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Show -- 2 Thursday, December THE GREEN SHEET 20, 1984 THS Individuals Stand Out - Granger Grapplers Gamer District Wrestling Crown KEARNS. Granger high assumed its familiar spot at the top of the heap during the Granite School District wrestling tournament which concluded here Saturday, but the lions share of Individual honors Taylorsville. Coach Mike went to Taylorsville grapplers. Johnsons Warriors, who improved Coach Roger Ketchums Lancer their fourth place position behind the wrestlers compiled a team score of winning Lancers last year, tallied 158 for a comfortable margin over 125 points to finish second in the team standings. Both outstanding wrestler accolades went to lads wearing THS colors; Tim Rogers in the upper weight divisions and Craig Stauffer in the lower weights. Garron Miller was credited with recording the fastest pin of the tourney, while Grangers Jerome Hansman took to see what his team could to in a honors for logging the most falls, close contest and against a bigger with total time being the determinteam than itself. ing factor. Wrestlers from Taylorsville capIt was a game all the way. The score was knotted at 12 after one tured four of the 12 individual weight at the division titles, while the champion period, the Bulldogs led 3 half and going into the final Granger team won three. Taylorsvilles Rogers dominated period. With Highland up class, defeating Tom Lytle in the nailed a jumper and was fouled, conGrangers Jeff Lund in the finals. verting the charity toss to give the Third and fourth went to Marty Jaramillo of Kearns and Marian Bulldogs the lead. On the ensuing exchange, Tony Cordova pilfered the ball, drove the length of the court for a lay-u- p and Judge never trailed. Both teams played exceptionally wll. Judge missed only 12 shots on the evening, tying a school record with 68 percent from the field (25x37). The Rams had the size to stay with the Bulldogs on the boards and Coach Larry Maxwell had his team spread the court to upset the Bulldog defensive scheme, but Cordova came up with six steals to foil that. Richard Holmes, despite sitting out almost half the game with foul trouble, scored 17 and had 10 rebounds. Lytle added 14 and Danny DelPorto 10. runner-u- p Judge Cops Three Wins During Week SALT LAKE. Judge Memorial improved its record to 0 with three 7-- victories during the week and the Bulldogs have people talking. 'Theyre in the league with those Skyline teams that had Vranes, said Charlie Whiting who saw his Farmers fall last Wednesday. Woods Cross, which gave defending 4A champ Brighton a tough test, fell Friday and a good Highland team was beaten Tuesday 83-2- 9 67-3- 9 64-5- 6 night. The Bulldogs are slated to play at American Fork at 5 p.m. tomorrow (Friday) and will be idle until meeting Hillcrest on the 28th. Judge Coach 64, Highland 56 Jim Yerkovich was pleased Murray Hockey Team Tags Judge With First Defeat MURRAY. The hockey club from Murray handed Judge Memorial its first loss of the season Saturday night, stunning the Bulldogs The Spartans had 41 shots on to just seven for Judge. Matt Vesterenin led the scoring for Murray followed by Paul Snow with three. Shawn Shelton and Darren Wack had one goal each. Two assists were credited to Chris Snow, Jeff Anderson, Shelton, Eric Radcliff, Brent Crocher and 9-- Hay-mon- Wack. Mike Charnholm scored both goals for Judge with Rouge Lachica earned an assist. In other games this past week, Cottonwood defeated Brighton Ogden South stopped Taylorsville 6-- 7-- Granite edged Bountiful Olympus blasted Valley North 14-East Highland beat Valley South Alta skinned West nipped Ogden Jordan and Granger defeated 67, Woods 167-pou- Cross Taylorsville victory, downing Will Barker of Kearns at 132 pounds. Steve Nicholas of Olympus and Dave Penrod of Granger were third and Granger champion when he stopped John Bishop of Olympus at 185 pounds. Mike Saldavar of Taylorsville and Jason Hess of Skyline were third and fourth. also logged three Cottonwood weight class titles, including Ted Perrymans conquest of Grangers Dave Olsen at 112. Third and fourth went to Daren Bradshaw of Kearns and David Reyes of Granite. Cottonwoods Jamie Rigby capd tured the class, downing Irvin Maxwell of Cyprus. Granger's Dave Marsh and Kearns highs Chris Pratt were third and fourth. Champion in the heavyweight divi fourth. The other Warrior individual title was claimed by Dave Vande Veegate, who defeated Grangers Jim Miles at 155 pounds. Cottonwoods Ross Callahan and Cyprus highs Andrew Judkins were third and fourth. The championship Granger team won its first of three individual titles in the class, with Stan Penrod stopping Cottonwoods Mark 28-2- 7 Judge Taylorsville and Rusty Kakala of Kearns were third and fourth. Lancer Jay Simon won first place in the 138 class, defeating Phil Diederich of Cottonwood. Third and fourth went to Terry Morgan of Kearns and Brian Mosteller of Skyline. Carraway claimed another 44-4- 47-4- Lloyd of Skyline, respectively. Earlier, Rogers Warrior teammate Stauffer won at 126 pounds, defeating Granites Chad Kearns highs Steve Turner was third and Grangers Mike Peterson fourth. Following Stauffers win, Sean d Meyers. Tracy Sudoko of Hansman became the third Golden sion was Cottonwoods Meier, who stopped Taylorsvilles Scott Wightman in the finals. Finishing third and fourth were Devon Grossaint of Cyprus and Clint Gunderson of Kearns. For the Cougars of Coach Glen Kawa, tourney host, the lone individual title was claimed by Garron class. He Miller in the defeated Paul Gomez of Granger, with John Winkelkotter of Granite and Dave Hall of Olympus finishing third and fourth. Cyprus highs Chad Fowler won division, downing Dino the of Rivera Granger. Brian Cowan of Cottonwood and Shaun Stauffer of Taylorsville were third and fourth. Team standings in the tourney: Granger 158, Taylorville 125, Kearns 114, Cottonwood 107, Cyprus 53, Granite 47, Olympus 41, Skyline 33. Thank You We would like to thank you for participating in our voluntary pay program. Much of our carriers' wage comes from your payment, and if they do a good job we hope you reward them. We greatly appreciate your support. The Green Sheet 155 E. 4905 South Murray, Utah 84107 262 6682 Office Hours: Monday-Friday- , Peter Bernhard, Publisher Michael Bennett, Advertising Robert Prince, Operations Donald Robinson, Editor Ethel Bradford, Editor Michele Bartmess, Editor Karen Egli, Circulation Pat Robinson, Circulation Jan Brown, Business 39 The Bulldogs were never really threatened as Holmes and Lytle took control of the contest. When it was over, Lytle had scored 16 points and had a career high 15 rebounds while Holmes scored 15 and grabbed 16 boards. Cordova added 14 points and eight assists. Judge outrebounded the Wildcats The scorewas 14-- 7 after one period at the half and the Bulldogs and lifted it to 5 and the subs saw considerable fourth quarter action. Mailed Subscriptions: You can have your paper mailed to your home or business. Subscriptions are sold on a one year basis and must be pre paid. Rates are: 51-2- 29-1- 6 Jordan Valley Sentinel 46-2- Judge 83, Granite 7-- 8-- 29 We offer a 25 senior citizens discount on subscription rates. Because the papers are mailed we accept no responsibility for delayed delivery. Whitings young Farmer team had Continued on page 4 Program Set For Four Years Now $12 $16 $16 Murray Eagle West Valley View 3-- 2 p.m. 8 a.m.-- - UHSAA Changes Region Alignment MURRAY. Because of action taken here Thursday, alignment of the 13 newly reorganized regions will remain stable for the next four years and, for the first time, it will be possible for an Arizona school to take a Utah state championship. The Legislative Council of the Utah High School Activities Assn. (UHSAA) held one of its twice yearly meetings here Thursday to decide regional alignments and accepted by a slim margin a proposal by the board of directors that realignment take place only every four years instead of every two as had been the practice in the past. The new alignment has Kearns moved Taylorsville and from Region Two to Region Three, putting all eight Granite district schools into the same region, while American Fork, Mountain View and Orem were reclassified 4A schools and placed in Region Two with Jordan districts Alta, Bingham, Brighton, Hillcrest and West Jordan. A safety valve was built into the new alignment system, however, to allow for changing circumstances. Any school which experiences a drastic change in enrollment, either up or down, may petition the UHSAA for a change of classification on an individual basis during that four-yea- r period by: Submitting a proposed plan change to the board of directors at least 60 days prior to being an agenda item with the legislative council, The legislative council must receive the proposal at least 30 days prior to any action being taken by that body, and The proposal would not go into effect until the next school year, if approved by the legislative council. In addition, any region that is aware of a drastic change in enrollment of any school of its region may petition to have that school changed to another classifiction. Regions One through Four, comprised of a total of 28 schools, were assigned 4A classifications, while 24, 3A schools made up Regions Five through Eight. The 2A and 1A schools were divided into four zones making up Regions Nine9 through 13, and six other small schools will comprise an independent region which will eventually be shuffled into UHSAA regional lineups. For the first time, two Arizona schools have been included in Utah regional lineups: Page high will compete with Ceday City, Dixie, Pine View and Hurricane in Region Seven, while Fredonia will qualify for Utah state championships with a dozen other Region 12 high schools. The alignment proposals did not pass without a fight, however. While Granite district representatives voted en masse to support the measure, Jordan was equally opposed as a block. Joining the Jordan delegation were representatives of several smaller schools throughout the state, with Larry Johnson of the Rich County system voicing the strongest opposition. When the final tally was taken, however, the measure passed by a slim five-vot- e margin. In other action, the legislative council defined specifically the qualifications for activities eligibili Huskies Hold Off Late Surge By Oly UNION. A late offensive burst by Hillcrest accompanied by some pressure foul pitches enabled the Huskies pull away from a tough Olympus squad and secure at 0 victory at home Friday night. The game was tight right up until the final three minutes, when Olympus was forced to go after the basketball and Hillcrest made the most of its chances at the foul line. I think the turning point in the contest came with about four minutes left in the game, recounted We Hillcrest coach Jim Jimas. were only leading by three points, but scored the next seven points and were able to hold on the closing moments. Hillcrest held 12-- lead at the end of the first period, but the lead changed hands several times in the 57-5- 8 neither team more than a two much managing second quarter, ty to apply equally to three-yea- r and high schools, allowing ninth grade students to participate on the high school level in districts which allow such practice. Granite district, however, recently forbid ninth graders from high school participation, making the ruling moot as far as Granite students are concerned. The Granite delegation, though, led the fight to defeat a motion by the board of directors to give control travel in music, of debate, and drill teams back to the individual districts. The board had also recommended that If local boards of education were unwilling to support the UHSAA with control of travel in these areas, that all UHSAA restrictions on travel in these areas be dropped. Weve had no idea of what the communication has been with the UHSAA board regarding travel, Patricia G. Sandstrom, vice president of the Granite board told the legislative council. "To vote against it (the measure proposed by the UHSAA board of directors) implies support for the good rules and basic structure as it is now intact, Granite board member J. Dale Christensen added. In many instances we were overridden (by local boards of educa tion j, Murray high principal Ray of the Oliverson, vice president-elec- t UHSAA organization, told the legislative council. "It has been a futile attempt on our part in the past. We are perfectly willing to handle it if we have the support. By another slim margin, the measure was defeated, leaving control of travel in these areas in the hands of the UHSAA board of directors. Another move' to change quorum rules for the legislative council itself was presented by the Granite board. Written notice in advance of a legislative council meeting will now allow school board members to vote proxy votes for other council members in regions which are unable to attend a legislative council meeting. This move was done to eliminate technical problems encountered last June when a quorum was not achieved, making any action by the body ineffective. A counter proposal saying that the legislative members present was will constitute a quorum presented by Ronald Peterson of Logan, but was defeated by a margin. The proxy amendment was tur-threfined to stipulate that no more than 50 percent of the votes counted for a quorum could be proxy votes. four-yea- r a rot U TOPS AMERICAN AND FOREIGN TRUCK AMD at Popular Poplin Pullover Ige front pocket Jrs-,Ladies' & Men's all colors 49 z FULL ZIPPER JACKETS Ladies' IINED- - Reg. 35.00 UNLINED Reg. & Men's 22.50 eo 19.95eo. 30.00 FUR BALLS Tab front 1 stripes, solids Sizes 4 to I 10 no TO 12 Reg. Nylon 8, & 6.00 CHRISTMAS PRINTS colors ,99 355 303, 49 Colored RIBBON Special Buy 100 Poly. Most sizes dia. Q (KUO CLOSEOUTS 40 OFF QBGZD WERE CELEBRATING QUR SOtlTiYEAR K 'Seasons Greetings" DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS "We sell to the General Public 3495 West 3500 South Winterize New! point margin. At the half it was even at Early in the third period, Olympus 6 moved out to a advantage. 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