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Show Page A4 Thursday, February 19, 1981 nil9s SttM dDnnit TTIkeir MM Mi . B RESTAUR Arjl" i W M v FRESH THIS WI EK B Oysters, Clams, ijiltf Flounder, Haddc ck 1 ' 6-11 p.m. Daily I JJTf Pn ' f T PCI"" 1 1 , Reservations Sugge ited , ' I i JJ L A Ai -1 649-4006, 368 Main Street l4 Virtually indestructable. Mastercharge and VISA .cceptedC loves .he sun. Water 2 3 weeks JgjSi 1 T ( 10 Main St. Design Coalition Building. -a-is-s CLAIM JBMFER RESTAURANT M TarkCity'i 41 lit Tinest Restaurant 1 I t Open for Dinner 1pIX. Seven Nights a Wwk 0:00 tn II 00 p.m. . . W Sunday Brunch Live Fnte tainment Claimjumper Restaurant 11:00-2:00 Tom DMail 7 DAYS A WEEK - 5-10 WEEKDAYS 649-7177 I 611 WEEKENDS afc, 1 I Main Street G43-B051 jfi I r i Will you be allowed to vacation in Park City next year? Your answer may be yes, but the next obvious question is "How much will it cost you?" You. like many others, may find you simply cannot afford the expense. 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Call for eligibility requirements. v jjj INTERNATIONAL Karachi, Pakistan A crude grenade made of nails and spare metal parts exploded at a stadium 20 minutes before Pope John Paul II appeared ap-peared there to preside over Mass for 100,000 people. The pontiff was not aware of the explosion ex-plosion and was not told about it before the ceremony. cer-emony. It is still not known if the Pope was the intended victim. The explosion killed the man who was carrying the grenade and injured three others. The dead man was identified as a Pakistani Moslem who tried to carry the explosive into the stadium in a sack. He was stopped by security guards who asked him what was in the sack. The man replied, "Fruit for my wife." The explosion went off when the guards began to scuffle with the man. The Pope used the Mass to make a gesture of good will toward the world's 800 million Moslems. In his speech, John Paul expressed wishes for continued "mutual understanding and respect." The Pakistaniarj stop was the beginning begin-ning of the Pope's tour of the East and Far East. Moscow A KGB femme fatale trapped a U.S. military attache in a compromising situation, and now the official, Army Major James Holbrook, has abruptly left his post at the American embassy. A source reported Holbrook was visiting the Ukranian city of Rovno, and was lured into a quintessential case of sexual entrapment. en-trapment. "The bedroom scene, the knock, the door being kicked down, the flashbulbs popping,' pop-ping,' ' the source said, i Holbrook had worked for the embassy since 1979, and his fluency in Russian and knowledge of Soviet life made him an important target for the KGB. The Russian spy agency sought to either enlist him in theij1 service or neutralize him. Reports are unclear on how Holbrook became involved in the compromising situation, but sources deny rumours that he was drunk. Reports say Holbrook is up for a job on Vice President Bush's staff, as a specialist in Soviet affairs. Meanwhile, he is keeping quiet about the Russian episode. Warsaw, Poland The country's new premier, Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, appealed to Poland's workers for "90 peaceful days," warning that further unrest could lead to civil war. Solidarity, the independent trade union, responded with a communique saying it would only strike as a last resort. Jaruzelski '' promised he would ' develop a "broad dialogue", in the coming months,' and' said the Roman Catholic Church wouldplay' a" greater role in the negotiation Solidarity leader Lech V,' tJ ': 4 o the appeal by saj .ig he v - a demands that P sh for--ei. include , va a new national Li ,or cudo. Dublin, Ireland Authorities say the fire in a Dublin nightclub which killed 49 young people and injured 130 others might have been started by two youths setting chairs on fire. The blaze at Dublin's Stardust Club broke out early Saturday morning during a Valentine's day disco-dance contest. The fire burst from behind a stage partition, par-tition, knocking out the electricity, and sending the 700 to 800 customers in a panic. Many of the victims died from asphyxiation as they attempted to escape through locked doors or clawed at windows secured on the outside by iron bars. The club's floor manager said all seven emergency exits were open, but customers could not see them for the smoke. Firemen reportedly were angry, however, about the lack of nearby fire hydrants and the fact the club furnishings fur-nishings (a polyurethane roof, foam .chairs) were made of material which gives off a nauseous gas in a blaze. Five teenage girls reported spotting the youths setting the fire. It is believed they held a grudge against the club management. Murchpur, India Two American balloonists ended their attempt to make the first non-stop, around-the-world flight in a balloon by landing at this small village 90 miles northwest of New Delhi. Maxie Anderson and Don Ida said they had to land their 20-story craft, "Jules Verne," because the balloon failed to gain enough elevation to sail over the Himalayas. Anderson said he wasn't sure if the balloon had sprung a leak. The pair began the trip from Luxor, Egypt on Thursday, hoping to circle the world within eight to 10 days. They had gone 3,000 miles when they were forced to land. The two said they plan to ship the balloon to New Delhi by truck, and take a commercial airline home . Anderson, an investment executive, piloted the first successful trans-Atlantic manned flight in 1978, and last year, he and his son made the first crossing of North America. Ida operates a tree nursery in Boulder, Colorado. Ankara, Turkey The most serious indictment yet of disco music comes from researchers at the Aegean University who report that high-level noise like the music in discos causes homosexuality in mice and deafness in pigs. NATIONAL Las Vegas, Nevada The Nevada Gaming1 Board recommended that Frank Sinatra receive a license as a casino executive. But it is a limited six-month license, conditional on Sinatra's holding his temper and avoiding suspicious ties with Mafia figures. In three hours of testimony, Sinatra denied he was a Mafia member, and said he met, but never fronted for, the late Chicago mob boss Sam Giancana. The Mafiosa's association with Sinatra caused the state to revoke the singer's gaming license in 1963. Washington President Reagan prepared to present a detailed package of budget cuts to the American people, meanwhile eliciting chagrined reactions from both the left and the right. Lane Kirkland, president of the AFL-CIO said, "The problems that we face ... are not going to be overcome simply by de-taxing, de-regulating and unleashing McDonalds and Burger Kings." On the other end of the political spectrum, conservative con-servative Rep. Jack Kemp was reportedly chargrined that Reagan had decided to omit Americans in the highest salary bracket from his three-year tax cut plan. Reagan spent much of the week reassessing his economic goals and trying to draw support for his budget-cut program. The White House announced that seven important social welfare programs would be exempt from cuts. They included in-cluded basic Social Security retirement, the Head Start program, and federal school breakfasts break-fasts and lunches. Las Vegas Fire blazed again at a Las Vegas hotel, less than three months after 84 people died in the MGM Grand fire. Eight people died and 198 were injured after a fire in the east wing of the Las Vegas Hilton. And in a bizarre follow-up, police arrested a busboy who said he accidentally acciden-tally started the blaze with a lighted marijuana cigarette while engaged in a homosexual act. Phillip Bruce Cline supposedly told police the pot cigarette started an eighth-floor curtain on fire while he was occupied with a man named "Joe." Cline was arrested for investigation of arson and murder, but as the week wore on, his story wore thin. Police and fire investigators say it would have been hard for a marijuana cigarette to set the flame-retardant curtains on fire. They also noted that blazes broke out on the ninth, second, and third floors almost simultaneously simul-taneously with the first fire. Suspicion now is directed at a group of arsonists, possibly including in-cluding Cline. L6s'Angeles4-R6hald Reagan's 35-year-old son Michael is being investigated on charges he channelled off funds from a development project for his personal use. Reagan also is accused of trafficking in stock for a corporation that was planned, but never incorporated. The White House had no comment on the charges, but Reagan's lawyer said his client would be completely com-pletely exonerated when the investigation was completed. The investigation was first disclosed by the L.A. Times, and a spokesman for the Los Angeles County D.A.'s office said no charges were filed against Reagan. The authorities are trying to discover what he did with $17,500 given to him for a gasohol-distribution venture. Hollywood Dramatic biographies scored big with Oscar this year, as "Raging Bull" (the story of Jake LaMotta), the true tale of "The Elephant Man" and the Loretta Lynn bio "Coal Miner's Daughter" received the greatest number num-ber of nominations, including nominations for Best Picture. The other two picture nominees were "Tess" and "Ordinary People." Best Actor and Actress nominees included Robert DeNiro ("Raging Bull"), Robert Duvall ("Great San-tini"), San-tini"), John Hurt ("Elephant Man"), Jack Lemmon ("Tribute"), Peter O'Toole ("The Stunt Man"), Ellen Burstyn ("Resurrection"), Goldie Hawn ("Private Benjamin"), Mary Tyler Moore ("Ordinary People"), Gena Rowlands, ("Gloria"), and Sissy Spacek ("Coal Miner's Daughter"). Louisville, Kentucky The sewers blew up beneath sections of Old Louisville on Friday, injuring in-juring four people and demolishing miles of streets. The blasts were believed to be caused by an accumulation of an industrial solvent called hexane. Mayor Williams Stansbury closed four schools and evacuated 20 blocks of an industrial area. Workers flushed the sewers, but National Guardsmen Guar-dsmen still partolled the area, allowing only residents to pass in and out of the area. A soybean mill was being investigated as the source of the hexane leak into the sewer. Gainesville, Florida Michael Hammond, "The Crisco Kid," is dead at age 10 from a cardiac. car-diac. The young boy was born with a rare disease epidermolysis bullosa which renders the skin extremely fragile and caused blisters and sores to erupt over his entire skin surface-even surface-even his tongue. His nickname came from the only treatment that eased the pain two cans of Crisco applied every day. Michael had improved to the point that he was ready to start school next 'week, but he suddenly died at the Sunland Training Center during a visit with his mother. 1 |