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Show Wednesday, November 23, 1977 Page 4 ( ... ITS STILL OUT THERE INTERNATIONAL t Jerusalem Egyptian President Anwar Sadat told the Israeli parliament Sunday, "We accept j to live with you in a lasting and just peace." Sadat's declaration was broadcast around the world and it is the closest any Arab leader has come to recognizing Israel as an independent I nation in 30 years of intermittent wars. However, ; the Egyptian president insisted that Isreal must . withdraw from Jerusalem and other lands occupied oc-cupied in 1967 and that uprooted Palestinians must receive a homeland. Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin hailed Sadat for his "courage of heart" in coming to Israel and invited other Arabs to follow his example. Begin said he was personally prepared to travel to the capitals of neighboring Arab countries. He called on Arab leaders to open peace negotiations and declared: "Everything must be negotiated and can be negotiated." Beirut, Lebanon Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's visit to Israel sparked anger among many Arabs Sunday with Palestinian guerillas vowing to assassinate him and Syrian state radio urging Egyptians to overthrow him. Millions of Arabs listened to live broadcasts of Sadat's offer in the Israeli parliament to make peace with the Jewish state and activity in Beirut and other Mideast capitals came to a virtual vir-tual standstill as people gathered around their radios. ' Sadat's speech drew mixed reactions from the Arab world. Leaders of radical Arab states denounced it while officials in Jordan praised the speech and others remained silent. Hyerabad, India At least 670 people died in a cyclone that struck the coast of the southern Indian In-dian state of Andhra Pradesh Saturday, it was announced Sunday. Officials said the death toll could pass the 1,000 mark but the final figure cannot be calculated until the path of debris left by the storm was cleared. ,The Samachar news agency said more than 100,000 people were left homeless and 472 people were killed in the town of Guntur, where thousands of small huts were destroyed. a stunt to end all stunts. During a press conference the daredevil described what he called his "last and final act as a professional liferisker." Knievel said he plans to remove his spleen, install a guidance system in his body and then drop more than seven miles without a parachute from a World War II bomber to a landing in a haystack. The 39-year-old stuntman said he would attempt at-tempt the stunt next July 4 in either Las Vegas or Atlantic City, N.J. with a money-back guarantee guaran-tee if he fails. Birmingham, Alabama Former Klansman Robert Chambliss, 73, was convicted Friday of first degree murder and sentenced to life in prison for the death of one of four girls killed in a church bombing 14 years ago. The bombing took place on a Sunday morning, Sept. 15, 1963, after several months in which the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church had been used by the late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. as headquarters for civil rights demonstrations in Birmingham. The four black girls killed were in the basement changing into choir robes when up to 15 sticks of dynamite exploded. Alabama Attorney General Bill Baxley said Chambliss was the ringleader of a group involved in-volved in the bombing and predicted more indictments indict-ments would be forthcoming. Virgin, Utah It's hard to find a virgin in Utah's Washington County. Roadsigns giving directions to the tiny community com-munity of Virgin in the southwestern portion of the state disappear as fast as the Utah Department Depart-ment of Transportation can put them up. One highway official speculated that signs saying virgin rz mnes must make good converr sation pieces. Washington An agriculture Department of ficial said the average family will have to pay up to six per cent more in food prices next year but there are indications than an improving economy could help offset the increase. The higher food prices will be caused by rising costs for transport, processing and selling food after it leaves the farm, according to Kenneth Farrell, acting chief of the department's Economic Research Service. i, Kenya Ugandan President Idi Amin . .. ... . ' . ,t d the United JSffli'ttb'"" MfaiWhU.Commerce Department issuedl. a i tpvu i unci nig ?uvuui agcmcm iui JUU UUlliei b. It said the nation's output of goods and services grew at an annual rate of 4.7 per cent in the third quarter. It takes an annual growth rate of more than four per cent to create new jobs. Washington The State Department told Cuba Thursday it has destroyed the prospect of improved im-proved relations, for the present, by sending more troops to Africa when it promised to withdraw with-draw some. "In light of the developments of increased Cuban activity in Africa," State Department spokesman Hodding Carter III said, "it would appear that we have gone as far as we can toward normalization at this time." The move was a measure of President Carter's displeasure with Cuba's "colonial" style military buildup in Africa, which he expressed in an interview last Friday. i Nairobi accused "sabotage" his regime and threatened to retaliate against Americans inside and outside Uganda. He said he had been in touch with terrorist groups abroad who are willing to defend Uganda against the alleged sabotage. Amin's remarks apparently were prompted by reports from the United States that the Carter administration planned to restrict imports from Uganda because of Amin's human rights record. It is estimated that more than 100,000 Ugandans have been killed in reigns of terror since Amin seized power in 1971. London Two distinguished British astronomers said Thursday that life on earth could have come from outer space and major epidemics like influenza in-fluenza and the plague may still be coming from there. Sir Fred Hoyle and Prof. Chandra Wickramasinghe speculated that the essential building blocks of life were not formed in the "primeval soup" of primitive earth but in the core and tails of comets. Their article in New Science magazine suggested that about four million years ago a comet crash-landed on earth, bringing with it the primitive organisms from which all life has evolved. NATIONAL Los Angeles Stuntman Evel Knievel, recently Washington A group of scientists opposed to nuclear power charged Thursday that serious accidents are 20 times more likely than the government's basic estimate and may kill thousands in the next few decades. , The Union of Concerned Scientists criticized the "Rasmussen Report" used by the government govern-ment and forecast some 14,400 cancer deaths due to nuclear power plant accidents within the convicted of beating a television executive with a next 23 years if the nation's nuclear program baseball bat, has announced that he will attempt grows rapidly. 53 At the Golf Course Lunch Hours 11:30 -3 p.m. Open Monday - Saturday 6a.m. until 3:30 p.m. Sunday Brunch 11 am. untx3p.m. Children's Portions Available 649-7177 Open 7 Days a Week D..l,ln.l I L. O O . n . ui camast, huhch at aunaay truncn f "'Sticking Our Finger In The Dike" The Park City Fire District is currently revamping revam-ping its meeting format and preparing for a long-range, five-to-ten-year master plan. "We're now merely sticking our finger in the dike," said Fire Commissioner Com-missioner James Schnirel. "We must go after federal funds and in order to do that we must have a good master plan." The Park City District, which is comprised of both the Park City and the Summit Sum-mit Park areas, has been in existence for two years. A group of over 600 citizens, feeling that Park City's growth had "eroded the quality of fire protection," petitioned Summit County to form the Park City district separate from the North summit and the South Summit Sum-mit districts. The first three appointed commissioners who served a two-year term were Mary Lehmer, Clem Hansen and Jim Schnirel. Hansen and Schnirel then ran for a four-year term and appointed Tom Snellen- . berger to replace Mary Lehmer after her resignation. The fire district, still in the formative stages, is planning plan-ning to build an addition to its Park Avenue station and eventually purchase a ladder lad-der truck. At its next meeting it will discuss the possibility of providing a salary for volunteers attending atten-ding drills and answering calls. "At this point the Board finds itself addressing many problems and not doing operational board. Larger issues are being scheduled while we enter into too much operational detail that should be the prerogative of the fire department under the direction of the chief." "The Board is, therefore, forced to take a look at its total operation, set its own priorities and proceed while delegating the operations of the department to the chief where it rightfully belongs," he continued. "To effect this more efficient operation will require a clearer definition of responsibility for both the Board and the department as well as more accountability." accoun-tability." Some of the topics to be discussed by the fire board within the next few months include: 1. Fire Chief-Paidnon paid 2. Departmental operations accountability. Status reports on a reasonable time frame for a volunteer department. Topics are as follows: (a) equipment, (b) training, (c) general operations 3. BoardDepartment Fiscal Policies, Department Budget ' ? 4. Board Budget Management: (a) set up accounting ac-counting system, (b) auditor 5. Personnel Policies: performance per-formance standards for officers, of-ficers, men (persons) retirement, pay charter, etc. 6. District communications, com-munications, public relations department, etc. 7. Mutual Aid Agreement 8. Fire PreventionInspection PreventionInspec-tion Program 9. Masters Planning: (a) r .... No Cover No Membership Needed 368 Main Street 649-8981 6 to 1 1 p.m. 8.95 6.95 St 1VS VfK0 justice to some-oJ1rje reMlfftnihipJ with other problems at hand," Schnirel government agencies, (b) said. "We have slipped from grantsmenship, (c) needs a policy making board to an assessment C88SISA?I8KSSAr88B.. crab, scallops, and shrimp sauteed with mushrooms and garlic CtlBZUBS ST. JACQUES , scallops and mushrooms served with a white wine sauce nwu mi nmtm 7.95 baked sole stuffed with shrimp, served with a white wine sauce Hi t vf o ne CLAM U ViUtJl JUUO ...... U.OJ select sections, served hot with lemon and drawn butter sals watm umn mil . . . . 14.45 8 to 10 oz., served with lemon and drawn butter em 65..... .......6.95 petite Tenderloin 4 oz. steak urn nit boibbuisi. . . . . . . 5.95 covered with mushrooms and red wine sauce nif immmm ...... ... 6.95 cubes 0 Filet sauteed in red wine sauce TE2E?tlOI5 mil ........... 9.95 Moncfrt USD A top choice, 8 oz. SOT STUB .......... . . .9.95 Monfort USDA choice 12 oz. sssr iiisi mil ............ 9.95 sauteed mushrooms with rice, served faming C11TMVBIUIB m TW8 .... .21.95 Tenderloin center cut served laming BIACKLA M M8SS8 ......... . .8.95 Tenderloin baked in Italian tomato sauce and cheese SAiABBAB .....3.95 beverage, baked potato, and dessert included vnu Wr fun ift UX&Al AO MAIN STREET, PARK CITY Hours 5:30-10:30 p.m. All entrees incfudeYaTad b'ar,T)akedpotato with butter ( sour cream, beverage and dessert.. . mi I MF liver Kimi Ctato This Friday & Saturday Night: The band you liked so much at Halloween DOORS OPEN AT 9 - 1 COME EARLY AND STAY LATE 19 t : : |