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Show ml t? ievj High Wins First Same Mountain View used a tough defense and a fourth quarter score by Gary Cooper to win its first game ever. Both teams were hurt by penalties and turnovers turn-overs throughout the game. Mountain View scored its touchdown on the first play of the fourth quarter. It was set up when Doug Jensen recovered a fumble by Carbon. The offensive line, anchored by Phil Broderick at center, played a great game. Mountain View moved the ball well both on the ground and through the air accumulating over 250 yards in total offense. Coach Dave Allphin and his coaching staff were very pleased with the performance as a whole. Mountain View will play its first home game as they battle Cedar City this Friday. If the first game is any indication, in-dication, Mountain View should have an excellent football season. Mountain View 0 0 0 7-7 Carbon 0 0 0 0-0 MV Car Don First Downs 17 11 Rushing yards 178 106 Passing yards 105 35 Passes 6-13-0 3-10-0 Fumbles lost 5-4 3-3 Punts avg. 5-38 4-35 Penalties yards 14-140 8-80 Prep Scores Springville 20, Provo 19 (overtime) Spanish Fork 29, Timp-view6 Timp-view6 Orem 14, Payson 13 Dixie 15, Pleasant Grove 12 Mountain View 7, Carbon 0 Cedar City 19, American Fork 7 Wasatch 13, South Summit 7 (overtime) Emery 13, Juab 12 Lehi 23, Uintah 0 South Sevier 26, Richfield 24 Millard 34, Delta 0 Alta 20, Jordan 0 Hillcrest 34, Granger 14 Granite 27, Kearns 8 , Highland 19, East 6 Bingham 26, Cottonwood 14 Brighton 7, Skyline 3 . Ben Lomond 21, Morgan 6 .South 33, Tooele 7 Judge 20, West 7 Cyprus 21, Woods Cross 12'.: J)avis 18, Murray 7 v ; Duchesne 54, Whitehorse 6 Kanab 27, Parowan 0 Capitol (Idaho) 37, Layton 7 Next week's local games Carbon at American Fork, 5 p.m. ' - Cedar City at Mountain View, 5 p.m. North Summit at Wasatch, 5 p.m. Payson at Pleasant Grove, 5 p.m. Dixie at Orem, 5 p.m. Spanish Fork at Provo, 7:30 p.m. Springville at Timpview, 7:30 p.m. Juab at Moab, 7:30 p.m. Lehi at Bear River, 7:30 p.m. Muzzleloader Permit Sale Permits for the muzzleloader muz-zleloader deer hunt to be held Nov. 1 through 9 are now on sale at Division of Wildlife Resources offices in Salt Lake City, Ogden, Springville, Price, Vernal and Cedar City. Deadline for buying the $10 permit is Oct. 17. A muzzleloader permit does not have a deer tag and thus does not entitle a permit holder to a second deer. Installed Free Exchange 5' '1 - ti&, im'iV mm- Jazz Tryouts Saturday The Utah Jazz will be holding tryouts for a team mascot, Sept. 6, at the F. R. Payne Gymnasium on the campus of Westminster West-minster College. Tryouts will begin at 10 a.m. for the yet unnamed un-named mascot that will perform at every Jazz home game. Each contestant will be asked to put on a three minute performance of acrobatics and comedy routines. Judges for the tryouts Fitness Tips By Dr. Dale Nelson Before you get ready for a long run, you should have an ample reserve of water in your system, so have an adequate amount to drink the day before. - Don't drink anything with sugar in it for several hours before the race. The sugar triggers an insulin reaction, which may result in a temporary tem-porary lowering of your blood sugar level. Premature exhaustion is likely to result. Two hours before the race, don't drink anything or you will be dashing for the woods to answer nature's call. It takes 60 to 90 minutes for the body to process excess liquid through the kidneys. However, you can drink quite a lot (10 ounces or more) five minutes before the start. The kidneys shut down after you start exercising to preserve fluid. A pre-race pre-race water station is a good service to runners. During the race your body loses liquid much more rapidly than it can be absorbed into the system from the stomach, so you need to drink a lot to minimize the loss. Start drinking at the first water station. Don't wait until you get dry. Drink more than you think you need. Your system can absorb a full cup of liquid every 15 to 20 minutes. Walk, if necessary to make certain you get all the fluid down. If you are Dave Allphin of Mt. View High School guided the Bruins to the first football victory for the new high school. by Mike Schlappi will be Jazz Director of Marketing Avery McLean, General Manager Frank Layden, Vice President Ken Beck and Public Relations Director David Fredman. The competition is open to anyone 18 years of age or older. Each contestant con-testant must contact the Jazz office at 355-5151 to pre-register . The deadline for entry is Sept. 5 at 5 p.m. like me, you can't drink on the run. The best drink is water. You don't need to replace the electrolytes (sodium, potassium, magnesium) during the run, since they are more concentrated during exercise. More water than electrolytes are removed during the run. Thus, as far as the cells are concerned, con-cerned, the body has an excess of electrolytes. During prolonged periods of heavy sweating, the need to replace body water is greater than any immediate demands for electrolytes. If you want to drink ERG, Gatorade or whatever, be sure it is diluted so that it is' almost water. Remember that sugar has to be diluted in the stomach in order to be absorbed. If it is too concentrated, the stomach gets water from the tissues, and you can't afford that on a hot day. Cold days are another story. Fruit juices and colas are no, no's. Stay away from carbonated drinks during the run. After the run drink as soon as possible but not quite as much as your stomach can tolerate. The drink should be as cold as possible, since that will help the body's cooling process. Whatever your choice of liquid, including water, you need to keep drinking to replace the large VIUW IS THE phra.se to FROM TE CUSTOM OF USING tortoise shell money, in old china! shell currency is still commom in parts of that oountrv! HOVl WOULD FROM THE MOON ? A ,m:v ns LIKE A LARGER ftND CLOSER MOON. SINCE OUR GLOBE 15 ABOUT 4 Tfcffs THE SIZE OF THIS SATELLITE Utah Jazz To Play Two Pre-Season Games In Utah The Utah Jazz will play two of its eight preseason pre-season games in Utah the club announced today. Jazz fans can get an early look at their team by attending games at the Marriott Center in Provo against Denver on Sept. 24 and in the Salt Palace against the 76ers on Sept. 30. The game in the Marriott Center will be the Jazz' second game of the pre-season, as the team will open its preseason pre-season schedule Sept. 23 in Santa Barbara, Calif, against Golden State. Tickets for the game in Provo are priced at $5 and $3, with family rates also offered. A portion of the proceeds for this game will go to BYU as a BYU football stadium addition fund raiser. The Nuggets are looking to rebound from their 30-52 season of 1979-80. 1979-80. A healthy David Thompson along with center Dan Issel will lead Denver into Provo for the inter division tilt. Tickets for this contest will go on sale at the Marriott Center on Sept. 8. Philadelphia will provide the opposition for the Jazz in Utah's only Salt Lake City appearance ap-pearance before the regular season opens in the Salt Palace on Oct. 10 against Portland. The Bighorn Sheep Flocks Growing Utah desert bighorn sheep, once so plentiful in southeastern Utah that they were often the subject of ancient Indian petroglyphs, are again increasing in numbers. With careful management practices and utilization of transplants, tran-splants, desert bighorn sheep populations are now at their highest known levels in areas east of the Colorado River, according to Norman Hancock, chief of Game Management for the Division of Wildlife Resources. However, the Division officials are not resting easy. A highly concentrated herd of desert bighorn sheep is a prime target for disease and parasites. Recently, New Mexico lost 80 percent of one of its bighorn sheep herds to a scabies mite infestation. Hancock says the Division plans to transplant tran-splant desert bighorn sheep into their historical habitat west of the Green and Colorado rivers where herd numbers are still very low. This operation will increase the chances for healthy populations of desert bighorn sheep to perpetuate per-petuate in all areas of quantity of fluid your body will have lost. It is best to drink a little at a time over quite an extended ex-tended period of time. Keep drinking until you have fairly clear urine. Your electrolytes will be replaced naturally through your diet of fresh fruits, cereals, vegetables, and milk products. Good luck! TEL L ORIGIN OF THE shell out V" THE EARTH LOOK ln ... i 76ers were last year's NBA runnerup to world champion Los Angeles. Julius Erving and Darryl Dawkins will lead the Sixers into Salt Lake City. Last year a sellout crowd watched as the Jazz whipped Philadelphia, 107-101. The Sixers will make only one other appearance in the Salt Palace on Feb. 27 for a regular season game. Tickets for the Philadelphia preseason game went on sale at the Salt Palace Wednesday. Wed-nesday. Aside from the two games in Utah and one in Santa Barbara, Calif., the Jazz will also play preseason pre-season games in Fort Wayne, Ind., Louisville, Ky., Poeatello, Idaho, Calgary, Canada and Edmonton, Canada. All pre-season games, as well as regular season games, will be broadcast back to Utah on KSL Radio, with the voice of the Jazz Hot Rod Hundley describing the action. The Jazz will begin training camp on Sept. 12 at Westminster College. The teams will go through workouts twice a day before opening its preseason pre-season schedule, on Sept. 23. ' All training camp workouts are open to the public. southern and southeastern Utah. The Division feels a sense of immediacy in taking advantage of the ninent high populations of desert bighorn sheep. However, ; financial constrahils have recently delayed the transplant opera tion. Contributions from Shikar-Safari International In-ternational and a grant from the Foundation for North American Wild Sheep have aided the causes, but funds still fall far short. (Due to the remoteness of desert bighorn sheep habitat, helicopters are essential in a stransplant project.) To give a financial boost to the project, the Board of Big Game Control recently approved ap-proved the bidding of one desert bighorn sheep permit. This proposal will allow the highest bidder to donate to the preservation preser-vation of Utah desert bighorn sheep in exchange ex-change for the opportunity op-portunity to hunt a trophy desert bighorn ram. A somewhat similar procedure has been successful in two neighboring neigh-boring states. Minimum bid has been set at $20,000. Some may say, "Are you trying to price hunting out of the common man's reach or, by bidding, are you going to eliminate my chances of drawing a permit?" No! In the first place, the Division is able to keep the price of the regular bighorn sheep permit at its present level by using this new procedure to pay for the total costs associated with reestablishing new bighorn populations. Secondly, the Division is notoffering additional bighorn permits. Ac- ME are young robins hearty eaters? VfesT MA.NV YOUNG POBINS CONSUME AS MUCH AS if FT OF ANGLEWORMS IN ONE PAY.' Vhat HELPS MAKE SUGAR VHITE? ., AGENT.... OFTEN IS TO MAKE SUGAR Fly Fishing Taught At Y Sportsmen can now learn to hook fish with homespun flies through a new course offered to the public by BYU's Department of Conferences Con-ferences and Workshops. The course makes available the collected expertise of two of the valley's most experienced ex-perienced fly fishermen-Steve fishermen-Steve Brown and Kraig Robinson. They will be teaching the fundamentals fun-damentals of fly tying and fly fishing through classroom instruction and streamside experience. In this six-week course, the participants will learn how to tie such flies as the Wet Fly, the Black Wooly Worm, the Muskrat Nymph, the Streamer, the Dry Fly and the Brown Hackle Peacock. During the course Brown and Robinson will also discuss fish mannerisms, man-nerisms, stream courtesy, cour-tesy, reading the water, fly casting and fly selection. Brown says the fundamentals can be learned within the scope of the course. "The excitement increases," he said, "as the fishing enthusiast pursues a fish with a strategically selected fly that he has made himself." him-self." Classes will be on Tuesdays from 7 to 9 p.m., beginning Sept. 16. For more information call 378-4903, or contact the Department of Conferences and Workshops, 242 Herald R. Clark Building, BYU. tually, last year, there were twononresident permits authorized on the regular hunt; this year, there is but one. Bids must be submitted sub-mitted to the Division Salt Lake office by 5 p.m., Wednesday, August 13. The bid proposal must be in letter form or a telegram and be marked "Sealed Bid--bighorn sheep." Bids will be opened at 4 p.m. on August 15, and the desert bighorn sheep permit will be awarded to the highest bidder. The recipient may hunt a desert bighon sheep from opening day of the regular season (September -13) to the end of the license year (December 31). A professional privat guide has tentatively offered to donate up to 10 days of his time free for guiding after the second week of the regular bighorn sheep hunt. All proceeds from the highest bidder's donation, except for license and permit fees, will be placed in the Research and Development Fund and be earmarked for capturing and transplanting tran-splanting bighorn fheep into historical sites. FISH KILLED Grout escaping from a repair operation on the Electric Lake dam killed 6,000 to 7,000 brown trout in Huntington Creek on July 18, reports Division of Wildlife Resources Southeastern Regional Fisheries Manager John Livesay. The concrete chemical turned the water a murky white, killing the fish in a two-mile two-mile fly fishing only USED , Jh WHITP! (ffil Tigers Of Orem Wm Season Opener Orem High Tigers came from behind in the last quarter to down a well coached Jim Durrant team of Payson by a score of 14 to 13. The game was a typical first game outing by both teams. Fumbles and penalties were frequent by both teams. However, the game kept a capacity house at Payson on the edge of their seats until the final moments of the game. The first quarter ended with the score 0-0 with neither team able to score. In the second quarter Payson recovered an Orem fumble on about the 27 yard line. With Scott Day and Doug Rowley providing most of the action for Payson, the Lions scored. Carl Ford booted the all-important extra point and Payson went into the locker room at the half with a lead of 7-0. As the second half got underway a Payson drive led by Hiat was stopped at the 10 yard line. After Orem tried to move the ball they were forced to kick, a penalty made the Tigers kick the ball over. Pete Peters grabbed the ball near mid-field, mid-field, picked up his blockers along the west side line and scampered in for the TD. The extra point was missed and the Lions led by a score of 13-0. Orem seemed to realize the victory was slipping away from them in the last part of the third quarter. Led by Randy Denter, Bryant Herman, and Carter, the Tigers were headed for a touchdown, touch-down, Denter was hit hard and fumbled the ball. Rogers picked it up and scored. Bradshaw drilled the kick-after and Orem had started to move. Payson threatened again in the fourth quarter but was plagued by penalties. Orem ended up with the ball on the Payson 29 yard line when Denter, Herman, and Carter started their 80 yard drive which proved to be a victory march. The play was sensational sen-sational on the part of the Orem team as they seemed to come alive with about 4 minutes to go in the game, as they marcned down the field and scored. Bradshaw booted the extra point and Orem had the lead 14-13, with time running run-ning out. Wiley Jim Durrant pulled a reverse on Orem that almost worked as Payson moved the all to the 20 yard line of Orem. Payson was still battling when Mike Fairbanks intercepted a Payson pass giving Orem the ball with time nearly out. Orem played it safe and ran the clock out. Final score: Orem 14-Payson 14-Payson 13. The play of the Orem Tigers was very interesting to watch. Under the new head coach Steve Downey it was evident that the division of the Orem stretch of stream immediately im-mediately below the dam. John Livesay savs fishing is normal three miles below the dam. Utah Power and Light Company, responsible for the grout operation, is working out an equitable solution, with the Division to restore the fishery. According to Livesay, 2,000 four-inch and 3,500 seven-inch brown trout xare available in state hatcheries to replace the lost fish which had ranged up to 3 pounds. However, before planting can take place, the food base in the stream must be studied. Chemicals from the grout may have also killed invertebrates which serve as food for the trout. Fishing should be back to normal in the two-mile stretch of Huntington Creek in two or three years. Golf Cell Limited 225-7600 up m Orem-Geneva Times 5s Mmmmm No Permit To Pick Pine Nuts No permit will be necessary to gather pine nuts on land administered by the Bureau of Land Management this year. Salt Lake District Supervisory Range Conservationist Bob Mitchell said no permits will be needed to gather them for private use. However, one would be required if they are for commercial use. The harvest of pine nuts may be lower this year due to last year's bug infestation and lack of rain, Mitchell said. The best time to gather the nuts from the trees is after the first frost, sometime in October. Oc-tober. The freezing temperature opens- the f V J sr mmmm turn LJ I The Magic Islands of Hawaii October 20 - 27, 1980 Coach Karl Tucker and his wife, Joanne will conduct a tour of two Hawaiian Islands. Visit Kaui and Oahu. Play four different Golf Courses. Play Princeville, Kauai Surf, Makaha, and Kuilima Optional Tours for non Golfers Visit the Polynesian Cultural Center, Pearl Harbor - Seethe BYU-University of Hawaii Football Game Mow As Space Is Very For This Personal Tour Travel Agency SIX 521-9460 September 4, 1980 i , , , it ft V Randy Denter f 4 fcnlj m Bryant Herman These two elusive ball carriers of Orem High gave the Payson Lions fits last Friday evening because of their big gains. schools has not marred the caliber of football the Orem fans can expect. The Tiger team will be on the front row when the laurels are handed out at the end of the season. , Payson Orem First Downs 14 13 Yards Passing .89 22 Yards Rushing 86 209 C-A-I 9-17-2 3-13-1 PuntsAve. 4-43 4-30 Pen.Yds. 8-90 8-79 FumblesLost 6-2 3-2 piny on cone and releases the nuts. Mitchell suggests the Raft River Narrows in Box Elder County and the Boulter Mountains in Utah County as possible areas to gather pine nuts. Also, several areas in Nevada are expecting a good crop of pine nuts this year. Tne public should bring rakes and gloves for gathering the nuts. While gathering, care should be taken so that the trees are not damaged. Climbing the trees is not encouraged en-couraged because of the extensive damage that can be done to the tree limbs. The Range Conservationist Con-servationist also stressed that the public should stay on existing roads and trails while traveling in these areas. |