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Show Page B6 Thursday, October 9, 1986 Park Record Mnnlb HDwim $525,000 PARK CITY P.U sen-serve oar wasn w sieaay clientele, .o acWGC zoning. V. Cropper 649-8799. $99,000 PROSPECTOR 2774 Sidewinder, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, full basement, landscaped yard, excellent condition. Tevy Smith 649-7785. $39,900 $42,900 $49,900 Tt '" Tm"' "'lrrl $69,000 1 'V 7 I $119,000 SILVER SPRINGS 4932 Silver Springs Road, entertainer's delight, open vaulted ceilings, wet bar in family room, deck off master suite. Cyndi Sharp 649-4090. it 12 n 1 ! 5 ' I o i $89,000 $89,000 $99,000 $115,000 $189,000 $215,000 PROSPECTOR Unit 502 Prospector, kitchenette, present offer. -Tevy Smith 649-7785. SNOWCREST 100 Snowcrest, 1 bd, 1 ba, pool, walk to skiing. Cyndi Sharp 649-4090. PARK WEST 4B Park West, 2 bd plus lof, 2 ba, furnished, bank repo. Cyndi Sharp 649-4090. RESORT AREA Unit 301 Snowcrest, 1 bd plus loft, 1 ba, furnished, fireplace, near slopes. Maire Rosol 561-7709. PARK CITY G-1 Fireside Condos, 2 bd, 2 ba, own, don't rent. Don Griffin 649-8220. RESORT 194 Payday, 3 bd, 3 ba, by golf course, foreclosure. Cyndi Sharp 649-4090. SILVER SPRINGS Unit 27 Meadow Wild, 3 bd, 3 ba, 1800 sq. ft., owner financing available. Martha Brown 649-7064. OLD TOWN Unit B Motherlode, Victorian with prime Old Town location. Craig Masters 649-8442. TRIPLEX 402 Ontario, excellent investment, potential triplex, on Rossie Hil. Chris Eberlein 649-7743. DEER VALLEY B-4 Sunspot, Quality contemporary, 3 bd w solar at D.V. entrance, views. Linda McReynolds 649-6234. RESORT CENTER Unit 28 Snowflower, 3 bd plus loft, 3 ba, ski-in-ski-out. Bob Richer 649-1132. $9,500 HIGHLAND ESTATES Lot 312 B, .92 ac, Meadow View Dr., horse prop., ex. for timeshare. Maire Rosol 561-7709. $179,000 OLD TOWN Motherlode no. 2, 3 bedrooms, 4 baths, luxurious condo, located across from Town Lift at entrance to Main Street, Mint condition Bob Richer 649-1132. 'tV'i ' ''7lfa3"i. $185,000 SILVER SPRINGS 1468 Willow Loop Road, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, 1 level contemporary design,, open floor plan, trade for smaller homecondo. Maire Rosol 561-7709. $9,900 SILVER CREEK Lot 514 Silver Creek, 2.5 ac, single family lot, best prices in area. Tevy Smith 649-7785. $12,000 HIGHLAND ESTATES ! Lot 352 Highland Estates, 1 .25 ac, located on Countryside Circle. Ann Brighton 649-4084. $30,000 SUMMIT PARK Lot 231 Jeremy Rn., reasonably priced in prestigious sbdiv. Georgia Shane 649-7836. ,' $55,000 DEER VALLEY Lot 87 Solamere, Deer Valley bank foreclosure, great ' , financing avail. Martha Brown 649-7064. $75,000 OLD RANCH ROAD Treasure Mt. Ranches, fenced and drained horse prop., expansive views, area of fine homes. Bill Ligety 649-4090 $190,000 OLD RANCH ROAD Horse property, 1 0-20 acre parcels. Craig Masters 649-8442. $215,000 PARK AVENUE 8th St & Park Ave, prime cnr lot, across from Town Lift, dev possibilities. C. Masters, R. Dudley, B. Richer 649-8550. $235,000 DEER VALLEY Lot 63 American Flag, great views of mnts & Empire Can & Old Town, prestigious subdv. Georgia Shane 649-7836. $195,000 DEER VALLEY 1 4 Queen Esther, luxury 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, hardwood floors, hot tub, best buy in development. Dianne Holt 649-8550. :7. $68,000 HIGHLAND ESTATES 6295 Snowview, best price, 3 bd, 2.5 ba, 3,000 sq. ft. 1 plus ac. Chris Eberelin 649-7743. $125,000 SUMMIT PARK 490 Parkview Dr, 4 bd, 3 ba, easy access to main road, cathedral ceiling in living rm. Tevy Smith 649-7785. $125,000 THAYNES CANYON 19 Prospector Dr, 4 bd, 2 ba, on golf course, great value. Dianne Holt 649-8550. $131,000 SNYDERVILLE 491 8 Silver Springs Rd, great 4 bd house, new paint & landscaping, good area. Leslie Grace 649-7153. $135,000 PROSPECTOR 221 Doc Holiday, 4 bd, 2.5 ba, family rm, very well cared for. Tevy Smith 649-7785. $148,000 JEREMY RANCH 3835 Saddle Back, 4 bd, 3 ba, views, across from golf course. Cyndi Sharp 649-4090. $149,000 PARK MEADOWS 2663 Little Kate, 3 bd w upgrades, garden rm w hot tub, Ig yd. Leslie Grace 649-7153. $215,000 PINEBROOK 2925 Stagecoach 5 bd, contemporary home on gorgeous heavily wooded .7 ac lot. Linda McReynolds 649-6234. $215,000 THAYNES CANYON No. 3 Hidden Splendor Ct, 3 bd. 2 ba, & trees in Thaynes, nicest area. Vivian Cropper 649-8799. $320,000 PARK MEADOWS 4023 Fairway Village, very large, very well furnished, mother-in-law-apt., 4 bedrooms, 4 baths. Georgia Shane 649-8550. $320,000 RIDGEVIEW GUMP&AYERS R E A I STAT E I N C 649-8550 3000 Crestline Dr, 3 bd, 4 ba, furnished, open floor plan, great views, hot tub, sauna. Maire Rosol 561-7709. $375,000 THAYNES CANYON 2088 Three Kings Ct, 4 bd, 3.5 ba, fantastic views of Park City & Deer Valley Craig Masters 649-8442. $375,000 RIDGEVIEW 5575 Meadows Drive. 3 bd, 4 ba. 3,400 sq, ft, hot tub. sauna, furnished, views. Martha Brown 649-7064. $492,500 RIDGEVIEW 5520 Meadows Dr, P.C.'s finests views, fabulous 5 bd, plus, must sell. Randy Spagnoletti 649-8386. $530,000 HEBER Daniels Canyon, 6 bd. 5 ba, 20 ac horse ranch, log home & barn, 3 pastures, arena pool. Maire Rosol 561-7709. $630,000 AMERICAN FLAG 370 Centennial Circle, high on a rrint top, close to town & surrounded by trees! 3 bd, 3 ba. Vivian Cropper 649-8799 $750,000 SNYDERVILLE 568 W. 5200 N., Treasure Mt. Estates finest, 5700 sq. ft., 6 bd, lap pool, 5 ac, barn, views. Leslie Grace 649-7153. Park Meadows Plaza 1500 Kearns Blvd. Park City, Utah 84060 and 1030 Park Avenue Heart beat the pulse of life Editor's note: The Park Record will be publishing a sports medicine-related article each week with the help of local physicians and other sports-related professionals. profes-sionals. If you would like to have a specific sports-related sports-related question answered in the Record please send your question with your name and number to: P.O. Box 3688, Park City, Ut. 84060. Or call 649-9014 and ask for the sports department. We will make every effort to try and find an answer to your question. The following article is part one of a three-part series written with the help of Dr. Robert Evers from Holy Cross Hospital in Park City. Dr. Evers is an avid runner and a specialist in exercise physiology. Your heart use it or lose it. May sound simple enough, but what exactly does it mean? Sure, we use our hearts our heart pumps blood around our body, our heart gives us a pulse we can usually find in our wrists, ear lobes, femoral artery, and neck ; sometimes we say our heart breaks. . . Considering heart disease is the number one cause of death in our country, it might help to know more about our heart and what function it really does perform and what we can do to perhaps lower our risk of disease. The heart is a specialized type of muscle that functions as a pump and circulates blood through the body. It has been found that following a proper training program, an individual can actually change the size of this muscle; increasing the amount of maximal oxygen one can consume con-sume and strengthening the heart making it more efficient. effi-cient. You may have heard that the more aerobic-type exercise exer-cise you do, the lower your resting pulse will be. For instance, in-stance, a marathon runner may have a resting pulse of 44 beats-per-minute, while the guy who walks from his car to his office while smoking a cigarette may have a heart rate of 100 beats per minute. Great, you may say. So what if my heart has to beat faster than a guy who runs marathons? Well, if you were able to take a look at both sets of hearts you would most likely find an amazing difference. You would find that the marathon runner has a bigger heart. The effects of his running have increased the thickness of his heart muscle. His heart is a more efficient effi-cient machine with the ability to pump more blood through his body in a single beat. Most likely he will have lower blood pressure, lower cholesterol and dilated coronary arteries, which in turn can help to lower his risk of sudden death, myocardial infraction and all risk factors associated with heart disease. In the sedentary office worker, you would most likely find both an elevated pulse and an elevated blood pressure. His form of exercise (aside from walking from his car to his chair at work) is an occasional football game with the guys on the weekends. (Though he might prefer to watch other guys play while drinking beer in his favorite chair.) He loves food and eats most everything as long as it isn't green. Sure, he's a little overweight maybe 20 pounds or so, but he's happy. He's a success in the business world and he makes lots of money. He has a nice house and fancy car, wife and kids. He's been smoking like a train since college. Inside, his heart is beating furiously to transport needed need-ed blood through his vascular system to the various organ systems in his body. Who do you suppose will live longer? You say you would put your money on the marathon runner? You're probably right-granted of course, that the runner doesn't have a high incidence of heart disease in his family. The marathon runner would most likely be the one to live a longer, healthier life. If he does have a high incidence of heart disease in his family, at least he is taking preventive measures that can help to lower that risk. Meanwhile our overweight friend can be in danger. Although it may not be an immediate problem, he is not doing his body any favors. He's actually making it more difficult for his system to perform the way it should. His heart has to work faster, since it is less efficient thus increasing the amount of times his heart beats per minute. His risk of sudden death is increased by exercising only on-ly on an occasional weekend. His random football games place an incredible stress on his heart and it may not be long before this guy experiences some trouble. Symptomatic heart disease is the end state presentation presenta-tion of atheroscherosis (hardening of the arteries). Atheroscherosis is characterized by abnormal, cholesterol-containing deposits on the inner layers of the blood vessels. It is one of the main causes of high blood pressure. It has been found that fatty foods, such as dairy products and eggs, are one of the causes of atheroscherosis. Atheroscherosis is a disease process that occurs in everyone over the age of 20 and has been found to begin as young as infancy. Your chances of developing heart disease depends on your age, whether or not you smoke, your blood pressure and your family history. Since you are pretty much stuck with your age and your family history, what can you do? Find out next week as Dr. Evers helps explains more on exercise and the heart. MuWBsiy oim Sprit by Jim Murray Love him or hate him, tennis needs John Patrick McEnroe "7 hate funerals and would not attend my own if it could be avoided. But, it is well for every man to stop and reflect every now and then on the kind of mourners he is preparing for his final event." Gouverneur Morris, Revolutionary patriot. John Patrick McEnroe Jr., the tennis player, may be a long way from his funeral but a lot of people thought his tennis game was terminal. It had atrophied shockingly in a 6-month layoff. If it wasn't dead, there was a rattle in its throat. It was a day many people had been looking forward to like a kid to Christmas. Umpires, journalists, linesmen, opponents, the whole fabric of tennis yearned for the day when his serve no longer blistered, his forehand wobbled and his backhand netted. Tennis could go back to being a gentleman's game again and not a Bowery Boys sit-com. After all, it is a game that starts out at love and now it could go back to its tea-and-crumpels origins where the royal box could be spared the kind of gutter language the lower classes use to express themselves. McEnroe had lowered the elegant game to the level of mud wrestling. No self-respecting equerry would dare subject the Queen Mother to a McEnroe match. She would hear some perversions of the mother tongue Chaucer never dreamed of. Might as well take her to a porn house i n Ti mes Squa re . It would be nice to have a Wimbledon final of "Lovely shot, Gene!" again, of silent, efficient Swedes or fun-loving fun-loving but polite Aussies. No more guttersnipes to curdle Ihe cream on the strawberries. ' So. when McEnroe married a movie star and retired to Malibu to reflect on his options, tennis began, hopefully, to dig out like a family that has survived a tornado, to see what was left they could rebuild upon. They had this pointy-headed Czechoslovakiun, a heavy legged German kid and not much else. Hut matches could be played in library silence again. Tennis is not really a spectator sport, it is a kind of complicated tea dance. McEnroe made it seem like the semi-main at St. Nick's or a dock light in Marseilles. When McEnroe didn't even make Wimbledon and then Hot knocked out in the first round of the U.S. Open this year, tennis heaved a collective sigh of relief. The day it had been dreaming of seemed at hand. The kind of mourners McEnroe had been training for his final event were about to throw their hats in the air. Throw a party. Uncork the champagne. Dance in the streets. Congratulate each other. The nightmare was over. Tennis was saved. Or was it? When McEnroe was eliminated, the U.S. Open degenerated into the CzechosovakianOpen. Four Czechs played in the two finals, which gave newspapers a field day with their "Hey, Czech This!" headlines and a chance to break out all their Czechpoints, Czechmates, bouncing Czechs, and similar puns. Other publications were not so enchanted. When Ivan Lcndl won. Sports Illustrated put his picture on the cover, labeling him "The Champion That Nobody Cares About." Inside, the magazine published a series of headless pictures of him, showing his shirts and suggesting that his wardrobe was the most interesting thing about him, that he played tennis with all the elan of a store window mannequin. The story pointed out he could empty a room faster than a loose anaconda or a smell of smoke, and said that when he took the court the aisles were so clogged with fleeing spectators it looked like the evacuation evacua-tion of Paris. Jimmy Durante used to sing, "You Know Darn Well I Can Do Without Broadway, but Can Broadway Do Without Me?" Tennis won't have to do without John McEnroe just yet. He showed up at the Volvo TennisLos Angeles tournament tour-nament at the tennis center at UCLA a few weeks ago and, although it was not to be confused with the U.S. Often, it had some people who have been beating McEnroe lately and the crowds came out in numbers, probably in the hopes of seeing the shadow of John McEnroe humiliated by guys who couldn't warm him up in the old days, the kind of people who slow down at freeway accidents or like chain-saw movies. The McEnroe that showed up was no burnout. He was not the shell of a player the rumors had led the crowds to expect. He chewed out photographers, umpires, linemen, referees, fans and opponents with equal skill and enthusiasm. He fought for every point, verbally and athletically. If his tennis was a little ragged, his larynx was in Wimbledon form. He stood on the base line with those cat's eyes of his, like a lion who sees a leaf moving in the bush across a clearing, and he whacked out opponents like Brad Gilbert while jawing with female fans, whom he called "low lifes." He kept up a running commentary to himself on the behavior off the ship of fools in the stands and violently contested all calls that went against him. Meanwhile, he was playing impeccable tennis. It was vintage McEnroe. It called to mind Muhammad Ali systematically destroying some foe in his prime while keeping up a lively banter with the ringside seats. "Call this guy a contender" bam! "get me somebody " wha p ! whap ! ' ' who can fight . ' ' He basks in hate. He doesn't play tennis, he provokes it. He stirs his down adrenaline, chokes his opponents choler, and then serenely plays his best tennis while affecting af-fecting a scowl as black as a polar night. He is not fooled by the crowds 's bared fangs. "People want to see me beaten in a match, until they remember that, if they do. they won't see me the next day," he explained ex-plained in a postmatch press conference. "I think they want to see me the next day." At one point last week, McEnroe walked over to a catcalling cat-calling fan cheering for his opponent, Gilbert, and demanded: "What do you want to see tomorrow, an Edberg-Gilbert final or an Edberg-McEnroe?" John McEnroe knew the answer. So does all tennis. They used to call Erick Von Stroheim, the movie villain, the man you love to hate. John McEnroe makes him look like Kebecca of Sunnybrook Farm. McEnroe is training exactly the kind of mourners he wants, and tennis needs. Paying ones. (O 1986, Los Angeles Times. Disl. by Los Angeles Times Syndicate. PEOPLE NOTICE. . . 649-901 4 Call the Park Record today |