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Show Ihi.lii.K , Agge Cage Schedule Includes 10 Tough '4 Pre-Seas- Games on l Utl St a If v t,jkt'H'j.. 'hrtluk" hj a!:t.iiil",(.t" J jllii ;t IT; i ludes j ditlifult H1 aiiu ;.i!r hnh tuuM prffarv the Ags f!; I.t 't A A plj n thtA taeed in years and years, said ear Head i'oaeh RhI Tueliei t start here Nov 3o against a State team whieh should rate ritti: ..j there with BYT And up un''.'; !: ur;enew t;me tor league play in Januarv js.t. ; The ini'iudf H f:jrr:t s ee a letup From top to buu. iir ;r. ttu- Sfm'rjm tat the iloiiuna;.; eluding a good IX.K.K raee. th;nk It'dlaic i.n as difficult a schedule as f e : Thuse pan; adini eifihl diltvu-n- had here .!'. bt- pljved .iain-- ! The schedule im iude !., c;"(iunt'tit ls wm whii t. a possibility of playing 16 d.;: : the teams on the teams The Aggies will be molveo year agu None M'heuule danr.f: that Noveni ber !hf Ubo Classic Dec .8 and l HvemU'r M and althoug!-i'iieiit had u;ti h'jhii; Viburquerque a ear av sngs have not been announced involved there inc lude the li i ho!it't! view it as one c! the l lah State toiihf-- ! Mheduie has I.obiis eastern power .aa:ie Dt-- Nofii::H-r-mn-finL-t'- ta fx -- ;i i rht - Idaho M.,tf ' !v:oit.' v;.. :.::r.;: new r ' p.j-.- w V ' t - e j uelelW;ng B.g Sky r m,,:, 2? .mi e : la'. !" :' ' ' ' V" 'e - ofu'e and MT once The v.' ,i. euuid in ' :o.i.i., - ' t ' ,:..'t-- iga:Hs! alld a' Ml Ri, sr avt-rat-- "'' l New '...t-:;te- - - .: !m,e '.o BM a.la He! v u yra' t'egir.s ar.'. 1 v : t ; ' Sk kg ." ... . Ida- !' ,, ., -- e .mi o'!.-tea- K P.J.ideg .. 't y i'' v Archery Coming Into Its Own HV f , krt, f I 5 t. i ( , - , !ej: f; I ... t onn uttered from the dav expu:t I'l I under-iro- llham pii on his son s head esNji'nt "t the oWiest ar nerv e, ir.y in the I'mied States iinalh coming into its sa thi pi'ld TelUp;.:a;.a; Ho i Tavlor oi Steinmier Archery credits the President's Commission on Physical Fitness with helping move the spurt toward the recreational mainstream intent oi the presidential to push lifetime sports. You can't (day baseball football or soccer ail your 111 e As a result physical education units have been developed in many ot the nation's schools and that has really given archery a boost." he said Louis Stem-mleTaylor's father started the business m 1912 in the cellar ot his Staten Island. N Y home using lemon wood Irom the rain forests of Cuba tor bows It s the i SAN DIEGO'S famed "Chicken Man" polishes first umpire Frank Pulli's shoes during the seventh in- ning stretch of a recent game between the Chicago Cubs and Houston Astros. CSicken Man wanted ment for the shine, but Pu'.li refused so Chicken Man kicked dust on the shoes. e Mahaffey Again Playing Hurt By PETER MAY UPI Sports Writer - John SUTTON, Mass. (UPI) Mahaffey thought it had ended The injuries and hard times that were as much a part of his golf game as his backswing no longer existed He was sure they had disappeared. He had shaken the bridesmaid tag incurred in two mentally debilitating U.S. Open "almosts" by winning the 1978 PGA Championship in a dramatic playoff. He had followed it a week later with a win at the Pleasant Valley Classic The torn tendons in the elbow had healed. So had the broken finger sustained while he was recuperating from the elbow ailment. His private life was placid with a new and supportive wife. Confidence oozed from his slender once-shattere- d frame. Admiration poured forth from his fellow pros. He started off 1979 with a flourish by winning the Bob Hope Desert Classic the first event of the season. The jinx had finally ended. Mahaffey thought. Then came the bunker shot at Pebble Beach three weeks later. "I tried to take the lip with me on the shot and you can't do that. I sprained the ligaments in my left wrist. As a result I'm not hitting the type of shot I want and I'm not scoring the way I should " Mahaffey said recently while participating in a golf outing at the Pleasant Valley Country Club. "After Pebble Beach L went to 71 in Hawaii. I shot 65 in the Pro-Athe first round. Then I went out and hit seven buckets of balls. The next day I couldn't make a fist so I had to withdraw," The curse of forced idleness was the only immediate option. It was not an unfamiliar experience. He could adequately define the term "playing with pain." "My hand still hurts on every shot. But there's no way I can injure it any further. The doctor said I can either rest for eight months or learn to play with it. And when I'm not playing. I'm bored to death " he said. When he plays, and is healthy, he is in the money. Mahaffey won more than $100 000 a and added $77 000 in vear in 1973-71976. He was hit with the injuries in 1977 and won only $9,000 He rebounded in 1978 with the twin wins and $153,000. 12th best on the tour. "It was fun while it lasted (playing healthy). I thought I had a lock on it 5 seems to Award. It player who a physical I merit the Ben H"gan is to the annually gien has best hounn d back .'roiii -- - injury ve been trying Hogan Award. likes awards She ting hurt ears i.i the M oked wile n,.. to keep get teii.- - ommi.v-M- Some are equipped with tvw i .da.; coi: pounds with mechanical ,id. ,: tages Robin Hood might neer n.iw imagined With their pulleys ami wheel, thev look like contraptions eon ceived by NASA engineers The compounds allow the shooter to hold longer at lull draw for the best shot and to shoot for an extended time with less muscle fatigue says Fred Bear, founder of the Gainesville. Kla archery company that bears his name He calls compounds the most exciting change in one of man's oldest sports Conventional bows send arrows traveling at a speed ot 125 mph The high velocity compounds have more rifle, penetrating power than a less draw weight and can pass through a deer at 20 yards Some are called " "magnums ' I'( ;,e :.' the Hope. I was playing some of I ear Ti shiOli a '! ice and in be and assisu:ie tants Dana Paget: a"d 'em Stewart will be searching lor the light nian to fill the center position some quest answered rm i,- m v. 4 ei Hv h i i.a-'d- s- TH IS :2 in i J ; H .1, j: run. i Jan i m is lc HthSNtl Si 1J l'A 1? ;il Santa H.irt. .1.11) 1H ian iff-:- : :i .1.111 J.irt Jl Hearh 1. at Sati Jnsi si 2H Jan 31 h ii 2 eb Kcli 7 I s i.LKHT-- liiVINK at h ,rv Feb 12 .,' I'lii! ai liVI "el H 1. ti s eh el. SI Jdsi s .Ian 24 .Km S it lit -- V e I: !'... n, 21 ;,: Z:t - - a '.!a! i ii .'mi; ty 12-1- 4 Player SET Earn $463.29 in 26 weeks. PUUDENTIAL FEDERAL K Savings Certificate 9.164 (Effective 71279 through 71879) This is the Nation's highest interest rate on short-ter- m insured savings. We wrote the book on it. This free book is available at any PFS Office and is designed to answer questions like: What is a MoneyMarket Certificate? Who are they for? How much interest do they pay? 'Highest rate paid on short term savings insured by FSLIC and FDIC. deposit Interest paid on certiiicates Six month term, $10,000 minimum only when held to maturity fenemi regulations prohibit the compounding ot inte'ost during ot the account Hie Steel shaft rackets 'Net le'm 4J 88 ESEE IF Prudential Federal Savings St'mi v ft'imm ik'i i tin, uici.il 363 North University, Provo, Utah 84601 Phone 309 East State Road, American Fork, Utah 84003 Phone 374-934- 756-762- 3 Were your Mountain Bell Yellow Pages representatives, and we need information about your busi-ness. We'd like to know what makes our business so special, what gives you a possible competitive edge. 'Hien we'd like to show you how to use that information to test advantage in building sales. Because research tells us that people who are ready to MILLER SKI 2 Minutes Off Freeway 1200 N. 1200W No. Orem Open: 9-- 7 i buy are prompted by specific tyxs of information. They look for that formation in the Bell Systei n Vt !!' Fages. And more than eight jxh )kout of ten who look take act ion to ,w;. We can help you put t igctlu-- a Yeilow Pages program thai combine ) I i our advertising experience with the key facts alx )ut y mi business. Ut's talk about Well be contacting vi u s' Stakes Shuttlecocks Reg. 10.00 ' ''nsf SAVINGS MoneyMarket ) Bell System Yellow Pages t C lc NKV i 111 II Mii lit Jl O.I.T ") I'll i pi s K jl Dti hee I ill !.,:. U lii IK-- . w - Meeting Set SALT LAKE CITY (UPI - The Utah fej nxJj .:. man algl things will have - t,:'; Turkey Hunt Sl Willed season and thhe I'ai it u .' ' Wi dec ade send a basketball ; ia eye: ,.ttie: the best golf I ever played and felt my i confidence was getting better with Wildlife Board has each win. scheduled an Aug 23 "It was a damn good year 1978. I meeting to set state don't know what happened I guess I hunting regulations for just didn't get hurt." the 1979 fall turkey Mahaffey has played infrequently season. since the injury at Pebble Beach (in Dwight Bunnell, upland February). He spends much of his time game supervisor for the practicingtwoat Champions andin State Wildlife Resources courses Woodlands, Division said this sprhis hometown of Houston. There's no ing's turkey hunt' was secret, at least to his success. He feels poor due to the heavy he has to push harder. snowpack in the high "There are some things I'm not doing mountains and a large right and I've got to work at it. It's number of turkeys which nothing but hard work and I haven't died during the long worked hard enough. My scores show-it- . winter. I've been very, very lazy and it's But Bunnell said good too much," he said. summer feed conditions starting to show He has earned $60,038 this year, most should make for "a better of it in the Hope. He will next parturkev hunt this fall in ticipate in the Greater Milwaukee Open Utah" July Nearly three tons of "You want to win, you play on the food a year are required course that suits your game " Mahaf- for the average American fey said explaining why he bypassed family of four. this weekend's Western Open on the long Butler National Course "We complain about anything. We uon't like to take the blame for bad shots. We don't want the responsibility. We'll blame anything." BADMINTON And there's still one award which Mahaffev would like, and one which he PGA-quali- - - ..o-- t , back-to-bac- k after ..r. ia". Tigers o! the !ii e ( n the ae: age ' has seen the Aggo team into post see y ' ' to,,: n.oi A . !4 ' .u-- i'i.iei .3(1-3- Art Hall ;reats every bow as it it were a loaded gun His Manchester Conn , archery range was the first m Taylor says people are moving New England when he opened it in ioward archery these days because the Since then at least three ranges have sport stresses independence and has no failed in Connecticut. time or geographical limits. cutter is a stickler Hall, an You don't need a team a uniform a court You can do it in a park or your for safety and says nobody belongs in the woods unless they can hit the own 'backyard " he says There are an estimated 2 million target circle at 20 yards. Taylor douin the U.S. today with an bles the distance and says you should equal number of target shooters. Some be able to crack a saucer at 40 yards But even if you are a deadeye, it's no target shooters may use their feet to shoot lor distance of up to 500 yards. guarantee you'll bag your quarry. ' i, ''.:: a it . i.t |