?0 - MANCHESTKR HERALD. Thursday. Oct 25. 1984

PtM

Halloween events Rep. Bates says Play Bingo are big In town he’s laid back and win cash BENSON & HEDGES ... page 13 ... page 3 ... page 2

Manchester, Conn. Partly cloudy tonight; Friday. Oct. 26. 1984 some sun Saturday Single copy: 25

By John Phillips United Press International

ROME — Italian investigators today indicted three Bulgarians despite polls and five Turks in the attempted assassination of Pope John Paul II. concluding for the first time that Bv Matthew C. Quinn Iowa, Texas and California. His two gunmen shot the pope. .■as* United Press International stop in lies Moines, Iowa, is the The indictments were the first second this week and the Texas official acknowledgement of the •i'’ A ..1 C - FLIN T, Mich. — Walter Mon- swing is his fifth since Labor Day. “ Bulgarian Connection," but there was no immediate indication of dale. his emotions showing, said He will spend three days in whether investigators implicated today he knows it will be “ tough” California and the Pacific Northw­ the Soviet KGB secret police in the to defeat President Reagan but est. where |m)IIs show him within attack on the Polish-born pope in vowed he will" win because, "I'm striking distance of Reagan. St. Peter's Square May 13, 1981. •a**'- giving this campaign everything Mondale has decided to ignore “ However, one must retain as I've got." certain that a plot existed to kill the the (M)lls, recalling “ they stopped pope," investiging magistrate Ila- Mondale made the comments as taking (Mills" in 1948 when Harry rio Martella told a news ■ M ' he began a day of campaigning Truman staged his u|i.set win. And. conference. that will take him to four states, judging from the Democrat's Named in the 1.243-page indict­ ending in California. He denied a crowds and enthusiasm, .so have ment were Mehmet Ali Agca, 26, report in today’s Boston Globe that his sup(Hirters. the Turkish gunman already serv­ campaign Chairman James John­ ing a life sentence for the attack Several hundred |M'0|)le stood in son told him this week that that seriously wounded the pope, the rain Thursday night to greet Reagan's lead is insurmountable. and Sergei Ivanov Antonov, 36, a Mondale at the Flint airiiort. Bulgarian airline official arrested “ We did have a meeting. Jim Mondale jumiiiHl up on a jee|i almost two years ago. pointed out it's going to be tough tailgate and told the cheering The indictment charged that a second Turk, Oral Celik, also shot and we all know that,” Mondale sup[)orters in the unemployment- the pope, grazing him in his arm told reporters outside his hotel. “ 1 strieken auto town, “ My fight is and index finger. Celik, a close think that these polls are dead your fight" friend of Agca, had helped him wrong. 1 think we've got an escape earlier from prison in excellent chance of winning." “ I want to he president to siieak Turkey. His whereabouts are not Citing the arms Lssue and other up for workers, to stieak up for known. major points in his campaign. their families and give people a At Agca's trial in July 1981 the Mondalc said, “ I'm giving this chance." court concluded that Agca acted John Reilly. Mondale's senior alone, firing two shots that campaign everything I've got policy adviser, said Mondale has wounded the pope in the abdomen because America's future is at and arm. But the indictment said stake. I don't care what the polls .settled on the themes he is Celik fired a third shot. say. confortahle with and will stick with A Turk identified as Omar Bagci “ The crowds are enormous. them for the whirlwind days before was the accomplice who brought They’re engaged. They’re enthusi­ the election. the 9mm Browning pistol from astic because the issues are deep “ He's making his final argument Switzerland to Italy for Agca to use and profound," he added. “ This is or summation to the jury,” Reilly in the shooting, said Martella. who not about public opinion p o lls " said. led the 23-month investigation. After his siieech, Mondale Indicted along with Agca, An­ As he talked with reporters and plunged into hand shaking with tonov, Bagci and Celik were two predicted victory. Mondalc's eyes more Turks, Musa Serdat Celebi grew moist with emotion. “ I'm .screaming .su[)porters, many of and Bekir Celenk, and former going to win because I'm right." he them saying, “ Give 'Em Hell, Bulgarian Embassy officials To- said. “ There's a lot of deep issues Fritz. ■■ dor Aivazov and Maj. Zhelio that make this fight worthwhile." Though weary at the end of a Vasilev. Mondale, who is running behind long day. he paused for a moment, The indictment charged Agca Reagan in almost every state leaned on his elbow atop a huge specifically with introducing the according to most polls, noted that amplifier, listened for a few gun into Italian territory. .seconds to the blaring marching Aivazov, Vasilev. Celenk and unemployment is 15 percent in music from the Toledo Scott High Celik will be tried in absentia. Flint “ with an administration that Celenk, an accused arms traf­ doesn't care and we're going to win School band, and — displaying ficker, lives in Sofia under protec­ this election." characteristic optimism he tion of Bulgarian authorities. With just 10 days left before flashed the thumbs-up sign. Martella said it was possible to election day and the polls .showing identify Celik on descriptions him still trailing President Reagan given by American witnesses who by 12 percentage points or more. were in the square for the pope’s Mondale has returned to “ speak­ weekly general audience. He said Inside Today the descriptions corresponded to a ing from the heart," as one aide photograph taken in the square, said. 24 pages. 4 sections which was identified as being of Mondale unveiled a new stump speech Thursday as he cam­ A dvice Celik. Area towns Identification of other suspects paigned before large and enthusi­ Business was based on Agca's reports of astic crowds in Ohio. Classified 2 ''physical characteristics, meet­ “ The victory march begins here Com ics . . Entertoinment ing places and meeting times," Herald photo by Tarquinlo in Cleveland today. I can feel it. Martella said. For example, he Jackpot Bingo We’re on our way. We’re going to L o t te r y ...... said, Agca said he met Sotin Kolev, Snug In a pumpkin win," Mondale told a lunchtime Obituaries the alias Aivazov allegedly used, in O p in io n .. Sofia in July or August 1980. Amy Anastos, 2 months old, is too Halloween. Amy obligingly interrupted crowd in the city’s cavernous P eopletalk No date has been set for the trial, young to trick or treat — so her mother, Arcade amid balloons and confetti Sports < and Martella underlined that an her afternoon nap to pose in her new fall Today, Mondale campaigns in T elevision W eather Italian court has still to make a Jerrianne Anastos of 99 McKee St., outfit. four crucial states, Michigan. final judgment on the evidence popped her in a pumpkin to celebrate produced by his investigation. “ This trial is extremely difficult. All the facts have to be verified Bolton leader knew about asbestosis In 1982 under cross-examination," he said. Martella said it was his duty as investigating magistrate only to “ see if one can go ahead” with Ryba suit charges firms contributed to death trial. The indictments would set the stage for a trial of the “ Bulgarian By Sarah Passell failing to warn Ryba of the hazards asbestos-related illnesses, includ­ court with all those who sued them connection, " although CBS sour­ Herald Reporter of working with asbestos. ing about 300 in Connecticut. and that the Rybas got a share of ces said no direct link has yet been Ryba worked as a construction Connaughton said Ryba's-etnie those settlements. established between the Bulgar­ BOLTON — First Selectman superintendent for AC and S of has not yet been scheduled for J.P. Stevens was dropp(>ed be­ Discover just how rich a light cigarette can be. ians and the Soviet KGB. Henry P, Ryba learned that he was Wethersfield, a nationwide insula­ trial. He said the companies being cause there is not enough direct Agca, who has charged the dying of asbestosis more than two tion contractor. Court papers sued generally do not offer to settle evidence against them, Con­ Regular and Menthol. Bulgarians organized the assassi­ years ago, according to pa|>ers claim that Ryba had worked with out of court until a trial date is set. naughton said. nation attempt and helped him up filed federal court in connection asbestos since he was 18 years old. Connaughton said Early's is one All asbestos-related civil action to the moment he fired the gun, is with a $3 million lawsuit Ryba "The injuries and diseases from of two law firms in Connecticut against Johns-Manville halted expected to be the star witness in brought against 24 companies in which the plaintiff, Henry P. Ryba, that handle asbestos litigation. He when the company filed for bank­ the trial. 1982. is suffering will in all probability said Early has won about 11 ruptcy two years ago, Con­ Ryba died last month at the age 10 mg "tar" 0.7 mg nicotine av. percigarene, FTC Report Mar: 84. John Paul was severely wounded be fatal.“ court documents filed by settlements since entering the field naughton said. in the assassination attempt in St. of 54 of abdominal mesothelioma, a New Haven attorney James F. in 1980 The company was allowed to file Peter’s Square and spent a total of type of cancer that attacks the Early say. The lawsuit, which is still for bankruptcy when it claimed 11 weeks in a Rome hospital. lining of the abdominal cavity, Janina Ryba declined Thursday pending against 21 of the compan­ that if it settled all the lawsuits Agca was convicted in Rome in according to his death certificate. to comment on the lawsuit. ies, asks for $1 million in com()en- (lending against it, it would be July 1981 and sentenced to life at a Manchester physician Arnold James Connaughton, a legal satory damages and $2 million in bankrupt by the year 2000, Con­ Warning; The Surgeon General Has Determined top security jail near Ascoli Piceno Klipstein, who signed the certifi­ assistant in Early's office, said this punitive damages, plus the costs of naughton said. in east-central Italy. cate, attributed the cancer to morning the Rybas are also suing bringing suit. “ They can’t be touched," he Thai Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. Turkish police said Agca threa­ Ryba's asbestosis. two Connecticut firms in Bridge­ Court records show that the said, “ That was their tr ic k " tened to kill the pope in November Ryba and his wife Janina filed port Superior Court. The compan­ Rybas agreed to drop their claim Connaughton said New York 1979, during the pontiff's visit to suit in U.S. District Court in' ies are Raymark Industries and against three of the companies — bankruptcy .court Judge Burton Turkey. Agca made the threat a Hartford in February 1982, charg­ Combustion Engineering. J P. Stevens Co Inc., Garlock Inc. Lifland has ordered Johns Man- few days after escaping from the ing the Johns-Manville Corp. and Early specializes in asbestos and Pittsburgh Corning Corps. ville to come up with a plan to pay Maltepe military prison outside 23 other asbestos manufacturers litigation. He said today that he Connaughton said Garlock and HENRY RYBA Istanbul. and distributors with negligence in represents about 1,000 clients with Pittsburgh Corning settled out of Please turn to page 8 was first selectman Z - MANCHESTER HERALD. Friday. Oct. 26. 1984 MANCHESTER HERALD. Friday. Oct. 26. 1984 - 3 P e o p le ta lk Weather Manchester Bates says he’s ‘laid back,’ Today’s forecast In Brief All hits suds Connecticut, Massachusetts focuses on transportation Clergy to speak on nukes All McGraw, long a television-series hold-out, has and Rhode Island; Today; mostly cloudy north portion this Editor’s note: This is one of a If all the rest of Manchester’s way to curb waste and fraud in succumbed to big bucks and the movie Five church leaders in Manchester will speak government. "It’s a sugar coated afternoon and becoming partly series of profiles on Manchester delegation became Republican at star-studded cast of at a public forum on nuclear arms Tuesday, the pill," he says. sunny south portion. Highs 60 to candidates for the General some point and the state adminis­ “ Dynasty.” The Manchester Area Conference of Churches has "Oversight is my job as a former model, who 65. Tonight: partly cloudy, some announced. Assembly. tration remained Democratic, the 9th District representative could legislator: I don’t want to sur­ last appeared on dense fog forming late at night. "What Churches are Saying about the Nuclear By Alex Girelll be the only effective link to the render it to another agency.” television in the Lows 45 to 50. Saturday; fog and Arms Race” will be held at the Memorial Chapel Herald Reporter administration, he said. On the subject of the state "Winds of War" mi­ possible drizzle in the morning, of Emanuel Lutheran Church, 60 Church St., from surplus. $164 million and growing. niseries. caved in noon to 1 p.m. Tuesday. It will be free and open to He said that because he has been then partly sunny and mild in the Rep. Donald Bates, D-East Hart­ a "new kid on the block” in the Bates said there are a number of when producer afternoon. Highs around 70 ex­ all. Cable television subscribers may see it on alternatives. Esther Shapiro of­ Channel 13 on Thursday, Nov. 1 at 7 p.m. or ford. is retired without a hobby and Legislature, he does not press his cept a little cooler at the shore. considers himself a full-time ideas about how procedures might He said the surplus comes about fered her a long­ Vermont: Highs SO to 55 today. Sunday, Nov. 4 at noon and 6 p.m. because the state depends on a term deal — with MACC Executive Director Nancy Carr will legislator. be changed. But one change he Tonight, clouds with areas of fog sales tax, which means the amount options. moderate the panel. Members will include: He said recently he thought he suggested was implemented. forming. Lows40to50.Saturday, had not missed one of his assigned As a member of the Transporta­ of revenue depends on the McGraw joins • The Rev. David Baranowski, St. James economy. other big screen re­ quite mild with a chance of a Church committee meetings during his tion Committee, he wanted to know shower. Highs in the 60s. two-year term until someone told more about the budget for the Under present la w. as long as tlie fugees in the prime­ • The Rev. Charles Cloughen, St. Mary’s surplus remains under 5 percent it time soap — Dla- Maine: Periods of rain today :Church him about a special meeting he had Department of Transportation with snow in the higher eleva­ somehow lost track of. even though it is chiefly the would stay in the reserve fund, or hann Carroll, Billy • The Rev. Newell Curtis, Center Congrega­ "rainy day fund.” Anything over5 tions. Chance of snow extreme tional Church Bates, 56, retired a few years ago responsibility of the Appropria­ Dee Williams, Rock percent could possibly be used to north this afternoon. Highs in the from his job as a route salesman tions Committee. He broached the Hudson and "Dyn­ UPI ptiolo • The Rev. James Meek. Community Baptist retire bond issues. asty" fixture Joan upper 30s north to 50s south. Today: becoming partly sunny this afternoon. High 60 to 65. Wind Church for Table Talk Pie Co. His subject and the upshot was a budget presentation to the commit­ Ali McGraw Collins. Cloudy with fog and a chance of light southwest becoming northwest around 10 mph. Chance of rain • Jeffery Nelson, Emanuel Lutheran Church retirement left him with a pension A scream of glee and the freedom to delve more tee by D O T officials. But, said Bates, it dosen’t make light rain or drizzle tonight and 20 percent this afternoon. Tonight: partly cloudy, some dense fog For more information, call organizer Joan deeply into politics. Bates described himself as the sense to retire bonds at 4 and 5 The look of happiness comes in many forms. Saturday. Lows in the middle 30s O'Loughlin at 643-4031. forming late at night. Lows 45 to 50. Wind light variable. Saturday: Bates has been an elected most laid back of legislators. percent when you arc borrowing at For 13-year-old Traci Freeman, a scream of joy is and 40s. Highs in the 40s north morning fog and possible drizzle, then partly sunny and mild in the official since 1967, when he won a "Normally I don’t lose my cool,” 8 or 9 percent. her reaction as she is named ‘"reen Magazine’s" and 50s south. afternoon. High around 70. Today’s weather picture was drawn by He said it could be put in TV politics winner in their annual ’’Great Model Search” Pakistan night at M CC seat on the East Hartford Town he said. New Hampshire: Periods of Kevin Bell, 9, of 25 Perkins St., a fourth grader at Verplanck School. Council. He served until 1975, when One exception was an exchange short-term investments with the contest Thursday. The Houston teen will appear The Pakistan-American Cultural Association Television is being blamed for what some see as rain today with a chance of snow he left the council to become town between him and Norige at the earnings put into the general fund on the magazine’s cover, be given a $5,000 at Manchester Community College will sponsor a the mediocrity of the nation's presidential in the higher elevations. Highs in treasurer. recent League of Women Voters’ as revenue. It could also be used one-year modeling contract and the keys to a new night of lecture, music, film, and entertainment choices since 1963. Not so. said Daniel L. Ritchie, the upper 30s north to 50s south. He was in that post when asked to forum in Manchester. for a one-time capital improve­ sports car. Saturday in the Program Center of the new head of Group W Westinghouse Broadcasting. Cloudy with fog and a chance of seek the 9th Assembly District ment plan, but not for a program Frederick W. Lowe building. Rep. Don Bates He took issue Wednesday with presidential light rain or drizzle tonight and seat, which he now holds and hopes A reporter asked Norige to back that would become ongoing and Registration will begin at 6 p.m. in the main opposed by Norige elections chronicler Theodore While, who he said Saturday. Lows in the middle 30s to keep on Nov. 6. His Republican up a statement he had made two require future funding, he said. lobby, followed by a general meeting and has compared the last five presidents to those ■t weeks before at a Republican But Bates sees nothing wrong and 40s. Highs in the upper 40s to elections. opponent is Kevin Norige, the elected in the 20 years before the Civil War — lower 60s. Republican town chairman in East Town Committee meeting, when with having some cash on hand. There she goes The guest speaker will be Syed Sharfuddin, Donald F . Hales John Tyler, James Polk, Millard Fillmore, Hartford. Norige criticized Bates’s vote "We have to be prepared,” he said. second secretary of Pakistan’s Embassy in 243 Country Lane, East Hartford. Franklin Pierce and James Buchanan. How does Suzette Charles, who became Miss The district includes Manches­ against creation of a state inspec­ Observing that President Reagan America after Vanessa Williams was dethroned Washington. D.C, He will speak on the latest has said he will not raise taxes. Age; 56, Married to Thcrc.sa Albert; four Don’t blame TV . Ritchie said. He told told the Extended outlook ter’s 9th voting district. tor general and linked it to a children. Advertising Women of New York, “ that very last summer, feel phase of relations between Pakistan and the question about how Bates could Bates said he will not be surprised Extended outlook for New United States. Bates is fond of saying he thinks Political Affiliation: Democrat. comparison persuades me that television is less now that her reign is there are no boundaries within the own a home on a pension and his if Reagan cuts federal grants to England Sunday through Tues­ His speech will be followed by documentary Occupation; Retired. the villain than the carrier of bad news. We over and the crown district and has made himself legislative salary. states. day: films on Pakistan’s land, people, music and Education; Bulkclcy High School, Hartford. simply can’t blame television for Millard has passed to Char­ known in town during the current Bates, who said he had not heard Bates describes himself as a dances. After a break for refreshements, a group Civic Background: Stale representative, Fillmore.” lene Wells, Miss Connecticut,Massachusetts campaign. In a recent interview, the charge before the forum, fiscal conservative, but moderate of artists from New York and Pakistan will America 1985? and Rhode Island: Fair Sunday. he said he would like to attend fumed. to liberal in thematterof providing 1982-present, assigned to Public Safety Com ­ entertain with music and songs. ’’Freedom at Chance of showers Monday. Fair meetings of the Manchester Board He responded that he earned his social services. mittee, Transportation Committee, Planning Guests are asked to bring a plate of snacns. last!” Charles, 21, Tuesday. Temperatures much of Directors from time to time if he pension from the Teamsters Union He said one of his pet projects if and Development Committee; treasurer. East crowed this week as above normal. Highs in the mid There will be a nominal charrge to cover after 35 years. he wins in the election will be to see Hartford, 1976-1982; Town Council member. expenses. is re-elected. Instant recognition she prepared for an 60s to mid 70s Sunday and Bates admitted he comes from a ” Say I’m stupid, say I ’m not a that the 10-year program of repairs East Hartford, 1%7-1975; past president, St. For more information, call Professor M. appearance with Sid Monday and in the 60s Tuesday. safe district for a Democrat but he good legislator, but don’t say I ’m to the insfrastructure is carried Christopher’s Men’s Club, East Hartford; Jud Hale likes his job, which is editing the Zaheer at 647-6178 (work) or 272-3472 (home), Caesar at the Atlan­ Lows in the 40s to mid 50s. does not take it for granted. And he dishonest," Bates said later in an out. He’s afraid that after the first member. Elks Club. 193-year old "Old Farm er’s Almanac" in Dublin. tis Hotel-Casino in N.H. New Hampshire: Chance of said his split district has a value to interview with the Herald. couple of years public attention to Campaign manager: Henry Gcnga. East Atlantic City. Cha­ the program will wane, and the "I can walk anywhere in this country with this showers Sunday and fair Mon­ Satellite view Builders endorse Thompson Manchester that .some people Bates remains adamant that the Hartford. rles, who has day and Tuesday. W arm through overlook. office of an inspector general is no work will allowed to slide. book in my hand and people will recognize it launched a promis­ The Greater Hartford-New Britain Building the period. Highs in the 50s north Commerce Department satellite photo taken at 4 a.m. EO T shows immediately," he said. "They look at it and ing record and act­ and Construction Trades Council has endorsed smile.” Hale, who also is editor of Yankee ing career, had al­ and upper SOs to the 60s south. scattered showers and thunderstorms over Texas and southern New Democrat John W. Thompson in his bid for the New school group forms magazine, says the calendar pages and astro­ ways wanted to be Lows mostly in the SOs north and Mexico. A band of multilayered clouds extend from Texas to New 13th Assembly District seat. nomical information are his favorite parts of the Miss America. mid SOs to low 40s south. England. Broken frontal clouds cover the Northwest and the Northern William J. O’Brien, president of the council, almanac, which sold about 4 million copies last She came close in Summit forecast for the north­ Rockies. said in a news release that Thompson under­ year. "I can look at those figures and know that 1984, finishing first ern White Mountains, N.H.: 28.U ^ V stands working people and has a proven record as Parents lobby to expand gifted program they’re 100 percent accurate. To look and the sun runner-up to Willi­ West to southwest winds 20 to 40 a former mayor of Manchester. goes down in front of Lake Winnipesaukee exactly mph. Cloudy with occasional The council ” is encouraged in having such a ams. But after a academically gifted, his mother said she worries when we said it would 17 months ago — there’s Suzette Charles light snow mixing with rain at knowledgeable and experienced person make an By Sarah E. Hall six parents, two school principals, the town’s two grueling year on the about talented kids who aren’t recognized. something comforting about that.” road, including six weeks as title holder, she’s times. Highs near freezing. BOSTON : ernest attempt to recognize and respond to the Herald Reporter teachers of the gifted, and four regular teachers to JM Lakowicz said she feels that younger children Hale claims only 80 percent accuracy for the happy to get away from the ever-present ■ real needs and concerns of the residents in the study the issue. He will also be a member. Maine: Chance of showers More than six years ago, parents were the force should not be segregated from schoolmates to almanac’s weather predictions. "We always chaperone and the long list of do’s and don’t’s the lEW YOBK ■ town of Manchester,” O ’Brien said in the release. ” I support expansion of the gifted program,” Sunday and fair Monday and behind the founding of a program for gifted students in participate in "gifted” activities, however. With some claim 80 percent accuracy. That’s a traditional pageant imposes on its queen. " It’s just nice to be Thompson, a business consultant and former Cormier said today. ” I think the concern will be Tuesday. Warm through the Manchester’s public schools. help, teachers can encourage bright children to claim of almanacs," he said. “ We’re very big on able to go to the bathroom without having a*Ni union representative, is running against incum­ whether the expansion is reasonable.” period. Highs in the 50s north and achieve their potential in the classroom, she said. tradition." someone waiting outside," she said. bent Republican state Rep. Elsie L. Swensson. Now they’re at it again. More than 50 parents turned Lakowicz said parents do not want to see existing upper SOs to the 60s south. Lows Expanding the program won’t necessarily cost school services cut to make way for a gifted program. mostly in the 30s north and mid LOB out for a meeting to discuss expansion of the program this Tuesday, and school administrators have since money, according to Board of Education member ’’We’re not trying to rob Peter to pay Paul,” she said. 30s to low 40s south. Swensson honored announced the formation of a new, 13-member Susan Perkins. ’’There are lots of ideas about things There will be another open meeting for parents Vermont: Quite mild with a LOWEST we could do without impacting the budget.” she said. interested in expanding the gifted program in town TEMPESATUSES Republican state Rep. Elsie L. Swensson of coifimittee to study their concerns. chance of showers Sunday and Richard Cormier, who directs special education schools on Nov. 7, starting al 7 p.m. in the Bowers • Manchester has received the 1984 public service Aimanac fair weather Monday and Tues­ "I feel that there is a big need for expanding programs.y^aia~today that he is organizing a group of School library. award from the Easter Seal Society of enrichment-type activities within the classroom," day. Highs in the 60s and low 70s. lEOfWO- Connecticut. Lows in the 40s Libby Zakowicz. a parent organizer pushing for Today is Friday. October 26th, Swensson, a two-term incumbent, is secretary change in the gifted program, said today. the 300th day of 1984 with 66 to of the board of directors of the Easter Seal Society 60 FLOW follow. E 3 . of Connecticut and serves on the Development In 1978, after some lobbying by parents, teachers High and low UPI WEATHES POTOCAST ® and school principals, the Board of Education hired The moon is moving toward its 1 Committee of the National Easter Seal Society. The highest temperature re­ Swensson received the award for her efforts on two teachers to serve gifted students in fifth and sixth first quarter. National forecast grades townwide. But talented children in the lower JUST FOR There is no morning star. ported Thursday by the National behalf of people with disabilities. She is a member Weather Service, excluding of the Human Services and Government grades need more stimulation, too, according to The evening stars are Mer­ For period ending 7 a m. EST Saturday. During Friday night, showers Alaska and Hawaii, was 89 Administration and Elections committees of the Zakowicz. cury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and will be found In the Pacific Northwest, upper New England, upper degrees at Milton, Fla. Today’s Legislature. "Throughout the state, there are a lot of people Saturn. Florida and from Texas northeastward to the Lakes region. Some low was 13 degrees at Gunnison, whose kids are basically just marking time,” she said. Those born on this date are snow is expected in parts of the upper Rockies and Plains. Mostly fair THE RECORD Colo. ’’They’re not going as far as they should be in the under the sign of Scorpio. They weather elsewhere. Minimum temperatures include; (approximate Manchester Movers reapply lower grades.” While others talked about the include Russian revolutionary maximum readings In parenthesis) Atlanta 61(78), Boston 49(66), After being rebuffed by the Zoning Board of School Superintendent James P. Kennedy said problems of child abuse SENATOR Leon Trotsky in 1879, gospel Chicago 55(77), Cleveland 57(79), Dallas 60(77), Denver 30(56), Appeals Monday night, Manchester Movers Inc. today that there is still time to include funds to expand CARL ZINSSER took positive action. singer Mahalia Jackson in 1912, Weather radio Duluth 44(55), Houston 63(82), Jacksonville 69(83), Kansas City has reapplied for variances that would permit it the gifted program in next year’s school budget. actor Jackie Coogan in 1914 and 55(68), Little Rock 60(79), Los Angeles 58(70), Miami 77(85), But the new committee will have to act quickly if he SENATOR ZINSSER introduced and The National Weather Service to build a warehouse and storage areas on actress Jacklyn Smith in 1948. Minneapolis 46(58), New Orleans 68(86), New York 57(71), Phoenix Colonial Road. is to consider its recommendations, since most budget hod passed in 1983 legislation broadcasts continuous, 24-hour 56(80), San Francisco 48(60), Seattle 39(54), St. Louis 59(80) But before the application can be heard, thei planning must be done by early December, he said. On this date in history: weather information on 162.475 Washington 61(81). board will have to decide whether it is establishing “The Children's Trust mHz in Hartford, 162.55 mHz in While some academically children are happy with In 1825, the Erie Canal, Am eri­ substantially different than the one turned down things as they are now, "some can get lazy and bored Fund,” legislation that sets aside ca’s first man-made waterway, New London and 162.40 mHz in Monday. Otherwise, the company would have to Meriden. and disrupt the classroom,” according to Lakowicz. A funds to be used in the prevention of was opened for traffic between Manchester Herald wait six months before submitting a new mother of three, she lives at 37 Doane St„ teaches at Buffalo and Albany, New York. application, according to planning officials. the Manchester Early Learning Center, and is a child abuse. In 1920, the Lord Mayor of Cork Richard M. Diamond, Publisher The new application has reduced the number of member of the board of the Connecticut Association — Terence McSwiney — died proposed storage areas from 20 to 18, but still for the Gifted. Positive Action ------Not Words after a two and one-half month Lottery Penny Sadd Mark F. Abraitis includes plans for a 60-by-80-foot warehouse. hunger strike in a British prison Associate Publisher Business Manager The board rejected the first application Her only child in public school — a son in the second cell, demanding independence \ because the company could not prove a hardship, grade at Bowers School — is not being challenged Re-Elect SENATOR CARL A. for Ireland. USPS 327-500 as required for a variance. enough despite his having a good teacher, Lakowicz Connecticut daily VOL. CIV, No. 23 complained. While he has been identified as. In 1942, during World War II, Published dally except Sunday the aircraft carrier U.S.S. 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Office hours are8:30a.m . being exiled from his homeland Today In history you don't receive vour Herold bv 5 Maine daily; 191 p.m. weekdays or 7:30' a.m. Satur­ to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. E 1 £ Q by his former Bolshevik com­ day, please telephone vour carrier to use the services of On Oct. 26. 1979, South Korean President Park New Hampshire daily; 1980 If you're unable to reach vour rades, Russian revolutionary* Rhode Island daily: 7932 The Manchester Herald Is a Leon Trotsky said, "Old age is Chung-hee was as'sasinated at at a dinner by Kim carrier, call subscriber service ot subscriber to United Press Interna­ Jae-kyu, director of the Korean CIA. Kim is seen as he "Lot-O-Bucks’’: 17-9-39-18-30 643-2711 by 7 p.m. weekdays or 10 tional news services and Is o MANCHESTER VOTERS the most unexpected of all the Vermont daily; 792 a.m. Saturdays tor guaranteed member ot the Audit Bureau ot things that happen to a man.” re-enacted the shooting for investigators. delivery In Manchester. 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MANCHESTER DEVELOPMENT-J. RUSSELL SMYTH, TREASURER 4 - MANCHP:STF.R h e r a l d , Friduy, Oct 26. 1984 MANCHESTER HERALD. Friday. Oct. 26, 1984 - 5

Fed budget red ink V .S ./ W o rld FIRST NATIONAL SUPERMARKETS INC 1984 totals $175.3 billion in B r ie f Israeli boost withdrawal WASHINGTON (UPI) — Thegovern­ billion, the biggest four-year increase TEL AVIV, Israel — Key government minis­ ment spent $175.3 billion more than it ever. ters have endorsed a plan to begin withdrawing collected in taxes and other revenue The deficits during the Carter troops from southern Lebanon, leaving the full during 1984's fiscal year, the second- administration totaled $181 billion and largest annual deficit on record, the were $144 billion during the Ford years. Cabinet to decide the matter Sunday, Armed government said. Interest on the national debt cost the Forces Radio said. The figure, released Thursday by the U.S. government $153.8 billion in fiscal The radio said the agreement was reached Treasury Department and O f f i c e of 1984,19.4 percent m ore than in 1983 and Thursday by the 10-m em ber inner Cabinet of Management and Budget, brought the 79 percent of all the red ink, the Prime Minister Shimon Peres following a national debt to $1.59 trillion, one-third Treasury Department said. discussion of proposals by Defense Minister of which accumulated during the Several groups, including one of Yitzhak Rabin. Reagan administration. former Treasury secretaries — Repub­ The plan will be submitted to the full The red-ink total was $1.04 billion lican and Democratic — have warned 25-member coalition Cabinet for action, the radio higher than the administration esti­ that the interest on the national debt, is said. mated in its most recent set of growing dangerously fast. It was not immediately clear if the inner economic projections Aug. 15. Paying the interest already is the Cabinet made any changes in Rabin's original third-largest single category of govern­ proposal that envisioned a withdrawal of most of The government spent 5.8 percent ment expenditure after social pro­ Israel's 10,000 troops within a year. Israeli troops m ore in 1984 than in 1983, $841.8 billion, grams and defense spending. invaded southern Lebanon in June 1982 and and took in II percent more in revenue, The past 20 years have seen only one forced Palestinian guerrillas to retreat from its narrow ing the deficit from 1983's government surplus, $3.2 billion in l%9 northern border. record $195.4 billion. during the Nixon administration. The government's 1984 fiscal year After past economic recoveries huge ended Sept. 30. recession deficits have faded away. Bomb blast Injures four The administration estimates next But this time it is stubbornly remaining SANTIAGO, Chile — A car-bomb exploded year's deficit will be smaller, $166.9 roughly the same size or growing opposite the building housing Chile's military billion. But administration estimates of larger, depending on the group doing junta early today, shattering hundreds of deficits through 1989 have been chal­ the estimate, and swollen by interest windows and at least four people were hurt by lenged by the Congressional Budget payments. flying glass, police said. Office and other groups as too low in All estimates, including those of the Police said the bomb exploded at 1:50 a.m. most years. White House, see annual deficits today inside a car parked across the street from Corporate tax receipts soared 53.7 adding another $1 trillion to the the 22-story Diego Portales building, located on percent over 1983. to $.56.9 billion, national debt through 1989. an apartment block in Santiago's main thro- helped by the economic expansion. Announcement of the deficit figure roughfare, Alameda Avenue. UPl photo Defense s|>ending rose 7.7 percent, to was delayed from its scheduled release At least four people were injured by pieces of $220.8 billion. time Wednesday until late Thursday glass hurled onto the streets by the blast, which Early morning terror The administration had predicted a afternoon, released only after repor­ also destroyed five cars, broke all the front larger, 10.7 percent jump in Pentagon ters discovered the reports in boxes in a windows of the building and ripped off branches spending to $227 billion. Treasury Department public affairs of trees lining the street, police said. The Dade County medical examiner removes the body of oneof Social welfare spending went up 5.7 office. two children killed in an early morning apartment fire in Miami The glass-and-metal Diego Portales structure percent, to $292.2 billion, also less than But Treasury officials blamed the houses government auditoriums and the offices of while most of the 100 residents were asleep. Robert Auguste, 6, the 6.4 percent increase the adminis­ delay on operational problems and the armed forces chiefs, who make up Chile's and Tony Desinor, 4, were killed, and 14 others were injured. tration expected. denied the figures were l^ing held up to ruling junta. The Reagan years have added about miss evening newscasts or to avoid The blast came a week after leftist terrorists Many residents leaped to safety from the three-story building. one-third to the national debt, $539.2 Wall Street reaction. blew up three high-tension electricity towers, blacking out the capital of 4 m illion inhabitants and most of central Chile. Mrards in Manchester Chicago prelate rap^ one-issue campaign Gemayel calls for talks

Bv David E. Anderson reversed the "seamless garment" of "a consist­ BEIRUT, Lebanon — President Amin Gemayel back domestic social programs. today summoned Christian and Moslem m ilitia sa v in g ] United Press International & "But this does not mean the nuclear ent ethic of life" that puts the nuclear Bernardin also gave im plicit support representatives for a meeting to discuss an question can be ignored or relegated to war and poverty issues on the same for Cuomo and Ferraro in drawing a We’re also celebrating with even more rock-bottom prices in our WASHINGTON — The nuclear arms a subordinate status. " he declared. level as abortion. imminent withdrawal of Israeli occupation distinction between "moral principles troops from southern Lebanon. race and poverty demand equal "The only cure' for the nuclear threat "The value of the framework of a and specific solutions" in the policy Hours before the scheduled ta lk s began, Druze West Hartford and Southington EdwardsI attention with the issue of abortion, is to prevent any use of nuclear consistent ethic is that it forces us to debate. Moslem militiamen and troops loyal to Gemayel says Cardinal Joseph Bernardin of weapons." face the full range of threats tolife, " he exchanged m ortar fire southeast of B eiru t. B u t a Chicago, one of the nation's most "The Catholic position on abortion said. "It resists a one-issue focus by the While continuing to urge legislation cease-fire was agreed upon and there were no influential Catholic leaders. requires — by the law of logic and the church, even when the urgent issue is to end abortion, Bernardin. who heads immediate reports of casualties. In a pointed rebuke of fellow church law of love — a social vision which joins abortion or nuclear war." the national hierarchy's pro-life com­ leaders who have elevated the abortion the right to life to the promotion of a In addition. Bernardin criticized mittee, said the church must recognize The South Lebanon committee, which also issue to paramount importance during range of other rights: nutrition, health conservative Catholics who support "the different roles played by moral includes a representative from the Lebanese the current political campaign, Ber­ care, employment and housing," he anti-abortion legislation while also law and civil law in a pluralistic army, will discuss the mechanics of taking over nardin joined a growing number of said. backing the administration in cutting society," territory relinquished by the Israelis, a govern­ prelates in saying the church cannot be Bernardin's speech comes in the ment source said. a “one-issue" pressure group within midst of fierce debates on the relation­ Gemayel called on the nation's rival militia the American electorate. ship of religion and politics — one that groups to work out a security plan to avoid Bernardin, in a carefully worded has sharply divided the 52 million Judge sides with defense factional fighting in territory evacuated by the wide-ranging and warmly received Israeli army, government sources said. Roman Catholics in the United States. WEST PALM BEACH. Fla. (UPI) speech Thursday night, also sought to But the judge denied a defense Democratic vice presidential nomi­ Prosecutors have been ordered to distance the church from the religious request to release a videotape made of nee Geraldine Ferraro and Democratic release a statement Caroline Kennedy right and the bishops' longstanding Kennedy's room at the Brazilian Court Woman reconsiders appeal New York Gov. Mario Cuomo — both gave police about the death of David commitment to a constitutional Hotel in Palm Beach, where he was Catholics — have been criticized by ' Kennedy and photographs of the hotel RALEIGH. N.C. — Poison killer Margie Velma amendment banning abortion. found dead last April 25 slumped Archbishop John O'Connor of New room where her cousin died of a drug between two beds. Barfield has decided to die by lethal injection Bernardin said the church must face York for not actively campaigning overdose. Born agreed with prosecutors, who because its “easier," but also is considering equally "the full range of threats to against abortion. Other members of the Circuit Judge John E. Born, respond­ argued release of the videotape would another appeal to avoid being the first woman life" and that makes a "one-issue" hierarchy have suggested Catholics ing Thursday to a request by a defense hamper an on-going investigation that executed in the nation in 22 years. position untenable. make abortion the primary issue in the attorney, ordered the release of Caro­ may lead to additional arrests. After the 51-year-old grandmother chose In a major address delivered at Nov. 6 election. line Kennedy's statement and 10 crime Authorities said the 28-year-old son of Thursday to die by lethal injection, prison Georgetown University. Bernardin Bernardin. however, said the scene photographs. assasinated Sen. Robert Kennedy died officials set her execution for 2 a.m. EST Nov. 2. .said, “ The policy of abortion on church's involvement in the public A prosecutor said the m ate ria l m ight of a lethal mixture of cocaine and the Barfield was convicted of killing her fiance, demand needs to be resisted and policy debate must span what he called be released today. prescription drugs Demerol and Stuart Taylor. in 1978 by lacing his beer and iced M e lla ril. tea with rat and ant poison. Ky called crime boss VOTE NEW YORK (UPI) — Former retraction from political columnist South Vietnamese Prime Minister Jack Anderson, who described Ky MERCIER Nguyen Cao Ky heads a nationwide as "the Godfather of Vietnamese S T A T E R E P It's REGAL'S 44th crime network that preys on organized crime groups." M l» h llvo* M H t— I l* i Vietnamese refugees, a hooded Capt. Donald Saviers of West­ witness told a presidential crime minster. Calif., a police official commission. familiar with the operation of The allegation Thursday came Vietnam ese gangs, declined to on the third and final day of confirm the allegation of the testimony before the President's unidentified witness. Commission on Organized Crime examining the growing activities "lam not prepared at this time of Asian crim e gangs in the United to tell you if the information is States. accurate or not, " he said. Ky lives A hooded witness who said he and works near Westminster. was a gang member described the The hooded witness said the groups as "anti-communist" and gangs raised money through extor­ said his boss told him Ky controlled tion from Vietnamese refugees. He gang activities through subordi­ said gang members infiltrated nates who were former South Chinese gambling dens for the ^savings right Vietnamese generals. purpose of robbing them. The Park will close for You want to put your buying power to maximum "In the Vietnamese community, FLORSHEIM Four major gangs were identi­ the winter on Oct. 28 but everybody knows that General Ky .want rock-bottom prices on everything! on to you. Get fied as the "Frogmen, " a m ilitaris­ will open for sledding on use. You is the leader of the gang, " said the tic operation based in Los Angeles, unidentified witness. the "Black Eagles, " of San Fran­ weekends and holidays want you to have it all! We’re EdwardsI maximum Ky, who fled to the United States And we cisco, the Houston-based "Fisher­ when snow and weather in the final days of the w ar against men " and the "Eagles Seven " of even better than before! Wider aisles buying piower North Vietnam and the Viet Cong, Chicago. conditions are suitable. And we’re has denied any links to Vietnamese "They are trained in robbery crime gangs. packed with more fabulous your food and murder. Their activities thus WICKHAM PARK “I am an honorable man," the SHOE SALEI far are mainly extortion. They are 1329 W. Middle Turnpike dollar. former South Vietnamese prime not into narcotics as yet." said buys. More warehouse minister and vice president said commission spokesman Arthur Manchester. Connecticut after unsuccessfully demanding a B rill. 328-0856 ^ c: prices on all the brands you buy most! A new Fresh Shop % Fish on Ice Dept. A bulk foods' Edwards. PANCAKES & SAUSAGE BREAKFAST section where you can save We’U chop FUND RAISER 5 0 % over the cost of packaged up to Vs off HELP ELECT OFF goods. We’re your buying your entire JACK THOMPSON ENTIRE STOCK! agent and we’ll pass the food bill! STATE REPRESENTATIVP______80S Spencer St. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 28th SAUINOS NOV. 3 M anchester 8:30 A.M. - 1:00 P.M. “Your Quollly DONATION: <3.00 (Adult) <1.50 (Seniors/Chlld) Men's Shop” lEdwaixls Open Mon. thru. Sat. ELKS CLUB — 30 BISSELL STREET RECAVSMANCHESTER 903 MAIN ST VERNON 7 am to Midnight IRI CITY PI A2A ★ CLIP AD — WORTH 50C TOWARD BREAKFAST it OrtN OAlir V,3 0 .J:W . TMO«S. •« ».oo OWN w io, TNuns. t rn. t i t « o food wareJKXJse Sun. 8 am to 0 pm Paid for by: Committee to Elect John W. Thompson: Roger Negro, Treasurer MANrHKSTER HERALD, Friday, Pel 26, mm - < tj MA\( HKSTKR HERALD, Friduy, Oct 26. 1984 Richard M. Diamond, Publisher Yale administration mum Douglas A. Bevins, Managing Editor Connecticut In James P. Sacks, City Editor OPINION registered nurses struck the 4Z7-bed facility over lawsuit State pays hefty bill wages, benefits and working conditions. on students’ claim, Mary Lou Millar, state president of the union, HARTFORD — State public defenders report combined impact has shut down U claimed the latest talks broke down when the convince Yale to move from its that the bill for their defense of multipie- NEW HAVEN (UPl) - Yale of 13 dining halls and forced I hospital again revived the issue of a three-year refusal to meet the union’s de­ murderer Steven J. Wood could exceed an University has refused to com­ hundreds of classes off campus. I mands or submit the dispute to Jack contract. Initial talks focused on a two-year pact, ment about a lawsuit filed by Local 34 offered Wednesday to I unprecedented $160,000, including an unpaid binding arbitration, said student Democrats still don’t have a good strategy bill for one psychiatrist. which the union demands, she said. students who claim the university submit unresolved issues to fa­ Anderson- I $90,000 spokesman Tom Keenan, a gradu­ has breached its promise to culty arbitration, but Yale imme­ Chief Public Defender Joseph M. Shortall, who Woman convicted for fraud ate student in comparative (headed the unsuccessful defense effort, said provide an education during a diately rejected the offer. Washington literature. Two k'iiding Connecticut Uemocruts come to prolonged strike by white collar "The union’s proposal is not economically. He said the Democrats have to learn how 'Thursday the expense was Justified but the BRIDGEPORT — A former executive of a "W e hope the threat of $10 Go-Round . i commission which runs his office has questioned workers. acceptable to the university,’ said Monchestcr this week and played on traditional themes to convince voters that the deficit which ha.s. treatment facility for the handicapp^ has million in damages will prod The class-action suit was filed Michael Finnerty, Yale’s vice in an effort to boost their party's chances in the Nov. 6 accumulated under Reagan will have a la.sting and I the cost. pleaded guilty to using more than $16,000 in state (Yale) toward a more flexible Manchester Thursday in New Haven Superior president for administration. ” ltis election negative effect, one they will eventually feel. "Basil T. Tsakonas, chairman of the Public funds for personal expenses, including furniture, bargaining position," Keenan Court by 102 students representing an attempt to move the process Defender Services Commission, said in minutes travel and duck food. j said. ”We figure that if they’re First District U.S. Kep. Barbara Kennelly appeared Spotlight His asse,ssment is correct on that score. But Yale’s lO.OtK) students. They are away from direct bargaining of the commission’s September meeting that Helen Arnold, executive director of the United concerned about money, this will largely on her own behalf and was escorted around Democrats face another problem as well, one they rtfany of the costs were "a t variance” with seeking $10 million in damages across the negotiating table and Cerebral Palsy Association of Fairfield County get them to listen.” James P. Sacks won't acknowledge as quickly: They have been equally plus $2 million for each week the away from the process of media­ town by Democratic Registrar of Voters Herbert A s s e s s m e n i commission policies. from 1969-1979, was the 24th person convicted in The lawsuit claims Yale has unable to "lin k" themselves with a positive national One commission member who did not want to strike continues. tion that both parties have agreed Stevenson. Sen. Christopher Dodd stumped for several Heratci City Editor an ongoing state investigation of Medicaid fraud. breached its agreement with the (ienerid Assembly candidates — and against President .strategy in the minds of voters. identified said the costs were "w ay in excess of Arnold, 64, of Milford, pleaded guilty Thursday "It would be inappropriate for to.” the university to comment at this students and "destroyed the at­ Reagan — during a brief appearance at Democratic In seeking to accommodate the conservative trend, the normal practice" and it was “ bad precedent in Bridgeport Superior Court to first-degree of Soviets ; time on this suit,” a spokesman mosphere of collegiality and intel­ Headquarters on Main Street. they have abandoned some of the coalition that for the boss to spend that kind of money.” larceny for cheating the state out of $16,849. the lectual inquiry which induced the Errors spur formerly made the party strong. Wood was found guilty in August of murdering chief state’s attorney’s office said. said. " I t is the policy of the university not to issue any state­ plaintiffs" to attend the school. While in Manchester, both Kennelly and Dodd made Asked about her own campaign against Republican The party maintains its traditional advocacy of equal his former mother-in-law, stepdaughter and his Judge L. Scott Melville sentenced Arnold to a new exam is hard-iine ment on a legal mater which may When asked why the students comments that reassured those of us who aren't partial ex-wife’s boyfriend and found not guilty by reason 2-to 5-year suspended prison term and two years DANBURY (U P I) — Students in Herschel Klein of Windsor. Kennelly predicted victory, rights, a strong government role in the economy and eventually come before a court.” were not suing Local 34 of the to I'.S. muscle-flexing in Central America. On domestic of insanity of his ex-wife’s death. He is awaiting probation and ordered her to repay the state the Danbury public schools must re­ but not a repeat of her 1982 landslide. arms control. But except for the Module tax proposal. Educational, custodial and din­ Federation of University Em­ sentencing. $16,849 and a $5,000 fine. take a state mathematics test issues, they continue to be impressive representatives Democrats have been afraid to buck the rightward WASHINGTON - Though Soviet ing hall services have been dis­ ployees, law student Ian Ayres Arnold was arrested May 19,1983, and accused because a city teacher passed out of time-honored Democratie positions. LATER THAT DAY, Dodd voiced support for swing by strongly advocating policies that would fulfill President Konstantin Chernenko rupted by the month-long strike by said, "W e don’t have a contract of paying personal expenses with cerebral palsy with the union. We have a contract the exam as a practice test before But viewed in the context of the current national Mondale and s;iid Reagan's slips during the their philosophies. The lack of a jobs program in the has opened the door a crack. Nursing strike drags on association funds after the center received 1,500 Yale clerical and technical campaign, both reflect a problem faced by the President Reagan is hesitant to workers who have charged the with the university.” the test date. presidential debates were nothing startling. "You saw platform this year is one example. NORW ALK — The strike by registered nurses money from the state for therapy services that City and state education officials Democratic Party: Despite the party's ability to field a university with economic discrimi­ Ayres assisted in drafting the the president as he is." he said. enter his parlor and negotiate an at Norwalk Hospital entered its 26th day today weren’t actually performed, authorities said. say the incident was serious but nutnber of strong candidates, it has not succeeded in nation by sex and race. suit. ” I love this university,” Echoing Kennelly. Dodd said national security REPUBLICAN ATTACKS on the kind of policies arms-control agreement. Reagan with no end in sight after another round of talks Ayres said, "but I believe it would they believe it was not a deliberate developing an agenda to respond to the one that put involves "things like health care and housing" as well favored by traditional Democrats are likely to meet suspects that the Kremlin’s real - broke down with the union and management “ The strike has been alienating Judge wants no speeding for me and has divided the be disloyal to sit back and let effort to cheat. Ronald Reagan in the White House in 198(1. as military preparedness. He went on to accuse Reagan with increased success in the future unless the party purpose is to bolster Soviet mil­ trading angry charges. HARTFORD — Chief Justice John A. Speziale university into opposite camps," President A. Bartlett Giamatti’s For some reason. Democrats have been unable to of "short-changing the next generation." itary strength relative to the A federal mediator failed again Thursday to administration breach its contract can turn the corner on all tho.se counts. has told Judges and other Judicial Department said junior Marilee Albert, one of translate the strengths of candidates like Kennelly and "Every generation has needed its help," Dodd said The GOP's public relations strategy is to stress United States. settle the bitter contract dispute between the by failing to provide promised VOTE hospital and Connecticut Health Care Associates employees to obey the 55 mph speed limit and to the plaintiffs. “ The atmosphere is Dodd into what voters would perceive as a itrogressive from the head(|uarters steps. "People with the personal leadership, foreign power as oppo.sed to not only depressing and unplea­ services,” His suspicion is based on a recent District 1199. The two sides reached another use seat belts while traveling in state vehicles. and responsible national program. opportunities and a little bit of assistance can do it ' foreign policy, and faith in an expanding economy to The warning Thursday was the latest directed sant but it is not one which is An affiliate service and mainte­ National Intelligence Estimate stalemate and no new negotiations were MERCIER Turning to foreign policy, Dodd told reporters there is reduce the deficit. Democrats running for national at state workers following Gov. William O Neill s conducive to a healthy academic nance union has added to campus submitted without dissent by all scheduled. disruption by honoring picket lines STATE R E P MONDAY MORNIN'fi, Kennelly stumped a factory, a chance it could move even further right if Reagan office generally respond with a myriad of figures, order to state police to crack down on speeders. life,” M ki h >kia« M B C(Mm t bkiM. liMin nine U.S. civilian and military The walkout began Oct. 1 when about 350 at most of Yale’s 200 buildings. The toured the Municipal Building, addressed a gathering of wins. Concerning Nicaragua. Dodd said .some suggestions of tax reform (and increases) to reduce The aim of the lawsuit is to intelligence agencies. The docu--- senior citizens and paid a brief visit to the Herald administration officials "are just salivating and debt, and moderucy in the world arena. ment, classified "secret,” states During our conversation, she addressed the chafing at the bit to go in there militarily." Their timidity in articulating what lies behind their succinctly: TJ*; presidential race and what she considers the major On the subject of whether his primary favorite. Sen. policies and their recent failure to form a coherent ■ ^ • f political items in the next several years, health-care Oary Hart, would have been a better presidential national strategy has contributed to Reagan’s success "The Soviet Union considers the' N u rs e d ie s costs, tax policy and trade reform. candidate than Mondale, Dodd said: "H e was my in portraying the "failed past" as a wholly Democratic principal purposes of arms-contrq] . Kennelly. a member of the House Ways and Means choice in the primary but the party made its choice." achievement. Many have come to see that connection limitations to be those of enhanc^^ Committee, said the U.S. must "protect our j< bs and w e e k a fte r He quickly went on to (irai.se Mondale, describing him us so significant that they won't trust the old guard of ing its strategic position vis-a-vis I oursituation." She advocated *a little bit of a big stick " as "candid and honest . " the parly with national power. that of the United States and__ to gain agreements that would help reduce the massive Thai's proven by Reagan's appeal to party members reducing the risk of war." - trade deficit. ASKED WHETHER HART'S comparative strength who still back candidates like Kennelly and Dodd in tra n s p la n t Turning to health care, she said providers, including The estimate continues: "T h e - among "Yuppies " said something about the party's stale races. It also has been reflected by the shallow PITTSBURGH (U PI) - Claudia doctors, must share the burden of ca ring for the elderly future, Dodd acknowledged that traditional Democrats nature of the Hart candidacy and the increasingly pursuit of strategic advantage,’.. Zabski’s battle to live a normal life and infirm if expiui.ses are to remain manageable. have a problem, especially among younger voters. conservative stands taken by Democrats who hope to outweighs considerations of cost..... ended in Presbyterian University Kennelly also endorsed Walter iftondale's plan to cut He attributed this to a lack of "linkage" between a rise above the city council level. of controlling the arms race, or of ... Hospital six days after a heart- the deficit by increasing taxes and reforming the president like Reagan and the ill effects of his policies. If Nov. 6 proves to be a disaster and the Democrats the possible destabilizing effect olf - lung" transplant considered the corporate tax structure. She said the race is getting Dodd acknowledged, for instance, that the are unable to quickly develop a new appeal to party particular weapons.” only cure to her rare and fatal "closer than we ever thought." Republicans have "an appealing message" traditions, the damage is likely to get steadily worse. disease. In any discussion of disarma-" The 30-year-old New Haven, ment and detente, the document'" Conn., nurse died at 9:55 a.m. An editorial declares, the Soviets “ have sought,, ■ Thursday. to preserve the military advan­ Zabski had been critical since tages they already possess and to "" her 7-hour operation last Friday. protect the military programs and Her condition deteriorated over a s s t\u )C - options they intend to pursue.” the weekend, requiring an infusion The best choice of oxygenated blood. She showed O C I C ^ U K ^ - . One reason for this hard-line""' signs of improving earlier this m J v & f iS M assessment. I ’m told, is that""" week, but a hospital spokesman Reagan appointees have gained said her weakened condition be­ is McCavanagh fore surgery may have affected the ascendancy in the various wpcilip- her ability to pull through the Republicans have a beef intelligence agencies. They may'-T.! difficult recovery. represent Manchester well. also be protecting their jobs by with Rep. James McCava­ "She was in very dire straits” In backing the incumbent, the telling the president what th ey..„ before the operation, said spokes­ nagh, D-Manchester. They Herald has also considered think he wants to hear. man Tom Chakurda. "H er condi­ say his legislative record is the unusual and sometimes tion had deteriorated to the point undistinguished. But the intelligence analysts also.:.. where she was very, very bizarre positions that have a wealth of evidence to -- The GOP may have a point, critical.” Mercier has taken on some of support their concern about Soviet "W e do not know the clinical but the Manchester Herald the issues. intentions: the Afghanistan ag- ■ reason” for Zabski’s death, Cha- believes he is a good state Both candidates, for exam­ gression, the shooting down of the kur(la said. " I have not received j:epresentative. We recom­ ple, are concerned about Korean airliner and the detection '" any information to lead us to mend a vote for him Nov. 6 in of Soviet violations of existing believe the organ was rejected.” quality education. McCava­ She was the 17th person to arms agreements. the 12th Assembly District. nagh favors a change in state undergo a heart-lung tranplant at When McCavanagh first funding formulas to increase Whatever the cause, there i s " • Presbyterian University Hospital, entered the House after the Manchester’s share of aid to little douht that the Reagan one of four medical centers in the nation performing the operation. administration has achieved a 1982 election, he asked a education, and he wants to ’ ’Overall the program had a little veteran legislator what he lower the dollar amount of the conservative tilt at least in the top over a 50 percent survival rate,” should do to learn. "Shut up cap on the town’s share of echelons of the intelligence agen-. , (jhakurda said, with survival mea­ cies — the levels where assess- . and listen,” he was told. special education costs. sured in one-year increments. ments are made and sent to the Zabski was like any other young McCavanagh followed that Mercier concentrates on the White House. nurse working at New Haven’s advice, and he learned a lot. issue of merit pay for Hospital of St. Raphael until He has become known as a teachers, with the bad idea Soviet propaganda, though it ' March, 1983, when she became the good listener and a hard doesn’t create the vociferous agi- one in one million stricken with that each town should set its primary pulmonary hypertension. worker, and his attendance tation against U.S. militarism, “ at - own criteria for peer least helps to sustain it.” accord-' ' ' The debilitating disease prevented record at the Capitol is one of evaluation. ing to the estimate. oxygen from reaching the cells of the best. Besides his time in the her body and forced her to resign in Frequently accused of be­ August. Legislature, McCavanagh She waited more than a year for ing a parrot for Connecticut’s has three years’ experience a donor who matched her B- Democratic majority, McCa­ as a member of Manchester’s Open Forum positive blood type, tissue type and vanagh quickly responds that Board of Directors. He is approximate size. She was flown he is no rubber stamp for by private Jet to Pittsburgh and involved in the community, was in the operating room eight anybody. He broke with his serving Manchester Memor­ hours after that donor was found Scout program American Camping Association. I disappointing lot. They strut, The putative father of the ; / party to join the unsuccessful ial Hospital, the United Way, really wish that I were writing a last Thursday. make claims, squawk and talk, but Constitution, John Locke, said, Irene Zabski accompanied her effort to keep tolls on state and other service organiza­ gets high marks report on this program now, for it rarely do they care. Can we even highways to help pay for "Government has no other end— daughter on the trip and stayed by tions. He knows his business; would receive the highest marks trust them to be honest? her side until her death. Chakurda To the Editor: than the preservation of infrastructure repairs. he has his own real estate that I could give it. One man has served Manchester property.” " ' said Mrs. Zabski was "very well McCavanagh is a devoted agency. Scoutmaster Maidment has a with honesty, caring and commit­ composed for a woman who’s gone During this past summer, I had public servant, and his ho­ For his part, Mercier is charisma that brings out the best ment — Jack Thompson. A two- We have just lived through a '" through such an emotional roller the opportunity of visiting with my in Manchester’syoihig Americans, period of almost four years where! ’ coaster. She’s bolding up nesty cannot be questioned. articulate and intelligent. He term mayor who worked unceas­ "old” Boy Scout Troop 25, and its and he serves as a very realistic ingly to improve the quality of life the government policy of preserv- "* admirably.” . His opponent. Republican Co-workers at St. Raphael, who might be an effective legisla­ scoutmaster, Harry Maidment, for role model for them to follow. His for all, he is unusual. With Jack ing the property of the rich has , newcomer John Mercier, had collected $30,000 in an eme- / tor, but we believe he needs three days in camp. As a result, I all-volunteer camp staff, from skill seemed to be the prevailing ’ Thompson as mayor, we knew geiicy heaini fund to pay Zabski’s should not have criticized the have been wondering if the people specialists, to cooks, from dis­ more experience before he where he stood on issues — he has philosophy. For example, the - personal expenses, mourned her of Manchester really know about incumbent's integrity. McCa- can be taken seriously as a hwashers to the camp nurse, from been forthright all the way down number of people in poverty has.-’, death. "W e all feel badly for hen” the extraordinary training that the vanagh’s choice of the word candidate for the General maintenance to office, are not only the line. increased, food stamps have been..^ one nurse said. boy members of the troop are “ scurrilous,” in describing Assembly. fine dedicated people, but are I believe in Jack Thompson, in cut, educational benefits are de­ Gov. William A. O’Neill ex­ SO...HOP TO IT!!! receiving in citizenship, self- products in one way or another of creased, toxic wastes have been^' tended his sympathy and Mercier’s personal attacks, Perhaps McCavanagh has his words, and in the actions that reliance, ieadership and skills? their contact with him. make his words reality. In No­ neglected, legal aid to the poor has -" condolences. was accurate. not been the most effective "Lik e so many other people It is fabulous! It is evidenced by I found myself poking and vember, we have a chance to been gutted, etc., etc. — and the We like McCavanagh’s the large number of boys and throughout Connecticut, I feel a legislator in his freshman prodding, interviewing and play­ choose forthright, positive rich have become richer. campaign style. Though we term, but we have high hopes young men who continue as active ing devils advocate during my sense of deep, personal loss with honesty. the passing of Claudia Zabski,” have criticized legislators for participants in the program, and three-day stay at Troop 25’s Camp This is the first presidential ; for the next two years. He Let’s choose true commitment. O’Neill said. "Although most of us refusing to debate their chal­ achieve the coveted Eagle Scout Kirkham. I was impressed. I election in my memory where the 2 5 %- 5 0 % O f f should be returned to the Let’s choose Jack Thompson for did not know her personally, we Award: by the college age and choice is so very clear tetween two' ’< lengers, McCavanagh was congratulate and admire Harry state representative. knew of her valiant struggle Legislature. young working men who return philosophies of government: (1) the only incumbent to say he Maidment for the fine program he against a rare illness and we Joined Fabulous savings on selected items throughout the stores... during vacations and free time to the preservation of the properties... has built for the benefit of youth. Caihleen Toomey in prayers for her recovery. didn’t believe in debates. assist by giving leadership to of the rich, and (2) the advance­ "H er courage and deterniination Shop for Misses, Juniors, Children, Men aiid^oung Men... carry your D&L Charge Card! 500 E. Center St. Others have made excuses Letters policy Troop 25 — outstanding ieadership Robert A. Kurland, ACSW ment of social Justice and individ^ " will stand for a long time as an that they didn’t have enough that could never be purchased for a Manchester ual rights. inspiration to all who face adver­ The Manchester Herald wel­ 10 Park SI. salary; by the parents of the boys, sity. Truly, her legacy will be one time. comes tetters to the editor. Kingston, N.Y. OPEN MON. THRU SAT. OPEN MON. THRU SAT. OPEN DAILY TIL 5 P.M. OPEN MON. THRU FRI. ’TIL and the alumni of the troop who Choice is ciear We voters will ha ve an opportun-" of abiding faith and tremendous McCavanagh also has a ity to choose between what Is" inner strength in the face of ’TIL 9 P.M. ’TIL 9:30 P.M. THURS. NIGHT ’TIL 8:45 9 P.M.: SAT. ’T IL 6 P.M. Letters should be original, brief continue active relationship in the good answer for critics of his immediately beneficial for our- overwhelming odds,” he said. and to the point. They should be program: and last, but not least, Thompson shows in this eiection •Avon • Vernon • Groton record in not introducing or pocketbooks, versus the long hard Dr. A Purushotham, Zabski’s •Corbins Comer •Meriden Square •New Britain typed or neatly handwritten, and, by the achievements of those who •New London •Manchester • Bristol sponsoring many bills: "A true commitment To the Editor: path toward peace and Justice. It is' New Haven cardiologist, said "I for ease in editing, should be have passed through Scouting tldnk she would have liked it this now time to start the process 6(". junior legislator can sign on double-spaced. under the tutorage of Harry To the Editor: Adam Smith said, "Civil govern­ way. She would have felt terrible if to any bill he wants, but what Maidment. relieving our children of two great... she died before surgery. At least "rhe Herald reserves the right to ment, as far as it is instituted for burdens — nuclear threat anij,„ does it prove? It proves I am now a retired professor of she had a chance.” ALL D&L STORES OPEN SUNDAYS 12 TO 5 ... except New Britain closed Sundays edit letters in the interests of It is a very difficult task to find a the security of property, is in government debt — by voting on " nothing.” public service. During my adult In an interview with U PI a week D&L FOR CHILDREIN at Tri-City Plaza, Vernon and Wethersfield ShoppinR Center open Mon. & Tues. ’til 6 p.m. brevity, clarity and taste. person you believe in — never reality instituted for the defense of Nov. 6 for Mondale and Ferraro..... before her surgery, Zabski said she The Herald’s endorsement career, I spent 17 seasons as a mind someone you would trust the rich against the poor, or of Wed.., Thurs. Fri. ’til 9 p.m.; Sat. ’til 5:30 p.m.; Sun. 12 to 5 Address letters to: Open Forum, knew her condition was deteriorat­ professional camp director, and with a prized possession — your those who have some property of McCavanagh is based not Manchester Herald, P.0, Box 591, Francis W. Heltrick, M.D.' ing, but refused to give up hope. ” I D&L at Crystal Mall. Waterford, open Mon. thru Sat. 10 a.m. - 10 p.m., Sunday noon ’til 6 p.m. have assisted in surveying home town. against those who have none at Just want to be free, that’s all,” she only on the belief he can Manchester, CT 06040. _ summer camps for approval by the 14 Westminster Roail ’ Politicians, or. the average, are a all." Mancbealci'' said. " I want to enjoy my life.” H MANCHKSTKK HKHAl-O, Fridiiy, Oct 26, 1984 MA.NCHESTER HERALD. Friday. Ocl 26, 1984 — 9 Doughnut lovers GOP favor the GOP, smells SPORTS town poll shows •A- big kill Revolving door caught Meyer By Kathy Garmus such as bus drivers and con.struc- Herald Reporter tion workers. By Frederick Waterman he was "never opposed to decisive By Helen Thomas UPI Sports Writer back” — offensive formation and Wednesday night since Berry had "These are the people who action,” was fired from his first he would rely heavily on the suppo.sedly should vote Demo­ United Press International already accepted the job offer, Ki'iniblicans should win by u N F L job after guiding the Patriots present coaching staff. Sullivan said. "1 was not in the wide niiirgin in the Nov. 6 election, cratic," he said. FOXBORO, MASS. - Ron to an 18-16 record over 2'. of the killings with evidence used in had not shown it to her. the day campaigning in front of the down 19 .seconds. ter St., Manchester, or the ran well in dual meets but couldn’t "The ran su|M'r," Blanchette Hartford, died Wednesday. She Hackensack, N .J., City Hall. compete Thursday, among those was the mother of Donald j'. Forte Glastonbury Visiting Nurses Asso­ as NBA taps its season off tonight said. , _■ considered all-league of Manchester. ciation, 647 New London Turnpike, U.S. must pay cost In the junior varsity conipeti- Glastonbury. Runner-up to Ortiz was Man She was born in St. John, New By Mike Barnes go with their younger players — tioii. Bob Dickson won the boys' and the club will be stronger with ’The pain of losing last year is still Chester .senior Vinnie Liscomb Brunswick. Canada, and had lived UPI Sports Writer ' Orlando Woolridge, Quintin Dailey run for Miinchester with a time of Fire Calls No. 1 pick T o ^ Campbell of Ohio with the veterans and will serve as who turned in a 16:22 clocking. in Hartford for most of her life. Inez Buscaglia and Sidney Green. Jordan wants to 18:35. Tom O'Marra and Tom Lyon State coming off the bench. a catalyst for this season.” That was 13 seconds Indter thaii his She also is survived by a Although the Chicago Bulls are were 2-3 with Doug Stoker sixth, Members of the Anderson-Shea Shultz assails terrorism blend with, not overshadow, his — The Nets, with No. 1 seiection performance at the Wickham Park using the title of the old film ’ Here teamates. — The Suns are missing un­ Chuek Rose ninth, Don Wright 12th daughter, Janet Zajack of Newing­ Ladies Auxiliary No. 2046 will meet Manchester Jeff Turner, will attempt to prove Invitational at the tx>ginning of the ton; two other .sons, Arthur W. By Tito Davila with aggression and called for it to Comes Mr. Jordan" to trumpet the signed Maurice Lucas and injured • and Paul Szalaowski 15th. In the at the Holmes Funeral Home, 400 and bis most overt bid for public Thursday, 9:13 a m. — alarm. "It’s not going to be the Michael their stunning triumph over the month. Windham's Aaron Ezis was Forte of St. Davids. Pa., and Peter United Press International be "forcefully resisted.’’ arrival of Michael Jordan, it Jordan show,” said the new owner Walter Davis, but h o ^ top pick girls' JV run. Carolyn Fahey won it Main St. at 7:15 tonight to pay support for possible military reta­ Quality Inn, route 83 (Town). 76ers in last year’s playoffs was no Jay Humphries can pick up some third with Whippet teammate A, Forte Jr. of Woburn. Mass.; a respects to Inez Buscaglia. who “ We will have to find ways to liation or pre-emptive strikes. should be noted the rookie from of a lucrative seven- year contract. fluke. Atlanta has a two new for Manche.ster with a timeof 17,28 NEW YOR K — Secretary of Thursday, 9:59 a m. — medical North Carolina has moves that can of the slack. Steve Burtt, one of five Drew Erickson fourth. sister, Katherine Kovarovics of died Wednesday. fight back without undermining He did not lay out any specific "I just want to fit in and help this forwards (Antoine Carr, Cliff with Brenda Ketlledon 18th and State George Shultz says the call, 37 West St. (Paramedics). never be rerun. rookies on Golden State’s roster, Paul Toland and Mike Barry Li.sa Palicki 2lsl. Ashford; four brothers. Archabold Mrs. Buscaglia was the mother everything we stand for,” he said. examples but said the choice may team. I ’ve seen the success of the Levingston), a new center (Kevin United States should go beyond Thursday, 11:15 a m. — medical has added some offensive punch to were sixth and seventh respec­ Parlee of Brooksville, Fla., Fran­ of Norma Willard of Manchester, a "What will be required is public be as simple as inaction — which Jordan has dazzled witnesses in Cubs, the White Sox. the Bears — I Wills) and at times, a new big Teams entered were Manches­ "passive defense" and use mil­ call, 287 W. Middle Turnpike the pre-season with moves that the Warriors. tively for Manchester with Jim cis Pariee and Donald Parlee. both member of the auxiliary. understanding before the fact of would reward terrorism and, think it’s going to be time for the guard (Dominique Wilkins). ter, East Hartford, Hartford Pub itary force to combat terrorism, (Paramedics). signal the second coming of Julius — The Jazz look to defend their Lemieux 11th, .sophomore .Sr-nan of Hartford, and Harold Parlee of the risks involved in combatting therefore, is unacceptable — or Bulls now.’> — The Cavaliers look to top draft lie, Windham. Enfiidd, h’ermi but warned that Americans must Thursday, 11:22 a m. — medical Erving. Tonight, last season's suprising Midwest Division cham­ Gorman 14th, Chip Blodgett 18th Enfield; and four grandchildren. terrorism with overt power," he "employing military force.” Atlantic Division opponents pick Melvin Turpin to bring the South Windsor and Rockville. In Memoriam consider the inherent risk of said. call, 78 N. Main St. (Eighth College Player of the Year gets to pionship without Adrian Dantley, .sophomore Alan Myers 19th ami The funeral was scheduled this "Clearly, the democracies have District, Paramedics). think the Bullets' time is now. club to respectability. The 76ers. Ed Lynch 23rd. Results: morning at the D'E.sopo Wethers­ In memory of Peter Joseph "active prevention, pre-emption He warned some U.S. military strut his stuff in his first NBA game Washington, often mentioned as the NBA s leading scorer last year, a moral right, indeed a duty, to Thursday, 1:54 p.m. — medical with the addition of rookies Cha­ Manche.ster captured the first siSS''* 'EH) 16:10 for field Chapels, with a ma.ss at St. Reed, who passed away October and retaliation." men or "innocent people" may when the Bulls host the Washing­ the most improved club in the who is looking to have his contract defend themselves,” he said. call, 627 Center St. (Paramedics). rles Barkley and Leon Wood, hope CCC East hoys' title with a 7-0 (Ml, 3. Eil> Lawrence O'Toole Church. Buriai 26th, 1%7. lose their lives in striking ton Bullets (8:35 p.m. E D T ). East, has added forward Cliff renegotiated, Seattle has replaced io,*' f Erickson (W), 5. Jim Klttredoe The secretry of state said the Thursday, 3:17 p.m, — smoke to erase the memory of last season mark. (R), 6. Toland (M), 7. Barry (M), 8 will be in Mount St. Benedict October comes with sad regret. "We must not reward the terror­ terrorists. In other openers, Detroit hosts long-time Sonics David Thompson United States will not be “driven investigation, 19 Villa Louisa Road Robinson (Cleveland) and guard ’’In 1982-83 we tasted the thrill of 'HP). »• Roy Romes Cemetery. The date and month we will ists by changing our policies or Boston, Atlanta visits New Jersey, Gus Williams (Seattle). and Fred Brown and Williams with "1 thought our times were pretty off or stayed” from its policies. (Tow n). victory and last year we tasted the good," said Manchester boys’ J ' " ' 'Wl. " Lemieux never forget. questioning our own principles or In the election campaign. Demo­ Cleveland is at Philadelphia, Pho­ — The Celtics hope to become the new faces Tim McCormick, Ricky (Ml, 12. Steve Guerette (R). 13. Denis "We must reach a consensus in Thursday. 4:24 p.m. — medical agony of defeat," said Philadei- coach George Suitor, "considering Shannon (EH), 14. Gorman (M), 15 For in our hearts he will wallowing in self-flagellation or crat Walter Mondale has chal­ enix travels to Golden State and first team in 16 years to success­ Sobers and Gerald Henderson. Emma House this country that our responses call. Lake Street and East Middle phia coach Billy Cunningham. the work we’ve been doing. We Gordon Lunsford (SW). 16. Steve always stay. self-doubt,” Shultz said Thursday lenged President Reagan’s leader­ Utah is at Seattle. fully defend their title, and they'll IEH), 17, Jim Brand (R), IB evening. should go beyond passive defense Turnpike (Paramedics). went hard until last Friday. Now Emma (Evans) House, 88, of Loved and remembered everyday. ship in cases of terrorist bombings It’s hard to believe two other begin that long road against the Chip Blodgett (M), t» Alan Myers (Ml, to consider means of active prev­ Thursday, 6:14 p.m — motor we re starting to taper off We re 20. Rob Thibert (R). Glastonbury, died Wednesday at Sadly missed by. “ We may never have the kind of against U.S. targets. In their final players were selected ahead of Pistons at the Silverdome. Boston ention, pre-emption and retalia­ vehicle accident, 360 Broad St. . looking to the state meets. ” . '■ Pouncey (HP) 15:06 Hartford Hospital. She was the Mom, Dad, Sister and Brother evidence that can stand up in an debate Sunday, Mondale asked Jordan in the NBA Draft. At least received some good news Thurs­ tor 4,000 meters 2. Amy Oeser (R), 3. tion,” Shultz said. (Tow n). Yogi Berra to return Coach Phil Blanchette h;id only wife of the late Randolph A. House American court of law," he said. what had happened to Reagan’s it’s hard for General Manager Rod day when free-agent forward Ced­ Sherman (W), 4. Allison Cohen and the mother of Randolph D. “ But we cannot allow ourselves to Shultz sai 1 the United States Thursday, 8:46 p.m — brush fire. Thorn to believe. three Silk Towners in the girls’ i H .e °' '''"). 0 -tulle Bister (EH), pledge just days after his inaugu­ needs the capability to act on a ric Maxwell signed a four-year NEW YOR K (UPI) — George Taylor (EH), 8. KarenCulhone House of Manchester. In Nemoriam become the Hamlet of nations, ration of decisive retaliation Center Springs Park, Valley Street "There were only two superstars contract. for the 1985 season. varsity run. "We’re injury riddled, (SW), ». Kim Sherman (W), 10. Laura moment’s notice without time to (Town). Steinbrenner obviously feels he he sighed. "It’s the same old thing! Amelko (R), it. Castagna (M), 12. Sue She was born in Middle Haddam In loving memory of Peter Reed, worrying endlessly over whether against terrorists. in the draft," he said. "One was The Pistons, after acquiring ’The Yankees will not be mak­ on March 1, 1896, the daughter of who passed away October 26,1967. and how to respond.” debate over how to respond to the Thursday. 9:50 p.m. — gasoline Akeem (Olajuwon, picked by can make more news this year by ing any changes for 1985, ” Stein­ The .state meet hex is on us again McCabe (EH), 13, Irish Dubel (R), 14 Shultz has talked before of aggression. power forward Dan Roundfield in keeping his manager than by firing Nicole Ducheneau (W), 15. Betsy the late Henry and Emma (Bailey) We who loved you sadly miss you. In a 40-minute speech to 500 washdown, 12 Knox St. (Town). Houston), the other Jordan. Even brenner said in a statement. this year." Glenn (R), 16. Potty Wong (W), 17 "active measures ” to combat The speech apparently was an an off-season trade with Atlanta, him. Evans. She was a resident of As it dawns another year. people at the Park Avenue Syn­ terrorism, but the speech was his Thursday. 9:54 p.m. — alarm. though our biggest need was at look to be a legitimate contender. "Yogi’s contract will be honored Debbie Dussaiilt (breathing Swiotek (F), is. Mondy Peyton attempt to build up a consensus for Quality Inn, Route 83 (Tow n). With tongue-in-cheek amaze­ problem), Jamie Ross (Achilles (SW), 19. MIcoela Manley (SW), 20 . Glastonbury for 47 years. In our lonely hour of thinking, agogue, Shultz equated terrorism most elaborate justification of it center, there was no way we were "Now we’ve got someone to go to and he will be the Yankee fnanager Carolln Verden (R) She also is survived by two Thougths of you are ever near. action that may be taken later. Thursday, lo p.m. — medical going to pass up a chance at getting ment at "how many teams next year." in the low post for the last shot,” changed managers this year,” the daughters, Margaret E, House of Grandma & Grandpa Strickland call, 40 Pitkin St. (Paramedics). a player of Michael’s potential.” said Detroit coach Chuck Daly. In the past, Steinbrenner has Middle Haddam and Jeannette H. Aunts, Uncles and Clousins Friday, 1:54 a.m. — medical In the off-season, the Bulls added New York Yankees owner an­ been among the quickest to change Daly has moved 6-foot-6 Kelly nounced Thursday that the club Urban of Glastonbury; a sister. Officer contradicts his testimony call, 47 Lydall St. (Paramedics). veteran center Caldwell Jones to Tripucka from forward to guard managers, going for as many as Friday, 6:25 a m — alarm. will keep Yogi Berra as manager Pearl Willhelm of Rocky Hill; and By William Reilly three in one season. Players approve four grandchildren. against the CBS television Meadows Convalescent Center, In Memoriam United Press International land, head of U.S. troops in Vietam The funeral will be Saturday at In sad and loving memory of network. at the height of the war, kept a Bidwell Street (Tow n). 11 a.m. at the Second Congrega­ Margaret Levrio who passed away The 3-week-oId trial in U.S. ceiling of 300,000 on enemy Friday, 6:55 a.m. — medical NEW YOR K — An intelligence tional Church, Middle Haddam, October 27, 1983. District Court is to determine estimates. call, 551 Center St. (Paramedics). Maxwell ends holdout with Celtics firing of Meyer officer who served under Gen. Burial will be in Union Hill "Vou are not forgotten Peggy dear, whether Westmoreland intention­ William Westmoreland in Vietnam Never shall you ever be. ally gave low enemy troop strength By Frederick Waterman Cemetery, Middle Haddam. There has told a jury that Viet Cong George Godding, a retired gen­ contract terms. The pact was Bv Frederick Waterman from the main goal of winning As long as life and memory last, estimates in an effort convince UPI Sports Writer Charlotte. In the 1984 playoffs. are no calling hours. Spencer irregulars were not a military eral and director of Intelligence signed at approximately 4 p.m. UPI Sports Writer football games. Funeral Home, East Hampton, has We shall remember thee. President Johnson the war could Maxwell successfully continued threat — contradicting what he Production under intelligence Maxwell said, "It’s good to have "To win, you have to develop charge of arrangements. be quickly won if the United States BOSTON — Boston Celtic Cedric his role as defender against the Sadly missed b y - had sworn earlier in a deposition. chief Gen. Phillip Davidson, testi­ The child shown painting a this all done and over with.” The FOXBORO, Mass, — Player .something special, and Don Memorial donations may be committed 200,000 additional Maxwell ended his holdout Thurs­ opposition’s top-scoring forward Paul Vesco and The Viet Cong's Self Defense and fied Thursday he had Westmore­ Halloween picture on a storefront forward who has never been fond reaction to Thursday's firing of Shula instills that .something in made to the Manchester Associa­ soldiers. day, signing a four-year contract of training camp, joked, Tm containing Bernard King of the New England Patriots head Catherine Peretto Secret Self Defense forces have land’s "blessing” to present the window in Wednesday’s Manches­ one day before the team opens its New York Knicks and James his players. So did Bud Grant The CBS documentary, "The CIA with documents estimating really sorry to have missed all the coach Ron Meyer was one of become a key issue in Westmore­ Uncounted Enemy: A Vietnam ter Herald is Shannon Kaulback- regular season in Detroit. Worthy of the Los Angeles Lakers. But I don’t think we had it the number of enemy troops at pre-season.” almost unanimous approval around here. ” land’s $120 million libel suit Deception,” charges Westmore- Lucas, a fifth grader at Bowers Maxwell, the senior Celtic with Maxwell and Henderson were 297,000. School. The girl in the photo was He said he was 9 to 10 pounds Linebacker l,arry McGrew Free safety Hiik Sanford, It’S Barney, not Fred seven years experience playing for overweight "bftt I ’ll play 30 min­ the two holdouts from the Celtics’ .said that when the team was incorrectly identified. the Green, had been seeking a 1984 World Championship team. who hud lost his starting jobdue BRIDGEPORT (UPI) — Some rock, where residents kept pet utes m Detroit if K.C. (Jones, the told Meyer had been replaced, to a Meyer decision, said, "It contract in the $800,000-a-year Celtics coach) wants me to.” Henderson signed on Oct. 12 with "The first reaction of a lot of readers are plenty serious about dinosaurs. Rybas sue asbestos companies range. The 6-foot-8 forward was isn't a big surpri.se, but it is still To make room for Maxwell the Celtics, but was traded Oct. 16 guys was, Yahoo' ” He said he their favorite cartoon characters, The photograph showed a man believed to have agreed with the to the Seattle SuperSonics for a shocking. It is a move that was Continued from page I asbestos products manufactured VOTE first-round pick Michael Young wasn't "jumping for joy, but 1 chagrined newspaper editors dwarfed by the clearly defined It charges that the companies team several weeks ago on salary, draft choice. probably necessary. learned after a barrage of com­ drawing painted on the pavement by the companies listed in the from the University of Houston wasn’t sad either." “ Ray, who I knew when he '.the claims against it. But Con- failed adequately to test the but the amounts of money to be By trading Henderson, the Cel­ plaints in defense of a stone age. as he walked near Bridgeport’s lawsuit^ "contributed in part or MERCIER was. waived. Second-round pick Meyer was replaced by Ray­ was an assistant here, is an baughton called the plan offered so asbestos products they made or deferred and guaranteed were still tics made his salary of approxi­ sidekick named "Barney Rubble." Beardsley Park. Even the of­ totally” to his asbestosis. Asbesto- S T A T E R E P Ronnie Williams of Florida left mond Berry, a former Patriots outstanding |>ersun and we need far "completely ridiculous.” distributed, to warn those who disputed. Terms of the contract camp voluntarily on Thursday and mately $375,000 a year available The Bridgeport Post said Thurs­ fended artist insisted the charac­ sis is caused by inhaling asbestos ridkitlittoiii'HllM Ll*t».li— i» were nbt released. receivers coach and member of someone who will pull us closer Early said that he represents worked with the products of their was believed to be pursuing for use in negotiations with the Hall of Fame after a 13-year day that it had a "yaba-dabba-doo- ter was Fred, but rc,.ders would fibers. Dr. Klipstein said at the Maxwell’s agent, Ron Grinker, Maxwell. together. I ’m just ecstatic about many present and former AC and S hazards and to remove the pro­ playing opportunities in Europe career with the Baltimore Colts. time" with angry callers after it not accept the claim. The news­ time of Ryba’s death. met with team president Red It." employees, some of whom are ducts from the market when they WESTERLY YACHT CLUB Third-round pick Rick Carlisle of During his holdout. Maxwell had The change was made one day ran a photograph the day before paper Thursday admitted no error The suit charges that the com­ were found hazardous. Auerbach in Washington D.C. on Sanford said, "Now you’ll see suing AC and S as well as an WESTERLY, R.I. Virginia, a guard, made the final stayed at his home in North after Meyer fired defensive and identified a giant drawing as but, tongue-in-cheek, offered a panies have had experimental Wednesday then flew to Boston wbat a (Kisitive person and a average of 22 asbestos The records show that three Hie oSicen and membera of 12-man squad, taking the spot left Cedric Maxwell Carolina, missing training camp depicting "Fred Flintstone” of the possible explanation. information since 1929 that that night and met with general coordinator Rod Rust, who was motivator can do," adding. manufacturers. other companies — Armstrong IhU organiaation announce with open by the trade of Gerald and the nine-game exhibition immediately hired back by cartoon show "The Flintstones." "clearly indicated that asbestos World Indusries, Nicolet Inc. and manager Jan Volk and the team’s schedule. When you command respect Early said Ryba did not want to and asbestos-containing products •OTOW the loM of Robert P. Kina Henderson. Berry. The switchboard lit up with "Since the cartoon show was National Gypsum Co. — have coaching staff. injury during the pre-season, is Maxwell has a career 14-point you will get re.spect” sue AC and S "because he worked were hazardous.” It also charges of Mancbealer, CT, a member Kevin McHale has been starting expected to start Friday against Linebacker Steve Nelson readers claiming the character based in prehistoric times, we’ve denied responsibility for Ryba’s 23 year*. May be real in peace. Maxwell flew into Boston Thurs­ game average with the Celtics, on Quarterback Tony Eason, for them for so many years and felt that additional scientific confirma­ in place of Maxwell, opposite the Detroit Pistons. said. "There had to be some was in fact Barney Rubble, Fred’s walked a hard road contacting asbestos-related illnesses, claim­ day morning and he and Grinker career ,561 field goal shooting. His asked if he was glad Meyer had very loyal to them.” tion of those hazards was provided Paul Cryan forward Larry Bird, but is ex­ Maxwell, MVP in the 1981 changes in the basic attitude sidekick and neighbor in the Barney for verification, ” the Post ing his ailments were caus^ by his Keeper of the Binnacle met with Volk for three hours NBA record is 14.4 points per been replaced, said, “I don’t animated television town of Bed- Ryba’s lawsuit charges that to the companies over the next 40 pected to return to his sixth-man championship series, attended the around here. There were too said. Ryba’s 34 years of working around own carelessness and misuse of Pel. 26, 1984 Thursday afternoon to iron out spot. Bird, who suffered a neck game. He led the NBA in field-goal want to step on any toes I had no years. their products. University of North Carolina at percentage in 1979 and 1980. many things to push us away problems with Ron 10 - MANCHESTKR HKRALD. F riduv. Oct 26. 1984 .MANCHESTER HERALD. Friday. Oc( 26. 1984 - 11 Scoreboard Anderson, Frey named NHL roundup

Canadians 3. Sabres2 Habs pay back Sabres Hockey BuMlo 2 0 0—2 Managers of the Year By Dave Raffo Montreal g g i—g Calendar made it 2-1 and Guy Lafleur beat Rangers 11, Devils 2 \ • First period— I, Buttolo. Dovls 5 UPI Sports Writer Buffalo goalie Bob Sauve at 18:26 y West champion Royals in three (Creighton, Perreault) 1:51. 2, Buttolo. B Fred McMone of the second period to tie the score At East Rutherford, N.J., And­ NHL standings M v is 6 (Andreychuk, Vlrto). 16:16. UP! Sports Writer games for the pennant before TODAY The Montreal Canadians might 2- 2. ers Hedberg .scored a hat trick and Penoltles— ShutI, Mon, 1:15; Selling, But Soccer (m olor) 4:52; Shutt, Mon (m olor) 4:52; toppling the Padres for it first be able to make up for five years of Tomas Sandstrom added two goals W o ln C onitrtnc* Vlrto, But, 5:52. Manchester at Windham, 3:M ,NKW YORK — Sparky Anderson world championship in 16 years. to power the Rangers to their third Patrick Dlviilon Cheney Tech at Prince Tech, 3:15 frustration this season. Robinson’s shot to win the game period—3, Montreol, Walter of the Detroit Tigers and Jim Frey Anderson was previously named straight win. They have scored 23 W L T M l. GF GA .rIChellos, Noslund), 6:03. 4, Montreal, Manchester at South Catholic The Canadiens eased part of hit Buffalo defenseman Mike Ram­ PhlloaelDhla 5 2 1 11 40 20 (girls), 3:15 of the Chicago Cubs have been UPI Manager of the Year with the goals in that span. New York Lotleur 2 (McPhee, Corbonneou), 18:26. Eost Catholic at Entleld (girls), 3:15 their disappointing recent past sey from 50 feet out before it NY Islanders 5 2 0 10 40 35 Penalties— Buffalo bench (served named Managers of the Year in the Cincinnati Reds in 1972 and 1976. rookie goalie John Vanbiesbrouck NY Rangers 3 2 I 7 Rocky H ill ot Coventry, 3:15 Thursday night with a 3-2 win over deflected past Sauve. 29 22 by Potrick) 4:34; Dovls, But, 8:20; American and National Leagues "N o manager wins awards — made 34 saves while Devils rookie Woshlnglan 2 3 2 6 25 26 Svobodo, Moil, 8:51; Svobodo, Mon, Girls Swimming the Buffalo Sabres. Montreal had New Jersey 3 4 0 6 26 34 Windham ot Manchester, 3:M by the United Press International. only players win the awards for Hannu Kamppuri was forced from 13:15; Souve(servedbyDovls) But, 14:53; East Catholic at WIlby, 7 p.m. lost its last 12 games against the "In a situation like that, I just Pittsburgh 2 4 0 4 17 21 Rutt, But (molor) )7:21; Nllon, Mon, Anderson won the AL's top them,” said Anderson, 'T v e never the game after surrendering seven Adorns Division (molor) 17:2). Field Hockey Sabres, going back to the 1982-83 wanted to fire the puck at the net." Montreal 5 1 I Southington ot Manchester, 3:M manager honors by a 3-1 margin seen a last place manager win playoffs. goals in two periods. 11 25 17 Robinson said. “ I don’t know wbo it Hartford 4 3 1 9 32 35 Girls Volleyball over Billy Gardner of the Minne­ Manager of the Year. The players Thirdoerlod— 5, Montreol, RoWnson 3 Eost Cothollc at Manchester, 3:M The long-awaited win came on a hit, but I know it touched one of Buffalo 4 3 0 8 29 28 (Lotleur, Corbonneou), 1 4 :3 4 sota Twins while Frey was an easy win that award for the manager. Quebec 3 4 0 6 30 30 Penalties— 50-f(>ot shot by defenseman Larry their players before it went in.” Boston 3 4 0 6 20 27 Carlson. Mon, 4:08; Greene, Mon, 5:43; SATURDAY winner over Davey Johnson of the It’s a special award and I am Robinson with 5:26 remaining. Flames 5, Capitals 3 Compbcll Contirenoe Follgno, But, 15:48; Wolter, Mon, 15:48 Football New York Mets in the N L voting. grateful for it because my players East Cothollc at Northwest Catholic, Montreal is off to a 5-1-1 start anel At Calgary. Carey Wilson took Norris Division Shots on goal— Buffalo 7 -4 ^ 1 7 . Mont­ Voting was conducted of 26 UPI won it for m e." W L T Pfs. GF GA real 8-12-8—28, 10:M a.m , hasn’t lost since its opener. advantage of a rare blunder by Cnlcogo 4 3 0 8 38 30 (Joolles — Buffalo, Souve. Montreal, Manchester at Enfield, 1:M baseball correspondents from " I guess 13 was a lucky number Flyers 7, Blues 2 St. Louis 3 4 0 Soccer Frey, appointed last October as Washington defenseman Rod 6 24 27 Penney. A— 15,569. across the country. for us,” said Ryan Walter, who Toronto 3 4 0 6 20 Aquinas at East Catholic (at MCC), the 41st manager in Cubs’ history, At Philadelphia, Tim Kerr Langway to score the winning goal 30 10:M a.m . In the AL balloting, Anderson Minnesota 2 5 0 4 21 29 directed the club to the N L East scored Montreal’s first goal on a scored three of his four goals for the Flames. Wilson shoveled a Detroit 2 5 0 4 Post ot MCC, 2 p.m. received 18 votes while Gardner 26 37 title with a 96-65 record, an power play deflection at 6:03 of the within the space of three minutes one-handed shot under goalie Pat Smytho Division received six, Dick Howser of the Edmonton 6 0 2 14 improvement of 25'/2 games over second period. "They said we had a in the final period to power the Riggin from in close. He was being UPI photo 46 23 Basketball Kansas City Royals received the Colgorv 6 2 0 12 49 30 1983. The Cubs won the N L East by monkey on our back. Well I guess Flyers. After Brian Propp scored a harassed from behind by Lang­ Wlnnloeg 3 2 0 6 24 other two votes. Canadien defenseman Kent Carlson (17) along the boards Canadiens ended 22 6'/i! games over the Mets but lost we got rid of that” short-handed goal for Philadelphia way, who had been caught up-ice Vancouver 1 7 0 2 28 52 Football In the N L voting, Frey was Los Angeles 0 5 2 2 Buffalo took a 2-0 lead on two 5:55 into the third period, Kerr on the play, allowing the Calgary grimaces as he falls to the ice after drought Thursday night by beating the 20 34 NBA standings named on 15 ballots while Johnson Sparky Anderson the playoffs in five games to the Thursdov’s Results Padres. goals by Mai Davis, but Walter scored three straight for a 7-1 lead. rookie to get behind him. colliding with Buffalo’s Mike Foligno Montreal 3, Buffalo 2 received seven votes. Dick Willi­ Sabres. • . . top AL manager "A lot of people had a lot to do N.Y. Rangers 11, New Jersey 2 Eastern Conterenc* NFL standings ams of the San Diego Padres Phllodelohlo 7, St. Louis 2 Atlantic Division with our success," said Frey. " I Colgorv S, Washington 3 received the other four votes. o . Fct. GB never trailed from opening day just happen to be the guy getting Scholastic roundup Friday's Gamn Boston 00 00 (kX __ American Conference Anderson and Frey were sim­ until they wrapped up the world (All TImn EOT) Philodelphlo oo oo 000 — East ilarly honored as Managers of the the award. I think I was able to Sports In Brief Bunalo at Detroit, 7:as a m. New York 00 00 .000 — W L T Pet. championship by defeating the have the players play hard every Toronto at Quebec, 7:J5p.m. PF Year by the Baseball Writers S'** 00 00 .000 - Miami 8 0 0 1.000 267 Padres in five games. The Tigers single game. If the players don’t do Los Angeles ot Edmonton, 9:35o.m Washington 00 00 000 — NY Jets 6 2 0 .750 201 157 A.ssociation of America last week. won 35 of their first 40 games and Pumpkin Run on Sunday Saturday's (Mmws Central Division New England 5 3 0 .625 165 Led by Anderson’s strong but that, then the manager is at fault.” East girls streak broken by Avon Boston at N.Y. Islanders, night Milwaukee 00 00 000 — Indianapolis 3 5 0 ended up winning the AL East title Frey previously was named UPI N. V, Rangers at Quebec, night .375 150 firm hand and his ability to use bis The Pumpkin Run for Hope, co-sponsored by the American Detroit M So .000 - Buffolo 0 8 0 .000 136 by 15 games with a 104-58 record. Manager of the Year with Kansas Philodeiphia at New Jersey, night Atlanta 00 00 .000 - bench to perfection, the Tigers AVON — Two titans of the girls’ Calgary at Toronto, night Central Detroit went on to sweep the AL City in 1980. Cancer Society and the Manchester Rec Department, will be held champ, moves down and will minutes into the second half to knot Thursd;iy. downing visiting Bolton Cleveland 00 00 .000 — Pittsburgh 4 4 0 .500 155 Sunday morning at Bennet Junior High. cross country world in Connecticut compete in the slate Class L Los Angeles at Winnipeg, night Chicago 00 00 .000 — Cincinnati 2 6 0 the affair. Stacey Robertson, from High, 7 t Montreal at Pittsburgh, night .250 132 Indlono 00 00 .000 — Cleveland 1 7 0 .125 102 The event includes a costume constest at 10 o’clock, a costume collided here Thur.sday afternoon championship meet Wednesday a cross by Monica Ilodina. added RHAM is now 7-5-2, while Bolton Chicago at St. Louis, night Western Conference Houston 0 8 0 and when the dust settled, homes- Hartford at Minnesota, night .000 103 NFL roundup and one-mile fun run at 11 o’clock and a five-mile race starting at afternoon at Wickham Park at an insurance score for Coventry slips to 3-8-2. The Bulldogs play Midwest DIvtolon West tanding Avon High downed East 2:15, The Eagles won three consec­ W L Pet. GB LA Raiders 7 1 0 .875 215 11:30. Registration is $5. with two minutes left. Cromweil their last home game of the .sea.son Utah Catholic. 23-34, in a buttle of 00 00 .000 — Denver 7 1 0 .875 163 utive L titles before moving up, due had scored the lone goal of the first Monday when they host Cromwell AHL standings Dollos Free T-Shirts will be issued the first 100 registrants and all 00 00 .000 — Seattle 6 2 0 .750 222 unbeatens. to enrollment, a year ago. They’re half to take a 1-0 lead. High ;it 3: 15 Denver oox.ooo — San Diego 4 4 0 .500 231 runners collecting more than $25 in pledges. A $100 gift Kansas City The victory was the 63rd in a row back down to Class L this year due Midfielder Lisa Talaga was a Nortbem Division 00 00 .000 — Kansas City 4 4 0 .500 148 Jets meet distracted Pats certificate from Wishes Pizza in East Ha rtford will go to the team Michelle DeGiiiy, with two goals Son Antonio 00 00 .000 — for Avon while the loss snaps to decreased enrollment. key player for the Patriots, con­ ^ W L T Pts. OF GA Houston ^ ^ (any size) with the largest amount of pledges. and an a.ssisl, and Robin Gaby, Fredericton 4 2 0 8 28 23 00 00 .000 — East By United Press International mauled 44-24 by the Dolphins last East’s 58-dual meet winning skein Results: 1. Kirwan (A) 14:17 for trolling the whole midfield and Molne 3 1 2 8 24 15 , ^ Pacific Division W L T Pet. PF Washington at the New York A raffle will be held after the race and all registered runners with a goal and three ;issists, paced Woshlngton week can tie the Jets for second dating back to 1979. East is now 9-1 2.4 miles, 2. Buckanavage (A), 3. keeping the ball in the offensive Novo Scotia 3 3 2 8 29 36 t-otrers 00 00 .000 - 5 3 0 .625 217 Giants. On Monday night, Seattle are eligible to win. the scoring outburst for the Sherbrooke 3 3 1 7 28 22 Porllond 00 00 .000 — St. Louis 5 3 0 .625 241 After being rocked this week by place with a victory. for the season. Colliton (EC), 4. Little (EC), 5. end. l i t t l e 00 00 .000 — Dallas 5 3 is at San Diego. Proceeds go to benefit the American Cancer Society. Sachems. Adirondack 2 2 3 7 » 33 0 .625 157 coaching changes, it remains to be New England handed the Jets Avon was runner-up in Class M Gately (A), 6. Doyle (A). 7. Kuhl Moncton 3 3 0 6 25 24 Phoenix 00 M .000 — PhiladeiDhIa 4 4 0 .500 139 With quarterback John Elway Denise Welch tallied her ninth NY Gionts seen how the New England Patri­ and the State Open a year ago and (A ), 8. Daes (A ). 9. Cross (E C ), 10. Bolton bows Souttiem Division Goldm State 00 00 .000 — 4 4 0 .500 138 one of their two defeats, winning apparently sidelined with a goal of the year with a ininute-and- Rochester 7 0 0 14 31 12 L.A Clippers 00 00 .000 — Control ots will react to Sunday’s key AFC 28-21 at Giants Stadium five weeks is the Open favorite for 1984. "Avon Desmond (A). Binghamton 4 2 1 9 32 28 Friday's Gomes Chicago 5 3 0 .625 178 East matchup against the New bruised right shoulder, the Bron­ Road Race deadline Is Nov. 9 is a very strong team,” said East HEBRON - RHAM High quali­ a-half left to avert the shutout for . (All Time EDT) Detroit 3 ago. In that game, second-year Hershev 2 5 1 5 24 37 S 0 .375 159 York Jets, cos face an uphill task in their coach Mark Skehan. "Avon is the fied for the state tournament Bolton. New Haven 2 3 0 4 24 20 Atlanta at New Jersey, 7 :X p.m Tampo Bay 3 5 0 .375 143 quarterback Tony Eason set a club showdown for first place in the Deadline to enter the 48th edition of the Manchester Five-Mile Soccer St. Catharines 2 4 0 4 20 29 Clevelondat Phllodelphlo, 7 :X p m Minnesota 2 6 0 .250 163 Things have not been dull in the record by hitting 28-of-42 passes for Road Race on Thanksgiving Day morning Is Friday, Nov. 9. favorite to win the open and they Baltimore 14 1 3 21 26 Boston at Detroit, 8 p.m. Green Bov 1 7 0 .125 137 front office of the Patriots this AFC West with the Raiders. Gary looked like a championship team Washington at Chlcogo,8:X p m West 354 yards and three touchdowns. Applications are available at the Herald office at the Springfield 1 5 1 3 19 X week. First, Ron Meyer fired Kubiak will start if Elway, who is today. Coventry wins Thursday's Result Utah at Seattle, I0 :X p m San Francisco 7 1 0 .875 214 For the first time this season, the switchboard and also at Manchester State Bank, Savings Bank of PhoenIX at Golden State, 11 p.m. LA Roms 5 3 0 .625 184 defensive coordiantor Rod Rust. listed as doubtful, can’t play. “ However, we were right in the NCAA hit by tax claim St. Cothor Ines 5, Hershev 4 ( OT) Jets will have the services of wide Manchester, Heritage Savings, Nassiff Arms, Farr’s and COVENTRY — Freshman star Friday's (Somes Saturday's Gomes Atlanta 3 5 0 .375 174 Next. Meyer was the.one canned race with them and with just a few St. Catharines ot Baltimore Houston at Dallas, 3 ;X p m New Orleans 3 5 0 .375 170 receiver Lam Jones, who suffered Tenderfoot in the K-Mart Plaza on Spencer Street. Leslie Danehy has scored some big Detroit at New York, 7.X p.m. and Rust was re-hired. The Dolphins’ 8-0 start is the best changes in the order I think we can goals for the Coventry High girls’ Moncton at Binghamton Sunday's Gomes a broken' collarbone early in the in the N F L since the Cowboys won Applications are also available by calling the Road Race Hot TOPEKA, Kan (UPI) - The appealed to Shawnee County Di.s- Maine at New Haven Phllodelphlo at Atlanta, 7:Xp m (All Times EST) All this ruckus can either rile or exhibition season. beat them,” he quickly added. soccer team this year. With 17 Kansas Supreme Court has Iwen Hershev at Rochester N e* Jersey ot Cleveland, 8 p.m. Cincinnati at Houston, 1 p.m. their first eight games in 1977. Led Line, 643-1096, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. trict Court, which grunted the Washington at lndlano,8 o m distract the Patriots. New coach There was a 23-second gap goals in 14 games, Danehy has asked to decide if tlu; nation’s Fredericton ot Sherbrooke Indlonoisotls at CTollos, 1 p.m. ■’It’s going to be a lot better than by record-setting performances by Registration fee is $5. exemption. L.A Lakers at Son Antonio, 8:30 p m Detroit ot Green Boy, 1 p.m. Raymond Berry thinks things will between the first six runners and a been a major factor in the Patriots’ Saturday's Gomes sitting in the stands or watching Dan Marino. Miami is an 18-point major regulator of collegi' s|)orts is New Hoven at Adirondack Portland at Kansas City, 8:X p .m . ' Minnesota at Chicago, 1 p.m. proceed as they have been. 50-second gap between the first COC campaign, but her game­ involved in education or merely Assistant Johnson County Coun­ St. Catharines at Binghamton Chicago at Milwaukee, 9 p.m. New Orleans ot Cleveland, 1 p.m. from the press box," said Jones. favorite over the winless Bills. Golden St. at Denver, 9 :X p m "W e plan on trying to move on nine in the highly competitive winning marker in Thursday’s 3-1 entertainment. selor Bruce Landeck Thursday Moncton at Hershev New York Jetsot New Englond 1 p.m. " I ’ve been working out for four The Cardinals and Eagles put Youth hoop registration continues Fredericton ot Maine L.A Clippers at Utah, 9 :X p.m ' St. Louis at Philadelphia, 1 p.m. ahead, starting with today’s prac­ race. victory over visiting Cromwell The National Collegiate Athletic asked the Supreme Court to weeks and it’ll be five full weeks by their three-game winning streaks Sunday's Gomes Tampa Bov at Kansas CItv, Ib .m . tices, ” Berry said. " I believe the Avon's Lisa Kirwan was the High was of the fluke variety. overturn that ruling, saying real L.A. Lakers at Dallas, night Denver ot Los Angeles Raiders, 4 p.m. time we take the field against the on the line in their NFC East Youth basketball registration will continue through Friday, Association says education is its Phoenix ot Seattle, night Son Francisco at L.A. Roms, 4 p.m. coaches will rise to the situation to individual winner with a time of A Cromwell defender deflected game and is asking for a property educators are concerned with the Patriots. I just plan on giving 100 matchup at Veterans Stadium. St. Nov. 2, the Manchester Rec Department announced. Sign-ups Rangers 11. Devils 2 Washington of New York Giants, 4 make something good come out of 14:17 over a 2.4 mile layout with the ball into her own net, and tax exemption for its $446,300 3-Rs of "reading, riting and •••••••••••ddddddddooo p.m. percent. These guys have been Louis, co-leaders of the division are at the East Side Rec, Community Y and Mahoney Rec something bad. I think they have teammate Rose Ann Buckanayage Danehy was credited with the national office facility in Mission. 'rithmetic" Atlanta at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. doing great without me and I just with Dallas and Washington, has Center. N Y Rangers 2 5 4—i i Buffalo at M iam i, 4 p.m. real competent football minds on second, Carole Colliton and Tina tie-breaking goal 30 minutes into Kan. Johnson County lax officials want to get my two cents in. I ’m beaten Philadelphia in the last There are three divisions: Pee Wee. (ages 8-9), midgets ( 10-12) New Jersey 1 1 0 — 2 Bowling Monday, Oct. 29 this staff and good talent on the Little were third and fourth the second-half. point to big-money TV sports First period— 1, NY Rangers, Sond- Seottle ot Son Diego, 9 p.m. tired of just being a cheerleader." three meetings. and juniors (13-15). Age is determined as of Dec. 1, 1984. "Rules, regulations and field." respectively for the Eagles. The win, which gave the Patriots contracts and say the NCAA is strom 4 (Don Moloney, Loldlow), 4 X 2, Elsewhere Sunday, it’s Denver The Packers will attempt to, end A $5 registration fee and $3 Rec membership card a re required revenue-raising. That's what their New Jersey, Sulllmon 3 (Preston, Meyer, who fired the popular East, defending state Class LL an 11-2-1 overall mark and 9-2-1 in mainly involved in show business. College football schedule at the Los Angeles Raiders, their seven-game losing streak at time of registration. concern is." Landeck .said. PIchette), 8:M. 3, NY Rangers, Hedberg 3 Nile Owls Rust Wednesday without consult­ the COC. kept their conference The NCAA initially asked the (Ruotsololnen, Greschner), 12:00. Buffalo at Miami. Tampa- Bay at against a club they have had little Landeck said the NCAA could Saturday, Oct. 27 ing management or the Sullivan hopes alive. (Coventry hosts Por­ Kansas Board of Tax Appeals for a Penalties— Mac Leon, NJ, 1:31; Laid- Linda Luce 173-173-502, Annie Gag­ Kansas City, San Francisco at the success against lately. The Lions not show that its property is used low, NYR, 5:09; Driver, NJ, 14:03; non 191-500, Laurie Gagnon 458, Beth Akron-Tennesse Tech (n) family which owns the club, was tland Monday at 3:15. Winless property tax exemption on the Alobomo St.-Alobomo A iM (1) Los Angeles Rams, Atlanta at have won the last five games Volleyball league begins play UConn 11 exclusively for educational pur­ Greschner, NYR, molor, 14:56; CIrello, Hoock 454, Maureen Wood 468, Morion fired from his first NFL job after Cromwell falls to 0-14. basis it is a non-profit educational NJ,molor, 14:56. Gordon 459, Priscilla Cushman 450. Appalachian St.-CItodel Pittsburgh. New Orleans at Cleve­ between the two, but will be poses that are of benefit to the Arizona St.-UCLA (n) guiding the Patriots to an 18-16 land. Cincinnati at Houston, India­ Adult volleyball league play begins Tuesday night at Illing Andrea Rhoades tallied her third organization. When the tax board people of Kansas, as required by Second period—4, New Jersey, Higgins Boston Coll.-Rutgers record over 2‘/i seasons. without running back Billy Sims, goal of the year, unassisted, 12 Tri-Town Boston U.-Massachusetts napolis at Dallas, St. Louis at Junior High, the Rec Department has announced. at home denied the request, the NCAA law for an exemption. 4 (M uller, PIchette), 5:35. 5, NY This week’s game is vital for the who suffered a season-ending knee Rangers, Sundstrom 1 (Greschner, Brown-Holy Cross Philadelphia, Minnesota at Chi­ Men’s league will play Tuesday nights at 6:30, 7:30 and 8:30 and 212-571, Sherwood Central Florldo-Austln Peay (n) 5-3 Patriots, who after being injury in last week’s 16-14 triumph Lorouche), 9:42.6, NY Rangers, McPhee cago, Detroit at Green Bay and Wednesdays at 8:30. Women’s league will play Wednesday nights I (D. Gagne), 12:45. 7, NY Rangers, S " , * 2 ' - ^ , Pete Fortin X1-S5S, Stu Central Michigan-BowlIngGreen over Minnesota. finally Porker 217-537, Bob Torrev 201, Don Clnclnnotl-Loulsvllle at 6:30, 7:30 and 8:30. Rogers 3 (Hedberg, Dove Moloney), Jjprrls 203, John McLaughlin 550, Dove 13:X. 8, NY Rangers, H ^ b e rg 4 Colorado St.-Wyoming There are 14 teams in the men’s league and 10 teams in the (Rogers, Greschner), 15:50. 9, NY Gibbs 513, Andy Michaud 501, Bill Columblo-Colgote College football roundup STORRS — For the first time in a Calhoun 500, Roy Bessette 512, BUI Connectlcut-Molne women’s league. Rangers, Sondstrom 5 (Allison), 17:23. Jorrey 547, Dove Edwards 500, Mac month, the University of Connecti­ Penalties—Soorlnen, NYR,0:48; Allison, Cornell-Dortmouth League plays runs through Feb. 27. 1985. NYR, molor, 10:03; Verbeek, NJ, molor- McDonald 521, Carl Pottovlna 513, Bob Davidson-Woftord cut football team will be home. Arendl 510, George Moyer 5X, Emil Delowore-Towson St. SEE THE LIGHT! mlnor, 10:03; McPhee, NYR, molor, Slovens 508. The Huskies, after four consecu­ 17:47; Bridgman, NJ,molor, 17:47. Delaware St.-Central St. (Oh) Third period-10, NY Rangers, Hed­ Droke-WIchlta St. tive road games, return to Memor­ Duke-Morylond BYU bombs New Mexico Connors-Eveii Lloyd advance ial Stadium Saturday to host Maine berg 5 (Patrick, Dore), 0:21. 11, NY Eastern Businessmen Rangers, E. Kentucky-Murroy St. in a Yankee Conference clash at gYLt/An/tA BUYONE E. Mlchlgan-Boll St. (n) HOUSTON — Top-seeded Jimmy Connors and Chris Evert Greschner 4 (Hedberg, Dore), 3:26.12, NY By.United Press International BYU coach La Veil Edwards said 1:30. Rangers, Dove Maloney 1 (Ruotso- 400, L.Seretto 150, B.Munroe 152-391, Florida A&M-Alcorn St. (2) (n) meets East Carolina and No. 10 Lloyd may have th()ught they were taking a break from lolnen, Lorouche), 8:37. 13, NY P Glllberto 146, H.Peters Furmon-W. Carolina the win was made easier, perhaps, Boston College faces Rutgers. No The day has been designated HALOGEN Rangers, Fotlu 1 (Hedberg, Dore), 12:35 401, R.Joiner 391. Go. SoutKern-Voldosto St. Unbeaten Brigham Young and because his team was used to competitive singles with a mixed doubles match against Pablo Homecoming Day. Georgia Tech-Tennessee 9 Miami (Fla.) is idle. and Laura Arraya. Penalties—Loldlow, NYR, 0:07; New Mexico may be in the same seeing the Lobos’ type of offense. GET ONE Hawoll-San Diego St. (n) UConn sports a 2-5 overall mark Don Moloney, NYR, 0:07; MocLeon, LaVae Industrial conference, but New Mexico’s Washington has been relying on But Thursday’s win, 7-5, 6-4, in the first round of the $400 000 NJ, 0:07; Verbeek, NJ, 0:07; Hlemer, Houston-Arkonsos ’’The thing that helped us its defense to carry it to the No. 1 after its embarrassing 41-0 setback SEALED NJ, 2:10; Ruotsololnen, NY, 5:04; Idaho St.-E. Washington (n) coach knows his Lobos are “ not in world mixed doubles championship left Connors impressed with 223^4-597, Nick Morrotl Indlono-lowa prepare so well was that New ranking but Coach Don James to nationally ranked Holy Cross. Sund from, NYR, 5:22; Fotlu, NYR, 224203-617, Don Humiston 227-205-245- the same league" with the fourth- the Argentine brother-sister team. 17:06. James Modlson-E. Tennessee St. Mexico was the third option-type thinks he may have to open things The Huskies, however, are only 0-1 BEAM 527, John K ozIckI 235-595, John Kansos-Oklohomo ranked Cougars. In other opening action, Carling Bassett and Eric Korita, a late Shots on goal— NY Rangers 7-13-8—28. McCarthy 26^246-257-768, Rich Funke team we have played in a row,” up offensively this week against in conference play and with a New Jersey 10-14-12—36. Kent St.-Toledo Robbie Bosco, the nation’s roplacement for Jimmy Arias who dropped out because of a strep 220-579, Joe Parker 222-587, Pot Cos- Kentucky-(3eorala (n) said Edwards, who was particu­ Arizona. Arizona is 4-3 but ranks four-game winning streak could Goalies—NY Rangers, Vonbrles- togno MO, Floyd Totten M4-583, Don leader for total offense, threw throat, defeated the team of Raffaella Reggi and Tim Mayotte HEADLIGHTS brouck. New Jersey, Komppurl, Low. Lomor-Loulslona Tech larly pleased with Sikahema for second in the nation in rushing still win a Division I-AA post­ A— 18,882. 2'1‘523- Dole Mothloson M9- Lehlgh-Rhode Island three touchdown passes to Glen his scoring punt return in the 6-4, 6-1. Hie Nastase and Lisa Bonder defeated Melissa Brown season playoff berth. ^*!^ B*°ul>S ’’The difference was that today I birdies on 11, 13, 15 and 17. of the season. IZ MANCHKSTKH HKRAI.l), Kridi.v. Oct 26. 1984 MANCliKSTKH HKH.XLl), Knd;iy. (M 26, 1984 - 13 BUSINESS FOCUS/ Weekend '-'j^umoers Cabbage Patch kids Weekenders I n Brief boost Coleco sales Oi Stage Co.’s ‘Anatol’ is a good bet Salon joins chamber The Hartford Stage Company has During a scene where he shows Max WEST HARTFORD (UPI) - Coleco year ago. opened its 22nd season with ’’Anatol " a box of mementos of his past loves, he Third Dimension H;iir Design ;it 275 W Middle Industries has reported significant Greenberg also said the company by Arthur Schnitzler. It’s a wonderful meets Bianca, a circus rider. The It is difficult to Turnpike has joined the Greater Manchester increases in third quiirter earnings and was helped by a one-time tax credit farce about sexual mores in lurn-of- C e n t e r "giant of history ” is shattered when his Chamber of sales, boosted by a dramatic increase worth $682,000 which he said was imagine that this play the-century Vienna, when progressive old love docs not recall his name nor Commerce in sales of the inipular Cabbage Patch caused by a "decrease in the estimated > ideas and decadent lifestyles even where they met. wagjjfanned in its early The unisex hair dolls. annual effective income tax rate." S t a g e r prevailed. Then comes Emilie. his gentle salon employs years, for the action is The company Thursdtiy reported net However he said quarterly pre-tax The playwright Schnitzler had a high Rita fiancee, played by Giulia Pagano. seven hair stylists income was up 64 percent and sales up regard for Sigmund Freud’s theories earnings decreased by about $30 Kenway Anatol knows she is a woman with a tasteful and mild by and is owned by 58 percent from a year earlier, with million becau.se of the cost of selling on sexual behavior. The playwright past, but feels that he can forgive her as Michael and Carol sales of the Cabbage Patch kids and promoting the Ada m computer and was also ahead of his time in well as she can forgive his past today’s standards. Patulak. The Patul- products this year five times those in due to a recent slash in the wholesale recognizing the double standard of indiscretions. Who knows, perhaps aks bought the busi­ all of 1983. price of the computer. behavior for men and women, and the Since wc have seen Anatol savoring play illustrates this theme. ness in July. "This product line represented ap­ He never changes and grows with his mementos, the double standard history will describe The priceof the $600 Adam was cut by The women in the play, the used and each experience. Instead, his life has a Carol Patulak has proximately 85 percent of Coleco's $175 Wednesday through an offer of comes forward, as his fury mounts in the late 1900s as sales in the third tpiarter. with the discarded loves of the main character, concentric, circular pattern. The rotat­ discovering that she, too. has kept been a licensed hair­ free .software to retail dealers by the Anatol, represent the forces of change. ing stage used for the set enhances this indeed more deca­ dresser for many balance primarily in toy products," company. mementos of the past. He storms out as Shadowing the surface frivolity of this aspect as we understand the ever- if betrayed, leaving her weeping. years and was the said Coleco's president Arnold C. dent than the late Greenberg. For the first nine months of its fiscal “ Don Juan" is his failure to commit widening circles of meaning. Finally, we find Anatol on the former owner of The year, the company reported ble sales a himself to love. He is, instead, a man in We meet seven beautiful "loves of his morning of his wedding day. The night 1800s. Beauty Shoppe in He also said the company bcgtin the decline in net income but an increase in This produce section is one of the features at the remodeled love with "being in love." life" in this play. Each vignette before in a stage of depre-ssion, he has Glastonbury Carol Patulak fourth-(|uarter with tin order backlog of sales. Net income was $13,4 million or Edwards Food Warehouse, which will hold its grand opening His best friend. Max, is a few years explores one relationship. Cora, played brought home for .solace a tempera­ 82 cents pt>r share, compared with $27.6 older and far more skeptical. These two by Carol Calkins, is the first of several $300 million in the doll products with Saturday at its Spencer Street location. The Manchester store is mental Hungarian aetre.ss, Ilona. Now by John ( ’onklin, and lighting by Pal Law firms merge two-thirds of those orders phinned for million or $1.71 per share one year characters represent Schnitzler’s two sweet young girls in his life. Anatol he is laced with the task of getting rid of Collins It all adds up to an evening of shipment by the end of this year. earlier. one of three that will have grand openings around the state. sides — the analytical medical doctor agonizes over his concern that she may her. In the fiery Ilona, played by great enlertainment. and the poet. Tbe law firms of John J Woodcock III of South Overall, the company reported net Greenberg predicted that fourth- not be faithful to him, but when Patricia Mauceri, he had met his Windsor and Lavitt, Hutchinson, Kaplan and income w;is $3 8 million, or 23 cents per quarter earnings this year would also Mark Lamos, the director of the hypnotism is about to give him the match. She understands the scenes that Editor’s note: Hilii Kenwuy hus been Ford of Rockville share, comptired with $2 3 million or 14 be unprofitable because of the con­ Hartford Stage, steps in front of the answer, he finds that he cannot ask the Anatol plays and intends to beat him at urtive in art, music and theater In htive merged. cents a share in 1983 Sales were $181.3 tinued costs of advertising, promo­ footlights for a change to play Anatol fateful question. his game; thus the comedy escalates. Manchester for many years. She is a Edwards joins ranks with distinction. David Schramm, The principals in million, compared with $114.5 million a tional and support costs for Adam. While shopping on Chri.slmas Eve, It is difficult to imagine that this play member of the Manrhester Gilbert and the new firm are perfect as Max, .serves as Anatol’s Anatol meets one of his past loves, was banned in its early years, for the Sullivan Players, ihe rhaneel eholr of Jonathan J. Kaplan. anajyist, adviser, adjudicator and an Gabrielle, played by Mary Layne. He action is tasteful and mild by today’s South Uniled Melhodlst Church, the John J. Woodcock of ‘super’ markets audience. As the play unfolds, one hope.s to rekindle her love, but she is not standards. Who knows, pi>rhaps history board of dlreetors of the proposed III. Steven M. Ford Suitor says takeover becomes aware that Anatol sees “ buying” and goes on with her life, will describe the late 1900's as indeed ('apilol Region Performing Arts Cen­ and Mary C. Oberg. himself as an actor reveling in the leaving him standing forlornly in the more decadent than the late 1800’s. ter, and the Muneht'sler Chamber of delight of playing love scenes. Kaplan graduated Edwards Food Warehouse on Manchester store," Shelton said. Ghosts and goblins Imaginative sets and costumes were Commeree’s eonimlUer for the arts. from the University Spencer Street will become Manches­ The new Edwards will employ an will energize Textron Children will discover ghosts, goblins and other of Connecticut ter's .second "super" supermarket additional 50 to 70 workers for a total of School of Law and is Saturday when it opens its remodeled about 2.50 employees, Shelton said. Halloween creatures lurking in the woods at the Roaring Brook Nature Center Sunday, during the a member of the CHICAGO (I'I’Il — The chairman of developed last June from the bank­ store. The renovations began about three annual “Track-A-Treat Halloween Party” The Connecticut Bar As- a Chicago concern that wants to buy ruptcy of tbe Chicago, Rock Island and Company officials said the new store months ago, she said. kids should come in costume; refreshments will sociation. Wood- Textron stiys his goal is not to break up Pacific Railroad Co. It has between will include a sporting goods depart­ The work was part of a $100 million, ment. a health and beauty aide be served after a 25-minute guided tour through Donald on Ice just skates along cock graduated the conglomerate but to "continue to $250 million and $350 million in cash and three-year expansion program the woods. Admission is $3 for children, but the from Suffolk Law build Textron into one of the finest it claims to have lined up bank boutique, a bakery, an expanded launched by First National. adults who accompany them can come for free. School and industrial cotnpanies in the world. " financing for the remaining $1.3 billion selection of gourmet foods and a live A company press release said the Bv Nancy Pappas "This was good, but now it’s getting lobster tank, among other additions. expansion program was begun to meet Call 693-0263. The center is at 70 Gracey Road, member of the Mas- Harvey Kapnick of Cicago F’acific it would need to buy Textron. Canton. Special to the Herald boring," .said a ,5-year-old during a sachusetts and Co'n- Corp. said Thursday that his firm has A Manhattan investment banker who The Spencer Street store is one of an increasing "demand for one-stop particularly lengthy slapstick routine necticut reviewed at least 100 acquisition .studied the proposal said the deal three remodeled Edwards stores in the shopping." From Snow White with her seven by Bill Wall and Greg Ladret. playing Fordistigrtiduate candidates, but that Textron stood out would not work without the cooperation state that ase holding grand openings To entice shoppers on Saturday, the dwarfs to Olympic silver medalist Chefs Pierre and Pieu. Laughter and of the Western New as "an absolutely significant and of Textron's management because Saturday. store will give $10 gift certificates to the Masquerade and march Rosalynn Sumners, the "Walt Disney’s spontaneous applause were quite Mary C. Oberg England School of unbelievable opportunity. " Chicago Pacific lacks the industrial Gail Shelton, director, of public first ,50 people through the doors and World on Ice" show now at the Hartford sparse during these segments. I- a w ;i n d i s a experience to run the complicated relations at First National Super­ T-shirts to the next 100 customers. Don your costume and join Manchester’s Civic Center has entertainment that’s Each of the Disney ice shows has a Textron Chairman Robert Straetz member of the Tolhind County, Connecticut and firm. markets, the parent company of Free coffee and hot chocolate will annual costume parade, rain or shine, at 2 p.m. bound to please audience members of plot of sorts, and this year’s centers rejected the $1.57 billion dollar, or $43 American bar associations. Oberg graduated Edwards, said the changes were made help warm people waiting in line. Saturday. The lines will form at Manchester State all ages. around a surprise birthday party for per share, offer Wednesday as "com­ from the University of Connecticut School of L;iw Textron has 145 factories in 20 to "bring all of our stores into one Mayor Barbara B. Weinberg is Bank, and participants will march up to Center After she took the Olympic silver Donald Duck, whose movie debut was pletely unacceptable" and unsolicited. and is a member of the Connect icut and Htirtford countries and makes diverse products consistent image." among those expected to attend the Park, where Milton the Magician will perform a medal, 19-year-old Rosalynn Sumners 50 years ago. (See accompanying story County bars. He said the hid would be pre.sented to including helicopters. Chicago Pacific Most other Edwards in the state ribbon-cutting ceremony scheduled for free magic show and prizes for the best costumes was a free agent, and persuading her to on this page.) the board of directors but did not say The new firm is called Kaplan. Woodcock, Ford included some strong inducements to already contain such trademarks as 8 a.m. will be awarded. Clowns will entertain and sculpt sign with Disney was certainly a coup In the Duck Retrospective — a sort of and Oberg. and continues its practice at its South when. The board next meets Textron management in its offer, murals hanging from the ceilings and The Super Stop & Shop on Broad balloons along the parade route, which has been for producers Irvin and Kenneth Feld. "This is Your life” hosted by the Blue Wednesday. Windsor and Rockville offices. including namings of officials to high spotlights, she said. Street was the first supermarket in decorated with Halloween paintings on almost Watching her performances with this Fairy from the Pinocchio tale — Jerry Chicago Pacific is a new firm that positions in the merged firm. "None of that was present in our town to undergo a similar expansion. every merchant’s windows. group Wednesday night, it was easy to Bilik, the shows’s writer-director, has (An abbreviated parade and costume contest see why the diminutive skater has put together a wonderful series of Barnes named Citgo manager will be held inside the Manchester Mall on Main captured American hearts as well as spoofs on famous movie scenes and Kenneth Barnes of South Windsor has been Street in case of rain.) medals. She seemed to be genuinely styles. named division ga.soline manager of the Citgo More firms lend hand to troubled employees Also on Saturday, there will be a pumpkin enjoying her routines, elegant cos­ No one seemed to miss the huVnor in Quik Marts. decorating contest between noon and 1 p.m. in tumes and conversations on ice with the final spoof. As the Richard Strauss Bv Robert Doherty He will be responsible for the gasoline market have shown American industry loses becoming very active in the field. tant, experts say, that the manager not front of Manchester Mall. Pumpkins, decorations famous Disney cartoon characters. theme called "Thus Spake Zaralhus- United Press International of 59 Citgo Quik Mart locations in the northeast. more than $60 billion annually because "I think there is much more attempt to be a pseudo-Sigmund Freud. and prizes will be provided by the Manchester The littlest members of the audience tra" used throughout the Stanley Barnes. 29, has worked as a field repre.senttitive of impaired employee performance enlightenment," she said. "They should not be concerned with Main Street Merchants Association. All festivi­ seemed most intrigued by the denizens Kubrick movie ”2001, ” was played, a and area sales manager for The Southland Corp.. BALTIMORE — American business, due to alcohol and drug addiction, and An employee usually enters the what the problem is, but rather that ties are co-sponsored by that group and the Lutz of the Villa of Villains, a retirement multi-colored monolith rose, opened, parent company of Quik Mail and 7-Eleven coming more and more to the realiza­ an array of emotional problems. programs in one of two ways: voluntar­ there is a deterioration of job perfor­ Children’s Museum. resort for the bad guys from Disney and revealed a huge golden egg inside. stores. tion that a happy worker is a productive The development of such programs ily. which also may include a push from mance," Scherr said. films. Residents include the Big Bad The music continued, the egg shat­ one, is turning to assistance programs Barnes was born in Buffalo and studied at Erie began more than 40 years ago when a a union official or a loved one, or by a Generally. once an employee is in the Wolf, Stromboli, Maleficent and tered, and a joyful Donald Duck to help employees haunted by alcohol, Community College and the University of few major industrial firms began supervisor's referral. program, he or she will be evaluated by Cruella, among others, all of whom appeared with arms outstretched. drug or personal problems. Jog in costume Buffalo. He worked his way through college as a helping alcoholic employees. Lanier estimates 48 percent of those company personnel and, if necessary, perform a delicious production Here was the birthday boy, ready to clerk in a 7-Eleven store and became a store The programs have spread in recent It was not until the 1970s, however, now entering GM's program do so referred to outside agencies for help. The runners may wear costumes instead of number, singing "it’s so good, being bid farewell to his fans. It was a fine, manager in 1978. years as evidence mounts that they act that the programs really began ex­ voluntarily . That figure, which does not Program officials then will monitor an jogging togs at the annual American Cancer bad, it’s the most fun we’ve ever had," tongue-in-cheek ending to the best of The Southland Corp. owns over 7,300 7-Eleven to cut health-care costs, reduce acci­ panding — first to deal with drug include union referrals, is up from 36 employee’s progress, Society’s Pumpkin Run For Hope, but that with comic irony. the four family ice shows I ’ve seen in stores in the country. dents and absenteeism, and boost dependency problems and, more re­ percent four years ago. "Even as large as we are, we can’t shouldn’t slow the action at Bennet Junior High On the other hand, the broader the last three years. productivity. cently, to handle stress problems James Wrich, director of United Air match an outside health-care delivery School. At 10 a.m., there’s a costume contest; at humor of the skating company’s "There is a very real and direct related to marital, financial and other Lines’ program, put their voluntary- -system, ” said Wrich, who claimed 11. a 1-mile Fun Run; and at 11:30 the five-mile famous clowns and comics wore thin relationship betw'een these personal emotional difficulties. referral figure, which includes union 5,800 employees have gone through road race begins. with the 4- through 7-year-olds near us. Doyle makes council problems and the loss of production on Walt Disney's World on Ice will be at "It was a recognition that there were referrals, at 65 percent. United’s 5-year-old program. Merchandise prizes will be awarded for the “ Are they supposed to be funny?" the Hartford Civic Center through the job," said Dale Masi, a University Donald Duck goes steppin' out in top hat and tails in the Walt John E. Doyle of Manchester has become a other problems than drugs and alcohol Morris Scherr, administrator of the "Frank,” a radar assembler at fastest run, the best costumes, and the most asked a 6-year-old about Brenda and Sunday. Tickets are $6.50, $8 and $9. member of the New York Life Insurance Co's of Maryland professor and author of a in the workplace. It was an evolution," pledges collected. The run is sponsored by the Greg Ladret. Disney World on Ice show at the Hartford Civic Center through Education Center at Sheppard-Pratt, a Westinghouse's Defense & Electronic Call 7Z7-8080 for information. Sunday. ^ 1984 President's Council. new book. "Designing Employee As­ said Daniel Lanier, associate director Baltimore-area organization that Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program and sistance Programs." Systems Center near Baltimore, is one Members of the council rank in the top 17 of General Motors Corp.’s assistance offers EAPs on a contractual basis, of those who was referred to outside Manchester Recreation Department, but checks percent of New York Life's 9,600 agents in the "Eighteen to 20 percent of any work program. said it is important to stress the ($5 for each participant) should be made payable population at any one time is losing 25 help after approaching the company United States and Canada, Membership is based Today, some 60 percent of all Fortune program’s confidentiality to em­ for help with a longstanding addiction to American Cancer Society. Registration times on performance during the previous year. percent of their productivity, and that's 500 corporations have some type of ployees, and the key is "convincing are 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. at Bennet Junior High conservative," she said. to -several drugs, including heroin and He once looked mean Council membt'rs are invited to attend a program, and Masi said smaller them that this is not a club that will be cocaine. School, 1146 Main St. Masi, who has a consulting firm that four-day educational conference in Tarpon companies — either by entering into used over their heads. "I had put myself in a position at Springs, Fla. specializes in evaluation and research consortiums with each other or by If an employee is referred to the of assistance programs, said studies Westinghouse where I was on the verge contracting out for program help — are program by a supervisor, it is impor­ of losing my employment.” he said. Prepare to scream Creep through a haunted house at Lutz My, Donald, how you’ve changed Children’s Museum, 247 South Main St., as part of Seabrook owner welcomes appeal of bailout an evening of games, crafts, storytelling and refreshments, Monday and Tuesday from 7 to Who’s as suave as Cary Gram, as irascible as Clark CONCORD, N.H. (UPI) - An to return the financing request to possible because we know it’s 35.6 percent share of Seabrook, 8:30 p.m. Admission is $1 for those who are not (table, as lovable as Laurel and yv\ as mischievous as anti-nuclear group wants the state the Public Utilities Commission going to end up there anyway." members of the museum. Both kids and adults Hardy? Supreme Court to review a $425 making it the largest owner of the for another round of hearings. The Manchester utility owns a project. , are encouraged to come in costumes. m M million rescue plan for Public It s about time," Nicholas The answer is none other than Donald Duck who is Service Co. of New Hampshire, a Ashooh, a spokesman for the celebrating his 50th birthday this year. A huge cake move welcomed by the lead owner utility, said of the appeal. "We A fox trot with Dracula baked in his honor was cut Wednesday in the center of the Seabrook nuclear plant. wanted this decided on its merits a BUY DIRECT FROM rotunda of the Hartford Civic Center, and another, lit The long-awaited appeal has long time before this. We wanted to KEROSENE SALE AT: A Halloween scholarship dance will be with electric candlc.s, is featured at each |>i*rformancc stalled the completion of the see this before the court as soon as UQUIDATORSINC. presented by the Delta Booster Club of the VFW of Walt Disney’s World on Ice, playing through the financial package for New Hamp­ AND SAVE Ramada Inn Post 2046 Saturday, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., at the post weekend at the center. shire’s largest utility. Investors, 30% to 70% 1330 Slla* D une Hwy. home, 608 E. Center St. Dancing will be to the fearful of purchasing potentially 1-91 Exit 24, Rta. 99 Created as a swaggering bit player for Walt OFF REG. RETAIL WatharaftoM, CT music of Union Station, with a buffet supper and Disney’s 1934 film, ’The Wise Uttic Hen," Donald worthless securities, have said VOTE SAT. OCT. 27th costume prizes awarded. Proceeds from the $10 they will not buy into the deal until 10 am-3 pm Duck inspired such laughter and cheering in theaters tickets will benefit scholarships at East Catholic across the country that the Disney studios .soon were the appeals'process is exhausted. KERO SENE HEATER LIQUIDATION SALEH! and Manchester high schools. The appeal was filed Thursday MERCIER featuring him in great numbers of cartoons by the Seacoast Anti-Pollution STATE REP fn those earliest years of his .screen career Donald Bw*II'MCm . L hkto. ONE DAY ONLY!!! League. It is asking the high court SAT., Adults can have a hall was drawn to look very bottom heavy - an enormous OCT. 27th caboose Plenty of midriff bulge, then a skinny neck 10 AM-3 PM YOUR W TIC radio will throw a Costume Ball ‘and small head. The narrow, long b<-ak gave his face a Wednesday at the Parkview Hilton Hotel in rather nasty and snide appearance. Hartford. Theirs is the jackpot of costume contests — $1,000 will go to the wearer of the best By 1938, when he received his first Oscar award costume, and other cash prizes will be awarded as nomination for the cartoon "Good Scouts," Donald’s PLAY JACKPOT EIECT well. The party runs from 8 p.m. to midnight, with face had filled out to a friendly shape quite similar to singer Evelyn King and the full staff of W TIC-AM the one we know today. Although ’only ” a cartoon and FM on hand. character, Donald has been nominated for Oscar John W. awards nine times. In 1943, he became the first duck WITH ever to receive the coveted Academy Award for a 2 VR. WAMIANTY WORKS A U ITEMS PRKEO WITH CASH Thompson, Are you a Wiz? very serious film called "The P'euhrcr’s Face ” a look DISCOUNT INaODEO A U HEATERS BRAND NEW IN at life under Adolf Hitler in Nazi Germany. ADO $5 FOR wiSA/MC 0 CHECK CARTONS WITH FULL WARRANTY McCavanagh At Wizard’s nightclub, exit 99 off 1-86 in Tolland, BINGO The dramatic career ended with the end of World Democrat $100 will be awarded for the best costume of the CORONA 1960s tonight, and for the best wizard get-up War II, and In the late 1940s Donald returned to comedy. The artists at the Disney studios began to EVERY DAY OMw-ies A 0IM I Backs Drinking Saturday evening. Parties begin at 8 p.m. both nights. slim down the duck’s physique at about this time. i*,ss9n* o o * * 20,000 ITU 98®® 13th Assembly ■DM Unlike rnany Hollywood stars, Donald made the Win umm c a i a District transitwn into television very successfully. When Two uw sni 3 0 ^ I'l^in i 77®® ujwonu 78®® Age of 21 Take a stroll in the dark Walt Disney entered the electronic field in 19.54 *,300 ITU Donald was starring in his own animated shows and ^ni. 68M !^ in i6 7 ® ® W/FAN 78®® Connecticut Audubon Society staff members RE-ELECT PULL efub “ 8uest star on the ’’Mickey Mouse ALL WITH FREE invite you to take a look at the dark side of nature, BATTERY POMP ALL WITH 8ELF- CLEANINOWICK McCAVANAGH with a Halloween night hike in Earle Park. The This illustration, from Donald’s Mickey HAWAII walk will leave from.the society’s Holland Brook Here’s how Donald looked when he was 12th DISTRICT Donajd’s popularity seem unlikely to fade. In May A U W kKS & ACCESSORIES 10,500 BTU LEVER Mouse Club days in the 1950s, looks Cewnter, 1361 Main St., Glastonbury, at 7 p.m. first born in 1934, in his debut in Walt he was invited to leave his ’’webprlnts" in the famous W/UFT-OUT VOTE REDUCED UP TO B O % Tuesday. Pre-registration is required, and much more like today's duck. Note that Disney’s "The Wise Little Hen." It was ^idew alk of the Stars" outside Mann’s Chinese Page 2 KCRO-SUNA TANK Dmm oenUe 4A tickets cost $4 for adults, $2 for children and he has a milder-looking demeanor than just a bit part but the world has never Theater. He stars in new animated films and CORONA WKKS FROM • 3 3 e Paid for by tha Committaa to Ra-Eiact Paid lor by Committaa to Elaci senior citizerns. Call 633-8402. JMaaJI. McCavanagh. Raymond F. Oa- John W. Thompson; that bad-tempered duck who played the forgotten him. television specials each year, and the Disney Channel RATTERY PUMPS T . 0 0 48» mato, Trtaaurar. Rogar Negro, Traaaurar bit part in 1934. on cable television offers a new arena in which the ”T multi-talented duck can strut his stuff 14 - MANCHESTER HERALD. Friday, Oct. 26, 1984 MANCHKSTER HKRAI-D. Fridny. Oct 26. 1984 - 15

Plovers presents "Rene the Fox," a children's Dead, on solo piano Saturday at the restaurant, 22 Lyman center for the Performing Arts, New Greater Hartford Board of Realtors and the downtown Mystic and end at the new Mystic Copornicon Planotarlum and Space Science play, at 75 Zion St. Saturday 10:30a.m., Sunday 2 Union Place. (247-9738.) Haven: Southern Connecticut State University Homebuilders Association of Connecticut. 8 a.m. Community'Center on Route 1. Canter, New Britain: "The People," a planeta­ o. m. (247-2017.) Palace Theater of the Arts, Stamford: Galvan­ Chamber Orchestra to present a free program qt Wednesday. (243-4445.) Also, "Execu-Trends," a Children’s Museum of Hartford, West Hart­ rium program that views the starts through the JP’s Restaurant, Hartford: The Actor's Attic ized Jozz Band, New Orleans Jazz, 8 p.m. music by Geroge Frederick Hondel ot 8 o.m. mini-series of business seminars, begins Wednes­ ford: Hallowe'en Happening '84, a spooky party. eves ot the early American Indians. Friday and presents "The Arkansaw Bear," o children's Saturday. 61 Atlantic St. Thursday In recognition of Handel's 300th day at 8 a.m. with “ Torgeting Through Direct $4 tor adults, $2 for children and senior citizens. Saturday at 8:30 p.m., at Coperhicus Hall. Wells play, Saturday and Sunday of 11 a.m. and 2 o.m. The Palace, New Haven: Sarah Vaughn, birthday. '.ctures Marketing,"; presented by Tom Brett ot Head­ 950 Trout Brook Drive, West Hartford. Street, New Britain. $2 for adults, $1 for children (247-8144.) under 12 and senior citizens. f tonight and Saturday of 8 p.m., tickets $15.50 and Gilead Congregational Church, Hebron: Classi­ quarters Companies, Hartford, and Margery Wothersfield Cove: Oceanography research Theater Volley Playhouse, Naugatuck: "The Best Little Steinberg, assistant professor of marketing. South Coventry FIrthouso, South Covontry: S17.50. Maynard Ferguson, 8 p.m. Wednesday, cal, religious, folk and modern music program at boat tour down Connecticut River next Friday at Whorehouse In Texas," today at 8 o.m., Saturday $7.50, S10 and $12.50. Al Green gospel music, next 7:30 p.m. Sunday. Admission Is free to the (243-4246.) Coventry Volunteer Fire Association Auxiliary at 7 ond 10 o.m. Cabaret-style show, snacks Connecticut Hittoricol Society, Hartford: " Ir­ 11:45 a.m. tor study ot shoreline with marine will sponsor crafts fair, 10a.m. to4p.m. Saturday. Friday at 8 p.m. $17.50 and $15.50. 146 College concert, at 672 Gilead St. Refreshments will be Southern Connecticut State University, New scientists, teachers and noturallsts. Ottered by Monchesfer Community Colleso: "Jacques ^rved, BYOB, at playhouse, Mountolnvlew Street. (789-2120.) served at this celebration of the new piano at the ish Literature In Transition," lecture by Dr. South Coventry Firehouse, Route 31, South Conor Johnston, Massassoit Commonitv College Haven: Dr. Dorothy DInnersteIn, prominent Continuing Education Office ot Greoter Hartford Brel Is Alive and Well and Living In Paris," main Ploza, Rubber Avenue. KIngswood-Oxford School, West Hartford: church. Coventry. auditorium, 8 o.m. tonight and Saturday. $5 William Benton Museum of Art, Storrs: "To In Boston, 7:30 p.m., Monday, lost of a series on figure in the peace movement., to speak' about Community College. Cost Is $9 and limited seats Tokyo String Quortet, tonight at 8,170 Klngswood Greater Hartford Community College, Hart­ "Our Responsibility for History; Can Women are available. Call 549-4200, extension 276, to Inn on Loko Woramaug.NowPrtston; Jock-o - general admission, S3.S0 tor senior and student Embrace the Leper," written and acted by Road. ford: A free performance of "Borber of Seville," the Irish In Connecticut. “ Henry and Helen tickets. University of Connecticut English professors, FIvnt," lecture by Donald R. Friary of Historic Prevent War?" at 4 p.m. Wednesday. Student reserve tickets. lantern carving and pumpkin growing contests, Bushnell Hall, Hartford: "Man of La Mancha," given by Connecticut Opera On Tour, at 12:30 p.m. Center Faculty Dining Room. After DInnersteIn Saturday 1 p.m. Contestants In the carving Hole In the Wall Theatre, New Britain: "Bell, tonight and Saturday at 8 p.m., at the museum on presented by the Connecticut Opera with John Wednesday at the auditorium, 61 Woodland Deerfield. Both at society headquarters, 1 Wesleyon Hills Born, Middletown: A Harvest Book and Candle," by John Van Oruten, the play Storrs campus. (486-3969.) Elizabeth St. speaks, she will take part In a panel discussion on competition should bring their own tools and Reardon of the Metropolitan Opera. Tonight and Street, corner of Woodland and Asylum Avenue. the role ot women In combating the nuclear arms Moon Boll to benefit the Goodspeed Operat decorations. Free admission and free pumpkin lo which was the basis tor the TV series "Be­ Jorgensen Auditorium, Storrs: Shakespeare & Saturday of 8 o.m. Tickets between $7 and $30. Copernicus Hall, New Britain; “ Bergson House. Open bar, country French dinner, Al Canton High School, Canton: Al Gentile and the Duration and the Mystical Universe," lecture by race. (397-4554.) each participant. Prizes will be awarded. For witched." Friday and Saturday evenings at 8:30 Company present "A Midsummer Night's (241-0251.) Jarvis Swing Band will supply music for dancing. Dream," next Friday at 8 o.m. WRCQ Big Band, at 8 p.m. tonight. Tickets are $8 Paul W. Beeching, professor of philosophy and more Intormotlon, call 1-868-0563. p.m., through Dec. 1., at 36 Nort6h St., New Bushnell Hall, HarHord: The Stockholm Phil­ at the door. (673-9185.) Dress Is seml-formal or masquerade. Saturday Britain. University Theater, New Britain: "Monandthe English, associate dean of Arts and Sciences at Child A Family Services, Hartford; Resolve of University of Bridgeport: “ A Very Special Arts harmonic Orchestra opens a series of concerts by South Congregational-First Baptist Church, Greater HarHord Is sponsoring a program on from 7 p.m. to midnight. (873-8664.) Festival" where handicapped artists, dancers, Arts Center, Hartford: Company One presents Masses," expressionist tragedy, tonight and five international symphonies. 8 p.m. Monday. Central Connecticut State University. Port olf a "Enter a Free Man," opening Thursday at 8p.m. Soturday at 8 p.m. at Central Connecticut State Now Britain: "Great Music of Our Time,” a free series of lectures on the origins and eveolutlon of Internotional adoption, Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.. In actors and musicians perform and exhibit. 11 a.m. (527-3123.) program of French, English and American sacred auditorium at 1680 Albany Ave. Parents who have Connecticut Historical Society, Hartford: at the center, 94 Allyn St. Tickets $8. Thursdays, University, Stanley Street. (827-7398.) the universe as seen through ancient astronomy Films shot In Connecticut. “Way Down East," a Saturday. Workshops on art therapy, music, cloy Bushnell Halt, Hartford: Judy Collins In music, at 7:30 p.m. Sunday. A free-will oHerIng adopted will speak. SI. (236-5553.) sculpture, puppetry, photography and move­ Fridays and Saturdays through Nov. 10. (278- Nutmeg Theatre, Storrs: "The Shadow Box," concert, Sunday at 8 p.m. and classical thought. 7:30 p.m. Thursday. silent film starring Lillian Gish, at 7:30 p.m. next will be received at the church, 90 Main St. (827-7422.) ment. Free, at Bernhard Arts Center, University 6347.) Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award-winning play Cellardoor Coffeehouse, Hartford: Gregg Greater Hartford Community College, Hart­ Friday evening. Gish's famous rescue from an Ice Hartford Stage Company, Hartford: "Anatol" about death, opens Thursday at the Studio Auerbach Science Center, Hartford College for ford: Charles Morse, political columnist for The floe was shot on the Farmington River. S2. 1 of Bridgeport. Brown, star of Prairie Home Companion, plays Civic Center, Hartford: Walt Disney's World on playing through Nov. 11, at the theater, SO Church Theoter, uConn Drama-Music Building In the acoustic music. Bruce Pratt will be the opening Women: Susan Stamberg, co-host of National Hortford Courant, will speak to Senior Renewal Elizobeth St. St. Curtain times, Tuesday through Thursday, 8 School of Fine Arts complex. Performances at 8 Public Radio’s "All Things Considered," 8 Club, college's community room, 61 Woodland St. Ice, through Sunday, at the center In downtown act. 2 p.m. Sunday, at Hill Center, 350 Farmington Hartford. Tickets at Civic Center Box Office and p.m.; Friday and Saturday, 8:30 p.m.; Sunday p. m. dally through Nov. 10, except Nov. 5. Ave. $6 per ticket, bring your own wine or beer. tonight. "What Do We Have to Say," an Insider's "The Political Scene— What's Ahead." 2:15 p.m. American Indian Archeological Institute, Wa­ matinee, 2:30 p.m. (527-5151.) The Producing Guild, Hortford: "The Roth­ (249-7691.) view of how broadcasters handle the volume ot Tuesday, with refreshments served. Open to the shington: Harvest holidays of the Indians, all TIcketron outlets. (749-8107.) Yale School of Drama, New Haven: "Help schilds," of the Hartford Insurance Group, 690 Information they see every day. $10 tor lecture public. sponsored bv the Institute and the Connecticut Holland Brook Cantor, Glastonbury; Hallo­ University of HarHord, West HarHord: 14th Dance Department of Environmental Protection, 10 Wanted," American premiere of a German Asylum Ave. Wednesday through Nov. 18, annual pops concert Nov. 2 at 8 o.m. In Physical alone, $15 tor lecture plus reception. (236-1215.) ween Night Hike at the Connecticut Audubon working class play. Tonight at 8, Saturday at 2and Wednesdays through Sundays. (528-2143.) .Old Stole House, Hartford: "Women's Vote: American School for the Dent, West Hartford: a.m. to dusk Soturday. A hike, native foods, Education Center. Music from the Big Band Era Simon Carmel to perform deaf folklore and Society's center, 1361 Main St., Glastonbury, 8 p.m. University Theatre, 222 York St., New to benefit university libraries and scholarships. "1920 through 1984," presented by Mandv Wertz, natural crafts demonstrations, films, and a dusk Tuesdav from 7 to 9 p.m. A look ot the dark side ot Haven. (436-3164.) university of Hartford, West HarHord: Peace director ot social policy, Hartford League ot culture; jokes, riddles, legends and superstitions. campfire with stories and native dancing. In Concert and dancing cost $15. Bring your own Tickets are $1 tor this presentation, 7:30 p.m. nature. $4 tor adults, S3 for Audubon members, $2 Yale Repertory Theater, New Haven: "Henry picnic at 6:30 p.m., or order a box supper. Train Breaking, Popping and Rapping All-Stars Women Voters. Noon Thursday, free. reconstruction of an Algonquin village. $2 for tor children and senior citizens. Pre-register bv Tuesday at school's auditorium, 139 N. Main St. adults, $1 for children between 6 and 18, younger IV, Part I," Tuesdays through Saturdays, through (238-8048.) to perform at 10:30 a.m. at Lincoln Theater, Hartt The HarHord Club, Hartford: Letty Cottin calling 633-8402. School of Music. Tickets are $6. (243-4421.) Pogrebin, editor ot MS. magazine, will keynote children tree. Route 199, Washington. Nov. 17. Corner of Chapel and York streets. Emanuel Lutheran Church, Manchester: (436-3164.) ;t|rst meeting ot the Business and Professional Roaring Brook Nature Center, Canton: "Track- iGroup of the Women's Division ot the Greater "What the Churches Are Saying About the Spencer Village, Manchester: Crafts fair and Long Wharf Theater, New Haven, "Tobacco SHOMCASI Nuclear Arms Race," Tuesday at noon at the tag sale from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, ondfrom A-Treat," a costumed walk through Werner's Road," playing through Nov. 18 at the theater, 222 ;Hartford Jewish Federation. "Gender: Female, Woods where children will encounter ghosts, Music HARTFORD I^Religlon; Jewish, Outlook: Feminist" is the title church, 60 Church St. 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. Proceeds go to Christmas Sargent Drive. (787-4282.) packages which are distributed to children and goblins and other unusual creatures, then enloy Coachllght Dinner Theater, East Windsor: I HUMlMCnfSS . of the event, to be held at the club, 46 Prospect St. refreshments. Sunday 2 to 4 p.m. $3 tor children, ^ In e reception at 5:30 p.m., dinner at 6:30 p.m., elderly shut-ins around Manchester. Sponsored "Show Boat," playing through Nov. 25 dally bv the Spencer Village Craft Club, at the Pascol but adults are free. 'Those under age 5 must be except Mondays, Route 5. Dinner at 6:30 p.m., CRT’s Craftery Gallery, HarHord: Master Jazz PLAY JACKPOT rsbeech at 8 p.m. Monday, cost Is $15. (232-4483.) Lane Recreation Hall. accqmpanled bv on adult. Call 693-0263. show at 8 p.m. (522-1266.) Series opens this weekend In conlunctlon with a AMERICAN DREAMER 2 : Glastonbury Medical Center, Glastonbury: lazz photograph exhibit of Roy OeCarava'swork, rBulldlng self-esteem In children, presented on Goodspeed-at-Chester, Chester: "Mrs. l:l5-7gMM0-ll:«5 i- Emanuel Lutheran Church, Manchester: Universltv of Connecticut, Storrs: "Wulherlng McThlng," playing through Nov. 4 at the Norma entitled "The Sound I Saw." Jazz singer Joe Lee ttiehalf of the Inter-Community Mental Health Heights," Bunuel version, togight at 8 p.m.. Von Wilson; Walter Bolden Trio; and alto saxopho­ RRSTBORN Croup by Marcie Gueret, certified school "Treats and Treasures Fair" of Emanuel Ferris Theater In Chester. (873-8668.) Lutheron Church, 60 Church St. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. der Mehden Hall. S2.50 "Dr. Strangelove,” Darien Dinner Theater, Darien: "Irm a Lo ' nist Jackie McLean to begin at 1 p.m. Sunday at lj0-7:IS-8t38-ll:30 m.. 1 psychologist, at 7:30 p.m. Monday, 131 New Stanley Kubrick's comic nightmare, next Friday the gallery, 1445 Main St. ; London Turnpike. Free. E t Cetera Saturday. Crafts, Swedish Items, houseplants, Douce," playing through Dec. 2, dally except •O O T DOUBLE BINGO f lowal arrangements, soup and sandwich, handw­ evening. Jorgensen Auditorium, Storrs: Peter Serkin - I Tolland Agricultural Center, Vernon: "Con- Mondays. 65Tokeneke Road. (655-7781.) 1;45-7:30«GI>-1£00 riting analysis. Center Church House, HarHord: A film Auerbach Auditorium, Hllyer Hall, West Hart­ and the Springfield Symphony Orchestra. Tues­ !tamlnatlon ot our Groundwater and What We Can day at 8 o.m. TERROR IN THE AISLES program for Reformation Day and Halloween. ford: "Side by Side by Sondheim," today and IDo About It," Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Class te -' will Lutz Children's Museum, Manchester; Haunted Yole University, New Haven: Hilinks for Civic Center, Hartford: New England Ski and "Where Luther Walked," about the German Saturday at the theater on the campus of the ____ 1:48-7 jO-IOlOO-l 1)45 > EVERY DAY iBe $5, and session will be at 24 Hyde Ave. house and Halloween party, open to the public Wintersports Expo and Wine Festival. Noon to 10 countryside, and "The Night the Ghost Got In," a University of Hartford. 8 o.m. (243-4605.) Halloween concert with the Yale Symphony at ;r875-3331.) Woolsey Hall, corner of College and Grove THE TERMINATOR between 7 and 8:30 p.m. Monday and Tuesday. p.m. Saturday, noon to 6 p.m. Sunday. Ski James Thurber short sforv. Noon Wednesday at Puppet House Theater, Stony Creek: "Theater Party costs $1, and adults should also come In equipment and apparel sales, resort exhibits, the church, 60 Gold St. Call church office, 249-5631 Sports," by the New York Theater Sports Team. 8 streets, midnight Wednesday. Free. Doors open I:30-7:4S-IIU)0-I2J)0 Win Two Goodwin State Forest Conservation Center, on hour before the performance. I Hampton: Why did wild turkeys disoppear in costume. information on lessons, ski clubs, racquetball and bv 4 p.m. "Tuesdav tor lunch reservations. p.m. Saturday. S5 adults, $4 for senior citizens and THIEF OF HEARTS Main Street, Manchester: Pumpkin decorating children under 12. Mad Murphy's Cafe, Hartford: Tom T.C. ; Connecticut? Why are they coming back? tennis clubs and wine sampling. $3.75 tor odults, $2 iai-7:4IK4S-tl:40 at noon Saturday, costume parade at 2 p.m. tor children. HarHord Arts Center, Hartford: Hundred Feet St. James Church House, Hartford: Plum Cake Constanten, former keyboardist for The Grateful ' Lecture at 2 p.m. Sunday with biologist Brian Dance Prolecf presents an exploration of A SOLDIERS STORY -AAiller. Downtown Mystic: Parade to honor Paul Scully-Power, an oceanographer and Mystic Marc Antony's Cote, HarHord; "Bride and mask-movement, pantomime. Imaging and pup­ l:l8-7:30«40-IIM , HAWAII ::: University of HarHord, West Hartford: "Out- Groom Showcase," with two fashion shows, petry. Taught bv Gifford Booth ot the Boston resident who flew Into space on the most recent VOTE TEACHERS -tpok tor the Connecticut Housing Market" Chollenger space shuttle flight. Parade begins 1 champagne, hors d'oeuvres and entertainment, Actors Institute. 4 to 9 p.m. Sunday, $25. Cinema l30-7a(Xt80-IIJ0 Tpresented by the Construction Institute, The p.m. Sunday at Bank Square, go through at 1000 Wethersfield Ave. Shows at 1 and 3:30p.m. Pre-registration Is necessary. (522-5658.) MERCIER PLACES INTHE HEART Page Hartford Firstborn (PG) FrI 1:20, 7:15, 9:30, STATE REP Clnamo City — Sugor Cane Aliev 11:30; Sat 1:20, 4, 7:15, 9:30, 11:30; Sun fid t» b Mxoe II M Im 1. hkle. Iromt Body protein (PG) FrI 7:10; Sal 3:20, 7:10 with 1:20,4,7:15,9:30. — Places In the Heart Carmen FrI 9:05; Sat1:30,S:IS,9:05.— (PG) FrI I, 7:20,9:35, 11:40; Sat 1,3:05, The Gods Must Be Crazy (R) Frl7,9:30; 5, 7:20, 9:35, 11:40; Sun 1, 3:05, 5, 7:20, is linked to Sat and Sun 2:15,4:40, 7,9:30. — Under 9:35. — American Dreamer (PG) FrI The Wolfetones • Manchester Crvm)or^s 847-6043 California at San Francisco and 3:35,5:20,7:50,10,11:45; Sun 1:45,3:35, with Blood Wedding Sun 4:45,9:15. Call 5:20, 7:50, 9:45. — A Soldier's Story tor second screen schedule. V8nNB,CT 971-1191 S5 general admission Massachusetts General Hospital in London Broil (PG) Fr11:15,7:30,9:40,11:40; Sat 1:15, Vernon S3 50 students & seruors Boston found the pain transmitter 3:15, 5:15, 7:30, 9:40, 11:40; Sun 1:15, CInel A2—Ghostbusters(PG) Fri7, known as substance P also in- FINE GUIDE w/mushroom sauce 3:15,5:15,7:30,9:40. — The Terminator 9:10; Sot 2,7,9:10; Sun 2,4:15,7,9:10.— DON'T MISS m s ONE m (R) FrI 1:30, 7:45, 10; Sat 1:30, 3:30, The Karate Kid (PG) Fri 7:10,9:30; Sat _creases the severity of arthritis in Fresh Baby Bay Scallops 5:30, 7:45, 10, 12; Sun 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, and Sun 1:30, 7:10, 9:30. .--lliboratory rats. 7 :« , 9:50. — Body Double (R) FrI 1:45, Windsor ; Most of the rats’ symptoms were TO Fresh Swordfish or 7:30, 9:50, 12; Sat 1:45, 4:15, 7:30, 9:50, Ploza — The Karate Kid (PG) Fri 12; Sun 1:45, 4:15, 7:30, 9:50. — 7:15,9:35; Sat 2,7:15,9:35; Sun 2,7:15. 'alleviated when they were injected ^slcinclecr Halibut Your Choice The Covcnlty Hiatorical Society 16th Annual Tianos .'(irith a substance that blocks Imbstance P, offering hope similar AUTUMN DINING TOLLAND TURNPIKE IXIT 94 ON 1-86 Above served w/potato & Mlad /'k 'N *Mbstances could become effective MANCHESTER CaWor f l i i a Exit $9 oH 1-86 l^ rth ritis treatments, the re- 643-9529 Antiques Show j^estaurant I'-Oearchers said. "This is further evidence the Our Specialties Include •Tiiervous system contributes to diplomat Sale For Your ; arthritis,” the researchers wrote ResUumit ' in the journal Science. Sullivan Avenue Plaza So. Windsor, CT Seafood — Poultry Fri. & Sat. Night Specials fac32iiis^m ill M4-1561 _ _ ii|| Steak Dishes C; r«stai|FSnt SATUDDAY. 0CT05ED 27. 1984 Christmas Parties Many scientists have said the Luncheon Spaclilt Sanfad Oiily 11:30-3 P.M. JA L. .Ji---- Ik- Some Dates Are SHII AvallaMa disease is probably one of the Swordfish...... * Dinner Specials rl 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. I; immune system in which disease- Luau Dinners Thanksgiving is Coming ' fighting cells attack the body's own Fri.. Sal & Sun f'/4 Lobster...... *8” 0880 Buco...... 165 Adams St. tissue, in this case the joints. Covcnliy High fichod W# roast whole turkeys for partlea of 6 or more poopla Sun. only Roast Loin of Pork Dinner....'?” Manchester Researchers in the latest study Hippy Hiur d illy 1.8 p ji. ___ FINE POLYNESIAN CHINESE Mixed Seafood Casserole ....*7^^ Comer of Dipley HiD Doad aid Doute 31 said it is possible the immune 646-4039 Route 6, Bolton (44A) _. system triggers the substance P Ladlsi Nloht-Wad.-Two Orinks for Price of One Coventiy, Connecticut •: reaction. In the Lounge AND AMERICAN CUISINE Veal Francala...... *7*® < ______643-2342 LIvi EiHiinlnmint Tburi, Fri. $ Sil. O ur S . Arthritis in its various forms ADW&SION $1.75 affects about 36 million, or about la Strada Restaurant '<>ne in seven Americans. In many ENJOY YOUR A t i r m 9 l * * k With this ad. admit 1 or 2 pereona at $1.50 each Boases, the space between bones in SHE 471 HartfonI Rd. /> 643-6165 iin iin B 'ii ssjw n ^dffected joints shrinks as the O P fN MON FAVORITE lEVERACE M-Th 5:30-10, F a B IN 11, Sun III 0 -((isease progresses, making move- THURS ) l am I MOORCOCNTAa rment difficult. There also is om FRI a n d - (QiMtijirrwB Ofiiiy):' M 'i^ n ess and swelling of surround- Sa I 11 om-2 LOMCE MANCHESTER SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA >i))g tissues, and, in the degenera- om SUNDAY II CiUY-OETmKS

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CAPTAIN EASY by Crooks A Catale I'VE ALWAYS WAWTBP i r $ BAP b n o u o h to PO W T HAVE KNOW THAT MON^TEK’^ TO GO OUT THERE TO BE THE FIKftT PBREON Fnday T V L.00KIM& FOR TO CATCH Biaroen-. OUT THERE-. Dunlop’s wife convinced Area Towns Bolton SATs

6:00P M (3J (8J I2Z (30) News (24) (57) Wall Street Week Louis Rukeyser <'inHly/(!S ifH! '60s with a worikly review of in Brief r 5 ) Three's Company Channels economic iincf iiiveslrT>ent matters hold steady (9 ) Hart to Hart tier husband wrote note [ESPN] NFL's Greatest Moments Le (11j Benson WFSB Hartford. CT gends of the Fall BOLTON — Bolton High School Scholastic Aptitude WNEW New York. NY , . » w (18) Dr Gene Scott [U S A ] PFB Arm Wrestling Referendum gets second nod Test Scores released this week show that the (?lass of WTNH New Haven. CT fij i,»r :. FALMOUTH, Maine (UPI) - A brief, unsuccessful air search without even looking at his letter.” (20) Dukes of Ha/zard (1 ^ 5 ; The wife of solo sailor Bill Dunlop 1984 average scores were about the same as scores for WOR New York. NY (•j 9 : 0 0 P M C33 Dallas JR has trouble ac of the reef islands east of Mackay Weinstein said, '"nien we com­ BOLTON — As required by the town's bond (24) 3 2 1. Contact WPIX New York. NY HU cepling Jamie's claim to be a Ewing and says she is “ absolutely” certain a was launched shortly after the note pared it with the letter. It was other classes over the past four years. WHCT Hartford. CT 'It counsel, voters were asked-and agreed at a Town (36) One Day at a Time Pam wonders if Mark is really dead (60 :.note for help which washed up on was fojtnd. uncanny. The mean verbal SAT score was 436.7 and the WTXX Waterbury. CT 98 min ) (Closed Captioned] Meeting Tuesday to .reaffirm their approval to (40) Newswatch Springfield. MA Jill Australian beach last week was It was temporarily halted Wed­ “ Considering he's probably de­ average math score was 473.5 for the Class of 1984, An WWLP 3t CSJ Merv Griffin V hold a Nov. 6 referendum on four proposed (41) Reporter 41 WEDH Hartford. CT 9« -written by her missing husband. nesday when Australia’s Federal lirious and the best thing he had to average of students' scores from the classes of 1981 WVIT Hartford. CT M C l) (4b) Hawaiian Heat Mac and Andy are "It's his writing. It’s his writing, building projects. through 1984 put verbal scores at 437.9 and math (57) MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour drawn into an eerie case that leads Andy Sea, Search and Surveillance write on was a rock, it was just so The Hartford law firm Updike, Kelly and WSBK Boston. MA 98 definitely," Pamela Dunlop said, scores at 487.3. (01) Fantasy Island WGGB Springfield, MA A9 to believe that he’s found his missing Center in Canberra said the small similar,” he said. Spellacy told town officials that residents must LEVY'S LAW - by Jame* Schumcitter breaking into tears, during an Bolton High School Guidance Couneelor June [C N N ] Prog Cont'd WXTV Paterson, NJ 14U brother (60 min ) plastic tub had been made and sold approve the scheduled referendum at least 10 and Springfield. MA ' interview with The Bevston Herald. Krisch suggested to the Board of Education, which [ESPN ] ESPN's Horse Racing Weekly WGBY (18) Dr Gene Scott in Australia last month. The Air Search and Surveillance WTIC Hartford. CT 8t) no more than 30 days before the date set. (221 (30) Hunter Hunter and McCall en­ The 43-year-old sailor's wife got Dunlop was last seen June 23 Center, Australia's equivalent of met Thursday, that because the school is so sm all, the (HBO ) Remember When • Birds and the CNN Cable News Ntwrk ICNNI About 35 residents unanimously approved the counter a small town sheriff with homicidal her first look Thursday night at a best way to interpret BHS scores is to use an average Bees Otek Cavoti ex«imineb iho fashions, ESPN Sports Network lespNl r r I when he left the Cook Islands en the U.S. Coast Guard, has refused referendum. Voters will be able to pick and iraditluns and revolutions of Amercia's tendencies (60 min ) copy of the desperate, unsigned of several years' scores to get a representation. HBO Home Box Office iHBOl route to Brisbane, Australia, a to mount a search for Dunlop, choose among four proposals in the referendum. ever changing sexual mores CINEMAX Cinemax IMAXI (24) (6^ Great Performances: Lincoln ; plea which was found by passersby 3,000-mile trip, which made it saying the area between the Cook Some 49 percent of the students in the Class of 1984 Center Special Lincoln Center's 25th An Projects include renovating Community Hall and [M A X ] MOVIE: 'Enigma' Art American TMC Movie Chanrmi iTMCl ; sealed in a plastic margarine Islands and Australia is too great. took the SATs in their junior or senior years. USA Network Iu sa I niversary Celebration ’ Highlights from unlikely that he would come into building a new central fire station, a new pOhlic in East Berlin becomes embroiled in a USA container Oct. 19. The Class of 1984 at BHS can boast the largest scheme to kill Soviet dissidents Martin past Liv(! from Lincoln Center’ telecasts possession of the container. It said after the note was found, works garage and a new library-media center at feature encore performances by Andre ‘T v e lived with him for 24 years. percentage of students going on to 4-year colleges, Sheen. Derek Jacobi. Sam Neill 1982 But Weinstein said the tub could however, that it would send out Bolton High School. Rated PG Watts. Il/h«ik Perlman. Peter Martin and ' That's how I know it's his hand­ have been dropped from another search planes if an analysis of the according to a statement prepared by Krisch's office. tor arrives in the middle of the night many more (2 hrs ) The total estimated cost of all four projects is [U S A ] USA Cartoon Express (Closed Captioned) writing. He’s in bad shape. He vessel in the area and washed up on letter which Dunlop wrote to his About 45 percent of students in that class went on to (41) El Maleficio $2,945,000, and the referendum does not permit (9D News '‘ wrote this under duress,” she said. one of the tiny islands where wife from the Cook Islands con­ 4-year colleges: 18 percent went to 2-yearcolleges and 6 : 3 0 P M CH one Day at a Time (91) Kojak the town to spend over the individual estimated C11) Barney Miller (11) MOVIE: 'Rabbit Run' A form er high .- The note; dated Oct. 16, read; Dunlop may have swam or drifted firmed the note’s authenticity. 5 percent went to other schools. [C N N ] Freeman Reports Shipwrecked on an island. No amounts on any of the four projects. In the past four years the highest percentage of (22) (30) NBC News school basketball star is trying to run away ashore. Weinstein said he will leave for from a drab, miserable existence James [E S P N ] Breeders' Crown Series - Race wlood. Little water. Time running students any other class had sent to 4-year colleges (24) Nightly Business Report Weinstein, a marketing execu­ Sydney on Saturday to present the Caan. Anjanette Comer. Jack Albertson #6 Coverage of this harness racing cham) out.” had been 33 percent, in 1983. In that year, however, 28 ^ ) Jeffersons 1 9 /0 pionship IS presented from Washington. tive, met with Dunlop’s wife and letter to an official of Australia's DC (60.min) “ There was no question that it Federal Police, which will do the Coventry sets truancy rule percent had opted for 2-year colleges. (40) ABC News (18) Dr. Gene Scott several friends at his office near [U S A ] Friday Night Boxing Coverage of was from him,” said Jeffrey Portland to view a facsimile of the handwriting check. An SAT preparatory course taught in March by (41) Noticiero SIN (20) MOVIE: 'Twelve O'clock High' A ALLEY OOP - by Dave Qraue COVENTRY — The Board of Education has profpssional boxing is presented from A t­ , Weinstein, a family friend who has teachers was attended by fewer students in the Class young general takes command of a bom YES, HE note, which was transmitted by "I still have some reservations, decided that Coventry High School students must [C N N ] Showbiz Today lantic City (2 hrs ) LET US GET THE FOODSTUFFS FOR AH.VES... ANO I been directing the search for ber group operating from England in 1942 OUR HARILWORKING BROTHERS AT MORE OPIUM TO POES! I'M photowire from Australia. but I think jt ’s now likely that he’s attend at least 75 percent of class meetings to of 1984 than in past years, Krisch told Board of [ESPN ] Mazda SportsLook and soon lifts the moral tremendously 9 : 3 0 P M (41) SIN Presenta: 'El Rafa' THE RAILHEAD! S ELL TO t h e m : JAM ES I Dunlop, last seen four months ago Dunlop’s wife said she "figured there — on the Great Barrier earn credit in any course. Education members at their meeting Thursday. 2 Gregory Peck. Dean Jagger. Hugh Mar HOWDEN.' I in the South Pacific while trying to She gave a mixed report on the success of the 7 :0 0 P M (JJ CBS News low e 1950 1 0 : 0 0 P M C3) Falcon Crest it was a hoax” until she saw the R eef," he said. The rule, which passed unanimously at Monday •sail around the world in a 9-foot note. " I can tell you, absolutely, Dunlop left Portland, Maine, in course. Students had been more dedicated inside class (38) M -A 'S -H (22) (30) V Diana is brought to trial one year ® News night’s meeting, is designed to force academi­ Iboat. August 1983 in an attempt to set a than in past years, she said. But their willingness to do CO ABC News after the freedom fighters drove the alien f8~) (40) Matt Houston C J suffers from positively, it’s his,” she said. cally struggling students to get the teacher visitors away (60 min ) amnesia and win

SERVICE KO\n &SAVE l a t ^ Manchester soccer EH Republican Play Bingo wins CCC East title battles Bates and win cash

.. .p age 15 ... pa ge 3 ... p a ge 2 MANCHESTER AUTO BODY REPAIR Is A h e a d - Tho Body and Paint Spaciallata Cloudy today; Manchester, Conn. Tune up & Winterize NATIONAL CAR CARE MONTH warm Sunday Saturday. Oct. 27. 1984 — see page 2 Single copy: 259 M O i p t i M M HanrhpBlpr M m li Your Car Now The People at IT PAYS TO RAP NIELSEN e Collision Repairs M a rlo w AUTO PARTS, INC. e Free Estimates Fairfield 646 CENTER STREET • Frances Straightened MANCHESTER WITH PAP gives town . •ytu Rotorro Tho Rightit ToT< Voftfy Any EoHmoto'' will be happy to help you IBS MAIN STREET. MMANCHESTER AN CH EST~ 643-4317 Where Auto Parts Are Sold for Less p ro p o s a l with your needs. MON.-FRI. 8-5 welcomes Buy 1 Bulb at Reg Open Mon-Fri 8-8 Price - Get Second ANTI FREEZE By Alex GIrelll Sat 8-5 Sun 10-2 Bulb for .500 Herald Reparter For Your Convenience ALL president George Marlow, who owns the building at 869 Main St., has or call 643.4499 6014 Belts & Hoses proposed to combine eight of the 4000 Sale ^3.99 By Dennis C. AAliewskl chants from the crowd and set the apartments in the building into 4001 United Press International tone of his half-hour speech in four units as suggested by the '4651 1 0 % OFF which Reagan ripped Waiter Mon­ town’s Housing Code Enforcement 4652 per gallon Our Reg Low Prices FAIRFIELD — President Rea­ dale as a doomsayer and com­ Committee. gan had a little fun with Nathan pared Mondale’s view of the world The proposal is contained in a Hale Friday, but a flag-waving to the children's television show, letter to the committee from crowd of about 6.000 did not seem to “ Mister Roger’s Neighborhood.” Marlow’s attorney, John D. La- mind his joking reference to "But America is back, a giant Belle Sr., dated Friday. Connecticut's most famous Reagan said in his second The committee had asked that PENNZOIL patriot. campaign trip to Connecticut in some other apartments be com­ " I wouldn't want to claim he was about a month. "And you know bined. LaBelle said Friday even­ l O W - 4 0 THERMOSTATS a Republican," Reagan said on the something — that's not ing. But he said that was found to Go-Jo Hand be impractical. As a result, La- f o r l O O o f L for Most American historic Town Green, less than 50 debatable." feet from the spot where George Reagan lauded the economic and Belle asked in his letter that the n .i9 Cleaner Cars Washington stopped in 1789 for the defense policies of his administra­ committee grant variances for Ziebart QT. 18 oz. Reg. n.99 town's last presidential visit. tion and urged Democrats to three apartments from the re­ "That is almost as bad as my support the GOP in November. quirement that they contain 400 F j Rust Protection .. ^SCASOASd Reg. *1.59 *1.99 opponent invoking Harry Truman Supporters shouted "Four more square feet of space. g 'y z ie b o r t Reg. 4.79 to defend his defense policies.” years" and "U-S-A" despite The letter also asks for a delay 99C The remark drew cheers and gloomy skies and the threat of rain. until March 1 in the deadline for Iw n Point Protection 550 No. Main SI. completing work ordered on the rziebart Manchester, CT Dozens of Mondale supporters HerakJ photo by Tarquinio also attended the rally but did not building. The town has pressed M___ Interior II Protection (203) 647-9928 disrupt Reagan's speech. One man The Risley reservoir on Lake Street, repairs. But the repairs appear a long Marlow to bring the building up to A illon Housing Code standards. C T ^ e b a r t car carried an infant strapped to his once a scenic area, has become a mere way off because no one wants responsi- iv n Splash Guards back with a sign pinned to her tiny, Ronald Kraatz, town director of care PAP AUTO PARTS yellow raincoat: "What about my puddle because of a dam that needs bility for the problem. health, received the letter late man sentence is future?" Police said there were Friday and declined to comment SUPREME ^ ^ ___, incidents or arrests. on it until he has had a chance to Reagan spoke for about 30 study it. Mo.t Chip. * Sc ..tthr. f ui Cn.1 nl rt«w i LaBelle had said he would Before Winter:Ask about Zieb^t's' 5.iJn PCiicwccCK— Icwcc-f I V . Octi IVcticcI $ 33 9.95 75 years minutes in front of the Old Town Neighbors, officials lament 307 E. CENTER ST. MANCHESTER Hall where he later signed into law respond by Friday to proposals Rust-Eliminator for used cars a wetlands preservation bill that discussed at an Oct. 11 hearing by By Moragaret Jackson creates a wildlife refuge on islands the committee. LaBelle said hie Zteban wants to protect your car from ruttir^g. fading, staining and PRESIDENTIAL HELPING YOU IS OUR BUSINESS United Press International off the Connecticut coast. R isley fieseivofr’s sad state hopes the proposal will satisfy the stripping With Ziebart Rust Protection our exclusive sealants tools Thofnugh Sutlerr Sending. Macivne Serwhog committee. and lechniquas protect against ugly rust and is bached by a Lifetime of Rou^ Aipat. Tu^^Cnei of Pnowi Svelvf. $ 20 9.99 The Reagan administration once Limited Warranty While/lebari Paint Protection prevents fading our Acryiv Frwwnel Psmi CKvn Rehrd NEW HAVEN — A judge Friday opposed the measure and Connec­ By Tracy L. Geoghegon the fall, and at night the moon dam. Among them were the Besides asking for the variances Splash Guards protect egamsi chips and dings And whan you add sentenced Guillermo Aillon to 75 on space in three apartments, Ziebari interior Protection, your car s mside will be as beautiful as its REAR OF LENOX PHARMACY 6 4 9 - 3 5 2 8 ticut environmentalists called the Herald Reporter would shine off it." > Manchester Water Co. (whioh a« tenor years in prison for stabbing his bill signing ceremony “ an insult.” “ We’re not happy about it. We was bought out by the town), LaBelle’s letter asks for interior Right now ail this protection a specialty priced at StOO oft For beauti­ ful protection with an equally attractive price cut. tear or rip this out AMBASSADOR estranged wife and her parents to Protesters quietly passed leaflets Nobody seems to like seeing can see it from our house,” said Lydall Paper Co., John S. Risley wall variances on three others. He and bring to Ziebart Tisotough Sufiecp Sending A< iviv FiMmpI death II years ago. saying Aillon said that request follows a sugges­ Pevil Pehrd $ 1 5 9 .9 5 at the rally accusing Reagan of the Risley "R eservoir on the Ruth Lloyd of Lake Street in Jr., Pacific Manufacturing Co., SALE ENDS 10-31-84 was a liar and needed to be playing politics. Manchester-Bolton-Vernon Vernon. "M y opinion is that that Hartford National Bank i Trust tion made by Kraatz. "punished severely.” But the issues seemed to matter town line standing empty. But the Town of Manchester should Co., Benjamin Lyman, Salter & The letter proposes that nine Nobody halBsugly m ore than Z ieb a rt^ ' Handing down the maximum less than the excitement of seeing nobody seems to want to take repair it. They’re the ones that Strong, Mutual Manufacturing units not be rented and that Shop Hours: 646-7519 sentence. Superior Court Judge the president for many in the responsibility for correcting the use it.” Co., Keeney Fitzgerald & Co., another not be rented unless a lion, thru Frl.6 ain-B:0O pm William L. Hadden Jr said he was crowd who howled when Reagan problem, either. Lloyd and ateveral other William H. Jones and White bathroom is assinged to it. ■Ziebart Saturday B am-noon orr niT M n ■* not swayed by character witnesses launched into a series of jokes The problem is the dam — neighbors also said they worry Keeney Co. Answering an enforcement VEINON INDUSTRIAL PARK called during an emotional two- about Walter Mondale: specifically, a broken pipe that about fires, now that the reser­ “ What we've got is a broken order from the town, the letter Oarh Rd., Vtriwn POLYESTER SNpWS hour hearing who said they would OF • 'If my opponent's campaign runs through it. The pipe was voir' is unavailable to fire chain of titles, E le c tiv e deeds sayd that in 20 instances, correc­ FREE ESTIMATES go to prison if Aillon fled bail. were a television show, it would be causing the water level of the departments as a water source. and incomplete conclusions," tive work has been completed. The VERNON 8 7 2 -3 3 6 1 "H e destroyed the< Montano ‘Let’s Make a D eal,'" the president reservoir to gradually drop,- The DEP has been ordering Whitehead said. violations charged involved dam­ (Free FIcli-up and OelNtry family, killed the mother of his quipped. “ You get to trade your until late September, when town aged bathroom facilities, missing In Mancheeter area) repairs on the dam since it was The primary dispute over who X 7 ? -13 child and deprived his child of the prosperity for the surprise behind offlciats went in to investigate. cited as "high risk" by the should repair the dam is be­ and loose handrails, clogged venti­ love of her family, " said the judge the curtain.” After consulting with the state Army Corps of Engineers in tween Manchester and the lators, and too few electric outlets. in giving Aillon three consecutive • “If his campaign were a Department of Environmental 1978. That report said that estate of John S. Risley. In five instances of alleged sentences of 25 years, one for each Broadway show, it would be Protection, the town decided to several houses, a condominium The town’s official position is violations, the letter says the work death. ‘Promises. Promises.‘ If his ad­ drain the reservoir entirely in complex and and a church were that it has na interest in the will be done in the future. In two M ASTfRCA»ondVISAE78-14F7^^ "H e needs to be punished and he ministration were a novel, you‘d order to prevent erosion from in the flood plain of the reser­ dam, and no responsibility to instances it says some work has K S P THAT ORIGINAL needs to be punished severely." have to read it from back to front to collapsing the dam. voir. In addition, if Risley repair it. been done and the rest will be done the judge said. Hadden set bond at find a happy ending Reagan "F or public safety we thought flooded, two other reservoirs And Rlsley's heirs claim that after apartments are combined. $600,000. continued in rapid-fire delivery. we should open up the dam ," just below it could be over­ since the town owns the water In one instance it Says the work PURR-FORMANCE George Montano, a close relative The crowd was not disappointed. said Robert Young, town Water topped and damaged as well, rights, it has an obligation to fix can be done if a variance is f D m J E H IIIH of the victims, said, " I think justice granted. "It makes me proud to be an and Sewer Administrator. officials said. the dam, according to the DEP. has been served and I believe the • AUTO REPAIR CENTER • American again." said Lucille Now the reservoir is a mere But because it has been all but Representatives from both In two instances it says an family thinks so.” He left the Anzalone of Monroe as she pulled puddle. Neighbors lament the impossible to determine who parties are expected to sit down exterminator has treated the ROUTE 83 VERNON - OPPOSITE STEAK CLUB hearing with the deceased couple's JtByounton/ the string on her elephant gag cap loss of a natural resource, and owns the dam, state officials are with DE P officials at some point apartments and will continue to do surviving son, James. to make the ea r flap. Anzalone said town officials worry over what at a loss as to whose responsibil­ to try to work out a resolution th so on a fixed schedule. "The family can pick up what's she was a registered Democrat they will do without the water if ity H is to make what are likely the problem. The building has been the left of the pieces now," he said. ^ v ia SKCuus who voted Republican in 1980. She a drought should occur. to be expensive repairs. But Wesley Marsh, a field subject of controversy since ra i8 - UHCSin — M aOM T OWNHS Aillon, 46, was convicted Sept. 21 intends to do so again next month. “ It’s so ugly," said Barbara The case has become notor­ inspector for the DEP's Water March, when Marlow, a Main The LAZER BEAM of the Aug. 13. 1972, killings of "Reagan has caught the im agi­ Wilcox of Box Mountain Drive. ious on the state level as one of Resources division, could not be Street merchant, asked for assist­ Barbara Montano Aillon, 26. her When your new car needs coffision nation of the young,” said John "What is worse is what hap­ the most confuting and "sor­ specific about when that meet­ ance in evicting a tenant who had father J. George Montano, 49, a danvHIo repaired, your body shop wM Avery of Granby who took his pened to all the wildlife in it. It's did’'’ dam ownersUp disputes ing would take place. He said taken in several young people wealthy lumber dealer and real out GOAL — 100% QUAUn SERVICE suddenly be responsible for axle and WONT nephew, William Avery, and a kind of late now for all the fish they have seen. the Risley case is a low priority barred from the shelter for the estate developer, and her mother wheel alignment. Most shops cannot friend, Helen Gotten of Simsbury, and the turtles.” ‘ ‘Seventy-three people may or one now that the reservoir has homeless. EVERY CUCTOMER — EVERY VISn Bernice Montano, 46. do this total job. W e invested in the to the rally. Wilcox had permission from may not have an ownership, been drained and the imme­ A subsequent inspection resulted I Wm'vm h W iAImJ our affotta !• •mura yau larrica riwi't samnd la nana. Their bodies were discovered in Universal Lazer Beam AHgirer.'** the Later in the day, Reagan told the late John Risley, who owned interest in the dam. And I’m not diate danger removed. in a finding that there were 82 Yau con rati 05iura and tsa- ■ Repairs themselves might cost . Parts — made overseas where the cars are I \ ImM ss ue ^ quarts MilaNrnR si, deliberating in the third trial of the up his prospects in traditionally losing a member'of the fam ily." commissioned by the DEP downtown Main Street are planned made. So, whatever you drive we have the ' I ItaNaoeh mi Mm and imidhiisa. Ofa> | ...... ■ long running case, deliberated 6 as much as $100,000, he added. im III iq i» p id ■■bifii n liM iy higbM. Z I I [7 1 m t o t a l v e h i c l e A U Q N E i Democratic New York area sub­ "It's very sad," she said. "It throughout the 1970s turned up "It's a sordid affair," he said. after the Marlow case is over, hours and 45 minutes before right parts for it — the right quality and the fm BseaaCbdsrN*.______Y l I urbs. signing a wetlands bill was a beautiful spot. The leaves dozens of groups and individu­ "It's going to take forever to officials have said. nia*iaunKi A a e S •FREE ESTIMATES finding Aillon guilty. benefiting the Connecticut shore right fit to keep your car performing at its N n o B B I were reflected in tile water in als that might somehow own the iron out. It’s not very hopeful." At the Oct. 11 hearing, a | l *15.45 and capping the day with a rally in best. The right price, too! Call us. ANT am iC AlU TAXIS fXTIA ANTAIWCABIIAIISiXnA. S ■ *LOANERCARS Please turn to page 10 continuation of the one on Oct. 2, . ^VAUOS9TiAllfl4XTOMI. IttA VAUD OCTOiat IM4 | I Hackensack. N.J. Marlow sphke of his poor and 10IH ANNnfnSAUY elderly tenants, charging that the """i5iirt"uu3iE$""'* town had failed to provide for them GIVEAWAY DRAWING "wHiuAiiTm a"" properly. "Itputsanunfairburden . • FUADlfVeeUWICS a M SOLYINT SKCIAI . on the landlord, and I feet It has to e FAOl • msMcnoN 08 Indudsc esfta and iartalBiwn sf twa I Polish Communists call for security purge stop," he said. FOR FREE T.V. wifs* Uada fsMb aad saa n ai can si la*d URt^CIsa* wtaddusid wacbs* isla- ^ By Bogdan Turek AND OTHER GREAT PRIZES NsacsacaaseaSt I | Committee take a stand during this Internal Affairs, and in employees • an wmm hukw* had mM « United Press International abduction of the priest to stir up but there has been no word of his (no purchase neceaaary) w hPile dwrt by mi m Ow session to condemn the kidnapping headed by the Ministry of Interior. trouble for Jaruzelski. ““jss:^*8.80 I as an act of dangerous banditry whereabouts. • • » » # * • • • • • • • • • » » « » « « « IwwilMrt* I I ANY AfnJCABlfTAXB EXTRA | I Czeslaw Kiszczak,” a friend of Politburo member Jozef Czyrek, n fM mrm nmU w tmm ftm Nid. Mn Mw wy. I I ■’ WARSAW, Poland - Poland's OCT08B , 1084 ■ which has shocked the people of Jaruzelski. I UMrt> • N mI hflM Vmrt UMd. yM yay VAUD in a report to the committee on the Primate Jozef Glemp expressed Drawing: December 21,1984 r m mdmmtmmmmmtmimtatammmredfmnmm ruling Communist Party Friday Poland," Jaruzelski said in an It praised police and security fears Friday the priest had been lllSIC IU I O O S j ''I hAwbebda^ tm wrt 8a « Aaa 8iaa condemned the "provocative" kid­ kidnapping, blamed "forces hos­ yaWt hea hhei ueean rtaeaae* al ewW. leM address broadcast nationwide. services, but implied there were found dead, and in a sermon called I I ** *?*** ** F** ***** **** ****^ "** * napping of a pro-Solidarity priest tile to our motherland who want to chaA Ow baa IdaMwa The Central Committee ordered corrupt elements within the forces, antagonize church and state and on the nation to be "calm and not to 76 poboi- 2 Mctiom OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK UFETIME and called for a purge of "crim i­ J ' an immediate investigation of the saying "the few criminals, provo­ be carried away by emotions and nals” within the security forces push them into a deep conflict.” You Name it — We Hat'e it or We'll Get It! SOMCE kidnapping, and asked the "polit- cateurs and agents of the evil Popieluszko, an ardent suppor­ hatred." A'*''.'" » GUARANTEE amid rumors the outspoken cleric buro to review the party’s surveil­ cause do not change this general had been found dead. ter of the outlawed Solidarity " I hearjiis body was found," a Cloiiltlid...... li-lt Y9I, WiOflw: lance of chosen areas of socio­ evaluation." union, was abducted from his car The statement by the party political life, especially the clerk in a 'Torun government office |“u,^,nmanti;:;;: ii WE MONOB visa MASTEBCABD OIHEBS Clue INTERSATiOSA. AMERICAN CUNLIFFE "The Central Committee calls on Oct. 19 by three men, one of them Central Committee was issued internal security.” said F rid ay in a telephone jackpot eingo...... AUTOMOTIVE PARTS SUPPLY EXPRESS CARTE BlANCHE FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE a u t o b o d v * b w lM M s I m all the party members and state posing as a police officer, as he was ....2 / after Polish leader Gen. Wojciech interview. Lotttrv...... '..’..2 640HU1AR0ST. Call lor Appomlman* 0-