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Show poor copp Pifel Thursday, June 12, 1980 The Newspaper s If A qATrlERiNq plACE DAILY SPECIAL Charburger & Beverage $2.5 Carry Oul Available I'hono b-4l)-ir if HAPPY HOUR S:00til 7:(X)p.m. daily DELI SANDWICHES, DARTS, FOOSBALL LADIES NIGHT, Tuesday & Thursday BOY'S NIGHT OUT, Wednesday Friday Happy Hour ALL Night LOCATED IN OLD TOWN (across from Utah Coal & Lumber) Open wide and say m -h7 A ,' ft 1 in l pi njv 1 56' n sjm Open daily for breakfast, lunch and dinner Sunday Thursday, 7 a.m. 10 p.m. Friday & Saturday, 7 a m . 1 1 p.m. Bagel Nosh caters the eat hearty party Bagel Bakery. Delicatessen, Restaurant and More 592 Main St. 649-6674 The Gazebo v ynr 7 ei v. OTAL HAIR CARE SALON Featuring: Jerry Frkovich, owner Cathy Morris & Cathy Hansen OPFN MONDAY THRl I FRIDAY 1 A M mm V k T M , V v 5 y0 maun s i . b4y-y;u i TarkCitjrSpa Tub at the Gnl Course NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH TUESDAY-SATURDAY 1 1 a.m. -2 p.m. Serving a Variety of Crepes Crepes Tatatoille Crepes a la Seafood Maritime Crepes Beef Bourginguon Desert Crepes '- Apple Sizzle Crepes Fresh Strawberry Crepes plus many other luncheon items OPEN FOR DINNER ' TUESDAY-SUNDAY ' ' . v 6:00-10:00- 649:7177 LIVE ENTERTAINMENT FRIDAY & SATURDAY TOMDISTAD 43 649-8172 KilM'iglass S1HS VVH)tll'M I lot I tlllS Saunas Portable Spas Fiberglass Bathtubs Accessories (Ctiwis. I hernial lilankcts) Chemicals Support Kquipineni ( I'um)s. Fillets. I Icateis. rn . It we don't have it and ivc ( ait t yet it IT IKY DON'T MARK II. Park City Spa & Tub is located in the Brent Hill Building, across from the Holiday Inn 750 East Hwy. 248, Suite 104 P.O. Box 1567 Park City, Utah 84060 CLASSIFIEDS 649-9014 CLASSIFIED CLASSIFIEDS 649-9014 CLASSI CLASSIFIEDS 649-9014 CL CLASSIFIEDS 649-901 CLASSIFIEDS 64! CLASSIFIED 'Philip E. Pul nu ll ih' 'Barney iR. $auih 'Attorneys 'At Can' Are Pleased Jo 'Announce the Opening of their Qeneral 'practice of Paw h Palmer &-' Saunders A Professional Corpoiation Sum- 2C4 Hit .Nljt' 'Biink BuiLhihj 1650 Fink A 'Fiuk Cilij, Utah Ciill ! "'i'IIw, The Parma Ranch Heber, Utah Riding Lessons David Parma, trainer ol World (.. hanqnon lju,,r ter Horses and former Lalitornia State loist-mastership loist-mastership ihampion, still has a limited number of openings tor beginning and advanced ciurstn,in students (children and adults. Whether the student s interest is m riding lor pleasure or preparing tor the show ring, ihn, ,,, joymenl and safety will he cnhanied In pmper horsemanship. Lessons cover grooming and handling horses as well as western or english riding. In addition, serious students will have the unique opportunity to learn to train their own horse. To take advantage ot this program, the student neeil not own a horse, they may rule one ol ours. We have a tew quality horses lor sale sired by our stud War (ilory r. (sire ot A.Q.I I. A. and world champions). Heber 654-3030 S.L.C. 531-1181 jj They've Cornea Long Way Henry Henry Ford would have shuddered. Here was one of his finest works ol art, a Model A Roadster, no doubt painted a stately black before it rolled oil the assembly line in 1929. Now. hall a century later, it was sitting in the parking lot ol the Park City Holiday Inn, painted a lurid pink. The occasion was the Park City Rod Roundup, .m annual an-nual gathering of area car bulls who spend countless hours and dollars on the restoration of old automobiles. auto-mobiles. Restoration is probably the wrong word to use. Other than the shape of the bodies, most of these beauties bear little resemblance to their original forms. Huge V-8 engines have replaced tiny tour-bangers. Gleaming chrome pipes protrude from below vintage running boards. Magnesium wheels and ultra-wide tires provide traction where wobbly, bi-cvcle-thin wheels once sufficed. suf-ficed. 'Among the 94 registered vehicles, the star of the show was a 1931 Ford Victoria, i i nn iv rcnovu tod b" v Layos ol Hock Springs. Wyo. Lay os won four different trophies including Best Early Sedan, People's Choice and Ladies' Choice. The lurid pink entry, owned by Donna Neilson of Page. Ariz., won two awards: one Cor coming the greatest distance, the other for being the Children's Choice. The Rod Roundup attracted a crowd conservatively estimated es-timated at 400 to 500 people. The event," sponsored by the Wasatch Rod and Custom Club of Ogden, is held each year on. the first or second weekend in June. 1 WJ8E?&fl v items' t.t a t ol P t l m ifasV-, f jr-- "s. " " ' ' ' X' Democrat Berman Hopeful In Challenge Against Garn lit liil k I'll llllltll Dan KeriiKiii Deiiiiicralic Ciindid.iti- lor the Sen. lie. i not laecl h the upliili light he taees again-t ineiiiiibent Repulilli'.in .lake (iarn Herman laid I he Newspaper recentl that liarn, behind his national reputation as a leader ol the New Right, holds one a! the most vacuous records ul achievement in I he current congress. "tii oiih has he failed to pass one piece il public legislation or any amendment to any legislation . he has olten failed to try." said Herman. (am lias walked harder, he contends, on outside speaking engagement s. taking over Sliiti.iitiii in honorariums. "Public office is not a private concession lor corporate lips.'' said Herman The 4.") year old lawyer says the I'nited Stales must see new prioril ics and accept new limitations. Rut. he added, ad-ded, the belief that hard times are ahead "is a bad. self-fulfilling prophecy. We are still the most dynamic, strong, vital country in the world." That spirit ol optimism extends ex-tends to Herman's cam paign. A recent poll showed the Democrat pulling about 2ll"('i of the vote. Herman insists in-sists thai figure isn't bad at all for an unknown challenger who hadn't spent a penny belorc the survey was taken, "(iarn is the in cuinbent: he's well known,'' he said. "I look at this race as a great opportunity. I can't guarantee you right now I'm t."ing to beat him. but I'm going to make one super race out ol it. (iarn talks a goad game, but he doesn't have a deep popularity." First comes the stale Democratic convention. Two thousand delegates are elected elec-ted for the meeting. Only 1,5(1(1 to l.ioo are expected to show up, however. Berman is confident he can win 70 of that figure, which would enable him to head off a primary challenge from fellow aspirant and Ogden mavor Steven Dirks. On other issues: - The Democrat called tin the country to rebuild its nidus ni-dus I r i a I capability. "America is getting its competitive com-petitive clock cleaned 'by . foreign competition at Ijfwne and abroad." he said. - Herman said the MX shell game, in whatever mode, could not work, and condemned what he called the practice of using t'tah as a dumping ground. "Whenever they're looking for some place to put the hard things, they come to Utah." - Herman called lor new-legislation new-legislation for the elderly, including community care, lower health costs, and fewer restrictions concerning concer-ning mandatory retirement and income outside ol Social Security. - Berman denied his opposition op-position to KKA was hased on any cynical, election-year appeal to Republican, conservative con-servative voters. The can didate said he appeared before a review panel half of w hom were women - when he was nominated to fill the judge's seat in the U.S. Court of Appeals vacated by Willis Ritter. "And I u,sed the same arguments on ERA then that I do now," he said. Berman saves most of his arguments these days, however, for Jake Garn, w ho Berman said has been "all talk and no action" as a member of the Senate Appropriations Ap-propriations Committee, which oversees government spending. He said the only Garn amendments offered to Appropriations have been cuts in federal contributions to certain international financ" ig agencies. Those ''-. Herman said, were l-ss. than one-twentieth ol one percent -and were not en passed. Gam's service the-' Banking Committee, he contended, con-tended, has been marked by frequent absences. Berman said Garn missed 15 of 28 full committee meetings in 1977. and was absent from () of the meetings in 1978. During that same time, t he-Democrat he-Democrat said, Garn picked up over $29,000 speaking tc bankers groups, from Colorado to South Carolina. Berman said that in fivV years. Garn has been primary sponsor of only one law- a private immigration bill admitting one person into in-to the United States, .' Berman believes he "would be effective in facing the problems the country faces 15-18 .inflation,' loss of technology,' decreases $ft productivity, and trade deficits-if 30-35 billiom The steel 'industry is stajting, he said;.' hftTV .iriftyafery .is non-exist(ji!'; Vv ' :v;.; By contrast, he pointed out, "Germany has 4' inflation, in-flation, a 4. growth in GNP, and a in produc tivity. The yajianese are out-investing out-investing .."vS- two to one. We're issuing more patents to Japan, West Germany, and Russia than to the U.S. " Berman called for new research and development R and D government funds, he said, have been cut to half what they were in the 1950s. He said industry must invest in new plants and equipment, equip-ment, even while it continues to conserve energy. Finally, he urged the U.S. to insist on receiving the same competitive com-petitive advantages in foreign lands which other countries now enjoy here. The Democrat addressed several recommendations to the problems of the elderly : - He called for an increase in the amount of money a Social Security recipient can earn without loss of benefits. -He urged community care for the elderly, saving it would provide not only reduced Medicare costs, but a more humane environment for the elderly. - Hernial) ual'jed- for more senior cili.en housing. He said the waiting period in I'tah is anywhere from six months to five years. . -Escalating health costs should be checked. He recommended that sliong cost containment incentives should be applied io private carriers of Medicare and Medicaid. Heiinan opposed the MX system, calling it a giant "shell game" that depends on hiding 200 missiles in 4,600 shells. "Common sense and scientific opinion reject the idea that a 190,000-pound missile can be trucked around iri. wide-open spaces of the West without detection." detec-tion." Even . if the game .worked, he said, ' the Russians could-.' Simple overwhelm the' "shells" by deploying more missiles and more warheads. " , ,k . The candidate said the country can't afford to spend $60-$10() billion-and to pave OjVer 10,000; miles of desert basin for an unworkable system, (in a "BYU Daily Universe" editorial, Berman mentioned the submarine-basing submarine-basing mode as a practical, less expensive alternative alter-native and claimed that Sen. Garn had voted against a $20 million study to explore 'the idea.) ' Concerning Other issues, the Democrat said all Americans should be covered by catastrophic-illness catastrophic-illness insurance. And he clauihed effective representation represen-tation was needed to stop "the tidal wave of inflation" sweeping the country. Berman said the country's energy problems must tie solved without filling the coffers cof-fers of its special interests. The candidate, a senior partner-in the firm of Berman and Giauque, has handled more antitryst, suits against major oil companies than any other lawyer in the country. coun-try. He represented t'tah against Mountain Fuel in the recent Wexpro vase a state victory which resulted in over $150 million of rate savings to consumers. In an age of different pro -lerrs, B -n,tan and his Republican opponent yeai for a time which is past. "Wf. (cannot) eliminate i'.e threat of, commui.ism, restore cheap enc-gy, or once again dominate the control con-trol the strategic and political balance of power in the vorld," ' e said. "! (out "uggi- s far lr..in hopi .. The mleashed force for-ce of human freedom is still the greatest power on this earth." |