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Show Page 4 Thursday, August 7, 1980 The Newspacr . IttnUIl dDuntt TTDacBiPce IBarttlhidlay Stars August 8 Duanne Turner Joanie Chesnutt August 9 Cally Leatham Michele Corba August 10 Sally Bolton Lee Thario Joe O'Laughlin Kenny Binatena Bill Kerr August 11 Luanne Antonio Teri Ahearn August 13 Eileen Redell 5UILDI 5ERVICE6 If you would like to be listed in our Building Services just call 649-9014. HOT TUBS & SAUNAS Park City Spa & Tub Fiberglass spas, wood hot tubs, whirlpool baths Saunas, dry & steam Located in Brent C. Building, 649-8172 PAINTERS Painters & Stainers Licensed Painting Contractor Free Estimates, quality workmanship 649-8439 Painting Interior & Exterior Excellent Brush and Airless Spray Work Call Chet 322-0664 For Free Estimate WELDING Bob's Portable Welding Certified Satisfaction Guaranteed Pipe thawing 649-7544 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 MASONRY Quality Masonry Need a fireplace, retaining wall, brick patio or other QUALITY masonry? Call Bob 649-81 67 or Garry 649-9088 after 6 p.m. SNOWPLOWING Park City Snowplow & Landscape Co. 649-8250 BUILDING MATERIALS Heber Lumber 700 West 100 South Heber City 654 1 1 '0 We Deliver! Anderson Lumber uo. Highway 248-Park City 649 847 Everything for your building needs! PLUMBING Emporium Plumbing Installation & Repairs, Drain & Sewer lines cleaned Licensed & Bonded 649-851 1 , 24 Hour Emergency Service CONSTRUCTION WTC Construction Remodeling Specialist Licensed Contraction 2523 East 2100 South 485-2385, S.L.C. High Country Builders Professional builders for 25 years. We may have the home or lot you want for sale now. If not, we can build for you. 24 hours. Phone 649-6375. 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 r 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 654-4179 (Heber number). Serving Park City. Nevada Smith & Co. LAWN MAINTENANCE SERVICES Spring Clean up Mow & Trim Lawn Fertilization Tree & Shrub Fertilization Weed Control Power Rake & Vacuum. LANDSCAPING SERVICES Sprinkler Systems Grading Plantings Sodding or Seeding Any Type of Tractor Work Available $22.50hr. CALL NEVADA AT 649-6170 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 Mil INTERNATIONAL Bologna, Italy Italian police said they were almost positive a terrorist group was responsible for an explosion which ripped through the waiting room and restaurant of Bologna's main railway terminal on Saturday. The death toll currently stands at 76, with 160 people injured, including three BYU students. An anonymous call shortly after the explosion claimed the incident was the work of the neo-fascist neo-fascist Armed Revolutionary Nuclei, although another call denied the group's involvement. It is believed the attack might have been in retaliation to a Bologna judge's decision to put eight Italians on trial for an August 4, 1974 terrorist explosion on a passenger train that killed 12 and injured 35. Police discovered the source of Saturday's explosion ex-plosion near the station's second-class waiting room a hole eight inches deep and four feet across. Authorities have found pieces of metal and plastic near the hole, and theorise the blast must have been the equivalent of 90 pounds of TNT. Most of the dead were Italians, but an Englishman, Japanese man, and German woman with her two children also were killed. The blast leveled a platform roof on a train car, and a passenger was later found dead in the toilet. Among the survivors was an eight-year-old girl dug out from under the rubble after 20 hours. Also alive were Utah brothers Jeff Davis, 19, who suffered a leg wound, and William S. Davis, 22, who sustained a kidney injury. "If we had been ten feet closer," said Williams," we would' ve been killed." The two were traveling on a Semester-abroad program. A third BYU student, Peter Bergstrom of Sweden, was listed in critical cri-tical condition. Moscow Dan Rather's name is mud in the Soviet press, which says he helped to kill three native workers while filming the war in Afghanistan. The Soviet agency Tass quotes an Afghan newspaper, which says two captured rebels confessed their gang had been aided by an American news team toward the end of March. The rebels allegedly said that when the gang seized three workers at a southern village, "one of the U.S. newsmen took charge, ordering the bandits first to stone the captives and then to cut off their heads." ' ' ,J Rather, in New York, called the report "fantasy "fan-tasy from first letter to last, sheer unadulterated nonsense." Cairo Egypt on Sunday suspended Palestinian autonomy talks in reaction to a recently-passed law in the Israeli Knesset which claims the disputed city of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. Egyptian Foreign Minister Kamal Hassan Aly said the "so-called law" is null and void, and claimed the United States, which maintains its embassy in Tel Aviv, supports sup-ports Egypt's position. Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin told his government the suspension was no cause for alarm. Begin also denied reports he was planning plan-ning to resign and work for new elections. Deputy Premier Simcha Ehrlich had said earlier that he and Begin had agreed privately that the present administration was too unstable to govern much longer, but Begin denied that report. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat has sent a letter to Begin expressing his concern over the rupture in the autonomy talks, which were scheduled to resume on Monday. The negotiations center on the process of autonomy for 1.2 million Palestinians living on the Israeli-occupied Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. In the letter, let-ter, Sadat asks (1) that Jerusalem be placed on the negotiating table, (2) that a moratorium be declared on settlements in disputed territory, and (3) that Israel halt any "repressive treatment" treat-ment" of Arabs. A copy of the letter has gone to President Carter. Durban, South Africa Most male chauvinists think a woman should sit still and shut up, but a 19-year-old coed has struck a blow for Women's Lib by doing just that. Leigh Van Den Berg broke the world snake-sitting record of 61 days a week ago Wednesday, and announced her intention to go on for four more days. "They all laughed and said I would never make it because I was a woman," she said. "Where are they now?" The snake-sitting record requires a person to sit in a cage with a minimum of 25 poisonous snakes for 232 hours a day. Miss Van Den Berg achieved her record with a collection of 35 snakes, including puff adders, mamabas, and cobras. She got her chance at the title by being the only person to answer a newspaper ad for a snake-sitter. The record, which rates a one-line mention in the Guinness Book, has been broken five times since 1979 all by men. NATIONAL Washington White House officials said President Presi-dent Carter's stature had increased after his address ad-dress to the nation on the Billygate affair Monday. Mon-day. During the past week, both the president and his brother slightly amended denials they had made of White House involvement in Billy's trips to Libya. Carter told his national audience there were no violations or improprieties committed by any member of his administration. He said Billy never attempted to exert influence on behalf of the Libyans, and said the administration only used Billy as a diplomatic link to set up one meeting during the hostage crisis. Carter said he urged Billy to register as a foreign agent before he learned of his brother's $200,000 loan. White House staffers said mail on the speech was running 85 in favor of the president. Confusion reigned about State Department contacts with Billy. Joel Lisker, head of the Justice Department's foreign agent registration unit, said that Billy told him during questioning Jan. 16 that he was in possession of State Department Depart-ment cables that "Jimmy gave to me." Lisker also claimed that Billy, lied to him about gifts or loans he had received from Libya; he failed, Lisker said, to acknowledge a $20,000 check he had deposited in a Georgia bank that December. Billy told reporters, "Lisker is full of s-t," and denied receiving any cables, while President Carter denied giving any. But a day later, he said he had received a congratulatory memo on his trip from a diplomat. The White House disclosed seven cables dealing with Billy's 1978 trip, and acknowledged sending a confidential cable where the president told his brother, "You did a good job under the 'dry' circumstances." Otisville, New York All 173 Iranians being detained after a violent demonstration last week in Washington have been identified, and can be let go, said government officials. Only paperwork paper-work is left to be processed. The announcement ended a tense week of hunger strikes by the prisoners and threats by Iran to avenge their captured "brothers and sisters." The Iranians were arrested July 27 after a demonstration in Washington celebrating the Shah's death turned into a violent battle with police and anti-Khomeini demonstrators. The 173 men, confined to a federal corrections institution at Otisville, and 20 women taken to a Manhattan detention center, began a hunger strike that eventually even-tually hospitalized four of the men. At least 36 men were fed a diet of liquid nutrients, some, after af-ter given the choice of having a tube forced down their throats.--;; ;, ; ;-t , " Immigration and Naturalization officials said those Iranians with proper visas would be released. But the prisoners identified themselves at first as "John Does." In Iran, President Bani-Sadr urged the prisoners to "stand fast" and Tehran Radio castigated the U.S. for alleged police brutalization of the detainees. Controversial attorney at-torney Mark Lane claimed he had evidence of physical mistreatment, but a group of clergymen toured the prison and reported they could find no evidence supporting the charges. Washington President Carter fought efforts to release Democratic convention delegates from pledges to vote for him, but suffered two important defections in his struggle against a so-called so-called "open convention." Meanwhile, political circles buzzed with the possibility of an alliance between rival candidates John Anderson and Edward Kennedy. Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd came out in favor of an open convention, saying he still believed President Carter would win the nomination and leave the New York gathering a a strong candidate with a solid mandate. But Henry Jackson disagreed, and said Ted Kennedy would be a stronger contender than Carter. Independent candidate Anderson met with Kennedy on Thursday and said he would reassess his candidacy if the Massachusetts Democrat won his party's nomination. Neither man said they were contemplating a joint ticket, but were ambiguous about whether Anderson might endorse Kennedy, or Kennedy, Anderson. Kennedy forces claim that, in an open convention, conven-tion, they could sway 565 of the nearly 2,000 delegates committed to Carter. But Carter campaign cam-paign chairman Robert Strauss predicted that at most, the president would lose only 8-9 of his support. Boston and San Diego Two courts on opposite coasts are doing their small bit to revolutionize law and marriage. In Boston, the state Supreme Court ruled that a person could sue a spouse in civil court. In Dec. of 1978, Shirley Brown slipped on a snow-covered walk her husband, William, had failed to shovel, broke her pelvis, and sued him for $35,000. Mrs. Brown said the court fight has not harmed her marriage. But the husband's attorney speculated the ruling could lead to a morass of marital suits: a wife suing the husband who gets her pregnant, or a husband suing his wife after her over-salty meals give him high, blood pressure. In San Diego, Judge Raul Rosada is attempting attemp-ting to relieve an overcrowded court calendar by marching large groups of divorcing couples into his courtroom, having them answer three questions in unison, and giving them their decrees. Rosada said his approach reduces the emotional trauma of divorce, but other observers obser-vers wonder if he is not making the approach too easy. |