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Show Page 4 Thursday ScpicintuT 4. I'JKO I h.- Newspaper t nil 9s&ttfiiin (Dram worne September 4 Kathy Pope September 5 Dyan Thornhill September 6 Abbie Whitney Siobhan Cooney IBfiirttlhidlsiy ttan September 7 Sharon Auger John Fosdick Cameron Hatton September 8 Jimmy Noble September 9 Pat Van Wagoner David Van Wagoner Terry Hogan . September 10 LesOffret Tim Burraston bUILDIriS 6ERVIGE6 as- V AvNI in our Building . 'v Services just call vf 649-9014. HOT TUBS & SAUNAS PLUMBING Emporium Plumbing Park CitV SD3 & Tub Installation Repairs, Drain & Sewer lines cleaned ' " Licensed & ponded , ' F.berglass spas, wood hot tubs, whirlpool baths 649 8511. 24 Hour Emergency Service Saunas, dry & steam Located in Brent C. Building, 649-8172 CONSTRUCTION; ' - ' " ' ' WTC Construction PAINTERS Remodeling Specialist Licensed Contraction 2523 East 2100 South 485-2385, $.l,CV ' Painters & Stainers Hi9h Country Builders Licensed Painting Contractor Professional builders lor 25 years. 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CALL NEVADA AT 649-6170 SNOWPLOWING EXCAVATION parkCty P & C Trucking & Excavation Snowplow & Landscape Co. excS 649-8250 Hauling, basements, trenches Gravel & sand, general excavation Craig Kunkel, days 649-7838, evenings 336-2707 BUILDING MATERIALS ELECTRICIAN Heber Lumber 700 West 100 South-HeberCity-654-1 10 Atl3S EleCtNC We0el,ver! Daily service to Park City I surrounding areas AnderSOn Lumber CO. Established in residential, commercial, Highway 248-Park City-649-8477 Industrial or remodeling Everything for your building needs! FrM E,lmt" - S" City 262-8408 s Reed Knight, Master Electrician INTERNATIONAL Gdansk, Poland Striking Polish workmen and government officials resolved the country's labor crisis over the weekend with a settlement unprecedented for a Communist bloc nation. The settlement considered a victory for the strikers, called for independent, self-governing trade unions in Poland, a relaxation of censur-ship, censur-ship, and the release of several political prisoners jailed during the strike. It signaled the end of work stoppages for 300,000 workers along the Polish coast and about 600,000 Poles nationwide. nation-wide. The agreement was signed by deputy premier Mieczyslaw Jagielski for the government, and Lech Waleska, leader of the strikers in the port of Gdansk. It allowed the right to strike, guaranteed guaran-teed immunity from prosecution for the strikers, opened up the media to access from church groups, called for better health services, and relaxed censorship, except, it said, for matters of diplomacy, the military or Poland's "international "inter-national interests," an allusion to the Soviet Union. (The Soviet news agency Tass mentioned the strike settlement in a polite, non-committal report.) Despite the new-found freedom for trade unions, the workers agreed to follow "socialist principles" and acknowledged the ultimate authority of the Community Party. Strike news poured in from other sections of the country. Workers in the port city of Szczecin reached a similar, but separate agreement with the government that called for improved meat supplies and slower raises in consumer prices. In Warsaw, dissident leader Jacek Kuron and other members of The Committee for Social-Self-Defense were released from jail by the government. govern-ment. And workers at nine coal mines in southwest south-west Poland reached a tentative agreement with the government Monday. Nairobi, Kenya Somalia accused Ethiopia last week of launching a Communist-backed invasion, in-vasion, against them while Ethiopia in turn called the Somali charges a fabrication designed to speed up U.S. military aid. The Somalia Defense Ministry said a force of Ethiopian infantry infan-try attacked the northwest section of their country coun-try along a 27-mile front, while six warplanes bombed five Somali towns. The ministry claimed the invasion was repulsed at a cost of 90 Ethiopians and 35 Somalis dead. Sources also claimed one of the warplanes, a MIG-21 fighter, was shot down. A week before the alleged invasion, the U.S. concluded an agreement to give Somalia $40 million in military aid in exchange for an American military base in that country. "The Russians are leaving no stone unturned to frustrate the agreement," said the governor of Somalia's northwest region. The Somali ambassador am-bassador to West Germany said Cuban troops were involved in the Ethiopian attack. Peking The Chinese Parliament prepared to usher in a new regime of younger government leaders, while calling for an austerity program and a form of collective leadership that would have been unheard of in the days of Chairman Mao. Premier Hua GuoFeng and vice-premier Deng Xiaoping, both in their 70s, are expected to step down from their posts. Hua will retain his role as party chairman, but it is thought his post as premier will be filled by Deng's relatively younger protege, 61-year-old Zhao Ziyang. The Chinese National People's Congress turned its attention to a $11.3 billion deficit in last year's budget. Finance Minister Wang Binquian told the 3,255 deputies that China must live on an austerity budget through the early 80s, and cut back on its plans to modernize the military. Admitting Ad-mitting "official mistakes" made in finance, the congress slashed $1.9 billion off the defense budget. Damascus, Syria Syria and Libya have agreed to merge forces as an Arab defense against Israel. The Syrian government an-. an-. nounced Tuesday that President Hafez Assad had agreed to the union, which had been proposed by Libyan leader Col. Moammar Khadafy in a speech on the 11th anniversary of his accession to power. Khadafy said the merger would be "a last trench of Arab defense against the Zionist enemy.' If the proposal was rejected by his people, he would take up arms himself, he declared. "I am going to inform the Palestinian movement that I am registered as a commando with them." Khadafy also said the U.S. was willing to attack at-tack Libya, Saudi Arabia or any other oil nation to preserve its petroleum supply. , Pakistan The tallest man in Asia has been granted a special government allowance because of his handicap. Official government sources said that Mohammad Alam Channa, who is 8 foot, 2 inches, will receive $50 a month, plus a $300 lump sum payment. Sources did not specify what kind of difficulties Channa is suffering. NATIONAL Stateline, Nevada Despite FBI assurances that they were occupied with numerous leads in the bombing of Harvey's Wagon Wheel Casino, the San Francisco Chronicle reported the case had narrowed down to a search for three men and a woman. Meanwhile, the most promising clue to the bombing fizzled out. Fingerprints on the bomb were discovered to be those of a casino guard, who crawled over the ultra-sensitive device, which he mistook for a business machine, while he poked and prodded the ac-comanying ac-comanying extortion note, thinking it was a letter let-ter bomb. Harvey's, along U.S. 50 in Nevada, was evacuated when the bomb was discovered along with a note demanding $3 million. After a botched attempt at delivering the money, experts from the Army, FBI, and Department of Energy attempted to disarm the device by remote control. con-trol. But it blew up a week ago Wednesday at 4:43 p.m., leaving a two-to-three story hole in the side of the hotel and causing about $3 million damage. Local fire chief Bruce Kanoff would not put a definite dollar figure on the damage. "When you take 500 pounds to 1,000 pounds of explosives and put it in a box and blow it up, it just raises hell with a building," he said. Experts said the device was the most sophisticated home-made bomb they had ever seen, and was designed to detonate with less than .01 vibration on the Richter scale. Suspicion has centered on two men dressed as computer technicians who delivered the bomb, disguised as a copying machine, to the casino; and a woman who drove them in a van wijh IBM markings. Washington President Carter offered yet another economic plan to the nation, and Ronald' Reagan committed yet another campaign gaffe to formally kick off the 1980 presidential campaign cam-paign over the Labor Day weekend. While Reagan accused Carter of campaigning in the birthplace of the Ku Klux Klan, Carter unveiled a $27.6 billion tax package. Carter's plan includes a $12.6 billion in tax credits, a tax deduction for working married couples ; $15 billion in tax incentives for business, anti-recession aid for the cities, and a 13 week extension of unemployment benefits. Reagan called the plan mere "paper-shuffling" "paper-shuffling" designed to offset an increase in Social Security taxes, and said Carter's tax breaks were a "sop to business." 1 . :i .,- Reagan was attacked later that week when he noted that President Carter had appeared in Tuscumbia, Alabama, which he called "the city that gave birth . . . to the Ku Klux Klan." Tuscumbia is the headquarters of a major Klan group, but the KKK actually was set up in Pulaski, Tennessee. President Carter attacked Reagan for using "slurs and innuendoes," in his words, and seven angry southern Democratic governors demanded demand-ed the Republican apologize for "a callous and opportunistic slap at the south." New York Pennsylvania congressmen Michael Myers and three co-defendants were found guilty in the first Abscam trial. The public prosecutor at the trial said the conviction vindicated vin-dicated the FBI's use of "sting" tactics, which some had condemned as a form of entrapment. Rep. Myers, however, said "The American people will never stand still for what the FBI did to me." Convicted con man Mel Weinberg posed for the FBI as the agent of a phony oil sheik seeking favors from politicians. The scam which involved in-volved several meetings recorded on videotape let to the indictment of six congreeemen and other government figures. Myers' co-defendants were Damden, N.J. mayor Angelo Errichetti, a Philadelphia city councilman, Louis Johanson, and Philadelphia lawyer Howard Criden. Myers contends he was only pretending when he accepted $50,000 from the phony sheik for aid with immigration problems. New York Police arrested a 21-year-old stagehand for the "Phantom of the Opera" slaying of a Metropolitan Opera violinist last July 23. Police said Craig Steven Crimmins was "unemotional" and offered no resistance when police arrested him at his Brooklyn home. Drimmins reportedly matched the description given by a hypnotized witness who saw an unidentified man with Helen Hagnes Mintiks, who disappeared during an intermission and was found later nude and gagged in an airshaft of the opera house. Detectives say they know, of no motive for the slaying, and they say a chance meeting at the opera house may have led to the murder. They have refused to make public a sketch of the hypnotised hyp-notised witness's description. But Crimmins' father, Edward, a 20-year employee em-ployee at the opera house, has seen the sketch and claims his son doesn't look anything like the picture. "They had to grab somebody and they grabbed him," he said. "I think the police had a lot of pressure on them and now they're grabbing at straws." |