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Show Page 4 Wednesday, November 17, 1976 Ycio'llO brcorcr EES ODD INTERNATIONAL Beirut Syrian armored brigades moved into position Saturday for the final phase of a plan to halt fighting in Beirut and bring an end to the 19 months of civil war. According to Christian sources, a 3,000 man birgade was moving toward the central Lebanese Chouf Mountains to protect Christian villages there from Moslems and their Palestinian allies. Palestinian guerrillas of the so-called rejection front, told newsmen that they have been ordered by their leaders to accept the Syrian peacekeepers without resistance. Despite optimism for a near settlement from both sides, sporadic shelling and sniping continue to rock the embattled country. "We will abide by the ceasefire decision," said an Arab guerrilla fighting near Beriut. "But our i ommand has told us that we should respond to any fire on us. We respond with strength sufficient to make sure they don't fire on us. Munich Exiled Soviet author Alexander Solzhenitsyn's latest book reports that .Soviet price hikes and wage cuts led to a bloody uprising in 1962, when troopers called in to crush the rebellion killed 70 to 80 persons. s Solzhenitsyn presents a detailed account of the incident in his final volume of "The Gulag Archipelago," which deals mainly with the Soviet Union's secret police, prisons and labor camps. The third volume has just been published in German. Cario Saying he considers it "an obligation" and telling Americans, "I have President Anwar Sadat called on the United States Saturday to supply Egypt with arms. Addressing a group of U.S. Senators, Sadat also urged President-elect Jimmy Carter to help promote movement toward an overall Arab-Israeli peace settlement. "Let Carter take his time, but not for long because the problem of this area is so explosive," he said. Egyptaccording to Sadat.is ready for a peace agreement prividing, "Israel withdraws from the lands it occupied in the 1967 war and agrees to the establishment of a Palestinian state on the Jordan west bank and the Gaza sector." - ' . h c,ciii"i t , ;,"" Quebec5- Citizens of Quebec vote Monday on a new governmenT"that could result in a victory for i separatist! forces who would agitate for Quebec's independence from Canada. A large turnout was predicted for the crucial election among the province's 6.1 million populace With an electorate in excess of four million, j Pollsters indicate a close race between incumbent Premier Robert Bourassa's Liberal Party and the separatist parti Quebeco, which is led by Rene Levesque. The challenging party has promised a referendum within two years on whether Quebec remains within the Canadian confederation. IS3S3S3SSS The GAZEBO total hair care salon Professional hnth men 649-9501 m rat 38 JERRY FRKOVICH & Su (owner) s: S STILL OUT proven myself to you," hair styfng for A women 444 Main 3S8SSSSS SS9SS89S NATIONAL Boston Republicans lost the White House because they ignored the black vote and because the GOP vice presidential candidate, Sen. Bob Dole, was a: liability to the Ford ticket, according to the man responsible for much of the Ford campaign advertising. "Blacks were taken for granted, written off," Boston advertising executive Malcolm MacDougall said in a recent interview. MadDougall said of Dole: "You'll notice we didn't use him in any ads, and that speaks for itself." . Ford's pardon of his predecessor, Richard Nixon, "should have been addressed at the oqtset. We never confronted it. He (Ford) should have pointed out that it was very wise to pardon Nixon because if he hadn't, the trial would be just starting and the issue still would be hanging over the country." Atlanta A new strain of gonorrhea which penicillin has no effect on, has spread to 11 states and had been identified in several countries, the National . Center for Disease Control reported Tuesday. The CDC said the continuing increase in cases of the penicillin-resistant gonorrhea posed a serious threat to control efforts and is a growing concern of public health officials. Although other antibiotics can combat the new gonorrhea strain, a CDC veneral disease researcher said, "The cost could go from about 50 cents for a , shot of penicillin to three to five dollars and as much a $10 for other drugs. Honolulu The first "monster surf" in two and a half years hammered the Hawaian Islands Friday with 25 foot waves. The islands of Kauai, Oahu, Maui and Hawaii were all struck by the roaring surf. The smashing waves flooded numerous homes and knocked at least four houses on Oahu off their foundations. Washington The original Smokey Bear, a symbol of forest fire protection for 25 years, passed on to the "great honey tree in the sky," as a result of old age, authorities at the National Zoo reported on Tuesday - As provided by Congressional resolution, Smokey's remains were being shipped back to his original forest home in New Mexico. He will be buried at Smokey Bear Historical State Park near Captian Mountian where he was found in 1950. m U.rJt . -ui 1 sea Plains, Ga. President-elect Jimmy Carter ended his six-day stay on the Georgia coast Thursday, announcing he was "tired of vacation and ready to go to work." On Sunday, members of Carter's Baptist Church voted to end racial barriers to church members a move long supported by Carter. Carter, leaving Plains, stood in the rain and said, "I was proud of my church." Eleven years ago, the Carters were virtually the only members of the church to vote on the admission of blacks. seasoned firewood Cut to Length and Delivered TIM CONVILLE 649-8814 L COMPANY J JWJM. mi niss ISSUE THERE . Mt. Air Mall Scheduled For March Completion k, r M fc i'r " rJ!43j Skier's poison is the contrac tor's meat an axiom easily verified by contrasting the fair weather smiles of Park City construction workers with the teeth gnashing of frustrated hill sliders. Among the benefactors of the skier's curse is the Mt. Air Mall under construction on Park Avenue, adjacent to the Silver King Bank and the Mt. Air Market. Scheduled to be totally complete by mid-March with initial occupancy occuring as soon as mid-January, the mall will have an approximate approxi-mate 3) 3) mix of retail and office space. Most of the commercial enterprises will uHumeraai enterprises will be located on the lower level w mm continued from pager Congrats to Mr. Toly. What imagination. Old Mining Town decor, plus just a sprinkling of the Old West. Let's hope more Park City merchants follow Mr. Toly's ideas. AfYer Park Ave. condos, we gave up on Park City, but after a refreshing look on Main Street we can't wait to visit again. "Thank you Main Street." Mr. and Mrs Rulon Smith Hempsted, New York 'Gorilla' Warfare Editor: A "Jim Miller" of someplace some-place called "Whitepine, Utah" slandered my good name in last week's Newspaper. News-paper. 1 have a few things to say in reply. , (1) There is no "Jim Miller" (Source: the telephone directory). . (2) There is no such town as "Whitepine, Utah" (Source: Conoco Travelaid map). (3) Therefore, the attacks-in-print were : the . work . of some scoundrel too small to reveal his true identity. But perhaps this is just as well. Should I ever cross paths with Alias Miller I might not be able to control my temper and unleash upon him my skill in gorilla warfare. : ("Gorilla" should not be confused with "guerilla." The former is a form of martial arts developed in ancient Hollywood back s in the 20's and 30's. It is the means of self-defense employed by such greats as The Three Stooges AWtx and Costello. and Laura! HltfH?: It is sometin? irreverently referred to as "inonkey business." I will make no threats, but should Alias Miller be found one morning unconscious on his doorstep resulting from a j GO CLASSIFIED with US Mt. Air MaN of the two story complex while the offices will be housed upstairs. Bob Wells, general partner i the Michigan-Utah Company Com-pany which owns the mall building, revealed that the first leases will be signed this week. Wells said he has c6mmitments from a drug store, a clothing store, a fried chicken restaurant, a real estate office, a property management firm, an engineering firm, a land development company and a laundromat. It is also possible that a dentist's office and a jewelry store will reside in Mt. Air Mall. The'L' shaped building will ultiinately . consume 16,000 square feet of space, 13.3)0 of bad slip on a banana peel, it may be no accident the peel was in his path! Frank Erickson Peoa, Utah Thanks from Dockor Editor; I would like to thank all of those who supported me in the election. Your help was greatly appreciated, and although we did not win, we did make a few thousand people aware of the fact that we will no longer settle for the "leftovers" after Summit County has allocated ouir tax money. I also want to assure you that regardless of which side of the County Commissioner's table I speak from, I will continue to be there at every meeting or hearing where the Park City area's interests are at stake. One such meeting will take place Tuesday, November 23 at 7 p.m., concerning the fate of the Memorial Building. As a convenience to those who oppose continued County Funding, the meeting (a public hearing) will be held at the County Courthouse in Coalville, instead of Park City. I urge everyone who is concerned about where your taxes are spent, and the upgrading and continuing operation of the Memorial Building not to let the distance from here to Coalville Coal-ville be an obstacle. We are Citizens of Summit County. We should expect and demand that the County not .oplv, maintain but upgrade $hV:opeyn of the rial'Slwaiic. .There is no reason we should be treated as second class citizens. when we pay first class taxes. I hope Park City has the pride to show up "en masse" at the public hearing. Thanks again. Bruce Decker which will be rentable. "The space demand has really surprised me," Wells said, "The project has been received very well from a tennant point of view." Designed by architect Ted Warr, the mall is designed to present an bid mining town appearance similar to Moana's registration building build-ing across the street. Of special note is the type of businesses which will popu-' late the Mt. Air Mall. Most are not tourist oriented. Wells observed that the growth in year-round demand in Park City enables existing businesses to justify an expansion of facilities and space. 1 gCWGLj ddti dMtes 7 FREE SITS V A will 'u u 1 u stop i USSTWr. MEASURE MOUNTAIN INN DArSMRKET,usTop POSTOFFCEfclausroP lafCLAIMJUMPER BUS STOP UNION PACIFIC DEPOT lrliSilllSiSl ' III 8 am to 10 pm mrl Daily. MOUNTAIN REALTY mM BUS STOP BUS STOP I ..... i WOODHAU'S " I BUS ST0P PARK CITY -I I ST0P""', RESORT CENTER BUS STOP" I TEop I I I I m LINE , ,, " SANK j5sTOP fluS ., ' m ,W'jr?i iUs" wfcJKyrjsTppaiiil x-i, rtj uo in r iJBFHJi I , WJr I CRESCENT MT AIR I f f JBUS THREE KINGS ff " MARKET I I STOP 11 1 A CONOOS I , CONDOS , BUSSTCf.lt ) )J "JfsSTOP,, m condos I I, I H Sjw bus stop' j II ' JIW TOHt&Q Ji M CONOOS V CLA.MJUMPER 'jmmm I homestake - . O'BRIENS bus ST0v." y" tosaltlakei Wl NOVEMBER MOVIE MADNESS Thursday. Movamber 23 - THE KNACK. ..AND HOW TO GET IT v 8:00 PM at the Kimball Art Center, $2.00 , Friday, November 26 - TIGHT LITTLE ISLAND ' 8:00 PM at the Kimball Art Center, $2.00 M ADDED SKI ATTRACTIONS Monday. November 22 -LAST OF THE SKI SUMS A WINTER PARADISE . 8:00 PM at the Kimball Art Center, $2.00 . Saturday, November 27 -THE MAN WHO SKIED DOWN EVEREST 2 PM, 4 PM, 7 PM, 9 PM at the Kimball Art Center, $2.50 The first 200 riders Monday, November 22 receive: a free T-shirt. III III 1 !?.,' WW' |