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Show w 9 m n m m um Advocate, Price, Utah Wednesday, Nov. 22, 1978 (Bonus) yJjT Auto Llag or Style Wheels Is Mud or Poly 4 ! Expires Dec. I 23, 1978 25-1- Snow 2 7-- Hires (1 Bird team were Lane represented on Martino, a defensive Southern Utah end; Phil Howa, an the State College football team this year with three Carbon High grads, one from East Carbon High and two more gridders whose fathers played football at Carbon High in their prep days, listed on the roster. comThe pleted the season last Saturday with a win over the Colorado School of Mines in Cedar City. The victory gave SUSC a record for the season and a tie for second place in the Rocky 1 ON YOUR CHOICE & m Carbon County was well ml ristmas Social m Carbon grads spark SU team aieciixixtED ThislWinter 75rd""COUPOM' n poor Cof$ giiogso II w Mountain 3 Athletic Conference. Carbon High T- - graduates on the offensive fullback and John Borla, a The former East Carbon player was David (Pat) Rasmussen, a freshman linebacker. cor-nerbac- k. The players claiming Carbon ties were Kit Janes, aslant tightend from Kanab, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd (Blacky) Janes; and Dave Faddis, a defensive back and punt return specialist from Tooele, a son of Mr. and Mrs. David Faddis, both of whom attended Carbon High School as students from East Carbon before East Carbon High School was built. (SPECIAL The Carbon County contingent on the SUSC football squad includes: (from left) REMINGTON Pat Rasmussen, 57, Lane Martino, 90, Dave Faddis, 23, Kit Janes, 89, Phil Howa, 30 and John Borla, 42. Passenger mud I & Snow A78 x 13 sports spots $ Vikings Cb fS i M line of Nov. 25 field. Dec. 1 Summit. Dec. 8 Sanpete. TRUCK-R-V Traction Tires at Jan. Rich- Tabiona 19 (home). Jan. at North at North Dugway. Jan.' 26 Emery at 8-- wnra BankAmericaro (SXTQji) at Mon-ticell- o. Feb. 2 Duchesne (home). Feb. 8 Green Monticello River (Home). (home). Dec. 6 16 at Moab Feb. at Altamont. (tournament). Dec. 21 at Tabiona Feb. 23 at Green Dec. 29 at Juab. River. March Jan. 5 Altamont Region Ten meet at Duchesne. (home). March 7 Class Moab Jan. 11 state tournament (home). Jan. 12 at at BYU. Dec. 9 CEU. Dec. 14 aEBG32QCCE (ifUstTt at 24 15-1- (& by wait borla (Continued from page DDuchesne. Studding Available 14-1- A T The various athletic coaches at the College Eastern Utah are busy emphasizing athletics with an eye toward promoting a winning program. New football coach Ed Cody is recruiting and putting together a gridiron program for next season. Basketball coach Curt Jenson already has another representative basketball team in action, and Coach Ray Barrus has just finished a good cross country season for the long distance runners. Wrestling is underway and a good track team is forecast along with the same for baseball. Not to be overlooked is the all around womens athletic program at the college directed by Joy Peterson and Kendra Tomsic. of Volleyball has just been completed, basketball will start now and the spring will bring the softball and track programs. What does all this mean to the school and community? It can best be explained by the answer given by a college president of another school when asked why his school emphasizes athletics and has done so well in promoting a winning program. His first reason for emphasizing an athletic program relates to a general committment of his college to excellence in all areas: academic, technical and extra curricular as well as intercollegiate competition. This kind of excellence creates a positive spirit of place on campus that benefits students, staff and faculty. Another reason for sponsoring an excellent activity program is related to enrollment. To be effective a junior college should be an institution of from 1,200 to 1,500 students. Educational researchers claim that this size of small college can eliminate one person departments, provide an optimal range of programs and still provide individual assistance to students. Excellent athletic programs attract students to the campus and help make it possible to reach this enrollment 3 goal. A winning program at a college makes it very visible across the state and nation. This visibility gives a college publicity in areas that are sometimes difficult to penetrate. It seems as though everyone loves a winner and r o m p they associate winning in one area with winning in many areas. , A school is perceived as a winner in in technical and in extra academics, W' ff : curricular activities partly because of a winning tradition established by the athletic programs, complimented of course by winning traditions in many areas. sssss Chris Randall, an outstanding eager at CEU four years ago, is back for another season with the Mesa Mavericks this year as a senior, but another former Eagle, Alan Scholtec, did not return to school this year after playing his junior year for the Grand Junction College in the Rocky Mountain Conference. CEU has two more former players on the Southern Utah State squad, Chava Lopez being counted upon as one of the leading scorers for the T - Birds. The other ex - Eagle is Ronnie Stubbs, a kid who just wont give up. Stubbs was cut from the SUSC roster last year, picked up at mid season and made the squad outright early this season for his senior The board of directors of the Western Boys Baseball Association, meeting in Santa Monica, Calif, earlier this month, awarded Santa Monica the 1979 of the youth Little World Series baseball program during the third week in August. Plans call for the chartering of a Western Airlines plane to transport the Utah teams to the meet, so the lucky team from the Carbon - Emery - Duchesne district that wins out next summer has a big week in store for them . .Frank Iccobazzi, the former Carbon High wrestling coach, was visible in one scene of the movie Take Down, the picture that CEU wrestler Sal Feliciano had a major part in. The movie was filmed in American Fork earlier in the year. Iccobazzi is now at Hillcrest High School as a restling coach . . . As a note of hopeful comparison, the New Mexico Military Institute basketball team that CEU handled with apparent ease here almost two weeks ago went on to Snow College the next two nights and gained a split with the Badgers at Ephraim. Snow won the first night, 3 , and NMI won the second night by a score. CEU handed the New Mexico team an setback in the single game here in the armory. -- 97-9- 105-9- 4 89-6- 7 A ivarm gift for Christmas . . . . X' Nr- jj0V tkj4 ttvillliUlt- - ill MllMJV - at i nifilUl?' M )IfI 4 n I i 1 (KlftSili ! 11 snjHBEftfigs ti if rditsiiKi ' It- - v iMn'liKMIi?iaY3t 'tiliKi'iMriliUliUiriBSl i iiJin m m Both Stores: East Main, Price and in Castle Dale 14 ; |