans and recreational vehicles am manufactured In the most modern tire building tacilttias by experienced craftsmen, and are performance proven on roads all over the world. Each step of research, design engineering, development, production. produc-tion. Inspection and testing test-ing employs the most modern equipment and the latest technology and careful workmanship. workman-ship. 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STEEL BELTED RADIAL Z-8 is a tojgh. performance proven sleel belled radial lor spons ,irid compact cars Trie radial construction and sieel belts give easy roiling tuei economy, long mileage ana tread uff1 and positive roao gripping traction on wet or dry roads Puncture resisting 'etiaoiiity Construction TTBW&WW TL BW & WW &Wide WW TL-BW & WW & Wide WW TL BW & WW TL-BW & WW TL BW & WW & Wide WW TLBWSWW STEEL BELTED RADIAL A tough steel beHed rad.a l-n srnaii -.a-i miles of luel saving tr jvei Posilwt- i aer hugging traction in cornering stai:ira anc on Z-12 ia0',s for sa!$'v.-'3 'ong lite pe"crmance Bu,lt :or many mi g an road stooitic Rely d,-.d eceMent nkxCj ..'jk 155SR12 iSSK CfcVt 155SR13 If ifi$Xk fr-. 165SR13 HI If 175SR13 175SR14 185SR14 165SR15 Size 155SRI2 145SR13 1SSSR13 16RSR13 175SR13 I75SRI4 TL 1S5SR14 165SR15 Construction TL BW 8 WW TL BW 4 WW TL-BW S WW TL-BW & WW TL BW & WW BWSWideWW TL-WW TL-BW 8, WW tttitn' steel belted radial passenger car tires Food & convenience store now open at Conoco Service Cold beer & pop Snacks Hot and cold sandwiches Chips Cakes Candies Milk Bread Toiletries Barbecue supplies Superior Tire and Park City Conoco North Park Ave., 649-9331 Service truck available with battery service i f i mnrni i .f$mm 1 1 ! lN0W l v 1 it (MMWIM 1. I 50 I The members of "Just Arnie's", the top team in Park City women's Softball. Womens Softball Coalville team wins Park City tourney A contingent of women softball players from Coalville Coal-ville wasn't too congenial to its Park City hosts last weekend as the Coalville team took home top honors in the annual Park City Women's Softball tournament. tourna-ment. Coalville went through the double-elimination tourney completely unscathed, with its only real challenge coming in the championship contest. In that game, Coalville Coal-ville came away the winner, 11-10, against the Sandtrap team of Ogden. Three teams representing Park City had their ups and downs with current Park City League champions, Just Arnie's, giving the best performance of the trio. Just Arnie's took a 15-4 decision over league foe Prospector Sirloin in the opening round of play. Prospector Pros-pector Sirloin, which finished finish-ed the season third behind Just Arnie's and Janeaux's in the league, was shortly eliminated from the tournament tourna-ment with a 25-18 loss to Salt Lake Transportation. In the quarterfinals, Just Arnie's found itself meeting the other local tourney team, Janeaux's, a team looking for revenge after losing its title match to Just Arnie's in league play. But vengeance was not to be theirs as the champs prevailed, 14-8, to advance them into the semi finals against Coalville. But the visiting Summit County squad accepted Just Arnie's hospitality and returned re-turned it with a 21-16 defeat, putting Just Arnie's into the loser's bracket. Just Arnie's then met the Sandtrap, that had been sent to the loser's bracket by another Odgen team, Golden Spike. There, Just Arnie's ended its championship hopes, falling, 28-9. Park City's other two entrants weren't as successful success-ful as Just Arnie's as both lost two straight. A total of ten teams, representing Park City, Ogden, Og-den, Salt Lake City and West Valley City, competed in this year's tourney. by Jim Murray M Marcus Allen offers new Heisman profile It is the considered opinion of those who follow sports only through headlines that the Heisman Trophy winner of a given year is the world's best college football player. He is not. More likely, he is the world's best college football runner. Occasionally, but only occasionally, he is the world's best college football thrower. He is either a Notre Dame quarterback or an USC tailback. He's never a blocker, tackier, kicker or pass-catcher. What he is usually is, is a world-class sprinter to whom they have handed a football. They don't give it to bread-and-butter runners. Jim Brown finished fin-ished fifth in the Heisman voting. Larry Csonka was fourth. They give it to guys who don't bite off yardage, but get it in big flashy hunks. But, a top candidate for the 1981 Heisman offers a new profile for a winner. A Heisman Trophy winner needs a fullback as much as he needs a football, a guy in front of them who is almost as good as he is. And he needs a quarterback who can throw the ball well enough to keep the defenses honest, but not well enough to be a Heisman candidate himself. At USC, the tailback has to carry the ball every other play or the alumni want to cart his scholarship, and the press forgets about him. At SC, the quarterback is the second banana, the straight man, the guy who says "How hot was it, Grade?" The tailback gets the lines. Marcus Allen is not your basic Heisman candidate. He's in the hunt because he's an SC tailback, not vice versa. Marcus never won an indoor 60-yard at the Sports Arena, never had to debate whether to go out for spring practice or the Olympic team, and he thought he was a quarterback. SC thought he was a defensive back until his high school coach showed up at practice, pointed crossly, and asked "What you got that boy running BACKWARD for?!" Trained as a quarterback, recruited as a defensive back, Marcus Allen was not exactly given the ball and told to follow the student body into the end zone as was a standard tactic for almost every other USC tailback. Marcus was inserted at yet another familiar slot first, fullback. You can imagine his prep coach as saying to that "My God, now that got him BLOCKING!" At some schools, a fullback comes into view as a guy wearing a gold earring and carrying a scimitar, seven-feet tall, loyal to the sultan, and guarding the harem. But SC fullbacks have included Sam "Bam" Cunningham, Lyn Cain, and Mosi Tatupu and, in the old days, Jim Musick, Erny Pinckert, and Homer Griffith guys who could block for the sweep or run it, guys who could make over 1,000 yards a session themselves. Marcus Allen did not become the greatest blocking back in the world. But he didn't have to be. With Marcus in front of the tailback, the defense could not afford an 11-man rush to that tailback. The year Charlie White won his Heisman at SC he had Marcus Allen in front of him scoring eight touchdowns which may be a record for a "blocking" back. Marcus Allen is in a rare position for an SC tailback underdog in the Heisman prognostications prognos-tications for the year. Three of the last six SC tailbacks won the Heisman and two were runnersup. Georgia's Herschel Walker is a clear favorite going into a kickoff this year, but Marcus Allen, who was beginning to feel like a Shakespearean actor who keeps playing the butler, finally got the leading role last year and reeled off 1,563 yards and 14 touchdowns and was No. 2 rusher in the nation Heisman stats, all. Nor is he ready to lateral off this year's Heisman to any sophomore from Georgia or anyone else: "A year ago, the pre-season favorite was Art Schlicter at Ohio State," he reminded a press gathering at the opening of SC's fall practice the other day. "But he didn't get it. I feel, realistically, I have as good a chance as anybody to win the trophy this year." Before it goes to join those statues won by Mike Garrett, '65, O.J. Simpson, '68, and Charles White, '79, Marcus feels he will have to have something that they had a Marcus Allen in front of them at fullback. "We got to have a threat there. When you're a one-dimensional team, the other guys can load up on you. When you don't have a fullback who can carry the ball, the other guys come at your shoulders from the outside. I like to carry the ball, but there were times last year when I felt like the cavalry was coming at me. I was on the field so much in some games I thought the refs might kick me off for too much time. I thought 'Where are all those people coming from'0' I thought some of them should have been syphoned off watching the fullback, and I thought there should also be a way to put the tailback downfield more and gt trie ball to him down there." However, Allen wants it clear he's not complaining. It's taken him so long to convince anybody he's a tailback, he's willing to take two years to convince them he's a Heisman. Anyway, all things considered, he's probably lucky they didn't make him a noseguard. The Heisman Committee doesn't even know one of those exists. (c) 1981, Los Angeles Times SUBSCRIBE SUBSCRIBE SUBSCRIBE SUBSCRIBE |