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Show Page A4Thursday, September 10. Il- wwiupcr THIS IS REAL PRICED AT $74,950 nrt9 SanM (Dram TTDneiP 4i 5. 'ZP. US, ' Xs'' " r;;,,-."..- " S ,i 'J A - 'A I is ; "i u . " - f. Sags I " . 7- - $ - 1 561 Park Avenue Quiet, 2 bedroom, 1 bath located conveniently in old Park City. Financiable, with reasonable, livable monthly payments. With all the above qualities, this property will not last long. Call Madeline, 649-9066. 649-9066 K u CLQQD CO. Park City's most elegant dining. Specializing in Swiss-French cuisine, including a complete selection of veal, beef and seafood items, such as: Les Fscargots a la Bourguignonne Imported French snails served in homemade herb and gark butter LFscalope de Veau au Citron Veal medallions topped with a cream lemon sauce L'Emince de Veau a la Zurichoise Veal scallops Zurich style in a cream and mushroom sauce Le Tournedos Rossini Beel tenderloin steak with goose liver pate, mushroom cap and Sauce Madere Les Coquilles St. lacques a la Neuchateloise Poached Scallops in a white wine sauce with shallots and leek Le Souffle glace au Grand Marnier The speciality of the house: a light, homemade Grand Marnier flavored ice cream Fresh homemade fruit tarte Summer hours: 6:00 to 10:00 Tuesday through Saturday. 50 Shadow Ridge Drive, located directly west of the Resort parking lot. We offer elegant banquet facilities for up to 200 people. 649-5993 NATIONAL Washington The fall season promised problems for President Reagan on both business and labor fronts in selling his economic programs. While Reagan promised jobs and more jobs in New York over the Labor Day holiday, air traffic controllers fired by the president were among 100,000 workers in a Fifth Avenue union parade protesting Reagan's policies. Reagan presented New York Mayor Ed Koch with a ceremonial $85 million federal check for the first phase of the city's Westway project. Meanwhile, Reagan budget-cutters have turned tur-ned their knives to a neglected target the military budget in an effort to trim away enough federal' fat' to bring about more Wall Street confidence in 'Reagan's economic plans. The White House reportedly favors slicing out $30 billion in defense expenditures in 1983 and 1984, which would call for the elimination of an Army division. New York Roy Wilkins, who led the NAACP during two decades of dramatic breakthroughs for civil rights, died Tuesday at New York University Medical Center at the age of 80. The cause of death was undetermined, but Wilkins had a history of heart trouble. Wilkins' life spanned the time when blacks were routinely lynched in the South, to an era of gun-toting militants who scorned Wilkins and his generation for Uncle Tomism. The black leader, who believed in fighting for rights through , lawsuits, legislative action and education, helped engineer the landmark Supreme Court decision against school desegregation. Later, he criticized the civil rights militancy of the '60s, attacking at-tacking such figures as Muhammed Ali and Harlem politician dam Clayton Powell. Durham, North Carolina One teacher said it would be like "normalizing the Nero of our times." But the trustees of Duke University disagreed and voed 8-2 to continue negotiating for the$baidjng'of .fipBcaryle .house Richard Nixon's presidential papers. One trustee said.it was a valuable historic opportunity. op-portunity. But among the 30 protesters attacking at-tacking the-library, one 'older woman said, ; "Nixon's 'political "record is disgusting, and he 1hjruelf'disgu?.$mari.-!! '0 Duke University president Terry Sanford has set exacting standards for the library, he said. The library would be built only after the university univer-sity received assurances it would not be subject ) any legal 'action. Also, the transfer of the Nixon papers must be approved by Congress. Los Angeles California's City of the Angels celebrated its 200th birthday by undergoing an offshore off-shore earthquake that caused buildings and . bridges to sway, but caused no major damage or injuries. The tremor, equal to the force from 1,000 tons of dynamite, was the strongest since the quake of Feb. 9, 1971 that killed 64 people. A press spokesman for Mayor Tom Bradley said, "It may have been the supernatural spirits were wishing Los Angeles a happy birthday." Seismograph readings varied from 5.1 to 5.8. A housekeeper working on a patio in San Pedro watched a crack open in the concrete for 20-30 feet. "It was a horrible feeling," said Leora Rousselle. Trains between San Diego and Los Angeles were halted while bridges were inspected. inspec-ted. Lake Patk, Iowa The lost boy's father was about to give up. But a stubborn farmer equipped with a map supplied by a psychic found 2V'2-year-old Justin Stahly late Saturday, about two days after he disappeared last Thursday. Farmer George DeGroot, who found the boy, said he had consulted the psychic and was given a "triangle area" where the boy was supposed to be. DeGroot refused to identify the occultist. Little Justin had wandered away from his farm home on Thursday. The search for him enlisted 4,000 volunteers who probed wells and farm machinery, used airplanes, and even brought in a helicopter equipped with heat-sensor heat-sensor devices. The noise of the search only served to frighten the boy, said DeGroot. When found, he was suffering suf-fering only from insect bites and scratches. Washington Interior Secretary James Watt is mulling over a proposal to permit strip mining next to Bryce Canyon National Park. Federal District Court in Utah is considering litigation over a decision by past Secretary Cecil Andrus to prohibit mining in 9,000 acres of the Alton coal fields near ' Bryce Canyon. Environmentalists had contended that mining there would destroy the area's southern panorama, in addition to causing noise and air pollution. Watt said he might ask the court to return the case to his department for reconsideration. Boston Doctors at Massachusetts General Hospital have found evidence that suggests the "runner's high" experienced by joggers comes about when hard exercise increases the blood level of a chemical in the body that is almost addictive. ad-dictive. This could explain, they suggest, why runners feel out of sorts after missing a day of exercise. INTERNATIONAL Praetoria, South Africa South Africa has announced an-nounced the killing or capture of five Soviet participants par-ticipants in its war on Angola. Praetoria sources said two Soviet lieutenant colonels were killed, along with the wife of one and the wife of Sgt. Maj. Nickolai Pestretsov, who was captured. South Africa has said it struck at Angola starting Aug. 24 to stop black guerilla activity against the disputed territory of Namibia, also called Southwest South-west Africa. But Angola has claimed a further motive is to support the Angolese anti-Marxist UNITA forces. At the United Nations, two General Assembly votes denied the South African delegation the right to speak and ousted them from the assembly assem-bly hall. The U.S., Britain, and other Western na tions opposed the motions . Tehran, Iran Iran's unsettled government seemed to be losing leaders as fast as they could replace them. Iran's general prosecutor, Ali Qodussi, was killed in his office Saturday by a firebomb so powerful it knocked the balcony off the building. Earlier in the week, a hardline ayatollah was elected by the country's parliament to replace Prime Minister Bahonar, after he was killed with President Ali Rajai. The new prime minister, Mohammed Reza Mahdavi Kani, has helped organize the summary executions of hundreds of political opponents. The bomb blast that killed Prosecutor Qodussi was blamed on the United States, but inside sources credited it to the leftist Mujahedeen Khalq organization. Gdansk, Poland Members of the national union Solidarity met to consider their future, and hoped the same subject wasn't on the minds of more than 100,000 Soviet troops maneuvering beyond the Polish border and in the Baltic. The U.S. said the forces may be intended as an intimidating in-timidating factor. At the convention, union leader Lech Walesa, who has fought to moderate labor unrest at local levels, called for a strong central structure to the union. The union banned Soviet TV and radio at the meeting after they disagreed with the government govern-ment over the manner of coverage. In Bydgoszcz, 150 prisoners escaped during a Saturday riot, and 160 ethers barricaded in the . prison gave up after they were surrounded by militia units.1 Belfast, Northern Ireland The Irish National Liberation Army scaled back its hunger striking, said a spokesman, because, "at the current rate, all of our prisoners would be dead within six months." INLA prisoners in the Maze prison have been striking, one for every three IRA strikers, but even that ration will decimate their ranks. Meanwhile, the mother of IRA hunger striker Laurence McKeown authorized medical treatment for him after he had gone 70 days without food. Cairo, Egypt President Anwar Sadat, in the most severe crackdown of his 11-year rule, has detained 1,536 religious, political and journalistic dissidents since last Wednesday night. The Interior In-terior Ministry also announced that in an effort to stifle inflammatory elements that have led to 80 deaths in religious violence this year, the government is taking over about 40,000 privately owned mosques. They will be supervised to keep political sentiments out of religious services. At least 100 members of opposition political groups were arrested. The patriarchal head of the Coptic religion was exiled to a desert monastery midway between Cairo and Alexandria. Alexan-dria. Beirut, Lebanon French Ambassador Louis Delmare was killed Friday after an attack by three gunman who apparently bungled a kidnap attempt on Delamare and opened fire against him. An Iraqui news source said the pro-Iran group called the "al-Hussein Suicide Squads" took credit for the killing . As Delamare was being driven from the French Embassy to lunch, three gunmen leaped from a white BMW and attempted to jerk open the doors of his car. When they wouldn't open, the assailants opened fire on Delamare with pistols and a machine gun. The ambassador suffered 11 gunshot wounds in the head, chest, and right arm. Vatican City, Rome Vatican officials and Italian security police believe the Soviet secret police, the KGB, may be involved in the May 13 shooting of Pope John Paul II. According to a British news program, the Italians believe the Turkish gunman Mehmet Ali Agca was part of a conspiracy with its sources in Eastern Europe. And photographs also indicate, they say, that Agca was accompanied by another gunman. The evidence is being studied by Reagan ad-mininstration ad-mininstration officials, who speculate the attack on the Polish pope is an indication of Soviet intentions in-tentions against Poland and its labor union Solidarity. Agca reportedly told interrogators he was trained at a Lebanese PLO camp, where he had been brought by a KGB contact in Turkey. |