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Show Pafe 4 The Newspaper Thursday, July 3, 1980 At. 4 iVtfinn flDontl TTDneiP 8 " V. IMrttlliidlsiy ton July3 Bill Roland Julys JeffPackard follylvers Bonnie VanSch-enck n" Bill Fish MPoole Valerie Palme r July 6 " BillMcComb Amy Morris Brenda Bishop July 7 Bonnie Brown Mary Mayer July 8 Adam Markle Tika Beard July 9 Romey Haberle Eleanor Bennett Steve Leatham BeaKummer Vera Tree n hi ak nk 6ERVICE6 If you would like to be listed in our Building Services just call 649-9014. MOT TUBS & SAUNAS Park City Spa & Tub t loerglast 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, Industrial Licensed Insured, Quality Workmanship Customer Satisfaction, Call 649-7628 anytime Painters & Stainers Licensed Painting Contractor Free Estimates, quality workmanship 649-8439 Painting Interior & Exterior Excellent Brush and Airless Spray Work Can Chet 322-0664 For Free Estimate WELDING Bob's Portable Welding Certified Satisfaction Guaranteed Pipe thawing 649-7544 CARPET Professional Carpet Cleaning Done at Reasonable Rates Call Paul at 649-9303 or Susan at 649-8269 A-1 Carpet Service Carpet Cleaning, Carpet Installation Carpet Sales 649-6011 Terrv Penman MAINTENANCE A Bolding Co. Windows Washed, Construction Clean-up Complete Interior Cleaning Commercial & Residential , Call 649-8795 for Free Estimates Shangri La Ent. Specializing In window washing, Janitorial, maintenance & repair service reasonable prices, reliable work, free estimate call Bob & Michelle 801-649-6887 SERVICE & REPAIR Hot Rod and Yox Service & Repair Inc Plumbing, Water Heaters, Appliances & Electrical Repairs Fuel Saver Thermostats Installed Answering Service 649-7100 CLEAN-UP & HAULING Thomas O. Evans Construction & Clean-up Hauling, Construction Clean-up Construction Clean-up General Hauling , 649-7159 evenings SNOWPLOWING Park City Snowplow & Landscape Co. 649-8250 BUILDING MATERIALS Heber Lumber 700 West 100 South Heber City 654-1170 We Deliver! Anderson Lumber Co. Highway 248-Park City-649-8477 Everything for your building needs! m PLUMBING Emporium Plumbing Installation & Repairs, Drain & Sewer lines cleaned Licensed & Bonded 649-8511, 24 Hour Emergency Service CONSTRUCTION WTC Construction Remodeling Specialist Licensed Contraction 2523 East 2100 South 485-2385, S.L.C. mm CONTRACTING r Paul de Groot Contracting Carpentry and Building Established with Excellent Reputation Large or Small, New or Old Competent, Licensed, Insured, References We Do It All "Best Quality" Call a Professional First Day or Night 649-7581 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 GREENSTREET GARDENING COMPANY Mowing weed control & fertilization. Specializing in floral design & ground cover, flowers, ornamental shrubs & trees available for patios, beds & trim. Call 877-5204 (Marion number) or 654-41 79 (Heber number). Serving Park City. NEVADA SMITH & CO. LAWN MAINTENANCE SERVICES 1 Spring Clean-Up fow & Trim Lawn Fertilization Tree & Shrub F. utilization Weed Control Power Rake & Vacuum. LANDSCAPING SERVICES Sprinkler Systems Grading Plantings Sodding or Seeding Any Type of Tractor Work Available $22.50 hr. CALL N EVADA AT 649-61 70 EXCAVATION P & C Trucking & Excavation No Job Too Big or Too Small Excellent work, reasonable rates Hauling, basements, trenches Gravel & sand, general excavation Craig Kunkel, days 649-7838, evenings 336-2707 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 INTERNATIONAL Thailand Warfare ignited by Vietnam's invasion in-vasion of Thailand continued to rage this week. Four Western civilians, including two Americans, were captured by the Vietnamese in the midst of the fighting, but were released after four days. Meanwhile, the U.S. government moved quickly to pledge aid to the Thai government. govern-ment. Americans George Lienemann and Richard Franken were working on a photo-albumn of refugee children for the United Nations when they were found by Vietnamese troops in the abandoned border refugee camp of Nong Chang, which had been the object of heavy shelling earlier in the week. They were captured along with European Red Cross representatives Robert Ashe and Dr. Pierre Perrin. The captives were released at the Thai-Cambodian Thai-Cambodian border and warned to stay away from the frontier. Later, Ashe told reporters that, after their capture, the men were marched through the jungle for several hours, often blindfolded; blind-folded; they were well treated, he said, but warned they would be shot if they attempted to escape. The Vietnamese launched their incursion early last week in an effort to stop the U.N sponsored repatriation of Cambodian refugees back to their homeland; the invaders claimed the program was being used to infiltrate guerrilla guer-rilla supporters of deposed Cambodian ruler Pol Pot. Early fighting along the border between Vietnamese and Thais trapped some 70,000 refugees in the crossfire. By Friday, it was reported the bulk of the invading forces had withdrawn, but troops still were slipping across the border to attack Thai positions. And some 10,000 Vietnamese troops effectively had sealed off the border. In Malaysia, at a meeting of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, (ASEAN) the United States moved quickly to promise aid. Secretary of State Edwin Muskie said the U.S. would accelerate ac-celerate arms shipments to Thailand, provide easier credit for further purchases, and provide a $2 million grant for displaced Thais . Jerusalem Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin suffered a heart attack Monday in the Knesset (Parliament) and was rushed to a hospital, where his condition was later reported as fair. The attack, Begin's second in three years, came just before a crucial vote on a call for new elections, which Begin's ruling Likud coalition defeated by six votes. Begin's phyhsician, Dr. Mervyn Gotsman, said the prime minister suffered a myocardial infarction a narrowing of the heart arteriespossibly arter-iespossibly brought on by severe stress. Begin had a seizure in 1977 and suffered a mild stroke last August. Begin's party, which holds power in Parliament by a slim majority of three, won a 60-54 60-54 vote against a proposal to dissolve the present Knesset. Teheran, Iran An Iranian investigator said one of the American hostages may be put on trial for seducing a native woman, even if all the other hostages are freed. - Justice Ministry official Ali Akbar Parvaneh said Sunday he could prove an affair existed between Marine Sgt. Michael Moeller, an embassy em-bassy guard, and a woman identified only as Amaz A. The woman reportedly was hanged by her brother to preserve the family honor after she told him she was five months pregnant. Later, Parvaneh suggested that the Marine might not go on trial if Moeller's parents came to Iran and asked forgiveness from the dead woman's parents. Vatican City The Roman Catholic Church recognized Thursday the patient's right to die in cases where the prolongation of life could only be secured by "precarious and burdensom" artificial ar-tificial means. The church's new guidelines, released in a 3,000-page document, still upholds the condemnation of mercy killing, but distinguishes that from the prolonging of life by "extraordinary means." The church said its declaration is an attempt to cope with new life support systems in the medical field that may threaten the right to die peacefully and with dignity. NATIONAL Western U.S. The western states weather went on the rampage this week. While a heat wave broasted the Southwest, fires burned out of control in Colorado and winds clocked at 70 mph slammed into the state of Utah. Fifty-six deaths thus far have been blamed on the heat wave, the worst to afflict the region in 25 years. Thirty fatalities alone have been reported in Dallas County, Texas, where Dallas City reported two days of 113 temperature, flanked by two days at 112. One victim had turned off his air conditioner to save money. (Dallas utilities appealed to residents to keep their air conditioners con-ditioners running, promising that high electric bills could be paid later in installments. ) Cows reportedly are giving less milk than usual Millions of chickens are dying in hot coops, and it's expected losses for poultry farmers farm-ers could reach $5 million. In Oklahoma, a portion por-tion of Interstate Highway 40 expanded and exploded ex-ploded in the heat, leaving large chunks of concrete con-crete strewn about the road. In Oklahoma City, two families escaped injury when their motor home burst into flame after the 105 heat ignited a propane storage tank under the vehicle. Salt Lake High winds ripped off the copper sheading of the Capitol dome Monday. The National Weather Service at the Salt Lake Airport Air-port clocked winds at 67 m.p.h. before its power was blown out, but it later received reports of 70 m.p.h. winds. Meteorologist Earle Leonard said the sudden rush of thunderstorm activity from Nevada into Utah created a "down rush" that concentrated on Salt Lake and Tooele. Whipping power lines caused more than 40 fires and falling trees crashed into cars. At the Capitol, the flagpole was bent and the dome's wooden superstructure was left exposed by the winds. Gov. Scott Matheson said the entire dome may have to be replaced. Fire raged across 25,000 acres in Arizona. And in Colorado, where an unchecked blaze has consumed con-sumed more than 9,000 acres, Gov. Richard Lamm banned all open flames and smoking in most woodland areas. New York Helen Gahagan Douglas, who many think got an early taste of Richard Nixon's Watergate tactics, died of cancer at the age of 79 Sunday. The former actress and wife of film star Melvyn Douglas served in the House of Representatives from 1944 to 1950, where she lobbied in favor of governmental research into cancer. But she lost a 1950 Senate race to Richard Nixon in a campaign that still inflames tempers 30 years later. "(Nixon) left no stone unturned to leave the impression that she was a Communist," Com-munist," said Eleanor Roosevelt of the campaign. cam-paign. Nixon aide Murray Chotiner responded, "All we did was publish her voting record." Mrs. Douglas lived to see Nixon leave the White House in disgrace "...I never would have believed that it could go as far as this," she said. Nixon could not be reached for comment on her death. Mrs. Douglas had surgery for breast cancer in 1973, but three years ago, the disease recurred. Washington On the one hand, the Supreme Court Monday upheld, 5-4, a congressional ban on "medically necessary" abortions. On the other, it approved a $105 million damage award to the Sioux nation. In an opinion written by Justice Potter Stewart, the court upheld the Hyde Amendment, saying Congress had a right to afford abortion funds to poor women only in cases of rape, incest, in-cest, and danger of life. The measure, it said, "by encouraging childbirth except in the most urgent circumstances, is rationally related to the legitimate governmental objective of protecting potential life." But Justice Thurgood Marshall, in his dissent, said the decision means the poor "must resort to back-alley butchers, attempt to induce an abortion abor-tion themselves by crude and dangerous methods, or suffer serious medical consequences of attempting to carry the fetus to term." The court also ruled that states were under no obligation to pay for such abortions. In another decision, the court approved, 8-1, the U.S. Court of Claims award of damages, the largest even given, for the government's theft of the Black Hills from the Sioux nation. The court of Claims awarded $17 million for the 7.5 million acres in South Dakota, plus $88 million in interest dating back to 1877. Washington While Americans ponder the fate of the American hostages, the hostages themselves them-selves are concerned about more mundane matters. mat-ters. Maryland officials report receiving a handwritten hand-written note from L. Bruce Laingen, the captive charge d'affaires in Iran, who is worried about his driver's license, due to expire in August. Authorities have assured Laingen he won't have to renew his license until 30 days after his return home. Meanwhile, the Crysler Corp. has agreed to extend ex-tend the 12-month warranty on a new Volare for hostage Robert O. Blucker, who bought the car last October, but hasn't gotten much use out of it, he said, due to "extraordinary circumstances." Boston Medical science may soon be breaking new wind-uh, ground in its study of intestinal in-testinal gas, says a Minneapolis gastroen-terologist. gastroen-terologist. In an editorial prepared for the New England Journal of Medicine, Dr. Michael D.. Levitt says doctors may soon specialize in "flatology," a field involved with some serious problems. Levitt citied the case of a man who passed gas 140 times a day a world record, he believes. The patient, he said, was advised to give up his diet of milk, beans, and wheat products. The hydrogen and methane in intestinal gas can even be dangerous, warns Levitt. During electrocautery-a surgical process that burns polyps off the colon-"a spark at an inopportune moment can result in a frightening blast." |