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Show II 6 BOX Brigham City, Utah Sunday, September 25, 1977 ELDER NEWS. .4K ' ", y " " v ' ' , sr$ - march pastf claim part of region Dead Deurts The prep prognosticators were right on the button Friday night. The Davis offense juggernaut proved too much muscle for Box Elders defenses to match. The end result was a victory for the Darts in the Region Four football frolic. If youre interested in trivia, it marked the first time this season that Box Elder hasn't scored first in a game. And it was the second home field loss for the Bees in as many appearances. It left the local lads with a league mark and 2 on the season. The steam-rollin- g Davis crew left town with a 0 record in region play. For the Hivers the pill was especially hard to gulp down because the defeat marred their homecoming. But let it be said in their behalf that the win was not dished up to Davis on a platter with crumpets and tea. 22-1- 4 2-- 2-- Banged Darts Hard They banged the Darts hard on occasion, setting them back with running losses and jarring some bones in the process. But' it was a lack of consistency that hurt the Hive cause. Even the Darts stampede, running back Keith Malnar, picked up a crop of bruises. He left the game limping at one point in the first half and fumbled in the third period after a two-plopen field tackle that jarred the entire stadium. But this was the night of the Darts. They marched to a pair touchdowns with of first-hal- f relative ease. Meanwhile, the the Bees offense was stymied except for Dale Money whose gifted foot was putting points on the board. Six in all on a pair of field goals. one-ma- standings Davis Ben Lomond Box Elder Bear River Ogden South Woods Corss Logan In the first period, a short Box Elder punt gave Davis possesAnd the sion at the BE-3enemy moved to pay dirt in seven running plays with quarterback Ryan Hill collecting the final four yards. Hill added the PAT at the 2:54 y They did it again in the second period, starting from their own 20 and moving into the BE end zone in nine running plays with swift back Mitch Keck doing the TD honors and also running over for a pair of extra points. It gave the Darts a 15-- 6 halftime lead. Davis nailed up another score after grabbing a deflected Bee pass near midfield in the third period. Again moving primarily on the ground with one pass mixed in, the Darts scored in seven plays with Matt Gregory bulling the final yard. Hill booted the PAT. School Record effort. The first was a field The second was a goal . . . thats right ... 52 yards. It was another school record for the talented senior gridder and stamped him as the best of Utah's prep realm in this specialty and better than a host of college kickers. To boot, if youll pardon the expression, he also sent several kickoffs soaring into the never to be run back. So it was a big night for the youngster. However, it appeared the Bees would be shut out in the Threatened Box Elder threatened midway through the fourth quarter, making their way to the Davis one-foline before giving up the ball on downs. Doug Nelson set up the drive with an intercepted pass at the Minutes later, after Davis was unable to budget the ball, Box Elder regained possession, setting up the scoring play. The final stats reflected the dominant nature of the slugfest where Davis was concerned. The Darts rushed for 260 yards e, D-3- ed an aerial into the end zone. Clustered among Davis defenders, end Marlin Jensen rose ' up to snag it. The same combination worked to get the Hive guys a pair of extra points to fashion the final 1 1 1 1 0 0 who came through and helped in a couple of matches. We're also getting help from Chris Beach and Craig Bailey, a couple of juniors, and sophomore Doug Albright, the coach us Boa. geOfep. said. Other hopefuls are turning out after school to earn a berth, if not this year then in another season. Hone figures Logan, Woods Cboss and Ben Lomond are perhaps the regions strongest gofflOra' CisCOGF 9, .f j., The Box Elder High school golf team, already into the thick of the Region Four fall season, is getting better all the time. This was the assessment of Coach Lynn Hone ks his charges looked toward their next outing at Woods Cross Monday. in The Bees currently are league play in a stepped-u2 p schedule that will see each school play every other member twice during the season. Past practice when the Bees were affiliated with Region One was to play just one match with each school. Thus far the Hive linksters have defeated South, then losing to Ogden, and Logan, and then rebounding to defeat Davis, and Ben Lomond, 158-17155-15- 158-16- 152-15- 158-16- Rained Out A Thursday home date with Bear River this past week was called on account of rain. This years aggregation is a young one. Lost to graduation are Gene Munk, who tied for second place in last years state Val Thurplay, and front-liner- s ston and Clint Johnson. , '7- - , ..1wtaMKLUiwu" Mission also is Brent Gray who is spending his senior year footballing for the Bees. But back in the fold are two of Utahs top junior golfers ; senior Doug Bybee and junior Joel Kranz. They are the strong nucleus around whom Coach Hone is building a new contend- teams. After testing the Wildcats Monday, the Bees will be on the road again Thursday for a match with South High at Forest Dale golf course. er. of t Kranz has been in the two late. He was sub-pa- r most recent outings, firing a 34 at Davis and a 35 against Ben Lomond. red-ho- ' v while settling for 19 yards passing on Box Elder, after picking up 50 first-hal- f rushing yards, ended the evening with 58 yards rushing the 92 in the air on Adams' 9 attempts. The Bees will see their next action Friday at Woods Cross. Game time is scheduled at 4 p.m. ' '' Y f S"' ) , "I. t fil I 31 l:ML 10-1- y. S, 26 Brigham City flag league, 6 p.m! Rees Pioneer park. Recreaton comSept. 27 mission meeting, 7:30 p.m., Public Works Rec. Office. Womens volleySept. 28 ball meeting. Teams entering competition, $30 fee, 8:30 p.m. Public Works Rec. Office. Brigham City Swim Team the eight-ma- n traveling squad. Weve needed help from the youngsters coming up and some of them are starting to develop now, he explained. Mentioned were juniors Dean Hansen, Rich Daines, Brian Wight and David Orme and sophomore Duane Hereford open plunge terested party. in AAU Anyone in- swimming is 8 p.m., com- welcome. 6:30 munity center. October Womens volleyball clinic. League competition begins. sOScag s 2-- Bear River made two big mistakes Friday night and Ben Lomond jumped on both to score two second half touchdowns enroute to a Region Four win over the host Bears. The win gave the Scotties a 0 league mark and tied them with 4 winner over Box Davis, Elder. In other games, South nipped Woods Cross 8 and Ogden whipped Logan It was not a bright night offensively for the Bears. The forward pass was very difficult to complete against a hard pass rush and the BL defensive backs gave the secondary blanket coverage. 13-- 0 22-1- 37-2- Final Four Yards Quarterback Kenny Yellow-ta- il engineered the drive using John Stensgar and Tom Querta on the ground and throwing il short outs to Zorro Santio. carried over the block of big Frank Martinez the final four yards for the score. Bright Spot The Bears did have a bright spot in the running of Kelly Yel-lowta- in But the Wasps, now Region Nine, found they could pass on the tired secondary and pass they did. .. It wasnt a complete loss for the Eagles. There were bright spots. They proved that a running attack has to be pretty potent to be effective and Wasatchs big backs found that time and again as the Eagles gang tackled with ferocity. d Webb. The junior fullback bulled his way for several gains. However, penalties or other mistakes somehow 0 8-- 0 half. Coach Gary Rohmer said the safety just before half seemed to take the spark from the Eagles who had played quite well to that point. The coach said it will take a week of intensive pass defense in practice to prepare Grantsville next week, a team. for pass-oriente- cap- elimination. The ladies will play the best of three games out of five. No age limit for competition has been set. All games will be on Wed- nesday nights. d Box Elder junior varsity crew lost to Davis Thursday afternoon on the Darts field, in a 4 defensive football struggle rain. played throughout The Darts started fast. In In a their first possession, they moved methodically to score on a drive. From that point the Bees put up a stubborn defense. But at the same time, they couldnt muster the necessary offense to get on the board. They never got closer than the D-1- Coach Tom Stewart was pleased with his team's performance. The Bees picked up four Davis fumbles to thwart the Dart offense. The rain was so hard that the field soon made the afternoon football fray a mud match. What served to hamper the Bees on offense somewhat was an injury to running back Kevin Keller who hurt an ankle earlier in the week. It resulted in shifting end Mark D. Thompson to a running back position. And he did well KITCHEN CABINETS & VANITIES save up to BOX EIDER ACTION SPORTS'' 09 by dealing direct Talk About Trouble! King Mongut of Siam had 9,000 wives and concubines. We Specialize in lest service to customers at the lowest prices in the State Top cabinets, with quality, four styles and five colors to choose from. FREE Kitchen SHIRT LAUNDRY SERVICE ONE DAY The only Laundry in Brigham City TAILORING, ALTERATIONS AND REPAIR 36 UivlskSuLlL J North Main j CLEANERS AND SHIRT LAUNDRY Sanitone 723-377- 6 Fumble, Fumble Stymied again after the Bears fumbled on their own 19, Petersen got the ball right back on another fumble recovery. Ben Lomond later went 37 yards with another Moyes to Kunz pass for 14 yards that brought the touchdown. damThe half was even more The learnBears. tor the aging ed junior quarterback Blake Sandall suffered a dislocated shoulder just before the half and will be lost for two or three games. Senior Ned Petersen, norm- - Now 2354 Redwood Rd. SLC 972-59176 West Center Provo 375-232- 7 1- ally a tight end and defensive back, also backs up Sandall and the scrapper tried to ignite the Bear offense. The Scots werent about to allow any of that to happen. The final 24 minutes were played primarily between the 20 yard lines as the Scots were content to hang on to their lead. One might pick a few other bright spots. Punter Kirk Bourne lofted some long, high boots. Lanny Lewis had another solid game at tackle. Bear River must regroup next week. Davis provides the foe in a 7:30 p.m. game at Kaysville. The Darts, too, are known for a sturdy defense, as Box Elder discovered Friday night. -1 Eaglettes went volleyball tests Intermountain schools girls record volleyball team has a e as it approaches a series next week with larger schools. The highlight will be an encounter with the Box Elder High school team at 4 p.m. Thursday. The public is invited to the game, especially the 1 two-gam- for filling in on short notice, said Coach Stewart. Rick Nielsen also ran tough for us, the coach commented. could name the whole defensive unit if I wanted to. They have been a real bright spot for us, the ball boss said. Brian Braithwaite also was a standout. Hes played about every position out there and has been a stalwart on our defensive unit. Defensive tackle Robert Ward was back in action after sitting out a couple of games with a broken hand. After some cautious early minutes, he came back to play some fine defense for us, the coach commented further. I Intermountain faculty, says Coach Ellie Thompson. The Eaglettes are at Layton Tuesday. The Eaglettes opened the season against St. Joseph and came away with a win in three games. The Jays won the first but the Eaglettes won the next two and The junior varsity lost 20-1- 6 20-1- 20-1- The varsity lost its match at Bear River first Im all but starting over, she said. Back are Celia Moses and Victoria Jim. Up from the junior varsity are Rachel Lavender, Pam Waukau and Eva Sullivan. New faces include Rudene Galloway, Lynn Roanhorse, a very talented youth athlete, Jesse Tulee, Nellie McConni-vole- , Carolyn James, Lynn Wychesit and Cheryl Harvier. Coach Thompson said the Eaglettes will have only four league games this year but will fill in with several nonleague contests, nearly all with schools larger than Intermountain. As in years past, the Eaglettes arent as tall as other teams, she reported. and 14-2- 0 19-2- The jayvees also lost 8 and Coach Thompson has only two starters back from last year. 17-2- 20-1- 16-2- PHARMACY PHACTS UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY EXTEHSE8I CLASS B3V1SIC: QUARTER 1 the bid receiver took in the pass fromll yards. The point after kick was good. mud match Planning Assistance 48-inc- game 13-- 0 ll Davis jayvees trip up Bees Running Back Also mentioned was the running of Querta in the second rose to thwart any offensive effort. The Bears, just before half, almost scored on a Blake San-dapass that slipped out of the hands of the Bear receiver just yards short of the goal line. That was to be the last Bear gasp. As was predicted, it was a battle of defenses. Ted Petersen was especially difficult for the Scots to handle in his middle linebacker role. Although the Scots did move the ball, they couldnt sustain any drives either and it took Bear mistakes to pave the way for the Ben Lomond win. The first came about midway in the second quarter. The Scots intercepted on the Bear River eight. After Petersen forced a three yard loss, Danny Moyes dropped back and found tight end Mike Kunz coming across the middle and t. Long, who had been on a school project and missed a weeks practice, came in to play very well. Martinez was also singled out for his blocking at center. Billy Tenasket had a good day defensively, also. works-recreatio- ' Scotties trip Bears Wasatch High, grasping a 0 halftime lead, used a kick off return and the long pass to upend stubborn Intermountain' 26-- 6 in Brigham City Friday afternoon. A bad snap on a punt that went out of the endzone is all the Wasps could muster for a first half score. At least three missed tackles on the second half kick off allowed a 90 yard return as Wasatch went ahead That seemed to fire up the Eagles who were aided on a pass interception by Mike Torres on the 50. Brigham City Recreation will host a final meeting for wo- tains, managers on representatives on Sept. 28, at 8:30 p.m. n Meeting place is public office, city hall. Team entry fees have been set at $30 each. Oct. 5 will be opening night at 6:30 p.m., at the Box Elder high school girls gym. A clinic will be held for captains concerning rules and skills. League play will consist of single round robin play. Upon completion of league play the women will move into tournament play which will be double ch. No. 73 for Intermountain is Daryl Long. The was the Region Nine opener for both teams. Defensive struggle Final volleyball meeting mens volleyball league Jeff Sam takes a pretty good shot but holds onto the ball in this photo. The gain was part of a 50 yard touchdown drive in Friday's 26-- 6 loss to Wasat- EAGLE BACK rugged at linebacker. Daryl Agenda recreation Sept. football s Usp Matt Ramon had a great day at tackle and Stensgar was in Bybee Sidelined Bybee was sidelined following in fact the the Ogden match next day when he was hospitalized for an appendectomy. But hes back in the swing now and is expected to help cement the improving Box Elder squad. Coach Hone said theres a lot of competition for positions on Dave Jensen of Brigham City took MONSTER MOOSE this 1,500 pound moose near Rock Creek in Cache rack. He used National forest recently. It carried a h one shot from a .300 magnum to down the animal. He was hunting with his father Wynn Jensen and Bob Limb. ', mark. touchdown department until late in the fourth quarter when quarterback Kline Adams loft- W 2 2 the Dart recap Short Punt n end-zon- Region 4 score. To briefly scoring: 22-1- 4 y El. Ed. 666- - - FALL G7FEROS Intro, to Research, 3 cr.; Instr. Martinez; Tuesday, Sept. 27, 4:30; Tremonton North Park School, Rm. 16. IM 551- - Media production, 3 cr.; Instr. Don Smellie; Thursday, Sept. 29, 4:30; Box Elder I. High School. PEP 656- - Impl. of Phys. Fitness and cond. prog., 3 cr; Instr. D. Nelson, L. Nalder; Tuesday, Sept. 27, 4:30; Box Elder High School. Sec. Ed. 613- - Futuristics, values, and science fiction lit. for teachers, 3 cr.; Instr. D. Knight; Wednesday, Sept. 28, 4 p.m.; Box Elder High School. Geog. 490- - Earth History, 3 cr.; Instr. R. Alexander; Tuesday, Sept. 27, 7 p.m.; Box Elder High School, Rm. 1 56. Art 125, Art 527- - 3 cr.; Instr. Hdrrison Groutage; Wednesday, Sept. 28, 6:30 p.m.; Box Elder High School. Art 140, Art 141- - Beg. photo., 3 cr.; Instr. J. Huffaker; Thursday, Sept. 29, 6:30; Box Elder High School. from Ray Malmrose The careful care of your teeth is always vital where health is your concerned. And, here in our best-possib- pharmacy, youll always find the dental products your dentist recommends for the best care of your teeth and gums. Were carrying that toothbrush youre looking for . . . or the special toothpaste pro- duced for teeth more than to cold or heat . . . the best cleansers for dentures . , . and gum stimulators for your gums healthy condition. We have these and ordinarily-sensitiv- e many other health and beauty aids in all the types and sizes you can find only in our kind of store. This is the place where Your Health Is Our Business. . . the place where we well know that if it werent for friendly people like you thered be no store like ours. MALMROSE PHARMACY 102 PRESCRIPTIONS E. Forest 723-85- |