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Show Page 81 J, Lakeoule Res iew, March 5. 1981 Ry Bump To Keep Kegin Title Hopes Alive There was a lot at stake when the Royals and Lakers squared off for battle Friday, at Roy. The game had been billed as a rubber-matc- h between teams that beat each other in two previous games played at Bonneville. The Royals got past the Lakers to win the Bonneville Classic in early December, but lost to them on January 30th in Region-- 1 action. Both teams were anxious for game number three and it took two overtimes to settle the issue. Roy beat the Lakers but it wasnt easy. It took an eighteen foot pressure-sho- t by Rob Thomas, with three seconds left in by regulation, and a twenty-foote- r sophomore Reid Newey, with three seconds to play in the first overtime to make it possible for the Royal victory in doubleovertime. Midway through the second extra period, the Royals got the lead, and the ball offense to nail and used their down the victory. The game was tied at 59 in regulation time, and at 65, after the first overtime period. e In a interview, both coaches acknowledged that this game could very ' well be for the Region-- 1 championship, or at least for a piece of it. Both thought that Roy was capable of upsetting Clearfield on the Falcon floor. Coach Gary Alverson felt that his Lakers could beat Roy if they could keep Thomas and Kirkwood from getting an early start in scoring. If they get an early start, they play better, he said. I hope we can play Alverson noted that well as a team. Bonneville matched up well with the Royals, except for 68 Rob Thomas, who is three inches taller than any Laker. Rebounding the Key Roy Coach Ted Smith was concerned about rebounding against the physical Lakers. We cant give them two or three shots on every time down court, he said, and we better shoot better than we did last time. Nothing was said about stopping Cory Sylvester, Bonnevilles super star forward, who has been averaging 24 points per game. ROY 78-7- 1, four-corne- rs pre-gam- Rob Thomas and Bart Hadley each tallied ' nine field goals for 23 and 22 points jfijsj r.. ' ! Steve and respectively. Brad' McCaulley Scholtec each scored in double digits with 14 and 12 points. The Royal team scored 30 field goals and converted 18 of 23 foul shots for 78 points. Four Lakers scored in double figures. Cory Sylvester and Kerry Gambles each came up with 17, while Steve Draney chalked up 11 and Trimble came off the bench to score ten. The Lakers made 27 from the field and 17, of 26 from the line. Coach Elated Coach Ted Smith was elated, but drained from his victory. "We had the game lost twice, and came back, he blurted. I didnt do it, he continued. It was just that we made some pressure-basket-s and won. Somebody up there smiled on us tonight, he murmured. I thought I had blown it, when I called that time out, moaned Brad McCaulley. It just seemed like the thing to do with only 12 seconds left on the clock. This was our greatest victory since we beat them in football for the region championship, said the likeable Roy captain. Bart Hadley scored six big points in the second overtime on feeds from McCaulley and Scholtec, and he intercepted a Laker pass to their big man inside. Steve and Brad got it to me, and I just laid it in, beamed Hadley. Pretty passes, pretty passes, he chanted. Rob Thomas praised Bonnevilles Norm Haney as one of the toughest big men Ive There was a lot of pushing faced all year. and shoving going on inside, said Rob, but the officials were letting it go on both ends of the court. I didnt think that last shot I made to tie the game was going in, ad- vjJT mitted Thomas. Isnt it great to beat those .. i guys? Ted Smith and his Royals were back on BRAD MCCAULLEY, from Roy, bolts through the the court on Saturday, preparing for the key to score two points and help the Royals beat the at Clearfield. The Tuesday show-dow- n . Falcons beat Roy once and must do it again or share the league title with the Royals. Hell get his 24 points, said Smith, but weve got to stop the rest of the team. . But Cory Sylvester did not get 24 points. The Royals held him to 17 points, and that was in 32 minutes of regulation play and six minutes of overtime. The Roy coach had' defense that devised a triangle-and-on- e allowed Robert Kirkwood to follow Sylvester anywhere on the court, while his zone teammates formed a triangle-shape- d to guard the other Lakers. The strategy paid off. Sylvester had only four points by halftime, and only ten in regulation play. He finished the game with 17 points, but had only six against Kirkwood, who fouled out in the third quarter. Kirkwood has been Roys scorer, but left the game with only three on Friday. Coach Smith praised him for the job he did on Sylvester. double-overtim- most-consiste- Near Disaster. Brad McCaulley shared in the Royal heroics, but almost cost Roy the ball game, in the first overtime. With the score tied at 63, and only 37 seconds left on the clock, the Royals were playing for the final shot. As the clock ticked down to 12 seconds, Brad which seemed to be good called time-ou- t, to be had logic, but there were no time-out- s and Roy was tagged with a technical foul. The infraction not only gave Sylvester a free-throwhich he made, but it also gave the Lakers the ball. Roy was forced to foul again, and it was declared intentional, which gave Bonneville two shots from the line. Kerry Gambles missed the first, but hit on the second to give the Lakers a edge. With ten seconds left to be played, the Royals moved down for one last gasp. Thats when sophomore Reid Newey did his thing, to put the game into For Newey, it was a repeat performance of happy heroics. He had dropped in a twenty-footer- ,, earlier that evening with four seconds on the clock to lift his J.V. team to a 1 victory over the Bonneville juniors. Newey was modest about his double feat, but did admit that it was great to beat the Lakers twice in one night. two-poi- nt double-overtim- e. 52-5- e TV public service announcements calling for a halt to pollution of the worlds oceans. According to NWF president Dr. Fred R. Scroggin, Cronkite, who sails a seagoing yacht as an avocation, was chosen in recognition of his long42-fo- standing interest in conservation problems, and, in particular, because obvious love of the sea. Waller Cronkite has demonstrated his concern for our environment in his broadcasts for two decades, said Dr. of his Scroggin, a Dry Ridge, Ky., physician. hope to educate millions of Americans He has alerted millions of Americans to the fact that the oceans ecology is a to environmental issues through the delicate one and that we must protect HELP US GET THE LAKESIDE REVIEW TO YOU! you are not receiving your Lakeside Review each Thursday morning let us or Phone 825-166- 6 know , To help get this important message to the nations concerned students, educators,1 and conservationists, the NWF will mail more than one million posters to Wildlife Week participants. One poster features a sea otter, . In addition, beginning Sunday, March 15, the first day of Wildlife Week, the ocean-dwellin- 2. can cuft the number of hearing aid 359-261- . - Pays The poor person pays none! 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The TONI SCHULZE Recreation Department will hold their annual youth basketball awards ceremony on March 19 at the Clearfield High School Auditorium from 7 p.m. 8:30 p.m. This awards ceremony is for all grade girls, grade boys, skills, clinic par- public service announcements, spots, narrated by Walter Cronkite, will begin appearing on radio and TV stations across the country. The radio-Tcampaign will begin just two days after Cronkite has broadcast the CBS Evening News, which he has anchored since 1962, for the last time. photographed for the NWF by renowned wildlife photographer Stephen J. Krasemann. A second poster bears color photographs of 16 different s CONFIDENTIAL, CAREFULE, ACCURATE. COMPETITIVE PRICES, CALCULATIONS Clearfield The kits will include posters and activity booklets. A slide show which tells the story of maps dependence on the oceans and what he can do to better manage' the oceans great wealth of resources is also available for $9.95. it. Person's Tax Service Middle-Clas- Ceremony Set If 359-261- Staff Photo by Dan Miller : ; ; WOrOS Cron kite to Chair Annual Wildlife Week medium of television. When you add to that his great interest in the sea, there is no one who could deliver a message about the importance of our oceans more convincingly.' This is the first year that National Wildlife Week has concentrated on the oceans. In the past the weeks themes have dealt mostly with endangered species of wildlife and the protection of wildlife habitat. We decided to broaden the theme this year to cover a natural resource that we are all dependent upon, but most of us take for granted," Scroggin explained. The oceans not only cover 71 percent of the earths surface, but they serve as a reservoir for 97 percent of the earths water supply, provide us with half of our oxygen, and with millions of tons of food. Whether we live along a coast or in the landlocked midwest, we are dependent on the living sea, and yet in many places people use it as though it were a bottomless garbage pit, dumping into it sewage, deadly chemicals, and even nuclear wastes. This year, we Lakers in double overtime, , Focus on Constant Abuse of Oceans More than 15 million schoolchildren and conservationists across the country are expected to participate in the 1981 observance of National Wildlife Week this March 15 through 21. We Care About Oceans is the theme for the 44th annual observance of the week, first proclaimed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1938 to rally public support for programs to enhance the nations wildlife population. . Walter Cronkite, the dean of American TV newscasters, will be chairman of National Wildlife Week, which is sponsored each year by the National Wildlife Federation, the nations largest conservation education organization. He will narrate radio and . 425 E. 5350 So. 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