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Show Olympic Dope Sheet alt See Page 14 Mt tibunt Salt lake City, Utah oft f , See Page 15 Page 13 January 28, 1964 Tuesday Morning Night at Ballet?-Nope- ! Ih lost Resort by Grid Twin Bills Just Ute Cage Dance! r 4 Q ' I -- 'V 1 h. , About the only time an average recreation skier sees them, the U.S. forest rangers stationed at the sld resorts are enjoying themselves on the powder. And yon might even hear a skier ask ever do anything but ski? dont V " vA .4 , V'v mv A " those guys 4 the boys in green ate a skiers best friend. And the reason the weekend skier rarely sees a ranger doing his chores is that the rangers job is done early or late in the day as he prepares the hills for the rush periods, making them Actually, safe to ski on. vvv A TAKE LAST WEEK AS an example. The road to Alta was closed for three days and this annoyed the unknowing skier. .Gee, wouldnt it be nice to be a forest ranger and get stranded at Alta and have the hills all to yourself, one was overheard saying. But the work the forest service personnel turned in at Alta during those days is almost immeasurable, and very dangerous. ( i y V- -s . A vtf F - 'Unstable Snow Conditions We must have shot at 75 danger spots, Ed LaChappele, avalanche forecaster at Alta, said Monday. All major slide paths were active. We had very extensive avalanching throughout the upper part of Little Cottonwood Canyon. This is very ft V abnormal. THERE HERE ABOUT 51 inches of snowfall over the Wasatch Mountains in that storm and the new snow was very unstable due to the sugar-typ- e snow conditions on the earlier snow which didnt hold the new snow, Ed noted. Ray Lindquist, chief snow ranger at Alta, along with Ed, Ron Trogstad, Neil Hysell, and Warren Baldsienfen fired the 105 mm recoilless rifle at every potential slide they could. And for the places the 105 couldnt reach they hauled a 75 mm howitzer by truck or snow cat In all, they cleared about 75 avalanches to make it safe for skiing on Sunday. They shot at High Rustler, Stone Crusher, Lone Pine, Baldy Cirque, Mt Superior, some further down the canyon, some on the north side of the road and several in the upper reaches of the famed resort Its pretty safe now, LaChapple said, skiers observe the closure signs. 4' A a v d v '; i Over the years, twisting rope has been determined to be the cause of five fatal accidents and many manglings and 9 t k THE BOOK, WHICH was printed in Salt Lake and is being U.S. Ski Assn., features finished technical forms, teaching methods and theory and ski mechanics. And it has one of the most complete histories of skiing compiled. Its the first book of its type published on a collective basis in America. All the others have been published by individuals. distributed through the TECHNICAL DEFINITIONS, explanatory cartoons, teaching methods, ski schools, selection of terrain, racing, avalanches, and a chronologic study of the history of modern skiing technique are some of the major portions of the book. SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 27 -(Chi Chi) Rodriguez, Little Juan the golfer from Puerto Rico, outhit raw boned Texan Don January for a victory Monday in their playoff for the Lucky International tournament title. d one-stro- RODRIGUEZ shot a one under par 70 and January a 71 over the par Harding Park course. municipal The wihner and the loser collected $7,50Q $4,000. JAUNTY JUAN, a standing 5 feet V2- inches, whistled and traded repartee with the gallery. Still he continued the fine shooting w'hich brought him a deadlock at a tournament 272 at the end of record-tyin- g Sunday's regulation 72 holes. Rodriguez, with a 65 on his third round, dropped a putt on the final regulation hole for a 66. The tie resulted when the six-foJanuary bogeyed the - ( , a V f ' V .iv V , V - - j, V c offensive fouls. Stanford was guilty 14 times of errors. at the Utah was ahead, half and Doug Moon and Skip Kroeger between them scored the next 20 Utah points, 14 by Moon. No other Utes dented the nets in that spread. Several Stanfords did, however, and the visiting tribe was ahead, before George Fisher broke the spell with a layup for the Utes. The Utes got ahead to stay at 9 and nursed the lead until the time came for the specials. Moon led all scorers with 27 points. Other Utes in action were Thurgood with 14, Kroeger with 12, Hawes and Fisher with nine each, B. Granville Lash with six and Dennis Couch and Chuck Currington with five apiece. 44-4- the tribal rites largely were a demonstration of the game at its best. Utah collected the Stanford scalp, and the difference was two special plays put in the offense for just such situ87-8- ations. UTAH CAME out of a see9 saw second half with an 80-7- 67-6- 71-6- te Jtaan Tribune Photos b y Brandt Gray, Dave Jonsson George FLsher (21) heads the ballet lineup in this sequence as he and Krocger (rear) put sandwich around man with ball. Utes ganging up on tho Stanford tern offense against Utahs speed whiz. The two teams played and running attack. similar defenses, alert, aggresWHEN DOSE was kept under sive and hustling with Utah wraps in close he moved outgambling more. The 4,781 fans in attendance side and scored on jump shots the second. jump shooter! were strangely quiet, probably a UTAH r, STANFORD H Stanford coach Howie Dallmar engrossed in the classic battle UTAH ran in a seemingly endless unfolding before them which STANFORD Raaka Fisher 4 9 stream of big kids, all deadly pitted Stanfords size and pat-- 44 2 3 16 10 Bedell 14 Thurgood 4 23 Dose 9 5 Couch 2 shooters. Clayton Raaka scored 15 Hinckley Kroeger 4 45 12 IDAHO STATS UTE FROSH 7 10 Moore 5 18, Ken Hinckley 15, Bedell and Moon 10 27 OFT0 2 OFT 4 Shupe 9 Hawes 3 2 5 Christensen Ockel 0 Hollis Moore 10 each and pint-siz- e 0 Baker 0 04) 5 Currington 11 4 5 18 Eichflberger Beika 5 0 0 Kosanka 4 15 17 Page Lewis Shupe four on two Ivey 4 0 M Cordes 16 Marsh 5 6 Lynch time shots from outside. 11 4 Torres Giles 5 81 knee was operated on In December) this lad would be impossible. He sat out something like five minutes in the first half for a rest and fouled out with almost eight minutes to play in 6-- 8 OFF OFF 4 0 7 CM) 1 4 1 4 1 7 1 0 7 1 0-- CLEARANCE SALE 84-7- . 97-9- 1 mid-cou- 89-8- College Cage Results rt nt N 50x14 White Nylon and mans power when he crashed carded a 68. his drive on the 12th hole an estimated 300 yards. Rodriguez had won only once on PGA a at HIS SHOTS were straight all tour, previously Denver in 1963. this overcast day and he hit 17 of 18 in regulation figJanuary finished second in the ures. greens fo'r the second Lucky straight January missed five greens. year. He fell to Jack Burke by Each paired the first four He three strokes last January. never has won in the month that holes of the back nine before Rodriguez carded his only bogey carries his name. g from 40 feet on With his yellow straw hat by 14th. His lead was cut to the his on head, Rodriguez perched built a lead on Jan- two strokes. Texan errors as the hit into Ironically, January reduced uary trees and bogeyed both the the margin to one by sinking a birdie putt on the 18th, fourth and fifth holes. with Rodriguez taking a routine DON BIRDIED the sixth with par. an putt but Juan Sunday, bogeyed promptly birdied the seventh the 18th to January send the contest and also scored with a into a playoff. a birdie four on the ninth. with th turn made Little Juan dropped a putt of They Rodriguez three strokes in the 10 feet at the seventh hole for lead at 7 as a crowd of about his first birdie and reached the 2,500 followed the play. fringe of the green at the ninth In two strokes to set Outweighed nearly 50 pounds, Rodriguez proved he had big up his second bird. hole, missing M two six-foot- three-puttin- two-stro- 34-3- 510-ya- t runner-u- 570-yar- seven-foo- t putt. ALL See pick Bennion p MOST 166 S. Main IMpira 67 Your Dismond Headquarters tn Utah BRAKE SPECIAL guarantee Guarantee KETCIIUII'S EL Grease Seals Checked Brake Fluid Checked Brakes Tested 49 Kegaratess or Competitive Prices, We Guarantee Better Values for Your Dollar. A Goodyear Buy is a Better Buy at . . . Rebuilt 40t South at 7 lb Weet OFF ALL SIZES AVAILABLE WHEEL ALIGNMENT SPECIAL Front Wheels Removed Brakes Adjusted t Front Wheel Bearings Repacked Carload purchaM an all (tyl gai and electric, meant taring! to you. asy tonne o( course. Up to OFF This Week Only Factory Alignment Service tCheikCorter, Camber, Toe-I-n to specification 3350 10-Y- r. OFF e Expert WATER HEATERS one-yaa- r 35 15.95 mmmrnwummyiF BENNION'S BOYD PARK with TIRES SNOW TIRES 20 We hove the merchandise We have the vaiuee We have the prestige 30-G- al (design change) 50 DISCONTINUED When You Buy a Diamond in the Lucky a year ago, went over par on both the fourth and fifth d holes. On the par five! fourth, the Texan hit his second shot into the trees. His third stopped 35 feet from the green, he chipped up and missed a JANUARY, 31.55 DOUBLE EAGLES PLAY IT SMART! Rodriguez Cools January in Golf Duel By Associated Press f - lead and just under three min32 33 87 Totals 2 14 Campbell Matsuno Halftima score Utah 44, Stanford 41. utes to play when Coach Jack 2 Price 0 Personal fouls Stanford Beck 0 Raaka 5, Dose FISHER DID a fine Job deBunker 04) 0 Dodd 5, Moors 3, Bedell 2, Hinckley, Shupe, Gardners hanky signalled for a Harris 0 04) 0 Baker. Utah Fisher 4, Thurgood 3, fensing Dose with the help of a 2 2 2 Dunn Moon 3, Hawes 2, Currington 2, Couch time out. 27 74 Kroeger. Totals sagging defense that saw the 21 a Doug Moon took the resulting when time resumed and pass-i- n scored on a short jump shot The Utes got the ball when Stanford to 17. missed for one of the few times in the second half and once Nabs Win again ran a special from out To Make Room for 1964 Shipments STANFORDS NORMAN, OKLA., Jan. 27 of bounds. Dan Hawes tanked (AP) Oklahoma erased all but a twisting layup and the Utes center Tom Dose dunked 23 on PRESENT STOCKS DRASTICALLY REDUCED a brilliant performance that inKansas w ere in front by five at two points of a cluded nine of 11 from the field State lead in the second half, STANFORDS BOB but the Wildcats hit eight shortened the odds withBedell and five straight from charity a nice With two good legs (one - yV v . . straight free throws in the basket but by now it was too lane. final 2V2 minutes for a Big late. Hawes cashed in on a free Eight Conference basketball vic- throw when the visitors fouled CHECK THESE MANY BARGAINS tory here Monday. to halt Utahs freeze tactics and OKLAHOMA CLOSED the gap then Spence Thurgood cut loose 19 20 6.50x13 Narrow Whita 43.60 7 7.60x15 Narrow Whita to with 2:48 left when from right at the final 30.65 6.50x14 Narrow Whita James Gatewood hit a three-poi- buzzer and scored. Utah 17, Stanford II 31.10 Narrow Whita 7.00x13 seconds it the final until Now Mexico M, Eastern Montane 41 play. But guard Sammy Up Tennessee 63, Georgia Tech 43 Robinson hit four straight free was anyones ball game. So 7.00x14 Original It Quality Michigan State 102, Ohio State 99 Georgia 112, South Carolina 90 tosses to pull Kansas State out evenly were the teams matched 6.70x15 Original tquip. Tiro St Francis (N Y.) 59, Niagara 39 6.50x14 Original Equip. Tiro that each side tossed the ball at of danger. Chicago Loyola 70, Dayton 54 i Florida 86, Alabama 60 34.50 Premium Goodyear 0.00x14 the nets 64 times, each scored Providence 80, Creighton 77 81 St Detroit 111, Bonaventurt that is 51 6 per cent shootDePauf 85, Indiana 78 Spartans Tip Bucks 33 and Kansas State 97, Oklahoma 91 ing and very good indeed. StanPan American (Tex.) 104, St. Francis EAST LANSING, MICH., Jan. ford made 19 of 31 shots in the (Pa ) 90 27 (UPI) Michigan State upset Texas Tech 102, Midwestern 86 torrid second half. Mississippi State 113, Southeast LouisiOhio State highly regarded ana 73 102-9Bradley 97, Peru Nationals 70 THE FOR FIGURE a Monday night, philberts, despite Carroll College 61, N W. Nazarene 14 SALE PRICE Howard Pavne 91, Sul Ross 79 WAS performance by Buck- Utah played its most error-fre- e Chattanooga S3, David Lipscomb 71 Tuba .33.ZO candidate Gary game in a long spell, losing the White 00x15 S W. New Utah eye Typo 92, Mexico H 18.95 College Seattle 100, Pepperdint 77 34.05 00x14 Whita Nylon 1 7.32 Bradds. ball only eight times, including K-Sta- official American Ski Technique The PSIAs is the first ski technique published since the Austrians did it in 1955 and the French 1957. The new book took two years of voluntary work to produce. 4. $ Skip Kroegcr (13) and Stanford's Lewis Shape (11) and a few pair of extraneous hands join in the fun in tense moment, Fifth-ranke- Thats how the latest publication on skiing was born, as explained by Salt Lakes Bill Lash, president of the PSLi who also runs the Greater Salt Lake Ski Schools at Solitude. te. & ' Two Indian nations met on the basketball warpath Monday and 88-4- 2 ski f I 1 By Bob Williams Tribune Sports Writer ALBUQUERQUE, N.M Jan. rope has caught a glove, a scarf, a braid of hair 27 (UPI) New Mexico clamped and, in some instances, the hapless victim has been dragged a tight defensive lid over Eastunder the safety gate which would shut off the power and into ern Montana while four of its the terminal sheave wheel. own players were scoring in THE STUDY, DIRECTED by Verne L. Despain, Ogden, chief double figures to take an of Mechanical Engineering Branch of the Division of Engineering basketball victory Monday night. of the U.S. Forest Service, Intermountain Region, has virtually THE BIN was New Mexicos eliminated rope twisting. 14th against only two defeats Its biggest find was to use plaited or braided rope rather for the year. than spiral strand. These were found to be immune from twist. d nationally on deof the fense, the Lobos allowed the Proper installation of the rope and proper adjustment sheaves also help prevent tow accidents. Ropes with more than shorter Eastern Montana team five turns in a distance of 600 feet were found to be hazardous. only 25 points in the first half, So, you see, those skiing forest rangers do work so you can and were even tougher in the ski safely. second half in holding the losers cided, once and for all, to come up with an American technique. 1 f Utah Edges Tough Stanford, 87 to 81 Lobos Drop Lid Over Hoop Foes A twisting The Professional Ski Instructors of America and the average skier got tired and confused of hearing how the modified Austrian technique differed from the French and how the Sun Valley technique was different than Squaw Valleys, so it de- j t $ $ V Injuries. All Because He Got Tired . V T y .W 4 It was one of the worst avalanche situations weve had there for some time, F. C. Koziol, supervisor of the Wasatch Utah Redskins Doug Moon (4) and Dan Hawes (13) indulge in a National Forest said Monday. It's best to close the area and basketball ballet in going after the ball against Stanford, shoot those slides rather than let them hang and come down unexpectly with the mountains full of skiers. Pull in the Forest Service V v4 w X, k S ' - i - 5 - as long as the Aside from avalanches, forest service rangers see that skiers are safe on lifts and tows, inspecting them often throughout the year. These inspections have resulted in a system which prevents rope twisting on rope tows. 1 . , it :i t fF . w px'- V t t vj A s 4.. USA f . 14(51 imm TIRE SERVICE At the Goo year Corner 479 SOUTH 328-320- 2nd 7. i WEST Easy JJ |