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Show V Pago 10 Wednesday, January 21 , 1 976 V -'-' 1 . ' .,, . fH::rt?nt , 1 ... . 1 li 4 ' I 5 1 r . r I' Neither Retired Nor Tired car i by Gerry Johnsoa If you tire easily, then just thinking about all that Mrs. Frances" Laurence does will ' leave you exhausted. ' v For openers, the 61 -year-. - old Mrs. Laurence runs her own company. "It's called Laurence En-: En-: terprises, Inc.," ; she said. ' "Not very imaginative, but I ... . couldn't , think of anything . else." . It would be difficult to put a label on. her company's activities. ac-tivities. ; The word "organ-, ize" would have to be in there someplace for she helps companies organize filing systems, record keeping or whole departments. "Right now I'm working on a central record keeping i system. This company -has now hired a, full-time administrator admin-istrator for the records. Once I get the system established and " the administrator trained, I'll move on." she said. ' What her company provides pro-vides is Mrs. Laurence's years of business experience in ' organizing studies : and projects. : She graduated from college col-lege in 1963, a year after her son got his degree. In col-, lege, Mrs. Laurence organized organ-ized a physical fitness program pro-gram for older students. After graduation, she realized real-ized that" mature women returning re-turning to the job market or looking for their first job after aft-er the children left home were at a distinct ' disadvantage. disad-vantage. So what did she do organize. or-ganize. This time it was a committee to prepare a cur riculum to meet the needs of these women. Her husband was transferred trans-ferred then to the Chicago area so she got busy organizing organiz-ing again. She was working with the United Steel Workers Work-ers and the University of Chicago to develop a course on preparing the steel workers work-ers for retirement. Another transfer and the Laurences had to move on. They moved to their present hometown of Greenwich, Connecticut. The move was seven years ago. "I started the company four or five years ago," Mrs. Laurence said. She explained she had to have her own business so she could do the other things she enjoys such as traveling. "This way I have time to be a grandmother. I go to California to see 'my grandchildren," grand-children," she said. Her time away from her business is also spent with several other projects. "I'm into organic gardening. I raise aloe' veras for health food stores and nurseries. 1 wrote a pamphlet on the uses of this interesting plant," she said. She also works with a couple cou-ple who make movies. "They make the movies and I try to sell them to television. I think they are good, but I don't think television feels ready for them. I did sell one to; ABC a few years ago which was used as a Christmas Christ-mas Eve special." Every other Saturday, Mrs. Laurence goes into New York. "To see a matinee and go to the galleries." .' .t . In f addition, U you are ready for all of this, she also paints, gardens, cooks and makes all her own clothes. She gives the impression that every " moment ' is organized. or-ganized. ; f "Life is full, fascinating and I truly love being my age," she said. "I meet young people thirty years old who feel they are over the hill. How sad!" Possibly they got that feeling trying to keep up with Mrs. Laurence. : ' ACCORDING to the Senate's Sen-ate's Committee on Aging, the proportion of an older person's medical care expenses ex-penses reimbursed by . Medicare Med-icare fell from 45.5 percent in' 1969 to 38.1 percent in 1974. Deductible and other charges under Medicare rose sharply during the same period. IN THE New York City area, senior citizens, persons on welfare, the unemployed and those who qualify for food stamps, can get a 10 percent discount savings certificate cer-tificate from Shopwell's, a . large chain in that part of the country. Certificates of $5 are sold at a 10 percent discount up to a limit of $50 per family per week. They are redeemable at any Shop-well Shop-well store any day of the week for all merchandise except ex-cept cigarettes and beer. The program, initiated earlier this year, was to have expired August 25. However, Shop-well Shop-well president Martin Rosen-garten Rosen-garten said it had been so successful he was extending it until March 27, 1976. Moana's Employee oHhe Month is Cindy Wall t -J VTT. '4. V i Sm 3-j 1 Gam Urges Continuation of Missle Production U.S. Senator Jake Gam, upgrade the production and one of the Senate's leading deployment of four new proponents of a strong (MIRVed (multiple warhead) defense, has urged the ICBM's. Their overall President to reconsider the disreeard of recent treatise i ' I'M, Cindy WaU -5 decision which would lead to the discontinued production of ,the Mi,nuteman Three Ford, the Senator referred to ! "several recent press reports that the Pesident's budget for fiscal 1977 would exclude any funding for the continued production" of the missile. He said the action , would result in the termination of the only.ICBM in production in the United States. "I am gravely concerned that such a decision could have been made when serious questions are being raised concerning the sufficiency of our strategic force," Senator (Helsinki Agreements) by their open acts in Portugal iandlAngolay. leave- them - ' !'T unilaterally stop the production of our ICBM's with;;; no respect for replacements for at least eight years, seems illogical and incomprehensible. I fear this ! decision may be interpreted in-terpreted by the Soviets as lack of resolve to maintain our strategic forces and weaken our position at SALT II." . V ; . The Senator said the decision to eliminalte ; Minuteman funding from the Use off Label on fax Return Can Speed Reservations manager Cindy Wall has been named Moana's December employee of the month for her excellent work during the record-breaking Christmas rush. , Cindy, who is from Montclair, N.J., has lived in Park City for three years and had worked for the Greater Park.City Company before coming to Moana. d. ' ' . iarn saia. - Ana, ai a ume budget, is an inappropriate when we are attempting to response to those who want to negotiate ;a new " SALT cut the national budget only agreement. ... We , also know by trimming it from defense, that the Societs are involved Such cuts severely weaken in a massive program to needed defenses.'-' Oake (He sCeiqh (weatktrpermClinq)orlhe 6usfofte enCranceaffhrkdhf i Dinner served niqhLla-550-K)30 -Ueekend'Bruncfi from UAfr I &orJ&sertazwns please call dkfO 1 , KIS ' - tMudhrcom, CoJiUtL US 1.75 735 i four md mm2o Joidermu- 2 ib finest-. -VepUHtwdgilaUtiujour. 795 ..." tfdflmnewv ' OnJtr VtaL Cullef lopptd with, JUm Montmv tiuk Cheat . ' Sntdtnik kUIo a&veqcUhleilujimr , . 59S J5oHeteuflrrkk lof 'Chicken, ' Sadl ttmtidCfucfai&uut ream wit- with mujnmam. rurd wilk Blended rtce Soup duiur StsmpiArTcUzer 350 ZCOmplJW UttlDUIW' AotorledficlJiPlJc 233 dUfafiL MJjmU ULr SoulhPoctfb 'Dilictleltf Muctud exd 'Staled in. Ounpadhe jauce. Strued-wiDtpoiaa ' txdiefclaileJitjeitr 695 CcbderAmeriama- Mittttelthlef aStiJiCAJerMatU, BUxata-ttxpuerot Mfnvxjetce Strvtdutik ileMUnaaJtueUile- it four . " jl All enlrtc include JoMtl (jrten. SaUd orS&updufyur and ftaeryl Crime dtJUJuJUA 125 SmfCfftdSoddU 150 CheutcJu ' $5 fa & CluuUlt or Slrmtienu ' 1.00 . &I5 OmbSuzetk ' (85 Seer .60 VhieCteeluQ .30 Coff?5s '. 3e .25 , VUk m1u iu t1lbt added ttthtfeimtfdlteUiU ilo Havoyour J National Ski Patrol I bmCJinQS bOOn ..TH J1 checked lately? Taxpayers can speed their refunds by attaching the pre-addressed pre-addressed label to their returns when filing, Roland V. Wise, IRS District Director for Utah, said today. "If returns are otherwise error-free and all necessary documents are attached," Mr. Wise said, "these labels speed processing of refund checks." - : ' -r 1 The label, included in the tax package that taxpayers receive in the mail, lists the taxpayer's name, address, and social security number. Mr. Wise emphasized that if the name,, address, or social security number on the label is incorrect, taxpayers should make corrections right on the label. . On a joint return, Mr. Wise added, if only one social security number appears on the label, the other spouse's number should be entered on the appropriate line on the return. 63 Main Street 649-8051 NOW OPEN ,CGIPEDwGDDDPD, Af ID DAD Featuring Delicious Prime Rib Entertainment Nightly from 8 pm 'til Midnight "WE f LAY BACKGAMMON" . BAR OPEN 5 PM 1 AM RESTAURANT OPENS AT 6 PM 'Memories' ; is an Album You'll Remember By Jay Meehan Doc Watson's latest LP, "Memories" (UA-LA423-H2) works as a musical self-portrait self-portrait . because of who is remembering and what is being remembered. Growing up in the hills of North Carolina, Arthel "Doc" Watson experienced influences in-fluences from musicians like J i m m i e R o d g e r s , .Mississippi, John Hurt, . Wayne Rainey and . the ' Delmore Brothers, Bill Monroe and. perhaps most of all the man after whom he ; named his son, the great Merle Travis. Doc's clean and tasteful picking, coupled with his strong rural vocal lines, has kept him in the forefront with southern music fans ever since Ralph Rinzler first recorded him for the Folk-, ways label on "Old Time Music at Clarence Ashley's" back in the early sixties. But now the word is really getting out. - Doc f and Merle's two previous LP's "Then and Now" and "Two Days in November" (both still in print on the Poppy Label) each earned a grammy from ther National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences in - the "Ethnic and Traditional" category. Some purists consider this rather ironic in the they were both produced by Nashville's "Cowboy" Jack Clements in a somewhat commercially oriented manner. But Doc and friends are back home on "Memories", as there isn't an overly-slick-licjc w therentirea doubjevStfkaje,ssia ed Produced by Merle Watson and Nashville piano man Chuck Cochran, "Memories" has a much more personal flavor than the previous two albums, beginning with songs ' Doc heard around the' house from his father and Gaither Carlton, his to-be father-in-law. In a very unhurried and uncluttered fashion, Doc and Merle and friends proceed: Carter family, Roy Acuff, Leon McAuliffe, Bob Wills, even a Don Gibson tune. The arrangements: always with ' an undercurrent of bounce that make them par ticipatory, sort of hard to st, still during. , ' As usual, Doc's flatpicking is showcased utilizing pne of his favorite vehicles -r old : time fiddle tunes adapted to the guitar. Merle's long time -friendship with the late. Macon, Ga. guitarist Duane Allman shows itself on his slide-guitar work, which if displayed most effectively on the up-tempo "You Don't Know My Mind Bluet" and the old jug-band classic "Mama Don't Allow No Music" on which everyone shines. Co-producer Chuck Cochran's piano always fits so perfect, you just know many good things are ahead -. in his relationship with the Watsons. Michael Coleman is road bassist and harmony vocalist for Doc and Merle and handles similar chores on "Memories." In response to a question during a radio interview conducted last time they hit Salt Lake City, Doc and Merle both mentioned young Sammy Bush, two-time junior ' fiddle champ at Wieser, as the most exciting picker they had jammed with lately. And, lo and behold, Sammy's tasty fiddle and mandolin show up to add just the right embellishment to this already fantastic album. Beautiful memories from Beautiful Doc. If you're into this side of America's music, you can get an autographed copy of "Memories" by purchasing it beforehand and taking it with you, to. vTerrace.in, arete ftdfe gotten the word yet, Gayle Hendry and his children in Time Productions are presenting Doc and Merle Watson in concert. Call 1-466-4764 for further info. If you enjoy the guitar and a very human performance, be there, or be square. That's this Friday at the Terrace. Upcoming: Arlo Guthrie at the Capitol Theatre, Feb. 2. (All proceeds from this column donated ' to the Raleigh Hills Rest Home for those with chronic colon and hyphen fetish.) Desjn Coalition Interior Design and Gifts Supplying th Park City area with . A Furnishings irCarpotlng ADraportot Condominium Kitchen-Bedding-Accossory .' : '. Package ; Original Designer and suppliers of . Crescent . Ridge Payday, Park Avenue, Claimjumper, and Treasure' Mountain Moun-tain Villoge Condominiums. ;. located at Resort CenterSIver Mil House V v; 1284 Empire Avenue Park City, Utah 14060 (801) 649-8888 ; ... W MUAIN A W REAL ESTATE S Specializing in Condominium Salts It .Qll XPRTOWM W SBil I II II THREE KINGS PAYDAY PARK AVENUE UNITS AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE SALES FROM $43,500 REED JENSEN, broker FRED PRETTNER, SALES v. OFFICES IN THE A R$$QRT REGIS TRA WON BUILDING i 4 i I ! 8 649-81 1 1 - 649-9542 i For Reservations Call 649-9971 - i . |