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Show Page 4 SOURDOUGH & WHOLEWHEAT BREADS and more No Preservatives Beside the Cowboy Grub Below the Balsam Embers Behind Parley's K-Mart Beneath the Sporthaus ...and north of the Regency Theater GOT THAT? 'Sound Columh, At KAC The "Sound Column" Band, a Salt Lake based group of musicians and singers, will perform for . family audiences this Saturday Satur-day evening, 7:30 p.m., at the Kimball Art Center. "One Hundred Years of American Popular Music" is slated for the evening performance per-formance featuring musical hits from yesterday and today. Children and grandparents grand-parents alike will enjoy the "Sound Column's" authentic renderings of musical favorites throughout the years. Ron Simpson leads the "Sound Column" which also features the talents of Dennis Den-nis Nichols on the keyboards and vocals, Rebecca Terry, percussion and lead vocals, Kevin Auernig, guitar and vocals, and Bob Campbell, percussion. Formerly the band for the Utah Stars, the "Sound Column" entertained for several years in the Sky Room at the Hotel Utah. Today, they provide the background music for many local and national television and radio commercials from their Salt Lake City recording recor-ding complex. This program is sponsored by the Kimball Art Center and supported by the Utah Rural Arts Consortium of the Utah State Division of Fine Arts and the National Endowment En-dowment for the Arts. Tickets for the upcoming Saturday evening performance perfor-mance are; Kimball Art Center members. $2; Adults, $2.50; Children, $1. For ticket reservationsinformation, reservationsinfor-mation, contact the Art Center Cen-ter at 649-8882. m ANNOUNCEMENT J J) J S r r We are pleased to announce a "first" I a in Park City dining: I I Soft, tuneful, romantic piano background music to I comDlement an excellent candle-lit dinner. 1 1 World traveler ERIC LUNDBERG'S reminiscent rumblings rum-blings at the piano--and occasionally on the accordion-bringing accordion-bringing back "new nostalgia" and international melodies we feel will truly delight you. You know, there's not much of this kind of music around any more. We are sincerely conlident you will thoroughly enjoy it. 'Appetizer. I s,,ir,;o! 3.00 Oysters on a Halt Shell 2.75 Sauteed Mushrooms 1.50 Shrimp Cocktail 3.00 French Onion Soup 1 .50 Clam Chowder 1.50 5 'Entrees All entree- intitule S.il.ul Vf! ilu lour l.iU.I Potato with Sour Cream, Chives or Butter oi Kite Pilot and Beverage Fresh Sole 'Filet poji bed in Habs IViiii 8.95 Trout Amandine 'J hi traditional Western iRamboW 'J rout 7.50 Dames de Saumon Grillees au Beurred Escarots Salmon basted in herbed but tor 7.95 Poisson Farcia a la Florentine 'Florida iRed Snapper prepaied Willi jtosli i;,ii ; dressing i-' v riV(' whole 10.50 Coquilles St. Jacques a la I'arisienne Seallops presented ill the shell simmerimj in ii white h i no same 7.50 Lobster Owo broiled 'Australian lobster tails 13.95 Alaska King Crab Scried, with h mon bulla 9.50 Crab & Steak 'Alaskan King Crab lea combined with a prime Jillot 10.95 Roast Duckling Montmorency One half duckling scn'cd With Wilt) nee coCcrcd with i k m jiimv jhnicd tablesidc 10.50 Veal Madere if aider Coal ieasonei) with mushrooms, shallots S-'Madae 8.95 New York Steak Charbroiled to ijoui speculations 9.95 Charbroiled Tenderloin Filet an,e 9.95 Medium 8.95 Turned os Henri IV et Choron Escoffier A torn dc jone iii 'treihh cooking. Medallions of beej on aitiehoke bottoms eoeed With bearnahc ihoron sam es 1 2 . 95 Boeuf Wellington Ohe ilassic combination oj beej. pate cy pastry. 'Flease allow 35 minutes jet pieparalion 13.95 Desserts Banana Hambe 2.50 Peaches Cardinal 2.75 Italian Rum Cake 1.25 Cheese Cake with Strawberries 2.00 Please ask y.u:t ..-!es about ( hiklren s limners Fifteen percent .m.ituMv aiKleii In hill loi groups ol si or more t.l n cm., at Wednesday, March 1, 1978 INTERNATIONAL Jerusalem Following a lengthy eight-hour debate on Sunday, the Israeli cabinet decided against any alteration of its policy regarding Jewish settlements on lands captured from the Arabs during the 1967 war. There had been speculation that Prime Minister Menachem Begin's government would change the policy to ease the strain on relations the issue has caused between Israel and the United States. It also had been expected that the cabinet might delay a decision on the occupied territories because of the deteriorating state of Egyptian-Israeli negotiations. By continuing its present policy, the Israeli government is sanctioning the expansion of existing settlements in the northern Sinai and endorsing plans to establish three new settlements set-tlements on the West Bank of the Jordan River. Peking Communist Party Chairman Hua Kuo-feng Kuo-feng began China's fifth National People's Congress on Sunday by urging military preparedness for the takeover of Taiwan. Standing Stan-ding beneath huge portraits of himself and Mao Tse-tung,. Hua said the People's Liberation Army, Ar-my, 3.5 million strong, "must make all the preparations necessary for the liberation of Taiwan," according to Peking'.s official Hsinhua news agency. Hua also said the struggle against "the two hegemonist powers, the Soviet Union and the United States, and in particular against Soviet social-imperialism, is on an upsurge higher than ever before." But the Chinese leader indicated that his nation would continue its policy of improving im-proving relations with the United States and the West. Tokyo The slaughter of 1,000 dolphins by Iki Island fishermen was defended by a Japanese fisheries official Sunday as "an act of self-defense self-defense or a life-and-death matter." Takashi Hashimoto, chief of the provincial fisheries division, said the dolphins will "learn a lesson" from the massacre and stop stealing the fishermen's catch. The fishermen, who call dolphins "gangsters of the sea" because they feed on their main catch, stirred international protests Friday after they lured some 1,000 dolphins to shore, clubbed them to death , and then dumped some of the bodies into the sea. The fishermen claim their catches were two thirds of normal last year because of the dolphins. Mangua, Nicaragua Leftist guerrillas and anti-government anti-government protestors clashed with government troops Monday. Gun battles and rioting followed an announcement by President Anastasio Somoza that he will continue to rule Nicaragua until 1981. Ten persons were reported dead and at least 50 others injured during the latest outbreak of violence in the turbulent nation. Critics of Somoza 's 11-year-old, right-wing regime claim he has maintained power through electoral fraud and repression. On Sunday, the president promised to appoint a committee of leading citizens to investigate the assassination last month of newspaper publisher Pedro Joaquin Chamoro, a vigorous opponent of Somoza's dictatorship. New Delhi Indira Gandhi's political party pushed here to the forefront of Indian politics Monday with election victories in the big southern states of Andhra Pradesh and Kar-nataka. Kar-nataka. The Indira Congress Party, formed on January 2, picked up the 148 seats it needed for an absolute majority in Andhra Pradesh and won 152 of the 224 seats in the new Karnataka legislative assembly. The election results marked an astounding political comeback for Gandhi, who was ousted S STILL OUT THERE from power after serving 11 years as prime minister. NATIONAL Washington The Panama Canal treaties passed a crucial test Monday when an amendment that would have allowed American troops to be stationed in the Canal Zone for 20 years after the waterway is turned over to Panama was tabled by the Senate. The troop proposal had been characterized by Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd as a "killer amendment." He said the proposal would have unraveled the treaties, ' 'opening them to renegotiation . " Youngstown, Florida Eight persons were killed and at least 67 were injured Sunday when a freight train left the track, causing a tank car carrying deadly chlorine gas to rupture. "It was instant death," said Al Smith, an emergency troubleshooter for the Environmental Environmen-tal Protection Agency. "The kind of death we're talking about, it literally burns your lungs up." A National Transportation Safety Board official of-ficial said it appeared the derailment apparently was caused by a broken rail. The victims were reportedly all young adults or teenagers who were traveling on a nearby highway or hunting in the surrounding swamps . Waverly, Tennessee Five persons were killed instantly and six others died later of burns when a rail tanker car carrying propane gas exploded in a ball of fire Friday. More than 2,000 of Waverly's 5,800 residents were evacuated while a second derailed tanker was drained of 20,000 gallons of the gas. About 50 persons were injured in Friday's blast and ten of the critically burned were flown Saturday to burn centers in other states. "It was like we died and we've been to hell and back," said Carl Stokes, one of the burned survivors. sur-vivors. Seattle Bob Ingram has joined the arms race. Ingram, 28, is establishing an octopus farm beneath Pier 70 on Seattle's waterfront. He keeps the eight-arm sea creatures in plastic trash bags and hand-feeds them three times a week. Ingram plans to sell the octopuses to Alaskan halibut fisherman for bait. Washington The Labor Department reported Monday that the inflation rate doubled from 0.4 per cent in December to 0.8 per cent in January and .that workers' spendable income took the sharpest decline on record. A Bureau of Labor Statistics official said there was a "very strong and widespread rise in prices last month" which is "cause for concern" despite the apparent influence of bad weather. The consumer price jump and higher payroll taxes combined for a record three per cent drop in workers' spendable earnings. The worst previous decline recorded was a 1.6 per cent drop in August of 1973. Washington Millionaire rice dealer Tongsun Park pleaded innocent Monday to 36 criminal charges of trying to buy influence in Congress for the South Korean government. Park was arraigned in U.S. District Court in Washington even though the Justice Department has agreed to grant him immunity from prosecution in return for his testimony against other defendants. Grand Rapids, Michigan A Michigan trucker who mysteriously lost his sight while driving down a Kansas highway regained it after two hard sneezes. Francis Gilmore said his sight was restored seven days after he lost it. He was guided safely off the road by a motorist using a citizens band radio. "At first I thought I was hallucinating," he said. "Then I said to my wife, 'Honey, I can see you.' It was a miracle." g At the Golf Course Jig 8 4k, Original Swiss Fondue & Raclette Every Sunday Night call for reservations free shuttle service Special Sunday Brunch U-2:30 p.m. open 7 days a week Dinner 6-11 p.m. 649-7177 Lunch 11-3 p.m. Wed. - Sun |