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Show Page B2 Thursday, Seotember 30, 1982 The Newspaper 'XT" t ITALIAN RESTAURANT Cih fi i LETTERHEADS BUSINESS CARDS FLYERS BROCHURES FORMS POSTERS ADVERTISING PMT W E DO ESETTINC DESIGN BUSINESS CARDS BROCHURES FORMS FLYERS LETTERHEADS POSTERS ADVERTISING LABELS LOGOS MAILERS PMTS TYPESETTING DESIGN BROC P R I DESK LETTERHEADS BUSINESS CARDS FLYERS BROCHURES FORMS POSTERS ADVERTISING LABELS LOGOS MAILERS PMTS TYPESETTING DESIGN FLYERS BROCHURE 6 4 9 - 9 0 1 4 ERHEADS POSTERS MAILERS PMTS ADVERTISING DESIGN LOGOS LABELS TYPESETTING prospector Iv 'athletic club at (prospector Come in for free trial pass and tour of Club. The best fitness and recreation Club in Parh City! Call for membership information 649-6670. Off Season Specials: (Includes Soup or Salad & bread) SUNDAY NIGHT All the spaghetti you can eat $4.95 MONDAY NIGHT Lasagna Special $4.95 TUESDAY NIGHT 2 for 1 Fettucine Starts this Sunday, Sept. 26 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK AT 6:00 412 MAIN STREET, PARK CITY N T I gquare 649-6670 Mf N CTERS SING $8 MdPra 1 . Low monthly dues and monthly pro-rated initiation fees. 2. Free racquetball court time with full facility membership. 3. Free tennis court time. 4. Massage & physical therapy available. 5. More than 50 discount on classes! Aerobic Dance Swimming (Moms &Tots, children, adults) Weight Training - Men Weight Training - Women Karate Racquetball - group or private Yoga Energy Dance Stretch and Tone 6. Discounts on Pro Shop clothing and equipment. Weight Training Clinic Scott Siemon Mon., Oct. 4, 9 a.m. Tues., Oct. 5, 8p.m. Members Free! Nonmembers $3. Beiinnin Karate Dinp Devost Oct. 11 -Nov. 18, 6 weeks Members $40. Nonmembers $70. Tues.,Thurs., 7:45 -9:45 p.m. Advanced Karate Mon., Wed., 7:45 -9:45 p.m. Men's & Women's Racquetball Leagues - Diana Archibold Sign up by Oct. 20. Members $10., Nonmembers $20. Children's Racquetball Classes Mon., Wed., 3-4 p.m. Beginning Oct. 20 Members $10child, Nonmembers $20child. Call for more information i In Pocatello Tedford leads Muckers by John Sundquist Traveling to play rugby game has three parts: the bus trip, the match, and the party. The Muckers won all three elements and returned from Portneuf Valley (Pocatello) with a 20-13 victory vic-tory on a rainy Saturday, Sept. 25. Paced by two tries from flyhalf Kenny Tedford and some good defensive fullback play from Mucker-at-large Al 'Alice' Terry, the Park City club put together four tries with smart ballhandling and intelligent loose ball play. "We won a lot of balls during the game," said Coach Rick Phaler. "The team cleaned up the loose ball better than we have been all year. People were-looking were-looking for the ball on the,, ground instead of crashing?:: into a pileup." fi 9 o The pack was made up of front row players Dave Mueller and George Austin at props and Dave Sundquist at hooker. Rich Riley and Charlie Downing were at second row, and Tom Lauder was at number eight. The loose forwards were Buddy Macchia and Blackie Jones. "Charlie Downing had a good game," exclaimed Pheler. "He had quite a few very clean lineouts. At number num-ber two jumper, Downing was very effective at getting the ball to me at scrumhalf in a hurry." The scoring did begin on a downbeat for Park City because Portneuf Valley got on the board first. The ball was on the Mucker 20 yard line with a Park City throw-in throw-in on a lineout. Park City tipped the throw by Dave Sundquist and Portneuf Valley flooded through. Scrumhalf Rick Phaler grabbed the ball and flipped it back to Tedford. But the ball went wide and was picked up by center Lowell Carlson. His attempt to kick it out to touch (out of bounds) was thwarted as Portneuf Valley blocked it and recovered re-covered it in the try zone. The conversion was good and the score stood at 6-0. Park City came right back to Portneuf's five yard line MB 10? $ tl S China JZifye Open ft ,H 1 1 1" w i i" t ' 7t Mon. thru Fri. 11:30 a.m. -11:00 p.m. Sat. & Sun. ZZT SPECIAL Monday - Friday L--y 11:30a.m. -3:30p.rn. P- y7 Ro"' Cmcken Chow Mein, Nl-' Pork Fried Rice - $2.95 T Take out available mini bottle service. Players watch as throw-in soars over on some strategic kicking and running by Kenny Tedford. Ted-ford. With a scrumdown, the Muckers packed on ten men and pushed in. The ball was let out to Tedford from Phaler. Tedford passed to winger Frank Fields who scored in the corner. It was Fields first try of his career. Phaler kicked the conversion conver-sion from a difficult angle and tied the score 6-6. Park City's second try came after another scrum-down scrum-down at Portneuf Valley's five. The put-in was won by Park City. Phaler let it out to Tedford who scored in the corner for the try. Phaler missed the conversion and the score remained 10-6. Portneuf Valley took advantage ad-vantage of a Park City mistake on the very next play. The kickoff landed on the Park City 45, but before the ball could go out of bounds or be played, it was deliberately tapped out by Park City. The Muckers were penalized, Portneuf Valley hit on the penalty kick and now trailed by one point, 10-9. Park City responded with a fine running display from Kenny Tedford for his second try of the day. From the 35 of Portneuf Valley, Park City won a scrumdown and, by previous signal, Restaurant 7 days a week. 3:00 to 11:00 " " tip their heads. faked right and went left to Tedford. Phaler's pass caught Tedford perfectly. He hit the gap in the oncoming Valley back line and cut outside out-side for the wider side of the field. With support on either flank, Tedford took it all the way for a try. The conversion conver-sion was missed and the score at the half was 14-9. In the second half, the Muckers had the wind at their backs and they used it to keep the ball out of their end. "Once we got the lead," said Phaler, "we played with good field position in mind. We kept the ball down in their territory and put pressure on them by kicking it to them." Halfway through the second half, the Muckers scored their final try on a rather -long play which 'featured kicking 'back' and : forth in a battle of opposing fullbacks. Finally, Phaler ' . . IX 4 Running in the rain In spite of Saturday's downpour, about 145 competitors com-petitors were on hand for the 11 a.m. start of the annual Park City Oktoberfest Run, held this year on a course between Snow Park in Deer Valley and the Prospector Athletic Club. "I think we probably would have had over 300 if it hadn't been raining," club manager Jeanine Carofanello said lafer. The fastest time in the 10-kilometer race was posted by Philip Peterson, who splashed across the finish line in 30:53. He was followed across the line by Ken "Hawk" Harper and Craig Duerr. The first woman to finish the 10-kilometer event was Cheryl Harper in 41:43. Second place went to Ann Hoffman. Hoff-man. In the four-mile category, the fastest time was recorded by Keith Wittauer, 21:27. Second place went to Park City's Kent McLaren, while Brian Kuehl finished third. In the women's division, two Park City runners had the fastest times. Julie Chambers finished first in 31 :40, followed by Pam Sandberg and Karen Howard. Carofanello said that the club managed to attract some interest from Salt Lake-area runners by using the mailing list from this year's Deseret News Marathon. v Helping to organize this year's Oktoberfest Run was tho Salt Lake City Track Club. to win fielded a short kick and kicked a grubber (ground ball) ahead for ten yards. He picked it up on a clean bounce and passed it out to John Sundquist. He caught the pass just out of the reach of a Portneuf defender and ran the remaining 20 yards to the try zone. The conversion was good and Park City led 20-9. The final score of the game was the result of a Mucker miscue in their own end zone. On the Park City ten, the Muckers won the lineout and Phaler passed it back to Al Terry. Unfortunately, Terry dropped the ball and it was recovered by Portneuf Valley's John Casmere for a score. The conversion was missed and the game ended 20-13. The next outing for the Muckers will take place in two weeks when they are "scheduled' to play in the Boise Tournament in October. |