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Show 2C Lakeside Review North, Wednesday, Jan. 25, 1984 Deer Donations Pour Celebrities, corporations, adults and children from all over the county continued to donate money to help feed starving deer and elk in Utah this week. Well over $150,000 has been raised" for the Emergency Big Came Feeding Fund by late last week. ,, , The response comes after national and international media focused on the crisis. All three mqjor television networks, as well as radio stations and newspapers from all over the country have covered the story. Even the BBC came to Salt Lake City to do a story for its European audience. From a contribution of 36C taped to a scrap of paper mailed , in by five Joey Gardner year-ol- d of Sandy, Utah, to a $5,000 d check from a power company, to a $1,000 donation from singer Linda Ronstadt, Americans are pouring their hearts and their money into Utahs desperate attempt to save Utah-base- over 250,000 starving animals. Perhaps the biggest contribution geographically has come from the people of southern California. Jody Gibson, an accounting technician for the Division of Wildlife Resources, says she received over $30,000 in contributions from California last Wednesday, January 18, just three days after the emergency big game feeding story made the front page in the Los Angeles In Times weekend edition. Other major contributions have come in from Chicago, Philadelphia, and a myriad of small towns in North Carolina and Georgia. Gibson says shes received money from every state now. Gary Richins, environmental supervisor for Deseret Generation and Transmission headquartered in Sandy, Utah, last week presented the Division of Wildlife Resources with a check for $5,000 to help buy feed for the emergency feeding program. Donations to the emergency big game feeding fund may be addressed to the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, Salt Lake City, Utah 84116. Mark Tax Form For Animals Line 14 on the short form or life species in the state. Animals like the endangered marks line 27 on the long--d the spot where Utahns can con- peregrine falcon, the tribute part of their state tax referret and the desert tortoise fund to the Division of Wildlife will be helped. A1 Heggen, chief of the DWR Resources nongame program. A simple check mark in the nongame section, says the agentax checkoff box will do. cy gets very little state funding By checking a box for $1, $5, to pay for nongame programs. $10 or any other amount, tax- He says he relies on donations payers can help assure the future from the tax checkoff to fund of the nongame animals which critical management, conservamake up 87 percent of all wild- - tion and research projects to en X black-foote- DAVIS' MIKE ORTON battles the Vikings Troy Hanks and Bret Cloward for a rebound Friday in Kaysville. The Darts pulled out a narrow win to lift them to a mark in Region 4 play. You In jumper, but it didnt count because of a foul on the GARY HATCH Review Sports Editor Davis coach KAYSVILLE Mike Gardner has found since the Region 4 race started his position has become more than its an adventure. just a job Every time the Darts take the floor in region competition, win or lose, they manage to create a nailbiter. Fridays 6 win over View-mowas no exception. Hey, its our turn, Gardner said, referring to the two previous games his team lost in, the last seconds. This time we got the breaks. We worked hard for them and we earned them, he said. The breaks Gardners team got were two fouls called in the last three seconds of play. Viewmont had just gone ahead on a jumper by Bill White with 10 seconds left in the game. Davis called time out, set up a play in which center Jeff Sampson set a screen at the high post for Ryan Smith. Smith drove past Sampson and hit a 47-4- 10-fo- ot nt screen. Sampson, who had hit both ends of a just two minutes before, stepped up to the line with just three seconds left on the clock and bounced the ball high off the back rim. Forward Steve Sargent got position for the rebound and was fouled with two seconds left. He hit nothing but the bottom of the net on both, giving the Darts the one point win. Both of those last plays were designed. We set up the screen for either Smith or Sargent . . . and when we crossed our players underneath to get position for the rebound, Gardner said. From the outset, the game was a fast break and early offense showdown. We wanted to change ends rapidly, Gardner said. We knew we had to get the ball out and outrun them. We knew wed have a lot harder time if they made us set up and try to work the ball inside on one-and-o- ne wide-ope- n, Gardner added. Sargent led the way for the Darts, both in scoring with 18, and in team leadership. He scored bn three key drives late in the game to keep the Darts within striking distance. The Viewmont team that showed up was a smoother, more aggressive version than the one that played at Woods Cross last week. Most of the first half, the Vikings beat the Darts at their own strategy running. We had our guards press them on defense, but our big I mean our inside peopeople werent getting back as ple soon as they should, the first half, Gardner said. Davis plays host to East and Highland will travel to Viewmont Friday. Both games will start at 7:30. East is the team to beat in Region 4 with a 0 record, but they are not unbeatable and will be playing on a foreign court. Highland has a 2 record, but has won both of its last two con-- t a non-prof- Wall Paper e Wall Tex FLOOR COVERINGS Carpet Vinyls Professional Installation or it Two Convenient Locations: 253 24th St. e OGDEN 547 No. Main e LAYTON PHC 394-454- 3 544-421- 1 r ... 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