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Show Page B6 Thursday, June 24, 1982 The Newspaper Imto-fte-pool homer hiehlishts Wooitaes win Q Q Q Q Q 0 Q GUM n n WW WW a a 0 a a Oct 5 Mar- owi Now Open for Lunch from 1 1 :00. Featuring unique lunches. At the Resort 649-7778 Underground parking. i Restaurant When someone has to climb the fence at City Park to retrieve a ball from the Snow Country swimming pool, it usually means there's a rugby game going on. But not this time. In a men's softball game Tuesday evening, Jay Mar-tain Mar-tain of the Woodhaus hit a prodigious home run into the Snow Country swimming pool to spark his team to a 14-13 win over the Club Coconuts. The win moved the Woodhaus into a first-place tie in the men's league with the Alamo Bums and Doc's Club. Each team has a 4-1 record. In the women's league, Just Arnie's moved into so?e possession of first place with wins over Sneakers and Group I. Arnie's (4-0) has a narrow edge over the Black Pearl (3-1). Here is a synopsis of games played during the past week: Alamo Bums 10, Club Coconuts 6 The Alamo Bums improved im-proved their record in the men's league to 3-0 with this victory June 15. The Bums picked up five runs in the second inning and three more in the third to insure the win. Billy Ross homered for the Bums, Dave Boynton had three hits and Bud Macchia picked up a pair of doubles. Brett Mach homered homer-ed for the Club. Doc's Club 11, Alamo Bums 3 Pride comes before a fall The Bums watched their perfect record go out the window in this men's league game played June 16. The Bums could manage only single runs in the first, fourth and sixth innings. Doc's scored four times in the first and added five more in the fourth. Pat Brennan had four hits in four trips to the plate for Doc's, while Charlie Denunzio went three for four. Kenny Tedford homered hom-ered for the Bums. Hat Store 38, End Run 6 The Hat Store, leading 8-4 after four innings, scored 30 runs in the last three innings (including 18 in the seventh) to turn a close game into a rout. That seventh-inning barrage included 14 extra-base extra-base hits: seven homers, four triples and three doubles. Tony Passarelli led the attack with five hits, including two homers, in six trips to the plate. This men's league game was played June 16. Club Coconuts 20, Club Employees 4 The Coconuts were the clear winners Sunday in this Club vs. Club showdown in the men's league. The Employees Em-ployees didn't score a run until the fifth inning. Meanwhile, Mean-while, the Coconuts picked up an even dozen in the first two innings. The game was called in the bottom of the fifth when the margin reached 15 runs. Mike Hogan Windsurfers head for Colorado Defending champions Scott Williams and Dave Ringelberg will lead a strong contingent of Utah Windsurfing Wind-surfing enthusiasts to the District Six Championships scheduled this weekend in Gunnison, Colorado. When the championships were held on Deer Creek Reservoir a year ago, Williams edged Chris Willard, his business partner in Windsports Windsurfing Specialists, to take the title in the lightweight class, while Ringelberg captured first place in the heavyweight class. Other local sailboard specialists expected to compete com-pete in Gunnison are Tim and Martha Snyder, Steve Raineri, Eloise Koll, Mark Case, Bob Marsh and Vicki Beck. """ Meanwhile, the third race in the Windsurfing Summer Sum-mer Series, which was to have been held on Deer Creek last Sunday, was cancelled because of a lack of consistent con-sistent wind. "We would set the course, then the wind would change," Willard lamented. "The winds have been very mean to us this year." The next race in the Deer Creek Summer Series is scheduled for the Fourth of July. MEMO: tastier. 2 -66 22 A note of reason and then some . . . for buying NOW at Dave Strong5S,SCHE 1045 South State Street, Salt Lake City, Utah had a homer and three singles in four trips to the plate for the Coconuts. Mark Elliott added a homer, a double and a single. Alamo Bums 18, Hat Store 4 First the feast, then the famine. After scoring 18 runs in one inning against the End Run, the Hat Store managed only four runs total in this Sunday game against the Bums. Pat Meehan paced the Bums with five hits, including a triple and two doubles, in five trips to the plate. Chuck Folkerth added four hits in five trips. This game was played in spite of sporadic thundershowers which threatened to turn the infield into a quagmire. Doc's Club 18, End run 3 Doc's scored in every inning to hand the End Run its fifth consecutive loss in this men's game Sunday. John Whiteley and Stan Cordova each went four-for-four at the plate (Cordova had three triples and a double) while Charlie Denunzio De-nunzio added two triples and a double in three official at-bats. Woodhaus 12, Janeaux's 6 Jay Martain had a homer and two doubles to lead the Woodhaus to victory Sunday. Rob Svoboda and Greg Boyd also homered for the Woodhaus. Wood-haus. Just Arnie's 7, Sneakers 4 A five-run rally in the third inning Sunday gave Arnie its third straight win in the women's league. Bernadette Ott and Sue Bishop each had two hits for the winners. Mary Demkowicz had a double and a single for Sneakers, while Lisa Welle-ver Welle-ver added three singles. Prospector Sirloin 13, Group 1 7 Group I dropped from the ranks of the undefeated in the women's league with this loss to the Sirloins Sunday. Prospector picked up 11 of its 13 runs in the first two innings. Anita McDonald went three-for-three plus a walk, while Valarie Winn picked up a homer and three singles in four at-bats. Jaime Merrell and Colleen Pharis each had three hits in four trips. Because of a protest filed by Group One, this game will be replayed at a later date. An infraction called by the umpire in the third inning was not clarified until after the game had ended. Just Arnie's 19, Group 1 3 Arnie's made it four in a row Monday with this convincing con-vincing victory over Group I in the women's league. Arnie's third baseman Pat-rece Pat-rece McDonald had three hits in three trips (a triple and two singles) before leaving the game. Her replacement, re-placement, Bernadette Ott, had two hits including a homer. Janet Peretti had four hits in six trips to the plate, while Sue Bishop went four-for-four plus a walk. Black Pearl 28, Club 8 Judy de los Cobos had six hits, including a homer and a double, as the Black Pearl (formerly Janeaux's) claimed sole possession of second place in the women's league Monday. The Black Pearl scored in every inning except the second. Tammy Polychronis added a homer and four singles. Utah group forms ski academy by Don Hart Since the beginning of Snowbird Resort in the late Sixties and the revival of Park City in the Seventies, Utah has gained national recognition as a hotbed for winter sports. Indicative of this popularity is the recent formation of Utah's first and only ski academy. The academy is named Rowmark, a contraction formed from Rowland Hall-St. Hall-St. Mark's, a private school in Salt Lake City. The school has been in existence for over 100 years and enrolls approximately 350 students. The national ski teams from France, Sweden, Austria, Italy, Norway, and West Germany have to a great extent drawn upon the talent developed from ski academies in their respective respec-tive countries. All of these academies in Europe are federally subsidized. In the United States ski academies are a more recent phenomena, the first being Stratton Mountain and Burke Mountain in Vermont. Academies in the United States are privately funded. Rowmark Academy is the joint brainchild of Dr. Karl Kjeldsberg and OUe Lar-sson, Lar-sson, an alpine coach at the University of Utah. "Our goal at the academy will be to provide excellence in academics and sports," Larsson said. "I shall supervise super-vise the athletics and Greg Zeigler will supervise the academics." Only 15 seventh through twelfth grade students will be admitted to the program the first year and, as Zeigler said, "the kids will have to be balanced. We must have good athletes who are also good students, and with the University of Utah establishing entrance requirements in 1987 the academics will be important." N , K ' A, - . OUe Larson "In the area of sport we intend in-tend to help each athlete with the most modern training principles and help each racer reach his ultimate potential. These potentials could be a future Olympic racer or a collegiate racer," Larsson said. Larsson added that Utah is an ideal setting for a ski academy because it provides skiing from mid-November through mid-June and Mount Hood Glacier in Oregon can provide summer training within a day's drive. "The climate and location provide a more favorable site than the Eastern academies," Larsson said. Utah has long been an uncultivated un-cultivated field when it comes to the development of successful racers. A recent survey of the top senior and junior racers in the United States reveals the Inter-mountain Inter-mountain Division (of which Utah is a member) holds a weak share of seeded athletes, or approximately 6 percent of the total. "It will be a top priority to negate this deficiency by bringing to Utah athletes from other divisions and by developing local talent through effective training methods," Larsson said. During the ski season students will train at Solitude. Larsson brings to Utah an extensive background in skiing. He has co-authored two books on the subject, worked with Rossignol France, studied at the University Un-iversity of Grenoble, coached coach-ed the Canadian World Team, and is presently studying sport psychology at the University of Utah. McCLOUDVIEVC The McCloud Creek single home lots have breath-taking vistas of Thaynes Canyon and Jupiter Bowl. Drive through this unique, planned and controlled development and stop by our sales office for information on our very competitive financing package. THE SILVER KING VIEW Take your choice: The garden view from a studio, the valley view from a one-bedroom, the ski run view from a two-bedroom or perhaps the golf course view from a penthouse. 25 of our best views have been purchased. A number of excellent views remain select yours now. uiiui;.;'-" w 5 tin mitWf, Mil Hn (ill THE GOLF COURSE VIEW This custom home on Lucky John Drive has an unobstructed unob-structed view of the new Jack Nicklaus Golf Course. It offers 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 3 fireplaces, spacious decks and a fully landscaped and sprinklered yard. $190,000 with flexible terms. Call Allen Titensor 649-5210. rn ri m n PlllW"'!u,..l)Jll n !;, urn i mf AN UNCOMMON VALUE You'll want to investigate the attractive contract terms available for this delightful 4 bedroom, 2 bath home. Even the spacious kitchen has cathedral ceilings. The yard is complete with landscaping, sprinklers and fence and the price has just been reduced to: 1158,000 For details call: Norv Lambert 649-6218, Park City Land Company 649-3600. Park City LAND COMPANY Park City. LAND COMPANY ParkCity. LAND COMPANY ParkCity UNDCOMBtNY |