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Show Page A4 Thursday, April 9, 1981 The Newspaper j' i ':,! 1, April 9 Mark Gary Blase April 10 Sue Hillman April 11 Eddie Brinkerhoff 3 , ffe? 614 Main Street Park City 649-9066 April 12 Jean Ricciardi Lilian Smith Greer Markle Janean Burns Kathy Murphy April 13 Ranae Martinez Peggy Fletcher Val Cowan April 14 Susan Jarman . ; ; Adele Wolfberg Bob Lewis April 15 Rena Page Crissie Winn , Grandmom Mears 1 14 ? i ',1! ."ft fit - .--.nil -rf- '--vl I i . imiiiimmim . mwUm 1 gT.au. 1 ' lb T f T If mi r i Deer Valley Victorian Duplex Excellent Southern exposure 3 bedroom, 2 34 bath perside ( 1 bedroom, 1 bath lockout per side) oak cabinets and woodwork throughout, 2 car garage per side. Low utilities, a marvelous opportunity for you to become part of Deer Valley and Park City, terms available $220,000 INTERNATIONAL : i Prague, ; Czechoslavakia The Soviet bloc mounted a verbal attack on Poland and its labor i dissidents Monday. Meanwhile; the Polish union Solidarity' and Westerh diplomats cast nervous eyes on the build-up of Soviet forces in and around Poland, With Leohid Brezhnev in ap-; proving attendance, Czech leader Gustav Husak attacked Poland's leadership for its failure to restore order at Communisf Party Congress, f; In Britain, U.S. Defense Secretary CaspaV Weinberger said Russian troop build-ups in Poland are an "invasion by , osmosis," and ' Western diplomats said the troop movements are building up a momentum that could lead to invasion, though they doubted the Soviet leader- ship had made a decision on whether to invade. An adviser for Solidarity said the union should adopt a no-strike strategy to avoid provoking an 1 invasion. ) ' ..... , ,. .-: . Bangkok, Thailand A group of "young Turk'' Army officers staged a coup Wednesday against Prime Minister Prem Tinsulanonda, but Prem and loyal government troops swept back into power on Saturday, reseizing the capital in an almost bloodless suppression of the revolt. Prem relied on his personal popularity and the support of King Bhumibol Adulyadej to regain power. Prem's 13-month, . government has been criticized for its economic policy, and the young officers of the revolt also reportedly blamed him for corruption; social inequality, and favoritism in ministerial appointments. By week's end, however, coup leader Sant Chitpaima had fled the country by helicopter and his deputy, Gen. Vasin Israngkul Na Ayuthaya, had been arrested. t : y LondonHarold Wilson, former prime minister for Great Britain, affirmed reports that a coup was planned against his government in 1968, but denied that the late Lord Earl Mount-batten, Mount-batten, uncle of Queen Elizabeth, was involved. ; Wilson personal secretary, Lady Falkender, . made the charge in the Sunday Times. The allegation concerns a 1968 meeting supposedly sup-posedly planning the coup between Mountbatten, Lord Auckerman and two newspaper magnates, Lord Cudlipp and Cecil King. In a statement issued this week, Cudlipp recalled that King had speculated on a possible collapse of the troubled , WiJs,on government. King considered ha the , iarraed, forces might have to.r.estomonlerand,; Mountbatten would be a good choke; to 4ead than nation. Mountbatten s biographer, Richard : Hough, said the Lord treated the whole subject as a joke. A coup attempt was hatched at the time, but an ' intelligence spokesman said the plot involved civil servants and military men who were "a pretty loony crew." NATIONAL Washington Wounded President - Ronald ; Reagan was reported running a slight fever, but was in good spirits this week. Doctors at George Washington University Hospital ordered ad- ditional antibiotics for the president, and White House spokesman Larry Speakes reported Reagan might return home by week's end. Meanwhile, Reagan signed presidential orders, exercised by walking hospital hallways, and joked about "getting the four bedpans together for a reunion" with his three fellow victims. Reagan's accused attacker, 25-year-old John W. Hinckley, was confined to a room under 24-hour 24-hour guard at the Butner Correctional Facility in North Carolina,- where he was ordered by a ' Washington magistrate to undergo psychiatric tests for 90 days. Hinckley fired a volley of six .22 calibre bullets at Reagan's party as the president left an AFL-CIO AFL-CIO luncheon on Monday, March 30th, wounding -. Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy, .. Washington policeman Thomas Delahanty, and press secretary James Brady. It was thought-Reagan thought-Reagan had escaped injury, but the president began complaining of pain in his rib cage; and collapsed soon after Walking into the lobby of ; George Washington Hospital. , ; j The FBI later reported that Hinckley might n have used special "devastator" bullets which fragment on impact, but doctors who removed the bullet from Reagan in a three-hour operation reported no signs of lead leakage. James Brady, shot in the forehead and falsely reported dead ..shortly after the shooting, remained;, in, critical condition throughout the week. Doctors said Brady sustained extensive damage to the right side of the brain, but might retain more mental functions than initially believed. .. , . ' ',' A number of bizarre twists emerged in Jhe . assassination story as the nation struggled to recover Police uncovered an unmailed letter written by Hinckley to 18-year-old actress Jodie Fpster, in which he promised to "prove my lOve for you through an historic act." Foster, now! an English major at Yale, said she had received love letters from Hinckley, but had no other contact con-tact With him; The actress first came to famfe in the film "Taxi Driver" as the teenage-prostitute friend of a taxi driver who plots to kill a presidential candidate. f Los Angeles buzzed with the news that psychic Tamara Rand had predicted the shooting" in January on a local talk show. However, a TV news crew disclosed that a videotape of Rand's "prediction" was actually made on March 31, a day after the incident. ' In other highlights, Secretary of State Alexander Alexan-der Haig was accused of a tactless power-grab when he told reporters after the shooting that, "I am in control., pending the return of the vice-f- president," i Senator Edward Kennedy co-sponsored co-sponsored a bill proposing the ban of cheap handguns hand-guns and the registration of all others. And George Bush's son; Neil cancelled a dinner engagement he had with an acquaintance named Scott Hinckley who just happened to have a brother named John. , Salt Lake City Eldridge Cleaver, the radical leftist leader- of the Black Panthers in the 1960s, announced Sunday that he plans to join the Mormon church. Cleaver, who said his political views changed during his exile in the Communist r world, learned about the church while taking classes at the conservative Freeman Institute headed by Cleon Skousen. "I just feel at home in ' the church," Cleaver declared. ' eavwcated;,tagging,y;iiwv!ft States citizen with a number to control spies and illegal aliens infiltrating the country. "This country is full of Communist agents, home-grown and transplanted, " he claimed. 3 Atlanta The number of unsolved cases rose to 25 Monday in Atlanta's grisly string of disappearance-murders. The newest feared victual is Larry Rogers, 21, a thin, retarded black rijan who has been missing since March 30. He is the second retarded adult numbered in the 22 deaths and three disappearances being investigatedhy the city's task force; Last week, the corpse: of retarded 21-year-old Eddie Duncan was pulled from the Chattahoochee river southwest! of Atlanta. " , Meanwhilet Goergia Gov. George Busfcee signed papers to extradite a man for questioning in the case. The man, Larry Marshall, was bejng held in a Georgia robbery charge in Hartford, Ct, but a police spokesman said Marshall ias not being considered as a suspect. s Fort Lauderdale, "Florida An ex-Vietnam veteran, his bitterness brought to a head byhe hero's welcome given to the Iranian hostages, killed himself with a blast to the head from arl2-gauge arl2-gauge shotgun. In his suicide note, William bern-stein, bern-stein, 34, said he was tired of living with, his memories of Vietnam. His father, Bernard, said he held no resentment resent-ment toward the Iran hostages, but was hurt that he and other Vietnam vets, "came home to nothing." j ji( eatingfromi 1:30 to 10:30 1 fio& FRAGRfT SAr ' -Fine German Pastries jfi GARDENIAS ' M Pappucpno 'S? Expresso ffl 4 ,610M..No.202 I DSc3tioB.d3. E SMmJSL Pk City ffl |