OCR Text |
Show J Pai;? A4 Thursday, September 17, 1981 The Newspapei Quality newly constructed energy-efficient home for sale i 'I'M? nSptiE dDqnrJ; Uta 3 Mi U firf Rill 'Si 1 WtJliBW; l ' Uteiaipt few 2200 Monarch Avenue Prospector Village $139,500 Perfect for first time buyer! low down payment - redwood siding owner will consider 2nd with possible no payment for 3 years to qualified buyer 1700 square feet 3 bedroom, 2xh bath 2x6 wall construction R-30 ceiling R-19 walls triple glazed windows solid core doors cedar shake roof IRKBRIDE (VlUtitlUCtcOH gas appliances solid hardwood custom cabinets wood burning stove tile baths & entry skylight massive party deck concrete driveway large storage areas and many more quality features shown by appointment principles only please! 649-7708 r, Pi: "t fwm QUICK PRINT COPIES SHARON FLECK SECRETARIAL j'l jl 649-8790 'P 6ERVICE6 1 MitaawttKajiwaii iiw 11 mmim iy If you would like to be listed in our Building Services just call 649-9014. MwasB.iaii win m ' -K I 1 HOT TUBS & SAUNAS Universal Spa Systems 6980 South 400 West Midvale. Ut. 5667727 MAINTENANCE Shangri La Ent. Specializing in window washing, carpet cleaning, janitorial, maintenance and repair service. Commercial or residential. Free estimates. Licensed and insured. Call Bob Grieve 649-6887 LANDSCAPING Alpine Landscaping Landscape design & planning Complete sprinkler design and installation Call 649-8521 BUILDING MATERIALS Anderson Lumber Co. Highway 248 Park City 649 847? Everything lor your building needs! REPAIRS Mountain Home Repairs Odds & Ends Small or Large Home RepairS Maintenance Top Notch Service Why wait? Call now. Mike Haas 649-9776 PLUMBING Emporium Plumbing Installation & Repairs, Drain & Sewer lines cleaned Licensed & Bonded 649-851 1, 24 Hour Emergency Service CONSTRUCTION Crane & Auger Service Call for information. James Reeves 649-6344, 649-9442 FLORIST Park City's The Flower Box Full Service Florist Wire Service Renee Haines 649-4144 Holiday Village Mall Park City NATIONAL Washington President Reagan and his advisers ad-visers went back to the budget-cutting drawing board this week, as their projected 1982 deficit of $42.5 billion ballooned to $60 billion in the face of continued high interest rates. Reagan's spokesman said Tuesday he was not considering further cuts in Social Security, but may look to trim other so-called entitlement programs, such as food stamps, Medicare, veterans pensions, and Medicaid. In addition to the $20 billion next year the White House didn't count on, the Congressional Budget Office forecast that $35 billion for 1983 and $50 billion for 1984 must be cut. Budget director direc-tor David Stockman planned cutting $30 billion from the heretofore-unscathed Defense Department, Depar-tment, but Defense head Caspar Weinberger held the cuts to $13 billion. San Luis Obispo At least 50 people were arrested after scaling a barbed-wire fence at the Diablo Canyon atomic power plant Tuesday. Hundreds have gathered here to protest what they call unsafe conditions. Critics say the Hosgri earthquake fault nearby could trigger a temblor that would damage the plant and release radiation. However, the fault has been inactive for 125,000 years. A vote on the plant by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission is scheduled for next Monday. Some of. the 3,000 marchers carried wooden ladders to scale the outer fences, but most say they will not try to penetrate an inner moat-like area where attack dogs roam loose. Meanwhile, a group in a flotilla of small boats, including actor ac-tor Robert Blake, plowed through choppy seas and landed on the beach just outside an off-limits area declared by the Coast Guard. However, they could not carry out their plan to halt operations by putting swimmers in the ocean near the intake valves. if Chicago Cardinal John P. Cody, leader of the nation's largest Roman Catholic diocese, denied allegations he had diverted up to $1 million in church funds to a woman who is described as his stepcousin and a lifelone friend. The Chicago Sun-Times reported a federal grand jury is investigating in-vestigating whether Cody used the money to buy furs, clothes, an expensive car and a Florida home for Mrs. Helen Wilson. The paper also revealed that Mrs. Wilson was the owner-beneficiary owner-beneficiary of a $100,000 insurance policy on Cody's life, and had borrowed against the policy to invest in bonds and money-market funds. While the Cardinal's intimates publicly worried that the allegations might kill Cody, who suffers from a heart condition, the prelate said he forgives his accusers and called the charges an attack on his church. "When some people wish to ... disperse the flock, they first take out after the shepherd." INTERNATIONALS Heidelberg, West Germany Terrorists fired Soviet-made grenades at the U.S. Army's European commander, Frederick J. Kroesen, Jr. and his wife, while they were riding in a bullet-proof car Tuesday. The pair suffered slight cuts from broken glass during the attack, believed to be the work of the ultra-left Red Army Ar-my Faction. The general was riding to work through a Heidelburg suburb and was stopped for a traffic light when the attack occurred. The terrorists, hiding about 200 yards away in a wooded area, fired the grenades which hit the trunk of the car. The attack on the general was the fourth on U.S. military personnel since the Red Faction an-nouced an-nouced a war on "imperialist war" last August. Cairo, Egypt In the most serious breach since sin-ce 17,000 Russian advisers were booted out in 1972, President Anwar Sadat has expelled the Soviet ambassador to Cairo, six embassy employees, em-ployees, and a Hungarian diplomat. Ambassador Vladiinir Polyakov and his colleagues, accused of inciting violence between Moslem fundamentalists fundamen-talists and Coptic Christians, were given 48y2 hours to get out of the country. The announcement was part of Sadat's crackdown crack-down on political dissent and religious strife, a campaign that was endorsed by 99.45 of the voters at a referendum last week. Earlier in the week, the government suspended ABC foreign operation in Cairo, and expelled U.S. reporter Chris Harper for what was called "biased reporting." London Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher reshuffled her Cabinet to purge it of moderate voices who urged revising her conservative, monetarist economic program. Financial conditions, con-ditions, including a 50-year high in unemployment, unem-ployment, threaten the Conservative Party's majority in Parliament. James Prior, who moved slowly on labor union reform, was punished by being moved from the Department of Employment to the strife-torn Northern Ireland office. Deputy Foreign Secretary Sir Ian Gilmour, who urged Thatcher to relax her tight-money policies, tendered his resignation. Lord Thorneycroft, the head of the Conservative Party, was ousted for publicly questioning the party's optimistic economic forecasts. And Thatcher dismissed Lord Soames the man who negotiated the independence indepen-dence of Rhodesia as leader of the House of Lords and civil service minister. Bonn, West Germany In a speech here, Secretary of State Alexander Haig cited reports that the Soviet Union has been using unlawful chemical weapons in Afghanistan, Cambodia, and Laos. A day later in Washington, Undersecretary Under-secretary of State Walter Stoessel said the U.S. has good evidence that so-called "yellow rain" in Cambodia is the result of three Soviet toxic agents. Elections from 1 Bruce Barcal is not exactly a household name in Park City, but the 31-year-old resident believes his background back-ground in city government would be a valuable asset on the City Council. Barcal spent more than five years on the administrative staff of the city manager of Riverside, Illinois, before moving to Utah two years ago. He cites his experience in planning and development, road projects, and ground water problems. "We have a few things that have to be improved in the town. Hopefully we can smooth out an engine that's running a bit rough... "There's just a lack of expertise, sometimes, that amazes me." Barcal already is making an issue out of the handling of the Park Avenue construction. He charges that offering the contractor a $15,000 incentive to finish the job early was unnecessary and unprecedented. And he argues that the city should have made the effort to notify Park Avenue residents individually of the construction that was about to take place. Bill Coleman, 35 is making his first try for elective office after spending almost three years on the Park City Planning Commission. An 11-year-resident of Park City, Coleman has long been active in the Chamber of Commerce, serving as its president in 1980. He is also a director of the Park City Convention and Visitors' Bureau. When listing his reasons for running, Coleman refrained from criticizing the present administration, but mentioned his own, desire to continue his involvement in government. "It's consistent with my participation participa-tion in the affairs of the town," he said. "I think it's important to participate at this level... "I just feel that strongly about the town." Bruce Decker, 31, is no stranger to local politics. He served as the city's finance director before leaving to become director of the Snyderville Basin Sewer District in 1978. He ran a write-in campaign for a County Commission seat in 1976, then ran again as an independent in 1978. Decker believes that his familiarity with problems in the Snyderville area could be a valuable asset. "I think that Park City needs to deal more effectively with other government govern-ment agencies, especially the county," he said. "I'm very aware of everything that goes on out here (Snyderville) as well as everything that's going on in Park City." Decker has been a Park City resident for the past nine years. Karen "Digger" Degen, 29, is also a nine-year Park City resident. She is best known to the locals as the owner and operator of Digger's Express Company on Main Street. "I feel that Park City people, new and old, have been overlooked and neglected as far as the changes that have occurred over the last seven or eight years," she said. "I think that someone should be looking out, not for the developers and the realtors, but for the people." Degen said she has seen a bias in local government favoring ski resorts and large-scale development. Mickey Smith, 38, was one of the first candidates to file for the City Council. "Originally, I didn't know who was going to run and I figured we ivt'" ' i change." Smith cites several recent incidents as evidence of a need for better communication between the city and its taxpayers. He points to public complaints over the handling of the Park Avenue repaving project, the filming on Main Street, and this summer's water shortages. "I think with a little PR work with the community, the same decisions might have been arrived at, but they might have been a bit easier to swallow." Like some of the other candidates, he believes that the public works strike could have been handled differently. "It goes back to the same thing of being responsive to the citizens' needs." Smith is the owner of Advance Reservations and a long-haul trucking company. He said his job has given him insights into the problems faced by Main Street businesses, the ski resorts and the lodging industry. Bob Wells, is going back for seconds. First elected to the City Council in 1977, Wells at first considered filing to run for mayor this year, but then thought better of it. A Park City resident since 1971, Wells served on the Planning Commission before his election to the Council, and now acts as the liaison between the two groups. Well, 39, argues that he has no intention inten-tion of spending the rest of his life in politics. "But I would certainly like to sec some of the things that are in the mill now carried through to completion." com-pletion." During the past four years, Wells has become involved in a number of pet projects, including the development of the city water system and the construction con-struction of the new state highway. He said he would also like to see some of the impact of the Park City Redevelopment Agency while he is still in office. "It has certainly been a challenge over the last several years," he said. "I get a lot of satisfaction out of it, even with the grief." |