OCR Text |
Show Page 16 Wednesday, March 29, 1978 by Quicksilver Stereotyping anything can lead to dangerous assumptions, especially when one stereotypes filmakers. Ingmar Bergman, for example, is thought to be a director who is interested in creating personal psychodrama's, to the exclusion ex-clusion of anything political. Yet The Serpent's Egg, Bergman's latest film, is one of the finer looks at the cause of the produced. The Serpent's Bergman film, but it sociological interests as psychology. The film chronicles an become trapped in Berlin tLJlt 30 KAC End Atiyah Exhibit FIS Races Men and Women GS, Resort High School Tennis, Ten-nis, P.C. vs. Ougway, Away, 3:30 p.m. 1 April Fools Day Snowmobile NASTAR, Resort, 1:30 pun). KAC Mary M. Atwater's Weavers Guild of Utah Exhibit Opens Recep tion, 3-5 p.m. MOUNTAIN FISHERY The most unique dining experience in the Rockies. Set in a casual grotto-like atmosphere, we offer nearly 30 items baked, broiled, stuffed, steamed, poached, sauteed pr raw from abalone and.cja,bjo swprdfish and snapper. Specialty is live Maine lobster. Everything is prepared from our . original recipes. Open 6:00 - 11:00 p.m. daily. 368 Main Street. 649 8981. Master Charge and Visa card accepted. I HE CORNER STORE The corner store of your Park City vacation! Come delight in our deli treats: fine meats and cheeses in every sandwich, warm, fresh donuts, delicate omelettes, memorable cookies. There's a place for you at the Corner Store. Indoor and outdoor seating or Take it Away" up the mountain or back to your condo. Catering, too! We're at the Resort Plaza, 649 8600. THE CLAIMJUMPER Set in the historic Claimjumper Hotel, this first-rate steakhouse serves the famous Baseball Steak as a specialty, and Prime Rib in their own private club downstairs in the Down Under. Old whisky bottles serve as menus. Open 6:00-10:00 Sun.-Thurs., Fri-Sat. 6:00-11:00. Down Under, Un-der, 5:00-12:00. 573 Main Street, 649 8051 . CAFE RITZ Now in its second year of operation, this Gay 90s-style 90s-style restaurant is dominated by a beautiful oakwood bar and a true old-fashioned expresso brewer, replete with brass fittings and polished silver spouts. The specialties are crepes and fondues, and the French onion is said to be fabulous! Open seven days weekly from 5:30 to 10:30 p.m. 402 Main Street, 649-9998, SH EN AN IG AN S Of f efs the delectable combination of delicatessen sandwiches on bakery fresh German breads and ice cream delights including shakes, malts, splits, sodas and cones. For light lunchers or side orders, there is a well stocked salad bar with everything from sunflower seeds and croutons to potato and bean salads. The menu also includes tempting homemade soups. Open Tuesday through Thursday from nxin until ( p m. and from 12 noon until 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Take out service is also available. 323 Main Street. 649 8682 MILETI'S Park City's only Italian restaurant. A casual but elegant atmosphere serves as an excellent setting for shrimp and escargot appetizers, veal piccata, scampi, fettuccine, spayhetti. Sicilian pizza, spumoni and alpine cakes. Moderately priced. 412 Main Street. Dinner hours are from 6:00 p.m. until 10:00 nightly. BUMPS BURGERS Park Cnv .istesi himjiT and fn.-s WV have chili, sundaes and shakes T,ik- v. kii ltnl !! mn rise of Nazism ever Egg is obviously a shows that the man has well as his penchant for American Jew who has in the late 1920's. His -TwX Senior Citizens Meeting 5:00 p.m. Bookmobile 9 a.m. 4 p.m., Timberhaus, Marsac & Middle School County Commission! Meeting 10 a.m.,1 Coalville KAC-Weavers Guild Exhibit brother having just committed suicide, the man turns to his sister-in-law in hope that, together, they will be able to survive the economic chaos jdeveloping around them. The story becomes complicated by the police discovery that the man's brother might have been murdered, rather than taking his own life. The film continues con-tinues to chronicle both the psychological and economic plights of the man and the German nation. Bergman uses David Carradine to play the lead role in The Serpent's Egg, and Carradine provides a very creditable performance. He is a gifted actor, and one of the few performers working today who was able to throw off a television-imposed stereotype (Grasshopper in "Kung-Fu") and work in serious films. Bergman films require actors able to electrifyingly portray por-tray a wide range of human emotions, which Carradine, unlike some highly regarded American actors, is able to deliver. The Serpent's Egg uses Liv Ullman in the JUiJ Fire District Meeting 7:00 p.m., Mem. Bldg. KAC Weavers Guild Exhibit sa$eo convenient arive-in window or stay and eat with us. Open 1 1 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. Located across from Mt. Air Mall at Iron Horse Road and Park Avenue. ADOLPH'S Now at its new golf course location, 1541 Thaynes Canyon Drive. Local resident and proprietor Adolph Imboden specializes in Swiss cuisine in a formal European style. Adolph's offers a wide range of hors d'oeuvres from white asparagus vinaigrette to smoked Nova Scotian salmon. Entrees range in price from $5.95 to $12.50 and include Swiss veal bratwurst, coq au vin rouge, filet mignon gastronome, roast duck and the chefs special, roast rack of lamb. The dessert "menu features Swiss chocolate mousse and cheesecake. Adolph's has a Sunday Brunch from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. with a salad bar, salmon, hot plates, omelettes and eggs benedict. Price is $5.75. including beverage. Reservations, 649-7177. CAR 19-The railroad mouiof the Car 19 brings back the adventurous adven-turous spirit of the silver boom. The menu, which includes a variety of seafood dishes and steaks is complemented by a sumptuous sum-ptuous salad bar. The Club Car 19 (temporary memberships readily available) hosts excellent jazz and bluegrass musicians and the Caboose (open daily from 116 p.m.) serves hot lunch specials and hearty sandwiches. Dinners at Car 19 are served from 5:30 -10:30 p.m. 649 9338. PROSPECTOR SIRLOIN-Once a miner's lodge, the Prospector offers a historic, turn of the century atmosphere for dining. Victorian chandeliers and an antique brick fireplace add to the decor. AH steaks are USDA prime top sirloin. Alaskan king crab legs and rack of lamb are specialties. Creamy gourmet soups accompany each meal. Wine service with meals and cocktails are served in the Prospector Sirloin Club. Located at the top of Main Street in the Alpine Prospector Lodge; the restaurant is open from 6:00 p.m. until 10:30 p. m daily. MAIN STREET EXPRESS a quaint spe,ikiiy .mnosphere is to be enjoyed at the Main Street Express. The nvlU atmosphere at-mosphere of the Express is enhanced by original stone walls from the 1800s and a complementary turn-of the century decor. Local musicians will provide entertainment from an antique piano on occasion, as diners seated in pews and booths delight in a menu of seafood, steaks and omelettes. The Express has a rear entrance and ample parking on Swede Alley. 442 Main Street, open seven days a week. 4 p.m. until 1 1 p.m. APRIL 1 M T W T f $ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 IS 16171819 20 21 22 '3.242526272829 CHURCH SERVICES St. Mary's Saturdays 5:30 p.m. Sundays 9:00 a.m. Sundays 11:00 a.m. St. Lawrence In Heber Weekdays 8:00 a.m. LD.S. Sundays Priesthood 8:00 a.m. Sunday School 9:30a.nv Sundays Sacrament 5:30 p.m. Sundays Fast meeting In Snyderville Sundays Priesthood 11:00 a.m. Sunday School 12:30 p.m. Sacrament and Fast meeting 2:00 p.m. Community Church Sunday Schools "nc 11:00 a.m. Church Services- 11:00 a.m. raoo leading female role, yet the role she is asked to portray does not seem to mesh with her enormous enor-mous talent. As the sister-in-law who works in a1 cabaret by night and as a prostitute by day, Ullman fails to bring a convincing spark to the role. This failure seems to slow the pace of a film that is relying upon its tempo to build susDense. While the film is one of Bergman's less successful suc-cessful creations, there are moments that reveal the man's social consciousness. His treatment of Nazism is an exceptional look at the child that FaEheredThe fwfsted man. Forfhis alone the film is worth watching. The Serpent's Egg is not up to the standards Bergman set with some of his previous films, but, as a whole, it is a good film, nonetheless. Rising Medical Costs Put Squeeze On Middle Class Spiraling health-care costs are putting a severe strain on middle-income Americans, despite the fact that the quality of medical care is higher than it has ever been, according to Utah Foundation, the private, non-profit research agency. Government-supported programs pro-grams that provide care for the poor are a significant factor in rising health care costs which are moving ahead of the general inflation in-flation spiral. "The wealthy and the poor have available the best medical care ever known, but the middle class is caught in a tight squeeze," the Foundation notes in a research report released this week. Top-quality medical aid for the poor is largely provided through a government-sponsored program known as Medicaid, which has become the largest single public welfare program in the nation although it is only a little more than 10 years old. Ironically, Medicaid is a major factor in the inflation of health care costs. "It should not be forgotten that every American is a potential" ""candidate' ."'for Medicaid," said oWtJfah'' Social Services administrator. ad-ministrator. "At today's medical costs, even the Wealthy can use up their resources in a short time un-Ber un-Ber emergency conditions." f Medicaid and its companion com-panion program Medicare began operation in the 1966-67 1966-67 fiscal year. Since that time the rate of increase of health care costs in the United States has increased sharply (from an average annual increase of 8 to one of nearly 13), while the outpouring of Federal dollars into the health-care marketplace has more than MAC's DONUTS Open seven, days a week, 24 hours a day during the height of the ski season to serve the needs ot those wanting to be first in line at the gondola as well as-those with the 3 a.m. munchies. The donut shop features yeast and cake donuts, longjohns, cinnamon rolls, bear claws and jelly-filled donuts. Beverages include coffee and hot chocolate. Additional snacks of popcorn and soups are available. Located at 580 Main Street (behind the Kindersport). Large orders can be arranged for conventions or visiting ski groups, 649-7894. THE EATING ESTABLISHMENT Famous for "the best omelettes this side of Poison Creek." Other breakfast specialties include wheatgerm pancakes and "cosmic" cakes while a variety of luncheon burgers and sandwiches, homemade soups and a salad bar are designed to satisfy even the hungriest of miners. Open Monday through Saturday, 7:00 a.m. until 10:00 p.m.; Sunday 7:00 a.m. until 7:00 p.m. Beer available. 319 Main Street. CHARLIE'S OYSTER BAR Apres skiinsJioxs d'oeuvres and munchies including oysters on the half shell, shrimp tern-" pura, scallops, artichokes, burgers and an occasional treat of "Oysters Charlie." Open every day from 5 p.m. until midnight. At the Silver King Club, 1505 Empire Avenue. Live music Tr.esday through Sunday. MOUNTAIN FOOD SERVlCE-includes the base cafeteria at the resort center, the Mid-Mountain Lodge and the Summit House restaurant at the top of thecjondola. It offers a full line o fast foods and hot beverages for the skier desiring a quick warm-up by blazing firesThe Mid-Mountain features a complete line of hot sandwiches and a "Happy Hour" with twenty-five cent beers from 2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. daily. Lodging and convention facilities available through Mountain Food Services. RUSTY NAIL Enjay a. glowing apres ski scene with ski movies and disco dancing. The menus includes a variety of sandwiches,' sand-wiches,' burgers and spaghetti from 4 p.m. until 9 p.m. weekdays and noon until 1 a.m. on weekends. Located at the Resort Center upstairs from Wolfe'sCheck with the Nail for weekends of scheduled live entertainment, 649-8190. THE CATTLE COMPANY RESTAURANT Featuring a friendly western atmosphere specializing in charbroiled choice top sirloin and New York steaks, scallops, prawns and crab. Chuck wagon salad bar, one of the most complete in Utah and baked potato served with every dinner. Child's portion availabi .. Open 7 days a week. 610 p.m., reservations invited. Located al 1064 Park Avenue. tripled in its annual rate of increase (from 8 a year to 26 a year). This has inevitably had a significant effect on health care cost inflation, in-flation, although it is recognized that there are many other factors contributing con-tributing to the price rise. Most public criticism of government sponsored health care programs is directed at Medicaid, which is a combined health-welfare program with split Federal-state-local responsibilities. Medicare, an insurance-type program for the elderly operated in conjunction with Social Security, appears to be operating much more effectively. ef-fectively. While the volume of Federal spending in the , medical care field about ; $34 billion in 1976 is of con-. con-. cern to American citizen-taxpayers, citizen-taxpayers, evidence that a substantial amount of money going into Medicaid is being wasted or stolen is even more disturbing. Official estimates of the amount lost to fraud and abuse in the Medicaid operation run around $900 million a year, but , some Senate investigators in-vestigators estimate the total may be nearly double that r amount.'' A" natfonaf 4 magazine recently charged that "chiselers have... bored into almost" every phase of the program," although noting that those who criminally abuse the program represent "only a tiny portion of all participants inMedicaid." In Utah there are as yet no reliable 'figures to say whether fraud and abuse in Medicaid have reached serious proportions. Most of those working with the program, both in and out of government, feel there is nothing in Utah to compare with abuses found in the larger population centers. A Adult Drug Abuses A special program on drug abuse prevention will be available to adult groups throughout Utah during the last two weeks in April and the first week in May. This program is part of continuing efforts to inform Utahns about how drug abuse is best prevented. The program, conducted by one or two professionals in the drug or alcohol abuse field, will emphasize activities ac-tivities which have proved successful in drug abuse new fraud and abuse-control section has recently been established in Utah, but has not yet developed a sufficiently suf-ficiently broad data base to make a report. In the area of medicaid costs, Utah's experience appears ap-pears to have paralleled that of the larger states, but on a considerably reduced scale. In the second year of the program's operation in Utah (1967-68 medical assistance payments were $9.8 million, which was less than half the amount expended for cash assistance payments. paymen-ts. In fiscal year 1977, medical assistance had grown to $51.1 million, 28 more than was expended for welfare cash assistance payments. Largest single area of IsBS II CARRIES, -1 n A MOIETY IsA " At OF WEAPONS. A VARIETY AMERICA'S NEWEST FIGHTER. P16 WEIGHS 22,000 POUNDS, IS 48' LONG,, COSTS $8 MILLION AND IS EXTREMELY MANEUVERABLE. SO FAR, ONLY 5 ARE IN SERVICE. ISRAEL WANTS TO BUY 15. MOTHER LODE Grab a snack and a cold one at the oldest saloon on Main Street. Choose from a selection of traditional standbys hot and cold sandwiches from grilled cheese and burgers to Dagwoods. Portions of Arly's homemade chili are served with each sandwich. Hours are from noon to 2 a.m. seven days a week. Live entertainment on Friday and Saturday from 9 p.m. until 1:30 p.m. C'EST BON-Located in the C'est Bon Hotel at 1255 Empire.' C'est Bon dining offers a menu of tempting specialties including Darnes de Saumon Grilles au Beurre Escargot, Australian Lobster, Lob-ster, Poisson Florentine, Veal Madere, Canard Montmorency and Boeuf Wellington. Dine in the iet formal Telegancg. of a warmly lit contemporary atmosphere, with reminiscent ram-' blings-nostalgic, romantic melodies -by Eric Lundberg at the piano. The C'est Bon dining room is open nightly from 6:00- 10:00. Continental breakfast. MAIN STREET DELI Park City's newest delicatessen with delicacies to satisfy even the most particular East Coast deli gourmands. Bagels, imported cheeses and beers, candies, European teas, guiches, grinders and a wide variety ofkrauts and salads are available at pleasing prices. Salami, bologna arv ' 1 tipastos, pepperoncinni, cheesecake come by for a quick snack pr dine in the deli atmosphere complete with red checkered table clhs, neat rows of rare spices and refrigerated display cases. Catering services available. 523 Main Street, 649-7250. Open 11 a.m. until midnight Sunday through Wednesday and 11 a.m. until 2 a.m. Thursday through Saturday. THE GUESTHOUSE-is a new restaurant in the Park City Resort Plaza which is next to the main entrance in the Silver Mill House, prominently marked by its steepletower. This charming restaurant has been redecorated to a turn-of the-century motif featuring steaks, fish, and twospecialties:orangejglazed Cornish game hen, and teriyaki steak flambeau for two. All major credit cards accepted. POTATO JOHN'S Located under the large yellow awning at the steps of Park City's Resort Plaza. P.J.'s features a unique blend of audio visual and live entertainment including daily video filming of the day's fun on the slopes. A bill of fare ranging from burgers of all kinds and homemade soups to south of the border treats and vegetarian items. Open daily 31 1 p.m., 649-8616,. LA PAVILUON-Located atop the Park City Racquet ciub, this' unique restaurant offers international cuisine served family style and prefix prices Each evening you will find a delightful culinary surprise. Call for reservation sand information. 649-8080. prevention. The focus is on action that adult groups or communities can take to prevent drug abuse in people of all ages. The presentation will actively ac-tively involve participants in discussions and in exploring their ideas and feelings on the subject. Arrangements for these programs can be made by contacting the Utah State TJIvTsion orAlcohblfsm and" Drugs, P.O. Box 2500, Salt Lake City, Utah 84110. The phone number is 533-6532. Utah Medicaid expenditure is nursing home care. Two recent changes in Federal regulations have sharply increased in-creased Utah's costs in this area. Reimbursement of nursing home operators has been changed from a "fixed rate" schedule, where the state and the home operators agreed on acceptable charges, to the new Federally mandated "reasonable cost" schedule under which operators are reimbursed for costs actually ac-tually incurred, with liberal Federal regulations defining eligible costs. Federal regulations also forced the closing of many older nursing nur-sing homes and new ones have been constructed at much higher basic investment. invest-ment. THE U.S. AIR FORCE'S is a plane designed , to outfight any other plane, it ; is a $16 million i sophisticated MARVEL THAT rati , CLIMB TO 98,425' IN 3 MIN., 28 SECONDS AND IT WILL FLY 33 MILES A MINlITF I THE F -1 5 EAGLE lS.'". oj LUNb AND WEIGH5 4o,nm J HAVE OUTLASTED MANY CREATURES THAT HAVE ROAMED THE EARTH. THEY HAVE BEEN AROUND AN ESTIMATED 250 MILLION YRS. SOME 3,500 SPECIES EXIST, EX-IST, SCIENTISTS SAY. THEY CARRY BACTERIA BAC-TERIA EXTERNALLY. |