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Show Page 4 Thursday, October 2, 1980 The Newspaper I. X h HP SitllH dDtnitt lliceire Subscribe to Tr1 The ewpapeir 11 iLl'nrkt il.llab subscribe now! $6 in-county, $12 out-county Name Address. CityStateZip. Mail to P.O. Box 738, Park City, Utah 84060 1001 DO A TAKEOUT WW THE KIMBALL ART CENTER AND THE PARK CITY PLAYERS PRESENT BY MARY CHASE- Nil Q . mm STARRING SCOTT GRAHAM BRENDA BENSCH BOB TOY DAVID FLEISHER RUTH ANN FITZGERALD ROBIN ELAINE WESTPHAL FRED HIGHTOWER MIKE PHILLIPS LINDA MARTIN MADELINE SMITH ARNIE CARLOS CONNIE JEAN BOYLE DIRECTED BY DON GOMES SET DESIGN JOHN CRAIGLE LIGHT DESIGN TIM HANSEN STAGE MANAGER DEM1EMILIKEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY OCTOBER 3 AND 4 THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY OCTOBER 9 -12 8 P.M. PROSPECTOR SQUARE HOTEL THEAT.'. KAC MEMBERS $3.50 NONMEMBERS $5.00 CALL 649-8882 FOR INFORMATION Produced by special arrangement with Dramatists Play Service, Inc. our complete menu is available for takeout Breakfast, MonFri. 7:00 ;;,,; , , , Lu nch 11:30 to 2:30 1 1 ! 1 !i ' " "Au" Dinner 5:00 to 10:00 Sunday Lunch 12:00 to 4:00 430 main Street 649-6900 INTERNATIONAL j Tehran and Baghdad The Iran-Iraq war continued con-tinued to rage throughout the week while both sides exchanged confusing claims and counterclaims counter-claims about military victories. Meanwhile, three peace initiatives have either stalled or failed. 1 . .: The war is a struggle for . possession of the Shatt-al-Arab river which forms the major oil outlet for both countries into the Persian Gulf. While warplanes of both countries pound each other the most recent attack was an Irani raid on Iraq's nuclear research center Iraq has occupied oc-cupied up to 300 miles of Iranian territory. Iraq has repeatedly claimed during the week, that they have seized the major Iranian towns of Abadan, Khorramshahr and Ahwaz, but Iranian defenders are apparently still frustrating their efforts to capture those areas. At the U.N., Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko refused a suggestion by Secretary of State Ed Muskie to help negotiate a truce. Gromyko said Russia would not intervene unless another nation did. The 40-nation Islamic Conference Con-ference formed a peace mission under Pakistani President Mohammed Zia ul-Haq, but Iran's Premier Mohammed Ali Rajai rejected the effort. ef-fort. PLO leader Yassar Arafat also was working as a mediator. Jimmy Carter pledged not to interfere, but said free passage along the vital oil routes in the Persian Gulf was imperative. President Anwar Sadat of Egypt, meanwhile, suggested the U.S. should aid the Iranian military to overthrow the Ayatollah Khomeini. Munich, West Germany A bomb went off Friday during closing time at the annual Oktoberfest celebration, injuring 213 people and killing 12, including three'children and the man who planted the bomb. A German police official said Monday the bombing was carried out by a single man, 21-year-old neo-Nazi geology student Gundolf Koehler, who apparently became one of his victims when the bomb exploded prematurely in a trash can .near the Theresien Meadow gate of the festival grounds. The pipe-bomb threw bodies as far as 20 feet away, and it was difficult at first to identify the ",. number of dead'.""! saw people with,'arm'sandrf legs blown off," said one witness. CaauaHalLi were especially bad because so many people were waiting for streetcars at the time. Vagar, Faroe Islands Jaromir Wagner flew in Sunday clinging to the roof of an airplane and exclaimed, "It's the only way to fly." The Czech-born Czech-born car dealer plans to be the first man to fly the Atlantic in this peculiar fashion. "I'm thrilled by the risk, and I want to make some money," the intrepid stuntman explained. Temperatures oh the outside of the plane can sink to -58 F, so Wagner is dressed in a skin diver's rubber suit and leather clothes. Double-soled Double-soled shoes keep him' from sliding off the twin-engine twin-engine De Havilland plane, and Wagner hangs on to a special bar welded to the wingspan and tied to the superstructure. Wagner flew in from Aberdeen, and plans on stops at Iceland, Greenland, and Goose Bay, Canada on his way to New York. Stockholm, Sweden Twelve days after a mystery sub first was reported prowling in Swedish waters, the nation's navy is planning to drop depth charges within 50 feet of the sub-close sub-close enough to possibly sink the vessel. The government would not comment on reports that the sub is the Soviet diesel-electric powered sub, Whiskey. The sub first was spotted Sept. 18 about 30 miles from Stockholm. Defense Minister Erik Kronmark called it "an unprecedented provocation" and "the most serious violation of Swedish waters since World War II." The navy dropped 19 depth charges in a futile effort to coax it to the surface. The military also tried tracking it by sonar, but changes in water temperature and salt levels frustrated that effort. It has been assumed the sub is from the Warsaw Pact forces, since all subs from NATO have been accounted for. Windsor, England Newspaper reports said that Led Zepplin drummer John Bonham died from a combination of alcohol and drugs, but an autopsy found neither substance in the rock musician's body. Bonham was found dead at the luxury home of Zepplin guitarist Jimmy Page. The group was making an album at the mansion, which includes a recording studio. Further tests would be ca. ried out, said an administrator at the Edward VII hospital. Police have set no date for the inquest. v . ;f-r--uX'; i': l ima Pprn furinsitv Hirln'f till tha it TV,n results were far more tragic at a hospital here, as a roving feline fell from the roof onto the hospital's main electrical panel, blacking out the building and causing four deaths. Two new-born babies perished in an incubator, one man died on the operating table, and another in the emergency emergen-cy ward. Firemen brought electrical generators to the 900-bed, hospital but., those were: not sufficient. NATIONAL Cincinnati A man Salt Lake authorities believe may be the Liberty Park sniper was captured cap-tured Thursday in nearby Florence, Kentucky by police, only to escape within hours. A manhunt was quickly launched in this tri-state area covering parts of Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana. The man, identified as Joseph Paul Franklin, was also being sought in connection with the slaying of two black Cincinnati teens June 8th and the shooting of civil rights leader Vernon Jordan in Fort Wayne. Florence police officer David Collins detained de-tained Franklin and his brown '75 Camaro as part of an investigation into a service station robbery. Collins noticed a handgun in the back seat, and a computer check matched the car's description and license plate with an auto linked to the Salt Lake slaying of joggers David Martin and Ted Fields. Franklin was taken into custody with two pistols (.357 caliber and .44 caliber) and two rifles (both 30.06) found in his possession. (None of the weapons were connected to the Cincinnati, Cin-cinnati, Fort Wayne, or Salt Lake shootings.) Five hours later, Franklin crashed to freedom through a police station window when an officer momentarily stepped out of the room. A search was started using dogs and house-to-house inquiries. Witnesses said a man answering Franklin's description had his hair cut and dyed in a Cincinnati salon. Washington As before, the biggest debate in the presidential campaign turned out to be a debate over debate. Ruth Hinerfield, president of the League of Women Voters, offered a format wherein Ronald Reagan and Pres. Carter would meet one-on-one Oct. 12, followed by a three-way debate with John Anderson Oct. 26. Hinerfield said the plan was a package deal ; no candidate could accept one debate and refuse the other. Jimmy Carter accepted the first meeting, while Reagan chief of staff Edwin Meese said the round-robin format, which began with a Reagan-Anderson Reagan-Anderson debate, should be continued. Carter should meet Anderson, Meese said, before going one-on-one with Reagan. Reagan forces also turned down a three-way debate with running mates George Bush, Walter Mondale and Patrick Lucey, ..,, ,. t uca no tMK'i'vi In other election news, ReguJGftjf) pm,- bers of the Senate Appropriations Gonii'ttee asked Comptroller General Elmer Staats to investigate in-vestigate reports that Jimmy Carter's cabinet members are using public funds to campaign for him. Little Rock, Arkansas Residents of a small town six miles from the Titan II explosion said a gaseous fog settled over the town after the blast, afflicting the citizens with skin irritations, diarrhea, nausea, and fever. Many say they are still suffering from the effects. The town, named Tiny Guy, was just outside the fjve-mile radius evacuated by the military. Town officials say the Air Force "admitted they forgot us." Resident Bennie Mercer surprised government officials during a meeting at Little Rock Air Force Base by disclosing the news about the fumes. Pensacola, Florida A Marine student pilot was left to make a landing by himself, when his instructor, thinking he'd been killed in a mid-air collision with a turkey buzzard, bailed out of the plane. The student, 2nd Lt. S.R. Honie, was at the controls of the T-34C and his teacher Lt. Cmdr. Bob Young was rearward when a 5-10 pound bird crashed through the cockpit, showering the two men with glass and knocking them unconscious. When Young regained consciousness, he tried and failed to make contact with Honie, then bailed out. Honie came to, and he was able to land the plane at a Brewton, Alabama commercial airport. air-port. Southfield, Michigan A top-ranking woman executive in the Bendix Corp. took a leave of ab- sence Monday, due to what she called "malicious gossip" that she had romanced her way to the top. But Mary Cunningham, vice president of strategic supplying for Bendix, said she had no intention of resigning from her position. She had been given the post only four days before by Bendix chairman William Agee, a divorced father of three who denied any romantic roman-tic motives in a meeting with employees. Cunningham, Cun-ningham, currently separated from her husband, began work for Bendix a year ago as Agee's executive assistant. Agee said her rapid rise "is unusual only in the sense that Mary Cunningham Cun-ningham is , a very unusual and talented ih- , dividual." ' Detroit A district court judge ruled a local manufacturer's portable toilets, sold under the name "Here's Johnny," are not a trademark infringement in-fringement or invasion of privacy. Defendant Earl Braxton, sued by attorneys for Johnny Carson, Car-son, said the brand name was a mere play on words. "I would have called it, 'Here's Ralph,' but nobody goes to the Ralph." Judge Julian Cook said the work "John" was frequently used in the portable potty trade, and Braxton would , have violated the law only, if he had intendedio "confuse, deceive, or mislead." T |