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Show DESERET Slash (VtiKer NEWS, Thursday, January 22 1970 Q V milIlllllllIlll!l!ll!llllllllllH!lilillll!IIIIIIIIIIIII!lllllllllllllllllllllllllijll In A Great Big Way! FERGUSON By GEORGE Spoits Managing Editor iiiimiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiniiiijiMiiiiiiiiiniiiiii CASTLEDALE, UTAH You mi j, lit say that Castledale is way out in the sticks. And if you do you might flatter the residents hereabout because its the kind of life that they piefer. Certainly they are not going to suffocate like us city folk from the monoxides. You dont have to walk to one side of the walk when you saunter down Main Street. You dont hae to park all one way, like parallel or angu.ar. You have to watch out tor the deer in the foothills, or the fnendlv pheasa ,ts winch giub up the gravel on the shouldeis of the country roads. There are a lot of other disadantages in Ihing here. You have to saddle jour own horse. You have to take hay into the fields for jour own cattle. You dont have speeduajs to the mountains four laners. You have places like Huntington Reservoir and Joe's Valley Reservoir to fish and most of the time jou have to quit fishing because you have leveled at your limit. Those are just some of those disadvantages of living in the real western woild where the cloud3 and the s:y, and the fresh air and the wild game are all about you, were if you want to Joes hay rake you knour youre welcome to it. boi-ro- w A Very Special Place Since the days when this reporter rode range with Ev Doman, Ed Cliff (now chief of the U S Forest Service) Bob Park and otheis, some 20 years ago, and hunted elk and deer in their respective seasons, this part of the west has always been a special place. Ive chased pheasants down the gullies and washed around the hamlet of Elmo and searched for the chukars in Sinbad Canyon with Virg Draney and others. So it was a great occasion to stop in and say hello to Arch Kinder, principal of the Emery County High School here and talk over athletic affairs. Once, not many years ago Arch was guest, banwith his star athletes at our annual quets, sponsored by the Deseret News. Hes alwajs been a special guy with the athletic kids. all-sta- te As we went into the school here Arch showed where Coach Ken Stillson was preparing the mats for the wrestling meet with one of the other area schools. Wrestling has been worth its weight in gold, Arch said. Its a great program, and gives the little guy, as well as the big one, a chance to become a real champion. The Salt Lake Golden Eagles might have turned in their top foreehecking eftoit the season oi Wednesday night on Salt Palace ice. It was effective enough to e the finesse of the After Portland Pvkaroos, three looses and two ties, the over-baianc- Gok.en Eagles finally got one from the Bucks. Golden Guvle Fielder voted the night s most valuable pla,,ei, led the forechecking charge which carried the Golden Fagles to a lead in the opening pei lod Poitland stormed back in the second period with two goals inside a minute to tie the score That Buckaroo blitz signalled entry of veteran goalie F.uss Gillow in favor of Merlin Jenner. Gillow became Salt Lake's second big lieio of night with some tremendous saves among his total of 1G. Golden Eage coach Ray Kinasew ich isnt kidding him0 te self- "We caught the Bucks flat and grabbed the momentum w ith some aggressive skating. The ll be tougher Friday night. The Golden Eagles and Bucks have a rematch Friday night (8pm) on Salt Palace ice Elsewhere in the Western Wednesday Hockey League night, Phoenix thumped Denver 6 1 on Phoenix ice That enabled Salt Lake to gain a couple of notches on the Spun. Only WHL action tonight pits San Diego at Seattle on Seattle ire. Salt Lake got the scoring under way Wednesday night when Larry McNabb hit the net at 12 55 with assists from Bob ToothiE and Fielder. The goal came while the Bucks were shy penalty-plague- d Mike Donaldson. The Golden Eagles scored Fielder finessed again one into the nets off an assist by Ted Hodgson. That goal came at 19.37. Glee of the Salt Lake partiwhen Consan was short-livenie Madigan and Bill Saunders came though with their w'hen d Deseret News Photo by Steve Golden Eagle goalie s Gillow Ru reaches over the net to help J im (Red Eye) Hay tie up the disc against Portland's Watching the action is Portland's Norm Johnson (10). from center ice at the second periods 11:25 mark. Bob Heaney and Galen Head were credited with assists. punch inside 60 seconds to knot the score. Art Jones and Donaldson assisted Madigan. The Saunders tally was unassisted. one-tw- o Madigans shot hit after a deflection off Lake skate. Saunders into the a (1 ) Portlands Dick Van Impe tallied at 6:09 and Norm Johnson scored a protested when goal Nine minutes later, Fielder came up with a phenomenal feed to Bruce Carmichael and he eased the disc past PortJim McLeod. land the net a Salt slapped corner, looked like a Sait Lake rout was on when Bob Heaney on an stretched the lead to unassisted goal at 5 36 of the final stanza. 2 In the middle stanza, with Rollie the scored tied 'at Wilcox came up with some heshot roics. He ripped a 2-- WHL Standings We have good equipment and Coach Brent Arnold, who played baseball at the University of Utah, and was originally from this area, lets every man come out for football that wants to play. Football has done more to keep the bojs busy than anj thing else they can do. Ve hav e ev erjone come out for ths club who can do anything at all. It is a real school effort. By BRENT CHECKETTS Deseret News Sports Writer Wednesday' R (suits Salt Lake City 5, Portland 4 Phoenix 6, Denver 1 Thats what a school can do when it had leadand the students put their minds to win ership jn whatever they do. Ive never seen a high school trophy case with so many honors on exhibit! Always Be A Deer g Arch Kirder is a hunter and we got onto the matter of whether the deer herds around the Manti Forest were being depleted. Archie says that last seasons stoi m oil opening day kept him off his favorite ground, but that on the second Saturday his young hunters saddled up, rode into the back count ly and picked their bucks from many they saw There is no indication of a depletion Archie said. life-lon- Sn He also remembered when (here was so much public opposition to the grazing cuts on public lauds. "Now the users of the hnd realize how light the federal people were. They repaired the land and now it offers some of the finest feed ever far better than anyone dreamed it would. If only we could see ahead in things like these. But then it is difficult for us to give up our old wrys. "My father, when his permits were cut back, went to work and fenced areas and fed his own stock and learned quickly enough that he could raise beef far better by this means than just letting them live off the land as they pleased Not everyone, woud agree vith Archie. Like he said, it isnt easy to change ones wajs. To Archie K.nder the future all around looks our young resources in the generation bright the old resources we still have in our coming up mountain streams and natural way of life. And that '8 good to hear, for the change! V s snappy start this year, had little trouble playing Cypress Point and Spyglass Hill in the ram over the last two days, and looks like the man to beat Best known, of course, is letterman forward Ken Gardner, currently averaging 14 4 points and 11 8 rebounds per game from a starting forward spot An all WAC selection last season .Gardner has been hampered somewhat this season by a bad knee. Hes shown signs of coming around lately, however, as evidenced by an 32 point excellent performance against Utah State last Saturday at Logan. collegiate The Redskins' three Kens give Guidner is small for a college fotward. He makes up for the lack of s 70 ms do, however, with gxeat strength and timing. Ivenny is also a fine outside BYU and Reynolds Borrevik, left, Gardner a big headache Saturday ofternoon. At 6 4, 207 pounds, shooter. Coach Jack Gardner says of Ken: He's a veiy complete hasketbdl player . . . strong on the boat ds, good defensively and able to cany his of the load ofiensivel. He s fundamentally sound, consistent and one of the finest competitors I v e ever coached Borrevik is the member of "Ken Trio that plays both forward and center. Utahs letterman who and weighs 205 pounds, Borrevik is .seeing a io1 of action for the Uies this Season in a leserve role. A junior stands He's and 7 averaging 6 1 points rebounds for 14 3 6 game1 A fine shooter for Ins size Borrevik is luttng 46 2 per cent of his lield shots and 70 per cent from thf free f 1-- J - 3 514. Vi Crosby AAedf PEBBLE BEACH, CALIF. (UP1) Picking winners on the pro tour is risky business, especially one like the $150,000 Bing Crosby National Pro-Awhich begins today over three seaside courses on the rainswept Monterey Peninsula. But Bobby Lunn, off to a Utah basketball coach Jack Gardner could start a front line like that Saturday afternoon against Brigham Young and dont worry University it wouldnt be the same Ken playing all three spots. The Utes happen to have three cagers named Ken on their squad this season . . . and all of them "Ken play great basketball. That output was the highest Gardner's career prep or Portland (McCloedl Salt Lake (Jenner Gillow, Attendance ? U 4 10 k At center . . . Ken. At forward . . . Ken. At the other forward . . . Ken. of - Limn Favored V -- Then Archie walked over to the schools trophy case. It was bulging with hardware. Our greatest achievement has been in speech contests and forensicr We have never lost a regional meetf, have won a couple of state titles and excel in this event as much as any school in the state, the schools headmaster stated as he proved his case by showing us the title trophies. Its because we have good leaders. Mr. O. E. Johanson has led the forensic program (debate, legislative forum and extemporaneous speaking) and his wife, Grace, has been the instructor in the speech effort. 1 Salt Lake, MiNsSsb First Period (Fielder, Toothill), 12 55, 2 Salt Late, Fielder (Hodgson), IV 37 Penalties Flelder, Salt Lake, 9.13, Corab Portland, 12 Cl 3 Second Period Portland, Maw-ga- n (Jones, Doandoon), 12, 4 Part-lanSaunters (Unassisted) t -; (J. W Icox So t (Heaney Head), Lak, II 25 6 Salt Lake Carmichael (Field17 54 Penalties er Hrdg.on), 12 Donald on, Portland, 4). RochfOJI, Salt Lake, 14 27 v 7 Salt Lake, Heaney Third Period 8 5 37 , Portland Vbn (Unassl-ted- ) Imp (Donaldson), 6 09 , 9 PorDenel, 13 49 Johnson (Madlaan, schmautz), W Penalties Johnson, Portland 12 Salt 35, Lake Wilcox, Hay, Salt Lake, 13 43, Corab, Portland, 13 49. t. V 3 Kens Ken Spell Trouble football for eight years now, since we combined the two schools. We dont win any state championships but we sure shoot for them. ParkW Saves bv ilcox screamed a little too loud and too long. He was ejected fiom the contest. And Every Man Plays We have been playing C Saunders (7). t V, But things became torn! and go for the home town lads 90-lo- 13:43. Johnson batted the disc out of the an and into the net. That set the Salt Lakers to screaming like wounded Eagles on claims that Johnsons stick was far above his shoulder. From the press box, it appeared the Eagles had a legitimate beef. It rookie past Jenner. at Salt Lake refused to let the momentum stay with Portland, though. The Golden Eagles kept the pressuie inside Portland's blue line with likely the best forechecking dis play of the season. Bili thiow lire. His high scoiing output was 16 points against Michigan. help us a good deal before the season's over, coach Gardner says of Rev nolds. "Hes come tlnough for us ,n the clutch seveial times this season," Coich Gardner says of Boirevik. "He came to us from a small high school in Oregon and has had a b'g sp-up to make, especially (Oiisidcing how small he is for a college center. "He does a lot of tilings well, and is an especially fine "Hes done well, however, and has pi oven to be esp wily effective as a spot player who can come off the bench tj spark the team New to Utahs team this season is 6 5 forward Ken Reynolds, who starred last season for Curt Jensons Col lege of Eastern Utah team. Reynolds has sren only lm-ittaction o far this season, averaw.rg 2 7 and 19 points and rebounds, respectively "He's had an adjustment to make coming out of the junior college ranks, but he's Iron improving late'y and siuld d could when the firing begins. Lunn, who tied for third at the Los Angeles Open and tied for fourth at the Phoenix Open last week, tied the Cypress Point course recoid of 63 in a piactice round Tuesday. and then, with the ram slanting in off the Pacific Ocean on another miserable day Wednesday, he shot a 63 for 15 holes at Spyglass Hill, long the bane of pros playing in the Crosby. "Even though its early in the year Irn playing better now than I did at the end of last year. said Lunn. "Its all a matter of confidence and 1 think I can win here, although it wont be easy It never is, and 168 pros take off after the top puze of evenly split; jh groups playing Cypress, Spyglass Hill and Pebble Be&cjr. They play one round on each course and the low 70 and tiS advance to the final on SunVc. day at Pebble. $25,000 today, total of 53 of 1969s top 60 winners are in m$ years field, among then NSl J. Frank Beard, No. 2 Dave Hill, Jack Nicklaus, Arnold PaUS-e- r, Billy Casper, Lee Trdilnft PGA Champ Ray Floyd U.S Open King Orville Moody, Casper won the Los An$a Open to launch a $7 m illicit pro year two weeks ago ilifd Dale Douglass took the nix last Sunday. Weather is the big bugaboo A money heie- 4? - Alta Road Closed Deseret News Special ALTA The road to tins ski resort has been closed bv the Utah Highway Department on the advice oftthe United States Forest Servka. The road has been closed since 11 .30 a m , becauseJim lain has softened the srb$ and created danger. avalanc ' shooter Do the three same names cause (ontusion at Utah piactice sessions? Nicknames that prevent most of the tme, coach Gaianer says. All three Kens are hoping to be instrumental m leading the Utes to a win over BYU Saturday afternoon m a teltvised game in Provo A win would preserve Utahs unblemished WAC record and leave BYU vvinless m league play. The game will be televised on KUTV Television Channel 2. Tipoff tune is 2 p m. SECTION D Sports Fiibnciai for - 1 3 6, 7 SALT PALACE RESERVATIONS CALL TICKET OFFICE TICKETS ALSO AT: 1 ' All ZCMi & Sears stores- - Mint Cofe, Wards in Tooele end Granger, Mickey's Music in Brigham City, Hill Air Force Base, Lettermes Shop in Provo and Wolf's Sporting Goods in Ogden. f |