Show §tbe Salt £ak gfibttnr Sunday December 1 1963 cs Ij o ii t ft Ei o younger s e ft What DO YOU find in a hockey game? If you’re Bruce aged 13 and a left wing on one of the thousands of schoolboy teams from the Yukon to Jacksonville Fla you see dreams of glory-l- ike scoring five goals unassisted If you’re oanie Bruce’s admirer you simply see 12 frosty boys getting a bang out of slapping a puck around the Ice And if you’re Clarence S Campbell you see Jthe perfect blend of speed art and disci dine in sports “Everybody finds his own kind of hockey” Campbell said in an interview in his National Hockey League office in MontreaL He’s president of the league which is the top level of hockey He also played himself of course and was a Rhodes scholar ie A Gay Blade— On The See by Kitte Turmell "THE MORE YOU see of hockey the more you want But anybody who just looks for spills and thrills is missing the best of it "There win always be fireworks It is the nature of the game When you play fast and hard somebody can get roughed up Then tempers explode But you can’t brawl and play the best hockey And you don’t score when sitting in the penalty box That’s one of the first things a boy learns if he wants to get to the top” But what chance has a boy like Bruce of getting up there? "More than you’d think” Campbell said “For instance this is one sport where size isn’t You don’t have to be seven feet tall or weigh 200-plIn fact if you did you wouldn’t get far In hockey Some of the outstanding stars in every generation of players over the past 60 years have been little men’ In fact famous players who won fiie world’s championship were known as the Tittle Men of Iron' And hockey can be learned like any other business Players aren’t born— they’re made bee ginning at 10 in the leagues by playing many hours a week all the way up through high school” pee-we- FOR MORE on this learning process which applies to other sports as well as hockey here are facts from John C Grobba He coached amateur hockey In Toronto and served as a scout for the powerful Clarkson College team of Potsdam NY He now lives near Los Angeles is a figure skating judge and has a Dr Funshine and St Foy of Quebec Canada P E M at a hockey game between the Boston Amateur Hockey Assn of the US reports membership of more than 1400 teams 22000 players This action shot was taken Thompson secretary daughter Karen 12 who’s a Southwest Pacific juvenile figure skating champion What makes a promising hockey player? JOHN GROBBA: “Two thlngs-fi- rst all he must be a good skater Next he must have the ability to pass the puck and ability to set up plays But accuracy in goal shooting is only incidental of Pee-We- “Hockey is a team sport In baseball you can go to bat by yourself and hit a home run But in hockey you almost Bill OR GROUN- D- RAGS '5fElAND WE’LL MAKE HANDMADE CARD PAPER USING0 NEWSPAPER AS OUR CELLULOSE BASE DRY ACUPOFLNJNWJ? PUT THE PULI SIZING AND 2 qt OF WATER IN ®sSsb&sH good hockey” Youngsters In the Salt Lake area interested in hockey are advised to get in touch with Joseph N Rogers regional director for amateur hockey in the area and who already has some youth teams organized Weber ’KKMAOE from “LLULOSE fibers in PLANTS )D of the net “And she learns to take the ‘rhubarbs’ and focuses in stride— not to encourage them— because they get in the way of what everybody came for to play and see KITTE: "What should a girl like Joanie look for so that she cheers at the right time?” JOHN GROBBA: “Basically for team play That includes defensive play too She learns that the boy who can steal the puck and break up a scoring threat may at this point by be just as valuable as the flashy one who gets the play all set up for him in front never are able to carry the puck the length of the rink and score unassisted Every boy tries it at first The smart ones soon get over that This is the big lesson that hockey teaches to play for the team” A BIG BOWL ADD SOME VEGETABLE COLORING IF YOU WISH MIX WELL SLIDE A PIECE OF WINDOW SCREEN INTO THE BOWL LIFT UP THE PULP SPREAD EVENLY OVER THE SCREEN AND DRAIN BLOT CAREFULLY WITH ROPER TOWELS ' £ el over the FIBERS' 0F paper SANDWICH1 YOUR PAPER BETWEEN DRY TOWELS PRESS WITH A WARM IRON TILL THE PAPER IS SMOOTH AND DRY PAPERMAKERS CALL THIS CALENDERING WHEN THE PAPER IS COMPLETELY DRY TRIM THE RAGGED EDGES Tow- damp mat peel FULLY BY MAT AND CUT 2 FULL SHEETS OF NEWSPAPER INTO TINY PIECES ADD A QUART OF WATER AND 4 tbL OF DETERMENT BOIL 15 MINUTES POUR OFF THE INKY WATER AND ADD FRESH BEAT WITH AN ELECTRIC MIXER (or gqbeatedTILL LIKE THICK SOUP THE MAT LIFTING THE towel together papermakers CALL THIS COOTCHING 0ro9ideTlU Salt Lake City December 1 13 25 I |