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Board Slammed Rocket Injures Crowd

Board Slammed Rocket Injures Crowd

20—MANCHESTER HERALD. T\iesday, July 3,1990 What’s News Rose to find out soon if he’ll get some jail time Thursday sibility, level of involvement in the Spiegel received a copy of a pre­ filing false tax returns. Although he’s not expected to get One of Rose’s tax offenses falls By JOE KAY the maximum sentence, there’s a under federal sentencing guidelines crime and the amoimt of money in­ sentence report Monday from The Associated Press Rose has been getting treatment federal probation officers. The for a gambling disorder and waiting possibility Rose could be sentenced that went into effect Nov. 1, 1987. volved. Even if the grid suggests incar­ report, which will be used by LOCAL NEWS INSIDE for the other shoe to drop from his to some prison time under federal The guidelines, intended to provide CINCINNAn — Pete Rose’s il­ ceration for Rose, the Judge could Spiegel in deciding a sentence, April 20 guilty plea in U.S. District guidelines. The Judge also could more uniform sentencing, require licit activities cost him a place in allow him to avoid Jail. Judges to look at a specific grid of depart from it and grant probation, won’t be released to the public. ■ Local unemployment anrkatf r lpral6 Court. Aside from his weekly radio . In two weeks, he’ll find but would have to explain his sports show in Cincinnati, Rose has factors in determining a sentence. out whether they cost him his “He’s concerned and very much Rose could receive probation on reasons for doing so. Rose’s lawyers received a copy of rate on the rise. Page 5. freedom as well. b ^ keeping a low profile lately. the report at the end of May, and aware of the seriousness of the the first count, but the second — t'. Manchester, Conn. - A City of Village Charm Newsstand Price: 35 Cents A federal judge will sentence “At this , he doesn’t have situation he’s in right now,” Pinzka subject to the sentencing guidelines Rose admitted in federal court responded privately to its conf ents. Thursday, July 5,1990 Rose on July 19 for his admitted tax anything on his calendar for July,” said. — appears to fall on the border be­ that he failed to report income from Assistant U,S, attorney William 'V’i' ■ Private school offenses. Baseball’s career hits spokeswoman Barbara Pinzka said U.S. District Judge S. Arthur tween a prison sentence and proba­ autogrtqih appearances, memorabilia Hunt didn’t return a telephone call leader could get up to six years in Monday. Spiegel, who accepted Rose’s guilty tion. Rose’s position on the grid sales and gambling. He has paid the Monday for comment. The govern­ payments settled. Page 7. prison and a maximum fine of Pinzka called Rose on Monday to plea April 20, has given no indica­ depends in part on how the Judge Internal Revenue Service $366,043 ment has made no sentencing $500,000 on two felony counts of inform him of the sentencing date. in back taxes, interest and penalties. recommendation to Spiegel. Summer scorcher solution tion how he’ll rule. factors in acceptance of respon­ ■ Coventry ’ s town spirit Pension battered by budget. Page 7. In Brief • • ‘Old timer’ gets weird feeling Board mation that sent her home to West Ger­ Morrision picks Bender General Oil a winner By ROB GLOSTER many for the weekend, said Capriati is The Associated Press stronger and steadier thw was G r^ at 14, HARTFORD (AP) — Democratic gubernatorial GLASTONBURY — General Oil to p j^ Glastonbury, when she already had been on the pro cir­ candidate Bruce A. Morrison has picked former 10-4, Monday night in JC-Courant Junior Division ac­ WIMBLEDON, England — Steffi Graf South Windsor Mayor Sandra Bender as his run­ slammed cuit for a year. tion. Andy Bartley and John Bowes combined on a doesn’t feel old. A couple of years ago, “It’s Just great how far she is already ning mate for lieutenant governor, the Morrison she was a prodigy. She was only 4 when three-hitter with Bartley getting his fourth win without a with her game,” Graf said. “She is so campaign confirmed today. first played at loss for General. Jamie Lockwood tripled and singled natural.” “I certainly can’t deny that she’s the choice,” said Board, Negro and drove in three runs and Mike Bottaro played well Wimbledon. Navratilova, an eight-time Wimbledon Thayer Baldwin Jr., Morrison’s campaign manager But after defeating 14-year-old Jennifer defensively for General, now 6-1 in league play. singles champion, defeated the 14th- said. Capriati in a Centre Court battle for the seeded Wiesner 6-3,6-3 and hasn’t lost a Baldwin said he wasn’t surprised that word had Lavery leads soccer squad future of women’s on Monday, shirked duty set in reaching the quarterfinals. That, she leaked out at mid-moming at ^ e Capitol. Morrison Graf was asked once again what it feels Heather Lavery of Manchester coached the Connec­ said, is important to her body. was to announce the selection and introduce Bender ticut Central District (girls 12 and under) team in the like to play a youngster. at a Capitol news conference this afternoon. By ALEX GIRELLI “It’s Just weird,” said the top seed and “Getting older means that it takes you Pocono Cup Tournament last weekend. Local players longer to recover from tough matches,” Bender, a former high-level official with Connec­ Manchester Herald with the team were Meghan Buckley, Dawn Migliore two-time defending champion, who ticut Bank & Trust, is little known outside the turned 21 last month. she said. “When you get up the next and Christine Parsons. morning, you Just don’t feel as pain-free Hartford area. She served as mayor of South MANCHESTER — The Town Pension Board and Y At 33, Navratilova does feel old. She as you used to. No matter how good Windsor, a town of 20,000, from 1975 to 1977. Town Treasurer arc being heavily criticized in an inde­ Auriemma agrees to terms says it’s important to have easy matches shape you get in, the muscles Just don’t Following a time-honored tradition, Morrison pendent audit of the Manchester pension fund for to give her body a chance to recover. sought to balance his ticket geographically. He is shirking their responsibilities to provide proper fiscal STORRS — University of Connecticut women’s bas­ recover quite as quickly.” So the second seed spent only 53 from Hamden, in the New Haven area, so it made oversight. ketball coach Geno Auriemma has agreed to a four-year Navratilova has a 96-9 record in contract to remain with the Huskies, it was announced. minutes defeating Judith Wiesner on political sense to pick someone from the Hartford The audit was conducted after officials admitted that Wimbledon singles. Evert was 96-15 Delaying the signing is that UConn has a lame-duck Monday. In the process, she tied Chris area. they had apparendy lost more than $200,000 of pen­ Evert’s record for most Wimbledon vic­ before retiring 1 ^ year. sion money by investing in a heavily-troubled com­ president and an interim athletic director. was 95-15 while winning six singles tit­ Auriemma, 36, signed a five-year contract when he tories (96) and made the quarterfinals for CIA used drug ranch pany. a record 16th consecutive year. les. The auditors said in their report that the pervasive came to Connecticut in 1983 after serving as an assistant The winningest man at Wimbledon is LOS ANGELES (AP) — The CIA trained While the women were waging a battle factor in all weaknesses they found “is the apparent coach at Virginia. In his five years at UConn, Auriemma Jimmy Connors, who won 82 of 98 Guatemalan guerrillas at a Mexican ranch owned by of generations, the men were restoring a lack of pro-active oversight of the Pension Board over has a 92-51 record. The 92 wins equals the total won by a drug lord convicted in the murder of U.S. drug semblance of sanity in a draw devastated matches. the investment aedvities of the retirement fund.” the UConn program from 1974-85. agent Enrique Camarena, a federal report says. by upsets. Women’s third seed The report by Bennett, Katz, and Thibodeau, the After a 12-15 mark in 1985-86, UConn has had four But the Drug Enforcement Administration report Top seed Ivan Lendl defeated Bryan defeated Ann Henricksson 6-1, 6-0 to set certified public accounts who conducted the audit, was strught winning seasons. It has appeared in the NCAA docs not detail why the guerrillas were being -n \ Shelton in the continuation of a third- up a quarterfinal clash with fifth-seeded obtained by the Herald this week through the office the Tournament the past two years, its first ever appearances , a 6-3, 6-3 winner over trained, nor whether the Central Intelligence Agen­ O in NCAA play. round match suspended Saturday by dark­ town attorney. ness, and second-seeded lOth-seeded Helena Sukova. cy knew who owned the ranch. 5 “n The CIA denied the report, details of which the Fred Geyer, chairman of the Pension Board, Britsox beat Reading ousted 1987 champion Pat Cash in Garrison hasn’t lost a set in the tourna- declined to comment on the report Tuesday night, mern and said she is OMifident about play­ Los Angeles Times published today. READING, I ^ (AP) — Stuart Weidie drove in three straight sets. saying he had not .seen the final version of it. Third-seeded gained a ing Seles on grass. The two have met Just “The whole story is nonsense,” agency spokes­ runs as the New Britain Red Sox defeated the Reading man Mark Mansfield said today. “We have not Mayor Terry Werkhoven also said he had not seen measure of revenge against 13th-seeded once before, Seles winning on clay in the Phillies 6-4 in the Eastern League. trained Guatemalan guerrillas on that ranch or the report and would not comment on it. Michael Chang to Join Becker in the 1989 Rrench Open. n ^ Weidie singled in two for New Britain in the fifth in­ anywhere else.” The audit was authorized by the Board of Directors quarterfinals. Also advancing to the final “I feel this is my surface and this is my after it was disclosed that Town Treasurer Roger ning of M oney’s game, after Vinnie DelGifico singled chance against her,” Garrison said. “The CIA does not engage in drug-rurming ac­ and David Milslein doubled. He also beat out a double eight was seventh-seeded Brad Gilbert, tivities,” he said Wednesday. Negro had invested S200,(XX) in promissory notes of who struggled past American compatriot Lendl defeated Shelton 7-6, 6-7, 6-4, the Merus Corp., a blood bank company which appears play in the seventh as Eric Wedge scored. 6-4 in the completion of a third-round The report, completed in February, said the Wedge had opened the inning with a walk off David 6-7, 3-6,6-1,6-4,13-11. Guatemalan guerrillas were trained during the early to be in deep financial trouble. The town has filed a r n . While Lendl, Becker, Edberg and Gil­ match halted Saturday by darkness after lawsuit against the defunct company in an attempt to Holdridge (6-7) and got to third on a sacrifice and a two sets. 1980s at a ranch near Veracruz owned by Rafael bert are the only seeded men left, all eight single. Becker, the defending champion, over­ Caro Quintero, and that a guerrilla clash ^erc left Please see AUDIT, page 6. I S The Red Sox got their first run in the second inning on women in the quarterfinals are seeds, the 19 Mexican police dead. first time that has happened at came C a ^ in a first-set tie-breaker and z m a leadoff homer to deep center by Jeff Bagwell, who was then swept past him 6-1, 6-4 in the fmal named the EL player of the week earlier in the day. Wimbledon since 1981. O T 3 Graf led the way with a 6-2, 6-4 victory two sets. Japan rules on lawsuit Johnson of month over Capriati, who could not match the Gilbert had to fight off two matdi TOKYO (AP) — A Japanese court has ruled for the first time that female workers were denied Rocket NEW YORK (AP) — Randy Johnson, who threw the power of the top seed in their first en­ points before squaring the fifth set at S-S R o promotions due to sex discrimination, awarding 18 O T i first no-hitter in history cm June 2, was counter. and then got the critical break in the set’s women a total of $640,000 in lost wages. named the AL pitcher of the month and Geveland’s “Now I know why they call it The 21st game. The Associated Press The lawsuit, which took 10 years to wend its way m [5 Brook Jacoby was selected AL player of the month. Forehand. It was Just a bullet and she Edberg, the 1988 Wimbledon cham­ through the court system, was filed by women who Two other who threw no-hitters in June, Dave moves so quick,” Capriati said. “(Her pion, beat Chang 6-3, 6-2, 6-1 in their RETURN — Michael Chang of the U.S. fires a shot at Stefan Ed- worked for a scmi-govcmmental medical insurance injures serve) was Just too explosive, I mean, first encounter since the 1989 French Stewart of the Oakland Athletics and Fernando Valen­ Reginald Pinto/Manchesler Herald zuela of the Los Angeles Dodgers, were named the AL berg of Sweden during their fourth-round match at Wimbledon on powerful.” Open final, which Chang won in five ex­ fund. “This is an epoch-making ruling that will lead to and NL players of the week, respectively. Monday. Edberg won in straight sets 6-3, 6-2, 6-1. Graf, still bothered by a sinus inflam­ hausting sets. m ^ making other corporations review their labor prac­ BEATING THE HEAT — Parris Tyson, 10, of 80 Wells St., (on water pipe) and Shawn Cooley, Johnson, traded to Seattle from the Montreal Expos a > tices," said Eiko Shinotsuka, a labor economist at 10, of 58 Wells St., have fun at the recently opened spray fountain at Manchester's Charter last year in the Mark Langston deal, was 5-0 in six starts Tokyo’s Ochanomizu Women’s Urtiversity. crowd last month, allowing 30 hits and 12 earned runs in 45 in­ Oak Park. “TTicre are many other Japanese companies dis­ 33 03 nings. Jacoby, meanwhile, hit .394 (41-of-104) with 21 TORRINGTON (AP) — An errant rocket from tlie Boris Becker is peaking at the right time criminating against females,” .she said after Wed­ RBIs and 17 runs scored. He had six homers, four town’s Independence Day fireworks display plowed JO nesday’s ruling. > doubles and a triple. into a crowd of spectators and injured 19 pieoplc, in­ > H had to play much better much earlier. But I have done here two years ago. Cash was incensed when Becker In ildition to the $733,000 requested in the law­ Stewart no-hit the 5-0 on Friday at cluding a three-year-old boy who suffered multiple “D By STEPHEN WILSON that. I have survived that and that’s good.” dived over the net to imitate him after he tumbled going suit, the plaintilTs asked that the women be given Homeless panel lambasted the Skydome. About three hours later, Valenzuela no-hit bums, authorities said. The Associated Press after a shot. Cash then wore a red clown’s wig to his promotions allegedly denied on the basis of sex. Cash had two set points in the first set, but Becker Fire Lt. Nick Florio said the shell veered off cour.se Sl Louis 6-0 at Los Angeles. news conference, mimmicking Becker’s red hair. The court refused, saying that it could not direct Andy Hawkins of the , who lost a WIMBLEDON, England — Boris Becker seems to be saved both and went on to take the tiebreaker 7-3. The Australian said Monday that Becker had been during the grand finale of Wednesday’s fireworks dis­ such personnel decisions. play at Fuesscnich Park dial also marked die town’s no-hitter 4-0 on three teammates’ errors, received an peaking at the right time as he bids for his fourth “After I won the first set, it kind of clicked and it was Jealous of his 1987 victory and had made critical com­ for untrue assumptions honorable mention for the weekly AL honor. Wimbledon title. much easier for me and more difficult for him,” Becker 250th anniversary. ments about his personal life. But Cash said there were Terrorists attack police ^ Officials estimated that between 1(),0(.X) and 12,000 The second-seeded West German played his best ten­ said. Backley shatters world mark no longer any bad feelings between the two. BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Terrorists ap^' people were watching die fireworks when die ex­ nis of the tournament in beating former champion ftit Cash, who won Wimbledon in 1987 but is making a “I think he’s had a few relationships and he’s starting By RICK SANTOS Werkhoven. the charge of looking for soludons parcntly working for the Medellin cocaine cartel plosion occurred during the grand finale of die 45- STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) — Steve Backley of Cash 7-6, 6-1, 6-4 on Monday to move into the quarter­ comeback after a long injury layoff, said Becker will be to realize what it’s all about,” Cash said. “I think it’s part Manchester Herald “I’m concerned that he confu.scd to die towm’s problems with the blew up three police posts and shot one officer to minute display. BriUun shattered the world Javelin record with a throw of finals. hard to beat. of growing up. He’s a very nice young man and he’s mental illness with mental retarda­ homeless. death, police said Wednesday. 293 feet, 11 iiM:he8 in the DN Galan Grand Prix hack and Becker had trouble in his first three matches, but he lit holding his h ^ up high.” MANCHESTER — The leader of tion,” Edclwich said. “It’s a The spiccific comment which has Witnesses said the rocket exploded, showering the “If he plays as well as he did the second and third sets, So far this year, 159 police have been killed in field meet. up Centre Court on Monday with the dominating power Becker’s quarterfinal opponent will be seventh-seeded a church-based organization dedi­ misunderstanding that’s not heal­ got Edclwich concerned is tightly packed crowd in the west end of the park widi I can’t see too many people stopping him,” the Medellin, the country’s second largest city and the Pairik Boden of Sweden set the previous mark of game that earned him the champion’s trophy in 1985, Brad Gilbert, who saved two match points and survived cated to helping tlie homeless is thy.” Werkhoven’s statement that the in­ flaming debris at about 9:40 p.m. 292-4 in March at Austin, Texas. Australian said. focus of the government’s 10-month-old war on 1986 and 1989. 23 aces in beating fellow American David Wheaton 6-7, concerned that Republican Mayor A former teacher, who works in crease in the homeless populadon is “One lady was blown out of her seat,” Scott Pro of Danny Harris of the U.S. ran the 400 hurdles in 47.98, “I had three tough matches,” he said. “My draw has Relations between Becker and Cash have been drugs. Terry Werkhoven’s homeless panel the planning division of tlic stale largely attributable to ConnccUcut’s Brookfield told radio station WSNG of Torrington. fastest in the world this year, and Kenny Harrison of the 3-6, 6-1, 6-4, 13-11. The match lasted 4 hours, 10 been much more difficult this year than last year. So I strained the past few years. During a quarterfinal meeting minutes. Medellin Police Chief Col. Jorge Ferrero said na­ is making inaccurate assumptions Department of Mental Retardation, jxilicy to dcinsutudonalizc the men­ “The lady was then on the ground bleeding and a little United States came within U/2 inches of the world triple tional police arc sending 500 more officers to the about that population. she acknowledged there arc people tally retarded whenever possible. Jump record. Jumping 58-10, the third-longest in history. baby was rm die ground bleeding. It’s one of die worst city. Christina Edclwich is chair­ who arc both mentally ill and llie retarded, however, arc not in Leroy Burrell of the U.S. blazed a wind-aided 9.95 things I’ve ever witnessed.” In recent weeks, the police force has been woman of Helping Others Stand Tall retarded. However, to confuse tlic the sucets, she said, but primarily seconds to win the 100 and Joe F^con won the 1,500 Jody Lodiier, also in die crowd of onkKikers, said. Old order prevailed, somehow, at the World Cup doubled to around 5,000 members. (HOST), an organization founded by two in relation to the homeless living supervised lives in group meters in 3:35.52. “People were crying. Everylxidy got blood on diem. It No casualties occurred TUesday when the three members of tlic Center Congrega­ homes and other facilities. Among women, Lynn Jennings took the 5,000 in problem is a gross mistake, said was disgusting. It just misfired and hit people.” I^oduced darting runs. Joyful combination play and crea­ police posts were blown up, a Medellin police com­ tional Church. Werkhoven, however, defended 15:07.92 after a duel down the stretch with fellow ROME (AP) — Cameroon threatened to gatecrash the Edclwich, who served in die early Ms. Lothicr said a young child was struck directly in tive moves to dominate an often dour England. But the munique said. It said each of the three bombs con­ Edclwich said she became aware his comments. “She might have a American PattiSue Plumer. party of World Cup traditionalists. In the end, though, the 1980s on the Governor’s Task Force the face with the burning material. She said another Africans committed an elementary error, neglecting tained about seven pounds of dynamite.. of what she terms confusion on die different impression,” he said. old order prevailed. on the Homeless. youngster flew 15 feet in die air after being hit with die defense when their feet pushed them to look for a clinch­ Young, motorcycle-riding assassins on IVicstby part of the committee when she Werkhoven’s six-member com­ Floyd signs 4-year deal Just don’t ask how. flaming material. “It just lifted him off he ground." she ing goal. shot an off-duty policeman 12 times as he walking talked with its chairman. mittee was fomied in February with rica.se see PANEL, page 6. HOUSTON (AP) — Guard Eric “Sleepy” Floyd has England and Argentina scr^qicd through to the semi­ unarmed to his house, the statement said. said. signed a four-year contract with the Houston Rockets. finals on grit and sheer luck, losing some cf the luster Out went the team that provided so many smiles in a Rilice Chief Mahlon Sabo said die rocket skidded Terms of the deal were not released. and gleam they accumulated during their soccer history. tournament that made imagination seem out of date. across the ground from die launch site, injuring spec­ Floyd, 30, averaged 12.2 points and 7.3 assists in Of the final four, only West Germany and Italy per­ “These competitiems boost the h ( ^ that profes­ Havel re-elected president tators 400 feet away. 1 1989-90 and was an unrestricted free agent, meaning if formed up to standards throughout. Both were in control sionalism will gain hold in Africa," Kunde said. “Then, PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) — The he chose to sign with another team, the Rockets would we can do even more.” country’s new Parliament today re-elected former Connecticut struggling f\jlice detectives were on die scene late Wednesday in quarterfinal games, despite the closeness of the scores night trying to dctcmiinc why die shell misfired. have received no compensation. in 1-0 victories against Czechoslovakia and Ireland, Cameroon went further than it etqiected and was not dissident playwright Vaclav Havel as {U'csident, Floyd averaged 10.3 assisu in four playoff games and disappointed to go out at this stage. Former champions completing the political transition from Communist Torrington Fire Marshall Ron Corey said uxiay dial respectively. his office is working with the stale fiie marshall’s of­ holds the franchise playoff record for most assists in one Mercifully, the two World Cup powerhouses do not play for higher stakes. to democratic rule. to maintain state parks fice and Torrington jxilice to determine die cause of game, 18. meet in the semifinals. Italy plays defending champion “A semifinal berth was the minimum target for us in He is to serve a two-year term. the explosion. Argentina in Naples today, and West Germany plays this World Cup. We are now looking forward for a pos­ The immensely popular Havel, running unop­ Corey said officials arc invcsiigaiing several pos Fines can be deducted England in Tlirin on Wednesday. sible place in the final,” Beckenbauer said. “I have a lot posed, was elected with the necessary three-fifths By TOM COYNE quately," he said. “Wc’rc trying to Visitors to Harnmoiussct Beach siblc causes, including whether there was Kxi much PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Last winter, after the latest Argentina, Italy and West Germany have won at least of confidence in this team.” majority in a nationally televised secret ballot. A The Associated Press juggle everything to keep the on Ibesday didn’t notice any dif­ gunpowder packed into die shell. of numerous fines during the season totaling $45,000, the two World Cups each and England, which invented the He should. The Germans have displayed a potent at­ total of 234 deputies voted for him, and 50 against. major parks open.” ference. “Wc’rc looking at whether die clurgc was excessive, Philndflphin 76eri’ Charles Baridey aacked, “I’ll take it tack and more speed and stamina thw any team. Their Havel, who on Dec. 29 became the country’s first gamejias won it once and also oozes experience. MADISON (AP) — Tliosc who i ’hc DEP hist year proposed “I think die beach looks quite meaning too much gunpowder, so dial instead of off my income tax.” “With the last four being great traditional countries, captain, Lothar Matthaeus, might be the standout player non-Communist president in 42 years, was spent part of the July Fourth closing 13 of Connecticut’s 92 good,” said John Coit of Lebanon, 9 Everybody laughed. The thought prevailed that you in the tournament nominated by Civic Forum and its Slovak counter­ propelling it, it blew out,” Corey said. what more can the world of soccer ask for?” West Ger­ holiday at a state park might not stale parks. Gov. William A. who has been coming to Hum- Corey said such rockets usually propel upward can’t deduct a fine from your income tax. man coach Franz Beckenbauer said. Or maybe it’s German striker Juergen Klinsmann, who part, Public Against Violence. have noticed, but officials say it’s O’Neill, responding to public pres­ monasset for years. “1 know through a lube dial is set in die ground. Iliis lime, die Well, the laugh may be on somebody, but it isn’t has a dream beyond making the finals. How about better soccer, for a start, with less conser­ becoming increasingly hard to sure, overruled die order. Instead, diey’vc got u lot Ic.ss help, but it rocket exploded before it left die lube, sending it Barkley. “I am thinking of a united German soccer team, when vatism? From Italy, such a style is more acceptable be­ keep the parks safe and clean as the DEP made across-dic-board looks good to me. 'nierc’s no trash shooting across die field and into spectators, he said. After a six-week check, the Internal Revenue Service German fans will support a sole national squad,” said cause the team is built around the defense, iriaking 1-0 budgets decline. cuts, including hiring fewer around or anydting.” Corey said die operator of die fireworks display liad says athletes can dedua fines or salary lost due to a games the norm. Klinsmann, who is among the leading World Cup scorers In s id e Today... ‘Tve seen lean years, very lean, lifeguards, maintenance workers “I’m impres.sed by cverydiing,” suspension. Th* Auodalad Pratt with three goals. “I hope this can happen within two put on similar displays in Torrington for several years But England and Argentina supposedly possess strong but the difference diis year is that and law enforcement aides. said Ed Quirk of Springfield, and liad never had any problems. He said the ojx'rator, “We couldn’t find anything that would deny a deduc­ attacks. Where have they been? SOCCER HERO — Argentina's Diego years. It will be a great a^ievem ent” die number of people using the As a result, lifeguard sUitions go Mass. “1 think cverydiing is very Ken Luixili of Hamden, is a subcontractor who uses tion.” said Wilson Fadely of the IRS in Washington. England used its savvy and more than a little luck to Argentina holding omo iu title would be a great Maradona, the soccer star who plays for parks is so much greater," said Lcs unmanned, die grass isn’t cut as clciui and nice.” fireworks supplied by Vitale Fireworks Display Co. “The indicaticHi is that it’s probably deductible. It could survive in a World Cup in which upsets were the order of achievement only because the team has looked so sloppy 20 pages, 4 sections Napoli in the Italian first division, practices Whitham, chief of the state frequently at some parks and litter The cuts arc evident to workers, Inc. of New Castle, Pa, be considered as being an ordinary expense. the day until the burden of achievement became too thus far. Department of Environmental is a more frequent sight. But stale however. 9 Monday at Naples Stadium. 5 Lottorv fl “He’s always done an excellent job. He even goes Before you rush to your accountant, keep in mind that heavy. Argentina got into the semifinals almost by default be­ Business__ Protection’s bureau of operations parks arc surviving, Whitham said. Scott Medeiros, a lifeguard at cause Yugoslavia botched three of five penalty kicks, Classlfiod__ 13-16 Nation/Warld 2.3 beyond the (fim) ctxle,” Corey said. fines assessed by federal, territory, state and local “It was experience that told in the end,” Cameroon for­ Obituarios S management. “It looks a little shabbier, but Hammonassci, said he’s concerned compared to two misses for the defending champions, in Comics___ 10 Luixili could not be reached for comment uxiay. authorities for brewing laws are not deductible. ward Roger Milla said following the most exciting match has proved. Focus____ 12 Ooinion 4 “Wc’rc at the point where we we’ll have to get by,” Whidiam But if you are a professional athlete and your team in a disappointing World Cup, England’s 3-2 victory in The Indomitable Lions, considered a 500-1 outsider a shootout after a dull scoreless tie. Discover_ 11 Soorts 17-20 can’t cover all of die parks ade­ said. Please see PARKS, page 6. and-or your league fine you for whatever reason, the IRS the quarterfinals. before the tournament, outwitted and looked ready to Now it is up to Argentina and England to perform to Locai/State 7-0 Television 10 Plea.se see ROCKET, page 6. views it as a business expense. Experience takes decades to gather, as the World Cup beat England until eight minutes remained. Cameroon the standard such an occasion and their histories merit MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, July 5, 1990—3 2—MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, July 5,1990 Couple convicted Elementary kids NATION/WORLD in death of son need help: NEA The Suffolk County Superior By DIANE BARTZ By TAMARA HENRY the school year.” The Associated Press Court jury deliberated more than 14 Geiger called on Congress and the Gorbachev gives himself ' ' ' The Associated Press hours. president to appropriate about half BOSTON — A jury convicted a Since 1980, there have been KANSAS CO Y, Mo. — National of the needed dollars — estimated at Christian Science couple of seven prosecutions of Christian Education Association President $1.1 billion. He said state and local a deadline for changes manslaughter in the death of their Science parents. Five have been Keith Geiger says teachers “must be governments would pick up the rest 2>/2-ycar-old son in a case that convicted, one acquitted and one the agents for the rebirth of of the tab. case was thrown out, according to American education” and urged On a related issue, the NEA’s A ^ weighed religious faith against By The Associated Press “Vremya,” he denied that the Krem­ The 10-day congress, which con­ parental responsibilities to provide child rights activist Rita Swan, who them today to take bold actions to board of directors was expected to said no cases were tried in the improve learning. MOSCOW — Mikhail S. Gor­ lin leadership would do anything tinued with closed committee ses­ medical care. adopt a position that public schools 1970s. The boldest action proposed by bachev says that if Soviet citizens just to hold on to political power. sions today, also passed a resolution Some jurors cried after finding become the primary provider of pre­ Founded in 1879 by Mary Baker Geiger in remarks prepared for the aren’t better off in two years, he and Gorbachev pointed out that the appealing to disgruntled coal miners Ginger and David Twitchell, both school education for America’s 3- Eddy, the Church of Christ, Scien­ opening session of the NEA annual tlie rest of tlie Communist leadership reforms he initiated had diminished not to stage a one-day strike next 34, guilty Wednesday of involuntary % and 4-year-olds. tist, believes that physical disease, will resign. the power of the party post he holds, week. It said a repetition of last manslaughter in the 1986 death of meeting today is the creation of a $2 “The arguments for this preschool Gorbachev’s remarks to reporters general secretary: “If it had only summer’s mine strikes could “lead their 2>/2-ycar-old son, Robyn, who like sin, can be healed by spiritual billion program to make sure all piosition go beyond the child’s own Wednesday, which were shown on been for my sake, there would have to a breakup of the country’s suffered a bowel obstruction. means alone. children will start school ready to development,” Geiger explained. national television, marked the first been no need for any reforms, economy.” “It has been hard on everyone and Nathan Talbot, a spokesman for learn by the year 2000. “Every major trend points to public time the president and party leader renewal in either the party or in Miners’ representatives meeting it was certainly hard on” the jury, the Boston-based Christian Science “The public perception is that the school being the center of the com­ gave himself a deadline for revers­ society.” in Donetsk last month condemned David Twitchell said minutes after Church, said he’s confident the ver­ NEA is against change. It’s one of munity in the years ahead.” ing the country’s economic and In Wednesday’s session, Gor­ the Communist Party for not Uie verdict was read. “This has been dict will be overturned on appeal. the most mistaken notions in As the 2-million member NEA political downslide. bachev heard more bitter criticism embracing more far-reaching a prosecution against our faith.” “We’re deeply disappointed. It’s America today,” said Geiger, in his geared up for its four-day conven­ “1 think that in two years, if there from regional parly officials who ac­ reforms and said they would strike But prosecutor John Kieman said still an unresolved issue,” he said. first address as president to the tion, the 744,000-member American arc no changes, this leadership must cused the Soviet leadership of on July 11 unless Prime Minister the case was about crime, not “It certainly isn’t going to change policymaking body of about 8,000 Federation of Teachers wrapped up go,” Gorbachev said as he entered cowardice and indecision in failing Nikolai I. Ryzhkov quits. religion. spiritual hewing.” delegates. its four-day annual gathering in Bos­ tlie Kremlin Palace of Congresses on to defend the party amid growing Regional party leaders blamed “Wliat the case proved is the right Robyn’s sickness and death on Geiger said the nation’s largest ton today. teachers’ union supports rcslmctur- tlie tliird day of the Communist anti-communist sentiment. their bosses in the Kremlin for to believe is absolute — the right to April 8, 1986, were graphically President Albert Shanker told the ing public education, including Party’s watershed 28th Congress. “Our position today reminds of an ecological disasters near the Cher­ practice is not,” Kieman said. detailed in two months of testimony 3,200 teacher delegates Wednesday giving more authority to local A Western journalist on the scene army that is retreating in haste nobyl plant. Central Asia’s shrink­ A sentencing date is to be set ihal some experts said placed the in his keynote address that teachers schools and setting higher standards said Gorbachev had been asked without a plan,” said Nursultan ing A ri Sea and its overdependence Friday. Christian Science Church on trial. must face facts on how badly U.S. on cotton production, and deteriorat­ for teacher preparation. what should happen if there are no Nazarbaev, party chief in the The Twilchclls remain free, but “The important thing is to send a The Associated Press schools are performing and work “My friends, no more business as improvements in the Soviet Union Kazakhstan republic, pleading for ing social and economic conditions each faces up to 20 years in prison. message to other Christian Scien­ harder to persuade administrators to usual. We must be the catalyst to in two years. clearer direction from the Kremlin. that have more and more Soviets Defense attorney Rikki Klicman tists,” said Swan, who with her hus­ TWITCHELLS CONVICTED — David Twitchell speaks to the embrace reform. move this country off dead center,” Gorbachev, who rose to power in However, no speaker offered any considering the party the source of said the Twilchclls will appeal. band founded Children’s Healthcare media outside Suffolk Superior Court after a jury found he “Most of our members don’t Y their problems. Geiger said. “In the ’90s, we must believe this. It isn’t my school that’s 1985, did not specify who would be ideas on how to reverse the failing The Associated Press She contends Judge Sandra Ham­ Is A Legal Duty, Inc. in 1983, after and his wife Ginger guilty of involuntary manslaughter in the covered by his self-imposed dead­ fortunes of the Communists — who Gorbachev listened quietly to the lin failed to instruct the jury proper­ their child died of meningitis when be the agents for the rebirth of bad, it’s that big city down the 1986 death of their son Robyn. The Twitchells turned to American education.” line, but it seemed likely he meant have suffered crippling defeats in criticism, which came mainly from SEA OF PROTEST — Some of the several thousand rain-soaked protesters rally before ly on a religious exemption that ap­ the Christian Scientist couple relied road,” Shanker said. “We ought to prayer instead of medical treatment for their seriously ill son. Geiger is proposing a plan he look at the facts. We shouldn’t be only party posts. fairly contested elections. And no party leaders of some of the 15 Gorky Park against the 28th Communist Party Congress. The group put up banners con­ plies to child abuse laws. on faith healing. Soviet republics, large cities, and called “Operation Jump Start” that the ones making believe that noth­ Most important Soviet officials one offered an alternative to re­ demning Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev. still hold key posts in both the Com­ electing Gorbachev to another five- ministers in charge of important sec­ would require educators to identify ing’s wrong.” students who need special attention, munist Party and the Soviet govern­ year term as party chief. tors of the economy. Shanker cited statistics showing ment, though Gorbachev has moved Traditionalist party leader Yefrem S. African right warns of new attacks either with school work, self-esteem He heard much of the same or confidence or other services. He that 95 percent of Japanese high to shift power from the long- Sokolov of Byelorussia, who com­ criticism Tuesday from colleagues school graduates do math as well as dominant and increasingly dis­ plained to delegates that Moscow estimated about one-third of the on the party’s ruling Politburo. By BARRY RENFREW Wolves has claimed responsibility who has promised to end whitc- posed to apartheid. elementary school children in the top 5 percent of U.S. students. credited party to the more failed to cope with the fallout of the $15.1 million judgment for a scries of bombings in Johan­ minorily rule, could not win a The While Wolves have claimed He urged teachers to get the democratic government. 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster, Still, Gorbachev appeared in firm The Associated Press America would be affected. nesburg in recent days, and is warn­ whilcs-only election and would have responsibility for the attacks, which “We would release this education­ reform ball rolling by helping create Speaking confidently in a nevertheless told reporters “Gor­ control of the congress, and ex­ ing that it will step up its “freedom to hand over power to a pro-apar­ caused minor damage and no in­ at least one school per district that pressed confidence in another brief JOHANNESBURG, South Africa al surge in an intense two-week - n \ separate, videotaped segment shown bachev started perestroika and party struggle” unless President F.W. dc theid right-wing government. juries. looks different from those operating chat with reporters. — A bomb was discovered today at period before regular classes in the on the nightly TV news program members support him.” entered against Marcos Klerk holds whiics-only elections to today. O offices of a black mine workers’ A bomb Wednesday damaged the fall of 1991 — a little over a year retain apartheid, the Citizen Police Brig. Gen. Vic Haynes said “Let’s have schools in which 3 3 - n union after an extreme right-wing offices of die Afrikaans-language in Pretoria late Wednesday that ter­ away,” he said. group linked to recent bombings newspaper reported today. “TTic classes themselves would be teachers do very little talking, where By SAMUEL MAULL New York and June 27 in a slate Richard Hibcy, lead attorney for Vryc Wcckblad newspaper, an anti- rorist attacks were increasing. He threatened to mount more attacks. apartheid weekly. Tlie pre-dawn ex­ held in the schools the children kids are doing the work, where they NATO summit commences The Associated Press court here, clears the way for the the Marcoses, blamed the verdict on A man identifying himself as a said there were more than 30 attacks can do it over different periods of slain men’s families to attach Mar­ the couple’s unpopularity and said The bomb found in the offices in plosion at the empty offices of the in June, with extreme right-wing would normally attend, the teachers Obcrhollzcr had failed to detonate member of the While Wolves said would be the familiar faces who will time, where they can work cither out the Soviet Union’s crumbling NEW YORK — A $15.1 million cos property in New York. The judg­ he would appeal, which could delay newspaper was the fifth attack in as groups responsible for many inci­ By TERENCE HUNT saries,” Kohl said. and was disarmed. Police believe it by telephone that the “campaign of follow up with the children during privately or in groups.” Shanker said. n economy by rushing cash assistance judgment has been entered against ments were published in the New payment of the award for years. many nights aimed at whites op­ dents. 0 O The Associated Press He insisted on NATO member­ was planted by right-wing ex­ violence would be intensified” if to Moscow. former Philippines first lady Imelda York Law Journal on TTiesday. The jury decided that the Mar­ ship for a united Germany. Refer­ tremists, the independent South elections are not held, the CD Bush on Wednesday seemed to Marcos in a Washington slate case On Dec. 15, a civil jury in a coses were conspirators in the LONDON — President Bush and ring to the Soviets’ objections, he African Press Association said. newspaper reported. ease his eonditions for Western aid. in which she and her late husband federal court in Seattle found Mar­ deaths of the two men and were NATO leaders met today to overhaul said such a development would A group calling itself the White Right-wingers claim de Klerk, a Western alliance confronting a Mrs. Thatcher said she had “enhance their own stability and were found liable in the murders of cos, the late deposed president of the negligent in failing to control their rapidly diminishing military threat reeeived messages from Soviet offer them a new opportunity for two anti-Marcos activists. Philippines, and Mrs. Marcos liable intelligence agents in the United but were cautioned to keep up their President Mikhail S. Gorbachev and partnership.” Mrs. Marcos was acquitted Mon­ in the 1981 murders of the two States. 1 ^ guard even while reaching out to the Czechoslovak President Vaclav day with Saudi financier Adnan Filipino activists. Domingo and Viemes, both 29 West approves aid Regal's Summer Sale! Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. Havel within the last 24 hours. She Offering words of caution, Mrs. Khashoggi of federal racketeering Marcos’ estate and his widow and leaders of the Alaska Catuiery Workers Union, were slain in the O “□ “We are at a turning point in did not disclose the contents but said Thatcher said, “We know that it’s and fraud charges that she helped were ordered to pay more than $15 France, was expected to surface at union’s Seattle office on June 1, By SALLY JACOBSEN Europe’s history,” British Prime the two leaders were “as interested the existence of NATO and its sure loot her homeland’s treasury of million to the survivors of Silme the summit of NATO leaders open­ 1981, four weeks after they success­ The Associated Press Minister Margaret TTiatcher said at in the results of this summit as we defense which have helped to $222 million and spent it on art and Domingo and Gene Viemes. The ing today in London. S o the start of two days of talks by the are.” change the direction of Eastern real estate, much of it in New York. jury awarded Domingo’s wife and fully sponsored a resolution calling O - n BRUSSELS, Belgium — Western 16-nation organization. Bush arrived here with a scries of Europe and the Soviet Union from The $15.1 million judgment, two young daughters $12.8 million, for an investigation of anti-union ac­ It also was likely to dominate nations agreed to provide millions of “Our signal from this meeting proposals to revamp the North At­ the dictate of the government entered June 19 in a federal court in and Viemes’ wife $2.3 million. tivity in the Philippines. next week’s economic talks in m dollars in aid to help revive the All Silk Sport Coats must continue to be one of resolve lantic Treaty Organization for a less towards the democracy of the Houston among President Bush and Entire Stock of Suits stricken economics of four East w in defense, resolve and unity and militarized future. Despite misgiv­ people. the chiefs of six other leading in­ European counties, but made no defense, coupled with willingness to ings by Mrs. Thatcher, he planned to dustrialized nations. “NATO has defended peace with move to help the Soviet Union. extend the hand of friendship to urge NATO to declare that nuclear arms would be used in Europe only freedom and justice but it’s never IF YOU ARE SUMMONED FOR JURY DUTY... Foreign ministers of two dozen In recent weeks. West Germany Eastern Europe and the Soviet o > as a weapon of last resort. threatened anyone,” she said. “The Western nations on Wednesday has urged its allies to quickly Reg. *175 Union,” she said. cornerstones of that sure defense An important new jury system, called “One-day/One- ducked the troublesome question at fashion a $15 billion to $20 billion Bush, looking tired after an over­ >100 o ff * 9 0 " ! ^ ' West German Chancellor Helmut must remain for we don’t know a meeting called to extend an aid aid package to support Soviet Presi­ (Free Alterations) Minor alterations at no charge. ^33 CO night flight to London, sat next to what the future holds. But its ar­ program, initially set up only for dent Mikhail S. Gorbachev’s Reg. *275 to *525 Mrs. Thatcher and Secretary of State Kohl proposed a joint declaration of trial” , is beginning In the Tolland Judicial District. Ajuror chitecture may change in the new Poland and Hungary, to others in beleaguered peresuoika program of 33 > James A. Baker III as the leaders non-aggression by NATO and the situation.” Eastern Europe. economic reforms. Available in Regular, Shorts, Longs, Extra Longs, Athletic, Portly Shorts & Portly Regulars gathered around a long oval table in deteriorating Warsaw Pact military no longer will serve for four weeks. You will come to > H They said in a final statement a chandcliered room of a govern­ alliance led by the Soviets. In his opening remarks, NATO “We cannot expect the Soviet 33 they discussed the situation in the ment mansion. “We are prepared solemnly to Secretary General Manfred Woemer court on an assigned day. If selected for a trial, you will Union to resolve problems regarding Soviet Union and “underlined their Along with retooling NATO, the state in a joint declaration with the called for “a new European architec­ the transition to a market economy Select Group of Sport Coats All Better Slacks interest in positive developments” leaders were expected to debate Warsaw ftet countries that we no ture that binds all our nations serve for the duration of that trial. If not, you usually will on their own,” West German Foreign toward a democracy and a free- whether Western nations should bail longer regard one another as adver­ together.” Minister Hans-Dictrich Gcnschcr Sansabelt - Hart’s - Asher be dismissed at the end of the day and your jury duty market economy. told rcportcr^^^russcls. The issue of aid to the Kremlin, Good $6090 will be completed. ^ which pits the United States for the He said thU^Bmlin badly needs Reg. *70 to *95 Poland faces Cabinet shake-up most part against West Germany and financial help a^HRvicc. Selection (No Alterations) Sizes 32 to 42 IS “definite.” after Mazowiecki was named prime By JOHN DANISZEW SKI minister. Summonses are now being mailed to But not all colors in every size. The Associated Press Kiszczak’s department has been Widely lauded in the West for its criticized for destroying evidence of determined effort to tackle Poland’s prospective jurors residing in WARSAW, Poland — Under its past activities, and new accusa­ economic problems, the govern­ THE FUTON STORE pressure to dismiss holdover Com­ tions surfaced this week that it con­ DualBest Qualityuudiiiy And/\iiu Best Prices in Conn. & Ma. munists from key posts, Prime Mini­ ment’s popularity has dwindled at tinued to spy on Solidarity even home. Aridover Somers Select Group of ster Tadeusz Mazowiecki has dis­ — FROM THE SOURCE FRAMES closed plans to shake up the East Bolton Stafford bloc’s first non-Communisl govern­ Twin...Full...Queen Short Sleeve Knits ment. fvloir ^ Hardwood frames in Up to 10 of the 24 Cabinet mem­ imports Columbia Tolland Buy one knit at Reg. Price, get the 2nd for igJdBon^ Oak,Birch,Maple,Teak,Walnut bers could be dismissed in a major Fashions and Bridal Coventry Union just $1. Mix & Match. Higher price prevaiis. realignment to be aruiounced Friday 'rNff M(4TCtr NAMf W KfffF and Others in Parliament, the pro-government Gazeta Wyboreza newspaper said Ellington Vernon EASY LIVING INC., THE FUTON STORE today. East West... Sophia's Plaza II, 122 Q. Prospect Hill Fid., East Windsor, CT The paper said Mazowiecki will Hebron Willington 203-292-1919 From Harttord 1-91 North take Exit 45, at bottom of u-sc the occasion to counter the cam­ UNIQUE Mansfield ramfS take right. First traffic light take right. Store 200 ft. on left. Bathing Suits Short Sleeve paign Solidarity chairman Lech FASHION OPEN: TUES-WED 10-6 • THURS-FRI. 10-8 Bermudas - Dress Shirts Walesa’s has mounted against him, SATURDAY 10-6 • SUNDAY 12-4 1 splintering the popular movement In Naturally tliat rallied to oust the Communists. If you receive a summons, please read the mate­ ALL Spring Jackets - Sport Shirts Cool Fabrics Plans for Mazowiccki’s speech 25.000 PRICED VOLUMES, ALL SUBJECTS Come In t be dazzledi All that's Underwear Casual Slacks were announced Wednesday by now, beautitui i unusual Is here rial carefully and return the yellow form In the prepaid A rt Solidarity parliamentary leader nowl Splashy tiorals. gem-toned H um or Uaad Rare, Out-Of-Prlnl. Sold ft Bought geometries, heavenly solid colors M u ilc Bronislaw Geremek. In Knit or woven cottons. Scarves, envelope which is provided. W om an Government spokesmen declined bags i Innovative jewelry, tool C ra ft. comment on wliat changes were Failure to comply Is a violation of state law and will M ovIm planned for the 9-month-old NEW SPRING ARRIVALS: NM u r . BOOKS!! We will be closed Mondays In d ia n . National Saarch for Oul-ot-PrInI Books ( Cabinet, installed Sept. 12 after 45 Embroidered Gauze Tops not release you from jury duty. Myitory July and August. years of Communist rule. Halter & Tank Tops N atura •elFlo 9 The government has been under Shorts & Skirts If you have questions or need assistance, call the A nllquaa increasing pressure in tlie past two Harem Pants Galore n a llg lo n months, grappling witli a major rail special toll-free Jury Information Hotline at T haalar DISCOVER THE Eric Sloana suike, two farm protests that re­ COMFORT OF Naat bifliand quired police intervention and RAW SILK! HarlUga Praaa steady criticism from Walesa and WaMaea NulHng Touch this elegant Knen-llke tabric to believe Its 1- 800- 842-8175 Thornton Burgaat other elements of Solidarity. Joaapli C. Lincoln comlort t beauty. Fabulous shades in skirts, jackets, Walesa has been urging Oana Strallon Portar.. BOOKS ft BIRDS dresses t pants Mazowiecki to replace holdover THE JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT IS MAKING Oil Salk, Prop h M e n ’s S h o p 9 Communists, hold early parliamen­ Plus...Fiiendly Hometown Service! SIB E M IddIa Tpka tary and presidential elections and JURY DUTY EASIER AND LESS TIME Manchaatar. CT "Celfbraiinf; 50 Years on \tain St." speed privatization of state (203) 649-3449 lOUNS: Tuaaday-Saturday 1 enterprises. Any one single item you choose even I I « Is on sale akoady. Only CONSUMING BUT WE NEED YOUR HELP 903 Main St., Downtown Manchester a> 11-4:30 pm Intenor Minister Gen. Czeslaw one coupon per customer, please rxk to be used on lay a v ^ and special orders Excluding tormals Coupon expires 7/9/90. CONNECTICUT JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT THURSDAV8 UNTIL t P.M. Kiszcz.ak, a former Communist still i;20%off_ Open Mon., T u g s ., Wed., Fri., Sat. 9:30-5:30 PIsaaa call lor Sunday ft Thurs. 9:30-9:00 in charge of the police, is considered OFFICE OF JURY ADMINISTRATION Monday hour. a prime candidate for ouster. 757 Main Street Manchester ’ 643-56dS Diplomatic sources said his removal TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 10-6 ■ THRUSDAY TIL 9 ; o MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, July 5.1990—5 4—MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, July 5, 1990 OPINION BUSINESS

Open Forum Soviets, Manchester area Workers’ comp costs jump Facto Saudis eye unemployment up Orders 15 percent to $48 million T«M n*v wtfprp to Rewarding party MMOAf Initial (first-lime) filings shifted oil pact By RICK SANTOS HARTFORD (AP) — A 15 per­ $8 million — a 36 percent increase because the correction department from 4,167 to 5,065 and continued has hired an unprecedented numbw To the Editor: Manchester Herald cent jump in workers’ compensation — by the end of May. claims followed, rising from 41,357 Because of the higher costs of in­ of people during the past year, it is On June 15, 1990, the 1990 Manchester High School to 41,892. Benefits expired for 835 costs, which rose to nearly $48 mil­ By Jack Anderson MANCHESTER — Unemploy­ lion during the last fiscal year, juries, the department has become not surprising that workers’ com­ seniors were treated to an awesome (I’m 33-years-old claimants. pensation claims would increase, and don’t normally use this word) graduation party spon­ and Dale Van Atta______ment insurance claims increased by prompted state officials to transfer the second-most-coslly agency when sored by several area businesses and - more importantly 4.9 percent in the Greater The rate of insured unemploy­ $1.1 million last month to shore up it comes to workers’ compensation. loo. WASHINGTON — The world’s But a computer-assisted review of - by their parents. Manchester area for the two weeks ment (continued claims filed during the program’s account before the It now trails only the stale Depart­ largest producer of oil and the largest ex­ ,ending June 23, the latest figures the most recent 13-weck period) fiscal year ended Saturday. ment of Mental Retardation, whose compensation records by The 1 arrived as the party was almost over (5:(X) a.m.) to Hartford Courant showed that the scavenge some of the decorations. porter of it are forging an uneasy bond ayaijable, state Labor Commissioner dropped by one-tenth to 2.6 percent William Seymour, a spokesman costs totaled $15.8 million at the end that could dominate the world petroleum Bfetty L. Tianti aimounced. The A year ago the rate was 1.6 percent. for the Department of Administra­ of May. number of claims by correction As I entered the Lowe Building at MCC, I saw many employees in the past fiscal year has happy, enthusiastic young adults who obviously just had market claims totalled 2,263. This rate is included in the latest tive Services, said officials are State officials attribute some cor­ The Soviet Union and Saudi Arabia are not exceeded that of the year before. the time of their lives. Inside, the parents were cleaning Similarly, claims statewide in­ statewide unemployment figure studying what this means for this rection department increases to strange bedfellows. One has long been Claims filed in the last fiscal year up. They were tired, (some had been awake for 24 hours) creased by more than 1,4(X) to which was estimated at 5.1 percent year’s budget, which is slightly less sky-rocketing medical costs and ruled by communists and atlieists. The totaled 1,421 through May 31. but there was an aura of satisfaction about them and I average 46,957 for the same periods. in April. ASONO JAMAM than what officials estimate they h i^ er salaries. other is a strictly religious monarchy and The previous bi-weekly average was Claims decreased in five local of­ spent during the past year. Mike Fcrrucci, a union repre­ Records show that claims the fiscal could understand why. the birthplace of Islam. 45,524. fices and were higher in 13. May-W Apr. *90 MtoylO Workers’ compensation costs sentative for prison guards, at­ year before that totaled 1,457 from These parents had worked for months organizing and But tlmt doesn’t seem to be stopping a 1233.81 1 ^ . 0 1 1241.01 tributed some of the increase to in­ July to June. preparing for this party. Some had worked long hours have increased an average of more relationship of convenience between the than 10 percent a year during the mates’ attacking guards more often. Meachum declined comment on cutting out, painting and assembling hundreds of decora­ two nations amid a persistent world oil He said the General Assembly also whether attacks on officers in the tions. Their rewards were on the faces of their kids as FACTORY ORDERS — The past decade. If the cost goes up 10 glut percent this fiscal year, the program has caused the higher compensation past year have been on the increase, they partied hearty, alcohol and drug-free. When the On the heels of another summit by the Engine defect U.S. Commerce Department would have a deficit of almost $5 costs by building prisons but refus­ but said, “I do know that happens in dawn came, everyone was happy and alive. Arab-dominated OPEC oil cartel aimed at said this week that orders for ing to spend money to staff them our environment. 'That goes with the Congratulations to all of the parents. They really did million. bolstering sagging prices, the Saudis and both durable and non- “We’ll be trying to come up with adequately. conditions we’re in.” perform a labor of love. Soviets have opened new talks of their “Unfortunately, the injuries that Several consultants and state offi­ durabie goods totaied a a solution to this over the next few own. They’re apparently trying to ac­ corrected: Pratt months as we study iU” Seymour we are seeing now are not cases of cials also have said the state’s com­ Jane M. Polowitzer pensation program is costly because complish without OPEC what the once- seasonaliy-adjusted $241 bil­ said. men and women slipping on a 91 Ridge Street formidable cartel couldn’t HARTFORD (AP) — Pratt & rotating compressor blades were lion. The workers’ compensation banana jxiel,” he said. “They are it is one of the most generous in the Manchester rubbing a bit harder against the rub The Saudis, rich in oil reserves, Whimey is satisfied that a problem program covers medical bills and cases of throats being slashed, of nation. dominate OPEC. The Soviets, who are with the compressors in its newest, strips inside the engine casing. lost wages for Connecticut’s 51,OCX) people being stabbed.” For example, some injured Although there were no problems not members of the cartel, produce more largest jet engines that led to a recall marketing the PW40(X) for the huge or so full-time workers and several As part of an effort to increase workers, including prison guards, than Saudi Arabia but have less oil in the has been corrected, a company in ground testing for the first 38 im­ fleet of jumbo jets expected to enter thousand part-time workers when safety, the correction department can make more by staying home Budget tactics proved-performance engines, the ground. The two are trying to stabilize spokesman said. service in the 1990s. they suffer on-the-job injuries. recently embarked on a program to than by reluming to work, because prices. The spokesman, Mark Sullivan, 39th engine had excessive rub, caus­ Sullivan said after some flight replace shoes used by correction of­ they receive 100 percent of their To the Editor: If Saudi Arabia and the Soviet Union said Tbesday that the problem, dis­ ing the compressor to stall. Such a testings at Boeing Co. in Seattle, ficers to prevent officers from slip­ base salary tax-free when they are stall could have prompted an in­ Officials were cautiously optimis­ Like most of the people involved in Bolton’s recent accomplish that by agreeing on produc­ covered in the compressor of one Pratt decided to recall the first 38 tic in March that they were gaining ping and falling. 'The department injured while on hazardous duty. budget debate. I’m glad to see the seemingly endless tion goals — and if they pull in Iraq, the PW4000 engine compressor during flight engine shutdown. engines, which had been shipped to spent $43,0(X) on 431 pairs of “non- Most state employees and private The compressor is a critical en­ control over the program. They referendums finished and look forward to having the dust next-largest producer — some say they testing, stemmed from a “perfor­ aircraft builders Boeing, McDonnell predicted that costs would go up skid shoes,” which Fcrrucci referred workers receive two-thirds of their Reading, writing, religion gine subsystem, forcing air sucked Douglas Corp. in Long Beach, gross salary when injured. settle. As a result of statements quoted in the June could dominate the market It could also mance improvement” Pratt intro­ only 10 percent this year and tol^ to as sneakers. in through the fan into the combus­ Calif., and Airbus Industrie in State managers and consultants Manchester Herald, however, a few clouds remain in mean the end of the impotent OPEC. duced in February. $46 million. the air, and they need to be dispelled. point, have always suggested scenarios Of course, the mismatching marriage To fix the problem, Sullivan said, tion chamber to be heated and Toulouse, France. Correction Commissioner Larry said the 100 percent benefit can dis­ sume tJiat such clubs are part and parcel pushed out the back section of the 'The sharpest increase in a major Mr. Holland, one of The Neglected Taxpayers’ By Sarah Overstreet of tlie school-approved daily instruc­ where these parents’ Idds might be ex­ has some major stumbling blocks. Pratt will scrap one of the modifica­ Elizabeth Reese of Boeing Com­ state agency was in the Department R. Mcachum said he has not had courage an employee from returning engine. leaders, charges that some TNT supporters were in­ posed to the religious doctrines of groups The Saudis detest communism and tions that was part of the perfor­ mercial Air Group said Wednesday of Correction, where costs rose from lime to review the latest figure on to work and thus mean the state Earlier this month tlie Supreme Court tions.” Tc replace the recalled engines, timidated by nasty phone calls and that TNT’s signs were That’s the way it struck my seventh- other than fundamentalist Protestants. long have been a strategic U.S. ally. The mance improvement and go back to that lYalt & Whimey replaced 16 or $5.9 million in the last fiscal year to compensation costs. But he said that spends more on lost wages. ruled that as long as public schools allow Pratt delivered new PW4(X)0s — vandalized. I’m confident that my fellow Citizen’s Al­ grade mind when a group called Youth What if their children were drawn to country’s Islamic theocrats have m ^ e no making part of the compressor the 17 engines that had been sent to the secular groups to hold meetings in with the original blade-tip clearance liance for School Excellence members agree with me that for Christ was holding meetings in the meetings held by Black Muslims, Jews, secret of their steadfast financial and way they did before. 767 and 747 plant at Everett, Wash. school buildings, they must allow configurations — to the aircraft such actions are truly deplorable, no matter who they’re choral room of my junior high school in Catholics, Jehovah’s Witnesses or Mor­ moral support for Afghanistan’s freedom Sullivan said that unchecked, the Delivery of two planes to foreign religious groups to do tlie same. If they builders. Sullivan said all new en­ directed against. I assure Mr. Holland that CASE has 1%3. Some of my friends urged me to mons? Yet the argument failed to im­ fighters, battling a Soviet-backed regime. •problenx could have prompted an buyers was delayed for a day or two HMO to drop senior citizens don’t, says the court, they’re illegally gines will be assembled with the never resorted to such tactics, nor have we encouraged go, and I got the impression that anyone press, and supporters continued to push One of our associates who visited Saudi in-flight engine shutdown. He said each while engines on the aircraft discriminating. previous configurations. were replaced with other PW4(X)0s others to use them. The opposite is true: we’ve actively who loved God and called herself a for making school facilities available for Arabia last year said it is not uncommon “none of the 38 engines recalled was MERIDEN (AP) — A Meriden- factor in the decision. “It was felt able to do,” he said. This has been a lough call for citizens Sullivan said the problem caused that had the original clearanee, tried to discourage such behavior. Christian should be there. When the as­ religious meetings. to meet people who have volunteered to in use by an airline. based HMO, citing its inability to that Blue Cross & Blue Shield could Ungerleider said Constitution has who want to see as much encouragement a “very minimal disruption to our Reese said. She said she did not loo few senior citizens to make the Likewise, I’m sorry to hear that Mr. Holland’s mail­ sistant principal announced the meetings All laws are written for the irrespon­ fight for the rebels in Afghanistan. Sullivan said that as part handle coverage efficiently, is plan­ handle this population more effec­ given to the search for spiritual meaning customers and their delivery remember the affected aircraft box was vandalized. There is no justification for such an over the school intercom, they seemed sible, not the responsible. Children don’t Soviet troop casualties there over the February’s modifications, lYatt had ning to drop about 1,500 senior tively and efficiently that we were program worthwhile. as is given to tlie football or schedules.” models or buyers, adding that the act. even more school-sanctioned. need proteetion from religious groups last decade are largely a product of the slightly reduced the blade-tip citizens by the end of the year. teams. On one hand, it seems silly to The snag, however, was an em­ recall was completed more than a It should be noted for the record, however, that such I have no idea what goes on at Youth who just want a convenient meeting hundreds of millions of dollars in Saudi clearance in the rear stage of its Constitution HeallhCtire Inc. has incidents occurred on both sides. I am aware of a deny a meeting room to students who place to gather interested youth for a aid to the rebels. compressors. He said that meant the barrassment to lYatt, which has been month ago. want to study the Bible, while just down for Christ meetings today, and I have no started notifying individuals and threatening phone call received by a CASE member, and indication that the group is anything Bible study class. Supreme Court Justice Another hindrance is the Saudis’ his­ the hall the pom-pom squad is organiz­ employers of its decision. one of my “Vote Yes” signs was stolen, as were others in other than an organization dedicated to Sandra Day O’Coimor emphasized that torical interest in fostering ties with the town. Other questionable actions occured. My husband ing a bake sale. winning youth to Qiristianity. All 1 can the school does not convey a message of The customers who will be af­ “'Fo exclude student religious groups Soviet Union’s own 53 million restive and I interrupted a TNT supporter in the act of obscuring speak to is what happened in my case. “state approval or endorsement” when it Moslems. Soviet Islamic leaders arc chal­ Defense contractor sentenced fected bought coverage from Con­ from meeting on campus is nothing a state highway sign by covering it with a “Vote No” sign There were a couple of their larger permits religious meetings by “student- lenging the traditional communist hierar­ stitution Health network, which (less) than bigoted discrimination,” — which is clearly illegal. Furthermore, the day of the meetings (or rallies, as they called them) initiated and student-led” religious clubs. chy amid political change there. LOS ANGELES (AP) — A judge McHaffie saved more than $1.5 mil­ division failed testing by an outside merged April 1 with Healthcare Beverly Lallaye, president of Con- last referendum, CASE members holding signs on the that scared me to death. I went home But that’s the $64,b(X) question. How Yet problems remain between the sentenced a defense contractor to lion by failing to properly test some laboratory. Inc., a North Haven health main­ cerened Women for America, said of die tenance organization, to form Con­ W ho C alled approach to the polling place were verbally harassed by from one and had nightmares about hell on earth can we know what is “student- United States and Saudi Arabia that could thtee years in prison and fined him 9 million bolts between 1979 and 'The discovery that many of the decision. TNT supporters. so frightening that my mother had to get initiated and student-led?” $750,000 for faking quality tests on 1989. company’s bolls failed to meet test­ stitution Healthcare. Healthcare On the other hand, opponents argue drive tlte Saudis closer to the Soviets. As a p ^ n g thought, it is my hope tJiat our next town up with me several limes that night. That Children do need protection from The United States maintains close ties engine bolts used in thousands of Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen ing requirements also led to a mas­ Inc. dropped its Medicare members that the ruling violates the Constitution’s debate will be open and rational, with no underhanded kind of fear was not what my family’s groups that will use other children to en­ to Israel, at least publicly, alienating military and commercial aircraft. A. Mansfield said it was the sive effort to discard them from last year. requirement that tltcre be a strict separa­ Uictics. I hope TNT will join CASE in promoting that religion taught, so my mother was not tice and cajole them into organizations "This is a very egregious case longest-running fraud against the parts suppliers, prosecutors said. Alex Ungerleider, director of tion of cliurch and state. many Arab countries. America has The EnSlish ideal. their parents may not approve of. If this motivated primarily by greed and government by a defense contractor Generd Electric alone spent at marketing for (Constitution John Buchanan of People for the pleased. neglected broad-based Arab demands for Ceila A. Robbins For the most part, fundamentalist does happen, or if religious groups that avarice,” U.S. District Judge A. uncovered so far. least $4 million to test a sample of Healthcare, said coverage for senior American Way put it this way: “The an independent I^estinian state. And in Manchester some parents don’t approve of start Wallace Tashima said Tbesday in McHaffie told Hicks and Whit­ bolts, the government said. citizens will end on different dates, court has opened wide the schoolhouse Protestants have supported making the Saudis’ eyes, Israel exercises veto school facilities available for religious meeting in schools, we may hear a much ientencing Norman D. McHaffie, man to create fake test data and McHaffie shut down in June 1989 from Aug. 31 to Dec. 31. door to religious study and worship, power over U.S arms sales to the Arab meetings. So opponents, to make their different hynm from the church-in­ 56, former president of McHaffie fabricate reports to conceal the and sold off its assets. Ungerleider said money was not a leaving impressionable children to as­ kingdom. Teacher school supporters. As far as the Saudis are concerned, the Inc. of Sylmar. fraud, according to a federal com­ time could be right to cuddle up to the "The actions of McHaffie literally plaint filed March 29. CASE thanks Soviets. As always with the intrigue of weakened and endangered the na­ The government alleged bolls geo-politics, they probably can overlook tional defense,” Tashima said. sent to Co.’s engine PHOTO BUG To the Editor: Lame ducks face budget their fundamental philosophical differen­ No accidents were attributed to LOVES FIREWORKS! D a d d y -0 ? McHaffie bolts. As co-chairpersons of Citizen’s Alliance for School ces for the time being so both can shore HALL FOR RENT Find out July 7, when the original Coasters Excellence (CASE) we would like to extend our thanks up oil prices and bring in more hard cur­ The bolls were used in the Air $2.00 OFF PROCESSING ON contract. So far this year, nine separate term-ex­ Force B-IB strategic bomber, the F o r partir^ ^ahowrrs, reerplions, come to the East Windsor Ramada Inn for a and continued appreciation to everyone who worked By Robert J. Wagman rency. tneelinga. Complete kitchen facilitiet. many long hours to help our town pass iis budget. You As previously reported, F^RC turned tension bills have been inti;oduced, but That doesn’t mean the Soviets will stop Navy-Marine Corps F-18 Hornet ANY 36 EXP. ROLL W/FIREWORKS PIX! none has made it to hcaringj;. Next year, fighter-attack aircraft, the Navy-Air Large encloaei) {■jlt’king lot. Inquire: night of 50's-style rock and roll. Enjoy hot wrote letters to the editor, you painted and displayed WASHINGTON — “Lame duck ses­ Ace down, saying that FTiRC would ac­ worrying about the Muslims militating OR $1.00 OFF ON 12 OR 24 EXP. W/FIREWORKS signs, you helped write, print, and distribute information­ sion," Uirec words that strike fear into tlie tually lose money because the $1.25 mil­ however, the measure will get a thorough for greater freedom on the Soviets’ own Force A-7 Corsair II jet attack Lithuanian Haii food all night long. ALXi YOU CAN RAT. al fliers. You took the lime (and lime again!) to phone hearts of most members of Congress, is a lion would go to the Treasury while airing and will probably move through southern flank. Nor does it mean the fighter, the Navy F-14 Tomcat 24 QOLWAY STREET NEED HOW-TO ADVICE? STOP IN AND LET US HELP! Dance contests, T-shirt give-aways, even residents in an effort to encourage them to vote. You phrase that is being heard increasingly on FTiRC itself would be stuck with the cost the House to the floor. Saudis will overlook traditional Arab f ilte r and the Air Force F-16 Fight- MANCHESTER Insiders see the bill’s biggest obstacle Caa balora a P.M. 244 BROAD STREET, MANCHESTER 643-4684 babysat for others and you contributed money. As a Capitol Hill as it becomes apparent that of administering the contract. unity, enmity toward communism or tiig Falcon. Phon* 64S-Oei8 meet the band - all for only $30.00... as the two-thirds vote required to pass a MONDAY-FRIDAY 1(>-5:45, SATURDAY 9-4:30 result, on June 25th the people of Bolton passed the town Congress will probably not complete its So Acc sued, demanding that FTiRC longstanding friendship with the United They also were used in thousands take its $1.25 million. U.S. District constitutional amendment in the ^nate. budget with tlie highest voter turnout in the history of our schedule before the election recess. States. of Boeing Co. and McDonnell Judge John Penn has ruled, and the mat­ At present, senators, with their six-year town. 'Hiis being an election year. Congress But it is yet another reminder that Douglas Coip. commercial jets, the ter has been resolved — but with an even term.'!, have a great advantage over We want to thank every citizen in Bolton who voted must leave town by early October so miMiey can make even the staunchest foes ^ohhib more unbelievable twist. House members who have to run every government said. socks off to tamous not just once or twice, but three times. We want to thank members can return home to campaign. appear a little friendlier. Jack Gamble of Boeing Commer­ However, if critical items remain un­ Ace’s $1.25 million bid was actually two years. Doubling the length of House Broker bust hits including “Char­ those of you who took the lime to complete your absen­ in response to a second bid offering from terms would diminish that advantage and cial Airplane Group said executives finished, Congress might have to return Ariparently the fallout from Wall Street at the world’s largest manufacturer lie Brown,” “Poison tee ballots when you were unable to vole in person and to Washington in mid-November to com­ FTiRC. When FERC originally adver- add greatly to the stature of House mem­ scandals has finally trickled down to the irolley Museum everyone who cheerfully accepted numerous phone calls used the contract, Acc had bid only bers. of jetliners cooperated in the plete its work. classrooms that have supplied top Ivy” and “Yakkity-Yak.” Proceeds to benefit the reminding them to vote. We would like to remind you $39,500. Several other companies had On a more practical level, a four-year government investigation. This year’s problem is tlie budget. brokerage houses with their wanna-be Plus, special iJuests, Connecticut that while the budget issue is finally behind us, we will Congress must find huge cuts or revenue simply offered to do it for free. House term could mean that members of “We did quality checks on every wizards. IVolley Museum. be focusing our attention on Uie school building increa.ses in order to meet Gramm-Rud- For technical reasons, FTiRC canceled the House could run for Senate seats It seems there’s a dearth of future (McHaffie-tested) bolt we had, and the Marvelettes, with this original offering and put the contract without having to give up their House programs this fall. We are confident that the residents of man deficit limiLs. Few believe this will Milkens and Boeskys. Many promising we had no bad bolts," Gamble said. blasts from the past like “Mr. Postman” and Bolton will continue to support a quality educational sys­ be accomplished by tlie start of tlie new out for rebid. Penn ruled that this was il­ scats. That would encourage many to run newcomers are deserting the field that Tashima also sentenced McHaf- tem in the best interest of the community as a whole. fiscal year in October. Instead, Congress legal, and that FTiRC had to decide the for the Senate, and tJiat would not be once promised a fortune: fie’s quality control supervisor, “Don’t Mess With Bill.” Once again, thanks to all of you for demonsuating to will probably pass a short-term budget contract based on its first offering. welcome by members of the upper cham­ • Insider-trading scandals have turned James Hicks, 45, of Sepulveda to 18 Make your reservations today. And be there our children democracy in action. resolution to keep tlie government FTiRC, meanwhile, had come under ber. off more idealistic young grads and months in prison for participating in Christine K. Walsh operating at current levels until it can sharp fire from Congress for turning scared off young turks who realize the the scheme to submit false test cer­ or be square. down Ace’s money. So, in the end, it ac­ Michael J. Harney return to complete the budget. legendary, fast-and-loose practices now tifications to the govemmenL cepted Ace’s first bid. Bolton In a lame duck session, members have could bring them jail time. A shop floor manager, William a tendency to consider controversial bills The result; Acc got the contract — for Who’s on • The market’s wild swings and a sense which it was willing to pay $1.25 million Whitham, 37, of Lancaster, was tJiey would have Ix-cn loath to pass prior Corporate that only mega-insiders make real money previously sentenced to 20 to an election. Iligli on tiuit list would be — for only $39,5(X). The company, of have discouraged the little investors with Letters policy course, is overjoyed. FTiRC, too, says it Boards weekends in prison. a pay-raise bill passed last year. House under $1(X),()(K) to invest. 'They’re tradi­ McHaffie pleaded guilty in April 50’$ Dance Parly WUh members will get $20,(XX) more llian is satisfied biteause, under Treasury tionally the bread and butter of young The Herald welcomes letters from its readers. l>citcrs regulations, llte $39,5(X) is small enough to conspiracy and two counts of sub­ senators. Senators want a raise, but tltey brokers. mitting false test certifications to the should be no more than two double-spaced typewritten that FTiRC may keep iL thus breaking Percent of all board won’t vote on it before tlie election. Department of Defense. The other The Coasters pages. The Herald reserves the right to edit letters for any Bad news bidding even on administrative costs over the life members of Fortune • With a smaller pool of clients, even reason, including length, taste and .style. The Herald dies of llic contract. seasoned brokers have started to pluck the men also admitted wrongdoing. One constant of Washington 500 corporations Prosecutors contended that to publish all letters, but the decision of the editor is bureaucracy is lliat no matter how bizarre TTie taxpayers meanwhile have lost small accounts, leaving yet less room for And The Narvelelles. final. Writers may be limited to one letter per month. All tilings get, ilicy can always get worse. $1.2 million. White Males 9 2 .2 % newcomers. % % letters must be signed, and writers must include their ad­ Four-year terms One major New York house is even % In a recent column, I reported on the White Females 4 .9 “.b dress and a telephone number for verification. Mail let­ ongoing tiff between Ace-Federal Right now it is only being whispered cracking down on time-sanctified DATE: July 7 ters to Open Forum, Box 591, Manchester 06040. Reports Inc. and tlie Federal Energy in congressional cloakrooms, but rumor Black Males 1.6°/o brokers’ p^ks, such as mailing privileges CALDWELL has it that next year some House mem­ and long.^istancc phone calls. TIML: 7:00 p.m. Regulatory Commission. Acc provides Black Females 0 .7 % court reporters to record FTiRC hearings. bers will make a major push to inuoduce Mini-editorial OIL It also sells copies of die transcripts to and pass a constitution^ amendment in­ Hispanic Males 0 .2 % It’s hard to feel sorry for America’s PLACE: East Windsor Rainada Inn creasing House terms from two to four Manchester Herald interested parties at up to $6.30 a page. Hispanic Females 0 .0 % favorite glamour-boy, billionaire Donald 649-8841 (Exit 45 off 1-91) Ace’s current contract is up, so F^RC years. Trump in his recently reported cash The argument for the increase hinges Other Males 0 .3 % crunch. Never mind the way the resort Founded Dec. 15,1881 as a weekly. pul a new contract out to bid. Several on the fact that the current two-year term and real-estate tycoon handles his per­ T ra m 's CALL: 627:6^0 rejKirting firms offered to do die job for Other Females 0 .1 1'o Daily publication since OcL 1, 1914. practically forces representatives to sonal life. The speculative, far-flung in­ W S tiO E S free, so long as they continued to have ,6 7 » Shop at more than 30 Progue's stores thiooghout Connectioil, Masstxhusells and Rhode Island 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. begin miming for their nc ;t term on the vestments that now have caught him cash the right to sell uanscript copies. Acc, IN CONNECTICUT: Pavilions at Budtkind Hills, Manchester • Mandiester PnrVode, Monchesler • Tri-Gly Shopping Center, Vernon Publisher ______Larry Hall however, knowing how profitable a deal day that they arc elected. This means short are the kind that have driven up real PER GALLON C.O.D. Editor , Vincent Michael ^Ivo constant fund-raising, and it makes for Source* Hcidnck NEA GRAPHICS Prices SUbjocl To Change Fox Ron M J , Glastonbury ______News Editor ____Andrew C Spitzler they had, offered to fiay FTiRC $1.25 .ind Struggles. Inc estate prices and fueled the junk-bond 150 Gallon Minimum million over the five years of die new an inefficient Legislature. market that shook Wall Sheet. 6 MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, July 5, 1990 .. ,'U.'. iBanrlifBtrr Hrralil Panel Audit From Page 1 From Page 1 Section 2, Page 7 LOCAL/RECIONAL Thursday, July 5,1990 “She didn’t think that some of population. kicked out of the library and keep a recover the money, which in waited until last week to withdraw transcribed after the meeting, or that them come from the institutions. 1 “The whole idea of rounding up smile on your face before you’re January was playable plus 16 percent the principial balance. He said he a professional stenographer take the til ink they do, based on their be­ any group of people and putting going to become an ingrate?” she in interest. finally withdrew the money only be­ minutes instead of a board member havior. This is what we have roam­ them somewhere appalls me,” she asked rhetorically. The auditors cite the Mems in­ cause Bexar was taken over by who is also participating in the Private school costs ing the streets.” said. The Mary Cheney Library is one vestment as one without record of another bank, which offered a lower meeting. IN CONNECTICUT! He continued, “last week I saw Werkhoven said also that he will of the prime gathering places for the being fully analyzed by Negro or the interest rate. The auditors say minutes of board four of them going through town I Lockdown continues at Somers set up an appointment with Edel­ homeless, who seek the shelter, Pension Board. The auditors were asked to com­ meetings show no evidence of any now up to each town hall, arguing and fighting, Dcfimicly wich to hear her opinions in more comfort, and warmth of several The audit also cited two other ex­ ment on weaknesses and make review of Saltzman’s performance, SOMERS (AP) — Correction officials continued a “lockdown” at something has to be done.” detail. The conversation which lead other downtown Main Street busi­ recommendations for improvements and recommend that the board Somers State Prison Wednesday, the third tense day at the maximum amples of investments that have for $7,475 from West Hartford And one possible solution, he to the disagreement between the two nesses and public facilities. They been made by the treasurer as result in the investment procedures. They periodically review and document security prison after a melee between rival gangs Sunday. By NANCY FOLEY where Manchester has 52 students, said, may be to put them in the in­ occurred after she had written him a come to those places during the day of “cold-calls” received from finan­ did not audit the accounts, but will his effectiveness and responsive­ Meanwhile, five more inmates involved in Sunday’s brawl were Manchester Herald 32 of whom attend Kingswood-Ox- stitutions. letter which said the town should do when the shelter closes its doors. cial representatives. In neither in­ do that when they picrform the year- ness, “cspxeially in light of the fact transferred out of Somers Tbesday, bringing to 19 the number of “We have to look at all of the op­ ford School. Manchester delayed more to help the homeless. Edelwich continued, “fear keeps stance was there evidence of end town audit. that the four funds managed by the susp)ected gang leaders who have been transferred, Wheeler said. MANCHESTER — The state tions to see what has to be done,” “It seems to me like the situation people from supporting low-income thorough investigations into the Bennett, Katz, and Thibodeau did consultant have underperformed l^ison guards continued “shakedown” searches of cell blocks Ihes- Legislature has finally resolved the paying the bill in the hope that the Werkhoven said, stressing a regional may get worse before it gets better, housing or from having a homeless credentials and safety of the institu­ not review files maintained by the their comparative benchmarks.” day, searching for homemade weap)ons, said William Wheeler, a Cor­ issue of who will pay for services to state would intervene and modify effort. Plans are being made to meet espxoially in terms of the employ­ the law, following an outcry from shelter.. .the only way to conquer tions. office of the outside consultant, Saltzman said the word rection Department spokesman. Inmates were confined to their cells private schools, changing a law that with officials from East Hartford ment situation and housing,” Edel­ local school districts. that fear is to ^ucate pxople and The examples cited are WJ. Matthew Saltzman, who advises on “managed” in the report is incorrect and recreational and educational activities were cancelled. local school officials said was creat­ and Rockville to discuss the wich said. Unemployment rates in “It’s just a precautionary step to maintain absolute control,” Cormier said that he was satis­ raise their awareness.” Nolan & Co. of New York, with the bulk of the pension investment He said Smith Barney, the ing “chaos.” problem area-wide. Connecticut recently rose above the which $2.9 million was invested, Wheeler said. fied with the way the issue had been To do just that, Edelwich’s com­ funds. brokerage firm for which he works, Next year, local school distticts It is not the removal of the national average for the first time and a $100,000 certificate of deposit resolved by the legislature. mittee is planning an educational But the audit reports minutes of is paid to oversee the professional ■ Executives expect continued doldrums will assume responsibility for pay­ retarded from institutions, but the ever. forum to be held Sept. 30. placed with the Bexar Savings & Pension Board meetings which show managers of the funds. He said the For this year, however, the town ment of services, such as nurses and lack of decent jobs and affordable The effects of those conditions on Werkhoven and other officials have Loan Association of San Antonio, Saltzman introduced a local real es­ firm itself does not manage the HARTFORD (AP) — More than 80 percent of executives who housing which are to blame for the the homeless are compounded by responded to a survey by a business group said they expect Connec­ psychologists, that they are required will have to pay the bills from other been invited. Texas, an S&L now under federal tate syndicator to the board and that funds. towns and send out bills of its own, increase in the amount of homeless stereotypos, she said. a salcspierson from his firm made a ticut’s economic doldrums to continue through September. to give to private schools. Towns Edelwich said she is glad the control. The auditors’ report also says too Cormier said. Officials are in the people, Edelwich said. Mental ill­ “I personally think there is a big Negro said this morning the town sales presentation to the board. The much reliance is placed on the con­ The third-quarter economic survey, released Monday by the Con­ will now asume responsibility for all town is considering a measure to process of doing so now, he said. ness and substance abuse are other fear out there toward persons who has received the principial and inter­ repxirt said the minutes could be necticut Business and Indusu^ Association also found that 31 percent the students who attend those provide the Main Street shelter with sultant to catalogue investments and Cormier said that no resolution factors which she said can con­ are homeless — a fear based on a an additional $12,000 to help offset est on that banking investment, construed to imply that the consul­ report results. They say there is no of business leaders believe economic recovery will begin in the schools, regardless of which com­ tribute to one’s inability to maintain s ^ n d half of 1991 and 18 percent believe the state’s economy will has been found to another state lack of knowledge, lack of under­ its deficit. which was made in October 1987. tant has brought Colonial Realty documentation that certain invest­ munity the pupil comes from. a home. standing, and lack of personal con­ not until 1993 or later. regulation that he objects to, one The shelter’s annual budget is He said the investment was $98,000, Limited Parmership and Smith Bar­ ments received consistent detailed AWARD WINNING MILK - Members of the Fish family Until the 1988-1989 school year, She questioned Werkhoven also “Most of the respondents believe the state is facing at least another that requires schools to ask parents tact.” about $205,000 and is supported by not $100,000, the figure listed in the ney Real Estate Investment Trust in­ semtiny. And they cite Aetna Equity the state reimbursed schools for 100 for his suggestion to her that a solu­ Edelwich said she knows home­ year of a slumping economy,” said Peter M. Gioia, a research analyst receive the Dairy Farm of Distinction Award for the milk if they will use their private in­ town, state, and private contribu­ auditors’ report. He said the invest­ vestments to the board — a conflict Funds, Aema Real Estate Funds, and percent of those expenses, but then tion to the local problem may be to less people who are looking for jobs for the association. produced at their farm in Bolton. From left to right, Amy and surance or Medicare benefits to pay tions. The state, which had funded ment was insured by the Federal of interest since the consultant is CBT’s Concap funds as examples. reduced the rate of reimbursement gather the homeless and bring them and places to stay, but are greeted A similar survey done by the association at the same time last year almost 60 percent of that annually, Savings and Loan Insurance Cor­ supposed to advise only on general Saltzman said he does not have Angela Fish, Commissioner of Agriculture Kenneth B. Ander­ and declared that local school dis­ for services for special education to the Mansfield Training School, found that 62 percent of executives expected a downturn in the mostly with rejection and dis­ has decreased its input, leaving the poration up to $100,000. He said investments, not promote specific responsibility for oversight of those sen and Donald and Sharon Fish. tricts would have to bill each other students. one of the facilities for the retarded economy. crimination. $12,000 shortfall. town has collected its $98,000 prin­ products. funds, but reports on them informal­ based on the number of students The state is required to pay for Of the 4^0 executives polled in this quarter’s survey, 36 percent ex­ which has drastically reduced its “How many times can you be To compensate, the shelter, cipal and $24,851 in interest. He And a $500,000 investment in a from other towns attending their those services now, Cormier said. ly for the town’s benefit. pect growth in production and sales, down from 44 percent a year ago, operated by tlie Manchester Area said the last interest piayment was building owned by Colonial Realty As for funds invested by the For that reason, most parents will the association said. In addition, the survey found that 18 percent of private schools. Conference of Churches, had re­ received this week. is one of three cited in the repxnt as Bolton farm wins Manchester school officials have not agree, but the requirement to ask treasurer, the auditors say the executives plan to hire more workers and 29 percent expect to reduce quested the additional $12,000 in But, according to a repxm from examples of instances in which the them has created more paperwork amount should be limited and the their work force. contended that the law would create Rocket tills year’s town budget, but it was Vcribanc, a bank rating company in auditors say there is no documenta­ limit should be reviewed periodical­ a nightmare of paperwork, with hassles for the town, he said. Massachusetts, Bexar was in serious cut out by the Board of Directors. tion that the risk was fully analy7x^d ly- ■ Pacowta takes control of campaign agricultural award towits shuffling money around and The law was passed last year and From Page 1 financial trouble since at least by the treasurer or the board. The board will meet Thesday when At a meeting June 18, in the wake NEW HAVEN (AP) — Shelton Mayor Michael Pacowta has no one coming out ahead. “It was went into effect this month. mid-1988. Its year-end 1988 repiort Saltzman said this morning he did they may vote to restore the funding. of Merits Corp. development, the decided to run his own ca.mpaign for the Sth District instead of replac­ BOLTON — Donald W. Fish’s processing plant. crazy,” said Richard Cormier, direc­ The insurance law, as well as the showed it to be below federal capital not bring the syndicator to the meet­ Frank Rondinelli, a spekesman Shopey, 23, was listed in stable con­ Werkhoven, who asked that the board voted to limit the the scopte of ing his campaign manager who resigned last week. farm earned the 1990 Dairy Farm of Two restaurants, Cavey’s in tor of special education and pupil private school law, are part of a pat­ mandates, and by year-end 1989 it ing. He was already there. Saltzman for Vitale Fireworks, said the com­ dition this morning in Torrington’s item be on the board’s agenda, said Negro’s investment authority. Pacowta’s campaign manager, John Selman, said his decision to Distinction award from the state Manchester and Patty Tafts in El­ personnel for the Manchester tern of the state trying to turn over pany is working with local pel ice Charlotte Hungerford Hospital was in receivership. said he merely introduced the man leave Pacowta’s campaign was “a very mutual agreement” between lington, use Fish Family Farm milk fiscal responsibilities to the towns, he is will support it. They cut from $1 million to Department of Agriculture for the schools. and fire officials to determine the where she was being treated for “We were getting our interest to the board. himself and Pacowta. products and they are sold at according to Cormier. With the homeless, he said, $500,000 the amount of money he superior quality of milk produced Manchester received its first bill cause of the explosion. He said the bums to her eyes and face, a hospi­ checks on time, every month,” He said he has recommended that Pacowta said he will run the campaign with the help of his wife and Counuy Butcher Shop in Ellington “we’ve got to be humanitarian.” Negro said, explaining why he minutes be recorded on tapx; and can invest at any one time. and processed at his Dimock Lane company does not believe there tal spxikcsman said. a political advisor. farm. and Highland Park Market in were any safety problems with the “We asked ourselves who knows better about what has got to be ac­ Over the past few months, state Manchester. fireworks. complished in this race, and that’s myself and (my wife),” fticowta inspectors made unannounced visits Commissioner of Agriculture said. “We’ve solicited some topnotch people in the effort” “The show would not have gone to the state’s dairy farms, testing Kenneth B. Andersen awarded a off if we had any concern about With the nominating convention three weeks away, Pacowta has milk for its quality and purity and plaque to Fish and his family last safety at all,” Rondinelli said. hired Richard Callow to advise him. Callow described himself as “a week. Corey said he has asked a noticer" and a “watcher” and said he will advise Rtcowta on strategy. examining the hygiene of the fireworks expiert from Uie state fire Jay Marlin, campaign manager for Toby Moffett, Fhcowta’s op­ marshall’s office to inspicct the ex­ ponent, called the move “bizarre” and questioned whether ftcowta plosion site today to help in the in­ could manage a campaign and run the city of Shelton at the same vestigation. time. Budget battle breaks Torrington corporation Counsel Albert G. Vasko said Wednesday ■ State fines Meriden nursing home night that he believed the city is Cj MERIDEN (AP) — The owner of Independence Manor nursing Coventry town spirit potentially liable as is the fireworks home has been fined $75,000 and will lose its license to operate the company for damages caused by the home as of March 31,1991, under an agreement finalized this week. night, as some jccicU him. Health Care & Retirement Corp. of Toledo, Ohio, owners of the By JACQUELINE BENNETT Katlty Ullmar criticized Green for incident. nursing home, has until March 31 to either sell or lease it to new Manchester Herald Among those injured was 3-ycar- hurting poorer residents by scaring operators, who must be approved by the state, said Elizabeth M. old Robert Shopjcy, the son of a Tor­ “uninformed” people to vole down Bums, who signed the agreement on behalf of the state. COVENTRY — The town is rington police officer, who sulTered budgets. The conditions of the agreement, while not unprecedented, were being polarized and its spirit broken “Think Roland about the people multiple bums. The child was flown over die budget battle, says one considered “severe,” said Bums, who directs the state health depart­ you are really hurling: not the by helicopter to Hartford Hospital in councilman who continues to stand Hartford, where he was listed in \ \po^ ment division that licenses and inspects nursing homes. professionals, not the people over on behind a spending plan that includes serious condition in die intensive “This wasn’t done lightly. I think there was every reason for the Satari Drive, the people being hurt department to be concerned,” she smd. “This was not a single bad per­ a mill rate hike for this fiscal year. are people in the poor section who care unit today. “This polarizes the town, it takes Two other members of Shopiey’s formance. It was many over a period of time.” are being mislead with false infor­ The $75,000 fine stems from repeated state health code violations its spirit away,” Councilman mation and losing services,” Ullmar family were also injured. Rebecca Lawrence Golden, a Democrat, said at the Roy Stteet facility. said. c Michael Tcadt, a H ^thcare & Retirement Corp. spokesman, said in an interview following a Special Ullmar cited the town purchase of Town Meeting on the proposed Ihcsday the company would fulfill the terms of the agreement and try “second hand guard rails” because $15.5 million budget Thesday night Parks to make the change in ownership a smooth one. new ones were unaffordable. “It’s not the best solution, but it’s the solution tltat allows the resi­ at Coventty High School. dents to remain at the facility,” said Ibadt. The meeting was adjourned to a From Page 1 petitioned referendum to be held July 12. If approved, the budget WATER FIGHT — At right, a cut in lifeguards — from 32 last ■ Millionaire charged with spray painting means a 2.5 mill increase. It in­ Jim Dunnells and Nick Delap year to 18 this year — could mean GREENWICH. (AP) — A millionaire entrepreneur, known in this cludes $4.3 million for general put their all into a watergun danger. wealthy suburb for his efforts to beautify the town, has been arrested govenunent and $9.7 million for “We would definitely be short for spray painting a real estate sign near his manjtop- education. fight. Below, the pair share a handed if there were a water search Rene Ansclmo, owner of Plan American S a te l^ company, was Golden has from the start laugh during the adventure in for a missing child,” he said. “We’ve walking back to his Bentley after spray painting Mb sign, which ad­ adamantly supported the two pre­ Dunnells's backyard off East had no serious problem yet this year, vertised an open house, when he was arrested Hiesday, police said. He vious budgets that were sent down Middle Turnpike in but tliere’s always the threat of it.” was charged with third-degree criminal mischief. in two separate referendums. He DEP officials said the effect of ' ; ■ I - F ' . ■ ; '• Ansclmo’s attorney said he will plead innocent when he appears in even suggested sending the initial Manchester. die budget cutbacks on the most fre­ Stamford Superior Court July 18. $15.9 million budget back to the Judy Horlling/Manchoslef Herald quently used parks has been mini­ “I don’t like the real estate signs,” Anselmo said Thesday after his voters uncut mal. arrest. “I think they’re attocious. It’s an imposition on the neigh­ “This is a representative “We’re trying to lessen the impact borhood. It’s cheap and it’s trashy. . . . It’s turning all these streets democracy. The theory is (elected on those parks,” said Anthony J. i«TV\eS\ote officials) investigate the facts, and Canicle, western district manager into a used car lo t” Anselmo, 64, said he painted the sign because it had been illegally have a public responsibility to for die deparunent’s conservation evaluate. I have taken an oath to and preservation division. “But if placed on town property. make responsible decisions for the we have any further cuts there is no Police confirmed that the sign had been on town-own^ property. question it will have severe public The Ooupo'f' The town’s zoning regulations bar homeowners from placing signs on town. I was elected. If people don’t like the job I’m doing they don’t impact. We’re running out of in­ the town’s right-of-way. have to re-elect me,” Golden said. novative ways we can sUelch our The intensity of Golden’s views budgets.” ■ Pension fund pilfered were matched by Town Council Chris Brody, a ptatrol supervisor STAMFORD (AP) — The pension fund of a small century-old fac­ Chairwoman Joan Lewis, a at Black Rock State F^rk in Water- tory has been severely depleted by the theft of $750,000, but the Democrat, who said the council will town said he believes the ptark has fund’s trustees arc optimistic none of the beneficiaries will suffer a actually been cleaner and had fewer not reduce the budget to a zero mill loss, an attorney for the trustees said. increase. Asked if she would resign problems this year because of a ban Employees and pensioners of Excelsior Hardware Inc., many of before making such a cut, Lewis on alcohol. them Italian and Latin American immigrants, were shaken early laa would not comment. “We have more families coming month when the Umstees informed them about two-thirds of the plan’s “We have to put forth a respon­ out to die park and tliey care more funds had been misappropriated. sible budget,” Lewis reiterated. about die park’s condition. We’ve Founded in 1897, the company employs more than 50 people in the Their stance has bipartisan sup­ had no real problems,” he said. manufacturing of luggage lotis, lunch box latches and guitar port, Republican Harvey BarretU; Visitors to Kctlletown Slate Park hardware. said, “The meat, pouitocs and bread in Soulhbury also said dicy haven’t The uustces know who ux)k the money, and are planning to seek have been cut. " The only thing left seen a decline in park additions. restitution from the person and from the banks that honored three to cut, he said, would be recreation “I diink the park’s always in great forged checks drawn on the fund’s Connecticut National Bank ac­ and athletics — but said he docs not shapx;.” said Yaron Back, a division count, said David Ergos, a Suimford attorney representing the Uustces. COBWEB XsS'SB' support making reductions. head at Camp Laurel wood in North If efforts to seek restitution fail, the Uustees can turn to the federal The meeting on Fburth of July Madi.son who brings campers to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., Ergos said. He said he believed the eve drew about 50 people, including park several times a year. full amount of the loss would be covered. some new faces apparently con­ The impact will be felt more at ftOOEBS ,ice “I don’t think any one will Uikc a loss,” Ergos said. cerned about the town borrowing smaller state parks, such as the John Sute and federal authorities arc investigating the theft. money to operate without a budget. A. Minetto in Torrington, Collis P. Ergos declined to identify the person whom the trustees are alleging This week the council authorized Huntington in Redding and Hays­ look the money without authorization. But he said the person was sou'< maximum borrowing of $2.9 million tack Mountain in Norfolk. someone with access to the pension fund’s chec'-*. •XOSB\0^ for a 90 day period, with a $30,000 “We’re making less frequent trips Between July 5 and Sept. 13, 1989, the same person is believed to interest cost, to keep the town to diose parks for security, grass cut­ have forged the signature of a uustec on three se p a i^ checks totall­ operating even though it does not ting and dash pickup,” Cantclc said. ing $750,000 and deposited them into an account in Stamford. The have an approved budget. “People will sec die impact on some MON., THURS., FRI. TIL 8 checks were made payable to Excelsior Hardware Co., but were used trails and picnic areas.” Tubs., Wed. lil 6 • Sat. ‘til 5 ■ Sun. 12-5 for “no legitimate pension plan purpose,” according to a letter Uustees “Why not send out tax bills at the Whidiam said diis year’s cutbacks sent employees. 37 mill rale? Then if it’s approved arc the worst he’s seen in his 34 *90 Days Same As Ergos said he did not know what happened to the money after it without a tax increase you won’t Cash w/Approved was initially deposited inu> the local account. have to send out duplicates,” said years with dtc department. Credit. “When we get some really hot The loss of the funds left the pension plan with a balance of Republican Town Committee mem­ weadicr later in July or in August it SUPER$UPFR UU DISCDISCOUNT 445 Hartford Road, Manchester ■ Keeney Street Exit Off I-384 $427,000, with $55,000 earmarked for the family of an employee who ber Roland Green, who petitioned will really lest the system,” Cantele died in January, according to court documents filed by the trustees. all three budgets to referendum. said. Green was not very popular Thesday MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, July 5, 1990—9 8—MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, July 5,1990 Spirits sagging in state HARTFORD (AP) — Concerns G. Donald Ferrce Jr., director of Displaced prisoners no burden RECORD about the state and the national the poll, said the summertime drop economy have led to a distinct in the spirit rating marks a departure J decline in the “Gross National from previous summers, in which By JANET L. CAPPIELLO Spirit" as measured by a poll of the rating usually increased. The Associated Press Connecticut residents. “The winter number has usually y ” y Births Roundup BRIDGEPORT — The The poll, conducted by the been lower than the summer one," . ^ 7 €\ University of Connecticut’s Institute he said. “That is not the case this hundreds of inmates displaced for Soci^ Inquiry, measured the year.” when a raging fire destroyed a sec­ > / CLAY, Jessica Lindsay, daughter of Stephen D. and Man charged with assault “Gross National Spirit” at 1,228 Among the findings of the poll; tion of the Bridgeport jail won’t Tracy Spragg Clay of 90 Holl St. was bom June 10 at A Manchester man was arrested and charged Thesday points out of 2,400 points, an 84- —President Bush’s popularity cause overcrowding in the state’s Manchester Memorial Hospital. Her maternal with third-degree assault and criminal mischief for al­ point drop from a Eiccembor 1989 dropped slightly to a 76 percent ap­ other correction facilities, a grandparents are Donald and Judith Spragg of Hebron. legedly attacking another town resident. px)ll and one of the lowest levels in proval rating, but remained higher spokesman said. Her paternal grandparents are Richard and Jean Clay of Robert J. Trani, 28, of 130 Pearl St., drove to the the poll’s 10-year history. than Ronald Reagan’s popularity at “It will create a burden, but right South Windsor. Wadsworth Street home of a man who apparently owed now we have a luxury of extra TTie poll measures responses on a similar point in Reagan’s first METHENY, Paul Scott, son of Jeffrey and Mary him $10, police said. several subjects, including expecta­ term. beds being available,” Department Menard Metheny of 78 Lyness St. was bom June 8 at Once there, Trani asked the man for the money, but tions about the national economy, —^Republicans register a higher of Correction spokesman William N/ Manchester Memorial Hospital. His maternal was told by the alleged victim that he did not have it and personal satisfaction, personal finan­ “spirit level” than any other political Wheeler said Tbesday. grandparents are Robert and MaryLou Menard of Rock­ would pay later, police said. Trani became angry and The blaze 'fiiesday forced the ces and the overall state of the na­ group. Democrats r ^ second and ville. His paternal grandmother is Margaret Metheny of slapped the man in the face, police said. evacuation of 375 inmates, tion. independents rank third. 18 Ardmore Road. He has two brothers, Andrew, 5 and m i The man ran up the back stairs and into his apartment, Wheeler said. Justin, 2. and Trani chased him and punched and kicked the man’s By late Wednesday, about 200 DAVENPORT, Rory Jonathon, son of John F. and door, police said. One fatality over 4th of Uiem had been transferred to Linda Celinski Davenport of 53 Bausola Road, Andover, -}.W The victim then ran outside to a pay phone and called other state jails, said Michael was bom June 8 at Manchester Memorial Hospital. His police who later arrested Trani at his home, police said. Chemovetz, the warden at the maternal grandparents are Walter and Virginia Celinski HARTFORD (AP) — A sailor at the sub base, assigned to the USS Judy Hartling/Manchester Herald Trani said the incident happened when the alleged vic­ Bridgeport Correctional Center. of 93 Summit St. His paternal grandparents are stationed at the Navy’s submarine Pennsylvania. tim slapped him in the face, knocking off his glasses, He said “the bulk” of those in­ Rosemary Davenport, Durham and Joe Davenport, FRUITFUL LABOR — Winston Smith, 74, of West Middie Turnpike weeds his tomato plants. base in Groton was killed and The passenger, Ronald Malone, police said. mates had been sent to the Lakeland, Fla. His hard work should pay off later this month when he says the plants will bear fruit. another was injured when their car 24, suffered minor head and neck in­ Trani was released on a $500 non-surety bond and is Montville Community Correction­ BATCHELOR, Kathryn Hannah, daughter of Ken­ hit a tree in Ledyard and burst into juries in the accident and was taken scheduled to appear Monday in Manchester Superior al Center. neth A. and Catherine Marr Batchelor of 108 Ridge St. flames, state police said. to the hospital at the submarine base Chemovetz said Wednesday that Court. for treatment. was bom June 6 at Manchester Memorial Hospital. Her liiesday’s crash was the only fatal transfers of inmates would con­ Obituaries Malone was also assigned to the maternal grandparents are Nola Elliott of Manchester and Man charged with firearm theft automobile accident reported by tinue. He would not say when all USS Pennsylvania. Milton Marr of Washburn, Maine. Her paternal An East Haven man was arrested and charged Thesday state police during the July Fourth prisoners evacuated during the fire Police said they were investigat­ grandparents are Mary D. Batchelor of Greenville, N.C. was predeceased by a sister, Barbara died Wednesday (July 4, 1990) at with theft of a firearm in connection with a case in which holiday, which began officially at 6 were expected to be resettled. Frank L. Fournier Aronson. Veterans Administration Hospital in ing the cause of the crash. The Associated Press and Leonard Batchelor of Richlands, N.C., She has a a 12-gauge shotgun was reported missing in December pan. Tbesday. Chemovetz said inmates were Rank L. Fournier, 80, of 25 Services will be held Friday at Newington. The state police said there were brother Stephen, 11 and two sisters, Amy, 10 and Jessica, from a Spruce Street residence. The accident occurred at about 8 taken from the Bridgeport jail in House Drive, formerly of Hilliard 11:30 a.m. in the chapel of He was bom in Hartford on 85 accidents on state roads between PRISONERS EVACUATED — Prisoners evacuated from the Bridgeport Correctional 4. David E. Appleby, 26, of 129 Cozy Beach Ave. in East p.m. Tuesday on Route 214, police buses, vans and Fairfield County Sheet, died Thesday (July 3, 1990) Weinstein Mortuary, 640 Far­ March 23, 1923, son of Katherine 6 p.m. Tliesday and midnight Wed­ Facility during a major fire there Tuesday wait in the prison yard under the eyes of a NORRIE, Sarah Elizabeth, daughter of Alexander Haven, was arrested after police were tipped that he may said. Sheriff’s Department prisoner- at Manchester Memorial Hospital. mington Avc., Hartford, with inter­ (Bednarz) Hrynchuk of Windsor and nesday. During the same period, guard, right. About 395 inmates were evacuated from the jail because of the fire and and Dawn Benson Norrie of 40 Olcott St. was bom June have taken the gun. transport tm e^ escorted by state Bom in Connor, Maine, Dec. 11, ment in Temple Beth Sholom the late E)mytro Hrynchuk. state police said they made 636 10 at Manchester Memorial Hospital. Her maternal He was held on a $5,000 non-surety bond and Police said the car’s driver, An­ police troopers. He said state were moved to another section of the facility. 1909, he had been a resident of Memorial Park. A memorial period He resided in Windsor for many thony Mynhier, 26, was pronounced speeding arrests and 35 arrests for grandparents are Robert and Nancy Benson, South scheduled to appear today in Manchester Superior Court. troopers and police dogs as well as Manchester since 1965. He was a will be observed at the home of her years. dead at the scene. He was stationed drunken driving. A program began this year and Windsor. Her paternal grandparents are Lester and Rose Swat team officers from the Cor­ mal, but we’re heading in that Bridgeport, said Tuesday that Norrie, Windsor. She has a sister Elissa, 8. member of St. Bridget Church. son, 242-107 Talcottvile Road, Ver­ He attended the University of rectional Emergency Response direction,” Chemovetz said. about a dozen prisoners who were will continue until 1993 to add Before retiring, he was employed in non. Connecticut and received an as­ Team were called in to serve as “a No inmates escaped or were in­ previously eligible for early more than 5,700 new state prison the construction industry. Memorial contributions may be sociate’s degree in alcohol and drug beds to prevent overcrowding, Military Notes State begins river tests deterrent force” during Wednes­ jured in the blaze, which was ap­ release would be set free. He also He is survived by two brothers, made to the Gynecologic Oncology counseling from Otero Junior Col­ Wheeler said. If slate prisons and day’s transfers. parently ignited by workmen using said space in halfway houses Leo Fournier and Arthur Fournier, Research Fund, c/o Yale University, lege, Fort Lyon, Colo. jails are above 110 percent of College Notes KILLINGWORTH (AP) — State program last year was $180,000 — He said things were beginning propane torches on the roof. Two would be found for those who both of Saco, Maine; two sisters, Dept. OB/GYN, P.O. Box 3333, He served in World War II in the Sobol commands new squadron capacity for more than 30 days, in­ environmental officials plan to $135,(XX) provided by the federal to return to normal after 'Ihesday’s firefighters and a correction officer have been waiting to get into one. Laura Prue of East Hartford and New Haven, CT 06510 or to Temple 8lh and 9lh Air Force in England, Lt. Col. Anthony J. Sobil HI, son of Mr. and Mrs. mates must be released immediate­ check 80 rivers’ vital signs this sum­ government and the rest represent­ blaze, which destroyed a 100- suffered minor injuries, officials “Other than speeding up the Bertha Ledger of Enfield; and Beth Sholom, 400 E. Middle Tnpk., France and Germany. He served in Anthony Sobol Jr. of Bolton, recently look command of ly until the level is 100 percent, he Mezritz on dean’s list mer, examining their flow, tempera­ ing partial salaries of DEP year-old section of the jail. said. process, no specif considerations several nieces and nephews. Manchester, Ct 06040. the 43rd National Guard Infantry the 522nd Tactical Fighter Squadron during ceremonies ture and biological makeup as part employees already on the payroll. “Things aren’t perfect or nor- State Rep. Joe Grabarz, D- will be given,” Grabarz said. said. Alicia Mezritz, daughter of Marjorie and I^ul Mez- Services will be Friday at 11:30 Division from 1950 to 1954. at Cannon Air Force Base. of their first complete survey of A crew of five worked the ritz of 24 Kennedy Road, has been named to the dean’s a.m. at Holmes Funeral Home, 400 James Jack He was a communicant of St. Sobol is a command pilot with over 3,200 hours of more than 700 Connecticut rivers Menunketesuck River in Kil- list for the spring semester at the University of Connec­ Main St. A mass of Christian burial Michael’s Ukrainian Catholic Chur­ flying time, including 2,600 hours in various versions of and streams. lingworth recently. ticut, Storrs. will be held at noon in St. Bridget James Jack of Denver, Colo., hus­ ch, Hartford. the F-111. He flew 76 combat missions over North Viet­ State officials say they will use Electrical probes were pushed She is in the Honors Program and will be a Church, 60 Main St. Burial will be band of Mary (Damalo) Jack, died Besides his mother, he leaves a nam, Laos and Cambodia. the survey to help biologists decide into the water to briefly stun fish so sophomore next fall in the School of Liberal Arts. She is in St. Bridget Cemetery. Calling Tuesday (June 26, 1990) in Denver. daughter and son-in-law, Lori A. how best to manage the rivers as they could be identified and THetnUe Cola a 1989 graduate of Manchester High School. hours arc today from 7 to 9 p.m. He and his wife were former and Allen Chadwick of Southington; fisheries and to answer questions counted. Dace, white suckers, h ^ l Contributions may be made to St. Manchester residents. two brothers, Wesley D. Hrynchuk about how development will affect American eels, brown trout and Earns degree from UConn Bridget School Fund, 60 Main St., The couple moved to Colorado of Vermont and Walter E. Hrynchuk Public Meetings waterways. brook trout were found, though not Manchester, CT, 06040 about 45 years ago. Before that, they of New Britain; a sister, Mrs. Ann Julianne Hunniford, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wil­ lived in Manchester and Mr. Jack “There is a real need for informa­ in abundance. liam R. Hunniford, 99 Tonica Spring Trail, is a recent Lukawica of Wethersfield; two The following meetings are scheduled today; tion on the streams,” said William As the summer progresses, the Viola G. (Bennett) also had lived in Vernon. grandchildren and several nieces graduate of the University of Connecticut, Storrs. Survivors include a son, David A. Hyatt, fisheries management su­ crews are learning more about the She was awarded a bachelor of arts degree in early and nephews. MANCHESTER Chapman Jack of Pueblo, Colo.; and two pervisor with the state Department state’s streams. LM'S childhood education. While at UConn she was a dean’s Services will be Saturday at 8 Democratic Subcommittee, Municipal Building coffee r.'.’ Viola G. (Bennett) Chapman, 65, grandsons and a great- of Environmental Protection. “Our In 1984, an oil spill virtually list student and member and officer of Delta Zeta a.m. from the Carmon Windsor room, 7 p.m. eliminated fish from Cuff Brook in wife of William H. Chapman of 168 granddaughter. land surrounding rivers is under big Sorority. Funeral Home, Windsor, with a development pressure. Cheshire. Summit St., died Wednesday (July Services were private. mass of Christian burial at 9 a.m. at BOLTON “We’re doing more and more en­ “We found a few dace starting to Receives Mount Ida degree 4, 1990) at Rockville General Lewis George Jones Sr. St. Michael’s Ukrainian Catholic Con.servation, Herrick Park, 7:30 p.m. Hospital. vironmental reviews, and we have to come back,” said Neil T. Hagstrom, Lori Pelletier of Manchester was recently awarded an Church in Hartford. Board of Education, Bolton High School Library, 7:30 assess the impact of development. Bom in Atchison, Kan. on March Lewis George Jones Sr., 73, of a senior fisheries biologist with the associates degree by Mount Ida College, Newton, Mass. Burial will be in St. Michael’s p.m. The only way to do that is to have 8, 1925, she was a Manchester resi­ Key West, Fla., a fomier Manchester Ukrainian Catholic Cemetery, Glas­ DEP. “So it’s at a point where it is She was also the recipient of the Hill Scholarship, resident, died Saturday (May 19, information on what is there.” starting to support fish again. We dent for the past 45 years. She was a tonbury, with full military honors. was named most valuable player for the girls volleyball 1990) at dePbo Hospital in Florida. Now in its second year, the sur­ can probably go in and stock it with member of North United Methodist Calling hours are Friday from 2 to 4 team, and was nominated to the All New England Girls Bom on March 25, 1917, in vey will take at least three more fingerling brook trout or something Church, the church’s Brewster and 7 to 9 p.m. at Carmon Windsor Thoughts c v Volleyball team. Circle; and had been very active in Manchester, he was a son of the late years to complete. The cost of the like that.” She is a graduate of Mount Ida’s Junior College Funeral Home. A Panachyda service vl numerous committees and functions George and Sarah Jones of will be held at 7 p.m. Division in the veterinary technology program. Manchester. He was president of the I think it’s safe to say that there have been more chan­ there. She was named a life member Donation s may be made to the ges in the world since the turn of tliis century llian in all of the Methodist Men’s Club of Class of 1936-A, Manchester High Holy Family Retreat House, c/o Mental health pact reached School. previous years of history combined. Things seem to be Receives bachelor degree North United Methodist Church. Matt Talbot Reu-cal, 303 Tunxis changing at an incomprehensible rate. Clothes that were Elizabeth L. Tan, daughter of Frederick Tan, 350 Besides her husband, she is sur­ He was a commercial real estate Road, West Hartford, CT 06107, or HARTFORD (AP) — Workers O’Neill, union workers voted Satur­ broker in West Hartford and a mem­ in style yesterday are in drawers today. Computers which Timrod Road, graduated recently from Union College, vived by a daughter, Mrs. Michael St. Michael’s Ukrainian Catholic were “state of the art” a few short years ago are now ob­ for four private agencies serving day to postpone a strike vote from ber of the Masonic Temple there. He Schenectady, N.Y. with an interdepartmental bachelor of (Lynn) Lautcnbach of Charlotte, Church, 135 Wethersfield Ave., solete. Governments which had been established for mentally retarded people and emo­ July 2 to July 12. moved to Florida 7 years ago. science degree in biology-economics. N.C.; three brothers, Wally Bennett Hartford, CT 06114. decades are crumbling before our very eyes. Families tionally disturbed children have Above Steve, Joanne and Sarah Cohen, owners of M & S Mini Mart He is survived by his wife, Elnora reached tentative union contract Under the tentative agreement She is a 1986 graduate of East Catholic High School. and Lloyd Bennett, both of St. which have been so clo.sely knit together arc quickly un­ 119 Spruce Stre^ Manchester, CT. Joseph, Mo.; and Lester Bennett of Jones of Key West, Fla.; two sons, Mary (Evers) Willis agreements. reached Tuesday, the minimum When you visinhis famiy run mini mart, not only will you be greeted by Lewis “Guy” Jones of Madison; and raveling. To many it must seem like there are no ab­ Jerry Brown, president of New O’Brien named Hobart Scholar California; two sisters, Alice Chew Mary (Evers) Willis, 69, of 21 solutes — notliing is stable, cvcrytliing is tcmp)or.ary. To hourly wages of about 150 workers tie q ii^ wt and dy hueor of Steve and tie charm of Joanne, rnore ihan Christopher Jones of Lyndeborough, Phelps Road, wife of Harlowe G. England Health Care Employees David W. O ’Brien, son of Mary Jane and William of Atchinson, Kan. and Gladys arrive a these conclusions leaves one widioul hope in this at New Seasons Inc. and Connec­ Btely yout find everyting your looking fa arte if you d ^ ^ N.H.; five daughters, Patricia Adams Willis, died Wcdnc.sday (July 4, Union, said the agreements ensure O’Brien of Manchester, a junior at Hobart College, Whitehead of St. Lawrence, Kan.; ticut Community Services im­ Complete line of groceries, iesh meat produce, mik arte ice cnaam are of Lincoln, Mass.; Sara Anderson of 1990) at Manchester Memorial world. that workers — most of whom are Geneva, N.Y., has been named a Hobart Scholar. and a grandson, Michael Laulenbach Yet tlicrc is a hope. Die Bible affinns dial cvcrytliing mediately will be increased 6 per­ complimented by the acceptance of W.I.C., Food Stamps and free LaRyettc, Calif.; Ri.scilla Friedland Hospital. IV of Charlotte, N.C. which can be seen is temporary but tlut which is unseen employed at group homes — would cent, to $11.18, and will be further d e liv ^. Stop by. Hours are from 7AM-8PM. 7 days a week. ______of West Palm Beach, Fla.; Abigail Bom in Manhattan, N.Y. on Sept. be paid almost as much as state Sanderson receives prize Services will be held Saturday at is eternal. “Jesus Christ is the same yc.stcrday and uxlay increased 4 percent, to $11.63, next 1 p.m. at North United Methodist Drouin of San Rafael, Calif.; and 16, 1920, she was a daughter of the employees doing similar work el­ year. Mary Van Buren, spokes­ WHERE QUALITY & SERVICE STILL MEANS SOMETHING Philip Sanderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Owen M. and forever.” (Hebrews 13:8) Church, 3(X) Parker St. Burial will Darcy Jones of ft)riland; a brother, late Robert and Anna Evers. She had sewhere. woman for the union, said the mini­ Sanderson, received the Todd Prize in Rhetoric and YOUR ONE STOP & SHOP DIRECTORY. be at the convenience of the family Sherwood A. Jones of Portland; a lived in Manchester since 1945. The achievement of parity with mum hourly wage for state workers Mass Media at the recent annual class and charter day at sister, Emma Lennon of Warwick, Michael C. Gaiotti in East Cemetery. Calling hours arc Prior to her retirement, she was a Youth pastor stale employees, who are paid 8 per­ performing similar work is $11.40. Hamilton College, Clinton, N.Y. R.l. and 15 grandchildren. secretary for Dr. Daniel Purcell of cent to 30 percent more than their Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. at Church of the Living God Bloomers J & J Jewelers Marvin's Park Hill Joyce Services were held. Arrangements Manchester for 13 years. She was a counterparts at private agencies, has the funeral home. Conuibulions may The two agencies operate 14 were by Dean Lopez Funeral Home, member of Second Congregational been the main issue during negotia­ group homes and two day programs A Fine Lingerie Boutique Jeweler Art Supplies & Framing Florist be made to the memorial fund of North United Methodist Church. Key West., Fla. Church. tions. for mentally retarded people in the Besides her husband, she is sur­ At the request of Gov. William A. 22 Birch Street 785 Main Street 981 Main Street 36 Oak Street Lottery Beverly Ann (Streeter) Manchester Herald Hartford and Vernon areas. Sybil (Mandel) Fields vived by two sons, Robert R. Willis Downtown Manchester Downtown Manchester Downtown Manchester Downtown Manchester Here arc Wednesday’s lottery results from around New Sybil (Mandel) Fields, 61, of Tobin of Manchester and Russell G. Willis I Jenny^s Bakery MARC Bakery^ of Tolland; two sisters, EK)ris Pellon Founded Dec. 15,1881 as a weekly. 646-6456 643-8484 646-0613 649-0791 England: Manchester, wife of the late Dr. A memorial service for Beverly CONNECTICUT Harold P. Fields, died Thursday Ann (Sueetcr) Tobin of Vernon, of Hopewell Junction, N.Y., and Daily publication since Ocu 1, 1914. o Coffee Shop Coffee Shop § (July 5, 1990) at Manchester who died Sunday (July 1, 1990), Jean Cillcrbart of Melville, N.Y.; Daily: 6-3-7; Play four: 8-9-3-1. VOL. CIX. No. 234 V 435 Hartford Turnpike 846 Main Street ? Bray Jewelers Lift the Latch M&SMini Mart Pearl's MASSACHUSETTS Memorial Hospital. will be held at 11 a.m. at First Con­ and six grandchildren. USPS 327-500 Services will be Saturday at 11 ^ Shops at 30 • Vernon Manchester g Daily: 7-0-1-3; Mass Mcgabucks: 4-5-12-18-21-36 Bom in Hartford, she lived in the gregational Church of Vernon. Call­ Jeweler & Watch Repair Specialty Gifts One Stop Store Appliances Hartford area most of her life. a.m. at Watkins Funeral Home, 142 Publisher a 871-0099 649-5380 c ing hours are tonight from 6 to 10 NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND She was a member of Temple p.m. at Watkins Funeral Home, 142 E. Center St. Burial will be in East Larry Hall 699 Main Street 977 Main Street 119 Spruce Street 649 Main Street Pick three: 6-1-0; Pick four; 4-4-2-S. Tri-State Beth Sholom of Manchester and was E. Center St. Cemetery. Calling hours are Friday Executive Editor Vincont Michael Wtvo 8 Our Reputation & Quality 1 Downtown Manchester Downtown Manchester Downtown Manchester Downtown Manchester Mcgabucks: 2-5-13-19-30-36 a contributor to many charitable or­ from 7 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home. News EdiKx ___ Andrew C Spilzlor ganizations. She leaves a son, Barry Michael R. Hrynchuk Contributions may be made to the Features Editor _ _ _ CHanna M Talbot § Is Unsurpassed 8 643-5617 649-6870 647-1701 643-2171 RHODE ISLAND J. Fields of Vernon and a daughter, Michael R. Hrynchuk. 67, of American Cancer Society, 253 E Sports Edkior. ______Leo Auster Manchester, formerly of Windsor, Center St., Manchester, CT 06040. 4! Daily: 8-6-5-1 Robyn A. Fields of Bridgeport. She Business Manager _ Jeanne G Fromerth Adveroung Director______Manmo Miller Buy any size birthday cake Coach's Corner Manchester Pet Center Nasslffs Camera Studio Regal Circulation Manager. ____Gorlinde Colletti Production Director _ __ _ Sheldon Cohen ; l and receive 1 Dozen Sports Bar & Restaurant Pet Supplies Camera Supplies & Studio Men's Clothing Weather Pressroom Manager. hobert H Hubbard Published daily except Sunday and certain holidays by 623 Main Street 687 Main Street 639 Main Street 903 Main Street the Manchester Publishing Co . 16 Brainard Place, Downtown Manchester Downtown Manchester Downtown Manchester Downtown Manchester Manchester, Conn 06040. Seoxid class postage paid at Hermits Free! R E G IO N A L Weather Sunny Manchester, Conn. Postmaster Send address changes >1 ^ iP j ^ Tonight, partly cloudy and less to the Manchester Herald, P.O Box 591, Manchester, 646-5356 649-4273 643-7369 643-2478 Friday, July 6 Conn 06040. humid. Low around 60. Light The Manchester Herald b a member ol The Associated Stop in to see northwest wind. Friday, mostly Press, the Audit Bureau of Circulation, the Now England Jan Marie's MARC Bakery Oak Street Pub Second Hand Rose |o»rt>oMifrJ sunny. High around 80. Outlook for Press Association and the New England Newspaper As­ our weekly specials Saturday, partly sunny with a high sociation. Boutique Delicious Baked Goods Restaurant & Pub Thrift, Shop 75 to 80. The Manchester Herald welcomes unsolicited A cold front pushing into New articlas, nows releases and manuscriptsripi ^Bring this ad in for your free Hermits 847 Main Street 846 Main Street 30 Oak Street 183 Spruce Street Inquiries should be addressed to the Editor. Tl The England from the St. Lawrence Val­ Publisher, however, assumes no responsibility lor such ,i': Downtown Manchester Downtown Manchester Downtown Manchester Downtown Manchester ley this morning will move through materials and their return, even with return postage xt- southern New England this after­ cludod, cannot be guaranteed. No payment kx artidos or 649-5040 649-5380 646-1086 649-4066 noon and be off tlie coast iliis eve­ photographs will bo made unless specifically agreed to, in ning. . writing, by the Publisher J. Carman, Clothier Marlow's Optical Style Bar Guaranteed delivery. II ^ u don't receive your Herald S There is one spot left for Weather summary for Wednes­ by 5 p m. weekdays or 7.30 a m. Saturdays, please •(u- Men's & Women's Clothih Department Store Optometrists our great weekly directory. day, July 4,1990: telephorto your earner If you are unable to reach your s Temperature: high of 95, low of earner, cat subscriber service at 647-9946 by 6 p m weokdiayB tor delrvery in Manchester. 'JW r. 887 Main Street 867 Main Street 763 Main Street Please call the Manchester 70, mean of 83. The normal is 72. . ..I'.' •> Rccipitation: 0 inches for the Suggested carrier rates are $1 60 weekly, $7.70 tor Downtown Manchester Downtown Manchester Downtown Manchester one month, $23.10 lor three months. $46 20 kx six Herald for more details - day, 0.01 inches for the month, months ar>d $92 40 lor or>e year Newsstand price 35 649-5221 643-1191 643-2711 24.39 inches for the year. Normal Today’s weather picture was drawn by a child who forgot to cents a copy. 643-2401 for year to date; 22.04. write down his name and school on the back of his drawing. COUPON - COUPON COUPON - COUPON - COUPON 10—MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday. July 5,1990 < 0aiirIirstrr H rralft I THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME 1 ^ by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee Crossword TV Tonight Unscramble these four Jumbles, And don't forget— low sodium one letter to each square, to form / four ordinary words. Section 3, page 11 Thursdav. July 5,1990 Anawar to Pravioua Puazla ® CD Nows (CC) and indifference faced by many of Ameri­ [C N N ] Larry King Live DISCOVER ACROSS 49 Eacorti 6:00PM ca's senior citizens. (60 min.) (R) (In NYKAL 53 High craggy [E S P N ] Boxing From Gardnerville, Nev J IkIoIbIe Ia m W ho's the Boss? (CC) hill Stereo) (2 hrs.) (Live) 1 NultrM IK QD Webster Part 3 of 3. 5 Mtdication 54 Violent n a a o i i Q m m ® ® Father Dowling Mysteries (CC) • 1660 Ti«ira W*6W Me [LIFE] MOVIE: 'Half Moon Street' An AiiieiN* ta*4w«6 S — AW* ahowar □□□[!□□ [laaaiiQ Kate & Allie (CC). Pan 1 of 2. A priest in a new parish risks the displea­ attractive economics expert becomes en­ 12 Son of — 56 Yoko — (H) gS) g§) News sure of his bishop and the FBI when he 57 Yaa ------meshed in political intrigue after she begins investigates a murder. (60 min.) Part 1 of moonlighting as a paid escort in London. TAGEA 13 Small 01 58 Author — ® ) Motorweek The Toyota Previa; car 2. (R) (In Stereo) IN BRIEF 14 Alrllna Inlo WlaacI rentals abroad; a pair of Corvettes; the Sigourney Weaver, Michael Caine, Patrick ^ ■■ 15 TV’a David 59 Enargy Terraro sculpture ® MOVIE: 'On the W aterfront' An une­ Kavanagh. 1986. ducated dockworker rises up to challenge 60 Wild party (H) T.J. Hooker [M AX] MOVIE: 'Women on the Verge 17 — Angales 61 Sprint the racketeer behind New York City's wat­ of a Nervous Breakdown' A woman's (?8) Bosom Buddies erfront in Elia Kazan's Oscar-winning clas­ WHBN yOU'BE TOLO 18 Strict search for the lover who jilted her is com­ you HAVE A BLOOU Lawsuit supports Cuban art 18 Ramnani DOWN (S7) Naturescene sic. Marlon Brando, Eva Marie Saint, Rod plicated by the arrival of a troubled friend YALERN works to be brought into the country under the “free 21 Blrdclaai Steiger. 1954. rREeeuKE problem, NEW YORK (AP) — Art from Cuba is exempt from 1 Chum* (6T) Three's Company and an unknown couple Carmen Maura, trade in ideas” acL adopted by Congress in 1988. 23 Hangtooaal* (33) MOVIE: 'Outland' A space marshal Antonio Banderas, Fernando Guillen. PON'TTAKErr 24 Pipa-mtlng 2 By the time [A & E ] Decades: '70s Part 2 of 2. z c the trade embargo, say artists, galleries, scholars and a tries to keep the peace in a lawless mining 1988. Rated R. (In Stereo) WITH THIS- unit ------to community on a moon orbiting Jupiter. civil liberties group who are suing the Bush administra­ “Godfather III” due to arrive Phoanin [CNN] World Today [U S A ] MOVIE: 'The Long Hot Summer' 27 Not out ol Sean Connery, Peter Boyle, Frances Stern- 28 Accumulat­ 3 Ancient 20 Taj — (leave*) [DIS] MOVIE: 'The New Adventures of Drifter Ben Quick's actions divide the Var­ SHIGLE tion for banning it. NEW YORK (AP) — “The Godfather, Part HL” one of 22 Hailed 43 Coarse hagen 1981. Now arrange the circled letters to u ed matter mualcal Pippi Longstocking' The red-haired her­ peraon ner family and the townspeople as he is The lawsuit filed June 5 charged that the Treasury the most talked about movies of the year, has finished 32 Adorned Inatrument 24 Weekend- oine of Astrid Lindgren's novels sets up MOVIE: 'S.O.S. Pacific' A seaplane form the surprise answer, as sug­ 45 Diner (3® suspected of arson and murder. Don John­ 34 Hormone 4 0pp. of welcoming house in an abandoned mansion and em­ crashes on an island that is to be used for a S._4 5 ^ gested by the above cartoon. Department is violating a 1988 law that excludes paint­ principal photography in Italy, New York and Atlantic 46 Hall son, Jason Robards. 1985. Part 2 of 2. aourcet aatra abbr. barks on a series of escapades Tami Erin, nuclear test. Richard Attenborough, Pier 25 Eagle 47 First-rale ings, sculpture and drawmgs by Cubans from the 27- City. 36 Encroach on 5 Common Eileen Brennan, Dick Van Patten. 1988 Angeli, John Gregson. 1960. 9:30PM @ d® Seinfeld (CC) Jerry's level 26 Llalen (2 wds.) female house guest reveals her engage­ Answer here: A ye^-old U.S. embargo against Cuba’s goods. The suit The last in a trilogy about the fictional Corleone fami­ 37 Flowart 48 Singer VIkki Rated G. (In Stereo) (5® MOVIE: 'Hardbodies 2 ' Three fun- |CI X XXJ 38 Be aanaltiva 6 Fartheat furtively ment - to another man. Pilot for the series. loving Americans travel to Greece to film a (Answers tomorrow) said the department has infringing on the First Amend­ ly poses a challenge for filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola to within 28 Look* at [ESPN] Thoroughbred Digest (R) (In Stereo) 7 Burden boldly 50 Bitter nut low-budget film. Brad Zutaut, Fabiana Udi- ment. 39 Ratidue 51 Greenland's [LIFE] Supermarket Sweep Jumbles: DINER CHAOS PERSON TRUSTY since both “The Godfather” (1972) and “The Godfather, 41 Okla. time 8 Nation* 30 Drlnka nio, James Karen. 1986. 1 0:00PM ® Bar Girls (CC) Dramatic Yesterday’s 9 Attractive on 31 Atlenlion- colonizer [M AX] MOVIE: 'The Towering Inferno' pilot. Joanna Cassidy and Marcy Walker Answer How the nurse knew the kid had measles “Paintings are as much a part of the First Amendment Part n ” (1974) won best picture Academy Awards. 42 Wily 52 Duck ® d® Cosby Show (CC) Cliff has a rough 44 Tannii play­ TV gattlng (CC) Faulty wiring causes a San Francisco portray a pair of mismatched law partners, SHE "SPOTTED" IT ^ books. They are not, as the administration would have 55 Actress time organizing and preparing a huge But Hiramount Pictures thinks it might have yet er Arthur — 10 — jacket aound skyscraper to go up in flames during the struggling to stay ahead of their creditors. Myrna — Thanksgiving dinner. (R) (In Stereo) it, commodities like Cuban sugar or tobacco,” said another wiimer. 46 Inapt tar- 11 Holdout 33 Yell* to structure's grand opening party. Steve (60 min.) (In Stereo) 35 Bulba, e.g. McQueen, Paul Newman, William Holden. ® ) Nature (CC) The Spanish Pyrenees Now bock in Hook. Jumblo Book No. *2 U o.tllibta loi Michael Krinsky, a lawyer for the National Emergency ylcaman (2 16 Waa jealou* ® (4® Primetime Live (CC) (60 min.) “We are excited by the incredible look, texture and in­ wdt.) ol 40 Sweeping 1974. Rated PG. (In Stereo) Mountains and the bearded vulture that Civil Liberties Committee. trigue of the continuing saga,” said Sidney Ganis, presi­ [TM C] Short Film Showcase lives in this harsh environment. (60 min.) ® News (CC). TT (R) (In Stereo) Joining with the NECLC in the legal action were the dent of Paramount’s Motion Picture Group. [USA] He-Man and Masters of the GT) d® d3) News ( ® MOVIE: 'The Long Riders' Jesse Universe (3® Synchronal Research KIT 'N' CARLYLE by Larry Wright New York-based Center for Cuban Studies, several ar­ “The Godfather, Part IIL” which is scheduled for n r James, Cole Younger and their outlaw tists, art scholars, galleries and private collectors. 6:30PM ® CBS News (CC). (In Stereo) bands terrorize the old American West. d® All in the Family release at Christmas, begins in 1979. Michael Corleone Sotheby’s and Christie’s auction houses also joined as h r ® ® ABC News (CC). Stacy Keach, David Carradine, James (g) d® L A. U w (CC) Stuart becomes a (A1 Pacino) is trying to legitimize the family’s dirty Keach. 1980. basket case when Ann goes into prema­ “friends of the court” in support of the plaintiffs. money. He’s moved from gambling and casino opera­ (T) Comedy Wheel ture labor; a verdict is expected in Kuzak's We'V^ (S) MOVIE: 'Continental Divide' A politi­ The complaint, filed in U.S. District Court in Manhat­ tions to real estate and media. (TT) Happy Days cal reporter is sent into the wild country to college-professor murder case; Becker is (f do To (31) Minority Business Report interview a reclusive lady ornithologist. ordered to stop seeing a client. (60 min.) tan, asked that the Treasury Department’s Office of The film began shooting in Rome on Nov. 27, 1989. It (R) (In Stereo) d® Mama's Family Part 1 of 2. John Belushi, Blair Brown, Allen Goorwitz. Foreign Assets Control be required to permit Cuban art ended May 25. 1981, (24) Evening at Pops (In Stereo) (g) (® NBC News (CC). (g) This Old House (CC). (R) (3® Hogan's Heroes ® ) d?) Nightly Business Report ® MOVIE: 'The Bay Boy' 1937 Nova (S7) Black Adder II v a t t ^ yov iBfr ^ ® WKRP in Cincinnati Scotia is the setting for this tale of an emo­ Y [CNN] CNN News (61) Love Connection tionally troubled young man's coming of Artists to display talent in Hartford [DIS] MOVIE: Back Home' (CC) Con [A & E ] Chronicle A visit to Maine for the age Liv Ullmann, Kiefer Sutherland, Peter Donat 1984 Dieting emotions threaten to disrupt the wild blueberry harvest. reunion of a mother, father and daughter in [ESPN] SportsLook [A & E ] Crusade in Europe The horror of a post-World War II England. Hayley Mills, HARTFORD — Manchester artists Leigh Fergurson ment or more information call 249-1207 Nazi concentration camp [LIFE] Rodeo Drive Hayley Carr, Rupert Frazer. 1990 and David Morgan will display their talent during an The Charter Oak Temple is one of Hartford’s newest [CNN] PrimeNews [H B O ] Child of Rage: A Story of Abuse [TMC] MOVIE: 'Stand by Me' Four ■0—l L “Emerging Artists” exhibition to be held from July 15 to centers for the arts, humanities and education. The cen­ young boys face a journey of self- [DIS] MOVIE: That Darn Cat' A (CC) A documentary focusing on the re­ discovery when they attempt to locate the Siamese cat becomes a federal investiga­ percussions of child abuse throughout the Aug. 31 at the Charter Oak Temple Cultural Center Gal­ ter, which can seat about 300 people, offers concerts, body of a boy hit by a train. Wil Wheaton, tor's only link to a kidnapped woman Hay- life of an abused child (R) lery, 21 Charter Oak Ave. dance performances, lecture series and art exhibitions. River Phoenix, Corey Feldman 1986 ley Mills, Dean Jones, Dorothy Provine [TMC] MOVIE: Patty Hearst' (CC) 1965 Rated G Fergurson specializes in porcelain art and Morgan spe­ Rated R Based on the newspaper heiress's own ac­ cializes in stained glass, according to a gallery spokes­ Cultural Center activities lake place in one of [H B O ] MOVIE: The Fly' (CC) A scientist count of her imprisonment and brainwash­ Hartford’s most important historical landmarks, which 7:00PM ® Inside Edition is transformed into a monstrous insect fol­ ing at the hands of the Symbionese Libera­ woman. (T) d® Wheel of Fortune (CC). lowing an ill-fated teleportation experi­ tion Army Natasha Richardson, William They are among 11 artists who will display a variety served as Connecticut’s first synagogue building. (T) Cosby Show (CC) ment. Jeff Goldblum. Geena Davis, John Forsythe, Ving Rhames 1988 Rated R. (In (c) 1990 by NEA, Inc (3D Charles in Charge (CC). Getz 1986 Rated R (In Stereo) Stereo) of art works, including paintings, drawings, ceramics, Constructed in 1876 by Hartford architect George [LIFE] Hotel (3B) Untouchables 1 0:30PM (3® Synchronal Research photography and sculptures. Keller, the Cultural Center is a living monument of his­ d® M 'A'S'H Part 2 of 2 [T M C ] MOVIE: Cocoon' (CC) Ron Ho­ (2® Mama's Family Part 2 of 2. An opening reception for this exhibition will be held torical, religious and architectural significance. The ward's Oscar-winning fantasy about Flor­ d4) (57) MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour d® Carol Burnett and Friends ® 1090 by NEA. Inc Sunday, July 15, from 3 to 6 p.m. at the gallery. Gallery building’s ongoing restoration is scheduled to be com­ S \ ida retirees rejuvenated by a pool filled d® Newhart (CC) with alien pods Don Ameche, Wiiford (3® Hogan's Heroes hours are weekdays from noon to 4 p.m. For an appoint- plete in 1992. (3® ® Current Affair Brimley, Hume Cronyn 1985 Rated PG (61) Newhart (CC). SNAFU by Bruce Bea-tia CELEBRITY CIPHER 13 (In Stereo) Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous ® Cheers (CC) [H B O ] MOVIE: Stripes' (CC) Two Reginald PInto/Manchester Herald people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands lor [USA] Murder, She Wrote Army recruits spark an international inci­ Today's clue: U equals M. (fi) Hunter b 1000 ov NEA me another 8:30PM d® i® Blossom (CC) Comedy dent when their joyride in a prototype tank [A&E] New Wilderness takes them across the Czechoslovakian New plays, playwrights, introduced ARTISTS AT WORK — Mary Daly of 82 Oliver Road, president of the Manchester Art As­ pilot A precocious 13-year-old girl (Mayim ■VQW IRNQE N'DW [CNN] Moneyline Bialik) deals with life in Los Angeles (In border Bill Murray, Harold Ramis, Warren sociation, hoids her oii painting. The Fiorai," whiie Grace Tedfordo of 642 Birch Mountain O o [ESPN] SportsCenter Stereo) Oates 1981 Rated R P [M A X ] MOVIE: Out Cold' (CC) A quiet “Coyote Hangin’ on a Barbed Wire Road, membership chairwoman for the association, hammers a naii into a waii. Artists from MWFKQWS NQ MNXW [LIFE] Moonlighting (57) Frugal Gourmet (R) (In Stereo) By HERALD STAFF Curtain time for all evening z „ butcher finds himself involved with the Fence.” In iu a national TV news staged readings, Monday through the association are dispiaying their art in Manchester Community Coiiege’s Newspace Gai- GO [U S A ] Miami Vice (In Stereo) [A & E ] Eagle and the Bear (CC) death of his partner John Lithgow, Teri anchor returns home to a liny nor­ H < NY IRFI LRWQ PVG 7:30PM ® Entertainment Tonight Garr, Randy Quaid 1988 Rated R (In WATERFORD — The 26th an­ Saturday, is 8:30 p.m.; curtain for iery untii Aug. 31. An opening reception for the exhibition will be held Friday from 7 to 9 Stereo) Priscilla Presley s new movie "The Adven­ 9:00PM ® Wiseguy (CC) Vinnie is nual National Playwrights Con­ thern Minnesota town to deal with Saturday matinees is 2:30 p.m. p.m. at the gallery. ZVWFYW IV HW F tures of Ford Fairlane " (In Stereo) caught between the mob and the OCB 1 0:35PM (67) Red Dwarf Part 9 of 12 his neurotic mid-life crisis and to Ticket prices for Monday through when a feud between Cerrico and Tommy ference at the O’Neill Theater o d (T) d® Jeopardy! (CC) Chin escalates into a Chinatown war (60 1 1 :00PM ® ® News (CC) Center presents its first staged read­ confront his biker brother and born- Thursday evening and Saturday SGUUP, IRFI'Y LRWa ® Kate & Allie (CC) min ) (R) (In Stereo) ® 50 Years Ago Today again father. matinee performances are $6 for (TT) Bosom Buddies ing on Saturday. The conference ® (4® America's Dance Honors (CC) (31) Odd Couple will run through Saturday, July 28. O ’Neill Theater Center members P V G ' K W N Q d® d® M*A*S*H Sammy Davis Jr , Liza Minnelli, Shirley Ma- Also, Judy GcBauer returns to the and $7 for the general public. All o “o cLaine and others gather to celebrate the (3® Synchronal Research Thirteen new works are under “Let’s Make a Deal” is reborn (2® Carol Burnett and Friends world of dance (60 min ) (In Stereo) d® All in the Family Conference for the third time with tickets are $9 for Friday and Satur­ IKVGHMW.' — HV (50) Hard Copy development as part of the Con­ “Bobby, can you hear me?” In 1981, d® d® Cheers (CC) Norm is the love d® (I® (4® News ference’s I4th annual New Drama day evening performances. LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. AP launch the daytime television com­ “lovable conman” offering terrific (4® Cosby Show (CC) target" of his obsessive former secretary (21) This Old House (CC) (R) at age 27, Bobby Sands died on a To confirm reservations, reading — Visitors at the Disney-MGM eback of the decade. Cameras began deals or good-natured “zonks,” S o S N S S M W P . [A&E] World of Survival (R) (In Stereo) for Television Project, according to O ” n (2® Honeymooners hunger strike in Long Kesh Prison times or directions call the O’Neill Studios won’t have to gamble on taping Jime 14 on Soimdstage One depending on the contestant’s luck. PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "No brilliance is needed in law. [CNN] Crossfire d® (§7) Mystery!: Rumpole of the Bailey the conference’s artistic director Nothing but common sense and relatively clean (CC) A series of events causes Rumpole to ® ) M -A 'S ’ H in Northern Ireland after having Theater Center Box Office at of the Disney-MGM Studios. Theme park guests who queue up [ESPN] PBA Bowling: Hammer Senior Lloyd Richards. what’s behind Soundstage Door m K contemplate escaping from it all (60 min ) Arsenio Hall (In Stereo) tingernalls." — John Mortimer. Open From Floustor (90 min ) (Live) (®T) been elected to Parliament by 443-1238; hours are Monday No.l this summer. “We want a lot of action for the for a seat in the show could wind up (R) The works, chosen by the Con­ [HBO] Wimbledon Tennis Highlights [A&E] Evening at the Improv popular vole. The play examines through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 It’s the high-cnergy ’90s version ’90s, and with a much larger winning a pocketful of cash, or lots -« w (J) 1990 by NEA. Inc 05 [A&E] Eighth Van Cliburn International [CNN] Moneyline ference Selection Committee, were (CC) Piano Competition: Here to Make Music this unlikely revolutionary, an ordi­ p.m. of “Lake’s Make A E>eal,” returning audience, it will be sure to affea the more. [ES PN ] Baseball Tonight selected from over 1400 submis­ o O 8:00PM ® 48 Hours The Tarnished A look inside the grueling 16-day contest "You opened a laundromat at nary man in extraordinary cir­ Readings start at 8:30 p.m. and July 9 to NBC-TV’s daily lineup energy level,” says Monty Hall, the “We have big deals with big Years (CC) A look at the plight of abuse in Fort Worth, Texas (2 hrs ) [LIFE] Spenser: For Hire sions. m a nudist colony?!" cumstances. are scheduled as follows: from 10-10:30 a.m. Starring charis­ wheeling, dealing former host of values, bigger than ever seen before The first week of the Conference “Let’s Make A Deal,” which gained on ‘Let’s Make A Deal,’” says show With “Empathy,” Ned Eisenberg matic new host Bob Hilton, who o > ARID AND JANIS by Jimmy Johnson FRANK AND ERNEST by Bob Thavse will feature staged readings of new notoriety when many contestants producer Bruce Starin. returns to the Conference for the ‘Ties That Bind” — July 7 and 9 replaces game-show guru Monty plays by Walter Allen BennelL Jr., Hall, the wildly piopular show puts began dressing like radishes and Anything could turn up behind second lime. The play is about an “Coyote Hangin’ From a Barbed OD O ) / Percy Granger, Judy GcBaucr, and visitors on the trading floor to view chickens to compete. Door No. 1, No. 2, No. 3 or even the IJ06THADAfil2EAriPeA American businessman whose life is W ireftnee” — July 10 and 11 Ned Eisenberg. “Bobby, can you hear me?” — for prices worth thousands of dol­ Hall, who has hosted 4,500 tempting new 16-scrccn video wall. J3 > fOR A HORROR MOVie... changed by the graphic nightmares ir^ July 12 and 14 lars. episodes of the popular show since It could be a Disney vacation. Or > H loans Participating in the Conference of his tecn-age daughter. The “Empathy” — July 13 and 14 “The show is a carnival — picoplc 1963, is creator and part-owner of maybe a state-of-the-art stereo sys­ WHBN for the first time, Waller Allen Ben­ visions of her Central American • u “Enchanted Maze” — July 16 and are coming to an event, not just a the show with Stefan Hatos. As the tem. Or every homeowner’s dream nett Jr. comes to the O’Neill Theater pen-pal being tortured lead her YOU XAip, "NO, 17 TV show,” says Hilton, a former new hosL Hilton must be quick­ — a robotic househclpcr. Every Center with “Tics That Bind,” his father to uncover a world of terror “Bricklayers” — July 18 and 20 talk-show hosL TV news anchorman witted and ready to run a “game- contestant faces the fun of new look at a contemporary African- and death in the lives of his “Buster Comes Through" — July and “Truth or Consequences” host. show decathlon,” Hall says. prizes and surprises. American family in the midst of forcign-bom factory workers and With an 800-membcr audience “He had to be alert and quick on “These arc all people coming to domestic help. 19 and July 21 TIMB transition. The play is about a man, “Exodus" — July 21 comprised largely of Disney theme his feel, shifting gears at a moment’s Walt Disney World, and they’re al­ who after a 15-year self-imposed “Sons of Don Juan” — July 23 park guests, this legendary game notice depending on what the con­ ready in a festive mood,” says Hall, exile, returns to his wife and three Staged readings take place in one O 1990 by NEA Inc and 24 show incorporates Disney’s state- testant decides to do,” says Hall, who will make some guest ap­ THAV/Sr/ 7 -5 children. Each family member ex­ of the three theater spaces — the JOH0500' Amphitheater, the Bam, and the In­ “Down the Shore” — July 25 and of-the-art studio technology to likening the emcee’s role to that of a pearances on the show. amines whether or not their “new” 27 family can survive. stant Theater — located on the grounds of the Eugene O’Neill “The Wizards of Quiz” — July 26 THE BORN LOSER fay Art Sanaom PHIPPS by Joaaph Farria Also, Percy Granger returns to the Theater Center at 305 Great Neck and 28 (reading is at 2:30 p.m on Crockett descendants gather in Texas Conference for the second lime with Road in Waterford. July 28) IfSQi------For the descendants gathered at By DARRYL EWING Granbury’s Plantation Inn, it’s the Associated Press Writer search for a “real" Davy Crockett UConn professor is unique artist that matters most. And according to dicm, dial’s not GRANBURY, Texas — Davy the Davy Crockett a generation of By HERALD STAFF Crockett probably wasn’t bom on a Americans knew from the Disney mountaintop in Tennessee. And TV scries that made die buckskin- A rcU-ospcctive of the art of nobody really iliinks he shot a bear Harold Spencer, University of Con­ \ 'T' ‘ clad actor Fess Parker an instant when he was only 3. celebrity and prompted millions of necticut Professor Emeritus of Art But tliat doesn’t take anything History, will be on view at The Wil­ youngsters to buy coonskin caps. away from tlic legend, at least for The show became one of die big­ liam Benton Museum of Art in the 180 Crockett descendants Slorrs from July 14 to Aug. 12. gest overnight hits in television his­ THE GRIZWELLS by Bill Schorr gathering in Texas tliis week. tory. Ninety million people watched J Examples from five decades of “lliosc kinds of tilings arc inter­ the TV Davy swing his rifle as Santa WHE.H I f\R ,5 T met 4SUHTHER, Spencer's drawing, painting, and ...UTTUE PIP I KHOW HE WA5 esting to read about, but tlicy don’t Aniui’s trtxips attacked the Alamo, 1 WHY DOES EVEC?yeOPV K____ _ ,------1 T. THOUtSHT 0U 9 T F A L U H 6 A 5 LEEP,,. printmaking are included in the ex­ necessarily reflect tlic real David CO ^^e TO A^E W ITH hibit. according to Disney prtxluciions. r ------I C HAP Crockett,” said Leonard Slasncy, “Tlic Ballad of Davy CrocketL” die , THEIR TPOU&LES-? Long interested in the look and one of die Crockett descendants relation of land, water, and sky, theme song of die scries, sold 18 holding their fifth biennial reunion million copies in 1955, Billboiud especially in the American South­ at diis town, 30 miles soudiwest of west, Spencer’s recent landscapes said. Fort Worth. Davy’s widow settled in Joy Bland, the new president of focus on multiple horizons imbued Grtuibury after his death at die battle the descendants’ group, dismisses with a grandeur and mystery that of the Alamo in San Antonio in CROCKETT CLAN — have more to do with human ex­ Sandra Weaver of all dial as Hollywood ghunour. 1836. “They don’t slick to die real facts. perience than with nature. “'nic myth was bigger dian the Grandbury, Texas, a third He explains his use of shifting s- 1 never could sit through die whole man,” said descendant Sandra great-granddaughter of program. It was awful," said Ms. calcs and spaces as “means of inter­ Weaver of Granbury, who wore a 9 LA SIEMBRA — UConn. Professor Harold Spencer is an Bland, of Paris, Tenn. “'I'hc clodiing weave the layers of remembrances, cloth Crockett doll with a real coon Davy Crockett, shares a artist who explores multiple horizons, shifting scales and was too modem; the story line was passions, and ideas that sometimes tail on die cap, the whole thing laugh during the Crockett EEK AND MEEK by Howla Schnaldar unrealistic." a l l e y OOP by Dave Oraue sweep through my consciousness in spaces which relate his favorite landscapes to personal pinned to her shoulder like a huge Clan Reunion in her Only one descendant doiuicd a swift succession and deeply move memories and emotions. His oil painting. "La Siembra del corsage. me." hometown Tuesday. About coonskin cap for the reunion, and he SMOWJ ME. SOMEOfJE (AjH ^ ISNB f+5 MAME 0(0 Recuerdo," is on display at the William Benton Museum of Art Ms. Weaver and Crockett kin was in period costume to KNEW YOU WOULD BE, ] / TENDER ROAST SPINDLEVINE, These unconventional landscapes, traded Uiles about dicir famous an­ 200 people gathered for the 5 ^JT busy AfOD I'LL SMOOU MY TAPE MACfilAJE.AfOP MASTER ..SO I TOOK^-'-'-U SPINDLEVINE YOU SA Y? in Storrs until mid-August. demonstrate the rifles and muskets COOK THEM, THE LIBERTY OF ] SAUTEED IN the artist teacher explains, are cestor Tuesday at the clan picnic, event. 40U A LOSER... I'LLGE-T BACf^TO SOU DILLVIN! I'M PREPARING YtXJR/ DID \ THE JUICE “hybrids of sorts, whose identities of Crockett’s era. FAMISHED! FAVORITE M E A L! ( »YIMCrJ5P)OF RIPE RED swapped gossip and argued over the rendering die Alamo. About 2(X) people belong to die ^ W O M M IT S ! may shift even as I shape them — best place to get a genuine coonskin followed, before figures, objects, history faculty at Slorrs in 1968, but “Davy Crockett went down non-profit corporation Descendants v e t o from shorelines I have sailed along cap. r to the arid contours of the southwest and landscapes began to reappear in he hud been on artist and studio swinging a rifle — he wasn’t no of David Crockett, based in Ten­ teacher for a number of years in Il­ coward,” insisted Charles Edward 9 I love and regions of the mind only his art, Spencer drew heavily on his Tlicy debated how often a fighter nessee. Members must be blood ... across a dimension of time, or own experiences, including sailing linois and California before deciding could fire the muskets of Davy’s Crockett Sr. of Falls City, Ore. relations to Crockett. Associate space — or both.” with the U.S. Merchant Marine to study art history at Harvard day and whcdicr Crockett was killed “It just doesn’t matter,” Ms. memberships arc extended to Even in his early representative during World War II. University, where he received his in action or, as some historians say, Weaver said. “All the men who died cousins, historians and others who work and in the abstract phase that Professor Spencer joined the art doctorate. cxccnlcd by the Mexicans after sur- at the Alamo were heroes.” revere the pioneer. 7 -r 7-S ^ 0 4

MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, July 5, 1990—13 12—MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, July 5,1990 Storms of the past remain real to some Nutmeggers demolished, 16 have been rebuilt know there is anything wrong with kept changing. roads, sidewalks and uninsured FOCUS By LARRY ROSENTHAL million damage to insured property The storm also heavily damaged a her,” said her mother, Kristina Several other severe storms also buildings. Nearly $1.3 million has and NITAIELYVELD alone, there are also innumerable dozen Hamden businesses, and two Sancher. swept down through New England been paid out to uninsured Associated Press Writers others who bear emotional scars. — a luncheonette and a fish market J Sarah plans to confront her fears the same day, but Connecticut’s was households for home repairs and For them, thunderstorms are now — never reopened. an unnerving experience. head on the end of next week by at­ the most powerful. loss of personal property. One year after a severe storm left tending this year’s church outing, “I don’t know any reason why Connecticut officials had es­ Bjorn Abildsoe, a Norwegian who Keep Your a H/2-mile swath of destruction Some homeowners have even Dear A bby her mother said. ours was stronger. 1 think it was a timated the overall costs of the had lived in Hamden less than a year from Salisbury to New Haven, most taken special precautions to protect “She is going to do it because she roll of the dice,” Smith said. storm at $125 million. Litchfield, when the storm hit, will never forget PEOPLE of the damage has been repaired — themselves in future storms. At one the day he and his two children Car Alive wants to be a good example to tlie Smith and Copeland MacClin- Cornwall, Watertown, Waterbury, Abigail Van Buren but the approach of darkening house in Hamden, the owners have spent 20 frightening minutes hud­ built a kind of storm shelter in their other girls,” her mother said. tock, a paleontologist who spent the Hamden and New Haven suffer^ clouds and rumble of distant thunder dled in their basement stairwell. basement — a fortified room with winter doing the field work, are the greatest losses. still bring trepidation to those who THE STORM AND ITS PRICE preparing an exhibit of their findings HAMDEN CELEBRATES felt nature’s wrath. no windows to shatter. The owners “That turned out to be the only did not want to be identified. that will open Nov. 3 at Yale’s RECOVERY safe place in the house,” he recalled Neighborhoods dotted with gray­ By mapping tree-fall patterns and Peabody Museum of Natural His­ Woman yearns to Car news ing tree stumps, giant trees shorn of Sarah Sancher was on a church comparing the findings to eyewit­ In Hamden, the hardest hit com­ last week as he was out watering his outing at Black Rock State Park in tory. munity in the stale with an estimated newly re-sod lawn. “Everywhere By Peter Bohr broken limbs, naked hills and bare ness accounts, a Yale University According to an insurance in­ Watertown when the storm struck, meteoroIogi.st and one of his as­ $100 million damage to private and else, including the basement, every­ Contributing Editor expanses where majestic trees once dustry trade group, the storm caused sending huge pines crashing down sociates have concluded the storm public property. Mayor John thing was plastered with glass par­ meet decent man Road & Track stood — these are the physical about $80 million damage to insured reminders of the July 10 storm’s ter­ on her tent. She was one of the luck­ produced at least three tornados — Carusone boasted last week that ticles.” private and public property aefoss only one tornado-battered home DEAR ABBY: I’m slim, blond, well-groomed, take rible fury. ier ones. in Cornwall, Litchfield and Ham­ The storm caused more than $1 two baths a day, and everyone says I’m pretty. I come Here’s some news you might use • or at least find in- Jennifer Bike, 12, of Stratford, Connecticut. In comparison, the San remains to be repaired. triguing: The psychological toll is less evi­ den. Francisco earthquake last year million damage to the seven homes from a good, middle-class Protestant family. My mother was killed by one of the falling Entering the northwest comer of “Everything is brand new and Cadillac is determined to lure younger Eur(^>ean-car dent caused $960 million damage to in­ in his exclusive development and is a retired tax consultant and my father is an engineer. I trees. Jennifer’s sister, Melanie, now Connecticut about 4 p.m., the storm spanking. The only thing you’ll miss buyers into its showrooms with the new Eldorado Tour­ “Sometimes at night, even when sured property — and Hurricane knocked down all the tall trees that play three musical instruments and speak three lan­ the stars are out, if the wind is loud I 17, suffered a spinal cord injury that was a complicated mixture of gust is the trees,” Carusone said. separated the new houses from an guages. ing Coupe. The car is an unusual combination of two dis­ has left her confined to a wheel­ Hugo’s toll was more than $4 bil­ While more than 800 new trees parate automotive traditions. The 180-horsepower V-8 is start to shake,” was the way Sarah fronts that caused extensive damage older neighborhood. Last year, I won a bronze medal in the county triathlon chair. in their own right and tornados that lion. are being planted, double that num­ pure Americana. But the chassis, possibly General Sancher, 15, of Milford, who was al­ Contractors were able to the (a long-distance race consisting of swimming, bicycling Sarah’s spine was crushed, but would set down for a while, then The state expects to disburse $17 ber were lost. Motor’s quietest and strongest, has been modified to give most killed in the storm, put it Abildsoes’ ravaged five-bedroom and running). I don’t drink liquor or use recreational disappear, said Ronald B. Smith, the Seventy homes were heavily a firmer ride and better handling more in the vein of a recently. after undergoing a relatively new million in federal and slate funds to home, but repairs took more than drugs, nor do I frequent bars. municipalities, state agencies and damaged in Hamden. Of the 28 European sedan than the typical American luxo-Iimo. For all those who suffered proper­ surgical procedure at Yale-New meteorologist. The damage was ir­ four months. Three of the seven I am 40 years old, have no children, no health regular along the storm’s path be­ non-profit groups to cover the costs houses that were either flattened or ^Francophiles rejoicel After an absence of nearly 20 ty damage in the storm, which the Haven Hospital and finishing homes were destroyed. problems, and I own a nice car. I have been formally insurance industry says caused $80 therapy in January, “you wouldn’t cause the strength of the tornados of debris removal and repairs to so badly damaged they had to be engaged twice and broke the engagements. Both men years in our markey, Citroen - that maker of quirky, were compulsive liars. One had been married seven (yes, though often highly sophisticated French cars - plans to seven!) times. His last wife told me he was still married return to the United States. The first Citroen coming our to her when he started dating me! I am not currently way will be the XM, a model that won the European Car dating, deliberately, to avoid another disaster. of die Year award last year. ViTiy can’t I have a nice, normal relationship with an ANNIE 2 AND *Volkswagen seems to be inspired by Mazda’s red-hot seller, the Miata roadster. The German firm is expected CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 643-2711 honest, decent, middle-class guy where I won’t be lied SANDY — Lauren Y to introduce a two-seat convertible sports car of its own to, stolen from or beaten up? I have no preconceived Gaffney, as Annie, Merchandise Musical Items...... 84 at next year’s Frankfurt auto show. The new VW will use Lots/Land for Sale...... 23 Cameras and Photo Equipment...... 85 demands such as height, looks, bank account, religion. and her dog, Sandy, Notices Investment Property...... 24 So, how can I cormect with Mr. Nice and Normal? mechanical components from the Golf/Scirocco models, Lott/Found...... 01 Holiday Seasonal...... 71 Pets qnd Supplies...... 86 pose in Connecticut Business Property...... 25 Spcciolisjl D#tf! Miscellaneous for Sale...... 87 THOROUGHLY CONFUSED and the car’s body will be built by Karmann (as in the Personali...... OJ Resort Property ...... 26 "rfo Antiques and Collectibles...... 72 Announcements...... 03 Tag Sales...... 88 DEAR CONFUSED: There are con artists recently. The musical old Karmann-Ghia). Mortgages...... 27 Rooflng/Sldlng...... 57 Clothing...... 73 Wanted to Buy/Trade...... 89 Auctions...... 04 Wanted to Buy...... 28 Services everywhere, so one’s only protection is to check out their “Annie 2" is in produc­ *Then there are the British, who sent MG TCs to Financial...... 05 Flooring...... 58 Furniture...... 74 America right after World War II, thus introducing us Child Care...... 51 Electrical...... 59 TV/Stereo/Appllonces...... 75 backgrounds with someone who has known them for a tion at the 200-seat Rentals Heatlng/Plumblng...... 60 '""A'' Yanks to the joys of little sports cars. A new Miata-sized Employment & Education Cleaning Services...... 52 Machinery and Tools...... 76 Automotive very long time. Norma Terris Theater Port Time Help Wanted...... 10 Rooms for Rent...... 31 Lawn C ore...... 53 Miscellaneous Services...... 61 One of the best way to meet nice people is through roadster is purported to be in the works from the Austin Help Wanted...... 11 Apartments for Rent...... 32 Bookkeeplng/lncome Tax...... 54 Services Wanted...... 62 Gardening...... 77 Cars for Sale...... 91 other nice people — put out the word to friends and rela­ in Chester. Rover Group. It will be based on a British Rover 200 and Situation Wanted...... 12 Condominiums for Rent...... 33 Carperitry/Remodeling...... 55 Landscaping...... 53 Good Things to Eat...... 78 Trucks/Vans for Sole...... 92 is expected to be ready in 1992. And perhaps best of all, Business Opportunities...... 13 Homes for Rent...... 34 Palntlng/Paperlng...... 56 Concrete...... Fuel OII/Coal/FIrewood...... 79 Campers/Trollers...... 93 tives that you are interested in meeting someone nice. At Store/Office Space...... 35 it will be called an MG; why it’s enough to bring a tear Instruction...... 14 Farm Supplies and Equipment...... 80 Motorcycles/Mopeds...... 94 least that way, you will have the benefit of a little “his­ Employment Services...... IS Resort Property...... 36 Auto Services...... 95 SUPER SAVINGS WITH OUR SPECIAL Office/Retall Equipment...... 81 tory” regarding the person. The Associated Press of nostalgia. Industrial Property...... 37 Autos for Rent/Leose...... 96 *T\imabout is fair play. Ford has become the first Real Estate Garogesand Storage...... 38 m o n t h l y r a t e s ... Recreotlonal Equipment...... 82 Miscellaneous Automotive...... 97 Also, be very wary of people who seem to have no Roommates Wanted...... 39 T l % domestic automaker to sell a vehicle to a Jap^ese Homes for Sale...... 21 Call 643-2711 for more Information! Boots and Marine Equipment...... 83 Wanted to Buy/T rade...... 98 relatives or friends who have known them from way Condominiums for Sole...... 22 Wanted to Rent...... 40 automaker who will then sell a rebadged version in its back. o \ own showrooms — much like Detroit automakers have READ YOUR AD: Clottlfed advertisements ore DEAR ABBY: Here’s one for you. My wife and I DEADLINES: For classified odvertlsments to taken by telephone os a conyenlence. The 5 - n been doing with their captive Japanese imports. The Ford RATES: 1 to 6 days: 90 cents per line per day. were married over a year ago. We sent w ading invita­ Singer grants request be published Tuesday through Saturday, the Manchester Herald Is responsible for only one Sinatra sings to Londoners, 7 to 19 days: 70 cents per line per day. Explorer compact four-wheel drive utility vehicle will be deadline Is noon on the day before publica­ Incorrect Insertion and then only for the size of tions to a number of family members and friends. One of 20 to 25 days: 60 cents per line per day. offered in Mazda dealerships as the 1991 Navajo. The tion. For advertisements to be published theorlglnol Insertion. Errors which do not lessen my cousins who lives many miles away called to say that toasts his bandleader son NORTH EAST', Pa. (AP) — Country-rock star 26 or more days: 50 cents per line per day. 2i ^ Explorer/Navajo, targeted at Jeep’s popular Cherokees, Monday, the deadline Is 2:30 p.m. on Fridoy. the value of the advertisement will not be she couldn’t attend, and asked whether we would like “a LONDON (AP) — Frank Sinatra celebrated Jerry Jeff Walker sported an “Ollinger’s Plumbing, Minimum charae: 4 lines. corrected by on additional Insertion. this” or “a that” from a prominent store in her town. American Independence Day by performing in the Heating and Air Conditioning” T-shirt on stage to will be buiilt in Louisville, Ky. q 5 •Asked if there is a traditional rear-wheel drive, six- I chose between the two items and thanked her, but country that still sometimes thinks of the United acknowledge the plumber who cajoled him to give a passenger sedan in Buick’s future, Buick general now I really can’t recall what the items were. It was a States as “the colonics.” concert here. manager Ed Mertz replied, “Any model year now.” very cordial conversation. “I asked my agent if it “I like a man who knows what he wants and goes Well, here it is, a year later, and neither the “this” nor Translation: 1992. The name for this back-to-the-future Notices HELP was smart to book an act in and gets it,” Walker, who also traded his beige fell Buick? Roadmaster. No word on whether the new sedan WANTED the “that” has arrived. My concern: Did my cousin forget London on July 4lh,” the or decide not to send anything (which is fine), or did the cowboy hat for a maroon North East baseball cap, will have portholes like the famous Roadmasters of yore. Se// Your Car 74-ycar-old Sinatra said hollered to the screams and shouts of 250 fans who As a condition precedent store not send it (which isn’t). And, hence, since my •“Mercury customers are more interested in the feel of to the picicement of any during his show Wednes­ packed his show Tuesday night. ACT NOW-START AT m cousin may have thought a gift was sent and she hasn’t day night at London Arena. a V-8 engine,”" said a Ford spokesperson in explaining a d y e rtis in g in th e why the Cougar XR7 won’t available with a siqjer- Manchester Herald, Ad­ received a “thank-you,” she may be miffed. The audience laughed Walker, 48, catapulted to fame in 1968 when he $11.77 HR. O “□ What is the right thing to do? charged V-6 next year. A supercharged Thunderbird will vertiser hereby agrees and applauded warmly as recorded the now-classic “Mr. Bojangles.” Other hits to protect, indemnify POSTAL JOBS ARE PERPLEXED IN PRINCETON still be offered, though you’ll also be able to buy a T- AVAILABLE NATIONWIDE. Sinatra broke into the include “L.A. Freeway” and “Up Against the Wall, and hold harmless the DEAR PERPLEXED: Since your cousin did not attend opening bars of “Strangers Redneck.” Bird with a V-8. FOR EXAMINATION 2 o But for 1992 Buick will add a supercharger to its V-6 Manchester Herald, its ANDAPPUATION O T 1 the wedding, and you received no gift from her, I think in the Night.” Chuck Ollingcr got the idea of a Walker show in officers and employees powered Park Avenue Ultra (the Ultra model goes on sale INFORMATION CAU: it’s safe to assume that she sent none. In any case, I For more than an hour, this village on the shore of Lake Erie so he and his against any and all 4 Linesns — 10 Days m (219) 836-8157 would not ask her if she had sent anything. She may get Sinatra sang his favorite buddies could have front-row seats to hear one of this summer). And for 1994, a new replacement for the liability, loss or ex­ o ) compact Skylark model will have a supercharged V-6 en­ ext. 654 50

Frank Sinatra billion in costs from its 1990 budget tion of rights of privacy etc. Re-financino also one point to toast the But with the help of a local radio station and and infringement of accepted. Coll 278-7616. NO REFUNDS OR 3D CO Peter Gott, M.D. bandleader — his son, word-of-mouth advertising, the $18 tickets sold out copyright and SALESMEN/SALESWG/y Frank Sinatra Jr. in four days. proprieta^ rights, unfair EN- Manchester Insu­ ADJUSTMENTS THE GREAT CLASSIFIED TREASURE HUNT DD > Today In History competition and libel rance Agency looking > H Carter criticizes Bush and slander, which may tor on experienced If you have any item for sale and you're asking $100 or ■D Actor named theater executive commercial lines pro­ PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Former President result from the publica­ In need of safe sleep PARIS (AP) — Veteran actor and stage director tion of any advertise­ ducer. Salary & com­ Jimmy Carter gave President Bush mixed reviews mission commensu­ CLASSIFIED less, The Manchester Herald's the place to sell it. ment in the Manchester Jacques Lassalle has been named to head the pres­ after accepting Philadelphia’s $100,000 Liberty Today is Thursday, July 5, the 186th day of 1990. rate with book of DEAR DR. GOTT: I have insomnia for which my tigious French theater company Comedie Francaise. There are 179 days left in the year. Herald by advertiser, in­ business or produc­ Medal. cluding advertisements 643-2711 For a limited time, we will run your item at this incredible doctor has prescribed Tranxene. Could you please sug­ tion. Career opportun­ He succeeds Antoine Vitez, who died in April. The “I’ve been extremely disappointed in President in any free distribution ity. Coll Ed 643-6401 9-4. gest another medication that won’t affect the mind? Today’s highlight in history: appointment was announced Wednesday. Bush on environmental issues,” Carter said Wednes­ publications published NAIL TECHNICAN- price. DEAR READER: Insomnia is one of mankind’s most On July 5, 1935, President Franklin D. Roosevelt by the Manchester day after the gala Freedom Festival at Independence signed into law the National Labor Relations Act, which needed In Glastonbury common ailments. All of us experience it on occasion, Lassalle, who turns 54 tliis week, has directed the Hall. Herald. Penny Sietfert, Noll Solon. Expe­ especially during times of stress and worry. Insomnia is provided for a National Labor Relations Board, and Publisher. rienced only. Coll 659- National Theater of Strasbourg since 1983. In 1967 “In almost every case he’s come down basically on authorized labor to organize for the purpose of collective worsened by stimulants (such as caffeine), alcohol and the same positions as James Watt,” said Carter, refer­ 2068 or 659-2153. he founded the Studio-Theatre in Vitry, outside Paris, bargaining. many medicines. Also, environmental factors — such as which he directed until 1983. ring to the controversial interior secretary under TEACHER, NURSERY C lassifiedS noise and light — may interruprt normal sleep prattems. On this date: PART TIME SCHOOL- loin the Bush’s predecessor. President Reagan. In 1801, American naval hero David G. Farragut was I YWCA team & work 25 People who are required to sleep at odd hours or who Lassalle said he was “moved and honored by the “But on other things, in national affairs, I think HELP WANTED hours per week must frequently change their sleep patterns often suffer warm welcome” he received from the Comedie Fran­ bom in Knoxville, Tenn. Bush is doing a great job,” Carter, a Democrat, told In 1810, showman Phineas T. Bamum was bom in September- May. BA In insomnia. Temporary sleeplessness is common. caise troupe. He said he would maintain the 1990-91 reporters who asked for his assessment of the PART TIME-We need 8 appropriate field plus Bethel, Conn. people to work port Nonetheless, there are patients who are simply unable program of pcrformariccs planned by Vitez. Republican administration. experience. Send re­ to sleep — night after n i^ t, week after week. Their per­ In 1811, Venezuela became the first South American time from out tele­ sume to M. Money, counUy to declare its independence from Spain. phone soles office for YWCA 78 North Main PER LINE, PER DAY sonal lives and work habits may be affected. They be­ molor dolly news­ Street, Manchester, come concerned; this very concern may exacerbate the paper, 5pm-9pm, 06040 by July 6th. EOE. insomnia. Such people are often aided by the limited use Mondoy-Frldav and MINIMUM 4 LINES (Each acJditional line $.90) Saturday o.m. 9 fo COMPUTER LITERATE •PRICE OF ITEM MUST BE INCLUDED of medication. I ‘ 12:30. 21 hours weekly. SECRETARY- F u ll­ rbrtunately, there are many effective sleep remedies Nine new series are expected to be successful time, for small, Guaranteed hourly PRIVATE PARTY ADS ONLY available; unfortunately, they all affect the mind and, poy. No experience ne­ friendly, non-smoking business. Varied re- therefore, liave side effects, including drug dependence, By JAY SHARBUTT in household ratings will be half that of the fall of 1989, cessary. We will train. Pleasant working con­ sp^-sibllltles reoulre dizziness, liglitheadedness, hangover, headache, nervous­ AP Television Writer the agency’s study says. Intelligence, organiza­ Second-place ABC will continue to make inroads, ditions, bonuses, com­ ness and poor coordination. TV Topics missions. For Inter­ tion, & ability to work CALL TODAY AND SELL YOUR ITEM Tranxene (clorazepate) is such a drug; it is primarily NEW YORK — Despite decreasing network audien­ “especially among younger viewers, where the network view, contact Mr. Independently. Profi­ an anti-anxiety medication that is occasionally used for ces, no network executives have yet impaled themselves will be ahead of NBC,” the study says. Christopher between 3- ciency In Word Perfect TOMORROW. 7pm. 647-9946. & D bose 0 plus. Salary anxiety-induced insomnia. The manufacturer does not on a ratings point. Indeed, they are so optimistic that speedy by a lab accident, and “The Green Machine,” commensurate with 1 CBS — whose executives grouse about reporters who recommend it for long-term use. they’ve got 33 new series coming up next season. about what you’d call an environmental A-Team. experience. Benefits. precede the initials CBS with the phrase “still mired in I’ve found that insomniacs who do not wish to lake But hello, what’s this? Saalchi & Saatchi Advertising, NBC’s “Signs of Life,” a “reality” series about medi­ Coll office manager at third” — will find itself still mired in third. one of the nation’s largest advertising agencies, doesn’t cal case histories from the patients’ points of view, also 228-0721. Ask for Lee Ann or llze CLASSIFIED SALES DEPT. mind-altering drugs are often helped by over-the-counter But it “will hold onto its young audience via new com­ m NOWS You’ll Sell It Faster with 643-2711 rale any of the newcomers as a potential hit. This does gets a “long shot” judgment. “It’s painfully uncomfort­ FIND A CASH buyer lor Benadryl, an antihistamine that causes drowsiness — able to watch,” Saatchi says. edies,” the study says. without side effects or hangover. The drug is exuemely not mean it is Bummer Time, iliough. THE TIME those golf clubs you never HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS But tlierc’ll be a dire need in Hollywood next season safe, and when taken in a dose of 100 to 150 milligrams Saatchi’s annual forecast rales nine new series as And upstart Fox Broadcasting, by expanding to a use! Advertise them for for live studio audiences who will laugh at anything, t^TOBUY! sole In classified. Just dial at bedtime, will result in a restful sleep. Ask your doctor having a “very good” chance of success, including five-nighl-a-week schedule this fall, “will forfeit its ex­ 643-2711 even a sitcom taped right in front of them. This is be­ 643-2711 to place your od. about this. Also, you might consider treating your NBC’s “Fresh Prince of Bel Air,” which will test traordinary growth patterns of recent seasons, but should cause 18 of next season’s 33 new shows are sitcoms. anxiety with non-drug therapy, such as transcendental whctlicr rap music can work in a sitcom set in Bel Air. still hold its youthful viewers.” In fact, says the study, new and returning comedies meditation, counseling or relaxation techniques. (Bel Air, a wealtliy enclave in Los Angeles, is largely will represent 29 percent of the combined schedules of DEAR DR. GOTT: Please inform me on the details populated by Hollywood folk. Most arc Brooklyn natives who always wanted to play tennis.) CBS, NBC, ABC and Fox Broadcasting, up 2 percent 9 on Adrenalin addiction. How prevalent is it in today’s Elsewhere in television ... from the halcyon season of 1989-90. world? “NBC seems to have caught the rap wave while it’s VENI, VIDI, VIDEO: CBS, which no doubt wishes it NBC, which has a total of 17 new and returning sit­ / . f DEAR READER: Epinephrine is a substance still high,” says the Saalchi analysis in regard to “Fresh had ABC’s “America’s Fuimiesl Home Videos” on its ' k coms on its roster, is seeking the most laughs. Saatchi’s produced naturally in the human body. It stimulates the Prince.” roster, nonetheless has a summer sitcom about a young IT’S TAG SALE TIME study says NBC’s sitcom roster represents 36 percent of adrenal glands and causes increased heart rate and blood Saalchi docs not exactly do TTic Wave for Steven man and his vidcocamera. Starting July 20, the show is that network’s schedule — the highest percentage of any pressure. It also relaxes certain involuntary muscles, Bochco’s “Cop Rock,” diough. An innovative ABC “Wish You Were Here,” starring Lew Schneider. He e.specially those lining the bronchial passages. Adrenalin series, the show juxtaposes big-city police work with network. plays a guy who, after his girlfriend breaks up with him, But dramas, as they call hour-long series, are momen­ 4 Days for the Price of 3! is the trademark for synthetically manufactured songs and musical production numbers. gives up his Wall Street job to see the world live on tape. tarily in decline at the networks. Because of their “disap­ epinephrine. It is used by injection to counter shock and It may well be much more tlian just a show where Are things piling up? Then why not have a tag sale? police warn a suspect, “Anytliing you sing can and will pointing performance” in ratings last season, Saatchi THOUGHT FOR TODAY: There is no television ad­ treat asthma. To my knowledge, it has no addiction potential. There­ be used against you ...” says, cutbacks have been made. vertising in Holland, Switzerland and West Germany on The best way to announce It Is with a Herald Classified Ad. Indeed, Saatclii says tlie show’s dramatic scenes arc as Dramas will account for 38 percent of the networks’ Saturdays, Sundays and holidays, according to a new 9 fore, I believe Adrenalin addiction docs not exist. schedules next season, compared to 45 percent in To give you more information, I am sending you a free hard-hitting as anytliing ever seen on T'V. But the musi­ two-volume study entitled “TV Advertising on European Just place your ad before Tuesday and you’re all set for copy of my Health Report “Help II — Mental/Substancc cal numbers, at best, “are amusing” and at worst, “can be 1989-90. Networks.” distracting and irritating,” its analysis says. How does Saatchi handicap this fall’s network ratings the week. Abuse.” Other readers who would like a copy should ONE MORE THOUGHT FOR TODAY: The two- send $1.25 with their name and address to P.O. Box It declares “Cop Rock” a “maybe.” joust? TAG SALE SIGN f i f l j WHEN YOU PLACE AN AD. STOP IN AT OUR OFFICE. | NBC, the prime-lime winner for five seasons, will volume study by Jean Arachtingi, a Firis-based broad­ Call =tl 91369, Cleveland, OH 44101-3369. Be sure to mention Two CBS scries get the lowest mark of “long shot.” 643-2711 Tlicy are “TTic f-Tash.” about a police scientist made remain in first place, but its margin of victory over ABC casting consultant, is on sale for $4,800. i tiie title.

-s: 0 MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, July 5, 1990—15 14—MANCHESTER HERALD. Thursday. July 5.1990

p p m .™ ^HOMES [2] ] HOMES I APARTMENTS CONDOMINIUMS I HOMES FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR RENT FOR RENT Astrograph CLASSIFIED CRAFTS FOR SALE HERE'S ■START YOUR INDE- MANCHESTER-2 bed­ A Feature of This Newspaper ATTENTION: GOVERN­ MANCHESTER-lovelv 2 in a methodical manner. Do things one tee of one to get it done. NEW PRICE $130's, , PENDENCE now and MENT HOMES FROM room townhouse, nice bedroom, IVz bath build for vour future. step at a time. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Usually CHFA APPROVED. $1 (U-repalr)l Delin­ location. All applian­ Townhouse, end unit. 1 Terrific starter. 3 bed­ ^ o u r VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You’ll be bet­ you are rather outgoing and friendly in Oversized 4 bedroom, 2 MY quent tax property. ces, heat and hot wa­ Full basement, central ter at calling the shots today than you bath. Cape on Chester room Ranch In Im m ac­ your personal relationships, but today Repossessions. Call (1) ter, carpeting, air con­ air. Available Imme­ ^ r t h d £ ^ will be trying to comply with the dlrac- Dr. 1st floor den. ulate condition. Deco­ ditioning. Call 649-5240. you might be a trifle withdrawn. Come 602-838-8885, E xt.G H diately. Call 646-6079. tives of others. Don't be reluctant to Fireplace, carpeting rated very well. Priced out o( your corner, you’ll have more fun 775. GREAT LOCATION, 2 take charge when you see other being a mixer than a loner. and garage! Blanchard at $134,000. R E /M A X 5 Room spacious con- July 6,1990 CARD... SPACIOUS 8. bedroom Condo. Close fumbling. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) View your 81 Rossetto Realtors," East of the River, 647- do/PUD, gzrage, yard, AFFORDABLE-Owner to downtown Manches­ LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Don't waste expectations realistically today, be­ We're Selling Houses" 1419.0 patio. Lydall Woods. Even though partnership arrangements transferred. Must ter. Busline and high­ any time today on frivolous pursuits, cause your possibilities for making 646- 2482.0 PLEASE TELL THEM STRIKE UP THE BAND- way. $600 plus utilities. $800 per month, plus might not be too appealing to you In the leave this lovely 6 room year ahead, several alliances you form because if you focus on your more seri­ them realities are within the realm of B E S T VALUES IN You can really enter­ spilt level, 3 bedrooms, 1 month security. utilities. 569-3317. ous priorities what you can accomplish AREA! New modular will be extremely advantageous. Others probability. Practical goals are tain In this 1 bedroom hardwood floors 8i gar­ Available August 1st. may amaze you. Handle the tougher achievable. Ranches to be built. 5 YOU SAW IT IN Townhouse. Striking Call 649-8502. might be only of nominal value. age. Superb lot in quiet Is advertising expensive? matters first. ARIES (March 21-April 19) Your possi­ rooms, 3 bedrooms. lower level den or of­ neighborhood area. MANCHESTER-2 BED­ You'll be surprised now CANCER (June 21-July 22) A partner­ SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If there is a bilities for being an achiever are quite Vinyl siding, full base­ fice. Sliders open to THE MANCHESTER HERALD! OWNER ANXIOUS! ROOM DUPLEX. Rem­ economical It Is to adver­ ship arrangement could represent your serious issue you'd like to iron out with good today, but you’re likely to be ex­ m ent. A v a ila b le In fields and trees. Asking odeled inside and out. tise In Classified. 643-2711. Mansfield, Coventry, NORTH COVENTRY, most beneficial Involvement today. It another today, don’t beat about the tremely selective regarding your objec­ PLANS FOR OUTDOOR PROJECTS. Turn $90's Out of state owner Living room, dining and Ashford $124,900 $147,900. Philips Real will have mutual advantages, but each bush. Get down to basics as quickly as tives. If you’re not strongly motivated, your backyard Into an activity center. Plans needs sale. RE/MAX Estate, 742-1450a room, appllanced kit­ possible and set your mind upon up. Philips Real Estate, East of the River, 647- party will have to work at it. Get a jump you might wait until later. for virooden glider, lawn care caddy and chen, porch and deck. I HOMES resolutions. 742-14500 1419.0 NEWER TOWNHOUSE on life by understanding the influences TAURUS (April 20-May 20) A lesson gazebo party center Include brick barbeque DOUGLAS C. STOKER STYLE CONDO- 2 bed­ Nice area. $750 per FOR RENT which are governing you in the year SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Be you’ve learned from a painful, past ex­ pit construction tips, plus gazebo varia­ GREAT STARTER OR MARCH T)4R6 u GH THE month, plus utilities alert for ways to improve your material RETIREMENT (203) 643-8275 rooms, I ’/j baths. Fire­ ahead. Send for your Astro-Graph pre­ perience will be put to constructive use tions. #4014 Special $14.95 USTOM UT WOODS-To vour very place in the living and security. No pets. COVENTRY LAKE- pri­ dictions today by mailing $1.25 to As­ circumstances today. Your possibilities today. You're not apt to make the same HOME. Easy to take own town home. 1500 Available July 1. 649- vate 500 feet waterfront for personal gain look good, even mictaUo tuuic'o care of, this 3 room room. Walkout base­ tro-Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. SATISFACTION OR YOUR MONEY BACKI square feet sets this ment 8i vinyl siding. 5400 or 872-8555. lot. 3 bedroom contem­ Box 91428, Cleveland. OH 44101-3428. though what you might get won't be GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Financial or Ranch In move-ln- end unit apart from the porary. l'/2 baths, ap­ To order plans mail check or money order ' condition. Paved North Coventry, Be sure to state your zodiac sign. earth shaking. commercial Involvements should be LAWN - SCAPE others. Large roomy, MANCHESTER- pliances. $1200. Call CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) If some­ and project number and name, with your driveway, porch. "We Specialize In Youl" $116,555. SEVERAL TO LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Something your strong suit today. You’ll recognize "The Finishing Touches" appllanced and eat In beautlful quality 1 bed- 225-3035. thing difficult has to be taken care of in Newer siding, nice big CHOOSE FROM! Phil­ you've been trying to do that hasn't a good deal If you see one and you'll name, address and zip code. Add $2.95 for kitchen. Triplesllder to room, quiet, on your dealings with your peers today, lot. A rare find! Coven­ ips Real Estate, 742- worked out successfully so far can be know how to advantageously tit yourself catalog (Includes $16 in discount couponsi) 807 HarlforcJ Rd. HOURS: patio. Asking $120's 1450a busline. Air conditi­ accomplished today if you approach it you are likely to be appointed a commit­ into the picture. In Okla. please add tax. try , $95,000. Philips RE/MAX East of the Manchester, CT 06040 THURS*4 ^Fm 9-7 oned. Living room, din­ STORE/OFFICE Real Estate, 742-1450o River, 647-1419.0 NICE 3 ROOM HOME on ing room, kitchen with CLASSIFIED CRAFTS 37b Oakland St. large, private lot. Deck FOR RENT TIRED OF RENTING??? (203)647-1931 SATURDAY-9-4 CAPTIVATING!! This appliances, Including MANCHESTER HERALD, 06040 Roomy 2 bedroom with BBQ Is great for (Flexible Hours Available) Manchester. CT 06040 oversized Cape offers a frost free refrigerator, STORE FOR RENT-460 P.O. BOX 1000, BIXBY, OK 74008 Ranch close to private cookouts. Appliances self-cleaning oven, and well planned layout for 8< storage space pro­ Main St. Manchester. beach tor your fishing ease of living and en­ dishwasher. Ideal for Bridge and swimming enloy- vides everything to Please call 646-2426,9to tertaining. Large size Seniors or middle- 5 weekdays._____ ment. Shed with boat make this a great star- aged. Come, see why bedrdcims, first floor ter or retirement port. Perfect for first L O W COST we rarely have a va­ OFFICE space 500 square family room, family home. COVENTRY, feet. Excellent loco- cinctly in “How to Play a Bridge time buyers. Coventry, sized deck and more. A cancy. Large storage NORTH 7-5-90 If you need It, Hand" (Crown Publishers, Inc.). If dia­ $119,424. Philips Real $95,000. Philips Real tlon. Heat, janitor, FACTS ABOUT FAX HEALTH INSURANCE very well cared for Estate, 742-14500 area. Heat and hot ♦ A Q 9 Estate, 742-14500 water Included. $650. parking. $250/month. monds are 2-2 or if East has three, property. $217,500. Call 643-7175. VQ3 play for It there is no problem. If West has three SWEET AND PETITE!!! Pat Namerow 657-8364. BRAND NEW L IS T ­ 247-5030.______♦ 9 8 6 5 4 1131-J TOLLAND TURNPIKE FOR INDIVIDUALS ■ SELF-EMPLOYED • SMALL BUSINESS diamonds, you can keep him out of the This 1 bedroom condo R E /M A X East of the ING!!! Delightful Du­ NEW professional con­ ♦ a J7 MANCHESTER. CT 06040 By James Jacoby lead only if East has the lone queen, so on Eldridge St. In Man­ River, 647-1419.0 plex on Eldridge Street temporary 2 bedroom. chester might be lust 100% COVERAGE! USEANYDOCTOR! In Manchester. Each Skylights, cathedral VACATION WEST EAST you must allow for it. MANCHESTER COUN­ side features 2 bed­ South would have liked stronger Y ♦ 10 4 2 ♦ J 7 6 3 After winning the king of hearts, de­ what you are looking TRY CHARM-$219,900- ceilings, exposed RENTALS clubs, but everything else about his tor! Great floor plan Low Group Rates • $5 Million Dollar Protection rooms, 8, one side has a beams, carpeting, pa­ V J 9 7 4 2 V A 10 5 clarer plays a spade to reach dummy. MON - FRI 10 00 A M. TO 9 00 P.M A pleasure to come newer kitchen with CHARLESTOWN ♦ J 10 3 ♦Q cards cried out for a game force in no- When he leads a diamond from dum­ with an open kitchen SATURDAY 10.00 A M TO 6:00 P.M. home too. Lovely tio 8< deck. Air condi­ and dining area, fully PAULINE PLANTE range 8i refrigerator. tioning, appliances In­ RHODE ISLAND- cot­ ♦ K g ♦86543 trump. West led a heart, and declarer my and East plays the queen, declarer (203) M9-1450 SUNDAY NOON TO 5.00 P.M. Dental • Eyeglasses • Prescription • Ambulance large lot on quiet cul de Located In a CBD zone. tage. Sleeps 5. $425 a put up dummy’s queen, won by East appllanced, private sac street. Decorated cluding dishwasher. SOUTH can play low. Since East has no more basement, extra large It allows business, and $950/month + heat. week. 646-0174. After with the ace. Back came the 10 of hearts, declarer will win the next trick with country charm Is lust a short walk to June 24. 1-401-364-1025. ♦ K 8 5 closets for ample stor­ John Madey (203) 871-1609 and warmth. Beautiful Coll 647-8266. V K 8 6 hearts, ducked, and the third heart, and play A-K of diamonds, running the age. Built In 1981. Of­ Main Street! Offered at won by declarer’s king. It was appar­ In ground pool for $149,900. Jackson 8. ♦ A K 7 2 suit to make his contract. If the queen m * / fered at $89,900. Jack- summer fun and large CENTRALLY Located 4 ♦ 10 9 2 ent that West had started with five of diamonds had not appeared from son & Jackson Real Jackson Real Estate, room apartment. 2nd INDUSTRIAL wrap around deck for 647-8400.O hearts, and it was equally apparent East, declarer would of course have Estate, 647-8400.O Wa Specialize in Wedding Cakes & Birthday Cakes entertaining and sun­ floor. Security re­ PROPERTY Vulnerable: Both that making the contract depended BRAND NEW LISTING quired. Call for details. Dealer: North played A-K, hoping for the best. FOR PETE'S SAKE- ning. Even a gazebo for upon setting up extra diamond tricks James Jacoby 's books “Jacoby on Bridge’ and What's It going to take? cool summer evenings. !!! Spacious 10 room 643-6836. M A NCHESTER- Use your office fax machine to colonial on Mountain South West North East without allowing West to gain the “Jacoby on Card Games’ (written with his father, How about an unbe­ Don't miss out-call Di­ MANCHESTER- 2nd Avallable July 1, Road In Manchester! I ♦ Pass lead. the late Oswald Jacoby) are now available at place your ad. lievable $5000.00 reduc­ floor, 3 room, full attic, 4800/7200/1200 square bookstores Both are published by Pharos Books oMatc i^aket}^ <& (^hop ane, 647-1419 or 228- 2 NT Pass All pass Bill Root analyzes this problem suc­ tion In price on this Features Include: $500 per month. Secur­ feet commerlcalindus- 3 NT It's Fast! It's Simple! 4514.RE/MAX East of modern kitchen with gem of a Split Level on 846 Main Street the River, 647-1419.0 ity & references re­ trlal 3 phase electric. Spring St.! This Im­ Manchester, CT 06040 Corlan & Italian tile, 4 quired. 643-1577. 646-5477. Opening lead: V 4 Our Fax number is SOUTH WINDSOR- bedrooms, 2.5 baths, maculate and lovingly WILSON ELECTRICAL CO., INC./CONTRACTORS $79,900-CHFA/FHA ap­ 203- 643-7496 Rec. room or office, cared fo r home offers 4 73 SUMMIT ST., MANCHESTER, CONN. 06040 proved Immaculate 4 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, large deck, central air Send us a copy of your ad room Ranch style 8i vac. 2 car attached Be sure to include fireplace, hardwood condo In exceptional floors, vinyl siding and Open 7 Days A Week (203) 649-5380 lE I US SHOW YOU HOW TO CUT YOUR ENERGY BILLS BY garage. MOVE-IN- 1) The size UP TO 25% WITH CLSiP'S ENERGY-SAVER UGHT1NG RE­ location. Amenities In­ CONDITION! $259,900. a manicured yard In clude central air, In­ 2) The date you want your ad to appear one of Manchester's BATE PROGRAM. Jackson 8, Jackson door and outdoor Real Estate, 647-8400.O 3) Your phofie number prettiest neighbor­ pools, exercise and n ^ hoods! Now $169,900!! club rooms. D.W. Fish OLD TIME CRAFTS­ Need Help? Jackson 8, Jackson , Realty, 643-1591.0 MANSHIP!!! You'll S pedali^D Jft! Our Phone Number is Real Estate, 647-8400.D We Specialize in Wedding Cakes & Birthday Cakes find many lovely fea­ % COVENTRY-Serene SPLENDID PRIVACY!! United Powerwash tures from the early 203- 643-2711 settlng-$132,900. Well 1920's In this spacious 6 This terrific 4 room built 3 bedroom Ranch Townhouse at Beech- room Dutch Colonial Painting with an oversized gar­ on Strickland Street In MANCHESTER HERALD wood on Highland St. In (pe n n y's < ^a ke ty Charming, 8 room Vlc- $134,900! Jackson & able price. Complete home what tolook for... TECHNICIAN- LISTING! Like new, 6 tasteful decor, clean Open 7 Days A Week (203) 871-0099 Ceram ic Tile ■Bobcat a Backhoe Work torlan In good Jackson Real Estate, or office, also general clean­ D&HHOME 2 o Experlence desired, room Townhouse. 2 and neat Inside and Fully Insured Senior Citizens Discount Free Estimates C a r p e n tr y ■Stump Removal and what to look Contracting & Q -n condition. 4 bedrooms, 647-8400. □______ing. Call for free estimates. but not necessary. Will bedrooms, panelled out! Priced to sell at Licensed S Insured ■Screen Top Son a 643-7099 2 full baths, beautiful ANDOVER-$100,900-Just out for!” train. For more Infor­ Rec room, dining $113,900. Jackson 8. Tom's installation 649-2562 Landscape Materials IMPROVEMENT m ^ mation call 647-8997. room, central air, fire­ Jackson Real Estate, bow windows, 2 car reduced. Picture your­ Maintenance i garage on nicely sited self In this weekend 647-7126 Oelivefed BOOKKEEPER POSI­ place, garage and 647- 8400.g______•Roofing P w much more. Only (21X3)643-2711 P.O. BOX 591 { on a large lot. D.W. retreat overlooking Country Cleaners ■Stone Driveways HarBro Company: TION AVAILABLE DYNAMITE-FIreworks { Fish Realty, 643-1591.0 peaceful Andover $124,000.U & R Realty, will ring In your ears CARPENTER & Commercial a Residential 644-5998 •Siding IMMEDIATELY-Part Lake. f=uIIv furnished or full time book­ 643-2692.0 when you see this qual­ iBOLTON-Country llvlng- Expedenced and dependable $164,900. Big 4 bedroom complete with canoe HANDYMAN SERVICE Painting ■Painting interior & Exterior keeper. Call Steve or CONDOMINIUMS-Sunny ity crafted 8 room Co­ //7|i (kill for a free estimate •Seamless Gutters Ranch on a nice coun­ and ready tor summer Ken at 643-8844. Ranch Condo, private lonial In Rockledge on No job too small. of Manchester ■Waiipapering CMMNTfl try acre. Breezy and fun. Don't miss this Carol Green Brookside Exterior entrance. Rent with op­ heavily treed lot. 2 Specializing in remodeling. •Full Re-Modeling Quality Painting ■Remodeling -Custom Kitchens SPEECH/LANGUAGE spacious describe this one. ______649-0778 PATHOLOGIST: tion to buy! $59,900. fireplaces, hardwood CUSTOM QUALITY Fully Insured. Maintenance & & Bathrooms IMMACULATE 1st floors-you will spin One Stop Improvements home with first floor Service Services Mansfield Elementary family room, 2 full BUSINESS Call Tom - 649-6273 ■Free Estimates ■Room Alterations & Additions Schools. To begin Sep­ floor unit. Fully with this beauty. Framing to Painting Landscaping apllanced! $60,900. R E/M A X East of the JiaiifIji-Htrr BmlJl baths and 2 car garage. PROPERTY •Written Guarantee •Senior Qtizen Discounts ■Replacement Windows tember 1990. Half-time ) D.W. Fish Realty, 643- •Aluminum Sc Vinyl 2BEDROOM END River, 647-1419.0 YOU CAN enlov extra ■Elwirical Speech/Language Pa­ I 1591.0 GLASTONBURY- ware­ vacation money by ex­ Div. of GRF & Company, Inc. •References Powerwashing thologist needed to UNIT. Pool & Tennis, bo YOU REPAIRCARS? CUSTOM QUAUTY Licensed ;i N - L A W APART- house space available One stop improvements. changing idle Items in ■Plumbing work In grodes pre­ charming village set­ $229,900. This current 2 DAVID ADAMICK Specialist in Year-Round and Insured M E N T l II $137,900. Lots near center of town, '/j Framing to Painting. vour home for cosh ... •Licensed and Insured 646-6815 ■Roofing school to 4. Preference ting.$124,900. Anne fam ily sits on a highly (203) 647-1814 Exterior Maintenance M iller Real Estate, 647- 16 BRAINARO PLACE Of Victorian charm In mile from highway Licensed 8 Insured. with an ad in classified. ■Exterior Siding given to Individuals visible area on Adams HERALD SQUARE VERY We're Here To Serve 8000. o Street In a Commercial this 4 bedroom Colon- with rooms from 400 Call Dave Adamick Call 643-2711 to place your Residential ■ Commercial with early childhood FAX (203) 643-7496 MANCHESTER. CONN. 06040 square feef to over 3000 ■Decks B-1 zone. Use the 2 car ; lal with 3 full baths, for a tree quote. ad. experience. CT State CHFA CONDOS-A great ■ formal dining room, square feet with access ■Lawn Maintenance COMPETITIVE Senior Citizen Discount license In Speech/Lan­ time to buy. $75,900. garage fo r your repair I and a newer 30x18 addl- to loading dock. Coll 647-1814 Complete Property Maintenance guage Pathology re- Spacious unit In Wood­ business while you oc­ I tion fo r an In-law Kevin of 633-9474. ■Landscape Design & Instailallon PRICES BRUSH WORKS aulred. ASHA, CCC-SL land Garden Complex. cupy one of the 4 room i apartm ent or convert It HEATING/ Interior Painting preferred. Closing date Well kept with pool. apartments. The lot In­ * easily to a family room ■Exterior Power Washing ol Ml cludes a large parking TREE SERVICE/ PLUMBING 648-1981 - July 20, 1990. Appllco- Maintenance fee onlv ^^DollarDiyDock H E R L X ^ E with a private en­ Surfaces ★ Free Estimates 203 643-6774 tlons at Board of Edu­ $69. Centurv21, Epstein lot and possibility of ^KITCHEN & BATH^ I ROOMS PRUNING other businesses like t^arnL'U How m an Heal Ivsialc trance. The house sits cation Office, 4 S. Ea- Realty, 647-8895. c < ' "■ ' ' ■ on 0 nice size large FOR RENT ■Driveway Sealing & Paving 24 hours ★ 12 yrs. experience No Job Too Small olevllle Rd. Storrs, CT IMMACULATE 2 bed­ retail, office, and gen­ M&M OIL eral service busi­ Off lie: (203) 633 3661 ; lot-perfect for a grow- w/excelleni references 06268 (429-3372) EOE room unit with loft. Professional Kitchen 8i Bathroom Remodeling WARRICK BROS. PLUMBING & HEATING ■Tree Work nesses. Call one of our * Ino family. Call the ROOMS tor rent In Man­ •Pruning SALES $100,900. Century 21, office today tor your ■ Oil Burner Service & Sales ★ Repair ceilings, walls GSL Building agents for all of the NORMA J. MARSHALL, cau Visit our Showroom chester. Halt price spe­ •Tree Removal ■Tractor Work MAN AGERS/REPS- Epstein Realty, 647- exclusive showing! ■Professional CUmbIng ■ Automatic OH Delivery 8895.______details! Anne M iller Kialtor Assoiiau-* - liioker 254 Broad Street • Manchester, CT 06040 ! cial. 646-8337. ★ Refinish cabinets Maintenance Co. $700/$2060 w eekly.Im ­ Real Estate, 647-8000.a I Anne Miller Real Est- •WeH Pumps Sales & Service PAINTING/ mediate Income ser­ rrc.sltlciil's (.kill LARGE ENOUGH tor 2. # Senior Citizen Discounts ■Gutter Cleaning & Maintenance Commerclal/Resldential LOVELY 2 bedroom, IVj t ate, 647-8000.O ■Water Heaters (EiMirk; s Om ) w/line finished work vicing high volume CHFA $$ COMING, July Kitchen privileges. * Fully Insured PAPERING building repair and home bath unit facing the GEORGE R. JAY (2(X3) 649-5400 ■Bathroom & Kitchen chain. No fund rolslng lake. Century 21, Ep- 5th! Charming 4 bed­ 13(> New London I'ninpike lloTiK- ( 20.M () i() 4320 •2 ACRES-2 BARNS! Bus line, parking. 647- 203-645-8892 ★ Fully Insured improvements. Interior and room Cape with unique President FAX (203) 649-8265 645-1973 Remodeling accounts. High busi­ steln Realty, 647-8895. (il.isionl)uiy, i: r IX)03.'1 l ax (203) ()57-Hyi5 ! $198,900. 2 acres of 9813 after 7 pm only. WEJGLE'S PAINTING CO. exterior painting, light car­ ness, bonuses. Call 818- lay-out. Lots of work ' space abounds this cus- ■Senior Citizen Discounts Free Estimates CHARMING 2 bedroom, Quality work at a 647-0836 pentry. Complete janitorial 783-8274.______done In kitchen and * tom built 3 bedroom COVENTRY- Sunny, pri­ HAWKES TREE SERVICE ■Electric Work IV2 bath. Cape with 1 Landscaping Consulting reasortable pricel servk^. Experienced, reli­ bath. Full basement, j home with formal dln- vate entrance, bath, Bucket, truck & chipper. FREE ESTIMATES LABORER-tor shop and car garage. Century Interior & Exterior able, free estimates. garage with covered I Ing room, lower level fireplace. Non- Stump removal. Free Fuily Insured yard duties. Expe­ 21, Epstein Realty, 647- TOM TIM Phone: Free Estimalee potion. CHFA Candi­ JOHNJ. KEANE. Pres. 2O3-64»-910e J family room with smokers. $400. Coll 742- estimates. Special rience preferred. 289- 8895 date!! $132,9(X). Strano Call Brian Welgle ROOFING/ 643-0304 644-5998 423-0091 . woodstove hookup and 5861.______consideration for etderly and 649-2871 2323. EOE Real Estate Co. 647- SIDING • walkout to private MANCHESTER handicapped Screened Top Soil 645-8912 LEGAL ASSISTANT po­ 7653. EARTH RENOVATORS backyard. There's Any amount delivered BRICK & STONE sition for 4 attorneys. comfortable room, 2nc 647-7553 BECAUSE YOU never IN EXCELLENT CONDI- plenty of room for floor, gentlemen only Abo: Backhoe, Bobcat, & NO JOB TOO BIG OR SMALL CONSTRUCTION Some secretarial skills « LAND CLEARED • SCREENED TOPSOIL storage In the 2 car­ know when someone will RESIDENTIAL necessary. Call Attor­ TION, this 6 room Co- $75 per week. Non- be searching for the Item Loader available McHugh Himself Fireplacet, Walk*, Walk, Patlo't. • NEW LAWNS INSTALLED & LANDSCAPE KEANE CORFORATION riage barns already ■Roof Repairs & Re-roofrg ney B otticello , 646- I HOMES lonlal hos new smokers preferred HANDYMEN/CARPENTERS you have for sale. It's Painting & wallpapering at Its thermopane windows, « STUMP REMOVAL MATERIALS DELIVERED BUILDING • BEMODELING I wired and ready for Call Rose 647-8400. CtMninaHaulitiQ,Carp^ry. Davis Construction ■Gutters John Wennergren 649-3012 3500. FOR SALE * horses. Maintenance Hamodelrg. Roasonaby PtICBd better to run your want ad best. Decks repaired ex replaced. enclosed front and INTERIOR TRIM. DECKS, ADDITIONS, KITCHENS for several days... cancel­ 872-1400 or 659-9555 ■Wood Shingles A Specialty 27 Years Experience DOG GROOMER- expe­ back porches, vinyl LIGHT EXCAVATING SERVICES { free exterior, deck and FreeEstImales Free Estimates. Fully Insured. rienced & able to finish ■ patio too! This gem on ASCKtsAnnMrsd ing it as soon as you get (^11 Anytime Ask For Gil 1 VERNON-New llstin, siding, fenced yard, Established 1974. results. Now Is the time to run on ______646^)674______work. 55 to 65% com­ lovely 8 room Ranch, deck and garage. Call • STONE DRIVEWAYS • RAILROAD TIE WALLS ! the outskirts of Man- APARTMENTS RI(*'sHarxtymana ad In classified to sell that mission. 429-5533 pref­ main floor family now tor CHFA Infor­ • BOBCAT 8 BACKHOE • ABOVE GROUND POOLS REGISTERED CONSUMER PROTECTION * chesterl Anne Miller Carpentry Sorvl<» 643-9321 FDR RENT_____ camera you no longer CUSTOM QUAUTY erably after 6pm. room, with fireplace, mation! $134,900.00. • TRENCHES • ASPHALT DRIVEWAYS REMOVED INSURED Real Estate, 647-8(XX).a 646-1948 LA W N CARE use. LIONEL COTE Ono stop Improvement*. plus a spacious lower Strano Real Estate, n Framing to Painting level recreation room. MANCHESTER 3,4,and 5 Wall Papering and Painting ROOFING & SIDING 647-7653. OVERSIZED R A N C H - Liconsod 4 Insured. 3 bedrooms, tormol room apartments. 646- GCF HOME SERVICES 30 years Experience CHFA POSSIBILITY- BOLTON $249,900. 2426 week days 9-5. ■30 Y e a rs Expierience Call Dave Adamick Excessive abbreviations dining room, 2V] baths, RMnodeKrrg, Additkxw. decks, YARDMASTERS soaclous 3 bedroom You've got to see Inside MOWING lnsurarx», References and ■Fully Insured for a free quote. abbreviate results! Be central air condition­ dutch colonial featur­ MANCHESTER- 2 bed­ wtrxlows, doors, drywall, SPRING CLEANUP th is roomy R anch room, 2nd floor. $625 a All lawn, tree, and Free Estimalee •License # 506737 sure readers understand ing, 20x40 In ground ing first floor family SaUstactkxi Guaranteed, Trees h Lawns Cut 647-1814 which boasts 2 firepla­ month. Security. No your ad by avoiding ab- pool. $235,000. U 8. R room, deck overlook­ ces, 4 bedrooms, 2 Vi FREE ESTIMATES shrub service Yards ♦ CaraHCs Cleaned MARTY MATTSSON 646-9564 Reolty, 643-2692.□ pets. Adults preferred. brevlotlons. 643-2711. ing yard, freshly baths and a huge gar­ Chris FItzmaurkje •Brush Ihles Removed 6 4 9 -4 4 3 1 644-8843. CALL JOHN •Truck & Backhoe Work WET BASEMENTS? BRAND NEW Vj painted and new age that will hold 4 carpets too! Century MODERN 2nd floor, 1 645-6559 •Exterior 1 lousepainting Hatchways, foundation cracks, DUPLEX- MANCHES­ MARTIN KITCHENS CARS. Spectacular 649-0773 buyer MEETS seller In 21, Epstein Realty, 647- bedroom apartment. •Driveways iaealed Interior/Exterior sump pumps, tile tines, gravity 9 TER $129,900. Beauti­ Relacing or New view of the surround­ the want ads ... time after 8895. Newly painted. Utili­ •Landscaping Installations ful, newly constructed, Give Us A Price ing hills. D.W. Fish •Complete Building 6c Painting Done time after time! feeds, and dry wells. Also damp­ Stars Realty, 643-1591.0 ties a appliances. •light caipenlrydriveway teallrrg vinyl sided Duplex. SOUTH WINDSOR-LIke and We ll Beal It! Prefer mature adult. DECKS/ LAWN-SCAPE lYopcrty MalntaiiH.*d ness proffing ol conaela walls Fully appllanced kit­ new 3 year old U 8. R •ceilings and walls repaired SPACIOUS CAPE WITH No pets, references a ADDITIONS ■Any Job Considered •altica and cellars cleaned and floors. (^Im ney clean outs, Stand chen. 2 bedrooms, IV2 Contemporary ATTACHED IN-LAW “The Rnlshlng Touches" F u lly Insured Free F.slinutles 520 Center Street JIM MARTIN security. 646-6113 or MISCELLANEOUS Slone walls, and conaele repaks. baths. " Buy with a cathedral celling living 289-2448 SUITE OR PROFES­ 647-1221.______LAWN MAINTENANCE Cjill-YARDMASTERS 643-6386 out friend ” BOTH room, family room, 3 Manchester, CT 06040 SIONAL OFFICE- Over 40 years experienced. Sen­ NEWER 3 bedroom du­ AND 643-9996 lully insured/free estimates SERVICES HALVES AVAILA­ bedrooms, large dining 649-1212 BOLTON $465,000. Decks are ior dtizen dscounts. B L E ! D.W. F is h room, central air con­ Lovely, well kept 4 plex, 1'/2 baths, ap­ LANDSCAPING pliances. No pets. 2 OUR SPECIALTY Realty, 643-1591.Q ditioning, 2'/3 baths, an bedroom home In a • Weekly Mowings Albert Zuccaro Immaculote home. private setting with months security. Customized to your needs - Household vinegar Is an WILL DO ANY LAND­ WELL MAINTAINED- $725/month plus utlll- • Landscape Installatlone Wall Papering and Painting Waterproofing MANCHESTER $269,900. U 8. R Realty, gorgeous view's of hills liscensed for top quality crafts­ • Driveways Sealed effective and Inexpensive ORDER 643-2692.0 tlos. August 1. 649-5132. SCAPING, PAINTING, $137,500. Im maculate, 8i valleys yet conve­ ' Bushes trjmmed or removed fabric softner when added 30 years Experience 646-3361 Here's My Card is a special feature of the Manchester Herald and MANSFIELD- manship. Cali Joe HAULING, OR OTHER aluminum sided Cape. CHFA CONDOS-A great nient to 1-384. Attached • Fully Insured to the final laundry rinse. Insurance, References and 9 O N E FO R WILLINGTON line, 643-7381 Recent refurbishing In­ time to buy. $74,900. 3 car garage and separ­ Classified Is the effective ODD JOBS. FOR FREE Route 44. 2 bedroom Quality, dspandabit work at an Free Estimates cludes paint, paper, 8, Best priced unit In Bea­ runs every Thursday If you are Interested In placing your business ate e n tra n c e 1,000 and Inexpensive wav to NEVER PLACED a wont Y O U R AD square foot In-law apartment, country allordabis prica. MARTY MATTSSON EST IM A TES, C A LLJO H N hardwood floors. Nice con Hill. One bedroom WORTH LOOKING Info ... find a cash buyer for ad? There's nothing to If apartment or office TODAY! patio In the freed yard unit, sliders In living card here please call Classified 643-2711 for your special low rate. privacy. Adults pre­ the many bargains of­ Doug 643-8275 household items you no 6 4 9 -4 4 3 1 8 7 5 -6 5 7 7 ... lust dial 643-2711 for your enloyment room. All updated. space. M A N Y , M ANY ferred. No dogs. $460 a fered for sale every day In longer use. 643-2711. 643-2711 and privacy. D.W. Fish Century 21, Epstein special features. D.W. month. I'/z months se­ the classified columns! Realty, 643-1591.0 Realty, 647-8895. Fish Realty, 643-1591.0 curity. Call 742-0569. i() MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, July 5,1990

A Nevrfspaper in Education Program PETS AND CARS CARS ITRUCKS/VANS WANTED TO iBaiiflirstrr Hfralft Sponsored by IsOSUPPLIES FOR SALE HOFOR SALE FOR SALE |98]BUY/TRADE TH E Q U IZ The Manchester Herald IsD C H E V R O L E T tru c k 1977. FREE kittens to a good D O D G E - 1986. •150’ , 318 OLDSMOBILE-1983- JAGUAR WANTED XK home. Call 649-5160. CID, automatic, bed whlte. All new tires 350. 4 s p e e d , n e w or XKE. In rough or (10 points for each question Section 4, Page 17 liner, tool box, 50K, Including snow tires. clutch, new exhaust. poor condition. Coll answered correctly) WORLDSCOPE $5500. 742-8669. Beautiful condition. Needs motor work. 216-495-2456. Thursday, July 5,1990 $750 or best offer. Call J CHEVY MONZA- 1978 a u ­ Low mileage, all elect­ SPORTS 872-8924 a fte r 5 pm . WANTED TO tomatic, V-6, Maroon ric, 2 door. Call 646- We buy dean, lata model used [ m ] BUY/TRADE hard-top. Clean Inside 6274. cars and trucks. Top prices a n d o ut, NO RUST, new AUTO paid. MANCHESTER- Large paint lob, AM/Fm Mr. Duff - Carter Chevrolet variety. Including golf cassette stereo, front Schaller's SERVICES 1229 Main Street Thoughts equipment. Saturday bucket seats. Engine Quality Pre-Ownsd Autos Manchester, CT needs some work. All July7, 8:30-2.17 Patriot ______6 4 6 -6 4 6 4 ______Evans dutch man for the Bosox Lane (off of East El- original paperwork. Value Priced COLLISION AUTOMOTIVE Aplenty MINNEAPOLIS (/\P) — Today’s class is The Art of Barrett grabbed a deflected, bouncing grounder head- drldge). Raln/shine. O n ly d riv e n 2 w eeks 1987 ACURA INTEGRA LS 3 DR. CASH PAID for old cars over the at the Metrodome. then taken off the road. Auto, A/C, Sunroof Attention residents In good condition. Call Fielding on AstroTIirf. The instructor is ing toward center Field and turned it into a forceout at PRE-MOVING SALE- $ 9 3 0 0 A couple of heroes earlier in the game, Dennis L.amp $500 or best offer What anytim e at 646-6388. second baseman Marty Barrett. Orlental rugs (2) 1986 HONDA PRELUDE Free Junk Car Removal Len Auster second base, preserving Boston’s 4-3 victory Wednesday and Dwight Evans, set the stage for Barrett’s big play. a !!! Call 643-0030 valued at $3000 each. S Speed, A/C, Sunroof COLLISION AUTOMOTIVE a fte r 6pm . $8,700 Lamp retired all nine batters he faced in his three innings Asking $1000 each. Of­ Now Is the time to run an 528-1555 SUBARU-1983 GL Wagon, 1968 SUBARU GL SEDAN ad In classified to sell that of relief of Boston starter Greg Harris, keeping the u fice desk chairs, filing Auto, A(C, PS, PB camera you no longer cabinets, & typewriter. 5 speed, t ilt p o w er. $ 7 ,4 0 0 24 HOURS Twins’ lead at 2-1. Evans erased that lead in the ninth in­ Make an offer. Call Excellent condition. 1990 ACURA LEGEND L SEDAN use. ning, knocking a two-ouL 0-1 pitch by Rick Aguilera Dave 647-7023. 92K miles. $2200. 647- S Spd., Loaded, /U.B, Security Sy*. Don expect into the left-center Field stands to put Boston ahead 4-2. 8950. $22,900 1) Here, Nelson Mandela Is seen acknowledging applause 6 PIECE PINE Bedroom during a reception for him In Boston. During his visit totheU.S,, 1985 CADILUC SEDAN DEVILLE J S tars “He (Evans) has been doing it for about 18 years,” set, Includes mattress V-e, Fully Loaded. Lke New Twins catcher Junior Ortiz said. “He’s a good man to Mr. Mandela sharply criticized U.S. aid to Joseph SavImbI, the In good condition & $7,900 Stand have at the plate in those situations.” (CHOOSE ONE: rebel leader In, President oO Angola. head boards. Original CARDINAL 1965 OLDS CIERA BROUGHAM BEAT 4 years out price $4000. Will take V-6, Ful nowor, Eirtra Clean out Former Twins stopper Jeff Reardon came in for Bos­ $1500 or best offer. Air BUICK, INC. $4,900 / / l e ton in the bottom of the ninth and allowed an RBI single 2) Health Secretary Louis Sulli­ conditioner $200 or best 1968 MAZDA 323 SE MATCHWORPS 1988 Ford Ranger PAJ $5,895 Auto. AK. PS. P8. Low Milee to Dan Gladden to cut Boston’s lead to 4-3. Shane Mack, van was drowned out by demon­ offer. Call 649-1913. ★ 1987 Buick Regal $8A95 $6,900 who was pinch running for Kent Hrbck after he walked, strators as he spoke at the closing (2 points for each correct match) $6,990 1968 MAZDA 323 LX of Burrell 1987 Olds Clera Auto, /y r . PS, PS, Low Milee HEAT moved to second on the play. session of the Sixth International 1987 Isuzu Pup Pickup $4,280 $7,400 1— acknowledge a—sympathy CARS 1989 Buick Regal Coupe . $10,980 ORDER Find a great “I honestly thought we could get Gladden ouL” Boston Conference o n ..?.. recently. 198/CHEVY CAMARO Item: UConn’s Scott Burrell signs with the Toronto FOR SALE 1988 Chevy Cavalier $6,990 2— habltat b-ease V-8, 5 Spd., T-Top, AX: Blue Jays. manager Joe Morgan said. “I even moved (third baseman HD $13,490 ONE FOR fan, air 1968 98 Reg Brougham $6,900 Wade) Boggs over toward the line more, and Gladden hit 3) The fundamentalist Islamic 3— allay c —endorse 1988 Chevy Z-24 Caval'ier $8,980 Who would think Com-ecticut’s success in the NCAA SUBARU WAGON 1981, 1987 MAZDA RX7 YOUR AD 1968 Pontiac Sunbird Coupe $7,695 conditioner, it right where Boggs was. Then I Figured we could get Front was the big winner recently 4— compassion d-surroundings fro n t w h e e l, 4 w heel 5 Sod.. AC, Summa Fiinl Tournament would cost it the services of the talented 1987 Buick Park/We $11,490 in local elections, the first free drive, 4 speed, 125/K. $9,400 TODAY! Burrell down the road. (Al) Newman out.” 1987 Buick Somerset Cpe $7^80 1968 CHEVY K-5 BLAZER pool, etc. elections in Algeria since it won 5— promote e—recognize AM /FM cassette. Ask- But that’s what appears is going to happen. Newman, the next batter, lined a itch iq) the middle. 1987 Chevrolet Caprice $7^95 V-B, Auto, Silverado, Loadad 643-2711 independence from France in Inq $850. Call 646-6894. 1966 Mitsubishi Pkkuj $3,995 $ 1 4 ,5 0 0 in the If UConn didn’t enjoy the success it did on the Reardon redirected it with his glove, giving Barrett a 1986Bu'ick(1986Bu'ickSkyhawk(^8pe ^ $5,960 1990 ACURA INTEGRA GS PEOPLEZS PORTS P O N T IA C 1979 S u nb lrd - hardwood, one game away from the Fmal Four, then chance to flag it down. The Fielding professor takes it 1986 Pontiac Grand Pn'x $7,960 Auto, /VC, PS. POL, PW, Cruae classifieds! a -1949 b-1962 c-1975 Grey. Runs good. Ask­ $16,400 Burrell wouldn’t have fallen so far behind in his studies from there. (5 points fo r each correct answer) 1985 Cadillac .•'-iedan DeVille $9^80 END ROLLS ing $750 or best offer. 1985 Oldsmobile Calais $5,980 1966 CHEVY CAVAUER CPE and he might’ve been able to pitch for Coach Andy “It was do-or-die,” Barrett said. “On AstroTIirf, you 5 Spd., A/C. AM/FM 27 W width — 504 4) The government has formally 1) Movie actor..?..Is now promoting Call Ed 646-5250 from 1982 Chevrolet Celebrity 45k $3,995 Manchester $2,900 13" width — 2 for 504 Baylock’s Huskies. If he had played for Baylock, he can guess and judge them pretty well. If you’ve got a declared the northern spotted a novel." Dance With the Devil.' It Is his 9-4 o r 649-9619. 1982 Citation 46k $2,295 short Fust hop, it sometimes skips on you. 1\^en it hops a Y would’ve been ineligible to be drafted until after his FORD THUNDERBIRD- SCHALLER ACURA Newsprint end rolls can be Herald owl (CHOOSE ONE: 'endan­ second book. His first was his autobi­ 81 Adams Street picked up at the Manchester couple of times on AstroTIuf, it’s predictable. 1978 . 60K m iles. T -T o p . junior year. But... gered,' 'threatened'), clearing ography, 'The Ragman's Son.' 345 Center Street Herald ONLY before 11 a.m. $1700 or best offer. Call Manchester Burrell, the hard-throwing pitcher who was drafted in Barrett snared the bouncer and veered toward second the way for protection of the M anchester Monday through Thursday, 643 -2 7 1 1 Laura 649-7750 after 649-4571 the First round by the Seattle Mariners in the 1989 June base. He hit the bag a step ahead of the sliding Gladden, bird's ancient forest habitat. 2) As Jury selection for his trial was 647-7077 7pm . amateur draft, was taken in the Fifth round by the Tbrontc recording the forcout and ending the game. proceeding, Washington Mayor Mar­ Blue Jays this year. “It would have got through cleanly if Jeff (Reardon) 5) In order to allay foreign fears, lon Barry announced that he would wouldn’t have hit it,” Barrett said. “And we deFmitely the Israeli Government has an­ not seek a ..?.. term this fall. He signed with the Toronto club for first-round money. The big difference, if we hear correcL is that the didn’t want (Kirby) Puckett coming up (next) with the nounced that it will not settle a-2nd b-4th c-6th bases loaded.” (CHCXDSE ONE: Soviet Immi­ Special Wishes ! Blue Jays will allow Burrell to continue playing basket­ Said Morgan: “That was a great play by Barrett. The grants, any Israeli) in the occu­ 3) The Wimbledon tournament is ball for Coach and the Husldes. ball could have easily gone off his glove.” pied territories. now underway, and this time top- W hy Send A Card? Burrell, who despite undergoing arthroscopic surgery ranked tennis player Ivan Lendl is on a knee and missed a couple of games, averaged 8.2 The Twins escap^ bascs-loadcd jams in the seventh NEWSNAME hoping to win his (CHOOSE ONE: first, Make your own personal points and 5.5 rebounds per game as a freshman and was and eighth inning without allowing a run, thanks to the named to the Big East all-rookie team. combined relief efforts of John Candelaria, Juan Beren- ^ % (15 points for correct answer or answers) third) Wimbledon title. to DOWN wishes to that special person in The Blue Jays may go along with the agreement to guer and Aguilera. When Aguilera faltered to Evans with I am a Senator 4) The nation of (CHOOSE ONE: allow Burrell to play basketball come September, but two outs in the ninth, it was only his third blown save op­ o from Minne­ Chad, Cameroon) recently made your life on special days, such as sooner or later that stipulation may change. They, even­ The Associated Press portunity in 22 chances. ZD - n sota. I recently ON ANY NEW LINCOLN history by becoming the first team tually, are going to want Burrell to concentrate solely on The two men Evans drove in ahead of him, Boggs and asked the Sen­ birthdays, weddings, anniversaries, WINNING SWING — Boston’s Dwight Evans connects for a three-run homer in the ninth trom Africa to make It to the quarter­ Tony Pena, both fought off difficult pitches by Aguilera ate Ethics baseball and maybe attend an instructional camp or two inning against Minnesota Wednesday, giving the Red Sox a 4-3 win over the Twins at the finals of the World Cup, defeating for ground singles before Evans cleared the bases. Committee to OR MERCURY IN STOCK! birth announcements, etc. in the winter months. Metrodome. Evans’ game-winner came two days after Kevin Romine’s ninth-inning homer “Boston got three or four bloop hits and we hit the ball show compas­ Colombia, 2-1. Subjeci to Ford Motor Credit Company condil'ions and approval. It beats a card! That would preclude him playing basketball for the sion In dealing Huskies. beat the Rangers. Evans' homer made a winner of Dennis Lamp, who pitched three perfect hard,” Twins designated hitter Brian Harper said. “It’s o ^ 5) recently became the with my case. i Obviously it’s hard to forecast the future. But Husky innings in relief. frustrating to be so close to a win and have it slip away.” oldest major league pitcher ever to Who am I? With the Herald's new column, fans who may want Burrell to play for Calhoun, and hold a team hitless. His recent no- NEW 1991 GRAND MARQUIS YOUR SCORE. IneJudM -Oxkxd wtuie extencr wiih thadow bkM -Uumlnaied entry lyslem them, for four years may be wishing for something that’ll H 5 hltter against the Oakland A's was the you will not only save money, 91 to 100 point* - TOP SCOREI ckXti taett. rvrHighl blue vinyl reel. -Turbine spoke afuminum whoolt never happen. ..?.. of his career. ■S0l4arEnV-6 engine Light group m 81 to 90 point* — Excellont. 'Automatic overdrive transmission ■Dual iUjmmaled visor mlfrors but think of how unique an Is good ship 71 to 80 point* — Good. a-4th b-5th c-6th -Front I rear carpeted Boor mats Eiectronc am^m stereo with cassette and much morel Item: Anthony Harris says he*ll sign with Syracuse. Stock 1111013, was $20,S36 61 to 70 point* — Fair. 'Power lock group ■6 way power dnyefi seal opportunity this is! The question is obvious. Sx O Knowledge Unlimited, Inc. 7-2-90 -Electric rear window dolroster Why? Front i rear bumper guards z m Harris is a 6-2 out of Danbury High Steinbrenner ANSWERS TO THE QUIZ SAVE 52837 Special Limited ; School, the unanimous No. 1 basketball recruit in the O “o state for the 1991-92 season. He was ranked as the 12th 0 -9 Introductory Rate best recruit in the country by one prominent recruiting now sinking? :uoojoujDo-p !q-c :*D|6r>oa itJi)i-1 :siaods « 3id03d * 1 7 . 6 9 9 * service. S O 0 -9 ;d -t :q-C :p-J l«-l :saaOMHOiVW Q -n IS NEW 1991'S AVAILABLE, PLUS MANY NEW -Taxandregisliatlonextra Rob,itoa.islgnodiodo.iior 60^ a line! Harris said two weeks ago that he always wanted to j® 6 je q u e jn a P|A[>a :3WVNSM3N 199SIN STOCK AT EVEN GREA TER SA VINGSI Cloarcoal pami extra Must taka dollvery by 7/ur9o "We plan absentee ownership as far as running the m S «4udj6|UUUJ| (e|AOS-9 i„p«uo play for Syracuse, a dream since he was in the seventh >0 DOWN ON ANY NEW LINCOLN OR MERCURY IN STOCK! SOME EXAMPLES; For an extra cost ofSCF you grade, because of its run-and-gun style and because Yankees is concerned. We’re not going to pretend we're -4Dejm„-p :q-c ;saiv-z !U| jepoei |oqej-l :3dOOSCnaOM 1990 MERCURY 1990 MERCURY 1990 MERCURY 1990 LINCOLN something we aren't. I'll stick to building ships." — TOPAZ SABLE COUGAR TOWN CAR may also put your choice of a Syracuse coach Jim Bocheim reminds him of his scholas­ Stock iLO-2030. Stock «L O -1 0 ^. Slock #10 6018, Slock #LO 9003, , soon after his group bought the lisl$I3.165 irel $17,707 list $16,435 ksl $30,092 tic coach. o O birthday cake, heart, star, New York Yankees on Jan. 3,1973. Docs that mean he doesn’t think his high schex)! coach m z [CLEANING *8895 *13,999 514,999 524,999 can’t coach, either. O R t i O Q P** morth wHIi O R month wtlh OR j 4 pa* tnomh *4th O R I C C Q ? 5oa» month whh smiley face, candles, numbers By BEN WALKER SERVICES LAWN CARE NOW'S THE JU S T 1 »/ 3 no mon*v down J U S T v ' J nomonoydnavn JUST^^vV nomonaydown JUST^w39 nomonaydown eOfWihtat l??5%APnMtth 60 montha m 17 2 i% APR «rth eomnnthtal 17.75% APR wnh 60 montha at 17.75% APR $3ri44 5&, Iota! parm anti $47BI 2 6 . total paymania $5133 40, total paymanla S8558. total payTYwnts $03,555 for the age & many others!! expertise, however, has a lot to be desired. DUST BUSTERS- No YARD MAINTENANCE- $11,040 $18.790 70 $70.137 40 o ) time, but need results, Lawns our specialty. Anyone know the whereabouts of Leo Rautins, Tony NEW YORK — This was George Steinbrenner’s idea Bruin, Dwayne “ftarl Washington, etc.? we can help. Total Please call 643-2315. SUPER CLEAN USED CAR VALUES!! Deadline for ads —12:00 noon of absentee ownership: 18 managerial moves, one J 3 > residental & office 1981 VOLVO 1986 CHEVY fr20 1987 MERCURY 1988 FORD All were “sure-Fircd” NBA prospects, or so we were suspension, scores of suspect trades and frec-agent sign­ cleanino. Day & even­ FINDING A cash buyer 244 DL CONVERSION VAN GRAND MARQUIS ESCORT > H Sloe* «L0I027A Sloe* »0 5030A Sloe* (L11012A Slock »OC025B 2 days prior to the day you led to believe. ings, countless feuds and 17 years of constant chaos, ing appointments. Call for sparling goods eq u ip ­ Syracuse has been successful because it has better confusion and controversy. “0 649-6066. m e n t 1$ easy w hen you *4995 *10,995 58995 M995 would like your ad to appear. advertise In classified. I talent than most. B u l if any player wants to take that Now, with the New York Yankees the worst team in BUYER MEETS seller In 1988 MAZDA 1988 LINCOLN 1989 MERCURY HURRY INI extra step and Find himself headed for the NBA — Der­ baseball and their owner headed toward a hearing today the want ads . RX-7 TOWN CAR SABLE GS OVER 100 USED Sloe* (LOI059A Slex* «9 9036-1 Slock f P I U rick Coleman and Sherman Douglas notwithstanding — with commissioner Fay VincenL has it all Finally caught TIME TO CARS TO Call Classified Today 7 9 1 ANTIQUES/ then being under Bocheim’s guiding hand isn’t the up to him — is the S.S. Steinbrenner sinking? INVITATION TO BID *12,695 *12,995 *10,995 CHOOSE FROMI OO^^■COLLECTIBLES 1 smartest move. “I know people say, ‘Why, George, why?’” Slcinbrcn- The Manchester Public Sale erxis July 14.1990 ncr said recently. “Bul I’m my guy. I can’t change a lot.” Schools solicits bids for PAR­ ANTIQUE COLUMBIAN 643-2711 Item: Mark Calcavecchia refuses to talk to the Maybe he can’t change a lot about himself. But that TIAL ROOF REPLACEMENT STOVE-Combo wood, BUY! media. AT BUCKLEY SCHOOL, IL- coal, and gas. Kitchen a n d a sk fo r hasn’t stopped him from re-arranging everything else The Associated Press LING JR. HIGH SCHOOL stove. White enamel utoR/iiMaEm And we thought all golfers were cordial. around him. AND MARTIN SCHOOL tor I 3 l*j CENTER STREET (HT. 5). MANCHESTER with 4 burners, oven, n i l CARS Just oH E*il 60 Irom I-B4 TEL: 643*5135 LeeAnnorllze Calcavecchia had a shot at wi.-ming the Greater Soon after taking over the team, he decided he didn’t DEJECTED — An English soccer fan sits lonely and dejected after England bowed to West the 1990-1991 school year. and broiler. Call 872- aM pOH SALE Hartford Open, but put his second shot at the 17lh into Seated bids wiU be received like the Yankees wearing long hair. Those were the styles Germany in a World Cup semifinal match Wednesday in Turin, Italy. His countrymen, 8924 after 5 pm. the water, eventually taking a double bogey, and he until July 10, 1990, 1:30 p.m., of the early 1970s, but it didn’t matter to him — however, back home went on a rampage. 2:00 p.m., and 2:30 p.m., bogied the 18ih hole, too. He Finished tied for second Steinbrenner told his players, through public pronounce­ respectively, at which time place had took a measly check for $66,000 home. they will be publicly opened. FURNITURE ments, that they should visit barber shops more frequent­ The right is reserved to reject Poor fellow. ly- any arid all bids. Specifica­ Living raam 5 piece,$150. When members of the fourth estate tried to get a word He didn’t like Dave WinField and, after trying to tions and bid forms may be Formal dining room, 7 . with him afterward, he headed for the sancity of the humiliate him with the title “Mr. May,” got rid of him secured at the Business Of­ YOUR CHOICE; 2 .9 °^ A.P.R.** To 4 8 MONTHS Or *10 0 0 C A S H B A C K British hooligans on rampage fice, 45 North School Street, piece, $375. Bedroom, 3 ; : players’ lounge in the clubhouse. And, after an hour this year. There is the matter, still pending, of a piece, $100. Bedroom 5 Manchester, CT. j delay, he emerged and when approached by a member of grievance the California Angels Filed against Sicinbrcn- piece, $800. Buy port or NEW 1990 ESCORT 2 DOOR SUN SPORT NEW 1990 MUSTANG LX HATCHBACK 003-07 oil, 649-6620. ■ the media resorted to profanity to get his point across that ner and the Yankees after trade negotiations were com­ he didn’t want to talk. pleted. after loss in the World Cup LEGAL NOTICE Monday, at a pro-am in Danbury, Calcavecchia said “I He did like Reggie Jackson, but humiliated him by TOWN OF ANDOVER English language courses. to 200 people smashed shop win­ didn’t want to talk because I was real upset and knew I’d once suggesting he take an eye test. Steinbrenner even­ By MICHAEL W EST I have a Tax Warrant to collect taxes for the Town of Andovor Five hundred English fans dows and looted the contents. say something I’d regret.” tually let Jackson leave and later said it was one of his The Associated Press on the October 1, 1989 Grand List at the rale of 43.2 mills. Sorry, Mark, that doesn’t wash. roamed Brighton’s streets, overturn­ In a pub in Blackburn 185 miles Taxes in the amount of $100 or loss are due and payable in biggest mistakes. He loved , but Fired him ing cars with foreign license plates, northwest of London, 20 youths full in July, 1990, All m otor^ehide taxes, regardless of the Do you really think Jim Calhoun wants to come out Five limes. LONDON — Soccer hooligans smashing shop windows and looting armed with pool cues attack^ two amount, are due in lull Julnr<1, 1990. The First quarterly install­ and talk to the media after a onc-poinl loss. BuL after a Others left, too. Rickey Henderson and Jack Clark ment on all other taxes on thie October 1, 1989 Greurd List is threatened German citizens and the contents. Police reported 15 ar­ police officers, who were later ^ 10-minute cooling off period, he docs come out. He were traded for virtually nothing, and Fred McGriff, Wil­ due and payable July 1, 1990. Payments made after August 1, might not say much, but at least he doesn’t slink away ovcrtunicd foreign-registered cars rests in the town. treated in a hospital. 1 1990 are subject to a late charge of 1 1/2% per month on the L.'ST S12.166 lie McGee, Doug Drabck and LaMarr Hoyt were among S N 157 l i s t » i O 6 34 after West Germany defeated Hrlice around the country had an­ late installment trom due date, or a minimum of $2.00. Pay­ and hide and display such boorish behavior. the minor leaguers sent away. And almost every time a In the port city of Southampton, Automatic, Cassette, Air Conditioner, Speed Control England in llic World Cup, and more ticipated the violence, for which ments can be made by mail or at the Town Office Building the Automatic, Air Condrtonor, Sun Roof. Cassette If the IKjA Tour, which likes to have a squccky clean deal soured, Steinbrenner blamed his so-called “baseball 70 miles southwest of London, a following hours: Monday through Thursday (8:30-12:00 4 than 500 people were arrested, many British soccer fans are image, docs Fine those who don’t do all they can to people,” whose exits sometimes followed. group of up to 20 youths smashed 1.00-4:()0) and Friday (8:30-12:30). The Tax Colloclor-s Office police said. notorious. promote a loumamcnL then Calcavecchia is a prime can­ TTien there was the time in 1981 when Steinbrenner up the Royal Oak pub. “When is also open Monday evenings from 6:00-8:00 p m. Palicc said 35 officers were in­ Extra officers had been sent to * • 1 0 , 4 9 9 didate. ordered 50,000 copies of the Yankees’ yearbook pulled ^g lan d lost they went berserk, Mary-Alico Piro, trouble spots after violence in INCLUDES $1000 REBATE ASSIGNED TO DEALER - ALL VEHICLES SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE jured in disturbances, which broke Tax Collector "A P R. - ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE from the concession stands because he didn’t like his out Wednesday night after West several English towns and cities picking up anything they could Find Andover, Conrwcticut L«n Auster is sports editor of the Manchester photo. Some said it was the only time he took himself Germany won 4-3 in 3\irin, Italy. Sunday night when England beat and smashing it,” said pub manager O.FP-Ofi PRE-OWNED CARS & TRUCKS Jlcruld. out of the picture. Police said heavy drinking by fans Cumcroun in the quarterfinals. Bernard Smedley. I 1989 PONTIAC 1987 MERCURY 1984 PLYMOUTH RELIANT 1984 FORD ESCORT Let it be said tliat Steinbrcmicr docs many nice things who watched llte match in pubs con­ In Turin on Wednesday iiighL a Lawmakers from both the opposi­ i LEGAL NOTICE BONNEVILLE SE 4 DOOR GRAND MARQUIS LS 4 DOOR 4 DOOR for people, and that those acts often do not get any recog­ TOWN OF ANDOVER WAGON tributed lo llie rowdincss. 23-ycar-old German was slabbed in tion Labor Party and the governing PLANNING & ZONING Yanks low stature nition. When he read in the newspaper that a popular and tlte back and seriously wounded 9 One man was killed while inter­ Conservative Ptirty denounced the 1 COMMISSION «9999 *9999 *2999 star high school athlete in Sarasota. Ra., had been shot vening in a disturbance in Tollon, in when a Fight broke out between rival violence. PUBUC HEARINGS *2299 dead as an innocent bystander, Steinbrenner paid for the 1987 FORD 1986 FORD 1985 FORD southern England, bul police were English and German fans. H)lice The Rolling Stones concert was 1 The Plitnnirtg 4 Zoning Commission of Andovor, Connecticut 1987 FORD BRONCO II is richly deserved funeral — with the stipulation that no one would be told uncertain whclticr the incident was used truncheons to disperse rowdy will hold Public Hearings on Morxlay, July 16, 1090 at 7:30 TAURUS GL 4 DOOR CROWN VICTORIA LX 4 DOOR THUNDERBIRD 2 DOOR 4x4 where the money came from. temporarily drowned out at Lon­ p.m. in the Andover Elementary School Music Room on the related to soccer frusualions. crowds near the city’s main train d o n ’s W embley Stadium as following petition: By DOUG TUCKER “My public relations guys come to me a lot about station. In the seaside town of Brighton, thou.sonds of fans there roared 13 *6999 *7999 *4999 The Associated Press things and say, ‘We have to get this out.’ And I say, ‘No London police dealt with 18 inci­ Flosolution of Board of Selectmen lo discontinue portion of *6999 50 miles south of the capital, police “England, England” when England Bailey Road. we don’t,’ ” Steinbrenner said. “My father always told dents, Scotland Yard said. Drunken lucked 300 Gentian students in a drew level with West Gcnnany at KANSAS CITY, Mo. — They pitch a no-hitter, and me that if you do something good and more than two nightclub lo protect them from fans hurled beer cans and other mis­ At tfiis hearing, interested persons may appear and be heard one stage in the match in IXtrin. and written conwnunications will be received. Information per­ tlicy lose. Cranking out a season-high 18 hits, they lose people know about it, you’re doing it for the wrong hundreds of angry English fans. Tlte siles at police. reason.” taining to title application is on file in the office of the Zoning again. students later were escorted safely Hooligans in Grantham, 110 Many in the concert audience had AgenL Town Ofnoe Buildirtg. Ford But plenty of people, including Steinbrenner himself, Tlie New York Yankees, in dropping their fourth from tlte scene aboard Five buses. miles north of London, smashed brought radios and portable TV sets 9 know the down side ^1 Ux) well. Dated at Artdover, Connecticut this 5th and 13th day of July slruiglit Wednesday night, looked for dl the world as if Also in Brighton, police said 200 windows at llte Premier RcslauranL so lliey could follow the match. The 1990. Itliif Seu4ihwc^>. Due. Credit “It’s tough working for me. I know UiaL” he said. “I tlicir 28-48 record, the worst in the major leagues, is rich­ English youths chased young Ger­ in the building where Prime Minis­ rock group hit an ironic note when ANDOVER PUNNING 4 ly deserved. admit I’m tough on my people. I’m lough on myself.” ZONING COMMISSION 100 WINDSOR AVE.,RTE. 83, ROCKVILLE, CT * SALES 875-3369-PARTS 871-0094 mans tlirough ilic streets. The town ter Margaret Tlialcher grew up. llicy struck up with “You Can’t Al­ K.tiniiot:T A, Lester, has a large population of Gentians In nearby Worthing, police ar­ ways Gel What You Want” when an Chairman "SERVICE SECOND TO NONE" Please see YANKEES, page 19 Please see STEINBRENNER, page 19 and otlicr foreign students attending rested 18 people after a crowd of up England goal was disallowed. 005-07 0 MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, July 5, 1990- 19 18—MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, July 5,1990 Softball Post 102 bows in Niantic tournament Mets finding struck out lour, drove in Manchester’s first run in tlie Morency said. “It was a better game than I’ve been used Tonight's Games By HERALD STAFF second inning with an RBI single. An error plated to seeing. Manchester’s second run, that coming in the fourty and A&N vs. L.M.Gill, 6 — Fitzgerald “The kids were in the game longer mentally. I looked ways to win J EAST LYME — It was a better effort for the the final two runs scored in the fifth. After a Lindsey Bray vs. Pub, 7:30 — Fitzgerald at the schedule the other day and we have 25 games to go Manchester Legion baseball team, but three errors Boutilier double, a throwing error allowed the final two PM Const, vs. Police, 6 — Robertson and we have time to turn it around if the guys want to proved costly as Post 102 was eliminated by Willimantic, runs to come home. By The Associated Press H&N ConL vs. Medical, 7:30 — Robertson make it a better season.” Pub/MMH vs. J.C.Penney, 6 — Nike 6-4, Tbesday afternoon in the Niantic Tournament. Manchester, two-time defending Zone Eight champ, M ai^t vs. Tierney’s, 7:^0 — Nike Manchester, 5-15 overall, resumes Zone Eight play The first three Willimantic runs were unearned. Israel goes into to n i^ t’s game at 3-6 in Zone play. Dwight Gooden wasn’t at his best — but the way the 021 210 «- 6-8-4 New York Mets are playing these days, it didn’t matter. Purdy vs. Cox, 6 — Pagani today at 5:45 p.m. when it hosts Zone leading South Torres added a two-run homer for the winners and win­ Willimantic *■“ 4-7-4 Manchastor j Allstate vs. Fat Belly, 7:30 — F^gani Windsor at East Catholic’s Eagle Field. ning pitcher Mike Pekarovic knocked in the final marker Mika Pakarovlc, Gaorga Almo (7) and Chris Rivers; Brian Igoe and “They have eight guys who can hit it out. That’s one Memorial vs. Sheriff’s, 6 — Keeney “We had the four errors and that resulted in three of with a sacrifice fly. Devon Marquez dangerous lineup,” Houston pitcher Larry Andersen said the runs Willimantic scored,” Manchester coach Dave Losing pitcher Brian Igoe, who walked just one and WP- Pekarovic: LP- Igoa after the Mets beat the Astros 7-4 Wednesday night for their 21st victory in 24 games. “They’re so hot right now POP DELANEY — Hungry Tiger Restaurant downed that even if you make a good pitch they’ll drop it in the Gleim Construction, 16-7, Thesday night at Fitzgerald Field. Clyde Fox and Jeff Peck each had three hits for scats. A bad pitch, forget about iL they’ll crush i t ” The losers shell-shocked at Wimbledon That’s exactly what happened Wednesday night with HTR. Peck belted a grand slam homer. Dave Romeyko, Darryl Strawberry hitting a three-run homer and Howard Jim Grimes and Rich Marsh each had three hits for round of Wimbledon, gave a sluggish Glenn. By ROB GLOSTER Johnson a two-run shot. The Associated Press Lendl fits. It was Pearce’s third quarter­ The homers supported a so-so effort by Gooden (8-5), CHARTER OAK — Awesome Audio downed Glenn final iqipearance in any tournament in a Construction n, 7-4. Bob Edwards had three hits and Stu who pitched with a blister on his right index finger. He WIMBLEDON, England — They blast five-year pro career. Sibley, Jim Kibbie, Sean Moriarty and Todd Talaga each The elimination of Pearce, Gilbert and had two for Awesome. John Cizewski and Raul Hohen- aces and service winners, or crush volleys The Associated Press at the net. They don’t bother with dainty Curren swept the only remaining NL Roundup thal each socked two hits for Glenn II. American men out of the tournament on REC — Joline’s Spirit Shop stopped the Elks, 13-7, at lobs or baseline rallies. A WINNER — Easy Goer, with Pat Day Nike Field. Mark St. Jean had four hits. Bob Wilson Real men don’t try dropshots. the Fourth of July. aboard, wins the Suburban Handicap by 3 lasted eight innings and gave up all four Houston runs on three and A1 Horvith, Chris Barbieri, Dan Murphy, Doug And real men win, especially on the Third-seeded Edberg ousted Swedish eight hits. He eight . compatriot Christian Bergstrom 6-3, 6-2, 3/4 iengths over De Roche Wednesday at “The blister was better than I thought it was going to Green and Tony Chevrette two apiece for Joline’s. Man Wimbledon grass. Beimont Raceway in New York, it was Rozelle zipped three hits and Norm Kowalsky, Tom Hite, Ivan Lendl, Boris Becker, Stefan Ed- 6- 4 and will play Lendl in Friday’s semi­ be,” Gooden said. “I had a little pain, but nothing of any Dan Doviak and Terry Reming two apiece for the Elks. berg and Goran Ivanisevic turned up the finals. Lendl has won 10 of his previous Easy Goer’s second win in three starts this consequence. I backed off the curve ball in the middle in­ nings and then went back to it in the seventh and eighth. NIKE — Mudville Nine outlasted Brown’s Rackage power Wednesday to reach the semifinals, 16 encounters with Edberg. year and 14th in 20 career races. Store, 16-15. Gino Falcetta had four hits, Rob French, The biggest fireworks took place on “I’m happy that we won,” Gooden said, “but I’m The Associated Press serve-and-volleying their way past shell­ frustrated by what I did out there. I’ve got to shut the Mark Gurry and Jeff Phelon three apiece and Kevin Cun­ shocked opponents. Court 1, where Ivanisevic and Curren LOUSY SERIES — New York Yankees manager Stump Merrill, left, Lee Guet- ningham and Rob Johnson two each for Mudville. John­ were combining for 41 aces in a mano-a- door in this game. I’m just lucky that my teammates “I saw a lot of balls go by,” Kevin Cur- picked me up. Hopefully, I’ll be able to return the favor.” terman, center, and catcher Bob Geren talk things over during the seventh inning of Wed­ son homered. Marty Summa had four hits, Scott Garman, ren said after losing to Ivanisevic. “I mano shootout In Brief Scott Dougan and Tony Mozzicato three each and Dave There was little finesse in the contest Strawberry hit a three-run homer in the first inning for nesday night’s game in Kansas City. The Yankees lost their fourth in a row, 13-6. don’t think I’ve been aced 25 times New York and Johnson also drove in three runs, two with Dougan, Jim Bombria, Collins Judd and Kyle Dougan more of a gunfight than a tennis match. before.” his homer in the eighth to cap a three-run rally. two apiece for Brown’s. Mozzicato and Dave and Scott The players spit on the grass in disgust Capriati named to U.S. team On a day when the Wimbledon weather The Astros had rallied from a 4-0 deficit with three Y Dougan each homered. after losing points and let out battle cries WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — Jennifer Capriati has WEST SIDE — Oakland Heights won by forfeit over finally liv ^ up to its miserable reputation runs in the sixth, including Franklin Stubbs’ two-run with a four-hour rmn delay, balls were after winners. been named to the U.S. Federation Cup team, which will homer, and Rich Gedman’s sacrifice fly in the seventh. Yankees Food for Thought at Pagani Field. The 18-year-old Ivanisevic, the first seek to defend its title later this month. PAGANI — Acadia Restaurant won by forfeit over flying faster than the bone-chilling wind. “That had nothing to do with the blister,” Gooden said From Page 17 unseeded player in the semifinals since The 14-ycar-old sensation will join Zina Garrison, Strano Real Estate at Pagani Field. The women have to deal with that of Stubbs’ homer. “I had him two and zero and threw a weather today in their semifinals. Two- 1986, punctuated some of his biggest Mary Joe-Femandez and Gigi Fernandez for the com­ fastball away. He went and got iL so give him the credit.” DUSTY — Ward Manufacturing outdistanced Blue points by yelling “Da!” — Serbo- Ox, 23-8, at Keeney St. Field. Ken Irish had four hits, lime defending champion Steffi Graf petition in Atlanta from July 21 to July 28. The Pinch-hitter Keith Miller led off the Mets’ eighth with “It’s beyond me what we have to do to win,” a “Sabes pulled a Harry Houdini act giving up only two Croatian for “Yes!” Dave Hussey and Brian Martin hree apiece and Scott faces Zina Garrison and eight-time win­ Americans beat Spain for the title last year. a single off loser Juan Agosto (4-2) and was forced at dejected Yankee Manager Stump Merrill said after Bo runs,” said Manager John Wathan. “I feel bad for Ivanisevic proved too powerful for VanOudenhove two including a homer for Ward’s. Sean ner Martina Navratilova plays Gabriela A record 47 nations will participate in the Federation second by Mackey Sasser. Kevin Elster singled to move Jackson’s towering home run triggered a seven-run Saberhagen because he left with a lead and didn’t get the Curren, a Wimbledon semifinalist in 1983 Thompson, Jim Lazzaro, Bob Ellsworth, Bob Hunt, Art Sabatini. Cup, which awards total prize money of $461,000. Sasser to third and Mike Marshall followed with a seventh inning in Kansas City’s 13-6 victory. “This is win. But the bottom line is that we won.” and 1985, losing his serve just once in the Sullivan, Ray Purtcll and Tom Bride each had two hits Becker, the defending champion sacrifice fly. Johnson followed with his 13th homer off unbelievable.” If Saberhagen was ragged on this Fourth of July, the 4-6,6-4,6-4,5-7,6-3 victory. Sandberg, Martinez tops in NL for Blue Ox. known as “Boom Boom” for his over­ reliever Andersen. Since Sunday, when Andy Hawkins accomplished the Yankees’ Lee Guetterman was wretched. Bob Geren’s After Ivanisevic rocketed a second- “I called iL” Mets manager Bud Harrelson said of RODVAN — Lathrop Insurance bested Highland I ^ k powering serve, eliminated seventh seed NEW YORK (AP) — Ryne Sandberg of the Chicago incredible feat of no-hitting the but three-run homer off Steve Crawford put the Yankees on serve winner in the fourth set, Curren Cubs and Ramon Martinez of the Los Angeles Dodgers Johnson’s homer. “He looked confident at the plate all MarkeL 7-6, wih a run in the seventh inning at Robertson Brad Gilbert 6-4, 6-4, 6-1 on Wednesday. losing 4-0 because of walks and errors, the Yankees have top 5-4 in the top of the seventh. FVk. John Odell had three hits and Tom Crockett, Jim turned to the crowd and asked, “What can were named the ’s Player and Pitcher of night and I said ‘Now’s the time he’ll wheel it.’” seemed unnerved as well as inept. Then in the bottom of the inning. Bill Pccota walked, The second-seeded Becker lost his serve The Mets’ John Franco pitched a hitless ninth for his and Merrill made the mistake of summoning Guetterman Oo Deere, Dave Romano and Hatch Odell two apiece for you do when a guy goes wide at 120 the Month for June. The Royals, the last-place team in the AL WesL scored early in the first set and never faced Sandberg batted .377 with 14 home runs and 25 RBIs 15th save. Franco is 1-0 with six saves in his last eight from the bullpen. George Brett singled, then Jackson un­ Lathrop. Alex Britnell had three hits and John Hagearty, miles per hour on his second serve?” 30 runs in tlicir first tlirce-game sweep of the Yanks in 5 -n another break point. during the month. His home run total was one short of outings. loaded a 450-foot home run to suaightaway center. Tom Mozzer and Joe I^naro two each for HPM. Ivanisevic’s semifinal opponent is Be­ three years. The Yankees committed five errors, NORTHERN — Winingcr’s Gymnastics jumped on “The wind was really bad and you cker, whom the Yugoslav upset 5-7, 6-4, the record for June and he also led the league in runs Coupled with Pittsburugh’s loss, the Mets moved Before the inning was up, Willie Wilson had an RBI within a half-game of the front-running Pirates in the NL grounded into five double plays and stranded 28 runners. double and Frank White had a two-run home run. Dean Machine, 8-3. Bill Sibrinsz, Bob Reault and Ralph couldn’t play great tennis out there, but I 7- 5, 6-2 in the first round of this year s (32), slugging percentage (.789), hits (43) and total bases Jim Leyritz, whose three-base error uiggered Haw­ Guetterman got one man out and was charged with Pemberton each had two safeties for Wininger’s. Jeff still made the most of iL” Becker said. “It . Ivanisevic had 19 aces m (90). East. kins’ debacle in Chicago Sunday, was the only Yankee The Astros, last in the WesL have lost 16 of their last four hits, five runs, a walk and a balk. Clarmont, Mike Ouimet and Ken Snclgrove roped two wasn’t comfortable at all.” that contest, to only three for Becker, who Martinez, who struck out 18 batters on June 4 to tie without a hit on Wednesday. He also grounded into three Sandy Koufax’s team record, finished 4-0 with a 1.76 17 road games. “It was pretty much your basic off-nighL” Guetterman Q o hits apiece for Dean’s. Lendl, the top seed, lashed 12 aces said afterward, “I don’t want to see him double plays. ERA over six starts. He struck out 56 batters in 46 in­ Cubs 5, Dodgers 3: Joe Girardi had three hits and said. WOMEN’S REC — Behind the two-hit pitching of while defeating Brad Pearce 6-4, 6-4, 5-7, on grass.” DO drove in three runs and Marvell Wynne hit a two-run “That was probably a season-high in hits, wasn’t it?” Jackson, who has six homers in his last nine games, Kathy Grant, Main Fhib blanked Three Penny Pub, 16-0, 6-4. Lendl has won $16 million in a This time, Ivanisevic said, his task will nings and tossed three complete games. H !< homer as Chicago beat Los Angeles and Fernando Valen­ Merrill said. “Sure, it figures to be in a losing cause.” also homered off Guetterman in Thesday night’s 6-1 at Charter Oak Park. Elisa Brayall, Sandi Sarles, Karin career based on baseline brilliance, but he be much more difficult. The Associated Press 1\irek and Leslie Harrison each had two hits for Main Diver Phil Boggs dies zuela. The Yankees caught Bret Saberhagen, the 1989 Cy Royals’ victory. has learned to serve and volley to seek a “It is much different,” he said. “It is YES!! — Ivan Lendl celebrates after his four-set victory over Brad MIAMI (AP) — Phil Boggs, who dominated U.S. Valenzuela, 6-7, was bidding to become the second Young winner, on possibly his worst night in four years. “1 threw it down the middle instead of hitting spots,” o d Pub. Harrison homered. Wimbledon title. much easier to play Becker in the first Pearce Wednesday in the quarterfinals at Wimbledon. Lendl won diving compiclition during the 1970s, died at age 40. pitcher in major league history to throw back-to-back Saberhagen gave up 12 hits in five and one-third innings, Guetterman said. “I probably should have thrown more Pearce, ranked 120lh in the world, round than the semifinals, and easier on The 1976 Olympic gold medalist in springboard no-hitters, but he allowed 10 hits and all five Chicago but only two runs. He failed to get a for the first breaking balls. Obviously, I was doing something wrong never before playing beyond the first clay than on grass.” 6-4, 6-4, 5-7, 6-4. diving died at his home after a seven-month bout with runs in seven imiings. He walked one and struck out two lime in 128 starts. mechanically.” Little League lymphoma, a malignant tumor of the lymph nodes. while throwing 99 pitches. O TJ The first aquatic athlete to win three world champion­ Giants 9, Cardinals 2: San Francisco scored eight TOWN FARM TOURNAMENT — Vittner’s ships, Boggs was the three-time world champion in late runs, including a two-run homer by pinch-hitter Bill S o downed Casper’s, 16-2, at Verplanck Field. Tim Metcalf Padres are right about catching talent springboard diving, and won nine U.S. national cham­ Bathe in the seventh. Steinbrenner O “T| tripled and Brandon McCormick belted a grand slam pionships in the 1970s. The victory completed a three-game sweep for the of Cincirmati and Ozzie Smith of St. m rn homer to lead Vittner’s. Cory Soper tripled and Greg By JIM DONAGHY Giants, who have won 14 of their last 18 at Candlestick From Page 17 Louis, making his eighth consecutive start Foster holds off Kingdom Park after losing their first eight home games this season. Bottaro doubled and Aaron Dulka struck out 11 in the The Associated Press League All-Stars winning effort. Ed Torrez pitched well and Steve Foster at shortstop. Smith was the top vote-get­ EAST BERLIN (AP) — Greg Foster defeated two- Giants starter John Burkett (8-2) won for the first time 1 As vottd by tb* (am tM pm w a ter in 1987 and 1988. Certainly no one who worked at his hotel in his Orioles, represented Steinbrenner and the penalty was and Roy Winters hit well for Casper’s. NEW YORK — Last season, the San time Olympic champion and world record holder Roger in five starts, holding the Cardinals to two runs and four “I’m happy, but I’m not surprised,” Kingdom by two one-hundredths of a second in the 1 IO­ hits over seven innings. Jeff Brantley pitched the final hometown of Tampa, Fla., with the “Yankee Trader” later reduced to 15 months. Diego Padres thought they had two All- z No matter what happens off the field, Steinbrenner’s Sabo said. “I almost got elected last year two innings for his 12th save. lounge, wculd disagree. There, Steinbrenner has been Star catchers in their organization. They meter hurdles at tlie Olympic Day Grand Prix track and and I stunk. It’s a popularity contest. It Expos 5, Reds 3: Dennis Martinez pitched a five-hit­ seen carrying the luggage of guests, then dressing down problems on the field are likely to continue. The Yankees were right. field meet. are on a pace for their first 100-loss season since 1912 In Brief. doesn’t mean you’re tlie best by any Foster, himself a two-time world champion, started ter over eight innings and Mike Aldrcie and Andres the bellboys for not being at tlieir posts. San Diego traded Sandy Alomar to the means. It must means a lot of people want Galarraga had two RBIs each in a five-run first to lead Other former employees of Steinbrenner’s American and have become so bad that Steinbrenner turned to a 3 3 XO Cleveland Indians and kept Benito San­ fast and finished in 13.27 seconds to Kingdom’s 13.29. youth movernenL something he always said he thought to see you play and I guess I had a lot of Other highlights: Kenny Harrison won the triple jump Monueal. Shipbuilding Co. in Tampa tell similar stories of the tiago. Both were selected starting catchers he would never do. 33 > fan support.” with a leap of 58 feeu 402 inches, just five inches off Martinez (6-6), who had lost his two previous starts, owner’s involvement. Although they call it interference. for the All-Star Game in voting an­ How bad are tliey? Even when Andy Hawkins pitches > H General Oil a winner Smith is having an off-year so far, hit­ Willie Banks’ world record set five years ago, and struck out four and walked two before yielding to Dave A real Yankee Doodle Dandy, for sure, bom on the nounced Wednesday. SchmidL who notched his 10th save with perfect relief in Fourth of July and all. Steinbrenner turned 60 on Wed­ a no-hitter, the Yankees lose. 33 NEWINGTON — General Oil remained unbeaten but ting .224 with seven errors. But his Jamaican Merlenc Ottey won the women’s 100 and 200 Kind of like the days when Steinbrenner bought die twice tied in JC-Courant Senior Division play with a 6-4 Ray Fosse in 1971 and Manny Trillo in 1,337,815 votes beat Cincinnati’s Barry meters, the latter with a world-best clocking of 21.94 the ninth. nesday. 1983 were the only other Indian players Braves 4, Phillies 1: Dale Murphy homered and There was a big party for him during the weekend in Yankees. Then, they were struggling in the standings and win over Newington Tliesday night at Mill Pond. George Larkin by 79,220. Larkin is hitting .317. seconds. starving at the gate — in 1972, the Yankees drew Covey pitched a four-hitter and Brian Courville picked voted to the team since fan voting knocked in two runs as the Braves concluded their first Florida, although it’s not known what he got for gifts. “It’s partly a popularity contest,” Mouland leads Monaco golf winning road trip since September of 1989. Suffice it to say, though. The Boss usually gets what he 966,328, their only time under 1 million since 1945. up the save for General Oil, now 5-0-2. Marc Sears, Jim resumed in 1970. Cleveland’s low atten­ Larkin said “The Wizard of Oz ... Wlien he took over, Steinbrenner promised to put die IfCOMlt IlilM" MarliMeOwlr* | MONTE CARLO, Monaco (AP) — Mark Mouland of The Braves, fifth in the National League WesL wound wants. In baseball and otlierwisc. Jackson, Raul Kirby, Craig Rardi and Jason Stanizzi hit dance traditionally has hurt its players’ WadttoM* To b* AfiAounoad Tburadiyi everybody knows him. He’s good for the Yankees back on top. And under the guidance of Gabc Britain shot a 6-under-par 63 and took a one-shot lead up their current road swing at 4-2. “There is nothing quite so limited as being a limited well for the wiimers. chances of winning fan balloting. Botteo game and he should be there. As long as Paul, who had built the Indians teams that Steinbrenner over South African H u ^ Baiocchi after the first round of With Murphy hitting his 366th career homer in the partner of George Steinbrenner’s,” John McMullen, who The 61st All-Star Game is scheduled he plays, he’ll be voted in and I think he admired as a kid growing up in Cleveland, the Yankees the Monte Carlo Open golf tournament. fourth and an RBI single in the eighth, it eased the way bought a share of the Yankees in 1974, said in one of the for Tliesday night at Wrigley Field. deserves it.” got there. Britsox beat Canton “It’s really special because I got traded Josc-Maria Canizares of Spain, runner-up here last for Tom Glavine’s second strai^t victory. most memorable and telling lines. n.M i.Kiri Glavine (5-5) worked 6 2-3 innings, giving up six hits, McMullen later got out of the partnership and bought Paul traded for Graig Nettles, Cliris Chambliss, Willie NEW BRITAIN (AP) — Mike Kelly drove in the from the National League to the year, was third after a 65 and Ian Woosnam of Wales and Tony U Ru m s “If people take the time to punch my striking out one and walking four, before getting relief the Hou-ston Astros. These days, more and more people Randolph, Ed Figueroa, Mickey Rivers and Bucky Dent, game winning run and two others on a bases-lor^ied American League” said Alomar, hitting Peter Hedblom of Sweden shared fourth at 66. 0»kl$nd name on a ballot I’ve got a respon­ help. Joe Boever pitched the ninth for his ei^ th save. seem to want Steinbrenner out. and urged the signing of free agents Catfish Hunter, single in the bottom of the eleventh inning to lead the 298 with three homers and 31 RBIs. “As sibility,” Smith said. “To have the oppor­ l^dres 5, Pirates 4: Eric Show earned his first victory A CBS-New York Times poll last week showed Goose Goosage and Reggie, moves that led to World New Britain Red Sox to a 5-4 victory over the Canton- a rookie, I wasn’t expecting to be that Suburban to Easy Goer tunity to play with the best is something in more than a year and hit a two-run single as San Diego Steinbrenner had just a 6 percent approval rating among Series championships in 1977 and 1978 — die last Akron Indians Wednesday night. close. NEW YORK (AP) — Trainer Shug McGaughey didn’t The game was delayed 39 minutes in the top of the special. The fans don’t worry about good ended a seven-game losing streak. fans in general, while 36 disapproved of him. Among back-to-back championships in baseball. Paul could do “Being in Cleveland, nobody expected Mndy Alomtr like the way Easy Goer looked in the paddock. what he did because he had Steinbrenner’s respccL eleventh when the umpire halted play because of an In­ Tu**diy, July 10, i#*0W rtgi*y Fl»W or bad years. They just vote.” Show (1-6) entered the game in the second inning and Yankees fans, 10 percent approved and 53 disapproved. me to win the th'mg. But if you play 100 He loved the way the 4-year-old colt looked at the end something that not many in the Yankees’ organization dependence Day fireworks display that began behind the The NL outfield consists of Chicago’s of the Suburban Handicap on Wednesday at Belmont allowed one earned run over five innings to win for the Lately, anti-Steinbrenner chants and signs are more percent, they’re going to vote for you. A t have enjoyed. stadium. Andre Dawson, Philadelphia’s Lenny Park. first time since last June 19 when he made his next-to- frequent at Yankee Stadium. The banners are quickly The Indians took a 2-0 lead in the top of the second in­ “I heard they were supporting me in Dykstra and San Francisco’s Kevin last start before ending the year with a back injury. taken down by security personnel, but the Bronx cheers, Since then, Steinbrenner often has ruled by fear. Even San Diego and in New York, because I Easy Goer might not have been a fireworks spec­ during batting practice, Yankees players take a quick ning on an error and an RBI single by Bemie Tatis. The seasons (four consecutive years, Mitchell. he can’t stop. There are, however, fewer people jeering had a good scries there. Somebody has to 1991, Canseco will make $2.8 million. tacular, but he was impressive in winning the l'/4-milc Indians added another run in the fifth inning on an RBI Sandberg will be making his fifth straight 1986-89),” Boggs said. “My numbers are Dawson will be making his sixth start stakes in 2:00 under 126 pounds while spotting six rivals because attendance is down about 5,000 per game tliis glance at the owner’s box, to sec if Steinbrenner i;i diere. play for Cleveland, and I like it here.” If he is, sometimes with Donald Trump or other triple by Rob Swain. start for the NL and sixth overall. down, but earlier in my career I was and Mitchell (19 homers and 45 RBIs) season. “It wasn’t really one of my goals. At from 12 to 18 pounds. “I think they like to boo George Steinbrenner, 1 really luminaries, the word quicki) spreads on the field. New Britain lied the game in the sixth inning on an Joining Canseco in the starting AL out­ doing well at the All-Star break and will be starting for the second year in a Given a breather by Pat Day while on the lead midway RBI single by Eric Wedge and a two-run double by the first of the year, I wasn’t expecting to Fignon drops out do,” he said. “It hurts me. But it comes with the ter­ Just what drives Steinbrenner is uncertain. Is it win­ field will be Seattle’s Ken Griffey Jr. and didn’t get to go. It’s still an honor to go. row. Dykstra, the majors’ leading hitter at through the turn. Easy Goer went on to a P/4-legnth vic­ Kelly. be an All-Star. I expeaed to have a good .368, is the first Phillies’ outfielder to be ROUEN, France (AP) — Laurent Fignon got off ritory.” ning or total control? Oakland’s Rickey Henderson, ru lin g his I’m not ashamed of anything.” tory over Dc Roche. Tlie U.S. Olympic movement hired him because it Red Sox reliever Jeff Plympton, 3-2, picked up the season.” Rebounding from a third-place finish to Criminal Type his bicycle and took a car to the finish of the fifth Wliat will happen Thursday when he meets with Vin- sixth All-Star start. Griffey is the first Cecil Fielder of Detroit, who leads the elected since Greg Luzinski in 1978. thought he could bring the right spirit. win. Santiago was elected for the second and Housebuster in the one-mile Metropolitan Handicap stage of the Tour de France. cenL a former contemporary at Williams College, is un­ player in Mariners’ history to be elected AL with 27 homers and 70 RBIs, was Dykstra gets a $25,000 bonus for making certain. At issue will be Steinbrenner’s relationship with “Some people don’t like die word ‘winning’ and 1 say straight year at catcher but will not be on May 28, Easy Goer earned a uip to the $1 million Ar­ The two-time champion from France, who lost a as an All-Star starter. runner-up to McGwire at first base with the All-Star team. Howie Spira, who was associated with the David Win­ diat’s wrong," Steinbrenner said. 1 World Cup finalists set able to play because of a broken arm. lington Challenge on Aug. 4 at Arlington Park. dramatic finish to Greg LeMond in last year’s evenL “It hasn’t hit me yet,” Griffey said. “1 1,151,099 votes. Perhaps the biggest oversight by the officially quit the race for the third time in five years. Steinbrenner learned about winning in endeavors be­ TURIN, Italy (AP) — West Germany won a penalty- Mike Scioscia of Los Angeles was the There he will confront Criminal Type and old nemesis field FoundatioiL and Steinbrenner’s $40,000 payment to just want to keep playing good baseball Chicago White Sox shortstop Ozzie fans was Barry Bonds’ ninth-place finish “It’s been a bad year,” Cyrille Guimard, director of sides baseball. He backed the Broadway show “Ap- kick shootout over England 4-3 after a 1-1 tic in regula­ runner-up at catcher with 571,378 votes Sunday Silence, his Triple Crown rival of last year and Spira. and help the team win. That was my ob­ Guillen, hitting .324, was second to Rip­ in the NL outfield. Bonds is hitting .329 Fignon’s Castorama team, said. “He’s cursed.” John Dowd, the Washington lawyer who prepared the plau.se” and owned parts of the of the tion time and advanced to its third straight World Cup to Santiago’s 1,785.412. Rookie catcher winner in three of their four meetings. jective, not to make the All-Star team. ken with 1,054,370 votes. with 14 homers, 55 RBIs and 21 stolen While Canada’s Steve Bauer remained the overall report that led to Pete Rose’s banishment last year, inves­ NBA and the Cleveland Pipers of the old American Bas­ final and second in a row against Argentina. Todd Zeile of St. Louis was third with Easy Goer paid a winning muluel of $2.40 for his I’m happy. I’d like to thank everyone Starting with Sandberg in the NL in­ bases. leader, Fignon again experienced disappointment as tigated tlie Steinbrenner-Spira connection. Harold “Ace” ketball AsscK'iation. The Germans, who clinched it when England’s Chris 570,971 votes. second triumph in three starts tliis year and 14th in 20 who voted for me.” field will be first baseman Will Clark of The reserves and pitchers for both he fell victim to several mishaps that wore on him Tyler, one of tlie most-respected legal minds in the Mostly, Steinbrenner’s sports fouiidation came in foot­ Waddle shot over the net one kick after teammate Stuart The Padres traded Alomar, infielder career races. It was worth $239,4(X) from a purse of Canseco, who recently came off the San Francisco, third baseman Chris Sabo leagues were to be announced today. mentally and physically over the last three days country, was retained by Vincent, and Steinbrctuier h;ts ball, where he was an assistant coach at Nordiwestem Pearce was stopped by goalie Bodo Illgner, will play Carlos Baerga and outfielder Chris James $399,000 and boosted his bankroll to $4,873,770. disabled list, is hitting .2 ^ with 20 home Bauer managed to keep his lead after the rain- hired two top criminal lawyers. and Purdue. In diat sjxirL insuuit changes are nece.ssary defending champion Argentina on Sunday at Rome’s to Cleveland last December for outfielder runs and 50 RBIs. soaked longest stage of the three-week race. 187 Steinbrenner has been tlirough tliis before. In Novem­ — die season is short and every loss nieais a lot. Olympic Stadium. Joe Carter. Starting in the AL infield will be third miles through northern France. Dutch rider Gcrrit ber 1974, tlicn-commissioner Bowie Kuhn suspended But baseball is so different. Patience is u virtue, not a Both West Germany and Argentina advanced to the “1 thought he would be an All-Star,” Storm may not be back baseman Wade Boggs of Boston, Solleveld won Wednesday’s fifth leg by more than him for two years for making illegal contributions to vice, and it seemed Stcinbreiuier never learned diat. 9 championship match in the same manner — after 1-1 San Diego Manager Jack McKeon said of ST. LOUIS (AP) — The St. Louis Storm, who set an shortstop Cal Ripken Jr. of , four minutes over Belgium’s Johan Museeuw. Bauer Richard Nixon’s 1972 election campaign. Edward Ben­ Lately, Steinbrenner is pledging a kinder, gentler self. ties, they won shootouts 4-3 by making all of their kicks, Alomar. “Wouldn’t it have been nice to Teen-agers on sidelines expansion-team record for victories in the Major Indoor second baseman Steve Sax of New York again finished back in the pack, but still has a 30- nett Williams, who would someday buy the Baltimore He talks about his kids uiking over die family business. while the opponent missed its final two. have two of my catchers on the All-Star Soccer League last winter, may not return in 1990-91, and first baseman Mark McGwire of Oak­ WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — And Gabriela Sabatini, the youngest of the sur­ second overall lead over Ronan Pcnscc of France, team, both as starting catchers?” there’s not a teen-ager among them. vivors at 20 years, 1 month. the franchise’s owner says. with Frans Maassen of tlie Netherlands dropping to land. Milan Mandaric says he’s unhappy over lack of sup­ Two die in the celebration Jose Canseco led a parade of three In a year when women’s tennis has And there’s Steffi Graf, 21 and aiming third, 33 seconds back. For Boggs, batting .299, it’s his sixth port from local business leaders and will decide by Oakland Athletics on the AL team and been dominated by ever-youngcr players, for a third consecutive Wimbledon title, LcMond finished in the pack on Wednesday, leav­ BEST BUY ROBERT J. SMITH, inc. BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — Two people died straight All-Star appearance. Friday whether to fold the team. and nearly 200 were arrested after street celebrations Ryne Sandberg of the Chicago Cubs today’s women’s semifinals at against Zina Garrison, who gave away 10 ing him more than 10 minutes off the overall lead. “You can always say you’d rather have Wimbledon contained not a single con­ years of youth to Seles when she beat her The Storm, 24-28, drew an average of 6,847 fans, third The fifth stage, over a modcratlely flat route, be­ OIL CO. turned violent following Argentina’s victory over Italy in topped the balloting in the National the three days off to let your body resL" lowest in the MISL last season. In the playoffs, from INSURANSMITFS SINCE World Cup soccer. League. testant still in her teens. in the quarters. came interesting at the 77-mile mark, when a number Vernon, CT Boggs said. “It’s not only a thrill, but an The foursome was last year’s U.S. which St. Louis was eliminated in the first round, the 1914 Thousands took to tlie streets of Buenos Aires and With 14-ycar-old Jennifer Capriati of riders fell and held back a larger group, including Canseco led all players in fan balloting honor to represent the Red Sox and all Open semifinalists. Graf beat Navratilova team drew fewer than 4,(X)0 for each of its two dates. 8 7 5 - 0 8 7 6 other cities across the country to celebrate Argentina’s gone in the fourth round and 16-ycar-old Fignon. The Frenchman was involved in another 9 with 2,313,091 votes, the most since third basemen.” Monica Seles eliminated in the quarter­ for the title there. advance to the World Cup final for the second straight Ceron wins Peachtree run delay on Thesday. catcher Gary Carter received 2,785,407 in Toronto third baseman Kelly Gruber finals, this is a final four of relative old- Graf, Navratilova, 25-ycar-old Cauuina After a refreslunent break, Fignon slowed, turned 649-5241 time. was runner-up to Boggs. Gruber is hitting Lindqvist and 34-year-old ATLANTA (AP) — Dionicio Ceron of Mexico outran and rode against the pack looking for his team car. COD Revelry turned chaotic, however, when several 1982 while playing for Montreal. timers. 65 E. Center Street .303 with 20 homers and 65 RBIs. There’s Martina Navratilova, an an­ battled in the semifinals here a year ago. fellow countryman Marcos Barreto by four seconds to He then got off the bike and got in the car, officially hundred youths began breaking into shops in the capital. Sandberg was next with 2,262,245 votes. Diesel Fuel Also Available Canseco, who signed a five-year, $23.5 “I’ve won five batting titles and set the cient 33 and trying again to make history Since then, each of the Grand Slam semis win the 10-kilomctcr Peachtree Road Race in Atlanta. quitting the race he won in 1983 and 1984. 150 Galon Minimum Manchester, C T Police said nearly 200 people were arrested and faced Ceron, of Toluca, Mexico), finished in 28 minutes, 24 Price aubjact to changt Volum« Dtacounn million contract last week, has been record for 200-hit seasons and beat Lou on Wimbledon’s grass courts, against have had at least one teen-ager charges of robbery, resisting arrest and disturbing the seconds. peace. elected twice before as an AL starter. In Gehrig’s record for 200-hit, 100-walk 0 20—MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, July 5,1990 What’s News Attorney delaying pension inquiry United German team to enter 1992 Friday By ALEX GIRELLI In a report on the town policies and tion of the statute. authorize the study of the policies and funded. He also said the internation­ day. The merger will take place in Germany might not have qualified The first appearance by the united “As the two Germanys grow Manchester Herald procedures in investing pension funds, The auditors made the second sugges­ procedures involved in investing the By SEAN CULLEN December, right after the political for the Games in a unified system. German team in international ath­ together there has been great con­ al sport governing bodies would LOCAL NEWS INSIDE the independent auditing firm of Bennett, tion after pointing to an invesUnent in an funds in the town’s employee pension The Associated Press joining of the German states. That won’t deter the two commit­ letics will likely be at an internation­ cern over whether the athletes would need to decide how a single G erm ^ MANCHESTER — Town Attorney Katz, and Thibodeau of Manchester insolvent Texas savings and loan as­ program. It will be the first time since 1964 tees from forging a new Olympic al competition at the World Indoor feel shorted out of the competition team would be represented in Maureen Chmielecki will wait for a made two recommendations to sociation. The auditors said there is no The invesUnent in the San Antonio EAST BERLIN — There will be in Tokyo that Germany will enter monolith. Track Championships in Seville, for fewer places. Still we find great qualifying competitions for world ■ Manchester schools decision by the Board of Directors before Chmielecki involving the law. Sec. evidence that the credentials of the S&L bank, Bexar Savings, has paid interest one less German team competing at the Olympics with one team. On that “We had no dissenting opinions Spain, March 8-10, 1991, authorities support among our sportsmen for and Olympic events. determining whether any investments of 44-88(a) of the General Statutes. were thoroughly investigated. each month on lime, according to Town the Olympics in 1992. But the one occasion, athletes from the divided whatsoever,” said Willi Daume, in East Berlin said. forming one team from one Separate teams representing both lose arbitration. Page 9. pension funds made by the town Gne suggestion is to sec if an invest­ The Merus Corp. investment is in a Treasurer Roger Negro, and the town has that does could become a sports su­ nation competed under the Olympic president of the West German “We’re moving ahead quickly for counUy.” national Olympic committees have treasurer were in violation of state ment in Merus Corp. promissory notes blood bank venture that has soured and it recalled the $98,000 in principal the perpower. flag. Olympic Committee. “The unifica­ the sake of the athletes. A fast The two Olympic committee already participated in qualifying statutes, Chmielecki said Thursday. was in violation of the statute and the appears the town will lose its $200,(XX) town invested. Mayor Terry Werkhoven said the East and West Germany will send At the 1988 Seoul Olympics, East tion will be completed by the two merger is important in order to presidents said there was “complete events in some sports. ■ Local communities other was to detennine if investments in in principal and about $30,000 in inter­ The bank has been in financial a unified team to the Winter and Germany won 127 medals and West Olympic committees in an orderly remove any uncertainty about who agreement” between the two or­ In addition, both Olympic Com­ directors will not act on the report when certificates of deposit in out-of state est. Uoubles since mid-1988, and has been Summer Olympics in 1992, the Germany 48. The total of 175 was fashion. We will be working inten­ will make the team,” said Joachim ganizations about the decision. mittee presidents said they support have placid 4th. Page 9. they meet TVicsday, but will take it up at banks are violation, in certificates of It was the news of that loss that presidents of the two national Olym­ 14 more than the Soviet Union, but sively together in the coming Weiskopf, president of the East Ger­ Weiskopf said it was not yet clear the choice of Berlin as site of the their July 17 meeting. deposit in out-of-state banks are in viola­ prompted the Board of Directors to Please see PENSION, page 8. pic committees announced Wednes­ each athlete from East and West weeks.” man Olympic Committee. how the team would be selected and Olympics in 2000. ■ Ed board is accused of rubberstamping. P&ge 9.

SCOREBOARD 24 injured in bomb blast JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — Bolicc blamed rigjit-wing extremists for a powerful b(Hnb Expos 5, Re(is 3 that blew up today next to a downtown bus terminal National League results i M a n r I j f a t p r H r r a t f i | CINCINNATI MONTREAL Tennis Leaders used mainly by blacks, injuring at least 24 people. Giants 9, Cardinals 2 a b r h b l a b r h M Baseball ab r h bl ab r h bl The blast on a busy street during morning rush STLOUIS S A N FR A N Sabo 3b 4 0 1 0 DMrtnz d 4 0 0 0 Boggs 3b 5 1 1 0 Gladden If 5 0 2 1 FItzgerld c ab r h bl a b r h b l Larkin as 4 1 0 0 3 1 1 0 hour sent concrete and debris hurtling through the JoRsed ss 4 0 10 Manriq 2b 3 0 0 0 ONeill rf 3 1 1 2 Wbikerrf 3 1 1 0 Coleman If 3 0 1 0 Butler cf 4 3 3 2 Wimbiedon resuits PGA money leaders Greenwl II 2 1 1 0 Newmn 2b 1 0 0 0 EDavis d 3 0 0 0 WallachSb 4 1 1 0 air, a police spokesman said. American League standings McGee cf 1 0 0 0 Leach If 3 0 1 0 Penac 2 1 1 0 Puckettef 1 1 0 0 Grilfey 1b 4 0 0 0 Aldretolf 3 1 2 2 WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — Results Wed­ PONTE VEDRA, Fla. (AP) — Money leaders East Division MThmpcf 2 0 0 0 Bathe ph 1112 “There were rocks flying into the air. There was Bmnsky r1 5 0 0 0 Gaetti 3b 3 0 2 1 Braggs If 4 1 2 0 Nixon If 1 0 0 0 nesday of the $6.63 million Wimbiedon tennis on Ihe 1990 PG A Tour through the Greater Manchester, Conn. - A City of Village Charm Newsstand Price; 35 Cents L Pet GB Pndltn3b 4 0 0 0 Brantiey p 0 0 0 0 blood everywhere, people screaming and crying,” Friday, July 6,1990 w Evans dh 3 1 1 3 Larkin rf 4 0 0 0 Oester2b 4 0 0 0 Galarrg 1b 4 1 1 2 champlortships (seedings in parentheses): Hertford OperL which arxlad July 1: 46 32 .590 — Guerrer 1b 3 1 1 0 WCIark 1b 2 0 0 1 Men $832709 Boston Burks cf 5 0 2 1 Moses rf 0 0 0 0 Olivsrc 3 0 0 0 Fdey 2b 4 0 2 1 1. Greg Norman said Nhlanhla Mbatha, who was waiting in a bus 44 37 .543 3iq Walling rf 3 1 1 0 MWIms 3b 5 0 1 2 Singles $742616 Toronto Quintan 1b 4 0 2 0 Harper dh 4 2 2 0 Scudder p 0 0 0 0 Owen as 4 0 1 0 2. ftyne Stewart 38 39 .494 Oquei^ 2b 3 0 0 0 Litton rf 4 0 0 0 Quarterfinals $714,244 line when the bomb went off. “It was only black Cleveland Marzano c 3 0 1 0 Sorrent 1b 4 0 1 1 Birtsas p 1 0 0 0 DeMrtnz p 2 0 0 0 3. Mark Calcavecchia 39 42 .481 8*q OSmith ss 3 0 2 2 Kennedy c 5 0 0 0 Stefan Edberg (3), Sweden, def. Christian $673,698 Detroit Kutcher If 0 0 0 0 Ortiz c 4 0 2 0 HMorrs ph 1 0 1 1 Schmidt p 0 0 0 0 4. F^ul Azinger people who got injured.” 43 .449 11 PagrtozzI c 2 0 0 0 RThmp 2b 2 1 0 0 $579,880 Baltimore 35 Robidx ph 0 0 0 0 Gagne ss 3 0 0 0 Layanap 0 0 0 0 Bergstrom, Sweden, 6-3,6-2, 6-4. 5. W ayrte L^ Doctors said most of the 24 injuries were not 34 42 .447 11 CWilsn ph 1 0 0 0 Uribe ss 3 2 2 0 Boris Becker (2), West Gemtany, del. Brad $571,694 Milwaukee Romine If 0 0 0 0 Hrbek ph 0 0 0 0 Quinns ph 1 0 0 0 6. Hole Irwin New Mirk 28 48 .368 17 Barrett 2b 2 0 0 0 Mack pr 0 0 0 0 Zeile c 0 0 0 0 Burkett p 2 0 0 0 Gilbert (7). Piedmont Caiif.. 6-4, 6-4, 6-1. 7. Fred Couples $527,479 grave. The independent South African Press As­ Chem plant blast Mahler p 0 0 0 0 Division DeLeon p 2 0 0 0 Andrsn ph 1110 Nan Lendl (1), Czechoslovakia, def. Brad $503,377 Totals 35 4 10 4 Totals 32 3 9 3 Totala 32 3 5 3 Totals 32 5 9 5 8. GH Morgan sociation said two people were hospitalized. W L PCL GB Boston 000 100 003— 4 Dayley p 0 0 0 0 Kingery If 1 1 0 0 Pearce, Provo. Utah, 6-4, 6-4, 5-7, 6-4. 9. F^ter Jacobsen $421,420 Cincinnati 000 0101 0 2 0 -3 $393,296 Police said no group claimed immediate respon­ Y Oakland 49 28 .636 — TJones ph 1 0 0 0 10. Jode Mudd Minnesota 100 100 001—3 Montrsal 500 000 OOx— 5 Goran Ivanisevic, Yugoslavia, del. Kevin Cur- Chicago 47 28 .627 1 Horton p 0 0 0 0 11. Stave Elkington $388,222 DP— Minnesota 1. LOB— Boston 11, Min­ LOB— Cincinnati 4, Montreal 6. 2B— Galar­ n n , Austin, Texas, 4«, 6-4,6-4,6-7 (6-10), 6-3. sibility for the blast. But because the targets were See We 41 39 .513 0Rick Leach, Laguna Beach, Calif., and Jim Texas 36 44 .450 14'/! San Francisco 000 010 44x—9 15 John Huston $350,305 IP H R E R BB S O Scudder L.1-2 1-3 4 Pugh (1), Palos Verdes, Calif., def. Jason StoF week to step up a bombing campaign. Kansas City 34 43 .442 15 E— Coleman, Pendleton, Oquendo. DP— 16. Tom Kite $356,526 Boston 3 2-3 2 tenberg and Todd Woodbridga, Australia, 7-6 By RUTH RENDON eyes. I looked over to my left and I saw a Wednatday's Gsmee San Francisco 2. LOB— SlLouis 1, San Francis­ Birtsas 17. Nick Faldo $331,262 The groups oppose steps by President F.W. de GHarris 5 7 2 2 5 2 Layana 3 2 (7-5), 7-6 (7-3), 7-6 (7-4). Seattle 3, Cleveland 2 co 9. 2B— OSmith, Leach, Uribe, MaWilliams. 18. Mark O'Meara $329,531 Klerk toward dismantling apartheid laws that The Associated Press big ball of fire. ... It looked to me like a LampW,2-2 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 Stefan Kruger, South Africa, and Greg Van Boston 4, Minnesota 3 3B— Uribe. HR— Bathe (1). S B — FtoThompson Mahler 19. Tommy Artiwur $319,002 tank run off, you know, like a rocket just Reardon S,14 1 2 1110 Montreal Emburgh, Naples, Fla, def. and segregate whites and blacks. Toronto 4, California 2 (8), Butler (26). S — Brantley. SF— WCIark. 20. Lanny Wadkins $301,316 Minnesota 8 5 (6), Canada. 7-6 (10-8), 6-7 look off,” Mike Zugcl, a truck driver Detroit 10, Chicago 7,12 innings IP H R E R BB s o DeMrtinez W.6-6 21. Ben Crenshaw $293,940 CHANNEL VIEW, Texas — An ex­ West 6 5 114 1 Schmidt S,10 1 0 (1-7), 6 - i 4-6, 6-4. Kansas City 13, New York 6 StLoula 22. Steve Jones $289,682 plosion and fire ripped through a section who witnessed the explosion, told Cable Candlaria 1 0 0 0 1 0 HBP— Wblker by Scudder, DeMartinez by , South Akica, and Milwaukee 7, Oakland 1 DeLeon L,G-7 6 4 3 3 4 9 23. Billy FTay Brown $288,911 Bersrrguer 2-3 2 0 0 0 1 Birtsas. (2), Souto Africa def. , Sebring, Fia, Deja vu attack of a chemical plant “like a rocket just News Network. Baltirmre 9, Texas 4 Dayley 1 2 2 2 0 1 24. David Frost $285,136 Aguilera L.2-2 1 1-3 3 3 3 1 1 Umpires— Home, DeMuth; First Gregg; and Flobert Seguso (8), Sebrkrg, Fia, 6-7 (3-7), Thursday's Games Horton 2-3 2 4 2 2 0 2& Nick Price $282,778 took off,” killing at least 14 workers, There were no evacuations of people West pitched to 2 batters in the 7to. Secorid, Harvey; Third, Crawford. 7-6 (7-2), 4-6, 7-6 (8-6), 6-3. NEW MILFORD (AP) — A New Milford man Boston (Kiecker 2-3) at Minnesota (Erickson Terry 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 26. Brian Tennyson $274,648 authorities and witnesses said. living in the area, according to fire dis­ Umpires— Home, Young; FirsL McKean; T— 2:30. A - 1 5,827. $261,213 was in fair condition today after being severely 1- 1), 1:15 p.m. Secorid, Johnson; Third, Kaiser. San Frandaco 27. Ray Floyd The explosion occurred around 11:30 patcher Karen Ragsdale. Oakland (WIelch 13-2) at Milwaukee (Higuera Burkett W.8-2 7 4 2 2 1 3 28. Gene Sauers $255,145 beaten during an early morning attack in the same T— 3.39. A— 23,604. \U>man 5-2), 2:35 p.m. Brantley S,12 2 1 0 0 0 0 29. Ian Baker-Finch $251,338 pju. Thursday at the Atlantic Richfield Rose Ann Raupp, an investigator for Braves 4, Phillies 1 Doubles house where his father was fatally stabbed during a Seattle (Hanson 8-S) at Cleveland (Candiolti DeLeon pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. 30. Scott Hoch $244,198 Co. chemical plant in this Houston sub­ the Harris County medical examiner’s 9- 3), 7 3 5 p.m. Tigers 10, White Sox 7 H BP— MThompson by Burkett Litton by ATLANTA PHILA Third Round burglary five years ago, authorities said. a b r h bl a b r h bl Larissa Savchenko and Natasha Zvereva (3), 'Ik Kansas City (S.Davls 2-fi) at Detroit (Peliy Terry. urb. The 564-acre complex employs office, said her office was working with 3 0 0 0 Dykstra cf 3 0 0 0 Soviet Union, def. Katrina Adams, Chicago, and John Andrews, 34, was assaulted about 6 a.m. 5-5), 7 3 5 p.m. Umpires— Home, MeSherry; First Davidson; LoSmith If (12 innings) 5 1 1 0 more than 400 people. plant employees in an attempt to recover California (McCasklll 6-4) at Toronto (Stieb Second, Montague; Third, Hoha Thomas ss 4 1 0 0 Herr 2b Lori McNeil (9), Houston, 6-3, 6-3. Thursday in the house he shares with Diana Colum- DETROIT CHICAGO 2 0 2 0 Rec baseball “At this lime, we think wc have 14 the bodies. 10- 3), 7 3 5 p.m. T— A— 25,538. Gantcf 4 0 0 0 Fleady If Steffi Grat West Germany, and Gabrieia ab r h bl 2:4a bo, who was home during the attack. Andrews was Baltimore (Milacki 4-4) at Texas (Jeffcoat a b r h bl Presley 3b 3 0 0 0 Jordan 1 b 4 0 0 0 Sabatini (8), Argentina def. Elise Burgin, Bal­ casualties,” plant manager Earl McCalcb, “We believe there’s 14 dead, but we’re Whitakr2b 7 1 2 1 Uohnsn cf 7 1 2 1 FlMcOwl p 0 0 0 0 timore. and Rosalyn Fairbank (11). San Diego, taken to New Milford Hospital. 2- 3), 8:35 p.m. Mets 7, Astros 4 Murphy rf 3 2 2 2 Phillips 3b 7 0 3 1 Ventura 3b 4 0 1 1 his voice breaking with emotion, said still investigating,” said Ms. Raupp. Only games scheduled Cabrer 1b 3 0 1 0 CHayes 3b 4 0 1 1 7-6 (7-3), 6-4. Pony League New Milford police said they questioned a per­ TrammI ss 5 0 1 0 Caldern If 5 0 0 0 HOUSTON NEW YORK Krukrf 2 0 0 0 Quarterfinals Friday's Games Justice 1b 1 1 0 0 The Pirates overwhelmed the Orioles, 14-3, this morning. “It’s a terrible tragedy.” In Kathryn Cox, a member of a plant Fielder 1 b 5 1 0 0 Pasquadh 4 0 0 0 ab r h bl abrhM AkerfIds p 0 0 0 0 Jarta Novotna and Helena Sukova (1), son in the attack, but no arrest was made. Police n ^ Oakland at Cleveland, 2, 5:05 p.m. Olson c 3 0 2 1 at Moriarty Field. Mike Laurla tripled and drove addition, he said, two workers were cleaning crew, said she and several fel­ Sheets If 3 1 1 0 Grebekpr 0 0 0 0 Yelding cf 3 1 1 0 HJhnsn 3b 5 14 3 2 0 0 0 CMrtnz 1b 10 00 Czechoslovakia def. Mercedes Paz, Argentina Minnesota at Now Ifork, 2, 5:35 p.m. Infante 2b in two runs, Kevin Bates hit well. Don Diehl SgU James Engle said a weFqxm was used but Coles H 3 0 0 0 Gallghr ph 1 0 1 0 Ramirz ss 4 1 2 0 Magadn 1b 3 110 stvl Arantxa Sanchez Vkario (7), Spain. 6-4, missing. low workers had just finished their jobs Kansas City at Detroit, 73 5 p.m. Tredwy 2b 1 0 0 0 Thon ss 4 0 0 0 played well defensively and Mika Helin struck declined to identify the weapon. Brgmn dh 5 2 4 2 Kittle 1b Anthony rf 3 0 0 1 Jefferis 2b 3 110 Seattle at Toronto, 7 3 5 p.m. 4 2 2 2 Glavine p 2 0 0 1 Daultonc 4 0 1 0 6- 1. out seven In lour innings for the Pirates. Jeff McCalcb said the blaze was not extin­ when they heard the blast. Ltodmn ph Lyons 1b Andersn p 0 0 0 0 Strwbry rf 4 12 3 , Sacramento. Calif., and ZIrra Police said there is no indication that Andrews Baltimore at Chicago, 8:05 p.m. 10 0 0 10 0 0 Luecken p 0 0 0 0 Combs p 10 0 0 BlasNk doubled. Bill Flonauld hit well, Marc H Lusader rf 4 3 3 3 Karkovic c 3 1 1 0 Stubbs 1b 4 1 1 2 McRykJsIf 4 0 0 0 Freemn p 0 0 0 0 Garrison (10), Houstoa def. Jill Hetherlngton, guished until more than four hours after “We didn’t look back,” she said. “We 5 California at Milwaukee, 8 3 5 p.m. Gregg ph 10 0 0 Schoinblum played well defensively and Ed and his attacker knew each other. But police also Shelby cf 4 0 1 0 Biggio If 3 0 1 0 Boston cf 3 0 10 Canada and (12), San Jose, Ihe explosion. just started running and wc just kept run­ Boston at Texas, 8:35 p.m Fiskc 10 0 0 Boever p 0 0 0 0 Carman p 0 0 0 0 Cosgrove pitched etlectively In reliel for the said it did not appear to be a burglary attempt. GWardph 1110 Fletchr 2b 6 111 Agosto p 0 0 0 0 Miller cf 10 10 Vitcher r1 2 0 10 Calif., 6-1,6-7 (3-7), 6-1. Orioles. “The tank that exploded contains was­ ning.” Heath c 6 113 Sosa rf 6 12 1 GWilson rf 1 0 0 0 Sasserc 4 10 0 Totala 30 4 5 4 Totals 32 1 6 1 , King of FYussia Pa. and Engle would not speculate on a possible motive. National League standings 4 2 3 0 The Red Sox downed the Cubs, 7-5. Mark Guillen ss 5 1 2 0 Oberkfl 3b 3 1 1 0 Elster ss Atlanta 000 100 210— 4 (6), Australia def. GigI Fer­ tewater and some hydrocarbons. It was “Wc just heard a big explosion and East Division SImington triplod. Josh Gleeser had two hits Columbo’s father, Everett Russell Carr, was Ftohde 2b 4 0 0 0 Gooden p 2 0 10 Philadelphia 000 001 000— 1 nandez. Puerto Rico, and Martina Navratilova in a somewhat remote area of the com­ everybody said ‘Run!’ and we all took W L Pci. QB Totals 51101710 Totals 47 712 8 and Mike Tryon pitched well for the Fted Sox. repeatedly stabbed after he interrupted a burglary in Gedman c 2 0 1 1 Marshl ph 0 0 0 1 E— LoSmitK DP— Atlanta 1. Philadelphia 1. (2), Aspen, Colo., 6-3,2-6, 6-4. z m 31 .597 — DetroR 000 510 010 003—10 Chariia Apointo had two hits and Bryan Gagnon plex,” McCalcb said. “I don’t know why off.” Marlene Viscus said. Pittsburgh 46 Gulicksn p 1 0 0 0 Franco p 0 0 0 0 LO B— Atlanta 8, Philadelphia 10. 2B— Vatchor. D u m b e r 1985. Carr was stabbed 27 times. Chicago 000 410 020 000— 7 played well dolonsivoly lor the Cubs. New Ybrk 44 30 .595 '/! Puhl ph 10 0 0 HR— Murphy (12). SB— Ready (2), CHayes (2). Mixed Doubles there were so many other jxjoplc there.” The plant, about 15 miles east of O T J 44 36 .550 3’/! E — FioWor, Phillips, Calderon, Henneman. Ralph “Rickey” Birch, 23, of New Milford and Montreal Schtzdt p 0 0 0 0 Thomas (1). S— Combs. Second Round .500 DP— Detroit 1. LOB— Detroit 10, Chicago 12. Normally, he said, only about five Houston, was shut down today. Philadelphia 38 38 VI Candael If 10 0 0 IP H R E R B B S O Todd Nelson, San Diego, arxf Gretchen Shawn Henning, 21, of Mystic were convicted of Chicago 35 46 .432 13 2B— Shrtets, Karkovica, Sosa, Trammell, Phil­ Totals 30 4 7 4 Totals 33 7 1 4 7 people would be in that area. Initially, authorities had described the Atlanta Magers, San Antonio, del. Tim Wilkison, murder in that attack last year. The Associated Kess SL Louis 32 47 .405 15 lips. 3B— Whitaker. HR— Lusader (1), Kittle 2 Houston 000 003 100— 4 Asheville, N.C., and Shaun Stafford, Gaines­ Rec Hoop S o (16), Bergman (2), Heath (3). SB — Shelby (1). Glavine W.5-5 62-3 6 1 1 4 1 Tlie cause of the blast was not im­ blast and fire as relatively minor and said Waal Division New Ybrk 310 000 03x— 7 Luecken 11-3 0 0 0 1 2 ville. Fla. 7-6 (7-2), 6-4. O m QB S — Ventura, Shelby. mediately determined. W L Pd. E— Elster. DP— Houston 2. LOB— Houston 3, Boever S.8 1 0 0 0 0 0 \ Third Round HOMELESS ADVOCATE — Homeless advocate Mitch Snyder 28 .627 — IP H RER BB SO Cincinnati 47 Now Ybrk 7. 2B— Elster, Gedman, Oberkfell. Philadelphia Shelby Cannon, Gainesville, Fla., and Robin Worker seriously hurt “I seen a big flash cross in front of my Please see PLANT, page 8. m rn 38 .519 8 DetroR Southern San Francisco 41 HR— Strawberry (20). Stubbs (11). HJohnson Combs U4-7 61-3 3 3 3 4 4 While, San Jose, Calif., def. Piet Norval, South was found hanged Thursday at a homeless shelter in 40 .487 10'/! JMRobnsn 3 1-3 5 4 4 3 2 Los Angeles 38 (13). SB— HJohnson (16). S— Gooden. Freeman 0 1 0 0 0 0 Africa and South Africa IHLA 52 (Tim Carmel 15, Myles McCurry 11), ANSONIA (AP) — A 40-year-old construction 40 .474 11'/! Gibson 21-3 4 1 1 1 1 Washington in an apparent suicide, police sources said. San Diego 36 SF— Anthony, Gedman, Marshall. Camtan 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 7-5, 7-6 (7-2). Russian Lady 48 (Charlie Carroll 19, Greg Scott worker remained in serious condition this morning 32 44 .421 15'/! Nunez 11-3 0 0 0 0 1 Atlanta IP H R ER B B 8 0 Akerfelds 1 1113 1 10) .405 17 Henneman 1 2 2 12 1 following a 30-foot plunge from a Route 8 over­ Houston 32 47 Houston RMcDwU 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 J&M GrindIng/MARC 62 (Serge Arel 14, Paul W ednesday's Games McCullers W3-0 4 1 0 0 1 2 Seniors pass. Gullickson Freeman pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Kowalski 10), ^ o k e 40 North Korea will Chicago San Francisco 9, SL Louis 2 Schtzdr W P-C om bs. BK— flMcDowell. PB— DauF Men McDwII 5 10 6 6 1 5 Singles Alfredo Silva, of West Haven, was working with New York 7, Houston 4 Agosto L.4-2 ton. Northern Montreal 5, Cincinnati 3 Radinsky 21-3 1 1 0 1 3 Andersen First Round a crew that was cutting concrete slabs on the Activist Snyder Umpires— Home, Pulll; First Hirschbeck; Style 48 (Mark Bennett 11, Dwayne Milner Atlanta 4, Philadelphia 1 BJones 12-3 1 0 0 0 2 New Ybrk Tim Gullikson, Boca W as! R a , def. Manuel Secorid, Darling; Third, Froemming. 13), Indians 40 (Darren Goddard 10, Taharl Division Street overpass about 11:30 a.m. Thursday San Diego 5, Pittsburgh 4 Thigpen 2 2 0 0 2 3 Gooden W,8-5 Orantea Spain, 6-1, 6-2. T— 3:10. A— 18,286. Tumor 8, Bill Schoidermann 7) when a slab shifted, forcing Silva over the edge, Chicago 5, Los Angeles 3 Patterson U1-1 1 3 3 3 0 1 Franco S,15 1 Tom Gullikson, ftim Coos! Fla, del. John open its border BCI 49 (Kim Bushey 13, Matt Vaughn 10), Thursday's Games W P— JMRobinson, Henneman. Umpires— Home, Quick; First Flennert; Alexander, Australia, 6-4, 6-Z Ansonia police Lt. Ian Nixon said. Sun Devils 40 (Wendell Williams 18) SL Louis (B.Smith 6-6) at San Diego (Benes Umpires— Homo, Tschida; Firs! Reed; Second, Tata; Third, Bonin. Doubles Second, Cooney; Third, Brinkman. Silva fell to a debris-strewn section of Division found hanged 6-6), 4.35 p.m T— Z46. A— 48.07^ American League ieaders Quarterfinals Houston (Scott 6-7) at Montreal (Gardner T— 4 3 a A— 23,547. Street and a chunk of steel-reinforced concrete By PAUL SHIN Committee for the Peaceful Reunifica­ Baaed on 220 at Bats. Marty Riassen, Dallas, and Sherwood 4-4), 7 3 5 p.m Q AB R H Pet Staw aii The Woodlands, Texas, del. Bob landed on top of him, injuring his ribs, Nixon said. The Associated Press tion of the Fatherland announced the Cincinnati (Armstrong 10-3) at Philadelphia Brewers 7, Athletics 1 Cubs 5, Dodgers 3 Hewitt and Frew McMillan, South Africa 4-6, Rec soccer “The fact that birds have a home, Grilfey Sea 80 309 52 104 .337 plans in a broadcast monitored in Seoul By ALAN FRAM (Howell 8-5), 7:35 p.m OAKLAND MILWAUKEE CHICAGO LOS ANGELS 7-6(73), 11-9. Silva also suffered head and neck injuries and FIHdsn Oak 72 259 61 85 .328 foxes have a home, and yet men and New York (Ojeda 4-3) at Attania (Lelbrandt ab r h bf a b r h b l a b r h M Women today. The Associated Press a b r h bl 74 244 31 79 .324 was taken to Yale-New Haven Hospital where he SEOUL, South Korea — Communist 3-1), 7:40 p.m Guillen C N women, veterans of foreign wars, RHdsnlf 2 0 0 0 Gantnr2b 5 1 1 0 Descenzef 4 0 1 0 LHarris 3b 4 0 0 0 283 35 90 .318 Doubles underwent surgery. “I^r a successful progress of contact Pittsburgh (Fleed 1-0) at Los Angeles (RM ar- DFlarker Mil 73 Pee Wise North Korea said today it will open part Howard cf 2 1 2 0 Sheffild 3b 5 0 1 0 Sndbrg 2b 4 0 0 0 Gibson cf 5 1 3 0 .317 Quarterfinals mothers and fathers, working poor PImero Tex 74 284 34 90 Sharks 3 (Jeffrey Herzberger, Daniel Colierr- The project is part of a $7.1 million worth of of its border with South Korea next and visit between the North and the WASHINGTON — Mitch Snyder, tinez9-3), 10:35 p.m DHdsn cf 3 0 0 0 EDiaz3b 0 0 0 0 Ounston at 4 0 1 0 Oaniela If 4 0 0 0 .314 Wervfy Turnbull, Australia otvl Virginia Wade, Jacoby Cle 73 264 41 83 to, Danielle Durttonl), Mustangs 0 (Matt Dlttman who was found hanged in the slieltcr he people, have no place to lay tlicir head. Only games scheduled Gallego 3b 1 0 1 1 Yfauntd 4 1 1 0 Salazar If 4 0 0 0 Vizcain pr 0 0 0 0 79 .307 Britain, def. Peggy Michel and Vel Ziegenfuse, resurfacing and safety improvements O&G In­ month to promote reunification, and it South, we will op>cn the piortion of our EMartinez Sea 74 257 42 played well) He found that to be a moral disgrace,” Friday's Gam es Lansfrd 3b 2 0 0 0 DPSrkr dh 2 1 1 2 Villanv 1b 4 2 3 0 Murray 1b 4 2 2 2 .305 United States, 6-4, 6-2. side ... and hope that the South side, loo, founded, was eulogized today as a Harper Min 67 226 30 69 Strikers 1 (Douglas Sautrier), Penguins 0 dustries Inc. of Torrington is doing on Route 8. challenged the South to do the some, ac­ Houston at Montreal, 7 3 5 p.m RHarris p 0 0 0 0 Brock 1b 2 1 1 1 Grace 1b 0 0 0 0 Brooks rf 4 0 1 0 94 .305 Jackson told the mourners. Seltzer KC 76 308 40 Sockers 7 (Ben Wry 2, MNick Gurski 2, All will take a corresponding measure,” the “man of justice" who answered a moral Cirtoinrrati at Philadelphia, 7:35 p.m. Hnycut ph 1 0 0 0 Doer rf 3 0 0 0 Ramos 3b 4 0 0 0 Scioscia c 4 0 2 0 94 .303 cording to news reports. Gruber Tor 78 310 57 B o y s Champagne, Jason Bishop, Julie Lozzaris), Friends of Snyder who spoke with New Ybrk at Atlanta, 7:40 p.m. Klink p 0 0 0 0 Hamlltn rf 0 0 0 0 Lorrg p 0 0 0 0 Samuel 2b 3 0 0 0 284 51 86 .303 But officials in the capitalist South announcement said. call to help the nation’s homeless. Puckett Min 77 Singles Timbers 0 S L Louis at San Diego, 10:05 p.m McGwir 1 b 2 0 0 0 Surhotf c 4 1 2 0 Asnrrichr p 0 0 0 0 Griffin as 4 0 0 0 304 35 92 .303 him Tuesday described him as despon­ Trammell Det 78 Second Round Patriots 0 (Flyan Thompson played welO, Jets Ex>communists ousted denounced the action as propaganda. But it said only those interested in Snyder, 46, was discovered dead Pittsburgh at Los Angeies, 10:35 p.m Hassay 1b 1 0 0 0 Vaughn H 4 1 2 3 Lancastr p 0 0 0 0 Vatenzia p 2 0 0 0 Hom s R u n s dent. “He was really down in the Chtoago at San Francisco, 103 5 p.m. Cartseco rf 4 0 1 0 Felder H 0 0 0 0 Wynne r1 3 3 2 2 Javier ph 1 0 0 0 Alexander Medvedev, Soviet Union, def. 0 (Kent Gough arvl Wayne Jones played well) promoung reunification would be al­ Thursday afternoon in a 1,400-bcd Fielder, Detroit 27; Canseco, Oakland, 20; Hideki Kaneko, Japan, 6-1, 6-4. WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Prime Minister The North’s plans appeared to be lar­ Josadh 4 0 2 0 Spiers ss 4 1 1 1 Girard c 4 0 3 3 Crews p 0 0 0 0 Gnjbor, Toronto, 20; McGwire, Oakland, 20; homeless slieltcr in a ragged neigh­ dumps and wc had a long talk about his Quirk c 4 0 1 0 Harkey p 3 0 1 0 CGwyn ph 1 0 1 0 Pavei Gazda, Czechoslovakia, del. John Bar­ Midgets Tadcusz Mazowiccki ousted all but one former gely symbolic, and it was unclear lowed into the North. American League results Bell, Toronto. 17; McGriff, Toronto, 17; Klttie, ton, Britain, 6-4, 6-2. personal situation,” said a friend who Weiss ss 3 0 0 0 SWilson p 0 0 0 0 Chicago. 16; BJackson, Kansas Ciqr, 15; Par­ Suns 5 (Doug Cosmirti 3, Mike God, Flyan Communist from his Cabinet today to counter whether any citizens from the North The North Korean announcement said borhood a few blocks from the U.S. Wilkrsn 3b 1 0 0 0 Marten Flensirom, Sweden, def. Ignace Rot- asked not to be identified. Mariners 3, Indians 2 Rndlph2b 3 0 1 0 rish, Caiilomia, 15. Gliha), Falcons 0 about 800 yards of the border would be Capitol. Autopsy results were not made Totals 32 1 a 1 Totals 33 7 10 7 Totals 35 511 5 Totals 36 3 9 2 man, Switzerland, 7-6 (8-6), 6-4. criticism of his 10-month-old government’s perfor­ would be allowed to cross into the South. SEATTVE CLEVELAND Rune Batted In Metros 2 (Flyan ZawistowskI 2), Toros 1 Jackson called Snyder “a man of jus­ Oakland 000 000 010— 1 Chicago 020 201 000— 5 Marcos Ondruska, South Africa, del. Berviy mance. It would be the first time either of the opicned Aug. 15, the day in 1945 when public but police called his death an ap­ a b r h b l ab rh bl Fielder, Detroit 70; Gnjber, Toronto, 65; Bell, (Mark VanBuren) MttWBUk99 132 100 001— 7 Loa Angsisa 200 001 000— 3 Wijaya, Indonesia, 6-2,6-0. tice, who taught us i l that you can still Browne 2b 4 1 2 0 Toronto, 57; Dftrrker, Milwaukoo. 52; Leonard, But some Solidarity activists said the changes two Korean stales had opened a portion Korea was liberated from Japan after 35 parent suicide. Reynids 2b 4 0 1 0 DP— Milwaukoo 2. LOB— Oakland 6, Mil- E — LHarris, Sandberg. DP— Los Angeles 2. Webster cf 3 0 1 1 Seattia, 52; McGwire, Oakland, 52; Canseco, Juniors regroup and get your life together.” Cottorf 4 0 0 0 waukaa 7. 2B— Vaughn, Gallego. 3B— Ifeunt LOB— Chicago 4, Los Angeles 11. 2B— Girard weren’t sweeping enough. of their border since the Korean War years of colonial rule. The Rev. Jesse Jackson told a 4 0 1 0 Oakland, 50; Trammell, Detroit 46. Gills Bears 1 (Mike Guliarro), Sbikers 1 (Josh Grilfey cf 4 1 1 0 Baerga 3b HR— Vaughn (6), Spiers (2), DParker (10). 2, Scioscia 2, Gibson, Brooks. HFI— Murray “Don’t you surrender, and don’t you MIdndoH 4 0 0 0 Pitching (7 Decisions) Blnglea Brown) In a speech before I^liament that was broadcast ended in 1953. The North said the stretch of border to memorial service at Bible Way Church Leonard If 4 1 2 1 SB— Jose (5). SF—DParker. (10). Vi/ynne (4). S B — Gibson (5). CJams dh 4 1 2 1 BJones, Chicago, 10-1, .909; Welch, Oak­ Second Round give up,” Jackson told the crowd of POBrIn 1b 4 0 1 0 IP H RER B B S O IP H R ER B B S O Rangers 3 (Chris Hanson, Molly O'Morra, Tim nationwide, Mazowiccki said political battles in the Word of the North’s move came from be opened was in the Communist sector that Snyder was a man who heard and 4 0 1 1 Jacoby 1b 3 0 0 0 land, 13-2, .867; King, Chicago. 8-2, .800; Bod- Julie Fhjilin, Britain, del. Carrie Cumingham, Todford), Diplomets 2 (Todd Gabriel, Jeffrey EMrInz 3b Oakland Chicago answered a “moral call” to help the about 600 mourners, many of whom 4 1 1 1 Snyder rf 3 0 0 0 dicker, Boston, 11-3, .786; Stieb, Toronto. 10-3, Livonia, Mich., walkover. Champagne) non-Communist-Icd government were threatening Nacwoe Press, a semiofficial South of the truce village of Panmunjom, inside TJones dh Stewart L.10-7 21-3 8 6 6 1 0 Harkey W.6-3 6 2-3 7 SBradloy c 2 0 10 Skinner c 3 0 1 0 .769; Candiotti. Cleveland, 9-3, .750; Clemens, Anks Huber, West Ciermany, def. Kelko homeless. Please see SNYDER, page 8. Norris 2 2-3 1 1 1 1 0 SWilson 1 1 the country’s peaceful evolution to democracy. Korean news agency specializing in Valle c 0 0 0 0 Alomar c 10 0 0 Boston, 12-4, .750; FUohnson, SMtta, 9-3, Nagatomi, Japan, 6-0, 6-2 FIH arris 2 1 0 0 0 1 Long 2-3 1 The {M'ime minister announced the resignation of Please see KOREA, page 8. Schaeir ss 4 0 0 0 Fermin ss 3 0 1 0 .750. Andrea Strnedovo, Czechoslovakia, def. Communist affairs. It said North Korea’s Klink 1 0 0 0 0 0 Assnmehr 1-3 0 Phelps ph 10 0 0 Catarina Bernstein, Sweden, 1-6, 6-1, 6-3. five Cabinet ministers, including three of the four Milwaukee Lancaster S,5 1-3 0 Calendar Tot ala 34 3 8 3 Totals 33 2 8 2 Nationai League ieaders Erika De Lone, Uncoln, Mass., dal. Caroline RRobinson W.2-1 9 8 1 1 2 5 Loa Angolas former Communists who remained in the govern­ 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 -3 Hun! Britain, 6-1, 7-5. Seattle HBP— Brock by Stewart DParker by Norris. Valenzia UB-7 7 10 Based on 220 at Bata. 001 1 00 000— 2 Noelis Lottum, Francs, def. Seong-Heui ment as the price for Solidarity replacing the Com­ Cleveland W P— Norris, RHarris. Crews 2 1 Q AB F1 H Today E— Comstock. DP— Cleveland 1. LOB— Park, South Korea, 7-6 (8-6), 6-3. munist regime in September. Umpires— Home, Kosc; First Joyce; Sacorxt W P— Vtelenzuela. Dykstra Phi 70 280 56 102 Bassball Unemployment rate Seattia 6, Cleveland 10. 2B— Grilfey, Leonard. Naoko Sawamatsu, Japan, del. Kristis Barnett; TNrd, Morrison. Umpires— Home, Marsh; First Wendelstedt; Scuidberg Chi 80 321 64 109 South Wirxlsor at Manchester Legion, (East 3 B — Browne. HR— ^TJones (5), CJantes (5). Borrds R l 69 246 52 81 BoogerL Netherlarxls, 6-1,6-3. State income tax T— 2:39. A — 15,030. Secorid, BrocklandM; Third, Rellford. Catholic), 5:45 p.m. S B — INebstar (12). S — Webstar, Baerga T— 2:49. A— 46,811. Dawson Chi 75 267 41 86 Nicole Prat! Australia, del. Morie-Chtistirrs Twilight League: Mallove's at Newrrwn IP H R E R B B S O TGwynn SO 78 306 47 97 Goy, Luxembourg. 3-6,6-2, 51. (Moriarty Field), 7 pm. China health care lacking Seattle Alomar SO 75 307 40 97 Magdalena Maleeva. Bulgaria, del. Kaoru JC-Coursnl Senior Division: Gerreral Oil at 1 RJohnson W,9-3 6 7 2 2 3 4 Orioles 9, Rangers 4 Padres 5, Pirates 4 Shibata, Japan, 51, 57,6-3. BEUINO (AP) — Medical care in rural China is falls to 5.2 percent Larkin On 75 291 43 91 Simsbury, 6 pm. Comstock 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 BALTIMORE TEXAS PITTSBURGH SA N DIEGO Jetlorias NV 70 285 49 89 Kristin Godrkfga, Australia, del. Daphne Van so lacking that 500 people share a single health is gaining support MJackson 12-3 0 0 0 0 2 ab r h bl a b rh b l a b rh b l abrh bl McGee StL 79 315 51 98 De Zands, Belgium, 6 -2 6-0. Friday worker who probably h ^ never had profcssimial Schooler S,21 1 1 0 0 0 2 SFinley rf 4 0 3 3 Huson 2b 4 1 1 1 Bckmn 3b 2 0 0 0 Rober1s3b 3 0 10 MilchellSF 69 259 51 80 FWnille Soererwen, Denmark, del. Karina Boaaball By KAREN BALL Today's report, and its evidence ol Cleveland Habsudovo. Czechoslovakia, 2-6, 7-6 (1210), gaining, an o^icial report said today. BRipkn 2b 4 0 11 Deghrty H 4 0 0 0 Bilardell c 0 0 0 0 Howard If 3 0 10 Home Rune Manchester Legion at Wbterbury (Municipal HAMDEN (AP) — If state sales prehensive changes in the state tax The Associated Press continued sluggishness, was likely to Nagy L.0-2 7 7 3 3 1 3 Mlllign 1b 3 0 10 PImero 1b 3 0 1 1 JBelIss 5 2 1 0 TQwynn rf 4 0 0 0 Sandberg, Chicago, 24; Strawberry, Now 53. Stadium), 8 p.m. By contrast, six health workers serve every 1,000 taxes were significantly reduced, al­ system, including instituting a state Orosco 2 10 0 11 Tettelonc 4 0 0 0 Sierra rf 4 1 1 1 WnSlyk cf 4 0 1 0 JCartar cf 4 0 10 Ybrk. 20; GDavis, Houston, 19; Mitchell, Son Joonetts Kruger, South Africa, def. ShFTktg JC-Courant Junior Division: Gerreral Oil at renew debate over whether die R'dcral Wang, Taiwan, 6-3,54. urban residents, the English-language China Daily income lax and cutting llic sales lax RJohnson pitched to 1 batter In the 7tii. Orsulak If 5 1 2 0 Flalmer dh 2 0 0 0 Bonilla rf 5 0 2 1 JaClark 1b 4 0 10 Frandsco, 19; Dawson, Chicago, 18; Bonilla, East Hartford (McKenna Field), 6 pm. most 50 percent of Connecticut resi­ WASHINGTON — The nation’s un­ Reserve should lower interest rates to HBP— Webster by RJohnson. CRIpkn ss 4 2 1FrarKO 0 dh 10 0 0 Bonds If 3 1 1 1 Alomar 2b 4 2 3 1 Pittsburgh. 17; MaWiiiiams, San Francisco, 16; Barbara Flittoar, West Gertrsuiy, def. Paula said in a report. dents would be in favor of a sutlc in­ from 8 percent to 5 percent. No other Umpires—-Home, Wolke; First Ford; Secorxf, Cabazos, Chile, 7-5, 6-4. employment rate fell slightly to 5.2 per­ spur economic activity. Horn dh 2 2 2 2 Irtevglia cf 4 1 1 1 Bream 1b 2 110 Tmpitn ss 4 10 0 Sabo, Cirtdnnati, 16. Saturday Furthermore, 63 percent of the medical staff in come tax, a new poll shows. candidate for governor supports an in­ Evans; Third, Coble Hulettdh 2 0 0 0 Potralll c 4 0 1 0 Redus1b 10 0 0 RRynkJs c 2 10 0 Runs Batted In Bassball hospitals at the township level “have never received cent in June, despite a continued slump “The Fed is in a quandary now. From Wihgtn 3b 2 2 12 Cooibgh 3b 4 0 1 0 LVIliere c 2 0 0 0 Durrnep 0 0 0 0 MaWilliams, San Frarrcisco, 66; JCarter, San JC-Courant Senior Divison: Flockville at The independent poll of 7% slate come tax. in the nation’s manufacturing and con­ the job creation side, it's a clear ciLsc for Blue Jays 4, Angels 2 Deverex cf 5 2 10 Green ss 10 0 0 Merced rf 10 0 0 Show p 2 112 Diego, 50; WCIark, San Frarxrisco, 58; Bonilla, General Oil (Moriarty Field), 7:30 p.m. regular professional cdj'jation,” the paper quoted residents, conducted by Quinnipiac When asked how the state should CALIFORNIA TORONTO Pettis ph 1110 Lind 2b 4 0 1 1 Abner ph 10 0 0 Pittsburgh, 58; Bonds. Pittsburgh, 56; Sunday Huang Yongchang, of the Minisuy of Public struction sectors, the government said the Fed to case. But with unemployment Heaton p 2 0 0 0 Rodriguz p 0 0 0 0 Transactions College, was released Tliursday. balance its budget 32.8 percent of ab r h bl ab r h bl JoRussal c 10 10 Sarrdberg, Chicago. 56; Dawson, Chicago. 54; Bassball today. so low, it’s a very tough call,” said Allen OWhHaef 5 0 1 0 Felix rf 3 0 0 0 Totals 35 8 12 8 Totala 33 4 8 4 Belinda p 0 0 0 0 GHarris p 0 0 0 0 Manchester Legion at East Hartford (McKert- Health, as saying. The poll found that 49.2 percent those polled said government sliould Strawberry, New Ybrk, U The civilian jobless rate, as measured Sinai, chief economist at the Boston Co. 9 Joyner 1b 5 0 3 0 MWilsn cf 1 0 0 0 Baltimore 020 004 300—8 King ph 10 0 0 na Field), 7:30 p.m. would support an income lax if tlie cut spending, 7.3 percent said it Winfield rf 5 0 1 0 Femndz ss 4 1 1 0 Texas 000 022 000— 4 Tibbs p 0 0 0 0 BASEBALL by a household survey by the Labor He said the weak job growth 31 5 8 3 sales tax were reduced from 8 percent should increase revenues, and 59.8 Parrish c 4 1 1 1 GHill If 4 1 1 0 E— Daugherty, SFinley, Huson, Sierra. Totals 32 4 7 3 Totala Eastern League standings American Laagus Department, dropjicd from the 5.3 per­ demonstrates duit die economy is “as Ownng dh 3 1 2 0 Bell dh 3 1 1 1 DP— Baltimore 2. Texas 3. LO B — Baltimore 9, Pinaburgh 020 010 001— 4 W L Pet. QB MILWAUKEE BREWERS—Optioned Bob to 4 percent; 47.6 percent said Uicy percent said it should do both. Bichette If 3 0 1 1 McGrill 1b 4 0 1 0 San Diego 040 100 OOx— 5 cent registered in May. The nation's un­ close to a recession configuration as wc Texas 4. 2B— Huson. HR— Sierra (10), In- Albany (Yankees) 43 33 .566 — Sebra, pitohsr, to Denver of the American Ao- Radio, TV would still be opposed to the income But respondents had few sugges­ Fblonlalf 10 10 Borders c 3 0 11 caviglia (13), Horn (4). S F — Wonhingtort, SFirv E— VanSlyks, Roberts, Howard. D P— San .556 '/! aodation. Flecallsd Jamie Navarro, pitcher, Inside Today... employment rale has been fluctuating can get without being in one." Cantit-Akrn (todns) 43 34 Schu2b 4010Lee2b 4 0 0 0 ley. Diego 3. LOB^ittsburgh 10, San Diego 5. New Britan (Rd Sx) 42 37 .532 2'/s from Denver. tax. tions when asked what programs 2B— Alomar, Bonilla. HR-Alomar (3). close to 5.3 percent for more than a year. Unemployment has managed stayed Howell 3b 3 0 1 0 Willims cf 4 1 1 0 IP H R E R BB SO Harrisburg (Pirats) 41 38 .519 3'/! National League Gnly 18.2 percent of those polled should be cut. Schonid ss 4 0 0 3 Lawless 3b 3 0 11 BaltltTKirs SB — Bonds (22), Bream (4). S — Howard. London (Tigers) 41 36 .519 3'/! HOUSTON A ST R O S — Fhacod Bill Doran, Irv Today Private industries produced 92,000 relatively low despite sluggish economic SF— Bonds. said they would support an income Fully 78.9 percent opposed cuts in Totala >7 2 12 2 Totals 33 4 7 3 DJohrrson W,8-4 5 5 4 4 0 4 Hagerstown (Orlols) 36 42 .462 8 lleldar, on the 15day disabled Usl Activated new jobs last month, a weaker number activity because the growth of the IP H R E R B B S O 1:15 p.m. — Red Sox at Twins, California 000 101 000-2 Hickey 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Reading (Philliee) 37 44 .457 S'/I Ken Oberkfell, Infielder, from the 15dey dis­ 24 pages, 4 sections lux without any other changes in slate state education aid to cities and than the 125,000 payroll additions American work force "has almost ground Toronto 211 ooo oox— 4 Wlliamsn 1 1-3 2 0 0 1 2 Pittsburgh WiWamsprt (Mrnrs) 31 48 .392 13'/t abled lisL NESN, W1L1(1400-AM) taxes; 70.3 percent were opposed. towns; 74.1 percent opposed cuts to E— Abbott, DWhIte, Lawless, Schu 2. Ballard 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 Heaton L,10-4 62-3 8 5 4 t 5 W M naoday'a Qamea BASKETBALL 5 pjn. — Tennis: Wimbledon private analysis had been calling for. to u halt in 1990," Siiuii said. D P— ^Toronto 2. LOB— Calllornia 10, Toronto 7. Schiing 12-3 0 0 0 0 1 Belinda 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Albany 2, Williamsport 0. 1st gome World Basketball League Accent___ 13 Nation 6.7 The poll, conducted between June state colleges and universities; 63.6 Job growth figures arc derived from a So far diis year, only about 290,()(X) 2B— GHiR, Williams, Bell, Dowrtirrg 2, Joyner. Texas Tibbs 1 0 0 0 0 1 Albany 4, Williamsport 3, 2nd game STORM— Heioased An­ highlights, HBO Business_ 5 Obituaries 11 11 and June 18, has a margin of error percent opposed cuts in highway HR— f^rrish(15). SF— Bell. Hough L.7-6 52-3 7 6 6 6 1 San Diego scfiarale survey of business cslablish- Americans have entered the work force, 9 New Britian 5, Canton-Akron 4 thony Taylor arxl Sieve Bobiarz, guards. 7:30 p.m. — Mets at Braves, Classified_ 18-20 Ooinion 4 McMurtry 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Dunne 1 0 2 2 4 1 of plus or minus 4.1 percent. programs; and 73.2 percent opposed IP H RER BB SO London 2. Hagerstown 1 FOOTBALL C om ics__ 12 Soorts 21-24 mciiLs. U ut is often considered a more compared with the 1.5 million California JoBarfield 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 ShowW.1-6 5 3 1 0 4 3 SportsChannel, WFAN (660-AM) Slate Rep. William J. Cibes, D- cutting spending for environmental Reading 7, Harrisburg 6, 1st gams League R)cus____ 16 Television 12 reliable indicator of economic activity Americans who joined the labor force Abbott i.,5-7 71-3 7 Amsberg 2-3 2 2 0 0 0 Flodriguaz 21-3 4 1 1 0 3 Fleading 6, Harrisburg 5, 2nd gama TORONTO ARGONAUTS— Rsisased Don 7:30 p.m. — Bowling: Hammer New London, is building a campaign protection. Eichhom 2-3 0 Moyer 2 1 0 0 2 2 GHarris S,S 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Thursday's Qamea Edwards and William Madden, defensive Senior Open, ESPN Local/State 9-11 World 2.3 than llic household survey from which duing the first half of 1989. Toronto DJohnson pitched to 2 batters in the 6lh. Dunne pitched to 3 batters In the 2nd. Williamsport at Albany linemen; Bobby McAllister, quarterback: Brian Lottery___ 11 for governor on his call for com­ W P— Hough. JoBarfield. PB— Petralli. HBP— Roberts by Heaton. WP— Heaton. 9 p.m. — Boxing: Reggie John­ die overall unemployment rate is calcu­ Cerutti W .6« 52-3 9 CantorvAkron at New Britain Bedford and Tim Eubank, wide roceivors; Gerry Plca.se see JOBS, page 8. Acfcsr 21-3 2 Umpires— Home, HIrschbock; First Clark; Umpires— Home, Halllon; First Rungs; Lortoon at Hagerstown Hill, running back; and Paul Kerr, offensive son vs. Greg Dickson, USBA mid­ lated. Hanks S.15 1 1 Second, Hetrdry; Third, McCoy. Secorid, Winters; Third, Layne. Harrisburg at Fleading liroMnan. WP-AbboO. PB-Bordars. T— 3:00. A— 41.24Z T— 3:03. A — 10,897. dleweight title, ESPN

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