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Show Page 4 Thursday, May 1, 1980 The Newspaper . gad 7 U A qATrlERIINq plACE 1 DAILY SPECIAL Charburger & Beverage $2.75 Carry Out Available Phone 649-9536 HAPPY HOUR 5:00 til 7:00 p.m. daily DELI SANDWICHES, DARTS, FOOSBALL LADIES NIGHT, Tuesday & Thursday BOY'S NIGHT OUT, Wednesday Friday Happy Hour ALL Night LOCATED IN OLD TOWN (across from Utah Coal & lumber) New Expanded Bar Now Open 4:00 p.m. til 1:00 a.m. The Restaurant Open Monday thru Saturday Breakfast 8:00 a.m. til 11:00 a.m. Sunday Breakfast til 1 p.m. Lunch 11:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. . Serving Luncheon Special Monday thru Friday 442 Main Street BUILDItfj HOT TUBS & SAUNAS H H 6ERVICE6 If you would like to be listed in our Building Services just call 649-9014. Park City Spa & Tub Fiberglass spas, wood hot tubs, whirlpool baths Saunas, dry & steam Located in Brent C. Building, 649-8172 PAINTERS Summit Painting Interior, Exterior, Wall Coverings Residential, Commercial, Industrical Licensed Insured, Quality Workmanship Customer Satisfaction, Call 649-7628 anytime Painters & Stainers Licensed Painting Contractor Free Estimates, quality workmanship 649-8439 " SNOWPLOWING BUILDING MATERIALS Heber Lumber 700 West 100 South-Heber City 654-1 1 70 We Deliver! Anderson Lumber Co. Highway 248-Park City 649-8477 Everything for your building needs! PLUMBING Emporium Plumbing Installation & Repairs, Drain & Sewer lines cleaned Licensed & Bonded 649-851 1, 24 Hour Emergency Service Jim White Plumbing Sewer & Water, Repair & Remodeling New Construction :. " ::r-r: caii 64M497 Park City Snowplow 649-8250 WELDING Bob's Portable Welding Certified Satisfaction Guaranteed Pipe thawing 649-7544 CARPET Professional Carpet Cleaning Done at Reasonable Rates Call Ann at 649-9446 or Susan at 649-8269 A-1 Carpet Service Carpet Cleaning, Carpet Installation Carpet Sales 649-6011 Terry Penman MAINTENANCE A Bolding Co. Windows Washed, Construction Clean-up Complete Interior Cleaning Commercial & Residential Call 649-8795 for Free Estimates Spanking Clean Condos, Rentals, Parties, Restaurants, Offices also WINDOWS...Call now for FREE ESTIMATE 654-4657 or 649-3232 SERVICE & REPAIR Hot Rod and Yox Service & Repair Inc Plumbing, Water Heaters, Appliances & Electrical Repairs Fuel Saver Thermostats Installed; -Answering Service 649-7100 CONSTRUCTION Westbrook Construction Quality Workmanship, Custom Building & Remodeling No Job Too Small When Quality Counts Call West 649-7843 Telemark Construction General Contractors B-3071 8 Remodeling Custom Homes Passive Solar Orientation No Job Too Big or Too Small 649-8157 evenings WTC Construction Remodeling Specialist Licensed Contraction 2523 East 2100 South 485-2385, S.L.C. INTERIOR DESIGN Inside Story personalized interior design service Window and Wall Coverings, Furnishings, Carpet Paint & Accessories available in Park City 586 Main Street, 649-9332, 531-6262 LANDSCAPINGEQUIPMENT FOR RENT a Kubota Tractor with Front End Loader Scraper Blade Back Hoe Post Hole Digger Rock Rade Rotivator Available for either Snow Removal or Landscaping Hourly Daily Weekly Monthly rates available NEVADA SMITH & CO. 649-6170 Days649-6093 Evenings No Name Landscaping We're Cheaper Than Everyone Sprinkler Installation and Maintenance and All Types of Landscape Service Just Call J.B., 1-364-8710 EXCAVATION CLEAN-UP & HAULING Thomas O. Evans Construction & Clean-up Hauling, Construction Clean-up Construction Clean-up & General Hauling 649-6940 days 649-8763 evenings ELECTRICIAN Atlas Electric Daily Service to Park City & surrounding areas Established in Residential, Commercial, Industrial or Remodeling. Free Estimates Salt Lake City 262-8408 Reed Knight, Master Electrician B&D Excavation 649-7633 P & C Trucking & Excavation No Job Too Big or Too Small Excellent work, reasonable rates Hauling, basements, trenches Gravel & sand, general excavation Craig Kunke) Phone 336-2707 Evenings . REMODELING Better Living Builders We are remodeling specialists, basements, garages, carports, kitchens, baths, cabins, decks, etc. . Free estimates. Excellent references. . Workmanship guaranteed 1 year 1-969-8307, 1-943-5065, 1-467-2594 NATIONAL Washington Eight U.S. servicemen were killed and five seriously injured Thursday in a daring, but abortive, attempt at a night-time military rescue of the American hostages in Tehran. J Ninety military men from four services en route to Tehran were crossing the Iranian deserts de-serts aboard "Sea Stallion" helicopters and C-130 cargo planes when mechanical failures put three choppers out of commission. The helicopter pilots either abandoned their crafts in the desert or returned to their launch site, the aircraft carrier Nimitz, 500 miles distant in the Gulf of Oman. When the . third chopper experienced mechanical problems, near a pre-selected refueling site in the desert, the mission commander com-mander aborted the mission and ordered a retreat. As one of the choppers lifted off from the refueling site in the blackness of night, its rotors sliced into one of the six C-130 transports, sending send-ing both crafts up in flames. Eight men died and four were seriously burned. The mission commander, an unidentified colonel, then ordered or-dered all the choppers grounded, and the remaining commando force evacuated on the C-130s. The bodies of the dead servicemen were left behind. Late Thursday night President Carter appeared ap-peared on nation-wide television to explain the disaster and declare that he was assuming full responsibility. In Tehran, the bodies of the eight U.S. servicemen ser-vicemen and the maps, machine guns and other paraphenalia of the mission were displayed at the U.S. embassy by the militants. Contrary to U.S. government reports, the Iranians claimed 20 Americans died in the raid attempt, and 3,000 men had been involved. A Tehran Radio broadcast quoted the militants as saying the American hostages now have been split up and moved to various sites in Iran to foil any further rescue attempts. The militants warned, "if the American nation does not prevent pre-vent Carter's savage acts, the hostages will be dispatched to hell." On Monday, Iran indicated it may allow the bodies of the servicemen to be returned to the U.S. through third-party intermediaries. Washington Secretary of State Cyrus R. , I Vance resigned Monday in disagreement of President Carter's failed rescue operation in Iran. The Vance resignation marked the most major negative political reaction to the raid attempt yet. Carter chose Senator Edmund Muskie to succeed Vance. Elsewhere in Washington, political reaction to the botched rescue has been mixed. Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., called the mission a "disaster," and faulted Carter for not consulting Congress. Democrat Henry Reuss, Wise, said "President Carter should now announce that he is not a candidate for re-election and should quietly serve his term without any more impulsive im-pulsive actions." But Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., R-Ariz., called the mission "a good effort" and George Bush, out on the campaign trail, told reporters, "I unequivocally support the President of the United States, no ands, ifs or buts." Philadelphia Pennsylvania was "a must win" for party presidential hopefuls Sen. Edward Ed-ward Kennedy and George Bush, and win they did. But Kennedy did so by the barest margin and Bush's popular vote victory won't necessarily earn the majority of the state's Republican delegates. The April 23 contest ended with Kennedy eking out a few thousand more popular votes, out of 14 million cast, than Carter. Kennedy gained 94 delegates and Carter 91. Kennedy staged another razor-thin triumph over Carter three days later in the Michigan caucus. Kennedy then sped off to Mexico for meetings with that country's president, Jose Lopez Por-tillo. Por-tillo. Presumably the two will discuss Mexico's vast oil reserve and its steady influx of illegal immigrants. The meetings are expected to earn Kennedy political points with Hispanic votes in Texas and California. ' In the Republican camp, Bush took 53 percent of Pennsylvania's GOP primary popular vote, but he may have Jpst the battle there. Reagan ; claims at least 50 of the 83 Pennsylvania delegates, who are not bound by the popular vote, will cast their ballots for him at the national convention. The two Republicans now are gearing up for a debate in Texas, Bush's adopted state., The Texas primary is Saturday. Washington While the front-runners for the Democratic and Republican party presidential nominations battled it out with their respective challengers at the primary polls, Illinois Rep. John Anderson officially dropped out of the GOP race and declared his candidacy for president as an independent. The New Republic magazine this week reported report-ed that CBS anchorman Walter Cronkite may be picked for the vice presidential spot on the Anderson An-derson independent ticket. Anderson's office said the rumor about Cronkite did not come from the Anderson staff and that it is premature to discuss running mates. Key West, Fla. Impatient with the pace of U.S. evacuation procedures, hundreds of Cuban exiles in Florida set sail for Havana to rescue ' thousands of their countrymen seeking refuge from their homeland. The rescue armada, comprised of a ragtag assortment of boats bought or chartered by wealthy Miami Cubans, set sail despite warnings from the U.S. State Department that the operation was illegal and those involved would face up to five years in prison. By the beginning of the week, thousands of refugees had reached Key West via the "Freedom Flotilla." U.S. Coast Guard vessels searched the 90-mile stretch between Florida and Cuba as heavy storms threatened some of the refugee-laden craft. The "Freedom Flotilla" may be picking up Cubans other than just the 10,000 refugees that had crowded into the Peruvian Embassy compound com-pound in Havana seeking to emigrate. One Cuban official said as many as 1,000,000 Cubans may now be waiting to escape their communist homeland. New York Short term interest rates eased somewhat Monday as several leading banks lowered their prime lending rates a full point to 181, 2 percent. The prevailing prime rate, which is the interest in-terest banks charge top corporate customers for short-term loans, was a record 20 percent two weeks ago, compared with ll1, 2 percent last June. Morgan Guaranty Trust Co., the nation's fifth largest bank, and No. 18 Bank of New York were followed Monday by First National Bank of Detroit and Manufacturers Bank of Los Angeles in reducing the prime to W2 percent. The interest rate cuts contributed in part to higher prices on Wan Street, ' where stocks oyer-'.' came! profit-taking pressures Monday following .!, their best weekly gain in four years last week. INTERNATIONAL Luxembourg Western European leaders Monday renewed their threat to impose economic sanctions against Iran on May 17 unless "decisive progress" is made toward releasing the 53 American hostages. They also called for new U.N. efforts to end the hostage stalemate. Support from the nine-nation Common Market for the U.S. position came despite the European community's expressed displeasure over the aborted U.S. rescue attempt in Iran. Publicly, the Common Market pledged solidarity with "the government and people of the United States in their present time of trial." Privately, diplomats of allied nations expressed puzzlement puz-zlement at Carter's intentions following the rescue attempt. The Common Market leader also called on Islamic and other Third World nations to press the Soviet Union again to withdraw its troops from Afghanistan. Ljubljana, Yugoslavia President Tito's fight for life continues to baffle doctors as the ailing ex-leader of Yugoslavia continually edges toward death, then makes partial recovery. On Wednesday, Tito became comatose and his doctors reported the 87-year-old patient would not live out the week. But on Monday, Tito recovered from his shock and improved from "exceptionally serious" condition to "very grave." Bogota, Colombia The Marxist guerrillas that took occupation of the Dominican Republic Embassy in Colombia ended their siege Sunday and released the 16 diplomats, including U.S. Ambassador Diego Asencio, that had endured 61 days as hostages. The guerrillas flew aboard a Cuban jetliner for haven in Havana. Several of the ambassadors were released before the guerrillas took flight, the others, including in-cluding Asencio, were set free in Havana. Ambassador Diego Asencio was flown to Homestead Air Force Base, Florida, where he was reunited with his family. The ambassador said he was well treated by his captors, whom he described as a mix of "Marxists and teenage adventurers." Newspaper Classified Advertising $ e 11 jmam'i it n a o 1 4 Call us... 649-901 4 $ |