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Show 1 i Page B6 Thursday, January 7, 1982 The Newspaper POTATO Juki's jS BACk AT TtiELpESOPT FEATUpiKJ5 J1 tJ. p. L. pUyopF sf bciaL SGfJDAY JANUARY io s AhJ Difco vs. ci dctdhUyi g I O'.soAA. DALLAS vs. SA4 ppArJcisco zaof-A. CoLop VIDEO SCpEEMl pLUs!! LOsVESJ BEE2 PRICES OLl2 CHEF'S SPECIAL fDOT&ML FEA5T V'opEtJ fop BfJEAKfAST DAlLyAf "7--30A.A. vLukIcM ; H--oo - z-oo f?A. VAfTEp ski Aff ETieps 2.-7 videostiLL pHotopAfypls pop croups FAAlLlES - 59 90 a '"V , , ' " ' . " i - . k i ...... w?ii . . i; t x ?X :Lt, isL :.W:. , - : Nordic clinic for novices offered If the rolling terrain of the Park City Golf Course suits you more than the menacing slopes of Jupiter Bowl, this might be what you're looking for. The staff of the White Pine Ski Touring Center has joined forces with the Park City Recreation Department to offer a four-day introductory intro-ductory course to the art of Go Pack Your Ears! The Ear Candy Company brings to Park City an adventure in music. Lightweight Astraltune stereo cassette players available for rent on a daily basis at the Powder Room T-shirt shop on the Resort Plaza. Caution: Astraltunes may be habit forming. Give them a try! i COZY & RUSTIC This beautiful home has a huge rock fireplace, 4 bedrooms, bed-rooms, 2 bath rooms, is located close to the Park City Golf Course & ski resort, has mature landscaping and pines, and a secluded outdoor hot tub perfect for after ski relaxation. $358,500. BANBERRY REAL ESTATE DIVISION 649-1602 vv- "'- ' ; i :t -; 3? SNOW-COVERED ASPENS surround this beautiful home. Exclusive Deer Valley location, 3 bedrooms, loft, exercise room, wine cellar, and much more. $425,000. BANBERRY REAL ESTATE 649-1602 Chatham Lots' Banberry Realty is proud to announce: Chatham Crossing Subdivision single family lots available with excellent terms Prices range from $58,300 to. $71,900 Approximately $10,000 down, no payments due until June 1, 1982. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL: Ann Brighton (Project Manager) Lani Beck Martha Brown Dave Coleman Mary Runge Tami Anderson 649-4084 649-7356 649-7064 582-6328 942-4350 649-7799 586 Main St., P.O. Box 3121, Park City, Utah 84060 (801)649-1602 M AMRP P W V Real Estate nordic skiing. The class, to be held on four consecutive Saturdays beginning Jan. 9, will supply the nordic novice with the basics of track and downhill skiing, then give him the chanc to use those skills in to organized tours. According to Steve Erick-son, Erick-son, a member of the White Pine staff, the four-day clinic is aimed primarily at local residents. He said the $25 fee is about half what those lessons would cost normally if, offered individually through White Pine. Erickson said the first two lessons, each one-and-a-half hours long, will focus on the basic techniques needed for track and downhill skiing. Plans for the third week call for a half-day tour in one of the nearby canyons, to be followed by a full-day tour on the final week. "We'll talk a bit about general preparations for touring, the terrain, proper dress...," Erickson said. "We're trying to give people a good basis for nordic skiing in a good multi-week presentation." The course is available to those 15 years old and older. "They'll need equipment," Erickson said. "They can get their own or they can rent it here." More information can be obtained by calling White Pine at 649-8701 or the Recreation Department at 649-9461. Those registering after Jan. 7 will be assessed an additional $5 late fee. Erickson said that, if the response is good, White Pine will hold a similar clinic in February. Erika Hess stretches World Cup lead Neither rain nor lack of snow could keep Switzerland's Switzer-land's Erika Hess from her appointment in the winner's circle Sunday as the wo-i wo-i men's' alpine' World "Cup ("season resumed in Maribor, Yugoslavia. Hess, the current leader in the chase for the overall women's crown, posted a combined time of 1:37.58 to outdistance second-place Rosa Quario of Italy. A torrential rain before the race washed out almost the entire mountain, forcing the course to be moved from the bottom to the top of the mountain at the last moment. mo-ment. The race was run in temperatures well above freezing, and the soft snow wore through to bare ground in many of the gates. The water also forced the can-cellation can-cellation of the giant slalom scheduled for the following , day!1" ... . . ! Sun Valley's Christin Cooper, Coo-per, third in the overall World Cup standings, recorded re-corded the best American finish at Maribor with a fifth-place showing. Cooper was in fourth position following follow-ing the first run but hit the first few gates too hard on the second run, and the heavy edging cost her in the soft snow. Other U.S. finishers included in-cluded Cindy Nelson in 14th and Karen Lancaster in 20th. Both Abbi Fisher and Heidi Preuss were victims of the first run which saw only 32 of 78 skiers finish. " LDef ending World Cup giant slalom champion Tamara McKinney, who broke her hand in a pre-holiday training train-ing fall, was not with the U.S. team in Maribor, but will rejoin the group for the Jan. 8-9 downhill and giant slalom in Pfronten, West Germany. The mens' team is scheduled to resume competition compe-tition on Jan. 9 and 10 with a downhill and giant slalom at Morzine, France, followed by a slalom Jan. 12 at Bad Wiesse, West Germany. Wallyball comes to P.C. Adapt the game of volleyball volley-ball to the walled environment environ-ment of a racquetball court and what have you got? It's wallyball, of course. This off-the-wall adaptation adapta-tion of the game of volleyball, already thriving in California, Californ-ia, is now starting to catch on in Utah. : ' Here's how it works: you take a 20 by 40-foot racquet-ball racquet-ball court, then divide it into two 20-foot squares with an eight-foot high net. The object of the game, like volleyball, is to prevent your opponent from sending the ball back over the net. But there's a difference. The wallyball may be served or returned off one of the side walls. A ball hitting the ceiling is out of bounds. The back wall can be used, but only to propel the ball into the opponent's court, a defensive move similar to that in racquetball. However, hitting hit-ting the opponent's back wall is a foul. In its infancy, wallyball was played using a conventional conven-tional volleyball. However, The Hot Spa Luxury Soaking Salon Come, treat yourself to an evening of pleasure. Rest your weary bones and tired muscles In one of our S private therapeutic pools. After a hard day on the slopes or for a special end to a hectic day, nothing feels better than a good soak. You'll leave feeling like a new person. In the heart of Park City. 1700 Park Avenue, Mt. Air Mall adjacent to Jan's Mountain Outfitters.. 5 private rooms reservations suggested. Open daily. 649-4056 S p.m. 10 p.m. Sun.Thurs. S p.m. midnlte Fri. & Sat. r i about a year ago a ball was designed by the Voit company com-pany specifically for the game. It is similar in size to a volleyball but has the appearance and Consistency of a racquetball. In its January newsletter, the Prospector Athletic Club announced that it would like to introduce the game to the Park City area. Games have been scheduled for noon on Fridays. If wallyball attracts at-tracts a large enough following, follow-ing, it will also be scheduled during the evening hours. Nordic relay cancelled "Numerous technical difficulties" diff-iculties" forced the V lite Pine Ski Touring Center to cancel the nordic relay race scheduled for last Saturday, according to White Pine spokesman Steve Erickson. Erickson reported that the two snowmachines, which are normally used to pack the cross-country track, refused re-fused to cooperate. "We broke the chain on one of them, and on the other the electrical system burned up," he said. "You can't really race without them, with the snow as deep as it was." White Pine hoped to introduce intro-duce a new handicap system, whereby the total time of the three team members would be divided by their average age to come up with a team score. Erickson said that White Pine plans to try again Jan. 31. |