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Show 'age A12 Thursday, November 16, 1989 Park Record nninmmmfitt to Stinmmmmntt v MEDICAL DOCTORS Park City Family Health and Emergency Center 649-7640 Holiday Village Shopping Mall (between (bet-ween Albertsons and Hermans). Adult and Pediatric Medical Care. Family Planning, Medical Emergencies Emergen-cies and Trauma. Oiplomates, American Board of Family Practice Robert W. Barnett, MD Lisa A. Bollen, MD Robert J. Evers, MD Paula Gibbs-Taylor, MD Oiplomates i American Board of Pediatrics Robert T. Winn, MD Family Nurse-Clinician R. Herbert Lepely, FNP Tek Kilgore, FNP Diplomates Hours: Mon.-Sat. 9a.m. to9 p.m. Sun. 10a.m. to9p.m. Office appointments encouraged for non-urgent visits. Emergency care anytime. 24 hours everyday University of Utah Medical Center Obstetrics & Gynecology Group 50 N. Medical Dr. 581-7647 James Ft. Scott, M.D. Prof. & Chairman: High Risk Obstetrics. Tubal Microsurgery and and Gynecologic Surgery. William Keye, M.O., Chief, Division of Endocrinology Full range of infertility and laser surgery. Also, the department has 16 other board-certified obstetri cian gynecologists including all subspecialties offering complete state-of-the art obstetric and gynecologic care. Park City Urology 649-2070 645-8275 (By Appointment) Bruce W. Carlin, MD Park City Office 1 700 Park Ave. Urology-adult and children Male infertility Bed wetting Prostate Disease Kidney Stone Removal Urinary Tract Infection Vasectomy Vasectomy reversal Microscopic Urological surgery Male Impotence and Prosthesis Genital and Urinary Tract Cancer Surgery OB-GYN ASSOCIATES, INC. 649-0657 Carl Woolsey, Jr., M.D. Dan L. Chichester, M.D. Jeffrey D. QuInn.M.D. Tina Hedin Goldsmith, R.N., M.S., FNP Specialists in adolescent and adult women's health care providing obstetric, gynecologic, surgical, infertility in-fertility and family planning. Physicians on-call 24 hours Female provider option Salt Lake Office 1151 E.3900S..B299, SLC FITNESS CONSULTING The Diet Center 649-6776 Suzanne Harris Counselor The Diet Center comprehensive five-phase program includes private daily counseling, sound nutrition, behavior modification and lifelong maintenance. Call now for a free consultation. Located In the Jess Reid Building, 750 Kearns Boulevard. OPTOMETRISTS The Vision Center 649-5200 Roberts. Briggs, O.D. Visual examinations, contact lenses, large selection of frames and sunglasses, personalized service. ser-vice. Prescriptions filled. 750 E. Kearns Blvd. VETERINARY White Pine Veterinary Clinic 649-7182 Keith S. Lund, DVM Allen Bice, DVM Large and small animal, full-service hospital. Appointments and 24-hour emergency service. AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR Park Ave. Automotive 1400 W. Ra8mussen Rd. 643-7666 Richard Mercer Just east of Kimball Jet. Car repairs with a touch, of class. PHYSICAL THERAPY Park City Physical Therapy & 645-8080 Rehabilitation Mark Anderson, P.T. Brian L. White, P.T. Orthopedic, sports medicine and post-surgical rehabilitation. Specializing in knee and joint rehabilitation. Located at Prospector Athletic Club with access to all facilities. Open Mon-Fri until 7:30 p.m. Also open Saturday mornings. Summit Sports Medicine Physical Therapy Marc Larsen, P.T. Knee Rehabilitation Back and Neck Therapy Athletic Conditioning Equipment & Programs Computerized Fitness Testing Open Mon.-Frl. 7a.m. 7p.m. Saturday mornings 649-3913 CHIROPRACTIC a SPORTS MEDICINE Park City Chiropractic and Sports Medicine Clinic 649-1017 Donald A. Cofer, D.C. Chiropractic Orthopedist Duane W. Francis, D.C. Chiropractic Physician Robert Weiner, M.D. Orthopedic Surgeon David Jaramillo, D.P.M. Podiatrist Robert Fournler, L.M.T. Massage Therapist Laurie Cofer, C.N.C. Nutritional Consultant Nancy Pollard, M.S.W. Stress Consultant Ann Robertson, A.T.C. Athletic Trainer The new Park City Chiropractic and Sports Medicine Clinic is a multi-discipline multi-discipline facility offering a comprehensive com-prehensive range of services under the supervision of a highly qualified, professional staff. 1 678 Bonanza Dr. (next to the Park Record Bldg.) Available 7 daysweek. Hours: 8:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., Mon.-Fri. 8:30 a.m. to12:30p.m., Sat. 4:00 p.m. -6:00 p.m., Sun. INSURANCE Farmers Insurance Group Judy Kimball Hanley, agent 649-8656 Fire, life, commercial, auto. Holiday Village Mall State Farm Insurance MaxO. Vierig, Agent "40 years of Good Neighbor Service" 649-9161 Health, life, commercial, auto, fire. Suite 1 , Compark Plaza 1950 Woodbine Way, one street east of Anderson Lumber. Farmers Insurance Group Blake Jones, agent 278-4651 649-8587 Health, life, commercial, auto, fire. 3950 S. 2300 E., SLC 5465 Old Ranch Road Allstate Insurance Company Teri Bates, agent Understand all your insurance policies, bring them to me for a FREE review. 645-7100 1 647 Shortline Road (in Summit County Title Bldg. behind Silver King Bank) Globe Life and Accident Acci-dent Insurance Co. Luis Toro, Agent 649-6295 or 263-0772 in Salt Lake -All disability; including Medicare -In- and out-patient nationwide coverage -World wide accident coverage CWZ Insurance Mgrs. Valeska Spears . Independent Agent 645-8600 Auto, Fire, Commercial Health & Life 2053 Sidewinder Jack Daniels Building next to Grubsteak. INVESTMENTS SHEARSON-LEHMAN- HUTTON Charles G. Reynolds Money Markets, Stocks, Cor-porates Cor-porates and Goverment Bonds, Tax Free Municipal Bonds, IRA Rollover's. 2348 Foothill Blvd. (mouth of Parley's Canyon) S.L.C., Utah 84109 - 489-2200 800-662-0054 Utah Watts COUNSELING SERVICES Counseling Institute 649-2426 Confidential Professional Counseling Marriage, individual and family' group therapy, divorce adjustment, child guidance, depression, crisis counseling, medical and in-patient referral. Day, evening and weekend appointments, ap-pointments, sliding fee scale. A free assessment Is available upon request. Dr. Gene Hansen, PHD Shauna Bradley, LCSW Carol Buell, LCSW Beth Hughes, MSW All therapists licensed by the State of Utah. Counseling Institute is heavily involved in-volved in counseling cases of spouse and child abuse and offers a sliding fee scale to all persons depending on their income. 1 760 Prospector Avenue 649-2426 A United Way, non-profit agency since 1982. Marion P. Ayers, DSW. LCSW 50 Thaynes Canyon Park City -649-9723 240 University Street Salt Lake City -581-0329 -Relationships - Family, -Adolesencents. Adults. DeDressinn -Stress, Co-Dependency, Adult -Children of Alcholics, Interpersonal -Conflict. -Park City or Salt Lake City. The Emotional Wellness Clinic V. Alton Dohner, M.D. Adult Psychotherapy Medication Evaluation and Management Marty Rhea, R.N. Adult Psychotherapy IndividualCouples Therapy Special Interest in Women's Issues Sliding Fee Scale Office Hours by Appointment 649-7332 1 729 Sidewinder Drive Suite 201 Park City, Utah 84068-0281 The Prevention Center 649-8347 Drug and alcohol counseling, individual, in-dividual, family, marital crisis, referral refer-ral services, prevention and education. educa-tion. 1 753 Sidewinder Dr., Park City Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The Care Center 649-CARE FREE evaluation and referral services ser-vices for outpatient and inpatient care. Our experienced crisis specialists are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Office hours: Monday - Friday, 8am to 5pm. The Care Center A Division of The Western Institute 1760 Prospector Ave., Park City Nancy Pollard, LCSW Psychotherapist 649-7600 Specializing in stress therapy to improve relationships with self and others. Individual, couple and group therapy available. All counseling strictly confidential. 544 Park Avenue. Planned Parenthood Association of Utah 1670 Bonanza (in the Park Record Building) Birth Control Men'sand women's screening and treatment of sexually transmitted diseases Pregnancy Testing Pap smears and annual exams Education programs and services for schools and community groups All services are confidential and affordable. (Services free to those who qualify.) For more Information call the Park City Clinic at 649-5989. SPEECH PATHOLOGIST Summit Speech & Language Karen Butler, M.S. CCC-SP L i s e n c e d Speech Pathologist 649-4784 Serving acquired & developmental speechlangauagelearnlng problems. pro-blems. Adult and pediatric. AUTO BODY Maedel'8 Sales & Service 649-9802, Est. 1947 Your full-service body shop. Free towing If we fix it. Insurance claims welcome. Hours: 8-5 Mon.-Frl. After hrs. estimates available by appt. 41 1 7 W. Kilby Rd. Across 1-80 from Jeremy Ranch. Huge drug ring busted A prominent real-estate developer has been arrested and charged as the ringleader of an international marijuana mari-juana smuggling conspiracy spanning two decades of operation. Ciro Wayne Mancuso, 41, is one of 18 people charged as participating in the drug ring. He was arrested at his Olympic Valley home without incident. But the two other ringleaders, Brian John Degen, 41 and John Steven Fagan, 36, are believed to be out of the country. Federal authorities said they are seeking the extradition of both men. Drug Enforcement Agency Officer Jim Bramble said the conspiracy smuggled in 38-43 tons of marijuana since 1985, most of which was distributed in California and Nevada. Bramble added the group had amassed millions of dollars in revenues from the drug ring, which it had invested in various properties. The federal government is now seeking forfeiture of those properties, which include 30 in the Tahoe area worth an estimated $19.5 million and 33 in Squaw Valley. A total of eight civil forfeiture suits were filed Tuesday in Reno and repatriation of $1.25 million in Mancuso's Swiss bank account. The wholesale value of the drugs the group moved since the mid-1980s is estimated to be a quarter of a billion dollars. Assistant U.S. Attorney Dorothy Nash Holmes said authorities started the Mancuso investigation in the late 1970s, but had trouble getting records from the Cayman Islands where some of the money was allegedly laundered. Authorities said the ring had used boats to ship the drugs to the United States, as well as travel trailers with secret compartments and airplanes which landed on dry lake beds in Nevada. The last known shipment took place in June, 1987. "Ciro knew for a long time that he was under investigation," in-vestigation," said Holmes. estate tranfer tax, Town Manager Virginia Egger is exploring ex-ploring other options as well. Wallin, meanwhile, questioned the wisdom of the town's action. "They challenged me on how I could make the Coonskin pay on a purchase price of $952,000, he said, "and then they turn around and pay $1.7 miUion. I don't see how their plan can support that kind of debt. 1 Tackson Hole Guide! Ski Corp. gets time An llth-hour appeal for a temporary reprieve will allow president Paul McCollister to retain control over the Jackson Hole Ski Corp. for the time being. The Tenth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the company com-pany could delay turning over 24 percent of its mountain operations stock and a costly re-organization of its corporation. cor-poration. U.S. District Court Judge Clarence Brimmer had ordered the Ski Corp. to do so by Oct. 26 in response to a suit filed by Dutch oil investor John Deuss, who alleged it was part of an agreement in trade for a $3.6 million investment in the company. "The Ski Corp. is pleased the stay has been granted," said Steve Duerr, attorney for the resort company. "We were confident it would be. We will continue business as usual, and look forward to a banner year." Duerr said if the stay had not been granted, the company was prepared to comply with the district court order. Brimmer's order also included provisions which would allow Deuss to purchase another nine percent of mountain operations stock immediately and which held Ski Corp. to language in the contract which may ultimately make Deuss and not McCollister the majority shareholder in that company. WBSL "Jeep" wins Inn looks good Telluride's aggressive effort to provide affordable housing for its citizens by purchasing the Coonskin Inn took another step forward when an Arizona bankruptcy court rejected Inn owner Larry Potter's reorganization plan. The plan was not allowed because Aspen investor Bud Wallin, who would have provided the financing needed to keep the property from foreclosure, had not communicated com-municated his participation to all of Potter's partners. "Our plan, that would have paid off all the business people peo-ple around Telluride who are unsecured creditors (of Potter's), was thrown out over a simple technicality," complained Wallin. Now, Broadview Savings Bank of Cleveland will likely . be allowed to foreclose on the property and sell it to the town of Telluride, which has offered $1.7 million. The town plans to convert the 88-room Inn into 48 one-bedroom one-bedroom apartment units. According to internal city documents, renovating the property would cost about $565,000, and additional parking, another $250,000. Telluride also plans to subsidize rentals over a six-year period for $1.4 million in addition to the $1.7 million offer to buy the building. Although it is hoping to finance all with a 20-year bond issue of $2.6 million and a one percent increase in real Jeep Molnar's victory in his contest with the giant Chrysler Corp. has brought him fortune and fame. Molnar, who owns Jeep's Bar and Lounge in Jackson, spent eight months arguing with Chrysler attorneys over the right to use what the auto manufacturer said was a trademark name. The fight began with a terse letter from Chrysler threatening to file a lawsuit if Molnar did not change his bar's title. But he refused and pointed out in his own defense that Chrysler was using a name his father had given him 52 years ago, three years before a trademark was granted for the vehicle name. Molnar also noted he had no intent to sell cars and had used the name for his bar for many years. Newspapers, radio and television from across the nation na-tion picked up the story and soon thousands of requests for T-shirts, hats and jackets with Molnar's "Jeep" logo began pouring in. Finally, Chrysler gave in and agreed he could use the name for anything except to sell cars. They even paid his expenses for a trip he had made to Detroit in an effort to resolve the situation last spring. One of his largest orders is ironically from the Jeep plant in Toledo, Ohio, where 200 T-shirts have been purchased. pur-chased. Molnar traveled to Toledo for a celebration in his honor and asked for a tour of the factory. Although the plant manager balked at the idea, the union demanded demand-ed it. At the end of the two-hour tour, the manager asked if Molnar wanted to take a ride in a Jeep just coming off the assembly line. "So I got in, turned the key and nothing happened," said Molnar. "It didn't work." (Gelt sa girajp There's money in a name by BJORN MILLOM Record guest writer Scene: a Park City cafe, the light streaming from the translucent ceiling above. A fire burns effortlessly in the detached fireplace, so cozy it makes the bedrizzled day outside seem part of a different grayer universe. I am waiting to meet Myron Gold, an old college buddy; bud-dy; more correctly, a most-likely-to-succeed-and-did type college buddy. I hadn't seen Myron in 10 years, but he bought a condo and found my name in the Park City phone book and had, rather breathlessly, invited me to lunch at my favorite Park City eatery. From the cryptic phone conversation it was clear that Myron was already into very big money, was twice divorced, was a partner in a Chicago marketing consulting con-sulting firm, and was, at the time of the call, in a hurry. When he walked through the door, his eyes darting about like PacMan, I knew I was in trouble. I figured the price tag on Myron's overcoat was enough to carpet my whole house and re-cover the front seat of my truck. He wore his overcoat like a cape and managed to swing it smoothly as a matador from his shoulders and hand it along with a $5 bill to an impressed, if somewhat startled waitress. "Take care of the little rag here will you, Sigourney?" Myron said to the waitress and slipped down into a chair. "Sigourney?" I asked. "Yeah, I always use the name of some facho, well-known, well-known, high image babe with the female help, it flatters them. Sometimes I use Madonna or Cher. They love it. You gotta know people's minds, these days, if you want to get anywhere," Myron said. We bantered about a few things and then got into that "what have you done since college" wrestling match. When we quit, Myron was ahead a zillion to zilch. With no adequate competition before him Myron settled into a disseration on the enormous future of marketing. "Marketing is where it's at and where it's gonna be at. Marketing is the future. If you're not selling something, you're not making any money. With marketing we have only scratched the tip of the iceberg." "Go on, mix a few more metaphors," I said. "Look, the places where you can do some marketing are growing in leaps and bounds, look what happened with the Summer Olympic tie-ins. But it's not just sports, the future is tie-ins in politics, art, education; I mean, the tie-ins are going to be everywhere." "So what's all this going to be like? " "Remember in this country what happens in sports sets the stage for what happens in the rest of the country. Take the tie-in like the Sea World Holiday Bowl. Now there's a great concept. What's gonna happen next is Major League baseball is going to auction off all the positions on the diamond." "Say what?" "You remember Tinkers-to-E ver-to-Chance? " "Right." "Well, in the future it's going to be the Bud Light Tinkers-to-Camel menthol filter-tip Evers-to-Ace Hardware Hard-ware Chance." "So then the Allstate runner would be out?" "No, no that would be negative, the Allstate runner can only be safe. Get it? Besides, the Allstate image would be better if you used it for the catcher. The catcher cat-cher wears a mask and is well protected. Get it? " "I think so." "You know those dorks at the University of Utah Medical School really blew it. They could have been pioneers again market pioneers if they'd gone along and called it the James L. Sorensen Medical School, it could have got the old medicine-ball rolling," Myron sighed, "but maybe, then again, next time they'll hold out for more money, maybe something like the Phillip Morris School of Medicine, my God, I love that," Myron said and started scribbling furiously on the napkin. "That gives me another idea," Myron said. "You know after the Jimmy Bakker fiasco churches are hard pressed in looking for money. How about the St. Marks-American Marks-American Express Episcopal Church," Myron said, his pupils as big as saucers, "the Park City-Beneficial Life 3rd Ward, Cathedral of the Merrill Lynch Magdelen?" "Such possibilities, I mean, what's in a name?" I said. "There's money in a name. Big money. The trick is to tie into the deepest yearning, the highest integrity, the loftiest symbol, the most pristene beauty and transfer that sublime sense of what-ever-it-is to the company or product." "Sounds a little Machiavellian," I said. "Maybe so, but it works. I mean, how many people do you see these days wearing clothes with brand names big as billboards. Everybody is willing to be walking copy." "But where does it all stop? " "Hopefully never. Just think: the Mitsubishi-Republican Mitsubishi-Republican Party, the Dow Cemical Tebernacle Choir, Sony Hwy 40, the Great Morton Salt Lake, Zion's National Na-tional Nissan Park, Exxon-Summit County." "The sky is the limit," I said. "You're wrong. The sky is not the limit. You've heard of long distance laser image projection?" "I think so." "Well picture this, it's a crisp autumn night, you and the woman of your choice are out for a little walk in the mountains. There's a full moon. Suddenly our long-range long-range laser projector casts a company logo on the surface sur-face of the moon." "The Golden Arches?" "You got it, a billion people in one shot ! " |