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Show Prrb A4 Thursday, June 25, 1981 The Newspaper 1 a . , 1 1 E i f ill I 1 3 17 ill. a 3 . Presents The Summer Sunday Buffet Brunch!! Seating 10 a.m. through 2 p.m. Every Sunday $7.95 Adults $4.95 Children under 12 at Prospector Square in Park City 649-8060 INTERNATIONAL United Nations By a unanimous vote, the 15-member 15-member Security Council issued a strong condemnation con-demnation of Israel Friday for that country's attack at-tack on Iraq's nuclear reactor. Joining the 14 other members of the Security Council was United States Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick. Israel was urged to make "appropriate "ap-propriate redress" for the June 7 destruction of the Baghdad nuclear facility. However, Iraqui Foreign Minister Saadoun Hammadi expressed dissatisfaction with the vote, saying the strength of the resolution had been weakened by "the veto power of the United States." Tehran Iran's President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr Bani-Sadr remains in hiding this week after being declared incompetent to stay in office. The declaration came Sunday from the Iranian Parliament. The vote by the legislature capped a year-long drive by Iran's fundamentalists to get rid of the French-educated economist. Spectators in the galleries broke into a chant of "Death to Bani-Sadr" Bani-Sadr" when the vote was announced. The arrest of the nation's first elected president was ordered or-dered immediately. 3Bi ., iap 3BI IBI IBC inilFll inr 3BI IBE MO 3EM ipii ini mr mi inrs 3BI IBI IBC IBE a lag oa THE DIRT BAND BURRITO BROTHERS Deseret String Band . Oquirrh Ridge Drifters Saturday July 4th 5:00 p.m. Children's price: $5 FIREWORKS! 614 Main Street Park City 649-9066 I E J it i -m (REAL ESTATE OFFICE) 1 L - rtr-' r ' ' 1 inrim 1 mrsM glBL-EBB(inriCT temporarily moved to 818 Park Avenue North of Coalition Building THE PAT METHENY GROUP Saturday July 11th 7:00 p.m. $9 Advance - $10 Gate JOHN PRINE HOYT AXTON JUICE NEWTON Hot Rize Sunday July 12th 1:00 p.m. THE BEACH BOYS Sunday July 19th 3:00 p.m. B.B. KING The Persuasions John Lee Hooker Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee Buddy Guy & Junior Wells John Hammond Saturday July 25th 1:00 p.m. EMMYLOU HARRIS & The Hot Band Steve Goodman Asleep At The Wheel Jesse Winchester Sunday August 16th 1:00 p.m. DAVID GRISMAN Bluegrass Festival Sunday August 30th 1:00 p.m. There will be a total of 10 or more concerts this summer A special 10 ticket discount book is on sale at the COSMIC AEROPLANE and the KIMBALL ART CENTER for $80. TICKETS are $10 in advance, $12 at the gate. OUTLETS: Cosmic Aeroplane, Aero-plane, all Sound Tracks, Ruby Records, Smokey's Records, Toad Tape, Budget Tapes, The Cowboy Bar & Kimball Art Center. Available the day of the show at Parkwest. RAIN or SHINK. Refreshments available. No glass containers, no dogs allowed. Please bring warm clothes and a blanket. Save gas-please gas-please carpool. $1 parking fee for upper lots, free parking in lower lots. IS CREATIVE j fitoiacwtt ""J CONCERTS Rome Pope John Paul II returned to Gemelli Hospital Saturday, suffering from a fever which has slowed his recovery from an assassination attempt May 13. According to hospital spokesman Giuseppe Pallank, the Pope is apparently suffering from a lung infection. However, the Pope's life does not appear to be threatened by the complication. New Delhi, India The prince didn't turn into a frog, but a budding Bombay movie star has still been called on the carpet. Padmini Kolhapure has been ordered by an Indian magistrate to answer charges that she kissed England's Prince Charles in public while he was on a state visit to India eight months ago. Kissing in public has been forbidden ever since India gained independence in 1947. NATIONAL Atlanta A 23-year-old free-lance photographer photo-grapher who claimed he was being "tried in the media" for the Atlanta child slayings was charged Sunday with one of the 28 killings. Wayne B. Williams was arrested for the murder of Nathaniel Cater, the oldest and most recent of the victims. Cater's body was found in the Chattahoochee Chat-tahoochee River, where five other victims have been discovered, two days after Williams was stopped in the area. Police staking out a bridge reported hearing a splash while Williams' car was parked there. After being questioned Iq: 12 hours by police, Williams came under intense press and police scrutiny. Earlier in the week, he sought a restraining order against 17 news organizations. Washington Supreme Justice Potter Stewart announced he would retire from the Supreme Court next month, giving Ronald Reagan the chance to leave his conservative mark on the nation's highest tribunal. A spokesman for the president said he would strive to fulfill a campaign cam-paign pledge to name a woman to fill "among the first" vacancies on the court. The names mentioned men-tioned included Elizabeth Dole, wife of Sen. Bob Dole, and Carla Hills, secretary of HUD under President Gerald Ford. But sources late this week said the solid front-runner was a Mormon, Southern California judge, J. Clifford Wallace. Stewart, a 23-year court veteran whouoften, served as an idealogical swing vote, gave no reason for his retirement. Paradise, Washington Sixteen climbers died in twin disasters on two northwest American peaks the worst fatalities in the area since the '50s. Eleven climbers scaling Mount Rainier Sunday were buried when a wall of ice broke off a glacier and crashed down on them. It was the worst accident in the mountain's history. On Mount Hood, some 100 miles south in Oregon, five climbers dies and four were injured. in-jured. The party of 16, who were roped together, were dragged some 2,000 feet down the mountain when a rope team stumbled. Four men died in the fall, and one woman climber suffered a heart attack and died in a hospital after emergency surgery. Washington Three hours before air traffic controllers were set to walk off their jobs, the government announced they had reached a tentative ten-tative agreement with their union, and a strike was averted that would have cost the economy as much as $250 million a day. After an all-night session, union president! Robert Poli said he expected no trouble in getting get-ting members to ratify the package, which includes in-cludes $40 million a year in monetary benefits. The settlement also saved the union from government gover-nment penalties imposed for an illegal strike. I FM. I The Classifieds could be your ticket to the movies 3QE 3QE ini inr 3BI IBE |