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Show Curat Beat Judge The American Fork Cavemen Cave-men behind a "tiring" press, hounded the Uintah Utes in first half action that saw the Utes stay with the Forkers. Uintah led AF 15 to 14 at the first stop. Then with Brad Adamson the Cavemen's heavy artillery shooter hitting six goals, the Cavemen took over by a 32-29 score at the half break and just watching the Utes, you knew that they were worn out, they looked tired. In the third quarter with AF trapping and pressing very strong the Utes tallied just five points and AF had won their second league game as team scoring did in the Utes. Frank Pulley "Mr. Hustle" led the charge with five points, Mark Farnsworth point guard had 4, Paul Peters in his season's sea-son's first start 4, Chris Mon-son Mon-son 4, Adamson 4, and Bart Hawkins 2 as AF led 55-35 and the Utes did not have the bench strength to stay with the running Red and White outfit. The final period was sheer frustration for the Utes as time after time after AF scored they could not even get the ball inbounds to a team member as the press really hurt them. With AF out front by a 66-39 score Coach Carl Ingersoll emptied the AF bench, and the final score showed AF up 69-52, and a share of the Region Six lead. Adamson "did it again" as he hit a couple of fantastic shots inside but mostly the soft 12 to 15 foot swisher that just barely ripples the nets led AF with 20 points in three quarters of play. He is a super shooter from outside. Frank Pulley sank 13 points and is something else on a playing court as he never goes any thing by 100 percent. Chris Monson and Mark Farnworth each tallied 8 with Chris in the Meet the BOB LEWIS Twins Get by John Roberts You got troubles, I've got troubles, but you don't know what trouble is until you're an official and try to tell the American Fork Cavemen Jay-Vee Jay-Vee team captains apart. Then you've got troubles! "Meet the Player" introduces intro-duces identical twins Bob and Ron Lewis, and I must admit that without a program or help I cannot tell them apart yet--but a few people can now. Bob is listed first in the AF program and wears number 32. Ron is listed last (Alphabetically) (Alphabe-tically) and wears number 35. Bob is in reality about one inch taller than Ron and tips the scales just a little heavier. Bobby will shoot lefthanded a lot of the time, while Ron stays righthanded. Both rely on quickness and speed to do the job, and both can leap right out-a-sight for their height. Both can go up and reach the rim of the hoop, and for 5 foot 7-inch Ron, and 5 foot 8-inch Bob, that is good jumping. On occasion against taller people in jumping situations situa-tions you watch them, and you will note their jumpint ability. Both play guard and enjoy many of the same things. Their athletic ability is in all sports, but they have settled on basketball and tennis, and were the number 2 and 3 singles sin-gles players on the AF tennis team last year. They will go out for tennis again this year. Their mother, Greta Lewis, is a solid backer and with her oldest son Vaughn attend all of the boys' games. Mark, another an-other son, works out of town, and that is the Lewis family. Vaughn, a former AF athlete having played fullback and middle linebacker as a Cave- .f r - t . )., . n . ' " I f 'j-..V-. J :- h ran post and Mark out front on the press. Paul Peters hit 7, Scott Rackman 4 and they alternate with Mark and seem to stay fresh as a daisy while running the opponents down. Jamie Burgess had 4, Bart Hawkins 2, Steve Larsen 2 and Vaughn Webster 1. Defeat Judge Memorial Judge Memorial caught AF a little "flat" and with Region Five and Six scouts in abundance abun-dance at the game, maybe Coach Ingersoll did not want to show much, never-the-Iess AF won 72-63 in a pretty good game to watch. Play was close in the first half with Judge on top at the half 32-31. Then with Chris Monson warming up after the intermission and aiding Brad Adamson in scoring AF opened up a lead and maintained main-tained it even with reserves into the fray. Brad scored 8 in that third period and Chris seven as the quarter ended AF 52, Judge 44, and with AF in command at 69-55 the AF bench saw game time and Judge outscored them 12 to 4 to make the score respectable as the final showed AF 73, Judge 63. Brad again led all scorers with 21 as he maintains his 20 point per game average after 11 games. Frank rang up 17 and he was the only Cavemen consistent at the foul line. Bart Hawkins with a good effort had 11 points, Chris had 9 and missed a few layups, Paul had 7,- Scott 6, Mark 4 and AF's overall record is 6-5, but more important they share Region Six leadership with a 2-0 mark. Pleasant Grove beat Spring-ville Spring-ville 62-50 and they too are 2-0; Payson edged Sp. Fork in overtime 46-44 and they are 1-0. Region Six is idle until January Jan-uary 7 when AF travels to Springville. The Mental Health Association Associa-tion is a member agency of the United Way of Utah County. Cavemen RON LEWIS the Nod man said, "I think they are pretty good kids, and I am impressed by their quickness and speed and the amount of turnovers they create. I'm thankful that they are so evenly even-ly matched, both have been ever since little league baseball base-ball days when they played for the Yanks. They have good coordination and have learned from watching basketball on TV. I'm excited that they are as good as they are." Mom said, "I'm glad they are in sports, even though it's expensive for some of the equipment; I know that it is worth it. It is a good incentive to maintain good grades and I'm glad they play. It is fun to watch them, and sports have been a part of their lives for quite awhile. I try to see every game," she said. Bob and Ron are active in the 11th Ward where they both are Priests, and both like hunting hunt-ing and four wheeling for hobbies. hob-bies. Coach Carl Ingersoll said, "I'm glad they are paying for us. I would hate for some other club to have them. They are coming along very good. It is nice to have one good guard, but to have two is doubly good. They are excellent students and very coachable, I'm pleased to have them." Both agree on several things; they disagree on some of Mom's cooking, girls, and agict on Springville, the Cavemen's Cave-men's next opponent, "Our press will do 'em in." Official scorers, in addition to referees, have trouble telling tell-ing the twins apart, and Bob and Ron seem to enjoy that. But like I said, "I do not have any trouble at all identifying them. I just ask their mother." i ' : i:-- Sophs Trounce Uinta Dividing the sophs up so that the JayVee and sophomores could field two teams and playing in both AF gyms, AF played Uintah last week. Art Allred selected some good ones, like Gary D. Beck, AF soph guard, who burned the hoop for 28 points in less than a half of playing time. "Little" Beck started along with "Big" Beck, Gary E., Scott Shumway, Frank Caden-a Caden-a and Jeff Elliason and this group zoomed away from the Ute sophs as the two Becks each had 10 early points. Coach Allred, soph boss, sent in the second unit and they too with Robb Thomas playing sharp, ran away from the Utes. The first team scored 24 to 4, the first stop, the second team went to 42-13, and with everyone ever-yone of the 10 players scoring the final read AF 78, Uintah 42. Beck led the scoring with 12 of 13 goals tried from the field, and 4 foul tosses. Thomas hit for 15. Gary E. Beck had 12. Shumway 8, Scott Richardson 4, Larry McKinney 4, Jeff Eliason 4, Cadena 2, John Edwards Ed-wards 2, and Ron Stieneker 1. tjja 1 3 mm taro If your family drinks 8 glasses or one half gallon of milk a day, you spend as much for milk as the typical residential Mountain Fuel customer spends for natural gas, about 65C a day. Both are necessities. Both are bargains. With costs rising for just about everything we need today, it's important to remember that natural gas is still the most economical, efficient energy source available. Natural gas provides the energy to warm our home and water, dry our clothes and cook our daily meals. Natural gas works for us 24-hours a day for less than one dollar a Hau t. - u.in Wo at Moun- vu). ,,cll g g uciyan,. ' - tain Fuel are doing everything we can to keep it that way. JayUees Beat Utes, Judge The American Fork JayVee basketball club playing below par, lacking drive and not "up" for the game still beat the Uintah Utes 57-39. Quarter scores were AF 16-4 as AF started fast but then emotionally it was hard for them to remain high as the Utes had lots of trouble against the press. The second period ended 29- jLst tl -ml' I f ill t .v? I f-' llllillliiiiiiS ' WmmKmm 15 as both teams were going through the motions. With several sophs playing the third quarter ended 49-18 as the Utes badly outclassed scored just 3 points and the final score was 57-39. Two "blond bombers" led the scoring with Jamie Burgess and Steve Larsen each getting 12, and "Big Jon" Larson had 10. Junior guards Ron and Bob Lewis, the other starters had 2 and 4. Russ Devitt tossed in 9, Chris War-enski7, War-enski7, MikeOvard4. Against Judge Memorial a team that offered token opposition oppo-sition the JayVees won easily by an 86-60 final score and everyone suited logged a lot of playing time. Jamie Burgess once more poured in 20 points in leading the rout, that by quarters had AF in front 23-8 first, 41-23, halftime. 61-39 third. Jon Larson hit 17 on his turnaround jumper, Gary D. Beck scored 14 quick ones, Jeff Eliason 8, Bob Lewis 8, Gary E. Beck 6, Scott Shumway Shum-way 4, Russ Devitt 4, Joel Richards 4, and Robb Thomas 1. The Veterans Administration's Administra-tion's construction appropriation appropria-tion for fiscal year 1977 is $497.7 million. The Veterans Administration Administra-tion construction plans for fiscal fis-cal year 1977 include a $10 million computer center at Hines, Illinois. Providing you with Natural Gas service at reasonable reason-able costs is our business. Conserving it is everybody's job. "Our typical residential customer uses 180,000-cubic feet of gas annually, and pays $233.32 tor this service. Your individual bill may be more or less than this amount, depending on your actual usage. To do a comparable job with another fuel you'd pay: $646. 70 tor propane $445.42 for heating oil , $248.93 tor coal $596.91 lor electricity MOUNTAIN FUEL AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN WEDNESDAY. DEC. 29, 1976 U.H.S.A.A. Announces m Realignment "It is official", the realignment realign-ment by the Utah High School Activity Association was passed last week and the "new" Region Six has AF., PI. Grove, Spanish Fork, Springville, Spring-ville, Payson, Provo, Timp View (the new school created in Provo by the division of the old Provo High), Dixie and Cedar City. The new nine league membership mem-bership offers nine schools with well rounded athletic, music, debate and related high school activities that will be envied by many. According to local people that I talked with, they all are very pleased with the new setup, and are confident that rivalries will develop within the new alignment, that takes effect with the start of the 1977 school year. Uintah and Carbon, former region schools join Region Five with Union (Roosevelt), Judge, Jordan, Tooele and Murray. Region Four all 3A schools the same classification as Regions 5 and 6 are Bear River, Ogden, Davis, Logan, Ben Lomond, South and the new Woods Cross. Union High moved up from 2A, South, Ogden, Ben Lomond, Box Elder, all dropped from 4A. Of interest it should be noted that for South it will be a brand new way of life, as they have never owned a school bus and now must travel. The trip for Region Six will be long, that is for sure, and travel was the big argument by most every team and school but overall I personally like the new setup as do every one in AF that I have talked to. There are 169,000 Navy veterans among the nation's 577,000 women veterans, according ac-cording to the Veterans Administration. Ad-ministration. Marine Corps veterans total 36,000 among the nation's 577,000 women veterans, the Veterans Administration reported. |