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Show Page A4 Thursday, December 17, 1981 I Ik .st s)in-r at the Golf Course jasB J The Hot Spa Luxury Soaking Salon Com, treat yourself to an evening of pleasure. Real your weary bones and tired muscles in one ol our 5 private therapeutic pools. After a hard day on the slopes or for a special end to a hectic day, nothing feels better than a good soak. You'll leave feeling like a new person. In the heart of ParK City. 1700 Park Avenue, Mt. Air Mall adjacent to Jan's Mountain Outfitters.. 5 private rooms reservations suggested. Open daily. 649-4056 S p.m. 1 0 p.m. Sun.Thurs. S p.m. - midnlte Fri.&Sat. Vh.IIJII;I. Park City's Finest Restaurant Open nightly except Monday 6:00-11:00 . Sunday Brunch 11:00-2:00 Live Entertainment Friday & Saturday Tom Distad Reservations Please 649-7177 A vailable for Private Parfies of 20 or more. The Dental Clinic Dr. Richard Barnes North Park Avenue across from Golf Course Call for appointment We're Open Daily, Evenings & Saturdays 649-6332 For emergency call 649-6786 Park City Dental Associates Pamela K. Hilbert, D.D.S. family dentistry Richard E. Randle, D.D.S., M.S. practice limited to orthodontics Located u. the Brent C. Hill Building across from the Holiday Inn Office hours 9-5 Monday through Friday Saturday by appointment 649-6066 The Smile Creation Dane Q. Robinson, DDS Craig R. Bergquist, DDS Family dentistry Orthodontics Reconstructive Dentistry ' 613 Main Street in the Design Coalition Bldg. Hours daily and evenings. Call for appointment, 649-6116 PHARMACISTS Park Meadows Pharmacy Park Meadows Plaza Suite F-102 Delivery service, open 6 days a week, 9:30 - 6:30, closed Wednesday. 649-2600. fT5MrSia Dr. John Gleave 160 S. 100 W. Heber City, Utah Eye Examination By Appointment Contacts & Frames Available 654-1863 Park City Vision Center Robert S. Briggs, O.D. Open daily 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. The Hill Professional Building 750 East Highway 248 649-5200 Park City Health Center Holiday Village Shopping Mall Robert J. Evers, M.D. Family Practice Thomas L. Schwenk, M.D. Family Practice Robert T. Winn, M.D, Pediatrics Robert W. Barnett, M.D. Family Practice Monday thru Friday, 9 a.m. to 12:30p.m. 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. and on Saturdays 9 a.m. to Noon Office appointments and 24 hour emergency care Call 649-7640 Park City Gynecological Clinic William "Bud" Keye, M.D. gynecological consultant 1515 Park Ave. (basement). Located in Real Estate Coalition Bldg. Consultation by appointment 649-5989 Podiatrist Terry Smith, D.P.M. Park Meadows Plaza 1500 Highway 248 East General podiatry, foot surgery, sports medicine Monday 1:00 - 5:00 p.m. 649-1386, SLC: 363-2543 Orthopedic Surgery & Fractures GaryR. Zeluff, M.D., P.C. Orthopedic Surgeon Park Meadows Plaza 1500 Highway 248 East Call for appointment 649-1386. SLC 24 hour answering service 364-8772. Psychiatry Robert J. Brock, M.D. Child, adolescent and adult psychotherapy. Park Meadows Plaza 1500 Highway 248 East 649-5239 S.L.C. 24-hour answering: 268-9112 iiOPTICIAN Park City Optical Holiday Village Mall ' 649-2020 Designer eyewear, sunglasses, ski glasses, prescriptions filled, frames adjusted aid repaired. 10-6 Monday-Saturday ffiFlgDKILlWD pliD(o)lWDi; If you wish to be listed in our Professional Services, please call 649-9014. i;DENTISTS MEDICAL DOCTORS ::xir;7i:;: '"in : MiniiM INTERNATIONAL Warsaw A long-feared crackdown on Polish labor came late Saturday when government riot police armed with machine guns swarmed into the Warsaw headquarters of the labor union Solidarity and arrested the union activists inside. in-side. Government leaders said the situation was near normal, and insisted that the union's leader, Lech Walesa, was trying to alleviate the crisis. But other" reports said Walesa was under house arrest for refusing to halt protest strikes by his workers. After a shaky start, the union now reportedly has thousands of workers striking in protest against the imposition of martial law and the arrest of 3,000 activists from Solidarity. A message smuggled out of the Polish port of Szczecin Sz-czecin said, "Be with us in our hour of darkness. Solidarity with Solidarity." Telephone communications com-munications and news reports have been blacked out. And reports said that the Polish navy stepped step-ped up patrols along the Baltic shore to stop Poles from fleeing to nearby Sweden or Denmark. Den-mark. Early reports this weekend said that tanks with Soviet markings were seen on Polish roads. But a Pentagon spokesman said Tuesday that there is "absolutely no military activity" by the Soviets in connection with Poland. The Reagan Administration warned the Soviets that any move against Poland would have extremely grave consequences. Secretary of State Alexander Haig said the U.S. has suspended a $200-million-dollar food package to Poland until the situation is clarified. Meanwhile, Mean-while, the Senate called for an embargo of all exports ex-ports to Soviet bloc countries if Russia attempts to interfere in Poland. Walesa and other leaders had been meeting at Gdansk and were considering a nation-wide referendum for citizens to vote on the country's communist government. NATIONAL Mud Lake, Idaho-A plan by Idaho farmers to trim the rabbit population in the area eventually resulted in about 1,500 animal corpses when hundreds hun-dreds of farmers chased rabbits into pens and clubbed them to death. The Idaho Humane Society objected to the killing at first, looking back to past rabbit drives when townspeople, including in-cluding children, randomly beat animals to death. But farmers said they would use a quick blow o the head to kill the rabbits. Fanners' representative Orfin Twitchell said they lost most of the rabbits when the animals were scat tered by a low-flying news helicopter from KUTV.. Washington The Reagan Administration, its relations worsening with the Libyan Khadafy regime, banned travel there by U.S. citizens, and urged 1500U.S. workers there to leave quickly. But an oil executive said Reagan has shown no proof those Americans are in danger. The White House has said that Khadafy is plotting plot-ting to kill Reagan and other top officials, but said it could not disclose its evidence for security reasons.-Khadafy has denied the charges and said this week that he does not seek a confrontation confron-tation with Van actor." And Reagan critics at home are beginning to suggest he is exaggerating the situation to divert attention from his economic troubles. "They are putting on all the public relations acts they can think of," said Democrat Ernest Hillings. Border guards have been told to be on the alert, after government reports said a five-man death squad, headed by an international terrorist known as "The Jackal," may attempt to sneak into the country. Salt Lake While Parkites prayed for snow, Salt Lakers were besieged by wintery winds up to 60 mph Tuesday. The gales ripped up shingles, mangled billboards and toppled trees. Paramedics treated four people for storm-related storm-related injuries. A secretary to Police Chief Bud Willoughby suffered cuts from flying glass when a window caved in at the Metropolitan Hall oi Justice. Two 70-foot trees fell over at the State Capitol. A dumpster "decided to take ajstroll" breaking a bone in his hipastonishedathe pr, i according, to a witness atlhe Salt JLajceJfcrpart Jerusalem Units from the Israeli army moved into the Golan Heights after Prime Minister Menachem Begin rammed a bill through the country's parliament that annexes the 458-square-mile plateau in neighboring Syria. The action provoked protests from Egypt and the U.S. that the bill violated the 1979 Camp David accords. Begin, who left the hospital recently after position with his speed. He called an immediate Cabinet meeting, winning unanimous approval, and swiftly pushed it through the 120-member legislature, directing his forces from a wheel chair. Opposition party leader Shimon Peres said he was "shocked and sad" at the quick approval. ap-proval. Defense Minister Ariel Sharon said precautions were being taken to deal with potential poten-tial violence along the Heights, taken by Israel in the 1967 war. London Britain began to recover early this week from some of the worst snow conditions in this century. Three blizzards in five days disrupted disrup-ted traffic and caused power blackouts and scattered scat-tered deaths. Four people were killed Friday in an accident north of London when a passenger train rammed into the rear of another train which was stopped to clear a fallen tree from the tracks. Three passengers and the enginer died, 10 were injured, and others were trapped for as long as three hours. 1 In Yorkshire, a mother and her 2-year-old daughter were found dead in the living room of their home. The two victims were dressed in nightclothes, and police speculated they were trying to keep warm when they were overcome by fumes from a coke fire. Two drivers were found dead at the wheels of their cars in northern England, and hundreds had to be rescued by police or troops. While snow conditions in the north, a thaw and heavy rains in the south caused new problems, as sea walls collapsed and homes were flooded. Moscow Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov and his wife were successful in a hunger-strike campaign designed to pressure authorities who would not allow his daughter-in-law to leave Russia. Lisa Alexeyeva obtained her exit documents Monday and said she would be leaving for the United States in about a week. Miss Alexeyeva was married by proxy to Sakharov's step-son, Alexei Semyonov, who is now residing in the United States, but Soviet officials of-ficials refused to recognize the marriage. Sakaharov and his wife Yelena Bonner began a fast because he thought his daughter-in-law was being held hostage for his political activities. On Dec. 4, the Sakharovs were seized by plain-slothesmen, plain-slothesmen, taken to separate hospitals, and threatened with force-feeding. But after a 17-day fast, the government gave in. A one-sentence item in the official newspaper Isvestia announced that Miss Alexeyeva's parents had dropped their opposition to her leaving, which supposedly cleared the way for her to receive her exit documents. No. 2 in West Jordan. And a rooftop blowing off a beauty parlor disrupted an Ogden funeral procession. Nassau, Bahamas You can't go home again, at least not in the boxing ring, as Muhammed Ali, who will be 40 this January, lost a unanimous 10-round decision to the younger Trevor Berbick Saturday. Ali had an ability in the past shown to bounce back against the established champs, beating George Foreman in Africa and Joe Frazier in Manila. But a news report on the Berbick Ber-bick fight said Ali was "just a tired, old fighter, his belly bounding, his punches lacking any authority." The three-time champion was hoping to get a crack at World Boxing Association Champion Mike Weaver, but admitted after the fight, "Father Time caught up with me." The fight started off as a comedy of errors. It was delayed for 15 minutes because the audience couldn't get past the locked main gate. Then it was discovered the arena had no boxing gloves, and a rush delivery had to be made. Little Rock, Arkansas The creationist trial here has provided everything from frustrated judges to UFO-watching theologians. The American Civil Liberties Union has filed a lawsuit against the Arkansas state law which says the theory of creation that life and the Universe appeared out of nothingness 6,000 years ago should be given equal treatment with the theory of evolution. The trial has provided drama and comedy. When a biochemist asserted that creation-science works were censored by evolutionists, but couldn't provide one concrete example of such censorship, he was publicly scolded by Judge William Overton. A school administrator ad-ministrator testified the creationist curriculum she was forced to draw up had no scientific foundation foun-dation and contained elements of religion. And a theologian said God could be taught in science class because the idea isn't necessarily religious. He also testified that UFOs were "Satanic manifestations for the purposes of deception." New York President Richard Nixon toyed with the idea of appointing Spiro Agnew to the Supreme Court. And he thought blacks were genetically inferior to whites. Those are two of the bombshells in "Witness to Power," John Ehrlichman's memoir of life in the White House. Ehrlichman, formerly Nixon's top domestic aide, said Nixon sincerely believed government programs for blacks couldn't help them because of their "inferiority." But Agnew's former press secretary blasted the Agnew story as "ludicrous." Victor Gold said Nixon and his staffers staf-fers had a low opinion of the vice-president. |