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C la ssifie d 15-16 C o m ic s 13 F o c u s 14 Local/State 3-4 Lottery 2 Nation/V\torkl 5.7 O b itu a rie s 2 O o in io n 6 S o o rt s »-11 T e le visio n 13 2—MANCHESTER HERALD, Tuesday. Jan. 16. 1990 MANCHESTER HERALD, T\iesday, Jan. 16, 1990—3 RECORD MANCHESTER Engineering About Town Union’s leaflet Police Roundup firm wins Stop smoking classes held Back window provided entry angers Irish A free introductory class for “I Quit, My Way," a six- A Manchester man who was arrested Monday on top award week smoking cessation program, will be held Wednes­ burglary and criminal trespassing charges at Sears day at 7 p.m. at Manchester Memorial Hospital. Actual Roebuck and Co. apparently gained entry into the The Manchester Engineering firm classes begin Wedne.sday, Jan. 24. For more information, Marflipsier Parkadc store by breaking and crawling ‘Totally outraged’ by charges call the hospital’s community health education depart­ of Fuss & O’Neill has been selected through a back window, police said. as one of two consulting engineering ment at 647-6600 or 643-1223. Craig Hinson, 34, of 55 Grant Road, was held on ,a concerning firehouse dispute firms in Connecticut to receive the $1-000 bond and scheduled to appear Jan. 22 in Health clinics in Coventry 1990 Connecticut Engineering Ex­ Manchester Superior Court, police said. cellence Awards presented by Con­ tactic of spreading rumors to that ef­ Blood pressure checks, line tests, throat cultures and Using a police dog to respond to a 12:15 a.m. alarm at By Rick Santos necticut Engineers in Private Prac­ fect,” Irish said. health guidance will be available Wednesday from 10 to the store, police said they found Hinson inside the store. Manchester Herald tice Inc. He said he will pursue some sort 11 a.m. at the Coventry Town Hall, and Thursday from of action, so he can be vindicated. 10 to 11 a.m. at Orchard Hills Estates in CovenUy. All Man arrested at hospital 'The awards are given for en­ Republican Town Director Wal­ gineering achievements demonstrat­ lace J. Irish Jr. said today that he is But he docs not yet know what he residents of the town are eligible to attend. For more in­ A 29-year-old Manchester man was arrested Monday will do. ing the highest degree of merit and planning to take action against the formation, call Community Health Care Services at night on threatening and other charges at Manchester Martin, the fire union’s president, ingenuity. dispensers of what he called a myth 228-9428. Memorial Hospital, where family members had brought said Monday that the 65-member Fuss & O’Neill won the honor for about he and fellow Republican him because he was drunk, police said. labor group wants people in the nor­ Cholesterol screening available its design of a composting facility directors. Robert F. Walsh, of 4 Oakland St., was charged with theast part of town to Imow that they for the town of Fairfield. The system Irish was referring to a leaflet that Manchester Memorial Hospital will sponsor interfering with police, threatening and breach of peach are going to lose significant fire takes 4,000 tons per year of sludge accused him of being the leader of cholesterol screening on Thursday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the 8:37 p.m. incident, police said. He was held on protection beginning March 1, when from the town’s sewage treatment an effort by GOP directors to in its HealthSource Resource Room on the basement $1,0(X) bond and was scheduled to appear today in the town turns over the Buckland plant and mixes it with more that prevent the construction of a new level of the hospital. The $7 cost includes the finger-stick Manchester Superior Court. fire station to the Eighth District. 16,000 cubic yards of brush and firehouse in the northeast part of and nutrition counseling. To make an appointment, According to police, Walsh was brought to the hospital As part of the agreement with the leaves. The material is processed town. call 647-6600 or 643-1223. by his wife. Once there, however, he became belligerent district the town is supposed to con­ and in about 18 days the compost of The leaflet was distributed Satur­ and threatened several people at the hospital, includirrg struct a new station. In November, Opera to be performed - ready for use by the town in day to about 300 residences by his family, said police. Police then proceeded to arrest five Republican members of the leflinald Pinto/Manchester Herald landscape projects, including con­ members of the union representing The Connecticut Opera will present a performance of Walsh, who resisted and continued to threaten people, The Associated Press Board of Directors voted against version a landfill to recreation uses. the town Fire Department, said “Hansel and Grelel” on Friday from 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. police said. three Democrats delaying plans for SPONSORSHIP DRIVE — The Manchester Bicentennial Band Shell sponsorship drive for The facility cost about $3 million SEASIDE STROLL — Frank Gorman of Bridgeport takes an early morning stroll recently Robert Martin, president of Local at Coventry Grammar School, 3453 Main St., Coventry. the consmiction of the new station, Call 742-7313 for more information. the 1990 season started with a $1,250 donation by the town’s main branch of The Connec­ and has been operating successfully by Long Island Sound at Bridgeport’s Seaside Park. 1579 of the Professional Fire Fighter since August. union. and Martin says he thinks they will ticut Bank & Trust Co. Dave Estes, right, bank manager, and Beverly Noble, assistant never support the new station. Vegetarian class to be held Peter Grose, of Fuss & O’Neill, The leaflet accused Irish of call­ manager, talk about the band shell recently with Ralph Maccarone, band shell coordinator, Public Records “They’ve Just given every impres­ said the composting takes place ing residents of the northeast “ex­ A one-hour “Vegetarian Sampler” class will be held at CBT’s Main Street office. sion in the world that that’s what within concrete tanks that are six pendable.” Thursday at 5 p.m. at Manchester Memorial Hospital. they are going to do,” he said. Quit claim deeds feet wide and six feet deep by 220 Use rails, not roads, to ease Irish said, “It is an ouuight lie, Sample vegetarian meal plans, a list of vegetarian cook­ But Irish said he voted against the feet long. A tilling mechanism runs and I wish the person who said that books, nutrition information and food samples will be Julia M. Taggart to Ema W. Burgess, Barbara McDer­ plans because he thinks a better and along the tops of the tanks with the would come forward publicly.” discussed and prepared by a registered dietitian. The cost mott and Philip Burgess, 39 Hudson St., no conveyance safer location can be acquired for Obituaries tines of the tiller agitating the mix­ is $15. For more information, call 647-6600 or 643-1223. tax. traffic congestion, says Munns “I am totally outraged,” he said, the firehouse. He is requesting that ture. Velta Klavins to Ilze Zemars, 132-136 Mather St., no adding that he has worked for more the board to approve an independent Trees are for sale The other 1990 award for excel­ line is abandoned north and east of local public support for a light-rail to 9 p.m. Francis (Jean) White of Middlcbury; conveyance lax. By Dianna M. Talbot than 25 years as a volunteer study be done, so the best location is Palmira Zeppa Velta Klavins to Andris Tauris, 147-149 Wetherell St., lence was givcm the vanZelm, the Woodbridge street area, he said. mass transportation system. The Tolland County Soil and Water Conservation Dis­ Memorial donations may be made and two nephews, H. William Horan Manchester Herald firefighter for the Eighth Utilities determined, without any biases. trict has begun its annual shrub and tree seedling sales no conveyance tax. Heywood & Shadford of West An additional form of mass District. ftilmira (Ansaldi) 2^ppa, 94, of to the Manchester Memorial Hospi­ in Idaho and Harold J. Horan in Among the questions he will ask “I desire to see that all neigh­ program. Avaiable varieties include Hemlock, Aborvitae, tal Development Fund, Coronary Andrew and Anna L. Brindisi to Andrew T. and Hartford for a co-gcncration system transportation is needed to help ease “It is beyond belief that fire the South Glastonbury .section of Delaware. Stale Rep. Paul Munns, R- commuters are: why do they use borhoods are treated equally,” he Scotch Pine, White Pine, Norway Spruce, White Spruce, Dorothy N. Brindisi, 12 percent interest in Mountain study and design for Williams Col­ traffic congestion, especially on In­ Glastonbury, widow of Ferdinand Care Unit, 71 Haynes St. A Mass of Christian burial will be Manchester, wants to see the state mass transportation and would they professionals would use the scare said. Fraser Fir, White Birch, Douglas Fir, Mugho Pine, Farm property, no conveyance tax. lege in Williamsport, Mass. terstates M and 91, according to Zeppa, died Monday (Jan. 15, 1990) held Wednesday at 11 a.m. at St. try to ease commuter traffic conges­ support and use a commuter rail ser­ American Chesmut, Highbush Cranberry, Bluespruce, Wilfred Maclean Edward J. and Edna M. Sargalski Sr. to Edward J. Sar- Munns. 1-84 in Manchester is one of at Hartford Hospital. She is survived James Church. Burial will be in St. tion in the Hartford area by building vice? Munns said he docs not Blueberry, Rhododendron and Myrtle. Deadline for or­ Wilfred Maclean, 79, of Norwich, galski Jr., Sunny Brook Drive, no conveyance tax. the most clogged highways in the by two brothers, Andrew Ansaldi James Cemetery. There are no call­ a light-rail mass uansportalion sys­ know how much such a system Audit of insurance account dering is March 30. For information or to order, call and Edgar Ansaldi, both of died Sunday (Jan. 14, 1990) at the Gerald P. Rothman to Marilyn A. Rothman, Oak Park, state, he said. ing hours. Fatal accident tem, part of which would run would cost, but that its feasibility 875-8725. Manchester. William W. Backus Hospital in Nor­ The Watkins Funeral Home, 142 no conveyance tax. wich. He is survived by a daughter, throu^ Manchester. “This I know for sure,” said probably would depend on a federal on Eighth’s agenda tonight She is al.so survived by three E. Center St., is in charge of arran­ case postponed Munns, chairman of the State Munns. “We can’t continue to build construction grant. Pinochle results announced daughters, Virginia Peters Carroll in Mary E. Maclean of Manchc.stcr. gements. Legislature’s Policy Group on Mass more and more roads.” He recently flew to Washington The Manchester Senior Pinochle Club played on Jan. Florida, Irene Burgan of South Glas­ He is also survived by a son, Eighth District Director Gordan directors delayed naming an in­ Transit, is trying to gamer support He said he is not impressed by D.C. to meet with Rowland Mross, 11 at the Army and Navy Club on Main Street. Games tonbury, and Gail Zeppa of Rocky D. Maclean of Gla.stonbury; Ida Armstrong Current Quotes The pre-trial of Thomas C. Flynn, Lassow will make proposals at a surance commissioner Dec. 18. Dis­ for such a train system. It would be the state’s ongoing constmetion of the deputy administrator of the are open to all senior members and start at 9:30 a.m. Hill; a sister, Louise Piantanida of and two grandchildren. Ida (Vickers) Armstrong, 87, of who is accused of drunk driving and meeting of the district directors trict president Thomas E. Landers similar to ones in New York or Bos­ Higher Occupancy Vehicle (HOV) Urban Mass Transportation Ad­ Results were: Helena Gavello, 666; Helen Silver, 621; East Hartford; three grandchildren; The funeral will be Wednesday at 72 Pascal Lane, formerly of Duvall “If the United States truly expects democracy to causing an Oct. 22, 1989 accident in tonight for an audit of the insurance said then he had asked Lassow to ton, except smaller and above lanes on 1-84 in the East Hartford- ministration and officials from the Hans Fredcricksen, 519; Lynn Hockla, 601; Peggy and five great-grandchildren. She 11 a.m. from the Park Congregation­ Street, died Friday (Jan. 12, 1990) at flourish, you need a flourishing economy. All the good­ which an 11-year-old Providence, accounts, writing descriptions accept the appointment and that Las­ ground, he said. Manchester-South Windsor area. D.C. Metro system. Vaughan, 595; Gladys Seelert, 592; James Forbes, 590; was prcdecea.sed by a brother, Tony al Church, 283 Broadway, Norwich. home. She was the widow of will in the world won’t mean much when you have R.I. boy was killed in Bolton, has for district employees and establish­ sow has declined. Landers said he Trains would run to and from the 'The lanes are under-used and remain “I learned a lot about what types Jennie Forbes, 587; Mike Haberem, 581; Fred Krau.se, Ansaldi, and a sister. Rose Zeppa. Burial will be in Cedar Hill Richard Armstrong. growling stomachs.” — Laurence Berger, vice president been postponed again until next ing rules designed to shorten district wanted to talk to Lassow further. city of Hartford and its suburbs unfinished, he said. of projects the federal government 580; Dominic Anastasio, 579; Hans Bensche, 576; and The funeral will be Thur.sday at Cemetery, Hartford, at 1:30 p.m. She was bom in England, April 1, of the American Chamber of Commerce in I^nama, ur­ month. meetings. There arc no calling hours. along mainly existing but unused “By the time all the highway con­ will and will not fund and about the Lassow said he would like to see Sylvia Gower, 569. 9:15 a.m. at the Glastonbury Funeral 1902, and was a Manchester resi­ ging aid to rebuild from the looting, unemployment and The 22-year-old Braintree, Mass., rail lines, said Munns. stmetion is done, sometime around Memorial donations may be made dent for 50 years. Before retiring, role transportation plays in Items concerning those three some procedures set for meeting Home, 450 New London Turnpike, destruction that followed the U.S. invasion. resident is slated to appear on Feb. 8 In Manchester, the system 1993, it’s been said that our high­ measures have been included on the to Park Congregational Church, 283 she was employed by the Hartford at 10 a.m. in the Tolland County Su­ economic development,” Munns under which meeting would end at a Glastonbury, followed by a Mass of probably would run along an exist­ ways will have reached capacity agenda for the meeting at Lassow’s Broadway, Norwich. Fire Insurance Co. for 25 years. “We’re dead in the water here today.” — Florence perior Court in the Rockville section said. specific time, like 9:30 p.m. unless Christian burial at 10 a.m. at St. ing Conrail freight line that runs ad­ again,” Munns said. request. The meeting is set for 7 The Church and Allen Funeral She is survived by four daughters, Waymire, a vice president of Trans Mid-America, an of Vernon, a court clerk said today. “We also discussed the role of the there is a vote to continue them Public Meetings Augustine Church. Calling hours arc jacent to Tolland TUmpike until it The state representative is seeking p.m. in Cronin Hall of Mayfair Gar­ Home, 136 Sachem St., Norwich, is Dorothy Mae Miner of Stuart, Fla., Omaha-based marketing company that was unable to In his first court appearance on private sector in the development beyond that hour. And he said, he Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 reaches the Woodbridge Street area, public feedback on the railway and dens at Main and North Main in charge of arrangements. Shirley Ann Webb, Dixie Cordner make any long-distance calls because of a nine-hour Nov. 17, Flynn pleaded not guilty to and financing of transportation sys­ would like some limit on the time p.m. where it runs cast and north to South plans to conduct public surveys in and Mabel Plecity, all of phone outage, AT&T’s most widespread ever. 11 charges including manslaughter tems designed to benefit their streets. devoted to discussion of the issues. Public meetings scheduled for tonight: Memorial donations may be made Robert B. Nixon Sr. Windsor and Vernon, said Mark Pel­ commuter lots in Manchester and to the Glastonbury Visiting Nurses Manchester; eight grandchildren; and assault and misconduct with a employees and customers,” he con­ Lassow wants the audit of in­ Lassow said the December meeting Robert B. Nixon Sr., 58, of East legrini, town planning director. The other area towns to help determine Manchester Association, 647 New London and five great-grandchildren. motor vehicle, and driving under the tinued. “We learned that a lot of the surance accounts made before a new of the directors, which he was un­ Hartford, died Sunday (Jan. 14, business commiuiity helped pay for Department of Mental Retardation, Municipal build­ Turnpike, Glastonbury, or St. Private funeral and burial will be influence of alcohol. Flynn’s pre­ able to attend, lasted until almost 1990) at home. He is survived by his Thoughts it.” insurance commissioner is named. ing, coffee room (2), 6:30 p.m. Augustine Church, Hopewell Road, in Buckland Cemetery. There are no trial hearings scheduled in Decem­ midnight. wife, Barbara (Chapin) Nixon, his Those businesses benefitted by The post is vacant because Ellen Human Relations Commission, Municipal building South Glastonbury 06073. ealling hours. ber and January were postponed. Red Roof Inns refiles son, Robert B. Nixon Jr. and his There are many reasons for the Sabbath morning ser­ increased patronage from people Bums Landers, who was the com­ Lassow also said he would like to coffee room, 7:30 p.m. Memorial donations may be made The accident occured on Inter­ daughter, Cathy L. Woodward, both vice to be more effective than an evening service. I speak who used the system, he said. missioner, resigned as a district see Job descriptions written so that it Board of Directors, Lincoln Center hearing room, 7:30 to St. Mary Episcopal Church, Book state 384 in Bolton, when Flynn’s Wallace G. Gilbert of Manchester. now from the Jewish perspective in which Sabbath eve­ director after being elected to the will clear to district employees and p.m. of Rcmcmbcrance, 41 IVk St. vehicle struck a car parked in the Buckland Street plans Anyone wishing to comment or Wallace G. Gilbert, of He is also survived by another ning refers to Friday night. town’s Board of Directors. to the directors who is responsible Eight Utilities DisUict Board of Directors, Cronin The Holmes Funeral Home, 400 breakdown lane, killing passenger make suggestions to the policy Manchester, husband of Judy son, Mark W. Nixon of South By the end of the week, most of us are exhausted. We Lassow said he is willing to take for perfonning which duties. He Hall, Mayfair Gardens, 7 p.m. Main St., is in charge of arrange­ Carmelo Torrez and injuring four Red Roof Inns Inc. has refiled Manchester being given control over group can ^ 1 Munns at the Legisla­ (Brown) Gilbert, died Sunday (Jan. Windsor; another daughter, Debra ments. are eagerly looking forward to Sabbath rest, not Sabbath others from Providence. plans with the Planning and Zoning that area. tive Office Building in Hartford at the post but only if an audit indi­ said there has been some confusion Bolton 14, 1990) at Hartford Hospital. Hcaly of South Windsor; a brother, worship. By the time we finish dinner on Friday night, all 240-8787. cates the accounts are in order. The recently about responsibilities. Virginia Skiff Commission for a 112-room motel Red Roof Inns had plaimed to Republican Caucus, Community Hall, 7 p.m. He was bom in Hartford, the son L. Donald Nixon of East Hartford; we want to do is lie down and rest. Just sitting around the on the east side of Buckland Street build a restaurant in front of the Board of Selectmen, Community Hall, 8 p.m. of the late John and Rose Gilbert. and eight grandchildren. Virginia (Price) Skiff, 73, of 11 table, drinking tea and enjoying our guests takes a real Tips on crime south of 1-84 near the east-bound motel, but dropped the idea because Before retiring in 1986, he was The funeral will be Wednesday at Conway Road, wife of Henry R. effort. Far some, coming to the synagogue for a service- produce cash entrance ramp. of parking restrictions, Schmidt Coventry employed by People’s Bank of 11 a.m. at the Callahan Funeral Skiff, died Monday (Jan. 15, 1990) makes the evening truly meaningful, but it seems that' The new plans for the “no frills” said. The new plans place the motels Hartford. Home, 1602 Main St., East they are in the minority today. Many find that after as Steering Committee, Town Office Building, 7 p.m. at Manchester Memorial Hospital. The Tolland Coimty Crime Stop­ motel would eliminate a restaurant closer to Buckland Street. He is also survived by his two Hartford. Burial will be in Veteran’s restful Sabbath evening. Sabbath morning is a good time Town Council, Town Office Building, 7:30 p.m. She was bom in Hartford, Sept. pers Program began operation Jan. 8 that had been planned for the The motel would include two daughters and sons-in-law, Cathy Memorial Field, Hillside Cemetery, for worship and study. Our Sabbath service contains a Zoning Board of Appeals, Coventry High School, 19, 1916, and had lived in of its “cash for tips” hodine, 871- property and move the motel build­ buildings, one with 60 units and the / MARLOW'S '' and Dennis Cicero of Manchester, East Hartford. Calling hours are good deal of unison singing, and the Torah service room 28,7:30 p.m. Manchester for 35 years. She was a TIPS, as part of the recognition of ings closer to Buckland Street, ac­ other 52, according to Leonard and Nancy and Wesley Gilbert of today from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. engages all in thoughtful study and discussion. Being Water Pollution Control Authority, Town Office Build­ member of St. Bartholomew January as International Crime Stop­ cording to James Schmidt, vice Jahnke, vice president of Fuss & New Tripoli, Pa.; three brothers, Memorial donations may be made well rested (in our synagogue here in Manchester the ser-- ing, 7:30 p.m. Church. pers month. The program serves ^1 president of real estate for the O’Neill, the firm of consulting en­ SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALE Robert L. Gilbert of Windsor Locks, to the Hcmotology Oncology vice doesn’t begin until 10 a.m.) we can fully appreciate She is also survived by a son, of Tolland County, but principally Ohio-based Red Roof Inns. gineers that drew up the plans for Russell H. Gilbert of Vernon, and Memorial Fund, c/o Dominic Pbs- this worship experience. David R. Skiff of Wilbraham, Vernon, Bolton, Hebron, Ellington, The plans for the motel were ap­ the motel. Chester J. Gilbert of Manchester; waulc, 114 Woodland St., Hartford Mass.; a daughter, Joan S. Owens of and Tolland. proved in 1986, but the motel was Jahnke described Red Roof Inns on a select group of women's 06105. Save up to 60% Lottery two sisters, Viola Wright of Avon; and seven grandchildren. It offers rewards of up to $1,000 not built at that time because of a as “budget” motels with no recrea­ Windsor, and Bertha Hunker of Maye D. Stenger A memorial Mass of Christian Rabbi Richard Flavin and anonymity to anyone who dispute between the Town of tion facilities. soft spots OldmaineTrotiers Rockporf© , Ore.; and several nieces and burial will be held Thursday at 11 Temple Beth Sholom comes forward with information that Manchester and the Eighth Utilities The chain has over 200 motels, I H I N I VV B l\ I 11^ n o nephews. He was predeceased by Maye D. (Horan) Stenger, 88, a.m. at St. Bartholomew Church, leads to an arrest in connection with Here are Monday’s lottery results from around New formerly of Ferguson Road, wife of District over who should build a most of them on the East Coast, Regular to $68.00 - SALE $24.98 three brothers, Raymond Gilbert, Ir­ comer of East Middle TUmpike and a serious crime. Vernon Police Chief sewer for the area. The dispute was Schmidt said. Three are in Connec­ England: ving Gilbert, and Howard Gilbert, the late William H. Stenger, died Ludlow Road. Burial will be at the Gary Kology said recently that the CONNECTICUT resolved in an agreement reached in ticut, in New London, Enfield and and more on a select group of women's dress and a sister, Gladys Williams. Saturday (Jan. 13, 1990) at a local convenience of the family. There are program allows every citizen to take Daily: 8-8-4. Play Four: 3-3-1-2. March of 1989 with the Town of Milford, he said. The funeral will be Thursday at 9 convalescent home. no calling hours. Manchester Herald an active, yet safe role, in the shoes by ^ . $16.99 a pair or 2 pair for MASSACHUSETTS Save 50% a.m. at the Farley-Sullivan Funeral She was bom in Waterbury, June Memorial donations may be made protection of their community. $30.00 Hush Puppies Daily: 3-8-9-9. Home, 50 Naubuc Avc., Glaston­ 5, 1901, she lived in Manchester to the Manchester Area Conference Crime Stoppers has more than 620 NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND Founded Dec. 15, 1881 as a weekly. bury, followed by a Mass of Chris­ most of her life. She was a former reporting programs in the United New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine daily: 5-3-4 and of Churches, 736 E. Middle Daily publication since Oct. 1,1914. tian burial at 10 a.m. in St. James member of the Ladies of Columbus TUmpike. States, Guam, Canada, Australia and 6-3-6-0. and the Ladies of St. James. She was BuyTbids'^-iated 321 Church. 896 Main St. Burial will be The Holmes Funeral Home. 400 England. It has a 97 percent convic­ RHODE ISLAND USP : 327-500 VO L CIX, No. 90 in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Hartford. a member of St. James Church. Main St., is in charge of arrange­ tion rate. ;SAVE $10.00 on all Regular priced men's and | Daily: 9-9-2-2. Calling hours arc Wednesday from 6 She is survived bv a niece, Mrs. ments. Publisher I ’ Penny M. Sieflert before the next one hits. women's shoes with this coupon | Milewski heads Editor______Geo-geT. Chi:, f pell [ Coupon expires 1-20-9oJ Weather Managing Editor __ Mane P. Grady medical staff News Editor/Opinion Page Editor Ron Robillard ^ O Q Q 9 5 with free Associate Editor ______. Alexander GIrelli Dr. Stanley Milewski has been electric start Sports Editor '______NATURALIZER, classics Regular to $42.98 _____ Len Auster elected president of the medical staff REGIONAL Weather Partly cloudy of Manchester Memorial Hospital • The Toro 521 was rated the #1 Business M anager______Jeanne G. Fromerth Wednesday, January 17 Tonight, partly cloudy. Low 30 to Advertising Director______for 1990. Dr. Martin Rubin was two-stage snowthrower by a _____X______SALE $29.98 Douglas C. Murphy Sr. Aoow-WM*|52n A ridge of high pressure will to 'he Manchester Herald, P.O. Box 691, Manchester Department of Medicine and as warranty. move into New England today and Oonn. 06040. medical staff secretary. Dr. Purcell move off the coast tonight. The Man^ester Herald is a member of The Associated is a member of the Board of Incor­ Press, the Audit Bureau of Circulation, the New England porators of the MMH Corp., the 20% off all men’s ,^H ush Puppies' shoes Weather summary for Monday: Press Association and the New England Newspaper As­ yo«fc|56°| parent company of Manchester Temperature: high of 36, low of 1 sociation. K MARLOW’S 24, mean of 30. Guaranteed delivery. If you don't receive your Herald Memorial Hospitd. Most other fall & winter women's shoes at reduced prices A tta n tic by o p.m. weekdays or 7:30 a m. Saturdays, please "A /fft Precipitation: 0.06 inches for the o\ lor ovtrylhing $lnc» 1911" O cea n —1 to reach your Downtown Main Street, Manchester W^^Unglool 64"1 day, O.W inches for the month, 0.34 earner, ca l subsenber service at 647-9946 by 6 p m EMERGENCY inches for the year. weekdays lor-delivery in Manchester ^ 649-5221 1 FrM parking from a ratr ol tiora. i , , MARLOW'S f - i - W Suggest^ carrier rates are $1.80 weekly, $7.70 for FIRE - POLICE - MEDICAL e iW O Aoou kK Temperature extremes for today: Opan a daya - Thuraday nil 9:00. USU r ^ l Downtown Main Street * Manchester * 649-5221 Highest on record 54, set in 1953. one month $23.10 for three months, $46 20 lor six Today’s weather picture was drawn by Robert Roy, a fourth- months and $92 40 lor one year. Newsstand price 35 DIAL 911 OPEN 6 DAYS THURSDAYS TILL 9 PM Lowest on record, minus 8, set in cents a copy, ' Hitvent ytia done without aTHt) kwig enough?' FREE PARKING FRONT & REAR OF STORE cr ercaoi«nr ctouor 1984. grader at Highland Park School. In M anchester -MANCHESTER HERALD, Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1990 MANCHESTER HERALD, •Ibesday, Jan. 16, 1990—5 STATE NATION & WORLD Use of troopers Columbia Powell hopeful at start works on of meeting to review in 3 cities still experiments European troop status CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) J opposed by unions — Space» shuttle Columbia’s five VIENNA, Austria (AP) — Gen. ing talks, said officials want “to un­ crew members labored quietly today Colin Powell, the top U.S. military derstand better what these Eastern NEW HAVEN (AP) — The New the program would go forward in on their experiments, growing leader, today welcomed initial steps European countries arc thinking at Haven police union is asking its of­ Hartford, as long as details could be protein crystals in zero gravity, by the Soviet-led Warsaw Pact to this time, how their policies are A ficers to disrupt Gov. William A. worked out with the union. melting and resolidifying a metal reshape its armed forces and said the going to evolve.” O’Neill’s plan to put state troopers But Dennis M. O’Brien, president and photographing the Earth. level of U.S. forces in Western Czechoslovakia and Hungary al­ on city sUects by refusing to volun­ of the Hartford Police Union, “All systems aboard Columbia Europe could be changed. ready have said they want Soviet teer to work with the troopers when remained skeptical and warned are clean,” Mission Control reported Pbwell, chairman of the U.S. Joint troops off their soil this year. In East they arrive today. O’Neill of the political risks he as the astronauts worked through the Chiefs of Staff, made his comments Germany, Communist Party leader Six uniformed troopers and a su­ faces if the program fails. seventh full day of their marathon before top brass from the Soviet Gregor Gysi has proposed tliat all pervisor were to begin pau-ols in “The governor is being 10-day mission. Union and 33 other counuies in an foreign troops leave both Germanys A New Haven today, but the local shortchanged by his staff,” O’Brien There was little radio traffic be­ unusual exchange of views on their by 1999. police union dismissed the $250,000 said. “This is an embarrassment to tween ground and space “to allow governments’ military policies. “There is a greater willingness of program as “political window dress­ the governor. We don’t believe there the crew to stay on the timeline and “There is nothing sacrosanct counuies in Eastern Europe to take ing” that violates state labor laws is any merit to the program as get all their various chores ac­ about the number of American positions on the basis of what they and won’t put a dent in the drug proposed. The state is more inter­ complished without a lot of inter­ troops stationed in Europe,” he said. see as their national interest, rather problem. ested in symbolism than in actually ference from the folks here,” the “There is nothing carved in stone than just following a position which Meanwhile, the police union in doing something” to fight drugs. conuol center said. that says that military power in a is dictated to them by the Soviet Bridgeport threatenwi Monday to go In New Haven, police union “We just let them go at it, and divided Europe should remain as it Union,” Marcsca told a news con­ to court to stop the program, which president Louis G. Cavalier, still they’ve been doing very well.” has over the last four decades. ference Monday. has already proved unpopular with maintaining the troojwr plan violates 'Television from the shuttle “We are hopeful that the process Western analysts also are eager to the police union in Hartford and is state labor contracts and the city’s showed the astronauts busily pursu­ in which we arc all engaged will hear what Moiseyev has to say quickly becoming a political test for police contract, urged officers not to lead to the day when the military about the Soviet Union’s military N ing the several experiments. O’Neill. volunteer to work with the troopers. The Associated Press There were no further problems demands on both European alliances stance. In Hartford Monday, O’Neill met Under the program, teams of six with a navigation system that are greatly diminished,” he said. In December 1988, Soviet leader with Hartford city officials, who troopers would Join local police of­ PRESIDENTIAL PAR-FORMANCE — President Bush displays frustration Monday as he sounded an alarm and wakened the Foreign Minister Alois Mock of Mikhail S. Gorbachev announced asked him to press ahead with the ficers on their pauols in Hartford, takes advantage of warm weather to play some winter golf at Andrews Air Force Base in crew Sunday night, and commander Austria opened the unprecedented plans to pare his government’s program in Hartford despite strong Bridgeport and New Haven. Maryland. Bush got in 18 holes, but didn’t say whether he enjoyed himself. meeting, which is designed to fur­ defense spending and military for­ objections from the police union Dan Brandenstein stopped a “Six uniformed troopers on a ther reduce military tensions in ces, including the pullout of 50,000 there. dehumidifier leak that had been a comer is not going to solve the dmg Europe. of the estimated 550,000 troops “This is an issue of public bother almost from the begimiing of problem,” Cavalier said. “They need The military doctrine seminar, from Eastern Europe. policy,” said Deputy Hartford the flight. to go undercover.” scheduled in October, attracted Moscow has said it is adopting a Mayor I. Charles Matthews. “We Cavalier said he plans to file a Engineers did not have an ex­ Holiday helped limit effects greater attention following the wave more defensive military doctrine. don’t have a situation in the city of The Associated Press planation for the five sensor signals grievance today with the state Board of democratic reform that swept “We would like to understand better Hartford where the union runs the that triggered the alarm, but some of Labor Relations. HELPERS — Paul Hogan, 7, of Tolland, and Hope Tif­ Hartford Monday during the observance of Martin Luther Eastern Europe. what that means,” said Marcsca. city.” “Apparently the governor is not theorized they may have been as­ fany Jackson, 8, of Manchester, help Gov. William King’s birthday. sociated with electronics that feed a of AT&T network disruption Gen. Mikhail Moiseyev, the After meeting with Matthews, concerned about labor violations,” Soviet military chief of staff, also Western analysts seek hard Hartford city manager John Burke Cavalier said. “This is just political O’Neill ring the Liberty Bell replica at the Capitol in speed-measuring accelerometer and evidence of lower spending, fewer not with the navigation unit itself. NEW YORK (AP) — A computer down,” said Miriam Benson, com­ another AT&T spokeswoman. She was scheduled to speak. and Public Safety Commissioner window dressing.” 'The thrcc-wcck session marks the troops and reduced arms production. Bernard Sullivan, the governor said In Bridgeport, meanwhile, police Brandenstein plugged the leak by software failure blocked millions of pany president. said she did not know how many The North Atlantic Treaty Or­ stuffing a towel in a plastic bag and AT&T’s long-distance calls, sever­ Janice Falwin, a Montclair, NJ., calls were attempted Monday or first time top military officers of the union president Sgt. Paul Wargo NATO and the Warsaw Pact, plus ganization, the 16-nation Western State man charged called the plan an ill-conceived elec­ Neill tells children to listen to King wrapping it around the pipe that was ing the “lifeline” for phone-depend­ graphics designer who relies on her how many actually went tlirough. alliance, maintains its forces are the the neutral and non-aligned states of tion-year ploy, but. an organization its source. ent businesses nationwide before the fax machine to present projects to AT&T controls about 70 percent minimum needed to defend against Europe, are sitting down to discuss in drug ring case of black police officers backed the By Judd Everhart O’Neill said during a 90-minutc ceremony. fany Jackson, 8, of Manchester. The astronauts were so busy with problem was fixed nine hours later. clients in Los Angeles, New York of the long-distance market. Its an attack. 5h m ‘To our children, I say hold on to the dream State offices were closed Monday in honor of their experiments Monday that they American Telephone & Telegraph major competitors, MCI Com­ their intentions, plans and arsenals, COLUMBUS, Ind. (AP) — Two program. The Associated Press and Boston, said the outage caused of Dr. King. Be inspired by his vision, as we are went to bed more than two hours Co. said Monday’s outage was its munications Corp. and US Sprint, U.S. officials say. During the seminar, the military Columbus residents and a Connec­ Wargo said the union would go to King’s birthday, as were most municipal of­ her to miss a deadline, and that inspired, to try to make the world a better place late. So Mission Control let them most widespread ever, but the Mar­ reported no problems. The discussions arc being held officers were expected to present ticut man are being held without court to stop the plan unless state of­ HARTFORD — As Connecticut marked the fices. could cost her $1,000. than it is. sleep an extra half hour today. tin Luther King Day holiday AT&T customers are able to use under the auspices of the negotia­ their views, then respond to ques­ bond in Bartholomew County Jail ficials can prove that it has strategic, birthday of slain civil rights leader Martin Connecticut was one of the first states to set “Deadlines are my life. If I miss a rather than political, merit. Luther King Jr., Gov. William A. O’Neill urged “Avoid the temptation of dmgs ... stay in But it told them in the package of prevented the impact from being deadline, I don’t eat. 'The telephone the MCI and Sprint systems by dial­ tions on Confidence- and Security- tions. The give-and-take is designed on various charges of dealing aside Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday as a Building Measures. “They rushed into this without children to keep alive King’s message of hope. school and work hard ... continue the stmgglc messages and instructions faxed up worse. is like a lifeline to me,” said Fhlwin, ing special access codes. However, to fill in any gaps or clear up any cocaine, police said. for justice and social progress, just as we in state holiday, said Anita Gagnon of the state AT&T operators were forbidden, Western military experts arc confusion. Henry A. Booker, 33, was any planning or research. Right now O’Neill and two children rang the Liberty this morning: “Your request for “We’re hopeful the problem who works out of her house. government stmgglc for these noble causes for Commission on Human Rights and Oppor- even when asked, to give out this in­ anxious to hear just what the emerg­ In addition, the officers will have preliminarily charged with dealing it’s all politics and no substance,” he Bell replica at the Capitol on Monday as the na­ overtime has been disapproved.” won’t recur,” AT&T spokeswoman The problem was traced to the all our people,” the governor said. tunites. formation for competitive reasons, ing democracies in the Soviet-led a chance to meet privately for fur­ in cocaine and possession of said. tion observed King’s birthday. At least half of One of the crews’ first chores was Daisy Oitman said as dawn ap­ software that runs AT&T’s com­ The observance closed with the ringing of the Starting in 1974, a Sunday in January was Warsaw Pact have in mind for their ther questioning. z u cocaine. Laura D. Herrera, 24, was O’Brien, the Hartford union presi­ the more than 100 people .attending the “Let to dump excess water overboard proached today. “The fix is a puterized switching centers, said Ms. Sherwood said. bell at 12:30 p.m., the hour that bells across the designated as the day to remember the civil The problem apparently began in defense policies. The idea behind the meeting is to O J J charged with two counts of dealing dent, said both the Hartford police Freedom Ring” ceremony were children. through a valve. A TV picture bandage and not a cure. ... We’ll Ms. OtUnann. country were to ring to honor King. King was rights leader, she said. In 1984, the state revised one of the company’s electronic John Marcsca, who leads the U.S. lessen the secrecy that surrounds in cocaine, dealing in cocaine and and state police currently have staff “The most important social issues of our time to ice crystals as it hit the cold at­ have our fingers crossed.” 'The company all but eliminated bom on Jan. 15, 1929, and was assassinated 39 the date to coincide with the federal schedule, switching centers. delegation to the confidence-build­ military policies. possession of cocaine. Ramon E. shortages. Hartford police are — dmgs and violence, the rise of single-parent mosphere of space. As Columbia 'The company said it discovered sabotage or a computer virus as the O n families, the quality of our educational system years later, on April 4, 1968. which recognizes Martin Luther King Jr. Day the problem in mid-aftcmoon and Rodiguez, 34, of Danbury, Conn., authoritized to hire 505 staffers, but passed into daylight, the sun bril­ cause, she said. 0 m have only 450; state police are and the economic opportunities in our cities and Joining O ’Neill in tolling the massive bell on the Monday nearest to King’s birthday, she liantly illuminated the crystal corrected it shortly before midnight, On an average business day, 80 was preliminarily charged with deal­ were ftiul Hogan, 7, of Tolland, and Hope Tif­ said. ing in cocaine and possession of authorized to have 1,100 workers towns — arc really issues about young people,” shower. well before the start of the regular million calls go tlirough the A'T&T business schedule today. cocaine with intent to distribute. but have only 850, he said. “Quite a show, isn’t it?” Bran­ system, said Sally Sherwood, denstein remarked. About half the long-distance “You bet,” replied Mission Con­ callers on the AT&T network got a 0 1 trol communicator Tammy Jemigan. busy signal or a recording saying all WFRE BREAKING m >> I n B r i e f ^Annie 2 ’ to become a revival Mission specialists Bonnie Dun­ circuits were busy, the company bar, Marsha Ivins and David Low said. were busy monitoring an experiment Arizona Telemarketing Inc. of > CD in which the metal indium was Phoenix, which places 4,000 to THE RU LES Griffin said police are investigating the shooting as a Carbide confident of settlement of ^Annie* in state in summer being melted and resolidified to 9,000 calls a day, gave its 40 ^ > homicide, but had no suspects as of late Monday night. No, First Federal isn’t doing anything DANBURY (AP) — Union Carbide Corp. said that a employees an unexpected holiday in 33 H He did say the shooting was definitely related to drugs. determine if space-processed wrong (don’t be silly). But what w e’re $470 million settlement for victims of the 1984 gas dis­ By Kuchwara of the original, including on Broad­ minutes during its first preview. materials can have indusuial ap­ the afternoon. > Police, responding to an anonymous call, found the way where Loudon won a Tony SERVICE offering is certainly revolutionary. It's aster in Bhopal, India, remains binding, even though the The Associated Press Many theatergoers complained that plications. “We had to close the place FO R TH O SE “O man on a stairway landing on the second floor of the country’s new government has disavowed the settlement. Award. Eleven-year-old Danielle there weren’t enough orphans in the our new 20/20 Access CD. apartment building, Griffin said. “We are confident the settlement will stand. There is Findley who plays the title character show, and five little girls were Engage Us... And it’s exclusively for Tejada was shot through the back of the head, with the NEW YORK — A funny thing simply no basis for overturning it," said a statement by in “Annie 2” has also played the added to the cast. those who are 55 years small-caliber slug exiting through his eye, according to happened to “Annie 2” on its way to E. Geoghan, vice president and general counsel original, in other cities. Mike Nichols, Larry Gelbart and to Griffin. Broadway. It will become a revival 55 AND OLDER. of age and older. for the Danbury-based company. of the original “Annie.” “Annie 2,” which has a score by Tommy Tune, all of them ex­ Chamin and Charles Strouse and a Introducing an Engage You! Last week the new government of Prime Minister V.P. Alcohol banned at fund-raiser The $7 million sequel to the 1977 perienced show doctors, reportedly Singh said its predecessor was wrong to agree to absolve musical hit about the world’s most book by Thomas Meehan, is far were asked to come to Washington exciting new way Union Carbide of criminal liability in the gas disaster. It HADDAM (AP) — A volunteer ambulance corps, famous orphan closes Saturday in from dead. Powers said. to look at the troubled show. Inquire about The 20/20 Access CD isn’t like ordinary CDs. also called the settlement inadequate. saying that a dance to benefit the only survivor of an ac­ Washington, D.C., and will not open The sequel will be done this sum­ The plot for “Annie 2,” which to lose weight. Justice Minister Dinesh Goswami said the new cident caused by a drunken driver has become an “emo­ in New York as scheduled on March mer at the Goodspeed Opera House Uikes place six weeks after the en­ 1 can’t believe it. I ate pizza with my our Valentine 2 0 /2 0 ACCESS CD: It’s a CD that lets you access your money during government would support the gas victims and activists tional and sensitive” issue, has decided to ban alcohol at 1, said David Powers, a spokesman in East Haddam, Conn., where the ding of the first show, revolves kids, the same meals 1 cooked for the term, absolutely penalty free. That’s right. If, for in Supreme Court petitions challenging the right of the fund-raiser. for the show. original “Annie” started in 1976, around Daddy Warbucks’ search for my family, and even had a snack Engagem ent It lets you get to whatever reason, you should need extra money, former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi’s government to Plans to allow people to bring their own alcohol to the Instead, director Martin Chamin and possibly come to New York next a wife. Miss Hannigan wants the job with my coffee. And you know what? your money, 20/20 Access CD allows you a one-time withdrawal settle the case. Jan. 27 benefit caused too much criticism, said A1 plans to use much of the same cast, fall. Powers said. — to get revenge on Annie. 1 lost every single pound 1 wanted to. of up to 20% of your opening balance—without paying Lundgren, president of the Haddam Volunteer Am­ Critics in Washington lambasted Ride But Geoghan called the settlement “extremely fair” as well as its scenery and costumes, The original “Annie,” also written penalty free. one penny in penalties! and said it is a binding agreement. bulance Service. for the revival. Powers said Monday. “Annie 2” after its Jan. 4 opening at by Chamin, Strouse and Meehan, al­ It works fast. “The new administration may not disavow the settle­ “Haddam Volunteer Ambulance Services Inc. realizes The revival is expected to reach the Kennedy Center’s Opera House. most died at the Goodspeed O ^ra New Fast & Flexible Program from ment because it disagrees with it,” he said. that this event has become an emotional and sensitive Broadway later in the season, he “‘Annie’ was a musit^ to take to House in 1976. But Chamin brought Weight Watchers fits so comfortably At least 3,598 people were killed and another 20,000 issue and after careful consideration has, decided to not your heart,” wrote David Richards in Nichols, who signed on as a into my lifestyle that 1 thought 1 added. A date and theater has not The 20/20 Access CD’s flexibility injured when gas leaked from a Union Carbide plant on allow alcoholic beverages at the dance,” he said. yet been amiounced. in The Washington Post, “but you’ll producer, and helped him revise the wouldn't notice results right away. doesn’t stop there, though. During D ^. 3, 1984. The supreme Court ruled that the govern­ The dance was planned to raise money for Jose It could be an easy transformation want to take a paddle to ‘Armie 2.’” show. With Andrea McArdle replac­ Was 1 surprised when my husband 2 0 /2 0 ACCESS CD: ment had the right to be the sole representative of the Aguilar, a 20-year-old emergency medical technician — if it happens. He called the book “preposterous” ing Kristen Vigard as Annie and told me how great I looked after just the term, it also allows a one-time claimants, and last February the court accepted the $470 employed at Hunter’s Ambulance in Middletown who The stars of “Annie 2,” Dorothy and the score “dull.” Loudon added as Miss Hannigan, one week. It lets you add to deposit of up to 20% of your opening balance. .-k. million settlement. was injured in the accident in September. Loudon as Miss Hannigan and Revisions were started im­ the production went on to open in Wliat's more, because 1 can live with your earnings. So, if, after you open a 20/20 account, you want to take even Agulair was citically injured Sept. 2 in Colchester as Harve Presnell as Daddy Warbucks, mediately by Chamin. He cut the New York in April 1977, winning this program, 1 stuck to it and reached greater advantage of its attractive rates, go ahead. We re flexible. Emergency appeal is canceled he was helping a patient in the back of the ambulance. A have played in various productions book and musical numbers for the the Tony Award as best musical and my goal. And believe me, there’s FARMINGTON (AP) — The Connecticut Red Cross drunken driver swerved into the path of the ambulance, show, which ran three hours and 20 running for 2,377 performances. nothing more satisfying than success. has cancelled its emergency call for blood in the wake of killing the ambulance driver, another technician and the an “overwhelming” response by donators. patient. The drunken driver was also killed. And it fits my You can’t lose with a 20/20 Access CD. “The response was overwhelming,” H.D. Maynard, The proposed benefit had come under criticism from Literally. It's the only CD offering the members of Students Against Driving Drunk at Had- Capital Cities buys Imprint papers lifes^le. 2 0 /2 0 ACCESS CD: Red Cross administrative director, said Monday. “The aforementioned flexible features, plus a blood supply is again at a safe level.” dam-Killingworth High School. 1 WEST HARTFORD (AP) — The Monday he would take a yearlong tor for Imprint Inc., said. It keeps your . one-time interest rate upgrade option that He said 4,612 people gave blood last week, 874 more 14 weekly newspapers and printing sabbatical to pursue persoiial inter­ Hickey said Imprint’s 191 keeps you current with CD rates, should than the Red Cross had expected. Bald eagles thrive in state operations of Imprint Inc. have been ests before deciding what he will do employees were told Monday of the Free Registration interest up. But, he said, the Red Cross is still asking that people they rise after you open your account. Whenever you HARTFORD (AP) — More and more bald eagles, sold to Capital CitiesMrMedia Inc. next. sale, which was completed Friday. Save ^20. Pay only the *9 weekly fee. want to upgrade your rate, just tell us and it’s done. with types O negative and B negative donate soon. symbols of America’s nationhood, are finding Connec­ for an undisclosed price. Larsen sold to Capital Cities be­ No layoffs or consolidation of The Red Cross declared the emergency Jan. 7 because cause “it was the right company at ticut a congenial place to visit, even if they aren’t yet With the acquistion. New York- newspapers are planned, he said. Join by January 31 at these convenient times and locations: 1 Year CD blood collections were 17 percent or 2,800 pints lower ready to settle down here, according to preliminary based Capital Cities doubled the the right time for the right price,” he Capital Cities has purchased other than expected the past month, forcing the Red Cross to counts in an annual state survey of the majestic birds of number of newspapers it owns in said. weekly newspapers in Connecticut EAST HARTFORD MANCHESTER SOUTH WINDSOR cut hospital orders in half. Hospital were in danger of First Congregational Church Second Congregational Church Wapping Comm. Church prey. Connecticut and increased its cir­ Imprint’s printing plant, based in in the past two years. Last month, 837 Main Streel 385 N. Main St. 1790 Ellington Rd. postponing elective surgery. Although final results of the Midwinter Bald Eagle culation by 25 percent in the state, North Haven, prints the company’s •Wed. 10am.4;45pmS7pm •Mon 4:45 pm & 7 pm •Thurs. 4:45 pm 4 7 pm The Eagle’s new 20/20 Access CD. If you’re the company bought the Foothills •Wed. 4:45 pm 4 7 pm Widespread illness and snow storms contributed to Knights of Columbus Hall 8 00 8.30 newspapers as well as newsletters, Annual. Rate ^ Annual Yield Survey will not be known until Thursday, volunteers John Coots, group executive Traders, a free New Hartford com­ 55 or older and want to know more on how it’s the shortage, the Red Cross said. Several other Red Cross catalogs and periodicals, Thomas P. 1831 Mam Street Community Baptist Church who have been canvassing the state say they expect this publisher of Capital CitiesMrABC munity-based weekly newspaper, •Mon. 7 pm 585 E Center Street breaking the rules for the better, visit any 9 regions nationwide have also been experiencing blood 2 Year CD year’s count to meet or exceed the 66 birds counted Inc., said Monday. Hickey, corporate marketing direc­ for an undisclosed price. •Tues 6 pm branch or call us at 289-6401. shortages. during last year’s survey. Coots will be acting president and •Thurs. 10 am Blood drives are held Monday through Saturday •Sal. 9:45 am “We’ll have at least that many this year,” said Don publisher of Imprint. Mintmum depoo4 « $1000 tntefe&t it compounded monthly Rales are subjecl lo throughout the state. Hopkins, an amateur ornithologist who has been studying The 14 Imprint newspapers, with Meetings begin at times listed above. change Subsianitat penaKy lor early wthdrawais not meeting conditions staled Doors open 45 minutes earlier lor registration. No reservation needed. m the 20 20 Access CD Rale arx] yield assume principal and interest remam on 8 25 8.57 deposit lor one year at ongnai rate Tutorial accounts only and monitoring birds of prey in Connecticut for 25 years. a total circulation of more than Annual. Rale ^ Annual Yield Hopkins was one of about 50 volunteers who scouted 36,{XX), include the flagship West WEEKLY BINGO TUESDAY 7:00 PM CALL 1-800-333-3000 Man shot to death in Waterbury for the birds Friday and Saturday as part of the survey, an Hartford News and 13 other papers For a Weight Watchers meeting where you work, call 1-800-972-9320 WA'TERBURY (AP) — Police are continuing to in­ annual tally during a three-week period each winter. stretching from Enfield to Church of the Assumption vestigate the fatal shooting of a 29-year-old city man Bald eagles are frequently found along the Housatonic, Wethersfield in north-central Con­ 22 So. Street First Federal Savings who was found in an apartment building in the city’s Farmington, Connecticut and Thames rivers, as well as necticut. They cover community NFW FASTiSf FLEXIBLE PROGRAM South End, Waterbury police said. on some larger lakes in Connecticut. news and features, sports and retd Manchester, CT. 9 Police Chief Inspector John Griffin said the man, who The Department of Environmental Protection has es­ estate transactions, among other T/je Eagk among banks fmm lot ftubMQu«m w m Ks $9 Ott«f v«lK» 81 p8rticip8tif>p loc8tH>ni ooly C«nnot be combined with other diecountt or epeoel he identified as Tejada, was shot in the head tablished an observation platform in Southbury about topics. and ■'>‘1 FieiWe are registered trademarki of WEIGHT WATCHERS INTERNATIONAL. INC C1990 lIMOUimlS • CNWIIE 11DIM WEIGHT WATCHERS INTERNATIONAL. INC 3 1 1 East Hartford, Glastonbury, South Glastonbury, Manchester, about 1:15 p.m. Monday on a South Main Sueet apart­ MAIN STREET 100 yards from the Housatonic River just below an Imprint’s current publisher, $2.00 Admission over $1,000 CashPrtoes MANCHESTER, CT 06040 Vernon, Rockville and South Windsor TELEPHONE (203) 643-1211 ment building in an apparent drug deal that had gone hydroelectric dam, where birders can often glimpse bald Christopher Larsen, who founded Insured by Ihe FDIC ( i l Equal Oppoflunily Lender eagles feeding. the company 20 years ago, said DOT #2191 ICC #218409

I 0 MANCHESTER HERALD, TUesday, Jan. 16, 1990—7 6—MANCHESTER HERALD, Tiicsday, Jan. 16,1990 Campeau appoints Eastern Europe' OPINION former Fed chief Communists stripped of monopoly, open rite Was THe F/k s T Lowered Rciey MtN. as U.S. chairman Safeguards MftMBei? rlevtis- talks with opposition of CoH(sf^eSS> /■S standards CINCINNATI (AP) — Campeau reorganize under bankruptcy court To CoMFUarM TH^T He Corp.’s U.S. subsidiary today ap­ supervision. SOFIA, Bulgaria (AP) — The demand — that the talks lead to a COULPM’T MaKe it pointed G. William Miller, former Communist Party, its political “government of national consen­ needed on Federal Reserve Board chairman “The company is now positioned ‘reform’ monopoly formally scrapped but sus” — is more complex, Lukanov ON Hi$ FaYifaise- and treasury secretary, as its chair­ with a strong and experienced its grip still largely intact, is now told reporters Monday evening. man and chief executive officer, one management team at all levels to manage what has always been a opening talks with an opposition The talks are “too delicate an By Jack Anderson day after putting its department demanding more democracy in the exercise” to be marred by precon­ disclosures stores under bankruptcy protection. highly successful group of and Dale Van A lta______Soviet bloc’s slowest changing na­ ditions, he said. Equally delicate Miller, 64, steps into a job created American retail businesses — with a new name that reflects our retailing tion. negotiations last week to resolve The recent decision by the state’s Freedom of WASHINGTON — Congress is fond when Toronto-based Campeau last The talks come a day after Par­ the ethnic conflict between the of fixing things that ain’t broke. week split its U.S. operations from orientation,” he said in a statement. liament voted unanimously to Moslem minority and Slav Information Commission that the personnel files the parent company, giving them A number of perfectly good ethics The decision to seek bankruptcy repeal the Communist Party’s majority showed that the Com­ of teachers are public records, now being chal­ operating independence. rules have been relaxed by Congress,^ all protection reflected Campeau’s in­ guaranteed leading role, making munists and opposition Union lenged in court, has far-reaching implications. The U.S. unit is the parent of in the name of “umformity. The jus­ ability to pay off $8 billion in debt, Bulgaria the last Warsaw Pact alone cannot forge a national con­ Public school teachers are public employees. tification is euphemistically known as Federated Department Stores Inc. much of it resulting from the $3.4 country to formally overturn the sensus, Lukanov added. Their salaries are paid from public funds. TTiey are “parity” — everybody should be operat­ and Allied Stores Corp., which own billion acquisition of Allied in 1986 status that shored up Stalinist The opposition backed its such department stores as ultimately responsible to the public for perfor­ ing under the same rules. The real story is and the $6.6 billion purchase of structures in Eastern Europe for demands with a rally of more than that House Speaker Tom Foley, D-Wash., Bloomingdale’s, Jordan Marsh, Federated in 1988. more than 40 years. mance of their duties. caved in to White House demands that & Strauss and Lazarus. 50,000 people on Sunday, the big­ Hindered by ethnic conflict and gest to dale in Sofia. There is a continuing trend to require more government workers and members of They were placed under protec­ Under Chapter 11, the companies the remaining power of orthodox complete public disclosure about people who work Congress should live by the same stan­ tion from creditors under Chapter 11 get a reprieve from creditors and can Loudly applauded demands Communists in the provinces, there included the calls for the dards. , of the federal bankruptcy law on continue operating while reorganiz­ in public jobs. change is coming slowly to Bul­ resignation of Communist Premier There is no reason why teachers should be an But you can bet the lawmakers didn t Monday, enabling the stores to con­ ing their finances. But all decisions garia, where hard-line Communist raise their own standards up to those that tinue operating while Campeau tries regarding the companies must be ap­ Georgi Atanassov, a holdover from exception. Todor Zhivkov was ousted Nov. the Zhivkov era, and adoption of govern the bureaucrats. Instead, the rules to work out its financial troubles. proved by a bankruptcy judge. 10 after more than 35 years in The problem with the FOI ruling is that it re­ for the bureaucrats have been loosened, The Chapter 11 filing was the two-tiered legislative elections in Federated’s stores include power. quires public disclosure now of some information and Congress calls it “ethics reform.” largest by a U.S. retailer, affecting May and November to give the op­ Abraham and Straus and The Union of Democratic For­ The Ethics Reform Act of 1989, more about 100,000 employees and 258 position a chance to organize that was supplied by job applicants on the assump­ Bloomingdale’s of New York, Bur- ces, an umbrella grouping of op­ accurately known as the pay-raise bill, in­ stores in the United States, and the against the still powerful Com­ tion that it would be regarded as confidential. dine’s of Miami, Lazarus of Cincin­ position groups bom over the last munists. The police are fighting back cludes a package of trade-offs negotiated second largest by a non-financial two years and gradually gaining In its decision, the Freedom of Information nati and Rich’s of Atlanta. Allied’s by the White House in return for Bush’s company after Texaco Inc., which Mladenov has promised elec­ stores include The Bon Marche of ground this winter, wants today’s Commission exempted certain kinds of informa­ backing of the pay hike. Sources told our sought court protection in 1987. tions by May, but opposition for­ one point, they question people on a nan- Seattle, Jordan Marsh of Boston, talks to usher in free elections by tion which it held should remain confidential. Cleveland police are processing 700 drug associate Stewart Harris that Bush had ces see this as a by the Com­ By Tom Tiede gout comer, and afterward march into a Campeau’s U.S. subsidiary also Maas Brothers of Tampa and Stem’s lessening Communist control. arrests a month, three times the number of Foley over a barrel during last-minute munists to preserve much of their The exceptions apply to such obvious things as shabby home described as a shooting gal­ announced today that it would of Raramus, N J. CLEVELAND — The gentleman on two years ago. Narcotics have poisoned negotiations. Both men remembered all The opposition won another vic­ power while the opposition is still ancestry and national origin, religious and political much of the city, and the cop claim they lery (a haven for substance abusers), change its name from Campeau tory Monday — a promise that the duplex porch was three sheets to the too well what happened to former House Campeau’s stores moved quickly untested and weak. The faltering affiliation, family financial status, and medical must fight back any way they can. where they confiscate 20 packages of Corp. (U.S.) Inc. to Federated Stores Communist cells will be removed wind, waving a long-neck bottle of beer, Speaker Jim Wright when he failed to win to assure millions of shoppers and transition to democracy was evi­ What is more, the community seems to cocaine. M d, finally. The cops ambush a Inc., and that John W. Burden III, from Bulgaria’s police, making it conditions unrelated to job performance. and when the police cars pulled up to the a pay raise for his colleagues. 100,000 employees nationwide they dent at Monday’s parliamentary agree. Fiorello says good people here are gang of kids under a tree. All of the lads chairman and chief executive officer politically neutral, said Petar Personal essays that are part of the record are curb, he sneer^, hooted and demanded to The compromise struck by Foley and will stay open and well-stocked. session. so worried about drug abuse that they throw up their hands — except one, who of Federated and Allied, has quit ef­ Beron, an opposition spokesman. know what was going on. He stood up, the White House clears the way for cor­ not exempt in total although parts of such essays want tough action, any kind of tough ac­ drops a load of drugs on the ground. But fective Jan. 31 “to pursue other in­ “Please rest assured that we are Lawmakers agreed to scrap caught an approaching officer and tapp^ porations to pay the travel expenses of Beron said, however, that talks are. References are not exempt either. tion, and worry about it later. Citizens the officers are not fooled. That chap is terests.” operating as usual,” New York- with the government could stall clauses of the constitution that him lightly on the breast pocket. government workers and their spouses sometimes stand around to cheer the stops told of his rights under arrest, taken away Miller, chairman of G. William based Abraham & Straus said in over so far unsatisfied demands for enshrined the Communist party’s School systems may vary greatly in the way The cop exploded. when they attend private functions that and searchers, and, well, if iimocent get to jail, and Fiorello hunts the dirt for a Miller & Co., a Washington-based full-page newspaper advertisements an opposition newspaper and head­ role as “the guiding force in they keep personnel records. Confidential infor­ He said, “Don’t poke me, sonabitch.” are related to their work, such as conven­ drawn into things, it can’t be helped. few crack rocks worth of evidence. merchant banking firm, has served today. society and the stale.” mation may be intermingled closely with other And then the hammer fell. tions or corporate meetings where the quarters in Sofia. So, Fiorello and his “running guns” The street sweep lasts for three hours. on the boards of Campeau, The Associated Press Andrey Lukanov, in effect No. 2 But they postponed considera­ The drunk was spun around like a toy bureaucrats is invited to give a speech. While “there may be cases where data because of the assumption on the part of both just do the job. They leave the sorting out The cops say it is successful. There are Federated and Allied since 1987. He to Communist party chief and tion of demands to scrap the clause and forced against a wall. A half dozen A number of federal agencies already an advertised item is not available,” job applicants and officials charged with hiring to others. They are divided into two[man six arrests, a few hundred dollars in con- became Fed chairman in 1978. From IN BANKRUPTCY — Bloomingdale’s, along with other well President Petar Mladenov, said he that mandates that Bulgaria is “a other people in the street were also permitted the practice of corporations the ad said, “the action taken by our teachers that the information would not become cars, they coordinate by radio, and when uaband; one of the team broke a tire on a 1979 to 1981, Miller was Treasury expected the demands to be met. socialist state ... headed by the stopped abruptly to be searched. One fel­ paying those expenses for the federal know department stores owned by Campeau Corp, were one or the other of them sees something vehicle during a chase. Fiorello is secretary under President Carter. parent company is intended to help But another key opposition working class.” public. low broke loose and ran, he was followed worker, but, until the Ethics Reform Act, ensure that our customers’ needs are placed under the protection of the bankruptcy court Monday, ripe, they meet instantly at the scene. resigned. He says that it’s all eyewash, in Miller said the moves announced If the court upholds the FOI decision, it should by several plainclothcsmen, and he was only the State Department allowed the Naturally, they work almost exclusively a way, yet it’s at least disruptive, and today represent significant develop­ fully met and that our company allowing the debt-swamped chain to operate while attempting collared while crossing a nearby stream bureaucrat’s spouse to take the freebies remains strong and healthy.’ be sure the ruling provides adequate protection in the poor and black segments of town. tomorrow is another day. ments in the company’s cfTort to to work out its troubles. and arrested for narcotics possession. too — and only on rare occasions. German protesters ransack against the accidental or incidental disclosure of The men frequently come up empty, to As for the ethical concern, Fiorello But congressional spouses enjoy that information that should remain confidential. be sure. One example tonight is the leaves the last word to his second-in-com­ Welcome to the front line of America’s treat, and, faced with a question of goldfish suspect. Fiorello and his crew mand, Det. Sgt. Ray Gercar. Gercar is a secret police headquarters In the future, school systems should avoid as­ war on drugs. The Cleveland Police “parity,” Congress decided to extend the detain a group of persons outside an burly, 17-year narcotics veteran. He says, Right to face accuser is before court king applicants for information it cannot make Department is conducting a spirited street privilege of these privately financed vaca­ EAST BERLIN (AP) — Com­ angry interruptions and applause, sweeping exercise. The cops from mobile apartment doorway, frisk them down to “Most of these creeps that we stop have public, or at the very least segregating such infor­ tions to bureaucrats, rather than give up two 13-year-old girls were allowed the presence of the defendant, in Stating that the Sixth Amendment munist authorities warned that ef­ Modrow also professed “full un­ teams that are known as “running gun the underwear and find only a plastic bag got rap sheets as long as my arm,” and, WASHINGTON (AP) — The mation so that it can be easily be withheld from the perk themselves. such cases. About half the states forts to build democracy were in derstanding” of the rage stemming squads.” They swoop into the shabby full of the fish. The owner explains that anyway,on the subject of rights, “I think Supreme Court today agreed to to testify while protected by a large requires a face-to-face confronta­ That probably will confuse the people have similar laws. tion, the justices last year struck jeopardy after East Germans from decades of repression at the public disclosure. neighborhoods and round up the usual he is taking them home to feed his most people have too many of them.” decide whether people accused of screen placed in the courtroom be­ at Housing and Urban Development. The trial judge was constitutional­ down an Iowa man’s sexual-assault gripped by new revolutionary fer­ hands of the secret police. suspects, hoping to nab the dope mer­ piranha. Gercar is the policeman who did not child abuse have the right to at least tween them and the defendant. like the poke from the drunk gentleman Before Secretary Jack Kemp came along one face-to-face confrontation with The Sixth Amendment, in part, ly required to question the children, conviction bccau.se two 13-year-old vor stormed the headquarters of The protesters shouted “We are chants unawares. Then there is the rich but otherwise to clean up HUD, the agency solicited says, “In all criminal prosecutions, however briefly, in Mrs. Craig’s girls were allowed to testify while the despised secret police and ran­ the people! We are the people!” as It’s a profane and sometimes violent on the duplex porch. He pushed the stag­ their young accusers. clean motorist. Fiorello stops a shiny travel money from the private sector. the accused shall enjoy the right ... presence, the state court said. protected by a large screen placed in sacked it. Hundreds of thousands they rushed into the secret police behavior. It’s also ethically questionable. gering fellow about like useless meat on a The justices, in two cases of enor­ Bronco truck in the street, because the Kemp axed the policy after the Office of That was the only v ay, the state the courtroom between them and the of other protesters took to the building Monday afternoon. They Lt. Vic Fiorello is in command this even­ hook but did not find anything. When he mous importance for child-abuse to be confronted with the witnesses driver “fits the profile” of a drug hustler. Government Ethics pointed out that HUD court concluded, that the judge defendant. streets Monday night across the scattered documents and looted ing, and he says, “It’s illegal as hell.” "^e left, the drunk gave him the finger behind prosecutions nationwide, said they against him.” He has a thick gold chain around his was, in essence, letting private groups will consider reinstating the child­ could determine whether the The 1988 decision appeared to country, expressing anger at Com­ wine, food and clothing from cops bully anyone they want, often acting his back, and one of the other cops, The 1988 decision appeared to neck, $300 in bills folded up in his pock­ with money buy special access to HUD molesting conviction of a Maryland children would suffer “serious emo­ leave unanswered whether there munist leaders for not moving storerooms and closets. on hunch alone; they pull people out of seeing this, returned it with both hands. leave unanswered whether there et, but, alas, no narcotics, and he is policy makers. Kemp has allowed only tional distress” if forced to testify in may be exceptions to the face-to- faster to dismantle the secret police They filled stairways with cars, they barge into homes, and they Thus it is in the war of drugs. day-care center owner and an Idaho may be exceptions to the face-to- released without goodbye or apology. It can be hard to tell who is worse, the himself and his top aides to travel on the woman’s child-abuse conviction. face requirement. court with Mrs. Craig present. face requirement. and implement reforms. papers, ripped out drawers from question, intimidate and harass. On the other hand, the cops are as private dime. The judge instead relied on the In the appeal acted on today, offices and broke windows. Some of them seem to enjoy it. Others bad guys or the good. Decisions in the two cases are ex­ Maryland’s highest court threw They demanded the ouster of the patient as they are relentless, and they The policy is even tighter at the pected by July. They mark the pretrial testimony of experts in Maryland Attorney General J. Several ripjxid down a picture of just follow orders. In any case they may out Sandra A. Craig’s conviction, Communists. Three months after a score almost as often as they don’t. At Tom Tiede is a syndicated columnist Agriculture Department where only court’s second venture into this area saying her 7-year-old accuser and deciding that such courtroom tes­ Joseph Curran Jr. said the state court peaceful popular revolt toppled old Communist leader Erich Honeck- have scant choice. Fiorello says er, who was ousted in October, and Secretary Clayton Yeutter is allowed that of criminal law in the past two three other young wimesses wrongly timony would be traumatic for the ruling in Mrs. Craig’s case “struck hard-line Communist leaders, the trampled it. perk. years. were allowed to testify against her children. an untrue balance between a defen­ party still essentially conttols the About 60 police on hand at the Under the new law, it will end up to the Stating that the Constitution’s over closed-circuit television. That violated Mrs. Craig’s Sixth dant’s constitutional right... and the government, media, economy and time did not try to step them, ac­ General Services Administration and the Sixth Amendment requires a face- But the state court stopped short Amendment right to confront all ad­ compelling governmental interest of bureaucracy. Pittston chipped away at pay cording to news reports. No in­ Office of Government Ethics to decide to-face confrontation, the justices in of invalidating the Maryland law verse witnesses, the state’s highest safeguarding the physical and In the southern city of Cottbus, juries were reported and many in who takes private travel money and when 1988 struck down an Iowa man’s that allows young children to testify court said. Its ruling cited a 1988 psychological well-being of a quipinent to increase productivity. As a several dozen protesters pelted the the crowd appeared calm and prolonged inhalation of coal dust. spouses can go along. sexual-assault conviction because by closed-circuit television, outside Supreme Court decision. child.” By Robert Walters Moreover, the industry has few incen­ result, the average amount of coal mined That’s not the only change. The ethics local secret police building with good-natured as they milled annually per worker has grown more than rocks and clashed with guards in through the headquarters. WASHINGTON — Provisional resolu­ tives to improve health and safety condi­ law will soon make it legal to give your fourfold during the past 40 years. friendly public servant a “gift” as long as an unsuccessful attempt to storm Reports of the size of the crowd tion of a rancorous and protracted labor tions for its employees. In 1983, for ex­ ample, Pittston was fined a nominal UMW active membership peaked at it isn’t valuable. Just what constitutes it, news reports said. of protesters ranged from tens of dispute in the coal indusU7 provides only approximately 500,000 in the mid-1940s U.S. major donor of contraceptives The Communist-led caretaker $47,500 by the federal government’s thousands to 100,000. temporary respite for the Appalachian “value” has yet to be determined by the Mine Safety and Health Administration but today is below 65,000 — and those Office of Government Ethics. The ethics government, feeling the greatest The protesters dispersed by late workers whose jobs are dirty, dangerous miners produce only about one-third of pressure in weeks, said the storm­ after a spark ignited a methane gas buil­ experts are working on regulations to set WASHINGTON (AP) — The AIDS, but also to the growth of the ment is enthusiastic for family plan­ policy led to a tense controversy evening. East German television and debilitating. the nation’s coal. ing of the secret police head­ dup. Seven miners were killed in the ex­ a dollar value on gifts. Most estimates put U.S. government gives three- agency’s population activities. ning,” said spokesman Jerry with Congress over the United Na­ said a citizens’ committee and Notwithstanding the euphoria sur­ When an industry-wide labor agree­ quarters in East Berlin posed “the plosion. the probable limit at $35. quarters of the contraceptives Details of the population program Lipscomb. tions Fund for Population Activities. regular police officers sealed off rounding the tentative settlement of the ment expired in February 1988, Pittston gravest danger” to efforts to estab­ That penalty of less than $7,000 a life Tltat will be a set up for Agriculture donated to Third World countries, appeared in tl\e fall 1989 edition of Kenya, in east Africa, has one of Because the fund helped China, the building after the protest. United Mine Workers of America strike moved aggressively against the weakened lish true democracy. contrasts with the $63.5 million in fines Department employees who are not now including nearly 7 billion condoms “USAID Highlights,” an agency the world’s highest birth rates. The where abortion was reportedly The police agency is being dis­ "Do you ever miss having to put up with the against the Pittston Coal Co., despair and union and its demoralized members, sum­ Communist Premier Hans imposed upon the UMW for alleged un­ allowed to accept anything more valuable over the last two decades, according publication distributed to reporters Central Intelligence Agency es­ forced on some women, U.S. con­ mantled, and it was not clear how frustrations of real life?" depression remain hallmarks of an oc­ Modrow rushed to the building lawful acts committed by its officers and marily stripping away medical and other than a cup of coffee. to the Agency for International last week. timates its population of more than tributions were opposed by Reagan many people were working at the cupation notorious for its high rates of benefits miners had struggled to obtain and, through a loudspeaker, members during the Pittston dispute. The Government supervisors who demand Development. Gillespie said the agency has 23 million people is growing by 4.4 and many of his supporters. Last headquarters Monday. death and disability. decades earlier. pleaded with the protesters to stop. often violent strike produced almost gifts from their underlings used to be sub­ Since 1968, the agency “has pur­ overcome some of the hostility to percent a year — eight times as fast November President Bush refused to Ear’ier Monday, Modrow of­ Indeed, the high proportion of coal Pittston cut off health insurance held H e appealed for the 3,000 arrests by the Virginia State Police. ject to dismissal before the Ethics Reform chased $567.7 million worth of con­ family platming of many lliird as the population of Japan, for ex­ sign a bill on foreign aid until Con­ fered opposition groups a far miners who are forc^ to retire prema­ by 1,500 of its retired or disabled workers demonstrators “to stay in a In 1950, UMW President John L. Act came along. But no more. Although traceptives for distribution to 75 World leaders, who have suspected a ample. gress cut out a provision of $15 mil­ greater say in ruiuiing the caretaker Manchester Herald turely after contracting black lung disease and their widows. In addition, the com­ dialogue” with his shaky govern­ Lewis negotiated a landmark industry­ sanctions will still be available. Congress countries — 6.9 billion condoms, hidden western policy of countries The agency cited one program in lion for the fund. govenunent before free elections and other occupational afflictions was an pany halted its contributions to a trust ing coalition. Alternately facing wide contract that required employers to has sent a clear signal that dismissal is too 1.6 billion cycles of oral contracep­ to keep down their influence by Kenya that serves an area of set for May 6. important factor in the labor dispute that fund that provides benefits to 130,000 Since 1981, the agency has spent Founded Dec. 15,1881 as a weekly. provide complete health care coverage harsh a treatment for tyrannical bosses tives, 49.7 million intrauterine reducing their population. 350,000 people. It said 43 percent of Daily publication since O ct 1,1914. led the nine-month strike. retired miners from throughout the in­ who hold their subordinates hostage for $2.9 billion on population control About 55 miners are killed every year, not only for active miners but also for devices and 16.5 million vaginal “These countries have had growth the married women there now prac­ dustry. expensive gifts. activities, ranging from research to and another 10,000 to 15,000 are injured retired and disabled workers and their Pittston’s unilateral abrogation of its foaming tablets,” the agency that’s historically unprecedented,” tice birtl^ control, compared with Publisher ______Penny M. Sietfert reported. he said in an interview. only 17 percent in the country as a financing popular songs about the [___ Ron Robillard as a result of explosions, cave-ins and widows and orphans. commitment angered not only thousands dangers of pregnancy. ^ ELAINE KAHANER, B.s.y m.s7 \ Opinion PaM Editor Duff Gillespie, the agency’s He said in Africa the population whole, and women there average 5.2 Associate Editor Alexander Girelli other workplace accidents. Another 4,000 In return the union allowed the coal of workers, but also other coal mining Castro’s last stand companies to introduce mechanized e- director for population, said over­ is expected to double in 24 years at children compared with 7.7. The agency publication said in 20 Counseling & Psychotherapy die annually from lung diseases caused by firms. “Pittston is simply trying to dump Fidel Castro’s days could be numbered. Specializing in Child Behavior Management He has been a thorn in the side of the past seas orders for condoms rose from the present rate of increase and The publication noted the U.S. countries where it spent the most its unfunded employee liabilities on the Techniques and Parent Education and Support rest of the industry,” said one angry coal eight American presidents, and has been 535 million in the 1988 fiscal year leaders are trying to cope with in­ government does not support abor­ money, the average number of company executive. allowed that luxury because he had the to 735 million in the year ending on creasing demand for schools, hous­ tion or what it called coercive fami­ children per family has dropped A group is now forming to train parents to manage the MR- NoRiGQft, Pittston also insisted upon authority to support of the East Bloc. Now his patrons Sept. 30. He said the increase was ing and social services. ly planning. < from 6.1 in the l% 0s to 4.5 in the due in part to the fight against “In places like Kenya the govern­ President Reagan’s anti-abortion late 1980s. behavior of attention deficit/hyperactivity TeLL US require miners to work nights and Sun­ have softened and even they are weary of disorder children. I OBlecT days, sought to strip jobs from the union’s his Marxist rhetoric. There are conflicting flBoOT... jurisdiction and attempted to cut medical rumors about Castro’s health and dissent By Appointment: ToTHISUHecp benefits, holidays and sick days for active in his ranks. Now he must deal with (203) 649-9348 miners. growing isolation from his financiers. Sales outpace growth in business inventories JJ The miners worked without a contract Ironically, the Eastern Bloc, not the United States, may prove to be the undo­ for 14 months while attempting to bargain WASHINGTON (AP) — Busi­ Japan is trimming production at its level, which represent about 45 per­ ■ONE-TO-ONE WEIGHT LOSS COUNSELING ing of Fidel Castro. November pace. The ratio was 1.53 in good faith with the company. Finally, ness inventories rose rose 0.5 per­ U.S. plant later this month. in October. cent of the total, rose 0.3 percent. •PERSONAL FITNESS TRAINING the 1,900 UMW members employed at Mini-editorlal cent in November but business sales The Commerce Department said Inventories often rise during Manufacturing sales, on the other Pittston mines in Virginia, West Virginia We provide private weight reduction counseling and The elderly in this country are vic­ rebounded by a brisker 0.7 percent, inventories climbed to a seasonally periods of slow economic growth as hand, increased 0.5 percent. personal fitness training to people of all ages and and Kentucky went on strike in April timized by shysters armed with junk mail. the government said today. adjusted $7%.8 billion in November output exceeds demand. The Wholesalers’ inventories ad­ needs. Private sessions in weight reduction and management include nutrition counseling and 1989. Companies with nothing better to do than Faster growth of sales than ac­ after rising 0.3 percent a month ear­ economy has been experiencing vanced 0.5 percent, while their sales Three months later, the regional office programs for people with high cholesterol levels and rip off vulnerable people send official­ cumulation of goods on shelves and lier. That was a bit better than the sluggishness over the past year as jumped 1.2 percent. high or low blood sugar. The personal fitness training of the National Labor Relations Board looking letters that con senior citizens backlots is good news for the 0.4 percent increase originally the Federal Reserve keeps a tight Overall, inventories were 6.8 per­ iiKludes toning muscles, losing extra fat, and with jurisdiction over the dispute ruled achieving a more ideal target heart rate. These services into sending money. The ploy is often to economy. If inventories were to pile reported. rein on credit to slow inflation. cent above those of a year ago, that “Pittston’s unfair labor practices” Business sales also rose, to a are offered on an individual basis with one-on-one convince the elderly that they owe the up excessively, it could mean cut­ But many economists do not feel while sales increased 4.4 percent. appointments. provoked the strike and that the company government money to keep their Social backs in production and a loss of seasonally adjusted $523.6 billion, the ratio is at a dangerous level yet. “failed and refused... to bargain collec­ Security or Medicare benefits. This is after falling a revised 0.5 percent in jobs. Retail backlogs rose 0.6 percent tively and in good faith.” nothing more than junk-mail terrorism. However, some industries such as October. That revision showed a ^ rso n a l Witness in November, while retail sales But that order can be appealed — and To our senior readers, we urge you to call automobiles already are feeling the slight improvement over the 0.7 per­ lane Murano climbed 0.5 percent. But the Com­ the company is not likely to be penalized the post office about any suspicious piece effects of excessive inventories. cent drop originally reported. W E D E LIV E R for allegedly violating federal labor laws merce Department reported last M.S. Health Education of mail asking for money. There is no Chrysler Corp., Ford Motor Co. The result in November business For Home Delivery, Call now that a special mediator designated by activity produced a slight decline, to week that sales gained only 0.2 per­ 1170 Ellington Rd. shame in asking questions. and General Motors Corp. all have South Windsor, CT the Labor Department apparently has set- announced temporary layoffs to 1.52, in the ratio of inventories to cent in December, reflecting a 647-9946 tled the strike.______modest holiday buying season. 528-2743 Jack Anderson and Dale Van Atta reduce the number of vehicles stuck sales. That means it would take 1.52 Monday to Friday, 9 to 6 Robert Walters is a syndicated months to exhaust inventories at the Inventories at the manufacturing Complimentary Visit With This Ad. Valid Until 1 -31 -90 liii- I)i nm:k Pusi are syndicated columnists. on backlots. Mazxia Motor Corp. of columnist '90 MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday. Jan. 16. 1990 fflaurlirstrr Hrrali'i Trillions Section 2, Page 9 Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1990 From Page 1 From Page 1 SPORTS

cent on Jan. 1 from 7.51 percent, Social Security surplus and thus In exiting 1-384 onto South Main will bring in nearly $280 billion this pump up the overall federal deficit, Street, the operator of one vehicle year. The total reserves should peak turning up the political heat to ad­ slid out of control into two other at $12 trillion in the year 2030. but dress the budget shortfall. cars, the deputy fire chief said. One dwindle rapidly therc^ter. “It has now become clear that the woman cut her finger and one Confident Huskies beat No. 5 Syracuse By law, the money is not stashed administration intends to use the So­ automobile leaked some grease onto away, but invested in treasury cial Security payroll tax as an ongo­ the road, Beckwith said. with no call ensuing. securities, where it collects interest. ing, permanent source of revenue The ice did hold one advantage, By Len Auster The three officials needed a The Treasury Department uses the for the general purposes of govern­ however, he said. When one car Manchester Herald police escort at the half for their money the same way it uses other ment,” Moynihan, chairman of the bumped into another, icy conditions funds it pockets from securities sales Senate Finance Social Security sub­ allowed the car that was hit to HARTFORD — A year ago when first-half non-involvement. — to pay the government’s bills. committee, said when he announced bounce away. the University of Connecticut beat The referees found their whistles The money pouring into the So­ his plan last month. “It was like bumper cars,” the fire Syracuse, the Orangemen had the the second half, putting UConn into ^ -f n ■*■ ^ ' cial Security trust fund also helps V^ite House spokesman Marlin chief said. “There were no serious excuse of being minus floor leader the bonus with 14:19 left. At that make the overall federal deficit ap­ Fitzwater derided the plan last injuries, just body damage to the Sherman “The General” Douglas. point the lead was 45-35. But pear smaller — $52 billion smaller * » ■ • f Thursday. “The Social Security sys­ vehicles.” There were no excuses Monday Syracuse, with freshman Michael last year. tem is sound. Let the Democrats Radiational cooling occurred night. Edwards lending some desperately / , ^ 3kJ^ That will turn around in the next fool with it, not us,” he said. Monday night, said Alan Dunham, a The upstart Huskies, playing with needed direction at the point, pulled century: people who arc working Moynihan’s cut would cost $62 meteorologist with the National extreme confidence, took it right to within three (52-49) with 7:53 left now will be drawing retirement billion over the next two years, and Weather Service. the No. 5 team in the country early on a 3-poinler by Billy Owens (13 i funds and the government will have critics say it would shift the burden All during the day, the earth had and then held off a late rush for a points, 11 rebounds). to redeem all the maturing securities of financing baby boomers’ retire­ absorbed radiation in the form of 70-59 victory in Big East Con­ That, however, would be the the Social Security system will cash ments to later generations. sunlight, and after sunset the earth ference play before a boisterous sel­ closest the Orangemen would come. in to pay retirement benefits. The But the proposal could be irresis­ continued to reflect some of that lout crowd of 16,294 at the Civic “There was no panic, just a sense ■*if\The Associaied I Press shapes up as a major problem with radiation back to outer space. tible to lawmakers, who love a Center. of resolve when a great V • no end to the government’s red ink chance to cut taxes. Without clouds in the way to It was Connecticut’s fourth team came at us,” UConn coach Jim M EM O RIAL — Coretta Scott King and her daughter Bernice look on Monday as Martin in sight. reflect some of that radiation back to Moynihan’s proposal is one of straight conference victory, its Calhoun said. / Luther King III places a wreath at the grave the Rev. Martin Luther King during memorial Moynihan — who was a member severad Social Security bills Con­ earth and keep the earth’s crust longest streak since 1981-82, and “A year ago teams were making ceremonies in Atlanta. of the 1982 Social Security commis­ warm, the crust continued to grow pegs the Huskies at 4-2 and in sole runs and passing us. This year the sion — would cut the payroll lax by fe s s will face when it returns from its winter recess on Jan. 23. colder until it became the coldest possession of third place in the runs we’re able to hold off,” Husky 0.14 percent now and by another part of the earth, Dunham said. league and 14-3 overall. Syracuse, junior forward Murray Williams 0.96 percent next January. He would Many concede the political appeal “It doesn’t happen often,” he said. led by probable No. 1 NBA draft said. “It’s hard to explain, but I begin boosting rates again in the of the off-budget proposals is “I don’t think we’ll see much more pick Derrick Coleman (16 points, 12 think now we’re more focused and Memorials, and fist fights, year 2015, giving the counuy 25 probably unstoppable. In a measure of it this week.” rebounds), falls to 3-2, 12-2. more together as a unit.” years of lower taxes he says will of the idea’s appeal, the White Temperatures were expected to The Huskies showed no fear of After UConn opened an eight- help the economy grow and allow it House says President Bush will in­ climb to the mid-40s today, with the Orangemen from the word go. point lead (61-53) with 2:53 to go, mark King Day observance to belter afford the higher levies clude a version of the plan in the fis­ overnight low of 30 to 35 degrees, “Yeah, I would say we we were con­ the Orangemen scored two hoops to later. cal 1991 budget he presents Con­ he said. Only isolated icy s .ots were fident, but more or less we’re play­ come within four with 2:25 left. But His plan would also shrink the gress on Jan. 29. expected, Dunham said. ing with one attitude,” said Tate after a Husky miss, George made m By The Associated Press church beforehand; visitors were re­ states without any fomi of King The extended forecast, according George (17 points, five assists). maybe the defensive play of the quired for the first time to pass holiday, students at high schools in to the weather service, is: Wednes­ “They (Syracuse) had to come play night as he stripped Owens of the Thousands marched and prayed through metal detectors, and police Concord, Milford, Merrimack and day, a chance of showers, with us and earn their respect. We’re not ba.sketball. and church bells rang on the took up posts throughout the church Wolfeboro staged protest rallies. Ethics temperatures in the 50s, and similar saying we’re better than anyone in “1 was looking for a strip,” birthday of slain civil rights leader during the service. “Marlin Luther King wasn’t just weather on Thursday; on Friday, the country but until they come in George said. “I saw in the films that Martin Luther King Jr., while Security also was heavy for a for black people. He changed From Page 1 however, a cold front from the West and beat us, we don’t have respect he turns to his left. I thought that protesters demonstrated against March of Celebration held later in everything for everyone, not just is expected to move in, with from anyone as far as team.” was the key play.” downtown Atlanta. Police estimated black people,” Merrimack Valley temperatures in the mid-30s. The Huskies scaled the win from states, schools and businesses not resigned yet. The Huskies, riding six 3-pointcrs 400,000 people watched. High senior John Morin, who is partnership between local in the first half and strong play from the foul line, which isn’t always observing the federal holiday. Since Ethics Commission Chair­ A former top King lieutenant, the white, told fellow students. developers and then Planning and Nadav Henefeld (11 points, 4 steals, friendly to them, with Rod Sellers, Three Ku Klux Klansmcn handed man William FitzGerald announced Duarte given out leaflets in New Hampshire, Rev. Williams, complained In Arizona, where the King Zoning Commission Chairman seven rebounds), Chris Smith John Gwynn and George each con­ holiday has long been a bitter con­ his plans to resign. Democrats have Alfred W. Sieffert Sr. verting. The Associated Press The Associated Press fights broke out between blacks and that the parade trivialized the day had difficulty finding a party mem­ (Smith 17 points, three assists) and and wasted money better spent on troversy, a Phoenix crowd estimated Sieffert, who is no longer a mem­ the last rites George held a 38-31 halftime bulge. “The guys (were confident),” whites in Louisiana and South ber to fill the vacancy. A controver­ DOUBLE TEAMED — Derrick Coleman (44) of Syracuse is COMING DOWN — UConn’s Chris Smith (13) comes down the poor. “This has been prostituted at nearly 15,000 heard lawmakers ber of the partnership, has resigned They owned a 30-14 lead at one George said. “Lyman was getting up Carolina, and racist graffiti was sial vote by the commission on Jan. sprayed on signs on a California more than any other holiday except and community leaders at the as PZC chairman but remains a SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador point before the Orangemen became there and saying ‘I got it, I got it.’ defended by UConn’s Rod Sellers (22) and Murray Williams with a rebound in front of Syracuse's Derrick Coieman 4 indicated candidate Thomas Celia Jesus Christ’s birthday,” he said out­ Capitol urge them to vote in a member. (AP) — Former President Jose during Monday night's action. Coleman had 16 points and during Monday night’s Big East clash at the Civic Center. highway named after King. could face conflicts of interest, so he extremely physical. George was side an Atlanta housing project. referendum this fall over whether to Napoleon Duarte, who is suffering King’s survivors and others withdrew his name. Celia is an attor­ The ethics panel, also on Feb. 22, mugged before the end of the half. Please see UCONN, page 10 12 rebounds for the Orangemen. Smith had 17 points in the Huskies’ 70-59 victory. remembering him in services around About 25,000 people lined Los let a King Day observance become is scheduled to consider the proce­ from terminal cancer, has received Angeles’ streets for the fifth annual law. ney and his firm sometimes docs last rites, his doctor said. the nation said they harbored no il­ work for the town. dure to be followed regarding a King Birthday Celebration IVade complaint from a citizen against Dr. Jose Luis Saca said Duarte lusions that his work was finished. A bill to make the day a holiday FitzGerald said, “I’ve never had down a boulevard named for him, Republican Town Director Wallace was given last rites Monday. Saca “It’s great that we celebrate his was inuoduced Monday in the Idaho so much trouble withdrawing from No. 1 East Catholic falters and 2,500 turned out for an annual J. Irish Jr. The complaint registered said Duarte, who also has birthday but this day should be a day Senate. Montana also has no form of something in my entire life.” breakfast in Boston. In Memphis, by Seymour Kudlowclaims that pneumonia, was in “very critical” where we recommit ourselves to King Holiday, while some other At the Ethics Commission Feb. Tenn., about 300 people gathered at Irish, a member of the Manchester finishing his dream,” King’s son, states keep workers on the job but 22 meeting, the panel will be asked condition. The Lorraine Motel, where King Counu-y Club, had a conflict of in­ Martin Luther King 3rd, who was 10 mark the day in other ways. to act on a request from Republican Saca said Duarte, 64, was getting to fifth-ranked Notre Dame was assassinated on April 4,1968. when his father died in 1968, told About 200 people protested out­ commission member Mary Sears. terest when voting on the club’s heavy doses of antibiotics and being “We didn’t want the children to lease extension in November. 500 people at a DcFhul University side a bank in Buffalo, N.Y., that She wants an investigation as to fed intravenously. Until it was loo late for the said. “They (East) arc a team to be think that Martin Luther King’s By Jim Tierney church after leading a candlelight stayed open. Norman Eenith, 35, whether Planning Director Mark At the February meeting, the Eagles. reckoned with. They’re as good as birthday was just another day for Duarte survived an earlier bout of Manchester Herald march Monday night. held an outstretched dollar bill and Pellegrini or members of the plan­ commission is scheduled also to pneumonia in September, when he East, which suffered its first loss anybody we’ve played. I don’t think King’s widow, Coretta Scott watching television,” said Mardcst said, “This is what it’s all about.” against a stale team, is now 6-3 there’s anybody in the state of Con­ ning staff knew about a business elect new officers. was also given last rites. BOLTON — In its first in-siate King, spoke in Atlanta at an annual Van Hooks, a Memphis teacher who while ND improves to 5-3. East will necticut that can oulskatc these East contest since being tabbed as the ecumenical service at Ebenezer Bap­ helped bring a group of youngsters host Immaculate High of Danbury Catholic kids.” No. 1 team in the state poll, the East tist Church, where her husband to The Lorraine. Wednesday night at 8:30 at the Bol­ Before Carmody’s game-winner, Catholic hockey team fell, 4-2, to delivered some of his most stirring The Washington-based Federal ton Ice I^ace. ND had lied the game on a power- fifth-ranked Notre Dame of West orations. Holiday Commission said bells “I think they were on a high from play goal by Mike Christoforo. Car­ Haven in a battle of titans Monday “Now is the time to organize a chimed at 12:30 p.m. EST in all 50 s ZOO being ranked No. 1,” East coach mody finished off the scoring with If been a aiw heie! afternoon at Bolton Ice Palace. global non-violent movement based states and 144 countries. The Liber­ Graham Leveston said. “I knew in an empty-netter on the power play With 3:50 left in the game in a on Dr. King’s teachings, to put an ty Bell in Philadelphia was tapped my mind that we are not by far the with 24 seconds left. holly contested 2-all affair, both the end to the scourges of poverty, three times. The New York Stock best team in the stale of Connec­ Both Sacco and Eagle goalie Open a CD and turn your bucks into Eagles and Green Knights were as­ hunger, racism and bigotry, war and Exchange paused for a moment at ticut. They (Notre Dame) came out Wheeler were superb, stopping 18 ducks and other great Gund' toys. sessed a pair of penalties following militarism,” she said. noon. ready in the third period.” shots apiece. East played without Get a cuddly Gund stuffed animal just one of several mild scuffles. A 3- Security for the service was heavy The holiday, first celebrated in Who is the best team in the slate, Chris Hills, who will be sidelined for putting your money into an SBM on-3 situation now existed. following recent racially motivated 1986, fell on King’s actual birthday according to Leveston? until Jan, 27 due to a foot injury. Certificate (tf Deposit. The toy earns Chris Candido of Nohe Dame mail bombings in the Southeast. for the first time. you a big thank you, the CD earns you “Hamden is the best I’ve seen,” “They (Notre Dame) have one of stole a pass and fed Craig Carmody, Bomb-sniffing dogs inspected the In New Hampshire, one of four big interest. he stated. the better goalies in the state,” who beat East’s Andy Gagnon at See the chart below for how little the Following a scoreless first period Leveston said. “They worked hard. center ice. Carmody raced in on stuffed animal costs you - about 50% off in which ND goalie Andy Sacco 'They played better. They deserved Eagle goalie Brendon Wheeler and suggested retail! - depending on the CD was immense. East lied the game at to win.” you choose, from sL\ months to five years. tossed a backhander, which proved Noir* Dam* 0 13 — 4 liCtnon^hi Seal. 1- all when Mark Riendeau back- King But act fast. We must limit one Gund per to be the game-winner, past East Catholic 0 2 0 — 2 Duck, 6" tall. .N^inkcy. IH" lull; handed a shot past Sacco at 3:39 of customer. Offer good while supplies last. .V\iM>se. I6’'iall. Pelican. 11 "tall. Wheeler’s stick side with 3:26 to Scoring: the second. 'The Eagles assumed a Sscond period: From Page 1 play. It was the only even-strength 2- 1 lead with 59 seconds left in theND- Jim Barra (John Twohlll), 1:45 goal scored all game. EC- Mark RIandaau (unassisted), 3:39 second when Mike Raffin rifled a EC- MIks RaHIn (Sean Keith), 14:01 “Give him (Carmody) open ice ment, Damon said. “He shook people up while he slap shot past Sacco during an Eagle Third period: and forget about it,” Notre Dame ND- Mika Christoloro (Chris Candido), Reginald Pinto/Manchester Herald He came to the United States in was alive,” Dyson said. “Now, that 5-on-3 advantage. coach Mike Violano said. “He’s as 9:32 August with the help of the Center he is safely dead, we celebrate him.” “We went intothe lockeroom after ND- Craig Carmody (Chris Candido), 11:34 SAVE — East Catholic goalie Brendon Wheeler blocks a shot by Notre Dame’s Craig Car­ good as anybody around here. They ND- Craig Carmody (unassisted), 14:36 Congregational Church which wrote Toward the end of his live. King two down one goal and knew it was mody (11) during Monday’s action at the Bolton Ice Palace. The Green Knights upset the hit him all over. They never let him Saves: ND- Andy Sacco 18. EC- Brendan letters on his behalf. He is studying was beginning to broaden his still anybody’s ballgame,” Violano Wheeler 18. Eagles, 4-2. at Manchester Community College perspective beyond racism against I get reeling.” to complete his high school studies, blacks, Dyson said. He spoke out interrupted by his time in prison, against the Vietnam War, for ex­ and hopes eventually to study law. ample. Bruins Manchester icemen His visit is being sponsored by Both speakers said that there was Center Congregational Church. much woik left to be done. Dyson In South Africa, he had been used pointed to an incident in Howard to thinking of white people as his Beach, N.Y., where a black youth top the w hold off Warriors enemy, Damon told the mostly was struck and killed by a car as he cr>1 white audience. But it was difficult fled a group of white youths, as an By Jim Tierney Hall.” to sustain that image after the kind­ example of continuing racism. Whalers Manchester Herald Ciolkosz knocked in his own ness some whites had shown him in The 1980s was a lime of “social rebound with 50 seconds left in the this country. disinterestedness,” Dyson said, and first period to lie the affair at 1-all. He compared Desmond Tutu, the the Reagan administration made By Dave O'Hara BOLTON — In an effort to end Archambault scored the first of his Anglican bishop who has been a Americans feel it was acceptable to The Associated Press its three-game losing streak, the two goals a mere 16 seconds into the leader in the anti-apartheid move­ be racist again. Manchester High hockey team second off a pretty feed from Tim ment, to King. “Both put aside their Damon said that he had thought BOSTON — The Hartford stayed an arm’s length in front of Shumaker. Mimchester extended its own lives for justice,” he said. blacks were completely free in the Whalers are fourth in the Adams Hall High of West Hartford in Uieir lead to 3-1 at 8:35 when Curry But Damon said that not all South United States, but now realized that t Division, but boast the best road encounter Monday afternoon at Bol­ received a pass from behind the net African blacks are patient enough to discrimination still exists here. record in the NHL. ton Ice Palace. from Brian Wry and deposited it work for non-violent change. Entertainment was provided by And the first place Boston Bruins With Tim Archambault register­ home. “People can be pushed only to a cer­ members of the Manchester High know just how tough the Whalers ing a pair of goals along with one tain extent,” he said. School Jazz Ensemble, the filing are in Boston Garden. “When we went up 3-1, if we had each from Dave Ciolkosz, Jim Curry gotten one more 1 thought we Another speaker. Dr. Michael E. Singers from filing Junior High “They come to play here every and Lucas Cosgrove, the Indians Dyson, of the Theological School, and Wayne Dixon, from the game and I think we had better wake would’ve knocked them way,” held off the Warriors, 5-3. The win Famo said. ‘To Hall’s credit, they Seminary, said tliat the “dangerous” Churches of the Greater Hartford up to that fact,” Boston coach Mike lifts Manchester’s record to 5-3 side of King should be remembered. Area, Milbury said Monday night after the ju.st kept coming. They didn’t show while Hall slips to 6-5. The Indians any signs of fatigue. This is the Bruins’ 4-1 victory over the will play Glastonbury Wednesday WTialers. competition we play best at. This is night at 7:50 at the South Windsor a game we had to win. (Manchester Embarrassed 1-0 and 4-3 by Arena. ONE WEEK SPECIAL Hartford on two earlier visits this goalie) Ian Dalryniple played well. January 20th thru 27th season, the Bruins finally got some Manchester held a 3-2 advantage We didn’t play Saturday and that’s a TAKEOUTACD $1,000 TO $9,999 $10,000 OR OVER measure of revenge. after two periods, a recurring plus and a minus having an off day. Bring this ad in along with your carpets scenario for the Indians and War­ Savings Bank choose a duck for $7.00 OR choose any one But it wasn’t as easy as the final All three lines contributed.” and SAVE an Additional io% 6 M ONTH, 12 MONTH, riors. 18 MONTH, 2 V2 YEAR, choose a pelican or seal toy free] score may indicate. Clinging to its 3-2 lead in the on our regular 20% off Cash & Carry price. of Manchester “We went in after two periods and third period, Manchester got a key Where your friends are. O R 5 YEAR foi$15.00OR Hartford took a 1-0 lead on an choose a moose or monkey early goal by Ray Ferraro, but Ray we said a couple of things, first, 3-2. goal off the power play from Garner's Carpet Cleaning To be valid: ( Mikes in Manchesler. Fast llarilord. Boiion, Reginald Pinto/Manchester Herald Andover. .South Windsor, liast Wmdstir, Ashlord. for $20.00 Bourque gave Boston a 1-1 tie in the For the last three games against Hall Cosgrove with 4:01 left. Hall’s 14 High Street rear Carpets must be Fasilord. Mansiield. 'I(>lland.(ilasionhun' and we’ve always gone in with a one- Bryan Pariseault made things inter­ N'ernon. PhoneMh-lTOOtir Kate l.ine.(>*U»-H020. first period. A CROW D — Manchester’s Jason Pellegatto finds himself surrounded by several Hall Manchester, CT 06040 picked up by .Memhcr F l)l(. I%qiial Housing l.ender ^ The Bruins then went ahead 2-1 goal lead,” Manchester coach Eric esting with a goal with 46 seconds Phone: 646-5630 February 10. 1990 players, including Jamie McGee (24), Bryan Pariseault, front, and goalie Scott Ziskin during Famo said. “It was deja vu for the Please .see BRUINS, page 10 Monday’s game at the Bolton Ice Palace. The Indians won, 5-3. fourth time in four games with Please .see MHS, page 10 0 10 MANCMlvSTF.R HERALD, Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1990 MANCHESTER HERALD, Tuesday, Jan. 16,1990—11

East basketball records In Brief • • Pacers collect on debt against Warriors

'3ennet hosts hoop tourney By Dick Brinster I w : I?* ACC victory on the road Bcnnel Junior High will host the third annual Junior The Associated Press NBA Roundup Varsity Basketball Invitational Tournament on Thursday through Saturday, Jan. 25-26-27, at the school. Although there were no bookkeepers in / the lineup. Coach Dick Versace made rebounds for the Knicks, who won for the FAIRFIELD — Coming off a big first-year Finnegan said. “Maybe it Chris Conklin had a big hoop and The schedule is: Jan. 25 — Bennet girls vs. St. sure his Indiana Racers realizxtd the mean­ 17lh time in 18 games at Madison Square effort again.st No. 1 ranked St. was because of a letdown from the free throw in the closing tw a Joseph’s Cathedral at 3:15 p.m.; Illing boys vs. Corpus ing of accounts payable. Garden. Joseph, Ea.st Catholic High boys’ St. Joseph game. But we’re starting minutes for the Eagles. P.J, Christ! at 5:15 p.m. “I’ve mentioned it a couple of limes,” Scottie Pippen had 22 points and Bill basketball coach Bill Finnegan to win the close games which is Monahan led East with 19 points, 15 Jan. 26 — Bonnet boys vs. St. Joseph’s at 3:15 p.m.; Versace said Monday n i^ t after the Cartwright 18 for Chicago. knew his team was in for a letdown good. We held our poise. It’s a ‘W’ in the second half. Matt Ryan also Illing girls vs. Corpus Chrisli at 5:15 p.m. Heat 111, Bullets 105: Miami rallied in Monday’s game at Fairfield Prep. (win) on the road.” turned in a strong effort off the Jan. 27 — Girls’ consolation at 10 a.m.; Boys’ con­ Pacers avenged an earlier blowout by bench for East. solation at noon; Girls’ championship at 2 p.m.; Boys’ burying Golden Stale 144-105, denying on the strength of 11 points in the fourth J It came, but the Eagles had It was a tight affair throughout with Prep leading after one, 17-16, John Slais had 18 points to lead championship at 4 p.m.; Award ceremonies will follow Warriors coach his 6(X)th period by Glen Rice to snap a 13-game enough to pull out a 59-56 victory losing streak. over the Je.suits in All Connecticut and Ea.st at halftime, 31-29. Chris the Jesuits. each game on Saturday. career victory. Mt. * ^ ftiradiso had 13 of his 16 points and Admission is $1.50 for adults and $1 for students. “They paid us back,” Nelson said, al­ Rice matched his season high with 27 Conference action. luding to Golden Stale’s 150-124 victory points as the Heat overcame a seven-point East goes to 2-1 in the ACC, 6-4 Rob Penders eight of his 14 markers EAST CATHOLIC (59) - P J. Monahan 1 deficit in the final 12 minutes to win for overall, while Prep falls to 0-2, 5-5 in the finst half for the Eagles. 4-4 19, Ftob Pendors 6 2-3 14, Chris Conklin 1 Youth soccer signups set over the Pacers on Dec. 22. “We deserved 2-5 4, Chris Raradiso 6 4-5 16, Bill Evans 2 0-1 to get beat that bad because we played the first lime since Dec. 16. The streak with the loss. East’s next game is East led, 48-45, after three 4, John Griffin 1 0-0 2, Malt Ryan 0 0-0 0. To­ The Manchester Rcc Department will conduct two Friday at 7 p.m. at home against periods and held onto the upper tals 23 12-18 59. more youth summer soccer registration on consecutive awful.” was the second-longest in Miami’s U/2 ACC foe Xavier High of Mid­ hand at the end. “We had a five- FAIRFIELD PREP (56) — Mark Fitzgerald 1 Monday nights (Jan. 22 and 29) from 6 to 8 at the Illing Nelson, coaching his 1,000th game, seasons, four less than the club’s 0-17 0-0 2, Tom Murray 3 0-0 6, Matt Blodys 2 4-5 8, may not have expected a blowout, but start last season. dletown. point lead most of the fourth quarter. Tom Niehaus 3 2-2 8, John Slais 7 4-6 18, Tom Junior High cafeteria. “It was a good win, but a disap­ We couldn’t get it to seven, but Lucarraga 4 0-0 8, Scott Russo 3 0-0 6. Totals There are four divisons: Pee Wee (ages 6-7), Midgets Versace wasn’t surprised. Bernard King had 30 points and Jeff 23 10-13 56. “You get to read your team and I just Malone 27 for the Bullets, who have lost pointing .showing in that we didn’t (Prep) couldn’t get it to one,” Fin­ 3-polnt goals: EC- Monahan 3 (ages 8-9), Juniors (ages 10-11) and Intermediate (ages play up to our capabilities,” the negan detailed. Halftimo: 31-29 East 12-14). Age is determined as of Dec. 31, 1989. thought we were ready to explode,” said 11 of their last 13 games. There is a $5 registration fee and a $4 Rcc member­ Versace, whose Facers outshot the War­ Suns 118, Hornets 108: Tom Cham­ riors 61 percent to 26 percent. bers scored 40 points and Kevin Johnson '■II, ship card is required at time of registration. There is a maximum number of participants that will Dctlef Schrempf and Chuck Person six of his 23 in overtime for Phoenix, UConn be included in the program. No registration will be taken scored 24 points apiece for Indiana, keeping the Hornets winless in 15 road after Jan. 29,1990. which led by as many as 52 points. The games this season. From Page 9 Pacers led 86-48 at the half, breaking the Jeff Homacek finished with 20 points South Florida whips Central halftime record of 82 points set against while Mark West had 14 points and 12 4 V i'S » TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Center Hakim Shahid led the Denver on Dec. 2,1982. rebounds for the Suns. Dell Curry scored Rod was saying, ‘Don’t worry, I got Monday’s action. It added 10 through 16 games. . . UConn’s University of South Florida with 21 points and 15 Calvin Natt came off the bench to score a season-high 30 points for the Hornets. against the Orangemen. UConn’s The Associated Press it’ and Smitty, the same thing. bench was averaging 26 points per rebounds to defeat Central Connecticut Slate University 16 points for the Pacers. added 23 and Armon Gil­ Everybody did his part.” defense had 52 steals in wins over game going into Monday night’s ac­ Indiana broke a 4-4 tie on a jumper by CLEARING HIM OUT — Hartford’s Dave Babych, center, checks Boston’s Cam Neely as 89-58 in a non-conference game. liam 20. Sellers chipped in eight points Pittsburgh, Villanova and Seton tion. . . Freshman forward Scott Rik SmiLs with 10:26 remaining in the Lakers 111, Kings 91: Los Angeles he clears him from the crease during first-period NHL action at Boston Garden Monday Bulls guard Radenko Dobras added 11 points and for­ and eight rebounds while DePriest, Hall. . . Henefeld was Big East Burrell, who underwent arthroscopic ward Bobby Russell and guard Fred Lewis 10 apiece in first quarter and led the rest of the game. beat the Kings for the 40lh straight lime night. Whaier goaiie Peter Sidorkiewicz is to the right. The Bruins won, 4-1. playing for his defense, added a “Rookie of the Week” for his play surgery on his left knee on Jan. 8, the victory. Golden State was led by Sarunas Mar- at the Forum, getting 25 points apiece sca.son-high nine points. against Villanova and Seton Hall. In began “light shooting” on Sunday South Florida improved to 10-4 and Central dropped ciulionis with 21 points. Mitch Richmond from A.C. Green and rookie Vladc Divac. How does the win rank? “It rates the two road wins, Henefeld had 33 and his return to the lineup is on a. to 2-11. had 19 and Chris Mullin 15. The victory improved the Lakers’ right up there as one of the bc.st,” a points, 16 rebounds, eight assists day-to-day basis. . . UConn’s four- Knick.s 109, Bulls 106: With the score record to a league-best 26-8 and lied New Bruins smiling George said. “This team is and 12 steals. Henefeld began the game homestand, in which it plays Fielder is coming home tied and one-tenth of a second showing on York for the best home record at 17-1. coming together. It’s not just one in­ game nine shy of tying the single­ on three different courts, continues NEW YORK (AP) — Cecil Fielder has had enough of the clock, Trent Tucker’s 3-point shot Sacramento, 1 -5 since Dick Molta took From Page 9 dividual. It’s everybody and that’s season record for steals. He now has Saturday night when the Huskies Japan and is coming home. And he’s getting well paid to counted. over as coach, lost for the 16tli time in 18 what makes it so much better.” 78, six shy of breaking Bobby host No. 2 Georgetown in Hartford. do it. “I had enough time to get off a prayer, games. It was the Kings’ ninth straight Dulin’s school record of 83 set in 29 That game is already a sellout.. . The Asscx;iated Press ‘This is the oldest bunch of Fielder agreed Monday to sign with the Detroit Tigers and the Lord answered,” said Tbcker, loss on Uic road. on Cam Neely’s 32nd goal while “In the first two games here, they we dc.scrve a little respect in this games in 1979-80. . . George is ap­ UConn is now 7-1 in Hartford this young guys I’ve ever been around,” for $3 million over two years. The Toronto Blue Jays who shot after taking an inbounds pass Nuggets 101, Mavericks 90: Alex GOING UP — Chicago's Michael Jordan (23) goes up for a basket outshooting the Whalers 24-21 in were able to sneak them out in the building. We’re proud of the things proaching the l,(KX)-point mark. The year, 17-4 over the pa.st two years. from Mark Jackson. Engli.sh scored 20 of his season-high 29 we’re doing at home, and we’re Williiuns said. The young guys here sold him to the Han.shin Tigers of the Japanese Central the first two periods. end,” Bourque said after his 10th senior co-captain needs three poinLs “It used to be, but now it’s a mis­ Chicago coach Phil Jackson didn’t points in the first half as Denver built a despite the efforts of New York’s Patrick Ewing in their NBA game In the final 20 minutes, Hartford and 11th goals. “They probably had going to continue to work at making don’t know how to lose.” League on Dec. 22, 1988. He left with 31 career homers to become the 20th in school history nomer, that we don’t win in this in 504 at-bats over four big league seasons. believe it should have counted. huge lead against injury-riddled Dallas, Monday afternoon at Madison Square Garden. The Knicks won on outshot Boston 13-4, but was more chances tonight than they did our home record something we can HUSKY NOTES: The Husky to reach that level. . . The 13-3 start building,” Calhoun said. “After it’s “You can’t gel a shot off in one-tenth of which lost iLs fourth straight game. be proud of.” But he became a dominant player in Japan. He was a shot with a tenth of a second left, 109-106. frustrated by goalie Andy Moog in the other games, but Andy played “Steal” Curtain defense was averag­ by the Huskies is the school’s best all said and done, these kids feel a second,” he said. The Mavericks, led by Derek Harper’s while the Bruins added a power play real well.” ing 14.1 steals per game going into ninth in the league in hitting widi a .302 average, third in since 1981-82 when it was also 13-3 very comfortable here.” “It was a judgment call,” referee Raul 26 points, played without Adrian Dantlcy point shots for the Cavaliers, who set a points, scored a basket over Akccm goal by Randy Burridge and an After losing to the New York “They came in and played hard,” home runs with 38 and drove in 81 runs. Detroit, seeking to rebuild from a 59-103 sca.son, pick­ Mihalik said. and Sam Perkins. Dantlcy had muscle team record by hilling 10 long-range Olajuwon as the shot clock expired, empty net goal by Bourque with Rangers 3-2 on a last-minute goal Neely said. “They played physical The .score was tied when Michael Jor­ tightness in his neck and shoulders. giving Seattle a 103-99 lead with 24.1 ^ m Saturday, Milbury said the Bruins ed up another free agent Monday when inficldcr Ed shots in 22 allcmpls. seven seconds left. and got us fired up a little bit. It’s dan, who finished with 26 points, missed Perkins missed his second straight game seconds left. were looking for respect from the Romero agreed to a one-year deal for $350,(XX). Seven SuperSonics 105, Rockets 101: “Certainly both teams came to what we needed. Btxly contact is al­ a 3-poinier that the Knicks rebounded with the flu. Olajuwon’s basket made it 103-101 o ^ Whalers. players eligible for salary arbitration also agreed to con­ Xavier McDaniel had a basket and two play tonight,” Hartford coach Rick ways good for us. It might have with four seconds left to set the stage for Cavaliers 92, Spurs 89: Mark Price with 18.1 seconds left. But McDaniel Ley said. “The score was not indica­ woke us up.” tracts Monday. free throws in the final 24 seconds to lead “I love it, 1 enjoyed that win more Terry Steinbach, the Oakland Athletics’ catcher, got the final play. had 25 points, 12 assists and 11 rebounds Seattle. convened both free throws with 15.6 ^ -< tive of the play. 1 thought we had a “I couldn’t be happier about the Patrick Ewing had 33 points and 12 for Cleveland. Price made six of nine 3- seconds remaining to make it 105-101. lot of quality opportunities, but than any we’ve had so far this year,” two points,” Milbury said. “The the biggest deal among the arbitration eligiblcs, agreeing McDaniel, who finished with 25 Moog played very well. I thought he Milbury said. Whalers come in here and they gear to a two-year contract for $1.8 million, an average of was the difference.” “We had a great effon from up for us more than we’ve been get­ more than three times his 1989 earnings. With their sixth victory in seven everybody down the line,” Milbury ting up for iliem. That’s a major tA 1 L A LaFontaine player of week Bama’s McCants declares for NFL draft games and 10th in the last 10 starts, said. “They came in here and beat us mistake on our part.” Z “D the Bruins bolstered their division twice earlier. They haven’t shown The two teams renew their rivalry NEW YORK (AP) — Pat LaFontaine of the New York TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) - - Keith McCants, “I love football and you can’t beat getting paid for NFL scouts feel like I can play on the next level, so no .k O lead with a 27-16-3 record, includ­ us a lot of respect in this building. in Hartford Wednesday night. The Islanders, who had nine points in three games last week, Alabama’s All-American linebacker, said he has decided doing something you love doing and being able to take matter where I’m drafted I’d feel honored.” ing 16-6-1 at home. Hanford slipped “We went out and took it to them Bruins won 5-2 there on Nov. 15, was named NHL player of the week. to pass up his senior season with the Crimson Tide to care of your family at the same lime. Many scouts have touted McCants as the best defen­ to 21-20-3, although 13-8-2 on the a little more physically in the second but the Whalers took the .second ; LaFontaine, whose 11-game goal-scoring streak was enter the NFL draft. “I knew this is what 1 had to do when 1 sat down with sive player to come out of college football in years be- O -n road. period. We wanted to establish that game 4-3 on Dec. 20. stopped by Washington on Saturday night, is second in McCants, who planned a news conference today to my family and looked at the plusscs and minu.scs of the cau.se of his combination of size, strength, speed (4.4 0 m the league in goals with 39. confirm what many had expected, told the Mobile Press- situation,” McCants said. seconds in the 40-yard dash), and attitude. Register that leaving Alabama was a difficult decision The 6-foot-5, 255-pound linebacker is expected to be “1 described him as a St. Bernard puppy, the way he Carrier wins Thorpe Award but he had “no regrets.” among the lop picks in the NFL draft in April and it has played with so much enthusiasm and great intensity,” Michigan has mini’s number OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Mark Carrier of “I’m not leaving because I want to. I’m leaving be­ been reported that he will be the first player chosen by said former Alabama coach Bill Curry, who resigned Southern California was named winner of the fourth an- cause I have to do this,” he said. “Some players look at the Atlanta Falcons. recently to move to Kentucky. “Those were even finer 0 1 David Butler had 16 points and niual Jim Thorpe Award for the nation’s best collegiate the money and the money is nice. But I’m looking out for McCants denied reports that he didn’t want to play pro assets than his physical ability, which is enormous. m ■j> By The Associated Press 13 rebounds and Greg Anthony V i 4 defensive back. my family. My family is my number one priority right football in the South. “God has given me the talent and “Keith’s looking at several million dollars and it’s NCAA Hoop Carrier, a 6-foot-1 All-America selection at free safely, now. ability to perform at the level 1 am at now,” he said. “The hard to pass that up.” Like the last time, this Michigan- added 14 points for the Runnin’ > O ) Rebels, 11-3 overall and 5-1 in the edged finalists Nathan LaDuke of Arizona State and Illinois game went down to the end. Todd Lyght of Notre Dame for the award. And, once again, Michigan won. District of Columbia 110-52. Big West. Tod Bernard scored 27 ^ > The sixth-ranked Wolverines led Michigan shot 51 percent from points for Fresno Slate (6-8, 1-4). Schintzius is suspended Purdue is no H No. 17 La Salle 89, Canisius 77: the entire way Monday night and the field while Illinois hurt itself by > GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Florida senior center > ended No. 7 Illinois’ 28-game home making only 41 percent. Lionel Simmons scored 27 points " 0 and La Salle broke away in the Dwayne Schintzius, the Gators’ leading scorer, faced a winning streak, 74-70. Michigan “We were doing a lot of things possible felony charge Monday after a weekend fight at a won at Illinois for the first time right, but you just can’t win with second half to win at Philadelphia. longer a secret The Explorers led just 43-42 with fraternity house and was suspended indefinitely along since 1979, slopping a string of 10 that kind of efficiency on the part of with another player by Coach Don DeVoe. WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) — Hello national losses. Michigan. In basketball, you’ve got 17:40 left before Simmons got seven points during a 10-0 burst. “This action is being deemed necessary by the basket­ ranking. So long anonymity. to shoot it,” Illinois coach Lou Hen­ ball staff for behavior and conduct not representative and Purdue’s Boilermakers, coming off victories over two “Finally, this was next time,” son said. Doug Overton added 21 points for Michigan coach Steve Fisher said. La Salle, which improved to 11-1 The Associated Press unbecoming to University of Florida basketball players,” Top 25 teams, aren’t complaining, e.specially not with the Michigan (12-2 overall, 2-1 in the DeVoe said. memory of last year’s shocking slide still painfully fresh. Last March in the NCAA Tourna­ Big Ten) led throughout but couldn’t overall and 2-0 in the Metro Atlantic ment semifinals, Michigan beat Il­ Athletic Conference. Canisius (2-12, KNOCKOUT — George Foreman is restrained by referee Joe Cortez as Gerry Cooney The suspension was linked to an on-campus incident “Now we’ve done it,” moaned Coach , shake the Illini. Kendall Gill had a involving Schintzius and sophomore forward Tim Turner whose Boilermakers knocked off Minnesota and Indiana linois 83-81 on a last-second basket chance to tie it for Illinois with 33 0-6) lost its fifth straight. falls to the canvas in the second round at Atlantic City Monday night. Cooney was knocked by Sean Higgins. This time, Higgins early Sunday morning, DeVoe said. last week. “We’ve snuck up on a couple of teams, but we seconds left, but made just one of Others: Carlton Screen’s 24 out. scored 16 points and Terry Mills had points led Providence over Seton Wimesses told police that Schintzius was asked to won’t be able to do that anymore. Wisconsin will be two foul shots and Michigan kept a leave a parly at the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity house at laying for us” Wednesday night. 18. 71-70 lead. Hall 89-63 in the Big East. Last 12:40 a.m. Sunday after he became disruptive, according An 81-79 overtime victory over Indiana on Saturday The Wolverines preserved the vic­ , week, the Friars beat Seton Hall by “If you could have been in the to police. capped a remarkable rally from 16 points down in the tory with three foul shots. Illinois eight points in Providence. locker room after the game, it was Ken Atkin.son scored 26 points, Foreman wants a title bout Schintzius “was dancing and got into an incident with opening period, put Purdue into a first-place tie with great, like winning the national fell to 12-2 overall and 2-2 in the a girl,” fraternity member Alex Patton told The Gaines­ Michigan State in the Big Ten, and helped give the conference. including 12 of Richmond’s last 13, championship again,” Higgins said. and the Spiders beat Wake Forest ville Sun. “He grabbed her drink — it was alcoholic — Boilermakers (11-2) the No. 24 ranking in this week’s In other games, Connecticut No. 9 UNLV 84, Fresno State 51-49. Richmond (10-4) won for die drank the whole thing and spit it on the floor. The girl Associated Press college poll. turned back No. 5 Syracuse 70-59, after putting Cooney away had said something like ‘basketball sucks’ and he got A year ago, Purdue struggled to a 15-16 record, its 75: Larry Johnson scored 28 points first time in four games this season No. 9 UNLV defeated Fresno State and UNLV opened up a 22-12 lead against Atlantic Coast Conference irate. That’s when he was asked to leave.” The Associated Press first losing season in 23 years. With three starters back, 84-75, No. 17 La Salle beat Canisius got caught with a good shot. That’s sent Cooney reeling to the ground. the Boilermakers’ only losses this season have been to in the first eight minutes and won at teams. The visiting Demon By John Nelson BROTHER IN, BROTHER OUT — The Washington Capitals fired Coach Bryan Murray, 89-77 and Xavier of Ohio routed Fresno State. fell to 7-7. it for me.” Referee Joe Cortez didn’t bother Cornell names Hofher coach left, and replaced him with his brother, Terry Murray, right. The latter has been coach of the Long Beach State and Arizona, both on the road. The Associated Press to count this time. He signalled the “People are going to be more aware of us now,” said Cooney only fought seven times THACA, N.Y. (AP) — A Cornell graduate hasn’t end, instead. Cooney sal on the can­ Capitals' AHL affiliate Baltimore the past two season. senior forward Ryan Bcming, whose 15-foot jump shot in the 1980’s and was in his first coached the Big Red’s football team in 80 years. Now, ATLANTIC CITY, N J. — The vas, his lips flapping as he exhaled, put the game in overtime and two free throws in the extra fight since losing a heavyweight title with the hiring of Jim Hofher, the alumni drought is over. ring bowed under the weight. The shot by fifth-round knockout to his eyes spinning like the slot period iced the victory over the 14th-ranked Hoosiers. Becker breezes in tennis play tumbuckles groaned. And thunder Hofher, the quarterback coach at Tennessee, became Michael Spinks on June 15, 1987. machines next door. “Everybody forgot about Purdue. But we knew all along began to rumble in George Cornell’s third head football coach in the past nine might not be able to peak again.” through the first round. Unfortunate­ ‘To me, Gerry Cooney’s still wet Murray in, Murray out if we just stayed together we could be good. By Steve Wilstein Foreman’s big right hand. months Monday, and the first Cornell graduate to coach behind the ears,” said Foreman, who “We worked really hard last summer and in preseason The Associated Press While Becker looked sharp, ly for him, they won’t all be against You could hear it in the distance. at the Ivy League school since 1910. was a world champion until he met conditioning.... We really got at it. We didn’t want to go Stefan Edberg and McEiuoe issued opponents like Frenchman Thierry Start counting. One thousand one. Athletic Director Laing Kennedy said he hoped Muhammad Ali in equatorial Africa through the same stuff we did last year,” Beming said. MELBOURNE, Australia — warnings that they might be ready to Tulasne, ranked 114 spots lower One thousand two. One thousand MHS Hofher, 32, would bring some stability to the Cornell 1 on Oct. 30, 1974 and got knocked as Caps name new coach “Now we’re having fun practicing but we’re getting after Boris Becker, in eager pursuit of a stop him as he goes after Ivan than the No. 4 McEnroe. three. coaching staff. His two predecessors, Maxie Baughn and out in eight rounds. each other. No tempers are flaring now. We know we’re third straight Grand Slam title, is Lendl’s Australian title and No. 1 Unlike Lendl, a dedicated And the lighming struck. From Page 9 Jack Fouls, both resigned under pressure. The fight was on closed circuit By Jim Paul Terry Murray, 39, has been coach coach in the NHL and for that I am out there getting each other better. There arc no egos on worried about peaking too soon in ranking. baseliner, and Becker, a hard-charg­ A native of Middletown, Conn., Hofher continues to It crashed into Gerry Cooney’s television and pay-per-view. For The Associated Press of the Baltimore Skipjacks, the grateful.” this team.” the Australian Open after flexing his The soft-spoken but confident Ed­ ing serve-and-volleyer, Edberg and jaw, crushed him to the ground and remaining. Archambault tallied his hold some Cornell quarterbacking records, including those who didn’t pay to see it, it’s Capitals’ American Hockey League Bryan Murray said he was happy The 6-foot-9 Beming, 6-1 senior guard Tony Jones and muscles in a first-round showpiece. berg, 1985 and 1987 Australian McEnroe share a taste for the more second of the game with 20 licks most passing yards in a game by a sophomore (216 scattered what little was left of his not true that Foreman came into the LANDOVER, Md. — Terry Mur­ affiliate, the last two seasons, com­ for his brother. 6-9 senior center Stephen Scheffler are the three starters Becker pummeled travel-weary Open champion, won his first-round subtle aspects of tennis. heavyweight boxing career to the left. against Rutgers in 1976) and most passing yards in a ring wearing a chefs hat and lobster ray thought long and hard about piling a 56-63-5 record. Baltimore is “1 certainly think that’s a good back from last year. Jones leads the team in scoring at F^ul Haarhuis 6-1, 6-2, 6-1 Tuesday match Tbesday and proclaimed him­ McEnroe’s deft touch at the net, four winds. season (740) by a sophomore. He ranks seventh on Cor­ bib. He was thick in the middle, “I thought the first five or 10 whether to say yes to the job offer in second place in the AHL’s choice and not only because he’s my 15.8 points a game, with Scheffler, a 250-pound night, just a few hours after the self ready to challenge No. 1 Lendl sweeping hard serves and keen an­ minutes of the game we played nell’s career yardage list with 2,158 yards. Cooney, 33, will quit one fight though, and his muscles didn’t rip­ he’d always wanted, that of coach in Southern Division with a record of brother,” he said. “He did a hell of a muscleman, at 14.6 and Beming at 9.2. PTobably the big­ Dutchman arrived from New and No. 2 Becker for the top spot in ticipation all were evident in his 6-2, well,” Hall coach Scott O’Meara into his comeback. Foreman, 41, is ple so much as jiggle. But make no the National Hockey League. 26-17-1. job as an assistant here and he’s gest reason for the Boilermakers’ turnaround is the addi­ Zealand following visa difficulties. men’s tennis. 6-1,6-1 victory over Tulasne. 20 successful fights into his and mistake about it, he hits like a man said. “I thought the game had shifts To get this job, he would have to Bryan Murray, 47, leaves a team done very well in Baltimore. He’s tion of 6-6 forward Chuckie White, who missed most of Haarhuis, who upset John McEn­ “I see myself there,” said the No. Tulasne, ranked higher than Meola, 13 agree to terms looking squarely at heavyweight swinging an anvil on a chain. of momentum for both sides. I’d say replace his brother. that has lost its last eight games, is very deserving.” last season with a shoulder injury. 9 roe in the second round of the U.S. 3 Edberg, whose highest ranking McEnroe when the American champion Mike Tyson. they (Manchester) had some red LA JOLLA, Calif. (AP) — Goalkeeper It was apparent from the begin­ Bryan Murray, the wimiingest in last place in the NHL’s I^trick Bryan Murray, named NHL coach White, who transferred from El Camino (Calif.) Junior Open last fall, never had a chance was No. 2 in 1987. “I feel strongly slumped to No. 14 in 1986, is more “1 do believe that the same thing timely scoring today. It was 3-2 for and 13 other members of the U.S. national team agreed ning that Cooney wat; going to take coach in the history of the Division, and has the fourth-worst of the year for the 1983-84 season, College in 1988, is averaging 9.7 points a game. He had against the Becker onslaught. that I can come back to challenge.” of a clay court specialist and less that happened to Gerry Cooney will the longest time. That power play his best shot, though. At the end of a to one-year contracts Monday, the United States Soccer Washington Capitals, was fired record in the league, 18-24-4. He said he has no immediate plans. 11 of his 19 points against Indiana in the first three Becker, the Wimbledon and U.S. Edberg beat Swedish-bom Johan comfortable on the hard courts here. happen to Mike Tyson, if I get the goal really hurt. That look a little Federation said. . r . Monday, and General Manager also leaves a team decimated by in­ Murray compiled a 343-246-83 minutes of the second half, almost singlehandedly bring­ Anderson, who lives in Australia, chance,” Foreman said. promising career troubled by al­ Open champion, said the McEnroe momentum away.” Also agreeing to one-year deals were defenders David l^ile turned to Terry Murray juries, notably to key defensemen NHL career record after coaching in ing the Boilermakers back in the game. 7-6 (7-1), 6-3, 6-4, in a first round cohol and drug abuse, Cooney felt Manch«*t*r 12 2 — 5 upset was on his mind. ’Tulasne had an off day,” McEn­ What happened to Cooney? Demond Armstrong, , . as his “one and only choice” as a the AHL and the Western Hockey match on center court just before he owed it to himself. He came out Hall 1 1 1 — 3 Scott Stevens and Rod Langway. “I was just doing m'y job,” White said. “I’m the spark “It’s the reason why I played very roe said. He didn’t put too much on Foreman launched his 253'/4 pounds Scoring: Johny Doyle, Steve Tritlschuh and Michael Win- replacement. “I wouldn’t say it was unfair,” League. Becker took on Haarhuis. jabbing Foreman, and hurt him in plug. 1 try to get everybody pumped up. People might hard in the first round, which is not the ball. It was just like playing Ping into Cooney’s jaw and knocked him FIrat porlod; dischmann; midfielders , , John Murray and took the job only Murray told the Washington Post, “There’s no doubt in my mind have thought the win over Minnesota was a fluke, but normal for me,” he said. “In a Grand McEnroe made his debut on cen­ the first round with his trademark, a H-Bryan ParlaMult (unaaalatad), 11:35 Pong. If I could play that style every out at 1:57 of the second round of M- Dava Clolkosz (Scott WInot), 14:10 Harkes, , and John Slollmeyer after a long pause on the telephone. referring to the circumstances of his that Bryan Murray will again be a ter court earlier in the day and came left hook. now I think they’ve got to see we’re for real. We want Slam, you can’t play too well too match. I’d bet my life savings every what was scheduled for 10 rounds at Sacond period: and forward . “I’m sure he was hoping for a bet­ firing. “We stayed on for another coach in the National Hockey some Top 20 respect.” away making a similar warning that M- Tim Archambault (Tim Shumakar), :16 early. You have to wait a little bit. time.” the Atlantic city Convention Center In the second round. Foreman Two players refused to sign — goalkeeper David ter time or better circumstances for year to have another shot. We got a League, and probably very soon,” Lendl and Becker were not the only M- Jim Curry (Brian Wry), 8:35 Purdue, forecast for another second-division Big Ten 9 There’s a fine line between not play­ McEnroe, coming off an exhibi­ Monday night. knocked Cooney down early with a H- Scott Barmingham (unataiatad), 9:31 Vanole, who lost the starting job to Meola last summer, when he was going to gel the job,” lot of new faces. We got to first Poile said. “We didn’t gel rid of a finish in most preseason conference polls, was unranked ing too good and playing too bad. players who could win the tourna­ Third pariod: tion tournament victory over Ed­ “Thai’s it for me,” Cooney said. series of clubbing punches. Cooney and midfielder , who scored the goal that Poile said. “But he said to me, ‘This place and then the injuries killed us. bad person today; we didn’t get rid last season after ending up third in the final poll of the “If I want to do good in a Grand ment. M- Lucaa Coagrova (Curry, Wry) berg, thinks he has a chance of win­ “1 gave it a shot. I straightened some was up at the count of four, and H- Bryan Parlaaault (unaaalatad), 14:14 gave the United Stales a victory over Trinidad and is what I’ve been preparing my 1 was treated, over^l, very fairly, of a lousy coach.” 1987-88 campaign. The addition of the Boilermakers to Slam, 1 have to peak the last three McEnroe was a bit louder and ning here, especially if the weather things out. 1 wanted to sec what I Foreman laid into him. He hit him M- Tim Archambault (unaaalatad), 14:40 Tobago and a berth in the World Cup for the first time in hockey career for and, yes. I’ll ac­ given my longevity. (Team owner) Players said they were shocked by this week’s rankings puls five Big Ten teams in the AP days. If you peak too early, then you brasher, especially after breezing stays as cool as it was Tuesday. could do, and it didn’t work out. I with a left uppercut, then a right that Savaa: M- Ian Dairympla 21. H- Scott Zia- kln 32. 40 years. cept the job.’ ” Abe Pollin gave me a chance to the change. Top 25. 0 12—MANCHESTER HERALD, Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1990 MANCHESTER HERALD, 'Riesday, Jan. 16,1990—13

I THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME Crossword TV Tonight 1 9 by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee Unscramble these four Jumbles, Why don’t you SCOREBOARD one letter to each square, to form complain? four ordinary words. '// Presley, Chi (slashing). 6:03; lafrate. Tor 7 :0 0 P M CE) inside Edition 14. Indiana (12-2) did not play. Next: at Iowa, [H B O ] MOVIE: 'The Morning After' PLEEO (cross-checking), 6:03; B.Murray, Chi (inter­ Xavier 110, UD O f C 52 QD ® Wheel of Fortune (CC). [M ] MOVIE: 'The Longest Yard' A ference), 6:35; Damphousse, Tor (hooking), Thursday. ACROSS 37 Novalltt UrI* Answer to Prevleui Puixl* (CC) An alcoholic actress is shocked to former football player, in prison on minor Hockey DIST. OF COLUMBIA (52) 7;56; Lemieux, Chi (roughing). 10:39; Ramage 15. SL John's (14-3) did not play. Next: vs. 40 Clllzan — QD Cosby Show (CC). discover the man she'd spent the night charges, is chosen to train a group of con­ Rogers 0 9 2-2 2. E.Johnson 5 1 2 5 1 10, Villanova at the Spectrum, Tuesday. 1 Finally (2 !□□□□ □□□□□□ Tor (roughing), 10:39; Kurvera, Tor (inter- 41 Dawn (JD P eop le '* C ourt w ith murdered in her bed. Jane Foijda, Jeff victs for a game against the prison's t inb Tfteuee Mete* tanxte* u Fall 2-8 2-2 7, Goodie 1-5 0 9 2, Moton 3 9 0-2 ic io T r rarence), 11:25; Craighton. Chi (hooking), 16. UCLA (11-2) did not play. Next: at Stan­ wdi.) 43 Allow to tall □B BaOBBG Bridges, Raul Julia. 1986. Rated R. guards. Burl Reynolds, Eddie Albert, Ber­ 6, Darby 0 9 2-2 2, Anyatonwui 1-10 0-1 3, ford. Thursday. 7 Indltagree- 45 Ttm* parted □ □ □ □ □ □ (3) Untouchable* NHL standings 11:53; Ramage, Tor (holding), 17:44; Lemieux, menf (2 46 Pair [LIFE] Spenser: For Hire nadette Peters. 1974. Rated R, Chi (high-sticking), 18:14. E.LJohnson 2-3 0-0 4. McCanIs 1-2 5 9 7. Eq- 17. La Salle (11-1) beet Canislus 89-77. □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ ® K ate & A llia (CC). BELL WALES CONFERENCE vuekwo 19 2-6 4, Holbock 2-5 1-3 5. Totals Next: at Holy Cross, Saturday. wdi.) 47 Fun [M AX] MOVIE: 'The Sons of Katie [TM C ] MOVIE: 'Three Men and a Baby' Third Period— 12, Chicago, Larmer 18 (H) MacNeil/Lehrar Newshour Ritrtek DIvlAlon 1563 14-25 52. 13 Lawrence of 48 Sacral □ □ B □ □ □ □ Eldar' Four vengeful brothers attempt to (CC) Three carefree Manhattan bachelors (Secord, Savard), 9:23. 13, Toronto, Clark 17 18. Oregon State (12-2) did not play. Next: W L T P t* OF QA XAVIER, OHIO (110) vs. Washington Stale, Thursday. 51 Atonamant ' □□□□ □□□□□ (3) Police Story topple the corrupt politicians behind their are left in charge of an infant that one of (Damphousse, Kurvers), 13:45. Penal­ 22 20 4 48 181 Davenport 6-10 2-2 17, Hill 10-14 0-3 20, Wil­ 14 Polar Hghti 54 Namaa QBB □□□□□ BBD father's death and the loss of the family them has fathered. Tom Selleck, Steve 177 ties— Marsh, Tor (tripping), 6:49; Thomas, Chi 19. North Carolina State (12-3) did not play. @9 ® C urrent A ffa ir NY lalerKters 20 21 4 44 160 165 son 512 5 7 15, Walker 5 8 4-4 14, Gladden 15 Comadlann* 55 Thin illk BBB BBQBB □□□ ranch. John Wayrie, Dean Martin, Martha Guttenberg, Ted Danson. 1987. Rated PG. (slashing), 6:49; Pearson, Tor (roughing), 11:41; Next: at Wake Forest, Thursday. (3) Cheers (CC). NY Ranger* 18 21 8 44 149 5 7 5 0 10, Fbynter 1-4 0 9 3, Knop 0-3 0 9 0, Joan — fabric [!□□□□ □□□□ Hyer. 1965. (In Stereo) 158 B.McGill, Chi, double minor (roughing), 11:41- 20. Xavier, Ohio (12-1) beat District of Colum­ 16 Enlargtd (a 56 Part of a LIFTL WHAT YOU WOULDN'T Pittsburgh 20 21 3 Butler 1-3 2-2 4, Parker 2-10 5 0 6, Minor 1-3 @ H unter 43 184 192 Marsh, Tor (holding), 19:47. bia 110-5Z Next: at Evansville, Thursday. hofa) to n n tl □ □ □ □ □ □ □ [T M C ] MOVIE: 'The Prince of Pennsyl­ 1 0 :3 0 P M Q® USA Tonight Philadelphia 18 21 7 43 166 155 0 9 Z Strong 2-4 1-1 5, Brantley 4-6 0 9 8, Wil­ EXPECT A VE&ETAP/AN Shots on goal— Chicago 15-15-15— 45 21. Loyola Marymount (11-3) did not play. 17 Egg (comb, 57 Goat fa it □□□□ □□□□□ [A8iE] New Wilderness vania' A teen-age rebel and his ex-hippie J Washington 18 24 4 40 liams 1-4 3-4 5, Koester 0 9 1-2 1. Totals 43-88 G® Synchronal Research s TO PO WHEN THE FOOP 152 167 Toronto 6-22-5— 33. Next: vs. Gonzaga, Friday. form) BBBQBD [CNN] Moneyline girlfriend plan to escape their boring exist­ Adairn Division 1525 110. 22. Minnesota (10-3) did not play. Next: vs. 18 Bulhy clump DOWN ence in a rural mining town. Keanu Reeves, (2® M ail Order M oney Making 16 UNSATI6FACTORY. Boston 27 16 3 Power-play Opportunities— Chicago 2 of 7; Halftime— Xavior 58, Dist. of Columbia 26. 3- aaBDBB BBaBaD [ESPN] SportaCenter 57 165 134 Toronto 1 of 5. NFL Bonus Northwestern, Thursday. 20 Light------Amy Madigan, Bonnie Bedelia 1988. (2® MOVIE: The Hard Way’ A hired as­ Buffalo 24 15 6 54 155 142 point goals— DisL of Columbia 2-9 (Fall 1-Z faatliar 1 Brotharof BQBBBB □□□□□ [LIFE] She's the Sheriff Rated R. (In Stereo) Goalies— Chicago, Chavrier (20 shots What players earn for post-season games! 23. Arizona (9-3) did not play. Next: vs. sassin has to make one more hit before he ENTAUB Montreal 24 18 6 54 156 139 -15 Anyatonwui 19, E.Johnson 0-1), Xavior 6-14 21 Unlaai M oiai Anwar — 39 Giva afftr- Now arrange the circled letters to saves), Cloutier, 11-6-1 (10:17 second, 13-11), Arizona State, Wednesday. [USA] Miami Vice (In Stereo) [USA] Murder. She Wrote can retire. Patrick McGoohan, Lee Van Hartford 21 21 3 45 153 156 (Davenport 3-4, Parker 2-4, Poyntor 1-2, Butler 23 Evargrtan 2 Incldantal 19 Ovar (poat.) m iliva r' Y form the surprise answer, as sug­ Chevrier (18:18 third, 0-0), Cloutier (18:35 third, 24. Purdue (11-2) did not play. Next: at Wis­ Cleef. 1980. Quebec 8 30 6 22 136 203 Wild Card Games (All Players) $6,000 ' 0- 1, Brantley 0-1, Minor 0-2). Fouled consin, Wednesday. tree Information 22 Antliaptic lignal 7 :3 0 P M CB Entertainment Tonight 8 : 3 0 P M ® ® W onder Years (CC) ^ y gested by the above cartoon. A CAMPBELL CONFERENCE 0-0). Toronto, Bestar (30-25), Reese, 17:51 out— None, Rebounds— DisL of Columbia 30 24 Subilanc* 3 Sumptuou* liquid 40 Engllih poll G® Hogan's Heroes second (17:51 second, 15-14). 25. Alabama (12-3) did not play. Next: at Actress Anne Archer ("Fatal Attraction") Kevin is torn between his nice lab partner Norrit Division (E.Johnson 6), Xavior 67 (Wilson 11), As­ 25 SWp — I 4 PraaMant 24 Acquirtd 42 Lathara ® Three's Company Z - A— 16,38Z Divisional Playoff Games (All Players) $10,000 Kentucky, Wednesday. discusses her upcoming movies (In and his dream girl. (In Stereo) Answer here: IT W L T P l* GF GA sists— DisL of Columbia 9 (Goodia 3), Xavior 24 27 Gypty Lincoln 26 Davlatai 44 Holdi atlll Stereo) Referee— Flon Hoggarth. Linesmen— Swede 28 Handl* lor pnolo [D IS] Ready Steady Got (R) _ Chicago 25 17 4 54 189 173 (Wtelkor 6). Total louls— DisL of Columbia 21, 29 5 Mate titl* 9:00P M ® MOVIi!: 'Someone to Knox, Dan McCourt AFC/NFC Title Games (All Players) $18,000 roughly 49 High note C£) @ Jeopardyl (CC). (Answers tomorrow) Toronto 24 22 1 49 208 213 Xavior 22. A— 4,930. Kapltal” 6 Lutcloul W atch Over Me' (CC) A married Manhat­ 1 1 : 0 0 P M ® ® N ew s (CC). Women’s Top 25 31 Medieval 7 Hyana'a kin 30 Moat tugary 50 By birth C£) Kate & A llie (CC). tan delective becomes romantically in­ SL Louis 20 19 6 46 162 152 ® 50 Years Ago Jumbtes: HAVEN NATAL ALBINO ELDEST Super Bowl XXIV Winning Players $36,000 Record Pta Pva poem 8 Altar Mon. 34 S illy Spa- 52 Tinglad volved with the socialite murder witness Yesterday's MInnasota 21 23 3 45 156 172 La Salle 89, Canislus 77 cak movte m a il di) WPIX Newt Answer That unconvincing witness was making the Detroit 15 24 1. La, Tech (49) 12-0 1.537 1 32 Labor gp. 9 Oponinga he's been assigned to protect. Tom Beren- G® Cheers (CC). 6 36 155 172 CANISIUS(77) 33 Enjoyment 10 Raalm 35 P ltM l (law) 53 Chamlcil ® ® M*A*S*H jury wonder------WHAT "LIES" AHEAD Smyths Division Transactions Super Bowl XXIV Losing Players $18,000 2. Stanford (13) 13-0 1,507 2 • ger, Mimi Rogers. Lorraine Bracco. 1987. (2® All in the Family A Dyall 1515 3 9 23, Priah 7-12 1-5 16, Book 36 Paddte lu ffix 3. Tennessee 12-3 1,366 5 ' 34 Incena* 11 Styllah Hard Copy (In Stereo) Edrrtonton 23 14 9 55 177 147 3- 10 0-0 6, Giscombo 4-8 5 0 8, Smith 4-11 0-0 bumar 36 Florida N ew s 4. UNLV 14-1 1,325 6 12 Egypt'* (2® G® Now back In Block. Jumbit Book No. t It tvallablt for I2.t0. wbkh Inchidaa poataoa Calgaiy 21 15 11 53 192 160 Pro Bowl Winning players $10,000 9, O'Sullivan 0-0 1-2 1, McCarthy 1-3 1-1 3, product SI]) Cosby S how (CC). ® ) @® Roseanne (CC) Roseanne is un­ and handling, from Jumbla, efo thia nawapapar, P.O. Box 4366. Orlando, FL 33602>4M. 5. Georgia 13-1 1,296 3 G® M*A*S*H Winnipeg 22 17 5 49 152 154 BASEBALL Brown 4-9 1-2 11, Seymour 0 9 0 9 0. Totals happy about Jackie leaving for officers Includa your nama, addrtaa ar>d >

d maka your chock payabla to nowapaportoooka 6. Texas 10-2 1,200 4 [A&E] World of Survival Loe Angeles 20 20 5 45 198 187 American Laagu* Pro Bowl Losing Players $5,000 33-68 7-16 77. r n r 11 TS“ training camp; Darlene and Becky attend a G® Arsenio Hall (In Slereo) 7. Purdue 11-2 1,136 11 [CNN] Crossfire Vancouver 13 25 8 34 139 167 D E TR O rr TIGERS— A g re ^ to terms with LASALLE (89) party for older teen-agers, (R) (In Stereo) [A&E] Evening at the Improv Cecil Fielder, first baseman-designated hitter, T ! S ^ “ 8. Long Beach St. 10-3 1,085 9 Monday'* Qamaa Simmons 11-19 511 27, Hurd 3-7 0-1 8, w nr [DIS] Mouseterpiece Theater ® Run for Your Ufe KIT 'N' CARLYLE by Larry VYrIghI Toronto 7, Chicago 6 on a two-year contract and Ed Flomero, in- 9. Virginia 14-2 1,035 12 [CNN] Moneyline Liovarst 2-3 0 9 4, Ovarlon 8-14 3-3 21, Woods [ESPN] College Basketball: Oklahoma Boston 4, Harford 1 fiolder, and Tracy Jones and Larry Sheets, out­ 10. Washington 12-2 1,008 7 @ @® In th e Heat o f the N ight (CC) [DIS] Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet NEA Graphics 515 0-1 1Z Holland 3-4 5 7 11, Johnson 2-8 a t Kansas S tate (2 hrs.) (Live) Montreal 4, Minnesota 3 fielders, on one-year contracts. 11. Sleph. F. Austin 11-1 886 13 15 nr After the wife of a close friend dies be­ 0 9 4, Shelton 0 9 0 9 0. Neubauer 0 9 0 9 0, [HBO] MOVIE; 'The January Man' (CC) TUaaday'a Gamaa KANSAS r o y a ls —Agreed to terms 1Z N. Caroline St. 10-4 878 8 [LIFE] Day by Day (R) cause of a doctor's misdiagno.sis, Gillespie erry BONUS MONEY — An NFL player can earn up to $70,000 Slock 0 9 5 0 0, Morris 0 9 0 9 0, Borgin 1-109 A busted Manhattan detective is reluc­ with Steve Farr, pitcher, on a one-year contract. 13. Iowa 10-4 853 10 TT r a r fights his suspicions when the doctor is Vancouver at New fbrk Islanders, 735 p.m. 2. Totals 3571 13-23 89. 8 : 0 0 P M d ) Rescue 911 (CC) (60 min.) tantly reinstated after a strangler takes Now Jersey at Washington, 7:35 p.m. OAKLAND ATHLETICS— Agreed to terms 14. Auburn 12-4 714 15 murdered. (60 min.) (Postponed from an during the post-season — if his team wins the Super Bowl. Halftime— La Salle 39, Canislus 38. 3-polnt (In Stereo) over the streets of New York City. Kevin Philadelphia at Pittstiurgh, 7:35 p.m. with Ter7 Steinbach, catcher, on a two-year 15. Maryland 10-4 694 14 21 earlier date) (In Stereo) goals— Canisius 4-13 (Brown 2-7 Priah 1-1, Kline, Susan Sarandon, Mary Elizabeth Quebec at Winnipeg. 8:30 p.m. contract He can earn another $10,000 if he also plays for the winning 16. Louisiana St. 11-2 676 16 ® ® Who's the Boss? (CC) After An­ Smith 1-4, McCarthy 51), La Salle 6-20 (Hurd dZ) American Experience: Roots of Masirantonio 1988 Rated R. (In Stereo) Calgary at SL Louis, 8:35 p.m. SEATTLE MARINERS— Agreed to terms with 17. South Carolina 8-3 500 18 gela buys the house next door, Tony Resistance -- A Story of the Under­ team in the Super Bowl. 2-4, Overton 2-5, Woods 2-7, Johnson 0-4). [LIFE] Spenser: For Hire Detroit at Edmonton, 9:35 p.m. Jerry Reed, pitcher, and Mickey Brantley, out­ 18. Tennossoe Tech 10-2 433 19 leases it to a beautiful young woman (In ground Railroad (CC) Ruby Dee narrates a N Fouled out— None. Rebounds— Canisius 43 Buffalo at Los Angelas. 10:35 p.m. fielder, on one-year contracts. 19. Hawaii 11-2 378 17 Stereo) [USA] Miami Vice (Dyall 12), La Salle 42 (Simmons 11). As­ look at the escape route used by freedom- Wadnaaday's Gamaa TEXAS RANGERS— Agreed to terms with 20. S. Mississippi 11-2 258 21 ® It Takes a Thief seeking slaves. (60 min.) Geno Petralli, catcher, on a two-year contract sists— Canisius 18 (Giscombe 6), La Salle 23 21. Penn SI 10-2 224 24 1 1 :3 0 P M ® Night Court Boston at Hartford, 7:35 p.m. dl) MOVIE: 'Nothing in Common' A [A&E] MOVIE: 'Barry Lyndon' A ro­ National Laagu* 1-1 2-2 4, Ainge 520 5 0 10, Smith 8-14 3-3 20, (Overton 8). Total louls— Canisius 19, La Salle 22. SL Joseph's 8-3 196 23 ® f4® N ightline (CC) New Mxk Islanders at Montreal. 7:35 p.m. Del Negro 1-5 5 0 2, Sampson 1-8 5 0 2, young executive develops a better under­ guishly charming 18lh-century Englishman ATLANTA BRAVES— Agreed to terms with 17. Technical— Canisius coach Marbach. A— 23, Northwestern 11-1 185 25 Minnesota at Chicago, 8:35 p.m. 3,387. standing of his parents alter they decide to runs out of luck. Ryan O'Neal. Marisa Ber- ® Comedy Tonight Charlie Leibrandt pitcher, on a one-year con­ Pressley 3-6 2-2 8, Allen 3-8 0 9 6, Tumor 2-3 24. Old Dominion 10-5 170 22 . Winnipeg at Edmonton, 9:35 p.m. Basketball enson, Patrick Magee. 1975. Part 1 of 2 tract 0 9 4. Totals 40-97 10-10 91. 25. Vanderbilt 13-4 174 end their 36-year marriage. Tom Hanks, G® Honeymooners LA LAKERS (111) CINCINNATI FtEDS— Agreed to terms with Michigan 74, Illinois 70 Others receiving votes: Providence 147, N, Il­ Jackie Gleason, Eva Marie . 1986 [CNN] Larry King Live (2® Winning at Losing Weight Graon 7-12 11-12 25, Worthy 6-9 2-2 14, AHL standings Danny Jackson, pitcher, on a one-year contract. MICHIGAN (74) linois 73, Kentucky 33, Kansas 28, Connecticut dS MOVIE; 'Single Room Furnished' A [DIS] MOVIE: ‘Murder at the Gallop' Thompson 2-5 0 9 4, Johnson 5 7 6 9 17. Scott (22J 30: Tonight Show (In Stereo) BASKETBALL NBA standings Vaught 4-8 3-5 11, Higgins 510 2-2 16, Mills 23, DeFtaul 20, Clemson 15, Mississippi 14, woman turns to proslitution following a Miss Marple. an amateur sleuth, suspects Northam Division 3- 9 2-2 8, Cooper 2 8 0 9 4, Wbolridge 5 9 0-0 js- TT G® Sneak Previews Goes Video (In W L T Pla GF GA National Baskatball Association EASTERN CONFERENCE 7-11 4-7 18, Griffin 3-3 5 0 7, Robinson 7-16 Toledo 12, lllimis SL 11, Arkansas 10, Montana series of disasierous relationships Jayne that the death o f an old recluse is not an 10. Divac 1515 5 6 25, Draw 1-3 0 9 2, Vincent Mansfield, Dorothy Keller, Fabian Dean Stereo) Sherbrooke 21 16 8 50 155 151 ATLANTA HAWKS— Signed John Long, Atlantic Division 1- 3 15, Calip 1-5 2-2 4, Talley 0 9 5 0 0, Riley 7, Florida St. 6, Kansas S t 6, California 5, Bos­ w accident Margaret Rutherford, Robert guard, to a second 10-day contract 0 9 0 9 0, McNamara 1-1 0 9 2. Totals 42-78 1-1 1-2 3. Totals 25.54 13-21 74. ton College 4, S t Peter's 4, Miami, Fla. 3, 1968. Cape Breton 22 17 4 48 167 161 w L Pet GB 2528 111. Morley, Flora Robson 1963 G® St. Elsewhere PHILADELPHIA 76ERS— Signed Lewis New >brk ILLINOIS (70) Michigan St. 3, Oregon 3, W. Kentucky 3, Utah Halifax 22 17 3 47 173 145 26 10 .722 _ Sacramento ie 25 IS 32— 91 d® MOVIE: 'M issing* When an American [LIFE] MOVIE: 'Running Out' A young G?) N ew s (CC) Lloyd, guard-forward, to a 10-day contract Boston Kaufmann 2-8 3-3 7. Liberty 6-13 1-2 13, 2, La Salle 1, Richmond 1, San Diego 1. Maine 19 14 6 46 160 147 21 14 .600 4eople, past and present Each letter in the cipher stands for (CC) Nancy Is nervous when her book is C26) Success 'n' Ufe 10 .697 5 9 5 0 10, Sundvold 2-3 0 9 4. Long 3-4 2-2 8. Johnson 11-14 5 9 28, Augmon 4-7 3-5 11, East Hartford 2 2 5 3 fight between his daughter and his neigh­ Moncton 2, Cape Breton 2, tie Utah 1/2 another. Today's clue. N equals B finally published (60 min ) (Postponed 23 11 .676 Cummings 0-2 0 9 0. Totals 46-79 19-28 111. Butler 5 1 2 4 9 16, Hunt 2-5 2-3 7, Anthony 5 9 Fermi 2 2 4 3 bors over his land. Brian Donlevy. Ella 0OJ Hard Copy Z C D Halifax 4, Sherbrooke 3 Denver 22 15 .595 3 Raines, Rod Cameron 1953. from an earlier date) (In Stereo) oS WASHINGTON (105) 2- 3 14, Cvijanovich 1-1 0 9 2, Bice 0 9 0-1Windham 0, 2 3 (57) MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour Hershey 5, Baltimore 3 Dallas 5 3 17 19 .472 71/2 Jones 1-4 1-2 3, King 11-19 5 9 30, Turpin \bung 0-2 1-2 1, Scurry 2-3 1-3 5. Totals 31-53 Ftockville 'KSAZXHE XZRCAZX ® News (CC) New Haven 5, Maine 2 Houston 2 3 3 5 @® MOVIE; 'Harold and Maude' An 80- (61) Paid Program Baseball 16 20 .444 61/2 1-5 0 9 4, Malone 10-21 7-7 27, Whiker 5 8 0 9 1532 84, South Windsor 1 Utica 3, Springfield 2. OT 3 1 6 year-old woman teaches a 20-year-old Oil WPIX News Charlotte 7 26 .212 16 10, Alarie 7-17 3-4 17. Grant 2 9 0 9 4, Collar FRESNO ST. (75) [A &E] Biography; Douglas MacArthur: m H Sunday's Gamas Minnesota RP, XZDKD SF man how to live and love Ruth Gordon, 7 28 .200 17 0- 3 1-2 1, Roth 2-5 5 0 4. Eackles 2-8 1-2 5. HondorsonTo­ 3 9 0 9 6, Bernard 520 6-7 27, G® Synchronal Research The General A profile of Gen. Douglas Ma- Binghamton 5. Adirondack 3 Bud Cort, Vivian Pickles 1971 Senior baseball standings Pacific Division tals 42-96 21-26 105. Williams 1-2 5 0 2, Bally 3 9 5 0 6. Hooker 6-15 (2® (3® M idn igh t Caller (CC) Earthquake- cArtfiur. including interviews with Presi­ Halifax 3. Cape Breton 1 L A. Lakers ___ (S) MOVIE: 'Children of the Night' 26 8 .765 Miami 22 27 31 31— 111 4- 4 19, Taylor 0-0 0 9 0, Riddglesprigger 6-8 O'all VRDXKE SO ravaged San Francisco is the topic of dis­ dents Hoover. Eisenhower and Kennedy Sherbrooke 1, Moncton 0 Northam Division Ftertland Based on the true story of a sociology stu s s 25 11 .694 2 Washington 31 25 31 18— 105 1-1 13, Lindsey 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 29-58 11-12 W L W L cussion on Jack Killian's radio show to­ (60 min.) (R) New Haven 3, Springfield Z OT W L Pet. GB Phoenix 18 14 .563 dent whose research into female crime led 7 3-Poinl goals— Miami 0 9 , Washington 5 3 75. St. Joseph 2 0 8 0 night. as he speaks to listeners in the Bay [CNN] Newsnight Rochester 1, Baltimore 0 SL Petersburg1 33 22 .600 — Seattle VDBOZDF, DYDO her to open her home to teen-age prosti­ Z 18 16 .529 6 (Alarie 0-3). Fouled out— Edwards. Halftime-UNLV 44, FSU 38. 3-point SL Bernard 3 1 7 2 area (60 min ) (Postponed from an earlier u Newmarket 7, Utica 4 Oriando 31 26 .544 3 Golden Stale tutes seeking help Kathleen Quinlan, Ni­ [ESPN] Auto Racing; BMW Vintage 16 18 .471 10 Ftebounds— Miami 49 (Saikaly 11). Yfashington goals-UNLV 3-8 (Anthony 2-5, Hunt 1-3), FSU EAST CATHOLIC 1 1 5 4 date) (In Stereo) Monday's Games Bradenton 27 30 .474 7 L.A. Clippers cholas Campbell. Mario Van Peebles Fall Festival From Lime Rock, Conn (60 O JO 15 19 .441 11 52 (Jonas 9). Assists— Miami 31 (Sparrow, 6-16 (Bernard 3-6, Hooker 3-9, Henderson 1-1). Xavier 1 1 5 5 No games scheduled Winter Haven 22 34 .393 11t/z TZDO XZDE BKD 1985. (?4) (57) Search for Solid Ground: The In­ min ) (R) Sacramento 8 26 .235 18 Douglas 8). Ytashington 32 (Ytalker 10). Total Fouled out— Bally, RIddlesprIgger. Fairfield Prep 0 1 5 4 Tuesday's Gems* Southsm Division tifada Through Israeli Eyes A 1989 film Monday's Games louls— Miami 23, Washington 25. A— 10,921. Rebounds— UNLV 39 (Butler 13), FSU 20 Notre Dame 0 3 2 7 [A &E] Biography: Douglas MacArthur: [LIFE] This Evening ^ O Sherbrooke al Caps Breton W L Pet. GB New York 109, Chicago 106 U B O O D L . ' — about the Palestinian uprising in the occu­ (Hendersson 6). Assists— UNLV 17 (Butter 6), The General A profile of Gen. Douglas Ma [M A X ] MOVIE; 'The Beast' A group of O T1 Baltimore at Newmarket W. ftilm Beach 42 16 .724 — Cleveland 92, San Antonio 89 pied territories precedes a discussion (90 Pacers 144, Warriors 105 FSU 16 (Bally 5). Total fouls— UNLV 18, FSU cArthur, including interviews with Presi­ vengeance-bent rebels track a lost Soviet Wednesday's Gamas Fort Myers 32 26 .552 10 mm.) 0 m Denver 101, Dallas 90 27. A— 10,150. O'all AKBOYSHHD NBKIDK. dents Hoover, Eisenhower and Kennedy. tank through the Afghan wilderness. Ste­ Rochester at Harshay Gold Coast 25 32 .439 16'/2 GOLDEN STATE (105) §6] (Bfl News Los Angeles Lakers 111, Sacramento 91 w L W L (60 min.) phen Bauer, Jason Patne. George Cape Breton al Moncton SL Lucie 16 42 .276 26 Mullln 6-11 3-3 15, Teegle 8-17 4-4 20. Blab Big East Conferanca O'all PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I am afraid of losing my m K Miami 111, WtasNnglon 105 RHAM 4 3 4 5 [C N N ] PrimeNews (3® Hogan's Heroes Dzundza 1988 Rated R. (In Stereo) Maine at New Haven Monday's Games 4- 7 0-0 8. Hardaway 2-8 0-0 5, Richmond 517 w L W L obscurity. Genuineness only thrives In the dark. Like Indiana 144, Golden Slate 105 BOLTON 2 4 3 6 O) Adirondack at Utica West Palm Beach 7, Fort Myers 0, 1st game 3- 5 19, Tolbert 1-3 0 9 Z Higgins 2-8 5Georgetown 9 9. 0 0 celery.” — Aldous Huxley. [O IS] Lord of the Lions: Adamson of Af­ [C N N ] CNN News [TM C ] MOVIE: 'King of the City' Upon Phoenix 118, Charlotte 108, OT 3 13 Bacon Academy 2 4 3 4 West f^lm Beach 4, Fort Myers 0, 2nd game Marciulionis 6-12 9-10 21. Garland 1-3 2-2 4, SL John's 1 14 rica The late conservationist George [HBO] Louie Anderson: Comedy on arriving in Hollywood, a young man finds Seattle 105, Houston 101 3 3 COVENTRY 2 5 4 5 Bradenton 9, SL Petersburg 8, 11 innings Bel 0-5 2-2 2. Shasky 0-1 0 9 0. Totals 38-92 CONNECTICUT 4 2 14 3 Adamson is profiled al his camp in the Canvas (CC) Comic Louie Anderson gives work as a bouncer in a nightclub threa­ TUesday'a Gamea 2532 105. CHENEY TECH 0 6 0 7 0 1 NHL results Gold Coast 10, S i Lucie 9 Golden State at Milwaukee. 8:30 p.m. Syracuse 3 2 12 2 Kora game reserve in this documentary his perspectives on family pels, travel and tened by an underworld takeover. Tom Ttiasday's Games INDIANA (144) Villanova 10 filmed during the summer of 1989 (In tradition while performing in his hometown Parsekian, Michael Parks. Tony Curtis Chariotta at Los Angeles Clippers, 10:30 p.m. 3 2 7 O'all m >> Canadiens 4, North Stars 3 Fort Myers at West ftlm Beach Person 1516 0-1 24, Sanders 1-3 0 9 2, Providence 4 Stereo) of Minneapolis (60 min ) (R) (In Stereo) 1985. Rated R Atlanta at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m, 3 2 10 W L W L Gold Coast at SL Lucie Smits 6-14 3-3 15, Fleming 5 7 4 9 15. Miller Seton Hall 1 MInnasota 2 0 1— 3 Denver at Portland, 10.20 p.m. 3 8 6 Cromwell 6 0 6 2 SL Petersburg at Winter Haven 4- 9 2-2 10, Schrempf 9-13 6-6 24, McCloudPittsburgh 5 9 4 Montreal 2 1 1— 4 Wsdnatday'a GatTMs 0 5 9 East Hampton 5 1 7 1 Bradenton at Orlando 0 9 12, Thompson 4-4 5 0 8, Natl 6-10 4-5 16, Boston College 0 4 > First Period— 1, Montreal, Keane 6 (Carborv Washington at Now Jersey, 7:30 p.m. 6 8 Portland 5 1 6 2 ARLO AND JAIilS by Jimmy Johnson FRANK AND ERNEST by Eob Thavat a> Wadnaaday's Gamas Wilman 5-10 0 9 11, Nix 19 0 9 Z Dreiling 2-7 neau, Ludwig), 4:33. 2, Minnesota, Bellows 30 Detroit at Philadelphia. 7:30 p.m. Monday's Results Rocky Hill 3 3 3 5 Fort Myers at West f^lm Beach 1- 2 5.Totals 58-108 252 5 144. (Modano, Tirxjrdi), 5:13. 3. Montreal, MePhee 7 Boston at OriorKfo, 7.20 p.m. UConn 70, Syracuse 59 Vinal Tech 2 4 2 4 ^ > Gold Coast at St. Lucie Golden State 28 20 26 31— 105 Providence 89, Seton Hall 63 (Lemieux), 8:55. 4, Minnesota, Murphy 7 (Bel­ Indiana at Miami, 7:30 p.m. Indiana 44 42 36 22— 144 J 3 - H lows, N.Broten), 15:31 (pp). Penalties— Musil, SL Petersburg at Winter Haven New York at San Antonio, 8 p.m. Bradenton at Orlando 3-Point goals— Golden State 1-4 (Hardaway m KMOW \ OH, IKMOW' TMAT'6I?lfiHT/lMAYKITS I DON'T mm l u Min (holding), 10:43; Desjardins, Mon (slash­ Cleveland at Houston, 8:30 p.m. Tonight's Gama CCC East-girls O'all ev(R > 1- 1, Richmond 0-1, Higgins 52). Indiana 8-15 SL John's at Villanova, 7 p.m. mWCMAFttRYOOlWO YOUl? ] I HAVe YOU HAV6 I TROe,.. see THAT FAUCET n x s p .' ' / \ y ' ' ing), 15:00; Modarto, Min (tripping), 19:20. Phoenix at Dallas, 820 p.m. (Person 4-4, McCloud 2-5, Fleming 1-1, Wit- W L W L Atlanta at Utah. 9:30 p.m. YEAI»n)FIX1HEFAUC6T.' PKOaeM? A W VISIOM.' NO VISIOIO.' THE Lt/ejeJ "O Second Period— 5, Montreal, Richer 27 (Car- tman 1-2, Miller 0-3). Fouled out— None. MANCHESTER bonneau, Schneider), 6:55. Penalties— Ewen, Seattle at Los Angeles Lakers, 10:30 p.m. Wednesday'! GaiiM Enfield o .< Bowling Rebounds— Golden Slate 50 (Mullln 9), Indiana Boston College at Georgetown, 7 p.m. Mon (roughing), 4:31; Lebeau, Mon (tripping), 63 (Natt 11). Assists— Golden Stale 19 (Ffich- East Hartford f T o p s 7:34; Lelebvre, Mon (interference), 10:39; mond 6), Indiana 38 (Miller 8). Total Windham Musil, Min (holding), 1302; Lumme, Mon (hold­ NBA results Saturday's Gamas Ftockville louls— Golden State 24, Indiana 23. Techni­ Georgetown at UConn (Civic Center), 8 p.m. ing), 18:01. cal— Dreiling. A— 11,189. Hartford Public Third Period— 6, Minnesota, Bellows 31 Knicks 109, Bulls 106 Seton Hall at Pittsburgh, noon Formi (N.Broten, Murphy), 8:24 (pp). 7, Montreal, Henry Agostinelli 135145406, Bill Preston CHICAGO (106) SL Joseph's al Villanova, 6 p.m. South Windsor Suns 118, Hornets 108 Boston College at SL John's, 8 p.m. Ewen 1 (Skrudland, Schneider), 11:18. Penal­ 141-353, Travis Cook Sr. 145385, Howard Grant 4-8 2-3 10, Pippen 1516 2-3 22, Providence at Syracuse, 8 p.m. ties— Desjardins, Mon (holding), 8:00; Hampton 149-387, Tony Desimone 145366, CartwrighI 8-13 2-2 18. Jordan 9-24 8-9 26, CHARLOTTE (108) Duchesne, Min, minor-major (high-sticking, Joe Desimone 36Z Max Welch 146-385, Al At­ Raxson 3-7 51 7, King 513 1-2 13. Perdue 2-3 Gilliam 517 2-2 20. Tripucka 2-9 2-2 6. COC Easl-giris O'alt J.RRaid 3-10 0 9 6, Chapman 1517 2-2 23, fighting), 9:39; Lemieux, Mon, minor-major kins 137-350, Ralph Doyer Jr. 158-380, Carl 0-0 4. Armstrong 2-4 5 0 4, Hodges 1-1 5 0 2, W L W L Sichting 3-3 0 9 6, Bogues 2-10 0 9 5, Curry College hoop scores (high-sticking, fighting), 9:39; Berezan, Min Bolin 135387, Steve Disipio 139-368. Davis 0-0 5 0 0. Totals 45-89 1520 106. COVENTRY 6 2 6 5 14-26 1-1 30, Gray 0 9 5 0 0, RRoid 512 0 9 /\r (tripping), 17:17. EAST Bacon Academy 4 4 7 4 NEW YORK (109) 10, Gatlison 1-1 0 9 Z Totals 49-105 7-7 108. American U. 73, N.C.-Wilmington 70 Shots on goal— Minnesota 10-10-5— 25. RHAM 4 4 4 6 Newman 6-11 4-4 16, Oakley 7-11 2-3 16, PHOENIX (118) Charioston, W.Va. 95, W. Virginia St. 88 Montreal 8-8-13— 29. BOLTON 0 8 0 10 Power-play Opportunities— Minnesota 2 of 6; Ewing 13-21 7-10 33, Jackson 3-6 0-0 7, Chambers 14-32 11-12 40, Rambis 3 9 0 9 6, Connecticut 70, Syracuse 59 Montreal 0 of 5. Rec Hoop G.Wilkins 511 5 0 12, Walker 2-4 1-1 5. Tuckar WlBSt57 4-4 14, Hornacek7-15 6 9 20. KJohn- Delaware Val. 61, Muhlenberg 58 THE BORN LOSER by Art Sanaom PHIPPS by Joseph Farris Goalies-Minnesota, Takko, 3-9-0 (29 5 8 5 0 1Z Strickland 4-9 5 0 8, E,Wilkins 0-1 son 9-23 5 6 23. Lang 0-2 0 9 0, Majerie 3 9 Edinboro 96, Rtl-Johnstown 80 COC West- girls shots-2S saves). Montreal, Roy, 159-2 (2522). 5 0 0. Totals 4582 14-18 109. 2- 4 8, EJohnson 2-7 3-3 7.Totals 43-98 31-35Elizabethtown 80, Dickinson 69 A— 16,199. Pee Wee Chicago 29 28 25 24-106 118. FDU-Madison 73, Kings, Pa. 71 Cromwell Referee— Denis Morel. Linesmen— Gerard Naw llbrk 28 37 23 21— 109 Chariotta 20 28 29 29 2— 108 Gettysburg 64, Lycoming 59 Flo rtl and Community Y- Huskies 19 (Darrell Shabazz 3-PDint goals— Chicago 1-5 (Paxson 1-1, Pip- Phoenix 25 28 28 25 12— 118 Haverford 98. Vassar 94 HELLO, C?C.F5W Ng?^ Gauthier, Bob Hodges. 8. Garen Duchetta 6, Ryan Zawistowski 4) East Hampton owe OF A 6 m v ^ THCmnPLE, pen 0-2, Jordan 52), Now 'ibrk 511 (G.Wilkins 3-Point goals— Charlotte 3-8 (Bogues 1-1, Keene St. 65, Sacred Heart 60 Ftocky Hill Bruins 4, Whalers 1 Eagles 15 (Tim Vfollenberg 6, Dave Wolfgang 3, 2-3, Tucker 2-4, Jackson 1-Z Walker 0-1, Chapman 1-3, Curry 1-3, Tripucka 0-1), La Salle 89, Canisius 77 HA'S PKJUEsrepA^ax>NPopiMaJOFAW Sara Wbllenberg 2) Strickland 0-1). Fouled out— None. Phoenix 1-4 (Chambers 1-1, K.Johnson 0-1, LeMoyne 63, Gannon 60 Panthers 17 (Matt Bordeau 4, Steven CW bMCSIS.,.l'A\6EK»IM(b HlMOVE^TDHiOU, Hartford 1 0 0— 1 Rebounds— Chicago 48 (Cartwright 12), Now Majerie 0-2). Fouled out— J.R.Reid. Lebanon Val. 76, Vbrk, Fta. 62 Moorehouse 4) Pirates 16 (Andy Leitao 6, AL.i.-giris O'all Boston 1 1 2—4 York 42 (Oakley, Ewing 12). Assists— Chicago Rebounds— Charlotte 54 (Gilliam 16), Phoenix Loyola, Md. 81. Navy 74, OT First Period— 1, Hartford, Ferraro 17 (Tom- Roger Toner 2) 25 (Jordan 8), Now York 26 (Jackson 7). Total W L W L 61 (Rambis, West 12). Assists— Charlotte 31 Massachusetts 8Z SL 55 St. Joseph’s 2 0 8 2 lak), 9:3Z 2 , Boston, Bourque 10 (Neely, Haw- fouls— Chicago 20, Now Ybrk 17. Techni­ (Boguas 16). Phoenix 24 (K Johnson 11). Total Millersvilla 114, Bowis St. 85 Mercy 2 1 7 4 good), 13:00. PenalUet— Samuelsson, Har cals— Naw Ibrk illegal defense 2 . A— 18,212. fouls— Charlotte 27, Phoenix 17. Techni­ Mount St. Mary's, Md. 82, Bucknell 78 (roughing), 4:24; B.Swaeney, Bo* (roughing), Sacred Heart 1 1 5 3 cals— Cheriotte coach Harter, Phoenix coach Penn SL 64. Duquasne 56 S i Bernard's 1 2 4 5 424; Linseman, Bos (holding), 5:22; Vbung, Har Calendar Cavaliers 92, Spurs 89 Fitzsimmons. A— 13,643. Providence 89, Salon Hall 63 (holding), 5;57. EAST CATHOLIC 0 2 1 9 SAN ANTONIO (89) Rutgers-Newark 93. Medgar Evers 81 Second Period— 3, Boston, Neely 32 (Jan- Cummings 3-20 2-2 9, Anderson 7-15 3-4 17, Sonics 105, Rockets 101 SL Francis, NY 69, Concordia. N.Y. 67 ney. Carpenter), 6:58. Penaltiea— Dineen, Har, Today Monday's gamea not included Robinson 11-17 6-10 28, Cheeks 3-7 2-2 8, Wsstminster, Fta. 64. Houghton 52 rrynor-major (roughing, lighting), :57; Kluzak, Boys Basketball HOUSTON (101) Wingate 3-5 51 6, Brickowski 3-5 2-4 8. Max­ SOUTH Boa, minor-major (roughing, fighting), ;57; Cheney Tech at FtHAM, 4:30 p.m. B.Johnson 0-16 3-6 21, Thorpe 513 4-5 16. well 4-7 2-4 11, Elliotl 1-5 0-0 2. Totals 3581 Athens St. 83, Term. Temple 56 Samuelsson, Har (tripping), 3:15; Verbeek, Har, Vinal Tech at Bolton, 720 Olajuwon 8-16 2-6 18, Floyd 4-7 3-3 14, Wood- Scholastic hockey poll 17-27 89. Averatt 110, Methodist 96 minor-major (high-sticking, lighting), 6:25; Bacon Academy at Coventry, 5 p.m. son 1-6 1-2 3, Wiggins 7-13 9-10 23. Smith 0 9 NEW HAVEN (AP) — Hero Is the Now Haven CLEVELAND (92) Bolirwnl Abbey 57, Gardner-Webb 52 D.Sweeney, Bos, minor-major (instigator, light­ Girls Basketball 0 9 0, Chievous 3-4 0 9 6, Lucas 0-0 5 0 0. To­ Ftogisler's top 10 boy's Ngh school hockey poll: Brown 4-9 3-4 11, Nance 2-12 2-2 6, Rollins Berry 81, North Georgia 77 ing), 6:25; Krygier, Har (roughing), 16:47; Haw- Hartford Public at Manchester, 7:30 tals 38-75 22-32 101. 1. Hamden (10-1) (5) 170 WINTHROP by DickCavalli 2-4 0-0 4, Ehio 8-20 2-3 20, Price 9-17 1-2 25, Beihune-Cookman 103, S. Carolina St. 92 THE GRIZWELLS by Bill Schorr g o ^ , Bos, double minor (ro u tin g ), 16:47; Coventry at Tourtelotte, 4 p.m. SEATTLE (105) 2. East Catholic (6-3) (4) 162 J. Williams 511 4-8 14, Kerr 2-7 0-1 6, Keys 2-6 Campbellsville 93. Pikeville 82 Evason, Har, double minor (slashing, roughing), East Granby at Bolton, 2 p.m. McDaniel 11-22 3-4 25, McKey 7-10 3-5 17. 3. West Haven (9-3) 135 0-0 4, Dudley 1-3 0-2 2.Totals 3589 12-22 92. Carson-Newman 82, Eart Palk 63 IT WHY PIW T ’ BBCAU5eMI». .AMP UatO NEVEt^ Tsy AWPl5EA5i3H 19:38; Wesley, Bos, double minor (slashing, Boys Swimming Cage 2-9 4-4 8, A,Johnson 4-9 1-1 9. Thraatt 4. Formi-Enfield (8-1) 116 Son Antonio 29 19 15 26— 89 9-15 2-2 21, Kemp 1-2 5 0 Z McMillan 2-4 2-2 CenL Florida 53, Davidson 51 5. Fairfield Prep (3-5) 104 VOULETME IMF PBHtflFAL'^ 'MWAlHlRpiSRAPER 1 roughing), 19:38. Conard at Manchester, 4 p.m. IN MYOPINKON, Y A H ' Y O U R SOMEHOW, HEY WIMP.', Clamson 117, Georgia SL 59 c o p y OFP Third Period— 4, Boston, Burridge 14 Clavsiand 30 18 27 17— 92 6, Barros 2-4 5 0 5, Sellers 4-9 5 0 8, Polynice 6. Now Canaan (7-2) 98 WOUUP'VE OFFICE., WHO (SOT A TATTOO, 3-Point goals— San Antonio 2-7 (Maxwell 1-2, Clinch Valley 105, Milligan 93 THE TV ANCHOR- AAOTHER EA TS I EYPECTED (B.Sweeney, Christian), 6:02 (pp). 5. Boston, Wsdnasday 2-4 5 0 4. Totals 44-88 1 51 8 105. 7. Ridgefield (7-4) 92 z IT ] wufeieyr? <54UtfHTUft. Cummings 1-3, Cheeks 0-1, Elliott 0-1), Houston 25 24 28 24— 101 Coastal Carolina 74, Baptist Coll. 59 8. South Windsor (6-3) 81 AAAN ISAM S P A M O U T O F BETTER THAN Bourque 11, 19:53 (en). Penalties— Carpenter, Ic * Hockey Coll, of Charleston 84, Campbell 67 Manchester vs. Glastonbury (South Windsor Cleveland 10-22 (Price 6-9, Kerr 2-5, EhIo 2-8). Seattta IB 37 24 2 5 -1 0 5 8. Stamford Catholic (9-3) 81 T H E CA N .' TH A TF R C M Bos (hooking), 122; Andersson, Har (Inter­ Columbus 91, Morris Brown 73 ANACHRONISM. - o Fouled out— None, Rebounds— San Antonio 3-Point goals— Houston 3-7 (Floyd 56, Wig­ 10. Notre Damo-WH (5-3) 72 ference), 5:37; Galley, Bos (interference), 6:53; Arena), 7:50 p.m. Coppin SL 89, Md.-E. Shore 62 0 \ N FATHER O o Immaculate vs. East Catholic (Bolton Ice 57 (Cummings 12), Cleveland 63 (Price 11). gins 0-1), Seatlla 2-8 (Barros 1-1, Thraatt 1-4, Also receiving votes: Wosthill (7-4) 14. Carpenter, Bos (holding), 12:25. David Lipscomb 108, Bethel, Tenn. 79 Assists— San Antonio 29 (Cheeks 9), Cleveland McMillan 51, McKay 52). Fouled out— None. (The following writers vote: Chris Elsberry, Shots on goal— Hartford 10-11-13— 34. Bos­ Palace), 8:30 p.m. Delaware SL 98, Morgan SL 84 Wrestling 27 (Price 12). Total fouls— San Antonio 23, Ftebounds— Houston 49 (Olajuwon 12), Seattle Bridgeport F>osl; Dorn Amore, Hartford Courant; ton 12-12-4— 28. Cleveland 22. A— 17,657. Power-play Opportunities— Hartford 0 of 5; Manchester at Simsbury, 6 p.m. 45 (Cage 11). Assists— Houston 25 (B.Johnson How Top 25 fared Matt Buckler, Journal Inquirer of MarKhestor; Boston A of 5. East Catholic/Hartford Public at Wethersfield, Nuggets 101, Mavs 90 6), Seattle 18 (A.Johnson 7). Total foula— Hous­ Dan Nowak. New Haven Ftegistar; Mark Jalfoe, Goalies— Hartford, Sidorkiewicz, 8-11-2 (27 6 p.m. ton 2Z Seattle 23. Technicals— Seattle coach How the Associated Press' Top 25 teams New Haven Register; Jim StouL The News- shots-24 saves). Boston, Moog, 157-3 (34-33). DALLAS (90) Bickerstatf 2 (ejected), Cage. A— 11,404. fared Monday: Times of Danbury; Jim Smith, Greenwich A— 13,967. Williams 2-8 0-0 4, White 4-8 2-4 10, 1. Kansas (18-0) did not play. Next: vs. Times; Dana Gauruder. Stamtord Advocata; Referee— Bill McCreary. Linesmen— Kevin Donaldson 5 8 0-0 10, Harper 10-19 5-8 26, Elizabeth City State, Thursday. and John Kovach, Tho Hour of Norwalk. Collins, Pat Dapuzzo. Radio, TV Blackman 5 1 8 1-1 19, Jones 1-4 0-0 2 , Wen- Top 25 results 2. Georgetown (13-0) did not play. Next: vs. Season records, first place votes In paren­ nington 0-1 2-22, B.Davis 3-8 5 6 11, Alford 0-2 Boston College, VMnesday. theses. Points tabulated on a 9 Leafs 7, Hawks 6 4-4 4, Upshaw 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 3578 19-25 90. UConn 70, Syracuse 59 3. Oklahoma (12-0) did not play. Next: at 20-18-16-14-12-11 -10-9-8-7 basis.) DENVER (101) EEK AND MEEK by Howla Schneider Chicago 1 4 l-« Kansas State, Tuesday. Today English 12-19 5 5 29, Lane 3-4 1-3 7. Ras­ SYRACUSE (59) ALLEY OOP by Dave Graua Toronto 1 5 1—7 4. Missouri (15-1) did not play. Next: at Ok­ Scholastic hoop poll mussen 9-15 2-2 20, Lever 3-10 2-2 8, Adams Johnson 2-8 2-2 6, Coleman 513 6-9 16, First Period— 1, Toronto, lafrate 12 (Olezyk), lahoma State, Tuesday. NEW HAVEN (AP) — Here Is tho New Haven 7 p.m. — College basketball: 0-4 1-2 1, Kempton 2-3 0-0 4, W.Davis 517 2-2 Ellla 7-13 0-0 14, Owens 6-19 0-0 13, 14:49. 2, Chicago, Creighton 23 (B.Murray, Wil­ 5. Syracuse (12-2) lost to Connecticut 70-59, Ftegister’s top ten boy’s high school basketball TV CAfO'T TTiE fVOCHORS 14, Hughes 2-5 0-0 4, Lichti 5 8 4-5 14, Dunn Thompson 512 5 4 10. Edwards 0-5 0 9 0, MEMJS S m//W6 YOU BOYS / OKAY ^UIWw..! I WOWPER IF I ( NAW, I IT MIGHT BEND HIM \ YOU ..THIS MEDALLION ) AN son), 16:24 (pp). Penalties— Pearson, Tor (trip­ South Carolina at St. Peter’s, Next: vs. Pittsburgh, Saturday. poll: 0-0 0-0 0, Higgins 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 42-86 17-21 Manning 0-1 0 9 0. Totals 2571 5 1 5 58. KEEPCF RUN a l o n g ! UMPA! I MADE A MISTAKE IN V DON'T O U TA SHAPE A LITTLE, KNOW, IS BEAUTIFUL! .^^OLD ping), 6:22; Curran, Tor, double mirror (holding, ^ 6. Michigan (12-2) beat No. 7 Illinois 74-70. 1. St. Joseph (8-0) (7) 194 SO FA STm se PAYS,,. ARE. DRA3 3 II0 G SportsChannel 101. CONNECTICUT (70) AND LEAVE ^ ^ ( GIVING THAT SKATEBOARD} THINK BUT r DON'T THINK /ALLEY WHERE IN THE < PIRATE roughing), 9:26; Creighton, Chi, double minor Next: vs. Ohio State, Thursday. 2. Danbury (9-0) (3) 180 7 p.m. — College hockey: Dallas 10 25 26 20— 90 Williams 19 0 9 z HenefoW 4-8 0 9 11. - y ------' SUZ TO ME! ; I ------TO H IM ! ____ . J S O ! IT'LL KILL 'IM! WORLD DID YtXJ GAVE (roughing), 926; Curraa Tor (hooking), 15:45; Sellers 3-6 2-5 8, C.Smilh 5 9 6-8 17. George 7. Illinois (12-2) lost to No. 6 Michigan 74-70. 3. Weaver (8-0) 160 G E T IT f y IT TO Kordic, Tor, minor-major (instigator, lighting), Dartmouth at Boston College, Denver 32 26 20 23— 101 Next: vs. Michigan Stale, Thursday. 4. Cross (8-2) 133 3-Point goals— Dallas 1-3 (Harper 1-1, 511 5 6 17. DePriesI 3-5 3-5 9, Cyrulik 1-4 0 9 m e ! 17:43; Russell, Chi, major (fighting) 17:43. NESN 2, Gwynn 1-3 2-2 4. Totals 23-52 18-26 70. 8. Duke (12-2) did not play. Next: at North 5. Bristol Canlral (7-0) 111 B.DevIs 0-1, Upahaw 0-1), Denver 5 2 (Adams Carolina, Wednesday. Secortd Period— 3, Toronto, McIntyre 4 (Pear­ Halftime— Connecticul 38, Syracuse 31. 6. Hillhouse (9-1) 108 7:30 p.m. — College basketball: 0-2). Fouled out— None. Rebounds— Dallas 49 9. UNLV (11-3) beat Fresno Stale 84-75. son) 0:41. 4, Toronto, Olezyk 23 (Kurvers, point goals— Syracuse 1-6 (Owens 1-2, 6. Kennedy (7-0) 108 (While, Donaldson 10), Denver 48 (Rasmussen, Next: vs. UC Irvine, Thursday. Ramage), 2:52 (pp). 5, Chicago, Savard 20 Oklahoma at Kansas State, ESPN Thompson 0-1, Edwards 53). Connecticut 6-13 8. New London (7-1) 101 Lever 8). Assists— Dallas 23 (Harper 9), Denver 10. Louisville (12-2) did not play. Next at (Larmer, Cassidy), 3:33. 6. Chicago, Secord 11, (HeneleW 3-5, George 2-3, C.Smilh 1-4, Gywnn 9. St. (7-0) 74 9 524. 7, Toronto, Daoust 6, 9:35 (sh). 8, Toron­ 9:30 p.m. — College basketball: 29 (Adams 8). Total fouls— Dallas 19, Denver Tulane, Thursday. 10. Bassick (7-3) 32 23. A— 9,256. 0-1). Fouled out— None. Rabourxis— Syracuse to, Osborne 15 (Olezyk, lafrate), 10:17. 9, Notre Dame at Rutgers, SportsChan­ 49 (Ellis 13), Connecticut 36 (Sellers 8). As­ 11. Georgia Tech (11-1) did not play. Next- Also receiving votes: Crosby (7-1), Harding vs. Temple, Tuesday. Toronto. Damphousse 16 (Osborne), 12:46. 10, nel sists— Syracuse 11 (Edwards 4), Connecticut (3-5) and Kolbe-Cathadral (7-2) 14. E.O, Smith Lakers 111, Kings 91 (9-0) 7. Chicago, Savard 21 (Brown), 15:00. 11, 18 (George, Williams 5). Total Fouls— Syracuse 1Z Arkansas (12-2) did not play. Next: at Southern Methodist Wednesday. Chicago, Larmer 17 (Wilson, B.Murray), 17:51 9:30 p.m. — College basketball: SACRAMENTO (91) 2Z Connecticut 15. Technical fouls— Syracuse (Ftecord, first-place voles In parentheses. (pp). Penalties— Larmer, Chi (tripping), 1.22; Vanderbilt at LSU, ESPN McCray 8-12 3-3 19, Tisdale 8-20 5 0 16. Kite bench, Connecticut bench. A— 16.294. 13. LSU (10-2) did not play. Next: vs. Vandor- Points tabulated on a bilL Tuesday. 20-18-16-14-12-11-10-9-8-7 basis.) 0 MANCHESTER HERALD, Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1990—15 14 MANCHliSTHR HERALD, Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1990 FOCUS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 643-2711 Notices Lots/Land for Sole .... Merchandise Musical Items...... 84 L o tt/F o u n d ...... ot Investment Property . C am era* and Photo Equipm ent...... 85 P erso n al*...... 02 Business Property ..... Pets and Supplies...... 86 Resort P ro p e rty ...... 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