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Show Page 4 Thursda), AujjiisI 2. IVXO I hi Newspaper August 28 Gayle Jones Mike Hilton Mark Whittaker Lou Piniella August 2 Colleen Kovach Tammy Clark Tim "Razor" Sharp IritDiidiay ttair August :so Craze Greg Laura Williamson "Kicky" Kevin MacKay August :s I Tina Lewis Bryan Dalton Chris McLaughlan September I Gayle Erickson Jeanne Sterrett Dixie Bishop Tom Long Adam Sayers Julie Christians September :i Waterbed DUILDI 6ERVICE6 If you would like to be listed in our Building Services just call 649-9014. HOT TUBS & SAUNAS Park City Spa &Tub Fiberglass spas, wodd hot tubs, whirlpool baths Saunas, dry & steam Located in Brent C. Building, 649 81 72 PAINTERS Painters & Stainers Licensed Painting Contractor Free Estimates, quality workmanship 649-8439 Painting Interior & Exterior Excellent Brush and Airless Spray Work Call Chet 322-0664 For Free Estimate WELDING Bob's Portable Welding Certified Satisfaction Guaranteed Pipe thawing 649-7544 MAINTENANCE ABoldingCo. Windows Washed, Construction Clean up Complete Interior Cleaning Commercial & Residential Call 649 8795 for Free Estimates Shangri La Ent. Specializing in window washing, janitorial, maintenance & repair service reasonable prices, reliable work, free estimate call Bob & Michelle 801-649-6887 MASONRY Quality Masonry Need a fireplace, retaining wall, brick patio or other QUALITY masonry? Call Bob 649-8167 or Garry 649 9088 after 6 p.m. SNOWPLOWING Park City Snowplow & Landscape Co. 649-8250 BUILDING MATERIALS Heber Lumber 70QWest 100South-Hebei City - . We Deliver1 Anderson Lumbti Highway 248 Park City 649 Everything for your building newi . PLUMBING Emporium Plumbing Installation & Repairs, Drain & Sewer lines cleaned Licensed & Bonded 649-851 1. 24 Hour Emergency Service CONSTRUCTION WTC Construction Remodeling Specialist Licensed Contraction 2523 East 2100 South 485-2385, S.L.C. High Country Builders Professional builders for 25 years. We may have (he home or lot you want for sale now. If not, we can build for you. 24 hr. phone 649-6375. Paul de Groot Contracting Carpentry and Building Established with excellent reputation Large or small, new or old Competent, licensed, insured, references We Do It All "Best Quality" Call a Professional First Day or Night 649-7581 - r s - INTERIOR DESIGN Inside Story Personalized interior design service Window and Wall Coverings, Furnishings. Carpet Paint & Accessories available in Park City 586 Main Street. 649-9332. 531-6262 LANDSCAPINGEQUIPMENT Greenstreet Gardening Company Mowing weed control & fertilization. Specializing in floral design & ground cover, flowers, ornamental shrubs & trees available for patios, beds & trim. Call 877-5204 (Marlon number) or 654-4179 (Heber number). Serving Park City. Nevada Smith & Co. LAWN MAINTENANCE SERVICES Spring Clean-up Mow & Trim Lawn Fertilization Tree & Shrub Fertilization Weed Control Power Rake & Vacuum. LANDSCAPING SERVICES Sprinkler Systems Grading Plantings Sodding or Seeding Any Type of Tractor Work Available $22.50hr. CALL NEVADA AT 649 6170 EXCAVATION P & C Trucking & Excavation No Job Too Big or Too Small Excellent work, reasonable rates Hauling, basements, trenches Gravel & sand, general excavation Craig Kunkel. days 649-7838. evenings 336-2707 ELECTRICIAN Atlas Electric j.uh .-eivice to Park City & surrounding areas Established in residential, commercial, industrial or remodeling Free Estimates Salt Lake City 262 -8408 Reed Knight. Master Electrician INTERNATIONAL Gdansk, Poland and Le Havre, France Labor troubles hit two countries on different sides of the Iron Curtain this week. In Poland, the government govern-ment made a series of concessions to 150,000 striking workers which included a massive governmental shake-up. French fishermen, meanwhile, continued blockading vital ports along the French coast. Polish Communist Party chief Edward Gierek dismissed the country's premier, Edward , Babiuch, and six full or alternate members of the Politburo. In response to worker demands for free trade unions, Gierek proposed free elections ; to the Polish Central Council of Trade Unions, but rejected demands for free speech and in-f dependent bargaining. The government gave in on two other points; it agreed to hold fact-to-fact negotiations with a collective labor group, the Inter-Factory Strike Committee, and was forced to restore telephone communications between the Gdansk strikers and the rest of the country. The French strike began August 13, as trawler fishermen blockaded ports across the coast of France asking for lower prices for boat diesel fuel and higher prices for their catch. The French navy, on orders from Premier Raymond Barre, broke a blockade on Thursday and Saturday across Fos-Sur-Mer, France's principal oil port. But both times the . blockade of trawler boats again was installed. Ridayh, Saudi Arabia A butane stove was believed to be the cause of the fire aboard a Saudi Arabian airliner that killed 301 people in the third-worst airline disaster on record. The Lockheed Tristar was taking off from Ridayh airport a week ago Tuesday when the pilot reported repor-ted a fire. He successfully made an emergency landing, but the plane exploded on the ground. The number of bodies near the front emergency exits indicate the passengers made a panicky ' rush for safety. Two butane stoves were found aboard the plane, one with a fire extinguisher next to it. The Saudi Civil Aviation Authority conjectured the stoves were smuggled on board by Moslem pilgrims in violation of rules against the transport tran-sport of combustible material. Security procedures at Saudi airports later were tightened. Tokyo An Echo-1 type Russian nuclear sub was towed home to Vladivostok Saturday three days after a mysterious fire on the sub killed nine Soviet crewmen and injured three others. Japanese planes and ships checked the surrounding surroun-ding waters for 18 hours before determining there was no danger from radiation. The Japanese tanker Gari responded to distress signals from the sub some 84 miles east of Okinawa. The ship's owners reported seeing no sign of fire. When a Soviet training ship took 50 crewmen off the sub, it was feared the damage was much worse than reported. The sailors were dressed in protective cloaks and segregated from other crewmen. Japan issued a strong protest, then withdrew it Saturday when the sub was towed within the country's 12-mile territorial waters on its return trip to Russia. Ministry officials said the sub's passage, defying repeating warnings from the coast guard, was "regrettable" and "unfriend ly." However, after the sub passed out of range and official assurances were delivered by the Soviet ministry, Japanese sources revised their position, and declared "The government now regards the passage as innocent." Toronto City officials rejected Alice Cooper's offer to reschedule a rock concert after a cancellation can-cellation led to a riot causing $75,000 damage. And, they said, the prospects for future concerts were doubtful. The concert was canceled when Cooper, the king of macabre rock, arrived three hours before showtime "burning up with fever," according to his road manager. Upon hearing the bad news, 14,000 fans at the Canadian National Exhibition Coliseum began pelting police with bottles and chairs and ripping out light and sound equipment. equip-ment. Seventeen people were injured and 31 arrested. NATIONAL Salt Lake City Two full squads of city police were hard at work on "more leads than we can cover," searching for the killer of two joggers near Liberty Park a week ago Wednesday night. The two victims were black men, accompanied at the time by two 15-year-old white girls, and the racial connotations of the crime have aroused fear in some parts of Salt Lake's black community. com-munity. David Martin, 18, and Ted Fields, 20, were shot down at about 9th South and 5th East at 10:22 p.m. Terry Lee Elrod, 15, was struck by a bullet fragment, and Karma Ingersol, also 15, was uninjured. Police Chief Bud Willoughby ruled out the possibility of a psychopath. Police point out that all eight rifle shots, fired from about 100 feet away, hit the victims. Willoughby said there might be numerous motives for the killingThere was no evidence to substantiate a racial cause, but, said Willoughby, Willough-by, he would not rule that out. Willoughby and Mayor Ted Wilson met for an hour Thursday with black community leaders. Utah NAACP head James Dooley said afterwards afterwar-ds the group was "less certain than before" that racism motivated the crime. Two hundred blacks who met with Willoughby on Friday night were more concerned. "I might get my brains blown out," said Darryl Craig, "I don't want to have to look over my shoulder all the time." A special patrol squad now has been installed around Liberty Park. The Salt Lake Tribune's Secret Witness program is offering $10,000 for information in-formation leading to the killer, while Northwest Pipeline, which employed the two men, has offered of-fered a $25,000 reward. Washington and Los Angeles Ronald Reagan struggled Monday to repair a possibly damaging campaign gaffe over his China policy, while John Anderson picked Kennedy Democrat Patrick Lucey as his running mate. Reagan, who has been quoted as favoring an official relationship with Taiwan, reassured the Red Chinese that the current U.S. liaison in Taiwan satisfied his definition of "official." The Republican also said he has never advocated renewing diplomatic relations with Taiwan. Reagan and running mate George Bush called the joint press conference after Bush's chilly reception during a four-day China trip. A commentary com-mentary in the Chinese party newspaper said Reagan had embarrassed one billion Chinese and "had chosen to turn back the clock by reviving the extinct two Chinas proposition." In Washington, disgruntled Republican John Anderson joined disgruntled Democrat Patrick Lucey to launch their third-party effort. Lucey is a former Wisconsin governor and was President Carter's ambassador to Mexico. He resigned last November and joined Ted Kennedy's campaign shortly thereafter. Washington Testifying before a Senate investigating in-vestigating subcommittee, Billy Carter insisted he was not a "buffoon, boob, and a wacko," but a "common citizen with uncommon financial and family troubles." Two of Carter's associates, it was revealed, are under investigation by the federal government for importing marijuana and cocaine, but nothing in this case, said Senate sources, it connected to Billygate. Carter testified the Libyans arranged for a controversial $500,000 loan not to buy influence, but to recompense him for the financial setbacks he had suffered due to his association with them. When asked what he could offer to prove his claim, Carter answered, "Just my word." He also contradicted testimony from Justice official Joel Lisker, who said Carter told him in June that a $20,000 Libyan payment was not a loan, but a reimbursement for expenses. Carter denied that claim but later said his recollection might be unclear. Farmer George Belloumini and his financial consultant Ronald C. Sprague were the two Carter Car-ter associates under investigation on drug charges. Sprague told the committee Billy Carter Car-ter had asked him earlier this year to negotiate a $500,000 with the Libyans Carter did not mention the $200,000 he already had received, said Sprague. Committee chairman Birch Bayh said a preliminary report of the investigation would be ready by early October. But, guessed Bayh, demands to hear further witnesses would carry the probe past the Nov. 4 election. Springfield, Illinois A former National Organization for Women volunteer was convicted convic-ted Friday of offering a bribe to an Illinois legislator to vote for the ERA. The eight-woman, four-man jury decided that Chicago businesswoman Wanda Brandstetter was guilty of offering a $1,000 bribe to freshman Rep. Nord Swanstrom. She was found innocent, however, on a charge of soliciting a lawmaker to commit official misconduct. Brandstetter could face up to seven years in prison and a $10,000 fine. The defendant told the court she had urged Swanstrom to vote his conscience, and had merely offered to help in raising campaign funds. But she admitted under cross-examination that her offer of a $1,000 contribution was not meant to be carried through if Swanstrom voted against the ERA. Supporters of the amendment later called the conviction "part of the right-wing effort to stop the ERA." H New York Chrysler chief Lee Iacocca and New York mayor Ed Koch have made a bet on who can pay off their federal loans first. Iococca suggested the bet after Koch stated during Democratic Convention TV coverage that federal loans for Chrysler were "ridiculous." Koch is putting up a bushel of apples and Iococca, Iococ-ca, a box of Cuban Monte Cristos cigars. Both Crysler, with $1 billion in loans, and New York City government, $1.6 billion, have blamed their money troubles on the cost of meeting federal regulations. n,tf'h"i-1iTiifiiiiifiii idling! iifcinrti iiMin ,nuii jjjLW- " i fc .p'" A 1 iiiiitMitoiMWiiui Mm |