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Show Page 11 i D J THE mm 6& ( lara's sense of humor is contagious. Many oilier people became sick last week. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) For your information "dissident" isn't Italian for automotive body work. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) People remember you as someone who is always laughing. What they forget is "One can smile and smile and still be a villain." PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20) Keep both feet firmly on the ground and you'll find it difficult to walk. ARIES (Mar.21-Apr.19) Be careful. A spark of inspiration could ignite the trash littering your mind. TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20) Copy the sterling qualities of others. It's a stainless steal. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) If you were born between midnight and 8 a.m., how did you learn to read so young? CANCER (June 21-July 22) You're too clumsy to be a pen and ink artist. The only thing you've drawn is blood while trying to put a point on. LEO (July 23-Aug.22) It's only because they're interested in your mental growth that people tell you to go soak your head. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.22) A friend is hiding something from you. Remember the proverb, "Sneak and ye shall find." LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Your neighbor's grass might be greener but think of all the manure he had to go through. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) A new romance will send your heart galloping but, true to form, you'll soon pull up lame and alone. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) One of your flights of fancy will be hijacked and taken to Peoa. PUZZLE Fifteen Utah cities are hidden in this block of letters. The cities may be spelled forward or backward and may run horizontally, vertically or diagonally. Can you locate all fifteen? JJLLLLLJLJ JLJLLJLJLJ--LJL JLLJLLJL!LJJL JL J!J J-L e opAJ LL jljjlj! jljl la JrJLLvJ-!JL ljl a jl a a jljl j a AAAJLAA AAAAJLAAA R E II A 6 r I o I n LAST WEEK'S SOLUTION r Help your Heart... m " i m 0 iRSOTHT i del icateasen restaurant open at S:00 fluffy omelettes loagels, lox & cream otieese Hot Danisti coffee, juice EAT BREAKFAST Where At fSt Mountain on the other hand. 405 Main Street API 11:30-6:00 Records & Tapes Antiques Second hand merchandise Ski Clothes Consignment Buy and Trade Paper Back Books SALE ALL USED CLOTHING Vl P'ce Main Street 649-8051 DOWN UNDER 6 A JL f t . .4' luS N GUEST ENGAGEMENT TOM DISTAD FEB., 17, 18,19,24,25,26 "ANDREA" Returns March 3, 4, 5 Council Member Bennett Stresses New Library Hours City C o u n c i 1 w o m a n Eleanor Bennett told her fellow council members Thursday night that she wants to do a "great deal of advertising" to make known the new hours and improvements im-provements now sported by the City Library. Bennett commended Violet Terry for the "excellent "ex-cellent job" she has done since replacing Mr. Delia Clegg. who suffered a fall and subsequently a stroke and has been unable to perform per-form her librarian duties. At the recommendation of Councilman Bennett and Mrs. Terry, the council approved ap-proved expenditure for library improvements and new hours of operation. Additional magazine subscriptions sub-scriptions along with new tables, chairs and curtains will be purchased. Also to be added are paperbacks and the best sellers list and new-hardback new-hardback children's books. New shelves have already been installed. Bennett noted that the library had been open "at odd hours" in the past and at her suggestion a Tuesday through Saturday schedule of 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. was adopted. adop-ted. She noted that an additional ad-ditional librarian will be hired to divide the hours w ith Mrs. Terry. The councilwoman also commended Mrs. Terry for the marked improvement in the physical appearance of the library. "It's all cleaned up and it's neat and nice," Miss Bennett commented. City Treasurer Bruce Decker suggested that a three dollar fee be charged for library cards instead of requiring non-property owners to have their card co-signed co-signed by a property owner. Miss Bennett opposed this move. She favored a deposit for visitors taking out books, she said, but added that she would not want to charge residents for a card. She predicted that persons new to town would not find it as difficult to secure a card from Mrs. Terry as it was from Mrs. Clegg. K it ) ' M W' B. Hilites f 5l g) by Tubular Wells i v it x w it , j ar 'w raFi "il'4 Been scanning, or half skimming half-sober old Tubular lately in disbelief? What could be better than an expensive transistor man who runs fast as speeding snowmobiles in slo-mo, do you ask? Or how can you beat a twirling, bespectacled bespec-tacled and bunned secretary who stops her spin in a patriotic beauty contest suit, ready to out-leap out-leap tall rabbits in a single bound? And, on top of that you've got cop after cop after cop with big social service consciences, big eyes, big noses, and big bosses and Big Business to ignore, big guns, big bad wolves to catch, and many more lives than even the luckiest alley cat. Dialogue more powerful than HO locomotives. Plus, just about everybody, everything-a car, a lamp, a new dress, a meal, a hot tip, a bummed cigaret-te-these days is super. And then, sandwiched between all these video shows more stimulating than an Archie comic book, the eighty thousand dollar corporate minutes suggest you start getting stroked in the morning or tell you ever so subtly that you need a new car or stink or have dry skin or yellow teeth and sewer breath or that you're fat and have the frizzies or that your wet head is dead. Yeah, KUED, Channel 7 is crumby-it has no phoniness or fakery or phlegmy flair-it tries to teach you, like you're some sophomore or something. Can you beat that? No, so join it this week: Wednesday, February 23, 9:00 p.m.-Great Performances"ChiJdhood: Great Day for Bon-zo." Bon-zo." Bonzo, a dog, leads his three new children masters into the mystery of his former master, a stranger the children found in their barn. Thursday, February 24, 9:00 p.m.-Classic Theatre: 'Edward II." Christopher Marlowe's gripping drama of violence and homosexual passion. Ian McKellen as Edward II. Friday, February 25, 9:00 p.m.-Documentary Showcase: To Expect Jo pie A Film About Living." Robert Hargrove, journalist, dying of cancer, made the last months of his life a kind of gift. Saturday, February 26, 7:30 p.m. -"David Copperfield." Episode Eight. For everyone who. never got past half way through the book. Sunday, February 27, 3:00 p.m. -"As Long as We're Together." Study of American family living in Micronesian islands, a contrast to their former hometown-Concord, Massachusetts. Monday, February 28, 8:00p.m.Microbes and Men: "A Germ is Life." Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch prove that specific germs cause particular diseases. Monday, February 28, 10:00 p.m.-Soundstage: "Leo Kotke and Loudon Wainwright." tied I MUttAn! I UUIUC SERVING LUNCH & DINNER WITH DISCO DANCING NIGHTLY No Cover Charge No Membership Necessary OPEN 11:30 A.M. TO CLOSING TUESDAY Oldies WEDNESDAY Country Western THURSDAY Dance Contest CASH AND OTHER PRIZES prj APRES SKI MOVIES - POPCORN f$ k Rusty Nail Luncheon kjgj SERVED DAILY 11:30 -2:30 ESS SPECIAL INCLUDING ONE BEER J J ggj $2-95 ffl - rarK uny nesori senior f m. pjpj EATING ESTABLISHMENT - Featuring tie best omeletts this side of Poison Creek. Open Mon.-Fri. 7:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; Sat. & Sun. 8-6. Beer available. 31 9 Main St. 649-8284. Dinner 5 p.m. to 1 0 p.m. Tuesday Ihru Sunday. T.M.T. COFFEE SHOP - Real Food. Open 6 am.-4:30 daily; 8 a.m.-4:30 Sunday. Breakfast .35 - $2.65, lunch .60 - $3.00. Beer available. MILETIS - Italian cuisene in a casual but elegant atmosphere. Open 6-1 0 p.m., 7 days a week. Moderately priced. Mini bottles and wine available. Private Club upstairs (Memberships 25). 41 2 Main St. 649-8211. ' DAS GASTHAUS - German & Austrian Schnitzel Schnit-zel a speciality of the house. Open from 5:30-1 5:30-1 0:30 Thurs.-Sunday. Beer available. Dinners priced from $2.50 - $8.75. 1284 Empire Ave. (The Resort Center) 649-8842. CORNER STORE - Delicatessen restaurant serving breakfast, lunch or dinner. Open 8 a.m. thru dinner daily. CHARLIE'S - Oyster bar, munchies, sandwiches, san-dwiches, fresh seafood. Open everyday from 3 p.m. till midnight at the Silver King Lounge. Live music Wednesday thru Saturday. RITZ Crepes, fondue, cappucino coffees and expresso, open seven days a week from 5:30 p.m. -10:30 p.m, state iquor store on premise, middle of Main Street 649-8494. SHENANIGAN'S - Park City's largest sandwich san-dwich selection also malts, splits, Sundays, sodas and cones. Take out service available. 323 Main Street, 649-8682. RUSTY NAIL - Serving lunch and dinner from 1 1 :30 till cbsing, disco dancing nightly, no membership necessary, no cover charge, Apres ski movies - popcorn, at the Resort Center Cen-ter 649-8 190. CAR 19 - Open weekdays 6-10:30 p.m. Fri. & Sat. evenings 6-11:30 pm. Dinners priced from $3.95 for salad bar to $20.95 for Chateau Briand for two. Private ebb downstairs. Unique store next door. SIRLOIN SALOON - Open Sunday thru Thursday Thur-sday 5:30 p.m. -10:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday Satur-day 5:30 p.m. - 1 1:00 p.m. serving the best in steaks and seafood. Located at the top of Main Street. Beer and set-ups available. GYPSY'S ARM - Serving specialties from around the wortl. Open daily for breakfast, lunch lun-ch and dinner. Sunday Brunch. Dinners priced from $4.50 to $7.95. Mini bottles and wine available after 4 pm. 649-8584. CABOOSE - Very reasonably priced meals, 8 a.m. -6 p.m. Monday - Thursday, 8 a.m. -midnight Fri. & Sat. Breakfast 8-1 1, lunch and dinner to cbsing. 440 Main Street. CLAIM JUMPER - Home of the famous basebal. Open 7 days a week. 6 p.m.-10 p.m. weekdays; week-days; 6 p.m.-1 1 p.m. weekends. Liqour store on premises, Main Street. DOWN UNDER - For a change of pace, try our prime rib. Private club open 7 days a week, prime rib served Fri. & Sat. starting at 6 p.m. in , the basement of the Claim jumper. (Si m L'si m Lsl Help your Heart Fund wmf I xi si mm 1 1 m v i v i v ill i ' ii virA I o n M anon VI Xf |