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Show . EAGLE UllltT Skyline Launches Bid For Second Thursday, Sept. 15, 1966 Also, Olympus downed East 25- 7. Gooseggs cropped in in Mighty Mite contests also. Mur ray swept past South 18-Olympus squeezed past East 7- -0 and Highland was victor over 0. Also, West beat Skyline Granite 26-- 7. In the Murray games, played at Murray high, the season's first contest saw Chris Shaw pace his Mighty Mite mates to an 18- -0 win with a pair of touchdowns. The lad hit paydirt on the first play from scrim mage in the game in which youths from 8 to 11 years of age participated. were Midgets Murray's equally as impressive, tallying 25 points before South could muster a scoring threat. The visitors' lone tally came late in the game, with Murray reserves in action. Dee Marsden scored twoTDs and had another called back on a clipping penalty in his team's losing effort to South Bantams. Murray Juniors, paced by Jim trailed South by a Godfrey, single point at the half, before losing the encounter by a pair of extra points. Chadwick (to) N : .'M - "iTuit 3 ir -r- -f Potter yr ' U. d25 IH Jackson 72 WAS NO GAIN for IT (ML-D- Judge Murray defenders at lower left ball-carri- er if' j ticMillan .v.... 77 (M) '.1 ,4 i Priottie, buried under in this picture snapped during the Bill white-jerjeye- d 7-- 7 tie Friday. Norm Wesley had just handed off to Priottie, who was promptly trapped by a host of Spartans who evaded Bulldog blockers. Spartans Deadlock Judge In 7-- 7 East Opener; (earns Invades On Friday SALT LAKE. A spunky, un- derdog Murray grid squad halted Judge inside the stripe twice in the final six minutes of play here Friday afternoon and earned a 7 tie in the opener of both the '66 season and Region Three competition. It was a moral triumph for Coach Wayne Reid's spirited crew, who had entered the game an underdog. By the same token, it was a disappointment for Bulldog followers and, in particular, for Gil Cordova, who's succeeded Frank Klekas at the coaching rd 7-- reins. Tomorrow (Friday), the teams tackle squads who last week faced Judge draws the tougher, moving to Cyprus to battle a Pirate team which routed Kearns 54-- 6 in its opener. Murray makes its home debut against Kearns. Klckoff is at 3 p.m. Statistically, Judge chalked one-anoth- er. m up a yards-gain- advantage on ed the Westminster College field, but in their anxiety to launch a bid for a third straight region Bulldogs title, the committed many blunders. Most resulted in penalties and one, an offside call, nullified a rd touchdown scamper by veteran halfback John Pezely. Murray, though, earned the tie through its own aggressiveness as much as by Judge errors. When they were called defensive upon for stands in the game's fading minutes, they proved equal to the challenge. Sturdy Dennis Da vies was the Spartan kingpin. Not only did he do a yeoman job on defense, but he lugged the pigskin for more than 100 yards during the afternoon, scored the only Murray TD and winged a pass to teammate Jon Winget for the extra point. Coincidentally, Davies and the top Judge Pezely, wore No. 42 on their jerseys. They were equally imover-anxio- us 70-ya- do-or-- die ball-carri- er, pressive. After a somewhat turn-abo- ut first quarter, Judge drew first blood ih Friday's - tussle with 9'30" remaining in the half. The tally culminated a sustained rd drive In which Bill Priottie and Pezely did most of the Pezely finally punched over right guard from the two for the score. End Dan Mates lofted a high conversion kick to make It 0. Offensively sluggish up to that time, the Spartans surged back with a drive of their own which was climaxed by a pass from Blaine Church to Winget carrying to the Bulldog 11. It was nullified by a penalty, how ever, and the effort ran out of gas almost simultaneously with the half-tigun. Murray got on the scoreboard quickly In the second hall After an exchange of punts, the Spar tans engineered their way to the Bulldog 45 from where sen lor halfback Dale Potter swept to the left end with a pitch-o- ut 20. Ken Pino, pint-sizjunior halfback, then legged 20 more to the Judge five, skirting his own right end behind good blocking. From there, Davies took charge, ramming the last yard into the end tone on the third try over the left side. On a fake-kic- k, Davies winged a baseball strike to Winget In the corner of the end zone for the extra point and a 7 deadlock. Judge came to life In the final seven minutes of the game, but had two touchdown threats de nied by a stubborn Spartan line scrapping In the shadow of its own goal posts. came The first near-mi- ss when Pezely escaped around his own right end and ran 55 yards down the west sidelines before Dave Kemp, on a great effort, ran him down at the 12. Four plays got only five yards and the Bulldogs gave up the ballon the seven. Davies, who handled kicking 70-ya- ball-luggi- 45m 7-- One of America's favoran early Dutch importation the coffee break periodically comes in for a few licks from the medical fraternity. In fact, at the AMA's 11th annual meeting, a noted doctor claimed that too frequent coffee breaks might well start one on the road to a peptic ulcer. It was claimed that consuming 10 to IS cups of coffee dally will contribute to, though not necessarily Induce, an ulcer. ite institutions, ... Speaking of claims, we can claim that we go to the ultimata limits to provide the finest prescription service available. Stop in and get acquainted soon at DYCHES PHARMACY 4798 South State Street, In Murray 2700 Soullt In Magna . . . YOUR FRIENDLY REXALL DRUGS ed 7-- Phone AM bWM05 West 35-ya- rd STORE THIS WEEK'S HOUSEHOLD HINT: Attention heavy smokers: Nicotine stains on fingers can often be removed with lighter fluid. NO! chores in addition to his other duties, booted the Spartans out of danger, but Judge wasn't through. This time Joe Yanni gathered in a pass from Norm Wesley and raced 35 yards to the seven before being knocked out of bounds. Unable to punc ture the Spartan defense and tossed back by a penalty, Mates field goal tried a fourth-dow- n from the six, but was short. There were two minutes left. Bulldog followers had reason er touchto regret a down called back by an offside penalty. Priottie hit Pezely with a swing pass off the right side and the sturdy speedster ran unraollested 70 yards to pay-di- rt. It would've been the game's first SCOREBOARD 7 19, Highland South 19, West 0 Davis 26, Viewmont 13 Bountiful 53, Skyview 19 Judge 7, Murray 7 (tie) Hillcresr 32, Jordan 7 Cyprus 54, Kearns 6 Skyline 26, Granite 6 Granger 26, Olympus 19 on-league third-quart- Murray followers had their opportunity to cheer moments earlier. In a fourth and six situation, Davies went back to kick, but a mixup in blocking positions prevented him getting the ball away. Instead he swung to the right, eluded the Bulldog forwards and rambled 30 yards to the midfield stripe. It, too, went for naught. At game's end, Spartan coaches had praise for Davies Dale as well as Potter, defensive safety Greg McMillan, guard Kelley Bills, linebacker Bill Wack, tackle Rick Jackson and Kemp. But they hastened to add they considered the entire game a "good team effort once the Murray crew got over first half jitters. Cordova, who felt his team wasn't quite ready for its initial start and was hurt by mistakes which netted penalties, lauded guards Ken Yanni and Jim Fake, junior tackle Sam Alola, defensive half-baJim Smith and quarterback Wesley, along with Priottie and Pezely. ball-carr- t'.i- - topple to the turf in the woke of lancer fullback Steve Mackay (30) Also seen are during a game won by Granger Warner Ted Jerald (27) and Angus (62), Granger's TITAN GRIDDERS hard-chargin- g 26-1- Olympus end Terrill Bill ed 9. Prevail In Ute Lancers' Comeback Bid Topples SALT LAKE. In the opening games of little league grid action in the Ute Conference on Saturday, 13 of the 20 contests were shutouts. Two of the shutouts came In games at the Junior level, with Granite beating Granger 41-- 0 and Skyline downing Highland 38-- South 0. ray East 21-6-- 19 Juniors beat Murand Olympus tied 6. In Junior Bantam outings, Olympus pasted East 40-- 0 and 3. Skyline tripped Highland Shutouts in Bantam games Included Granite 0 over Gran19-1- 7-- ger, East over Olympus and Skyline 13-- 0 over Highland. The South Bantams nudged Murand Kearns beet Cyray 21-prus 12-- 6. Four whitewash victories were scored by Midget elevens. Murray blanked South 21-- 0, Granite stopped Granger 20-- 0, Kearns edged Cyprus 0 and Skyline blasted Highland 42-- 0. 20-- 0 13 6-- e Clash Gets Grid Focus MURRAY. The prep grid spotlight will focus on Skyline tomorrow (Friday). Hillcrest, fresh from a 32-- 6 of neighbor-riv- al throttling Jordan, will appear on the Eagle turf for a clash which will have great deal of titular import ance. Skyline opened its campaign by tripping Granite, 26-- 6. Although the teams are vying for crowns in two different regions, the outcome of Friday's mix counts on both standings. Hillcrest, on the strength of the decisive win over Jordan, looms as a favorite in Division Two. Skyline, the defending Division One champ, could mae it but has several obstacles in the path. victor over Granger, 26-Olympus in the opener, will move to Tooele for a game important to both. The Buffs decision to dropped a 19-Bingham in their opener, but demonstrated greater strength than expected. Bingham will get another start before a home crowd with Olympus the visitor. On the bas is of opening performances, there's reason to believe the Miners could chalk up a second verdict and the Titans a second defeat. Granite and Jordaq will be after Initial wins when they meet at Sandy. Judge, the Division Two champ, was deadlocked 7 by Murray in Friday's opener and will be after a first win at Cyprus. But the Bulldogs could be in for a long night In view of the 54-- 6 pasting the Pirates handed Kearns in a starter. Murray will entertain Kearns w, 19 13 7-- MAGNA. The debut of Region Three's newest football team was buried under an offensive showing of a team which had not tasted victory since here Friday. Cyprus high grldders raced to a 54-- 6 win over an inexperienced Kearns squad, representing a high school which had Just opened its doors. In Friday's season opener, played under the lights, Coach Glen Rupp's host crew set the pattern the game was to follow, with a drive from their own 30, the first time they got the ball. Les Matsumura, dlminultive Pirate quarterback, was credit- ed with the season's first tally for the winners. Two more sustained drives and a long pass play led to three more Cyprus TDs before the half. One of the three scores 1964, was set up by a rd , aerial maneuver, coming off the throwing arm of Matsumura, with Lonnie Lawson on the receiving end. Hitting paydirt for the Bucs were halfbacks Mike Yeates and Doug Barr, with Barr getting a pair. Although trailing 26-- 0 going into the second half, Kearns Coach Frank Klekas was given some hope for a rally on a pair of plays. Junior quarterback Frank Pe- droza uncorked a long pass to senior end Dan Coldeway, who got behind the Pirate defense, but was pulled down after a gain. The final 10 yards of Kearns' goalward push came on what Klekas termed a 'plain reverse," with junior halfback Wayne Goodwin hitting paydirt. Shortly after the second half started, Cyprus resumed its touchdown parade. Klekas, more accustomed to coaching teams on the favorledable side of the won-lo- st ger, commented, "I've got to face it, I have a bunch of kids that never played football beneatly-maneuver- ed 45-ya- rd fore." Best defensive effort displayed by a Kearns player, Klekas said, was that of Marty Junior Peterborg, a tackle. 185-pou- nd FOR FALL WITH FIX-U- P HOME REPAIR LOANS a Pointing Nh la Siding Nw GRANGER. Lancer grldders this week were girding themselves for their first division two opposition, following a 26-comeback victory over Olympus of Region Three's division one. Coach Jay Rasmussen's Granger high eleven will travel to Tooele tomorrow (Friday). In the season opener on Frispotted" day, the Lancers Olympus 19 points, but then unleashed a combined running-passiattack, which overcame the lead and sparked a defensive effort to shut out the Titans the entire last half. Granger's defense was put to an early test when Dennis Ferguson returned the opening klckoff 85 yards to paydirt. Steve Taylor's run made it 0. A fumble on Granger's nine late late in the first period put the home team's back to the wall. Ferguson again did the damage, this time on an end run. The point try failed. The Lancers had already seen enough of Ferguson, but the Titan crossed the goal again In the second period. This time It was from less than one yard out, capping an Olympus drive which started after another Granger fumble. Late in the second stanza, Granger took to the alrlanes, gobbling up yardage on passes Roland from Turpln, who switched at the quarterback slot ng with Ron Mendenhall throughout the contest. Turpin's prime targets were Jerald Warner, Richard Norby and Mendenhall, who snared aerials from a split -- end post when not on signal-calliduty. Although it was largely on the strength of forward passes that put Granger within range of the goal, it was Steve Mackay, the Lancers' fullback, who lugged the pigskin the final eight yards for the home team's first tally of the season. The extra point attempt was smothered by Titan tarklers. A recovered Olympus fumble on a return of the second half klckoff set up Granger's second tally. Working the ball to the seven, the Lancer score came (iKhical tmd Iwiibiitg ftceoki ng 205-pou- nd Hn&il on a pass from Turpln to end Don Whitworth. Only a short while SsoVooni toolint Titans In 2nd Half; Buffs Next 19 Little League 9-- Spoils Debut Of Kearns IV Oaraa ck Shutout Wins Buc Victory figures to make itself felt in the region title-rac- e. Granite Jayvees launched their year in more auspicious manner Thursday, registering a 0 victory over Skyline reserves in a game played on the loser's field. Sophomore squads did not play. Husky-Eagl- j lone touchdown. Cited for defensive performances were Jolley and Buckley, along with guards Shawn Allen and Charlie Adams, Paur and end Virgil Beck. mentor . Simmons, Head forced to miss his team's open er, hopes to be on the side' lines tomorrow for the Jordan assignment. In any event, the Farmer coaching staff ex pressed minimal disappointment In the Skyline outcome and predicted a still-goo- d year for the Granite squad, which still (84). nd lanaxosiaa WWwJowt later, Titan aerial was picked off by Junior John Fasslo, who had been used In practice as third string guard. On the second play from scrimmage, Tom Stark tumbled Into the end cone with a Turpln pass, maintaining possession of the ball Just long enough to bring an official's ruling for a Granger TD. Brent Larson's placeklck split the up lead. rights for a 20-With about 3 12 minutes re malnlng in the contest, Mackay bulled his way for four yards for his second score and the final tally of the game, a lead the Lancers made stand up des plte desperate Titan efforts Donl put off repairing until it's too latol Got roady cath horo. Painting or repairing con bo easily financed through a Home Improvement Loan from Dave Barton at ZIONS SAVINGS. Have your contractor or building materials man give an estimate. Then, visit Dave Barton, Mgr. Well plan your money requirements at low rates with long term. Consult us today, no 19 ZIONS SAVINGS 4901 So. State .. Murray - 2M-M- I! 7-- 1966 State Fai- r- Ribbons And Best Of Show 77 167-pou- nd VICTORIO FRUIT TOMATO AND JUICER. iwoliln. Illnt fr opplt tout. FOR THE DottS&H STAFF! COLOR PORTRAITURE DIRECT COLOR COMMERCIAL ILLUSTRATION r7x Bob McCreo Entries of Don Blair and received 1 1 ribbons in both color ond block end whit photography. Mr. Blair's portrait of Taylors vilte's Max lovejoy wot oworded the highest priie in the snow, we nope you II paroon inis display of pride in our worhmansh staff-memb- CARDS South en-ro- team's ' YjJ 1 4905 -6 Smith and other Farmer coaching aides had praise for Gordon Jolley at end, Jim Buck ley at tackle, Martin and half' back Larry Josie on offense. In Jured, Martin did not play In the second half after scoring his n See Our Hundreds of Samples East 0. try. ier Truth -- This Is the Ideal Time to Choose Your 155 rd 21-ya- rd N MURRAY PRINTING to the good. Then the spark went out of the Farmer forwards. Still, it wasn't until the final period the Eagles chalked up another TD and removed all doubt. Their final bulge was no reflection of the comparative strength of the two teams. The winners got on the scoreboard almost before fans had settled in their seats. Rob Hanks curled around a fumbled punt on the one-yastripe and Scott Robbins punched over. Tom Nelson's kick made it Granite didn't quit. The Farmers spent the remainder of the first period getting in position. Then as the second period opened they uncorked a short pass over the middle from Virgil Latimer to fleet junior halfback Rick Martin, who outran the Skyline secondary 54 yards to pay-dir- t. The conversion kick, though, was wide and it was 7- at Intermission. The break on which Valline capitalized midway through the third stanza was a flat pass intended for Steve Paur. The Eagle lineman plucked it from the air and was untouched to the goal line. Robbins passed to Jack Lyman for the point and a 14-- 6 lead. As It turned out, that was all the winners needed. But they got more. halfBill Jones, a king-sizback, drew credit for both set ting up and scoring a touchdown which came on the fourth play oi the last period. He set it up by running 39 yards with a pitch- out. He scored it by breaking up the middle for the final 19 try yards. Tough the extra-poi- nt misfired, it was 20-- 6. Mike Lees duplicated Jones' feat on a smaller scale as time was running out in the ball game. He scurried 23 yards to put the Eagles in scoring position, then escaped on a Jaunt to the Slightly over four minutes re mained when the Eagles left It at 26-- 6 with a missed conversion pay-stri- TD. Early CHRISTMAS ls, first-quart- It's Not Too In GRANITE PARK. Skyline's Eagles defied one of the fundamental rules of football here Friday night while chalking up a 26-- 6 verdict over Granite in the season's opener. In winning by a score more decisive than the game really was, the invaders didn't make a first down until the early moments of the fourth quarter. Nevertheless, the big Eagle eleven capitalized on enough Farmer mistakes to successfully launch a bid for a second consecutive title in Region Three's division one. They were unbeaten in '65 league play. Tomorrow (Friday) at 3 p.m., Granite invades Jordan for a second league start. Once arch-rivathe two schools haven't met on the gridiron in a decade. The Beetdiggers launched the year Friday by dropping a decisive 32-- 6 decision to potent Hillcrest. Coach Reed Smith, subbing for the ill Darold Simmons at the Farmer helm, still had respect for the 'Diggers on the eve of the game, after working his charges hard all week. Skyline, meanwhile, tackles Hillcrest on the Eagle field and may find the Huskies still smarting from a 57-- 0 rout administered them last fall. Granite presented a stubborn. tough defensive line in the opening game. It effectively shackled the Eagles until Tod Valline pirated a pass and rambled 35 er score yards to a that put the winners eight points 6-- f an obvious favorite. Region Title By Halting Granite 0, 1? in the only other Region Three assignment, with the Spartans ADVERTISER (UTAH) 117 60 .1) reites. 111 41 ler Intotmefion er erdtf , IOUII Dl ROSE 101 Uvm 4m letl 4141 ln.INOVU.lt, UTAH ) When you think of firte photography , , . family groups, wedding photos, I outstanding i n d vidual of . . . think portraits, hni.mm lit 4905 South State i. I W Diet 2622685 J |