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Show Page SUNDAY 12-- THE Sunday. Frb. 2,1970 HERAID. Provo. Utah HiSKH: Kittens Claim Two Victories Ida. earlier this season. Geoff Brandt led all scorers Saturday night with 25 points for the Kittens. Kalevi Sarn- -' 12-- 1 ahlati and Craig Jorgensen 93-8- 4. trailed at halftime, whipped substantially their foes in the second half. In Saturday night's game, at BYU trailed Ricks, 58-halftime. but outscored the Vikings 44 26 in the second half Cougars but 19 the victory. The win helped offset a loss the Kittens suffered against the Vikings to gain ' jf Rice 7-- 91-6- 6--2. ars. Scott 57 Brandt Porter Jorgensen Starkins 7 10 7-- 5; 6--4, 6-- 6-- 3. 7? 0 30 Petty Totals ' r I ;. F P 44 46 10 01 20 14 45 16 BerTmSn 11 3 2 00 58 67 Larsen BLrrf n. Totals BYU "Kittens" Sarkalathi 30 F P 16 Jorgenson Starkins D.Allen Bailey 11 35 6-- 0 2 0 0 20 Fred Baird, freestyle BYU; Slobodan Dijakovic, BYU; Dave Passey, A. 1:49.7 (Meet record) 50 freestyle John Ostrolch, A; Lind Williams, BYU; Randy Justice, BYU. 23.5. Der-i- n 200 individual medley Webster, BYU; Robert Bush, BYU; Pete Mangan, A. 2:12.7. Jim One Meter Diving Whytlaw, BYU; Mark Fent-no- r, A, Larry Cotcher, BYU. 206. 200 BYU; John Ostrolch, A; Dave Passey, A. 49.6 Reinhard 200 backstroke Bunck, BYU; Steve Baker, C BYU; Ron Rawson, A. 2:14.9 Slobodan Di500 freestyle YamaGlenn BYU; jakovic, shita, BYU; George Membrilla, A. 4:58.9 (Meet Record) 2 5 2 6 0 4 91 F P 35 46 57 55 34 00 22 7 MARV ROBERTS of Utah State blocks a shot taken by Seattle's Lou West during Saturday game in Seattle, Wash. The Aggies gained an 18 15 victory over Seattle, which puts the Ags bid. in good position for an NCAA (Herald-UP- I Telephoto.) 82-8- 1 11 5 0 6 0 0 0 22 2 64 24 31 Utah State Aggies Edge Seattle Chieftains 82-8- 1 Paul Jeppesen, senior guard, grabbed the biggest rebound of his life here Saturday aftereocn to prevent a patteneded Seattle 82-rally and give Utah State an victory. Seattle had battled back from a 14 point deficit to tie the game for the first time at 76 all on a three point play by Gary Ladd. Ladd had stolen the ball from a SEATTLE We have 3 charters from Salt Lake to Europe. They will fill up in Reno, Phoenix and Albuquerque. To reserve your seat on our charter we must have a S 00.00 de- Utah State 1 posit now. at your charter 81 head- quarters DESERET TRAVEL USU player, passed to Tom Giles, who threw back to Ladd. Ladd slowed down just enough to allow Epps time to catch him and he got a three point play. Less than a minute later the Chieftains took their first lead of the game when Jim Gardner took the ball in for a score to give Seattle a 7 advantage. From their From there the game changed 78-7- hands three times with Ed Epps doing all of Utah State's scoring. Epps put USU back in front with a foul line jump shot, but Lou West made both shots of a one and one foul shot situation to put Seattle back in front and sent Marv Roberts to the bench with five fouls. With Seattle stalling Jeppesen stole an all important pass and fed Epps who laid it in with 1:50 remaining to put USU ahead 81-8- 0. Epps made the lead with a charity toss, but Giles cut the margin to one at 1 with a counter free throw. Coach LaDell Andersen took a time out and told Williams Jeff JET FARES TUMBLE ... 82-8- CHARTER John JeDDesen. Tebbs, Ericksen, and Tim Tollestrup to stall the last 1:12 of the game. The Chieftains caused an Aggie turnover and got the ball for one final shot. Giles attempted an 18 foot jumper with four seconds remaining and it missed, but Lou West grabbed the rebound and got one more attempt before Jeppesen grabbed the ball to stop any more Seattle attempts. PASSENGERS WINNERS... Utah State Roberts 82 G 5 8 4 5 Williams ON SALE BY Tollestrup Jeppesen Tebbs 01 Ericksen Hatch Epps 2 0 4 29 G Totals Seattle 81 West Blue 12 3 2 4 8 0 Gardner Giles Ladd Jones YOU QUALIFY! choose from these Exciting Tours . . . GATEWAY CONDITIONED BUS; f COUNTRIES SUPERIOR TOURIST HOTELS;? . . r CONDITIONED PLUS FIRST CLASS HOTELS . . PASSION SWISS FONDUE PARTY 56 44 00 22 12 FROM PLAY -- OBERAMMERGAU mom GRAND $728 PRICES INCLUSIVE $618 $878 $798 FROM EUROPE EUROPE SCANDINAVIA IRELAND AND GREAT BRITAIN TRANSATLANTIC JET FLIGHTS .... Zone 23 Seniors - 23 22 01 00 00 AT OBER AMMERGAU ... A PAGEANT PASSION DENVER, ROUND TRIP New Springville Gym 6:00 Provo 2nd vs. Spanish Fork 13th 7:15 Santaquin South vs. Oak Hills 3rd 8:30 Springville-Kolo- b winner vs. Provo 4th 9:45 Lake Shors vs. Bonneville Oid Springville Gym 8th vs. Springville 3rd 7:15-K- olob 1st vs. Pleasant View 2nd 8:30 Rivergrove 1st vs. Payson 5th 9:45 Provo 16th vs. Palmyra 3rd 6:00Provo Fisheries in the cold and temperate waters of the northern hemisphere yield about 75 per cent of the world c a t c h 41 million metric tons according to Encyclopaedia Britannica. n AAA 043. 00 III VIA CAPITOL AIRLINES A NO SATUtN AIRWAYS U.S. CERTIFIED SUPPLEMENTAL (j i c c c c 9 COUNTRIES c cc AIR CARRIERS. c c mmmv v. One Day service, Dependable We handle insurance claims y f 9 ltL m end of his winning run. Before ft skiing away from the finish . line, Cordin asked: "Who is best?" leader Karl World Cup Schranz of Austria finished sixth in 2:02.03, but was not threatened by World Cup of mp' :rfln sWpr thv Kami put on the best host team performance for the ladies with a 2:00.49 time which was good for sixth place on the 2,100-fovertical drop race course. Betsy Clifford, a skier from Canada who won a gold medal in the World Alpine championships in Italy, fell at the fourth gate, but finished the course in 2:2851 on a broken ski. She said the course was mrr and d turns were the ot of Gustavo Thoeni E9 Jb? The "race had little effect upon the World Cur standings difficult. with Schranz, Thoeni and Identical twins Ingrid and Russel still dominating the top Britt Lafforgue of France three places. Cordin was scored identical times of Wa have the most modern equipment end experienced staff to serve you and all your repair needs. See us Today! seventh. c c 2:03.03. The men's downhill course dropped 2,980 feet maximum is 3,000 feet and was marked known as the by areas Waterfall and the Amphitheater. Despite brilliant sunshine and mild temperatures, the snow remained in exceptionally hard and fast condition throughout the race. The Waterfall, which is a near-cliaveraging 60 and dropping to angles degrees of more than 75 degrees, was one of the fastest parts on the course. The Amphitheater, racers said, gave them difficulty, in that the gates were set to favor a more technically-orienteskier. the tricky spots, Despite however, racers who have skied the European circuit said the course was generally easier Slalom events for both men and women were scheduled to begin Sunday. Tiny Lund Wins Race 200-fo- ot By CHARLES S. ALDINGER DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (UPI)-Ti- ny Lund, a fishing camp operator from Cross, S.C., edged Red Farmer of Hueytown, Ala., by a car length Saturday to win a NASCAR Sportsman model race. The warmup race for Sunday's rich Daytona 500 was marred by a wreck in which Glenn Guthrie of Temple Hills, Md., slammed a 1966 Mercury than most into the wall on the backstretch Austrian trainer Josepp (cq) at 175 miles per hour. Koessler said the course was Guthrie was lifted through the car window and taken to Halifax Hospital where he was reported in fair condition with a concussion and chest and spine injuries. A crowd of 51,300 watched Lund reach speeds up to 200 miles per hour in a 1966 Ford 95-8- 5 owned by DuPont heir Bondy Long of Camden, S.C. Long spent the day back home in ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI) -- South Carolina sailing on a Michigan, led by Rudy Tomjan-ovich- 's lake. 37 points, went on a Lund, averaging 133.316 mph, scoring rampage late in the led most of the race with first half Saturday and held on Farmer usually close behind. to its momentum in the second Farmer lost valuable time late period to dump Minnesota out in the race when he jammed of a third-plac- e tie in the Big his brakes too hard in front of Ten with a 9547 basketball win. liis slot on pit row, forcing his Scoring 13 points to the 1967 Ford to spin around. Gophers' one in a streak, the Wolverines capitalized on 16 Minnesota turnovers to take a halftime advantage to the locker room. Tomjar.ovich e'so garnered 24 HOUSTON (UPI) rebounds in a tough board Brigham pme that saw 43 personal fouls Young handed the University of assessed against the two teams Houston Cougars a defeat 2 of them in the second Friday in a dual tennis match. stanza. TerryNeudecker.Houston.def. by big Eric Hill, who Zdravka Mincek, pumped in 33 points in his Larry Halb, BYU, def. Chris scoring duel with Tomjanovlch, Bovett, Randy Trane, toe Gophers twice pulled even BYU, def. Jim Armstrong, in the second half but never Lee Merry, Houston, def. went ahead. Michigan is now 6 Mark Shires, Pat in the Big Ten and Landau, BYU, def. Chuck Shir-leoverall; Minnesota is 4 in the Marty Hennessey, conference and 12-- 8 for the BYU, def. i'om Gustafson, season. BYU, def. Rodney Ford contributed 17 Neudecker-Bovet- t, Houston, def. point" for Michigan, Larry Armstrong-Merry- , , Mikan had 16 before fouling out for Minnesota and Ollie ShanBYU, def. 10-non had IS. ff 265-pou- 300-mi- Michigan Tops Minnesota in Battle three-minu- C $618 Mowed standings Pfed a JM 2:01. by Bernard Orcel of France in do 2:01.39 and Henri Duvillard of norence steurer finished fourth France in S:JU0. jj, 2:00.05 and Francoise Macchi to say at the Cordin had wift 2MM tQ gve d Big Catch of Fish ... We make it! jf n hhh m uitmt. ui rwr umimmmm e, o.nc nals. The schedule for Monday is as follows: SUPERIOR TOURIST HOTELS FROM racer Karl an Cordin skied at a hour clip on an "Autobahn" Jownhill course Saturday to win the opening men's event of 23 PLAY SWINGING EUROPE HOLE, (UPI) Austrian Schranz by two points at 140 prior to the race. Both finished way down the list, Russel with a time of 2:05.05 and Thoeni in 2 PRESENTED Wyo. "like an Autobahn." American skier Rudd Pyles said it was more difficult to maintain a line near the bottom of the course, but agreed the course was generally easy. Dan Irwin of Canada described the course Wild West Classic. word ski with the German The French women's very fast." team dominated the women's Mschnell"-"f- ast, The fastest American downdownhill, taking the first five hill time for the men was places. Isabelle Mir was first mile and a turned in by Rogers Little, who over the half course in 1:57.87, followed placed ninth with a time of 2:03.27. Pyles finished 10th by Annie Famose in 1:59.36 and in 2:03.37. unofficially World Cup leader Michele Jacot French skiers won three of in 1:59.41. the top ten finishers with OrceL Cordin, who was seventh in PineL who the World Cup standings prior Duvillard and Jean in fourth 2:02.00. finished to Saturday's race, negotiated Malcolm Milne, the lone two mile-lon- g the at the meet, Australian racer coram was course in fifth in the downhill with in unofficial JACKSON high-spee- AAA ISO MILES. FEEL FREE AS A BIRD TO SEE 2:04.9. French Ski Crew Dominates Events Italy and Patrick Russel of France, each of whom trailed Senior Basketball Tournament gets underway Monday at the old and new Springville High School gyms with 16 teams vying for a coveted spot in the All Church fiThe Zone F 46 at Records fell to Cypress in both relays, the 200 medley and 400 freestyle. In the medley, the time was 1:45.8 while in the the timi was broken freestyle, 200 yard freestyle. twice, once in the preliminaries But it was Cypress High that at 2:04.9 and agai in the finals ended with most of the points, at 2:04.7. amassing 93 to defeat its nearA diving record was set by est rival Kearns High, which had 51. Highland was third with Gleed Toombs of East High, 25; Granger fourth with 18, earning 478 points. and Provo fifth with 16. Mike Baxter brought home In addition to Rameson's two second place medals and record, new times were set in 10 points to Orem High, and the 100 yard breaststroke by Wayne Young placed fifth in Randy Philpot of Cypress, the diving, earning two points 1:04.56; the 100 yard butterfly for Provo High. runners-u- p Playoff 914 44 Q FIRST CLASS HOTELS LEISURELY (Meet record) BYU 400 freestyle relay (Allen, Williams, Justice, Dijakovic) 3:30.8 Team scores: BYU 81, Arizona 24 33 OTHER EUROPEAN HAPPENINGS. ..22 DAYS AWAY OPTIONAL Bush, BYU; Tiny Sheehe, A; BYU. 2:28.5 Larrie Strong, HOM665. MOM785.0 BUS; FIRST CLASS HOTELS; 9 COUNTRIES BEST OF EUROPE. INCLUDES TICKETS TO GERMANY'S Robert breaststroke We don't meet competition, FEATURES UNLIMITED MILEAGE CAR WITH FIRST CLASS HOTELS ABOUT EVERY ONLY ONCE EVERY 10 YEARS 34 8 13 rfv f o OPEN ROAD int. THE 'sz? trip for 22 days Prices inclusive from Salt Lake City, round F 1 Collins 0 Bever 30 21 30 Totals Half Utah State 44 Seattle Fouled out: Roberts NO DUES! NO MEMBERSHIPS! 200 23 82-8- 0 R - Fred Baird, k, A WORD ABOUT AEiLEX CHARTERS! For oil facts on charters see Duane butterfly BYU; Terry Newman, A; Larrie Strong, BYU. 1:57.8 10ti freestyle Tom Fair-ban- bv Norris Udy of Kearns at :53.2, and in the 200 individual medley by Cypress' Craig Jones By Jerry Young SALT LAKE CITY Eight new records were set at the state high school swim meet here Saturday and Provo High's Rick Rameson had one of the records to his credit. Rick swam the 400 yard freestyle in 3:52.05 and also won the 200 7 22 30 6-- 1, i 24 10 15 22 01 00 00 Godfrey Steve Baker, 1000 freestyle BYU; Glenn Yamashita, BYU, George Membrilla, A. 10:32.4 (Meet record.) I 10 84 47 36 88 00 34 00 00 Carter B.Allen 1 9 2432 G J 1 Williams) 3:55.7. 3 4 0 93 Thompson l. Thompson 1 , H i) v 10 33 48 Mortens Wallace fAi vM 1 21 00 02 G Ricks Petty and Marty totals and Burman, Hennessey and Trane teamed W. Wyoming: (44) for the final Cougar victory Muniz Fiansburg over Ptlizzi and Williams, Randle 7- -5. Taylor The Cougars did not lose a set Hutchings Krmpotich during the seven matches. BYU Willis meets Southern Methodist Sun Grunell day in the third dual meet of Fiansburg Totals their Texas roal trip. 6-- v jfr 25 3 it12 6--2; 6--4, t: hi. 20 II Other singles results saw Lar- Scott ry Hall defeat Chico Garrero, Brandt 6- Patrick Landau defeat Porter 3, Mark George Burman, Shiers (Hp Gus Pellzi, fM); and Randy Trane stop Ralph Williams, In the doubles, Hall and Landau teamed to defeat Garrero s P F ? G Allen Bailey Young University defeated Rice University. in a dual tennis meet Saturday afternoon in Houston. Zdravko Mincek won the number one singles from the nation's 11th ranked Zan Guerry, 10-Rice finished fourth in the na- tion last year and the win was u- : sugoil uiipicssivc uiie tmr uie n... f . Os-trol- ch triumph. 4 0 Brigham .I j .1 38-3- resounding BYU 'Kittens' Sarkahlati 0 J .... 55-2- Net Team Rips Brigham Young University swimmers stroked to an easy 3 dual meet victory over the University of Arizona Saturday afternoon at the Richards Building Natatorium. Four meet records were established by separate BYU swimmers. Fred Baird, Steve Baker, Slobodan Dijakovic, and Robert Bush set the new marks for the Cougars. Of the 12 events, Arizona captured only one first place, and it was turned in by John in the 50 yard freestyle. The results: BYU 400 medley relay Stoddart, Fairbank, (Funck, 81-2- also scored in the 20s for the Kittens. In Thursday's game against Western Wyoming the Kittens were paced by Geoff Brandt with a 24 point production. Other double figure scorers were Kalevi Sarkalahti with 16, Craig Jorgenson with 15, and David Porter with 10. The Kittens trailed the West- era Wyoming aggregation by but in two points at half, the final half the Kittens blew the visitors off the floor. In the final half BYU trounced Western Wyoming 6 to chalk up the The Kittens defeated Western Wyoming 4 and then downed In both games the Ricks Rameson Sets Swim Record Y Dumps Arizona Swimmers at Rexburg, Hie Brigham Young University Kittens moved their season record to 4 this week on the strength of some second half performances in games against Western Wyoming Thursday and Ricks College Saturday. BYU W te Netters Defeat Houston BYU 48-3- !) - Id 6-- nuiiniiimi j ari t.nvirr ioiir "fHPFMn 6-- 2, 6-- 9-- 4-- 14-1- 6, r cm-r- c y, 6-- 6-- 6-- 6-- H Hall-Landa- u, 6-- 373-646- 3 456 S. UNIVERSITY PROVO Mincek-Shires- J 6-- 9-- AUI AMnCD'C . 8-- 6-- l 6, 6--3; Hennes-sey-Tran- e, Shirley-Gustafso- n, I |