OCR Text |
Show I'ase 4 i'hursdu), Scpii'inhi-r II. I MO I he Newspaper Itt9 Sttflnn CLDnntt TUneD0 I ' miI I i i I 1 MirfcHndlay Stairs September 1 1 Dave Ward Carol Austin Robin Elliott Mommv Mora September 1 Marty Kennedy Sam Circo .Jimmv Oliver September i: .lerry Peretti Chris Tippy V'al Chin September 1 1 Judy Root Aaron Mi 11 ward September l." Suzanne Shellenberger Michelle Circo 5UILDIHGTi! I W September lfi Dusty Orrell Stella Redondo Stella Hermosa Kathlene Harrington September 17 Bernice Fry Karen Warren 6ERVICE6 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 6498439 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 6497544 MAINTENANCE Shangri La Ent. Specializing in window washing, janitorial, maintenance & repair service reasonable prices, reliable work, free estimate call Bob & Michelle 801 -649-6887 SNOWPLOWING Park City Snowplow & Landscape Co. 649-8250 BUILDING MATERIALS Heber Lumber 700 West 100 South Heber City bb-4 1 1 iO We Deliver! Anderson Lumber Co. Highway 248 Park City 649-647 Everything for your building need;,! PLUMBING Emporium Plumbing Installation & Repairs. Drain & Sewer lines channel Licensed & Bonded 649-851 1 . 24 Hour Emergency Sei jiu- 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 hr. phone 649-6375. INTERIOR DESIGN Inside Story Personalized interior design service Window and Wall Coverings. Furnishings. Cartel Paint & Accessories available in Park Cit 586 Main Street. 649 9332. 531-626 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 t Sprinkler Systems Grading Plantings Sodding or Seeding Any Type of Tractor Work Available S22.50hr. 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 NATIONAL Washington Hours after the League of Women Voters announced Tuesday their decision to include John Anderson in their presidential debates, Jimmy Carter "respectfully "respect-fully declined" to take part, noting he instead preferred to first meet Ronald Reagan alone. white House Press Secretary Jody Powell commented that the league has said it is not prepared to sponsor a separate Carter-Reagan debate, but he added optimistically that he thinks something will be worked out by Nov. 4 and, "We'll end up with debates." Carter apparently is reluctant to climb into the debate ring with two Republicans, to which Reagan commented, "That's his problem." Reagan said he would consider going one-on-one with Carter after the first debate, scheduled for Sept. 21 in Baltimore. "But I am not going to fall for him putting us in the position of shutting out someone who is acknowledged to be a viable candidate. I think it is unfair and I don't think there is any reason for it." The invitation to debate gives a much-needed campaign boost to Anderson, who gratefully accepted ac-cepted before hearing of Carter's withdrawal. With or without Carter, CBS said it intends to provide live coverage of the first debate, while spokesmen for ABC and NBC said they had not yet made a decision. Meanwhile, Carter and Reagan continue to stomp the campaign trail, taking verbal shots at each other along the way. While Reagan called the president's economic record "an American tragedy," Carter attacked "cynics who say that America is over the hill." Campaigning in New Jersey, Carter attempted to garner blue-collar votes by promoting his recently announced economic recovery plan that promises to produce a million jobs over two years. He attacked at-tacked again the Republican tax cut proposals, insisting they would benefit the wealthy while increasing in-creasing inflation to the detriment of the working class. From Chicago, Reagan promised to cut federal spending by $195 billion by reducing government waste. Those savings, he said, would help rebuild the economy and allow big tax cuts for individuals and businesses. "We must first recognize that the problem with the U.S. economy is swollen, inefficient government, needless regulation, too much taxation, too much printing-press money, ' ' Reagan said. Trenton, N.J. A Cuban defector sent ba;ck to her country by the CIA to spy on her husband has filed a $1 million suit against the United States, charging that inadequate training led her to being captured and jailed for nine years. Carmen Mackowski, a 44-year-old former Perth Amboy resident, filed the federal suit in Trenton, Tren-ton, claiming that proper training by the CIA would have enabled her to avoid "detection, arrest, imprisonment and subsequent illness." Attorney Robert Greenberg said the former Maria del Carmen y Ruiz was given a one-month training session in espionage before shipping out to Cuba in the 1960s to spy on her husband, Alfredo Ruiz, then director of Cuba's "Department "Depart-ment against Spies." Remarried since the ordeal, Mrs. Mackowski served nine years of a 20-year sentence in prison after she was arrested by Cuban security men one night in mid-1968 while trying to send a message to the United States from a park in Havana. The U.S. Attorney's office in Newark is seeking to have the suit dismissed Oct. 6 by U.S. District Judge Dickinson Debovoise. Salt Lake City Despite early returns that put him in the lead, Ogden Mayor Stephen Dirks lost his bid for the Democratic U.S. Senate seat Tuesday to Salt Lake attorney Dan Berman by a slim 300-vote margin. Dirks said he may demand a recount, citing problems with Salt Lake County's Coun-ty's new computer balloting system. Berman was quoted as saying he felt "just super" about his win, and is ready to begin campaigning against Republican Sen. Jake Gam, who is heavily favored to win re-election. Late Tuesday night, Attorney General Robert Hansen and challenger David Wilkinson were locked in a tight race for the Republican nomination, but the incumbent was overthrown when he garnered only 47 percent of the votes. Wilkinson now will face Democratic nominee James McConkie in November. State Sen. Moroni Jensen of Salt Lake County was successful suc-cessful in securing the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor, defeating Doug Hunt. Elsewhere in the United States, 76-year-old Jacob Javits, who served four terms as New York's senator, was upset in his bid for renomination Tuesday. He was defeated by conservative con-servative challenger Alfonse D'Amato, supervisor super-visor of the town of Hempstead on Long Island. Javits' stunning upset was among the most bitterly bit-terly fought race in the primary elections held in 13 states to nominate candidates for the Senate, the U.S. House and governorship. Flemington, N.J. A New Jersey couple was arrested last Thursday after they attempted to trade their 14-month-old baby for a used sports car, depositing the child on the showroom floor and walking away with the keys and ownership papers to a 1977 Corvette. James M. Green, 29, and his wife Pamela, 21. approached dealership owner Italo Patinella a week earlier with the proposition, leaving Patinelli with a "feeling of shock." He said he first thought the trade would be in the best interest in-terest of the child, but then decided to play along with the parents and call the police. "They had the keys and papers for the car and we were putting the license plates for the car on," Patinelli said. "The coldness of them. They left the baby in the showroom on the floor, just turned around and walked out. They didn't even kiss it." The couple were held for arraignment in Superior Court on charges of endangering the welfare of a child and offering an illegal adoption. INTERNATIONAL Warsaw Poland's Communist Party chief Edward Gierek was ousted from his position early Saturday, as his successor promised to follow through on some of the most radical reforms ever proposed for a Communist bloc nation. Polish news sources reported that Gierek, who apparently suffered a heart attack, was being replaced by Stanisla w Kemia . Kemia's first public remarks were delayed for several hours, hinting of a serious power struggle in the 116-member Central Committee. Gierek's power began slipping after workers in the nation's southern coal mines, his base of support sup-port joined the strike protest initiated by dock workers in Gdansk and other ports along the Polish coast. It was also discovered that the head of the national television, a Gierek friend and relative, was involved in a massive embezzlement embezz-lement scandal. Earlier in the week, 250,000 workers in the southern coal mines returned to work after a five-day walkout. They had won assurances that the government, heeding complaints on high living costs, would impose new price controls on such basic consumer interns as shoes, toothpaste, tooth-paste, and television sets. Gierek was ousted in much, the same manner as his predecessor Wladyslaw Gomulka, who lost power in 1970 after using force to repress two strikes in the cities of Gdansk and Szczecin, an action which left 45 workers dead. Gierek's replacement, Kemia, joined the Central Committee Com-mittee in 1971 and was responsible for police, army and security matters. (1J ... , Hr ' j b-iilii'j iotcii'j? AT :.':U' urite nl Alexandria, Egypt Egypt and Israel agreed to resume Palestinian autonomy talks soon, and also arranged for a three-way summit with the United States in the indefinite future. Special Middle East envoy Sol Linowitz said the new talks would handle almost all the tough issues concerning elections, territory, and settlements on the West Bank. But the new talks would skirt around the issue of Jerusalem, which prompted the break-off of negotiations a month ago after an Israeli bill in the Knesset proclaimed the city as an eternal, undivided part of Israel. No date was fixed for the three-way talks. Although New York or Washington will be the problem sites, it is not known if the meeting will be held before or after the U.S. presidential elections. elec-tions. Linowitz said he had not received any assurances about further Israeli action on Jerusalem, but hoped "we are at a point where Jerusalem will not be a factor." He said he had warned Begin that Israeli plans to build four new settlements on the West Bank, bringing the total to 77, would be an obstacle to negotiations. Later in teh week, Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir met in Cairo with his opposite number, Boutros Boutros-Ghali from Egypt for what was described as "positive, constructive talks." Peking Chinese Communist chief Hua Guo-Feng, Guo-Feng, in a rare move, announced his own resignation as premier before the National People's Congress, clearing the way for pragmatic, capitalist-oriented successor, Zhao Ziyang. Seven out of 18 deputy premiers also were resigning, either because of age or because they now are forbidden under state policy to hold dual posts in both the party and the government. Hua will remain as party head, but there was speculation that a recently-named committee on constitutional revision may establish a figurehead figure-head post of chief of state that Hua could be eased into. Hua told the 3,000-member assembly that economic modernization should be China's main priority, and he denounced the "leftist deviations" that lead to the Cultural Revolution of the '60s, even though Hua was instrumental in that movement at the time. Hua's departure represents a triumph for Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping, a pragmatic Communist whose goal is to replace those influential in-fluential government heads who are too old, too leftist, or not technologically oriented. His protege, Ziyang, was known for restoring the battered economy in Sichuan, the country's largest province, by allowing more autonomy for factory foremen and peasants. |