State Sets Demolition at Center

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. • r ‘ r ~ r- ** ■ - r- 24 — MANCHESTER HERALD, Thurs., March 18, 1962 '^1 rorfy; Lease Dutch journalists Do you have xiuses doubts I slain in Salvador spring fever? Lutz Children’s Museum ... page 5 ... page 13 ... page 3 Mostly cloudy, Manchester, Conn. \ cool Saturday Fri., March 19, 1982 — See page 2 Umlh Single copy 25c State sets demolition race Proposed New Site at South School HARTFORD - State At­ 9 torney General Carl Ajello said at Center today he won’t run for a third term in November but said he was not pressured to bow out because of publicity about a bad business deal. By Paul Hendrie by today what projects in the region He said he will finish his term in Herald Reporter would get the trade-in funds. office, which expires in January, But he said this morning that a then join a “nationally known law meeting with DOT officials has been J— The state will demolish the vacant firm," which he would not identify. buildings on the corner of Main and scheduled for next ’Tuesday, so the He said he felt no pressure at all, decisions probably will not be made -C DifctCTOe, 1 Center streets, possibly as soon as either from Gov. William O’Neill or Our Present Building On Cedar Street I VNlt It six weeks from now, a state official known until then. party leaders, to drop out of the said. There are more top priority road race, adding the governor had been " p a J -----J projects in the region ready for con­ “Particular effort will be made to very “supportive” of him. struction than there is money Three other Democrats are expedite this matter for the earliest available. CRCOG officials are •r* possible removal date,” Donald G. seeking Ajello's post, and the hoping the DOT will make up the Manchester Herald learned L Leavitt, director of the transporta­ difference by drawing on other fun- -4 woec today that two other contenders can tion department’s office of rights-of- dii^ sources. STOTlON^. way, assured state Rep. Elise L. be expected to emerge. Town officials were worried that The strongest challenger is ■3' ' 4 ' “Biz” Swensson, R-Manchester, in if money for the realignment a letter dated Wednesday. former Senate Majority Leader project was unavailable, the Joseph Lieberman of New Haven. Leavitt’s, letter indicates the state buildings, which have become most­ The other announced candidates are will tear down the buildings—which ly vacated over the past year, would AOWH. AStiIgnkMT Thayer Baldwin of New Haven, a town officials have said are poten­ not be demolished. former state health administrator, M tial attractants for vandals, Mrs. Swensson wrote to Transpor­ and Joseph Ruggiero of Litchfield, a We Need squatters and arsonists — even if tation Commissioner J. William former state senator. L toilet Bums on March 4 to urge that the Herald photo by Pinto money for the long-awaited realign- A source on the Democratic State pnent of the intersection is not demolition proceed. Her letter in­ cluded articles and photos cll| ^fter the crash Central Committee told the Herald ■ lautT Tlfe Town is waiting to hear fraoulhe Manetaester Herald, w Ihqt Rep. Richard Tulisano, D- Rocky Hill, and Peter Gillies, whether the Departnient of showed the buildings’ run-down con­ Donald ^lleyi 25, of South Windsor sits volved, Juanita L. Dutton, 24, of Glastonbury, dition.- Ajello’s deputy, will seek the office. Your p 2 foiiW i Mvrmorl Transportation will make federal slumped in the seat of his car foiiowing a was uninjured. Wiley was charged with money available, under the ’The rekponse from Leavitt said At this morning's Capitol news con. Interstate trade-in program, for the the process of seeking a demolition two-car accident near the intersection of reckless driving and police said there was an ference, Ajello said he felt it was ClMMCCW*! ' ClA95Woa»l»g II realignment. contract is in progress and “it is Broad Street and West Middle Turnpike "odor of alcohol" on his breath. He was aiso time he returned to the private sec­ A ! aaim t Francis McMahon, an official of presently anticipate that a contrac­ Thursday at about 9:30 p.m. Wiley was charged with breach of peace when he tor and the offer to join a New York- \ based law firm was an “opportunity ■i V \ the Capitol Region Council of tor will be authorized to commence treated at Manchester Memorial Hospital began fighting with ambulance attendants Governments, had expected to hear work in approximately six weeks.” and released. The driver of the other car in- and police as they attempted to assist him. of a lifetime." ( “I had never intended to stay in Hartford for as long as 1 have." he .oiUfiac (Mfurr jPfffty p added. l£Q E N O Some believed Ajello, 49, would bow out I of the race because he EXI8TMQ TO BE REMOVED m ight De a liab ility on the There! OPEC ministers try to save cartel Democratic ticket in November as a EXnTMQ TO REMAIN result of a federal court suit raising questions about his business NEW CONSTRUCTKM VIENNA, Austria (UPI) - OPEC after a decade of dictating prices to to the present problem.” For the first time in its 21-year arrival in the Au.strian capital. exHiPiTiOH n EXHI8<TlON history, OPEC members were being Otaiba. oil minister for the United dealings. 2^ «2^* ministers met informally in hotel the West — would agree on reducing The Western recession and con­ UPPEf^ L&VELL aVii2^ asked to agree to production quotas Arab Emirates, said his country But Ajello said publicity over the scAt«.! rooms today In search of an agree­ production enough to end the oil glut servation have cut consumption so ment to cut oil production to stem and keep prices at official OPEC sharply the oil glut is now estimated cutting output 2 million barrels a was ready to “go along ail the way suit ‘‘would never have deterred me the world glut and save their deeply levels. at 2 million to 4 million barrels a day to 18.5 million. Production with a production cut” and from running." CHILPKLhvJ‘5 MUfpEUM reportedly has already fallen 31.4 The race is unusual in Connecticut LP«CA Uvtc ««u. docomewm 30tirMM*is. PT., MANCtCSllK^ CT. troubled cartel. Delegates said OPEC President day. That has helped to drop expressed hope other OPEC ’TiePOU^tH* ffMC1tO«»t percent since 1979. members would do the same. where the underticket office can­ owt: II rnQiecr An official said the ministers of - Mana Saeed al Otaiba met privately average U.S. gasoline prices 10 I. tpuamoNOU W'ecf. the badly divided 13-nation late Thursday with the oil ministers cents from a March 1981 record of In addition, experts said, real - But there was no clear sign of a didates — from lieutenant governor I.W0M. MAA Organization of Petroleum Expor­ of Venezuela, Libya, Iran and $1.38 a gallon. OPEC production had already fallen consensus emerging on the subject, on down — are normally left to the A M . 1 . r M im f c BOOM ting Countries chose nonbinding Nigeria. OPEC’s official benchmark price to only 17-18 million barrels a day. which depends on a sudden change gubernatorial nominee to recom­ 4- eiD M C . “consultative” sessions rather than Otaiba said after the meeting set last December is $34 a barrel for OPEC officials agreed further cuts of attitude by Saudia Arabia. mend. a formal meeting at the OPEC “that he was. committed to an light Arabian crude. But on-the-spot might be needed. The Saudis, producing 7.5 million But Ajello said he had been “con­ Secretariat. adjustment in production levels market prices have fallen to about “I think we will have to look for a barrels daily, have always refused ducting myself" the last several Oil experts doubted the OPEC oil only,” one delegate said. “He is con­ $28.50 and producers are scrambling lower figure,” QPEC President to discuss production levels with months as though he would be a can­ ministers — now on the defensive vinced that this is the only solution after customers. Mana Saeed al Otaiba said on his OPEC. didate and felt he had enough sup­ port statewide to be the party's nominee. He said the publicity might be in the "consciousness of Hartford" but not around the state. Ajello and his business partner PLEASE HELP US “GO PLACES”! State prepares for Klan rally are being sued for allegedly putting up phony collateral in 1978 for a Bristol plumbing supply firm they the people who are becoming vocal KKK op­ bought. MERIDEN (UPI) — Some residents are ly and a denied a permit sought for an anti-KIan Michael Belonick of Thomaston Your contribution brings our new wearing silver ribbons to show their opposition to group. ponents. However, Wilkinson told a news conference on Sorensen was one of 20 people injured on March and his brother Steven Belonick of the Ku Klux Klan, which plans to make its third New Britain, who sold Ajello and public appearance in Meriden in a year. the steps of Meriden City Hall ’Thursday the Klan 21, 1981, when anti-Klan demonstrators hurled home a step closer, and helps secure would be in Meriden, would not “break any rocks and bottles at Klan marchers. Most of the developer Vincent DiPentima of Klan leader Bill Wilkinson said Thursday the Southington ttieir business, claim group would have a “presence” in Meriden ^ tu r- laws,” and might disperse into smaller groups injured were police officers.
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