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Show Page 8 Wednesday, April 21, 1976 By Clara Voyant Love is in the air this week but the EPA is sure to do something about it. CAPRICORN (Dec.22 Jan.19) In your never-ending quest for excitement, you'll become a rabbit breeder. This should be a hare raising experience. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 Feb. 18) Make a dream come true for someone close to you don't get so close. PISCES (Feb. 19 Mar. 20) Start with a clean slate and you'll be able to chalk up another empty week. ARIES (Mar. 21 Apr. 19) Remember, there re two sides to every issue your side and the right side. TAURUS (Apr. 20 May 20) If you were born between 6 aim. and 12 noon you should still be in the hospital. GEMINI (May 21-Une 20) Take care of pressing matters. Your shirt is wrinkled and your pants need to be creased. CANCER (June 21 July 22) It will be love at first sight. Unfortunately, your new romance will take a second look. LEO (July 23 Aug. 22) Your property will be besieged by a flock of terns. Disperse them by throwing rocks and be sure to leave no tern unstoned. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You often travel with your mind. It might be best to leave it home since you seldom use it. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) If you want to look big in the eyes of your friends stand very close to them. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 Nov. 21) You will attend a $100-a-plate dinner only to find the price of adipjs'sipn did not include a . chair. v. r?rv "H ' i. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 Dec. 21) Always remember, I'm Clara Voyant and you're not. . PUZZLE Ten American League baseball teams are hidden in this block of letters. The teams may be spelled forward or backward and may run horizontally, vertically or diagonally. Can you go ten-for-ten? s I n I n 1 1 d ii i x slaLJLJL JLLJLiLJLJL JL JL JL J JL L J i ljjlljljljljl jl jljl!ljljl5jl a ! jl !l a j !l l jlrjjel!l!l jlljljljljljl JLJLJLAJLse jljljlj1jjjl Y I 0 1 Y 1 I 1 V 1 T 0 S Gam Offers Bill to Aid Judicial System Senator Jake Gam has introduced legislation to relieve the Federal judicial system of "the ever growing burden being placed on it by the multiplicity of small claim nuisance suits brought under the Truth in Lending Act." The Senator said that during recent oversight hearings on the Truth in Lending Act, "shocking evidence" was brought forward showing that fit-, igation based on the punitive damage provisions on the Act is "seriously encumbering the work of the Federal Courts" in certain sections of the country. He said one judge stated that, "the flood of private cases in the United States District Courts is substantially over burdened the Federal judiciary system which is already being taxed to its capacities." In one Federal district, Garn said, one-fourth of the cases filed involved small claims under the Truth in Lending Act. "The Federal court system was not estableished to handle this type of litigation; it has for more important work," Garn told the Senate. "This litigation serves no useful purpose unless one considers the extraction of attorney's fees from the public pub-lic as useful endeavor. The litigation has done nothing to clarify the law, it has not brought, nor will it bring, consumers more meaningful disclosures and compliance with or respect for the law is not being encouraged. "The " problem arises because the Truth in Lending Act and its regulations are so ambiguousd that lawyers, judges and the Federal Reserve Board are not able to agree on the appropriate disclosure forms. This leads creditors into technical violations and the punitive damage section of the law, as it is presently written, leaves judges no choice but to make un award where they find there has been a violation." The Garn bill would correct this by eliminating the minimum punitive damage provision and restoring to judges their discretion to exercise common sense in the disposition of these cases. The bill increases the civil penality maximum from $1,000 to 10,000 to give the courts power to assess substantial penalities where there have been willful violations of the law affecting 'the public interest. "This is merely a first step in the reform of the Truth in Lending Act," Senator Garn said. "The long run solution lies in simplifying the substantive sub-stantive provisions of the Act to bring consumers more meaningful disclosures and relieve creditors of un-c-ertainities in the interpretation in-terpretation of the Act. I intend in-tend to introduce a series of bills to accomplish it." LAST WEEK'S SOLUTION jUflJ i-U.UfpHi)i I If -laaaaSajl Cn EiAjAjLi iJ.!L AE-L JJL ji ETpnr kit XfeAJL iJLi: jlE L jlaS 4JJL BSjl "Low rates arc a big reason we're the largest home insurer. Dut there are more..?9 Low rates wouldn't mean much without our f irst-class irst-class service. Drop by, or give me a call. Tom LIgare SIvar King Bank B49-9161 649-8441 Like a food neighbor, Stat Farm is there. STATE FARM FIRE AND CASUALTY COMPANY Home Office: Bloomington, Illinois INSUIANCI Sprucing Up For Spring if !lf ' if' " l' "! p Tin a - o. it 4, I , I 111 J rzr- p Hill II " - w ( - . Rq58DI ffiatfaitf GOOD BUY on a recently built duplex with 3 lots. $49,800. BRAND NEW LISTING. Large two bedroom house with big loft and carpal. $31 ,56 v VICTORIAN DUPLEX only a year old. Two 2-bedroom units each with garage. Extremely well-built. Terms available. ';'fc'".V " ' '. FOR SALE: Older home, four bedrooms, two baths, basement and good location. Close to "Get On It." $40,000. NEW traditional-looking duplex; each unit has two bedrooms, 1ft baths, fireplace, good off street parking. Terms available. FOR SALE: Now duplex on Daly Ave. with sauna and garage. Victorian architecture; two bedrooms In each unit. y NEW LISTING: Good buy on one and two bedroom condominiums from $25,000. Good recreational investment in-vestment or place to live. LARGE restored old home, over 2,000 sq. ft. with possibilities for expansion located in quiet area of town near bus stop. $42,000. NEW LISTING: Large duplex with two bedrooms In each unit. Quiet location with nice garage. $48,000 with possible terms. GOOD BUILDING SITE on Rossle Hill overlooking town, $7,000. : WE CAN show you anything in town, condos, lots, homes, whether It's listed with us or not. Bill McComb . 649-8550 or 649-9280 (home) Seldom has there been a better time to take advantage ad-vantage of Park CKy potential. Are you looking for a home? An investment? Income In-come property? Combine these goala Into one with a duplex. We have three lor sale. Offering a good choice of terms, price and size. . Call today for details. Bmqwfoend Goiwsntttons HAPPEN INSIDE THE TREASURE MOUNTAIN INN'S NEWLY REMODELED CONFERENCE FACILITIES Take advantage of our Bicentennial overnight rate of $17.76 plus tax , We'y happily make yxirgolf,teorolh , Coffee ShopToining Room, Lounge on premises CALL US at 649-9241 IN PARK CITY Metes By Jay Meehan . ? "Seems 1 ike we've been on the road a hundred years or more; Don't get me wrong - I'm not complaining; Sometimes we get tired, and kind of lonesome, top. So begins Hoyt Axton's latest album "Pearless"(A & M SP-4571). From a folk-song kallajf&An n C f V. a ...1.. ja. i. - i : uuuoutti ui iiic caiijr ous 10 a country music star of the '70s, it has indeed been a long road for Uai4 A 4am 1 i.t i. Mi i . . .", aauvl n a ill ir ii ii i ii is us iii nrinn n 1 m q n rv nic V I " " - IV litttl M II V musical entouraee to Park Citv's r uuunge mis r riaay nignt. Also on the bill are country singer Katy Moffat and Utah's own swing band.the great Weber River Wranglers With Mr. Axton's fame growing, no doubt he has been playing large concert dates, but the gentle giant with the big grin seems to come across more totally within the intimate at- moshpere of a club. No doubt this Friday night will be one of Park City's all time musical happenings. Hoyt Axton's enjoyment of performing becomes immediately obvious to anyone attending at-tending one of his shows. Back in the folk days he once answered a request for Jesse Fuller's classic "San Francisco Bay Blues" by first apologizing that he could never seem to remember all the words, then singing the verses he did know at three different speeds so as to give the tune sufficient length. But the main musical growth of this man over the years has been in his songwriting. This is evidenced most notably in the LP's Country Anthem, Life Machine, Southbound and his aforementioned new one Fearless. (Fearless is Hoyt's Vk year old St. Bernard.) Three of his most successful recent singles have featured a strong up-front female harmony voccal line: Linda Ronstadt on "When the Morning Comes" and "Lion in the Winter" and Renee Armand on the catchy "Boney Fingers." Not exactly the 'beauty and the beast" but a super 'effective call juxtaposition of the strong and the sweet. myw&y, if you don't have your tickets yet, the C est Bon . Finn's Reata in Heber City, or KSOP radio in SLC and see if they have any left. Be there or be square. This Friday night at the C'est Bon Lounge. Doors open at 7 p.m. One other highly recommended concert will be going down this weekend at the University of Utah. The world famous "Boys of the Lough" (pronounced lock) will be bringing their special brand of traditional British Isles music to Kingsbury Hall this Sunday night at 8 p.m. Last summer at the National Folk Festival in Washington, D.C. the "Boys" got together with our own Deseret String Band and put on a workshop entitled "Old Ways in the New World." It was a demonstration of how the music of the old country had lived on in the colonies, and how this music fathered geographic evolutions which resulted in southern traditional, cowboy and western swing idioms.: Following the festival, the Deseret String Band went on a European tour, staying with the "Boys" in Scotland. During that stay the DSB invited their European cronies to visit them in Salt Lake City on their next American tour. This concert is the result of that invitation and will also feature the Deseret String Band on the eve of yet another European trip. They leave next week for. Switzerland as the only invited American group to the prestigious "Radio Romande Folk Festival." If the traditional accoustical sounds of Rodrams, Concertinas, North Umbrium Pipes, tin whistles, flutes, fiddles, mandolins, banjos and guitars are to your liking, this very timely bicentennial concert is certainley for you. This Sunday evening at 8 p.m. at the Kingsbury Hall. The "Boys of the Lough" in concert with the "Deseret String Band." f31 TTJT T7TTVT MIU ! ' , lALflflM H y.y" -r j Top of Main Street . Park City, lltjk--; You can mash our potatoes but you can't beat our meat (or our prices.) OPEN: 6-1 0:30 p.m. Weekdays OPEN: 61 1 p.m. Fri., Sat. & Sun. Tak the I r shuttle bus to th Alpin Prospector Hotel. Call us at 649-9975. |