Penri state wins Fiesta Bowi... page 7

Sunny, clear; Manchester, Conn. cloudy Sunday Sat.. Jan. 2, 1982 — See page 2 Hrralh 25 Cents Allen likely to lose job

By Helen Thomas ficial said. “'There has been some UPl White House Reporter shopping around” among officials to find out who is in charge, he said. By United Press International ' PALM SPRINGS, Calif. - Presi­ It was also clear that Allen’s per­ dent Reagan has all but decided to sonality conflicts with Secretary of Connecticut ushered in 1982 with a replace embattled Richard Allen as State Alexander Haig, sources said, rash of incidents, several deaths, a the White House’s national security and that was a key factor in influen­ suspicious fire and wet weather but adviser, a senior administration of­ cing the decision on Allen. no traffic deaths in the first 24 hours ficial said Friday. Clark, who Is vacationing in of the New Year’s holiday. Allen’s likely replacement is California with Reagan, could not be One holiday celebrant was shot to Deputy Secretary of State William reach for comment. death in New Haven, two policemen Clark, a long-time Reagan friend Allen, contacted by Independent were run down by a hit-run motorist and former California judge. Television News Association, said in Woodbridge, a Bristol man was The senior official said the foreign the suggested upgrading of the charged with wounding his parents. policy structure at the White House security adviser’s job “strikes me On Thursday night, a man died in will upgraded and direct access to as a reasonable idea.” But he had no a Bridgeport package store shooting the president by the adviser will be comment on reports he soon might and a young ^ rl d i^ from exposure restored. Such access was taken be out of a job. after falling into the Quinebaug away from Allen several months The Justice Department cleared River in Danielson. ago and he was reduced to writing Allen on Dec. 23 of any impropriety On Connecticut highways, state daily memos on national security, in his business dealings and in police reported no fatal accidents in developments that were transmitted accepting $1,000 from Japanese the 24 hours since the holiday period to Reagan. journalists for help in arranging an began at 6 p.m. Thursday. However, The recommendation to bolster interview with Nancy Reagan. But there, were a total of 82 accidents the powers of the national security the White House is still reviewing with 21 injuries and 83 arrests for adviser was made to the president his case and he has been on ad­ motor vehicle violations, including by White House Counselor Edwin ministrative leave pending a final three for drunken driving. Meese last week. The president is decision on his future. Snow and rain that began falling expected to make decisions on Allen The Washington Post first before m idni^t accumulated less and the job in that order' shortly reported Friday that changes were than expect^ but driving was after he returns to the White House contemplated in the national securi­ hazardous as the temperature from his California vacation Sun­ ty adviser's post and that it was hovered around the freezing mark day. expected Allen would be replaced. before giving way to warmer, rainy The president’s current thinking is White House sources have said weather during the day. to replace Allen, the official said. It Allen's chief liability may be that In Woodbridge, two policemen Herald photo by Tarquinlo was understood that Meese’s first the wide investigation and extensive were struck by a car as they con­ choice as a replacement was Clark. publicity given his case almost in­ ducted a routine auto check about “I think the first decision that has variably brought up Nancy Reagan's 2:45 a.m. on New Year’s Day. First baby of 1982 to be made concerns what happens name and his White House position. Patrolinen James Wilson, 32, and to Dick Allen,” the official said, ad­ Sources cited by the Post said the A. Thomas Pepe, 28, of Derby, were ,,Andrew Thomas Punay, the first baby born long wsy from their Wales, M ass^hom e but ding it ‘‘will probably come the first move was motivated noi oiilj 'o . ! strwdi by die daiic-colored car that at Manchester Memorial Hospital In the new came to Manchester to have Andrew so Mrs. part of next week.” notoriety of Allen's problems but sped off toward Bethany. year rests in his mother Sandra’s arms Dunay could remain under the care of the One of the main reason for also by a consensus among the top Both officers were admitted to oblivious to the distinction. The eight- doctor she had while living In Storrs. Andrew restructuring the adviser’s job is to White House staff that the national Yale-New Haven Hospital where pound, nine-ounce boy was born at 12:44 Is the winner of the Manchester Herald’s “firm up” appoint of contact for security apparatus had not worked tlK^ were listed in guarded but p.m. Friday. It’s the flrbt baby for Mrs. Dunay "First Baby" contest and the Dunay family coordinating foreign policy effectively in the administration's stable condition. will receive prizes from 10 area businesses. decisions in the White House, the of­ first year. In Bristol, police charged Joseph and her husband, Timothy. The couple are a Campagna, S3, with shooting his parents at his home over an undeter­ mined incident early Friday. Police said John Campagna Sr. received a minor bullet wound but Resist mutiny, Polish security says ^>parently suffered a heart attack and was Usted in critical condition By United Press Intf^atlonal Warsaw radio had announced against political subversion in­ still at liberty in Poland, Warsaw The Commission for Economic at New Britain General Hospital. Reform announced in Warsaw this His wife, Angelina, 65, was listed ’Tuesday that “college studies in dicated the regime was nevertheless union leader Zbigniew Bujak, has Poland’s Internal security chief certain categories” would resume ' worried about underground appeals just issued a message appealing to week that Polish industry would be in fair condition at Hartford called on the army and police charged steep price increases for its Hospital with several bullet wounds. next Friday, Jan. 8. But the by the Solidarity union. the troops’ nationalistic instincts, Friday to resist Solidarity’s call for authorities apparently were still too Interior Minister Czeslaw Kii^zc- urging them to follow their con­ supplies of basic commodities — the Campagna was held in 3200,000 mutiny against the martial 'law concerned about the possibility of zak’s New Year message to the sciences before the orders of their price of crude oil used by industry bond for a Superior Court hearing regime, and the government began unrest in the politically active un­ police and security services, as Communist superiors. will go up 620 percent, for example Monday on two charges of explaining complex new price in­ iversities to consider reopening the carried by Warsaw radio, called on — as part of a general program to attempted felony murder. creases. entire 275,000-student system. the troops to demonstrate “political Food, fuel and clothing prices reduce or eliminate subsidies. John Pujols, 30, was shot to death In Vatican City, Pope John Paul II Although Warsaw radio has broad­ maturity, steadfastness and went up in Poland Jan. 1, part of the Industries were told they could early Friday when he argued with a made a dramatic and urgent appeal cast almost uniformly cheerful resistance to the campaign of government’s longstanding plan for pass along their increased costs to man over continuing a New Year’s for peace in his homeland, coupling feports about life returning to nor­ calumny by internal enemies and economic reform. The government consumers, but government Eve party in his home. his New Year’s blessing with an out­ mal under martial law, Friday’s their foreign sponsors.” has begun distributing brochures overseers were expected to limit State police picked up Calixto spoken defense of the now-banned warning to troops to be vigilant The top-ranking Solidarity official explaining its pricing program. price rises for food. Rodriguez, 41, of West New York, Polish trade union. N.J., a half hour later on the He called Solidarity “part of the Connecticut Turnpike in Westport. , current patrimony of the workers of He was charged with murder and my homeland and I would say of Pope praises union, appeals for peace held in $100,000 bond for court Mon­ other nations.” day. A prominent Communist Party of­ Two deaths were reported ficial in Moscow, Georgy Arbatov, VATICAN CITY (DPI) - Pope greetings, John Paui, calling for the history of man,” the pope thanked the people carrying them Thursday night. conceded the decision to impose John Paul H, in his most outspoken himself “a son of Poland,” for their support and proceded to martial law on Poland was “pain­ said. Police said Eriberto Soto, 28, was defense of Solidarity, praised the un­ dedicated nearly ali of his prepared make his strongest defense ever for ful” and “unpleasant.” But, he address and his extemporaneous “May prayer become a force for shot to death as be allegedly bran­ ion Friday as one of Poland’s finest all of us. May it become the force the Polish trade union whose ac­ added, the military action was “an accomplishments and made an remarks to a personal appeal for tivities sparked the deciaration of dished a knife in the E-Z Package internal affair ... (that) does not by for my co-nationals, as it has so Store about 7 p.m. urgent appeal for peace in his peace in his homeiand, which has martial law on Dec. 13. itself mean any violation of the com­ been under martial law for 20 days. many times in the course of the cen­ A clerk, Angel Reyes, told police homeland. turies. May the heritage of tKe “This word (Solidarnosc) is the monly recognized norms of inter­ expression of a great effort that he fired at Soto in self defense, national law.” The pope told some 50,000 people rights of man, of real liberty, and of ^ l i c e said the case was under in­ gathered in St. Peter’s Square for “May the Lord spare you from peace', which is the work of men of work have made in my As the third full week of military violence, spare you from a state of homeland to assure the real dignity vestigation. rule in Poland came to a close, the his New Year’s Day address that the generations, not be dissipated. May outcome of the Polish situation “is war, of siege. May the Lord grant the heritage of these latest difficult of work, of the worker. In fact, the In Danielson, Sonya Stueber, 7, authorities announced all elemen­ you peace. While I thank all men workers have a right to establish died of exposure about she fell tary and high schools would rec^n important not only for one country months not be dissipated,” he said. but important for the history of who in these days pray for Poland, I I autonomous unions, whose duty it is through thin ice into the Quinebaug Monday. The country’s entire ask them to continue praying. We :^man.” After his prepared remarks the to guard their (workers’) sociai, River. educational system was shut down deal with a problem important not pope noticed several large Solidar- familial, and individual rights, " The holiday was also marked by a as one of the first decrees under After expressing New Year’s only for one country but important nosc banners in the square. He John Paui said. general alarm fire in Meriden ttot martial law. , taivestigators said may have been wt. The pre-dawn blaze destroyed the House of Pewter, a one and a half story building on Oiarles street. Silver City Glass, a business in an adjacent four story factory building, suffered some smoke and fire damage in the blaze which took firemen two hours to put under con­ trol.

Advice ...... Churches ;. • • • • • • ® Classifled .. * • •••••*' Editorial ;...... 4 Entatainmeat » Lottery •* O U tw ^es'...... Herald photo by Pinto Television ...... Weather...... » Looking ahead

One of the major events of 1982 In Manchester will be the opening of the gigantic J.C. Penney retail storage center. See page 5. THE HERALD, Sat., Jan. 2. 1982 - 3 2 - THE HERALD. Sat., Jan. 2, 1982 Government 1982 Store Hours& 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Daily Fri. 8 a.m.-10 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.-4 p.m, Meet the Herald's Lack of money several younger members of the She’s married to Chuck Plese and As the. old year ends and the New headlines, selection of stories, editorials and columns. engagements, ubuuaries and such. staff, in age and terms of service, the couple has three children. Year begins, the editorial staff of editing local and wire copy, writing As city editor, Girelli supervises She loves cats and kids and her am­ the Herald’s four Manchester bition is to someday run a home for joined the Herald last February. Lisa Zowada has been on the the Herald thinks it would be nice and covering sports events. His Herald staff for four month^. She’s You Be He’s a native of Enfleld~lnKl still for the readers to become a little biggest event of the year is the an­ reporters,making their assignments wayward or orphaned animals. lives there. His beat is local politics business reporter and also covers more acquainted with them, es- nual Turkey Day roadrace. and editing their copy. He meets biggest issue DOUG BEVINS^ joined the and town government. He’s been the police beat. She has a long list of . pecially those who are behind the Adele Angle, Focus editor, joined with them regularly each week to Herald staff more than 10 years ago working that beat since September. hobbies: she plays classical piano scenes most of the time. the Herald staff in October and discuss current news happenings as a reporter-photographer. He then Before that he was East Hartford and folk guitar, composes a tune The and plan the following days’ news Dan Fitts, who is editor and as resides in Manchester. She oversees moved on to becomo- suburban now and then, plays basketball,’ By Paul Hendrie some layoffs,” he added. the pages in the Focus section, coverage. reporter. such oversees the operation of the editor and wire editor and just this hikes, goes camping (even in Herald Reporter NEXT IN LINE for extended, ser­ Nancy Thompson reports on PENNY SAID the directors should be editorial staff, has held the position which contains feature stories she past October he was named news winter), and cross-country skiing vice at the Herald is Reggie Pinto education and social services. She’s more open than in the past to the idea of since July. He recently moved to and her staff write, weddings, editor. He’s responsible for the and swims. She prefers being out­ “ Money talks,” they say, but the lack who has been a staff photographer been on the staff for seven months. buying new equipment that can provide 725 EAST MIDDLE TPKE. MANCHESTER, CT. Judge Manchester.. engagements, club notes and such. of money is what the Board of Directors selection and display of news in each She came to the Herald from side to inside and has a Siamese cat Before coming to the Herald he She also writes a column each week. for more than 28 years. He can be will spend most of its time talking about services more efficiently, (R f 6 OPPOSITE ST. BARTHOLOMEW CHURCH) day’s Herald. Wilmette, 111., a suburb of Chicago, named Tai. was managing editor of the West She’s a graduate of Syracuse seen about town with his familiar Len Auster, sportswriter, working in the coming year. ib is, he said, would qllow the town to cameras. He covers the night beat and she w ork^ for the Independent- A1 Tarquinio works the day shift Hartford News and before that he University’s Newhouse School and with Yost, has been with the paper " I think the biggest issue we will face trim later costs— a leading expense— in and has photographed many major Register in Libertyville, HI. She was on the photography staff. He’lkbeen worked with Richard Diamond, worked for the lifestyle, staff of the since 1973. He, as well as Yost, also (s easy to identify,” Mid Democratic the long-run, to pay back the short-term bom and raised in Buffalo, N.Y. She with the Herald about a year. He publisher of the Herald and former Syracuse Herald-Journal before events in his 28 years. writes a column about the sports Mayor Stephen T. Penny. “ Cutback investment. One of his favorite pastimes is and her husband went to Buffalo for and his beard can be seen about For example. Penny pointed to the owner of the Trumbull Times. And returning to her hometown of West scene in general. management will be the toughest ques­ Hartford to work for the West Hart­ fishing. He also loves good music the Christmas weekend and were town. His trademark is the big purchases of word processing equip­ WALL TO WALL DISCOUNTS before that he was a general assign­ tion we face.” He covers the schoolboy athletics snowed in for a day. ment reporter for the now defunct ford News for four years. and Portugal, because that’s where camera case he lugs around. His ' ’Die question of how to provide public ment. beat extensively, along with the Richard Cody, who now lives in favorite friend is Jiis dog, Mandy. Hartford Times. He foolishly likes She likes to run, swim, collect an­ he was born. University of Connecticut. basket­ services with less money occupied much “ It has already led to savings and has Barbara Richmond, now a Andover, was bom in New York Ci­ to challenge Sports Editor Earl Yost tique postcards, hates people who ball team. He too has to be an early Scot A. French, who also writes Of the board’s time and energy last year. made it possible to eliminate one-and- member of the Focus staff, is also a ty. He covers the news, for the towns one-half positions, so far,” he said.! to a game of tennis, and also enjoys say “ synergy” and she’s always riser. His day starts at the crack of about town government, joined Already, popular services like vacuum SPAM long-time employee. She started at of Bolton, Andover and Coventry. 12oz. can hukts wanted a food processor but can’t the staff in September. Before the ’There is yet another way to balance K" playing hockey, dawn as does Yost’s. leaf collection and twice-a-week trash the Herald and left for a few years He also does his own photography Yost is the oldest employee, at afford one. JoAnn Dalton, who hails from Herald he served as collection tove been cut. the books, DiRosa noted. now has been back for about 12 work for those areas. least in terms of years of service. Alex Girelli, city editor, is Georgia and who has the nice reporter/managlng editor of the Penny said the combination of deep “ You could raise taxes,” he said. “ But years. Before joining the Focus He plays guitar and fiddle in a He observed 37 years with the catching up with Yost in terms of southern accent to prove it, joined Mondadnock Ledger, a weekly federal and state budget cutbacks, com­ nobody wants to do that.” Herald last April. He likes being longevity. He celebrated 30 years staff shd was reporter covering the Bluegrass band on weekends. He’s newspaper in Peterborough, N.H, the staff as copy editor in bined with the impact of inflation on DiRosa, who serves on the bipartisan challenged to a game of tennis, his with the Herald this year. When he Town of Vernon for many years. She been on the Herald staff for a year. He also served as editor-in-chief o( 1.19 September. Her duties include Susan Plese is the third member local funds, will leave the town with e^ budget committee this year with new II .00 very favorite sport. joined the staff he was part of a also worked pt one time for the the college newspaper at Syracuse KRAFT « - HORMEL REGULAR OR HOT assisting with editing and layout, fewer dollars than last year. Deputy Mayor Barbara B. Weinberg, has 19 The sport pages have the earliest news staff of two and one half former Rockville Journal and was of the Focus staff. She joined the University and free-lanced for the MAYONNAISE...... qt.Jar writing headlines and photo cap­ “ I think it will get considerably worse said he will be more outspoken than CHILI WITH BEANS...... isoz 7 9 * deadline so Yost said he even gets reporters. He worked as a city Vernon bureau chief for the Hart­ Herald in October on a part-time Syracuse New Times, Boston kRAFT tions. this year and it will continue to g it worse before in pointing out Republican views up before Bob Steele each morning. reporter for six years and became ford Times for seven years. She also basis and will join the staff as a full­ Monthly Magazine and the MIRACLE WHIP ...... 16oz.|ar09' , ; CAKE MIXES ...... 5 9 * Before she came to the Herald she time reporter on Monday. She has after that for several more years,” added on the budget that differ from the He opens the doors at the office assistant city editor in 1957 with the served as suburban editor at one Brookline Citizen. DINTY MOORE IQ was reporter and editor in Savan­ Penny. Democratic views. ^ A f \ e between 5 and 5;30 a.m. He's major responsibility of training time at the Herald. been a part-time lecturer at ...... 24 07. can ...... 140countpkg. nah, Ga. His hobbies are photography, “ Yes, it will be tougher than last BEEF STEW NAPKINS responsible for monitoring sports reporters. In 1966 he was made city She writes feature articles for Manchester Community College 8UNSWECT -rr\& FOLQER politics, and rock and reggae music. year,” agreed Republican Director The Republicans have been criticized $069 news and photo wire services, story editor. He also writes some Focus as well as doing weddings P A U L HENDRIE, one of the since 1969. Her avocation is theater. by some, including their Chairman, Cur­ PRUNE JUICE ...... qt. bottle INSTANT CCFFEE lOoz. )sr Peter P. DiRosa Jr. "It will require a PFEireR - ALL VARIETIES r » / * J n n MRS. BUTTERWORTH more intricate analysis of priorities.” tis M. Smith, for going along with $•^39 Democratic proposals too quietly. This, SAN-AD DRESSINGS...... soz botti. 2/^1™ SYRUP...... 24 oz. bottle NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST I - Z - 8 * ' Penny also thought the board will have SWEET LIFE to decide what sei^ces people really de­ the critics said, left the Republicans with 3/$1oo 29.77 2®*^^ 30.00.,®?-2^s PUREX BLEACH ...... oai. 59® TENDER PEAS mand and what ones are expendable. no issues of their own at election time. LIBBY'S CUT GREEN OR seatxTC News Briefing ‘"The town should not look to com- But DiRosa said he will stop far short BATHRCCM TISSUE...... 6pack=^l" FRENChT tyUe BEANS...... i6oz, 3 /^ 1 °° 30.00 \)Tomise all services with across-the- of the old system, where each party GEISHA PRINCE THIN SPAGHETTI OR _ _ m|ard cuts, but to prioritize services and produced its own proposed budget. CHUNK LIGHT T U N A ...... esoi./S® ELBCWS...... 1 lb. pkg. 3 9 * 30.24J / A I pr^erve the important ones,” he said. Penny predicted the board will con­ i v r • t" Tnh^ mayor said there are no new or tinue to operate in a bipartisan manner, !h u l Dozier’s wife SAN PIUNCtSCO \ lOENVEN easy approaches to balancing the books. especially since this is not an election “ Fundamentally, .there are two alter­ year. WITH THIS COUPON & A ‘ 10 % USDA CHOICE BEEF PURCHASE EXCLUDING COUPON ITEM FRESH PERDUE ^ offered hope LO^AH"* natives,” he said. “ One is to promote the . ANOTHER ISSUE that will continue & TOBACCO CHUCK HIGHEST»ME8T growth of the grand list, by further I to face the board is the problems with’ OVEN TEMPERATURESM P ER A T U R E6 development and we’re doing that, for VERONA, Italy (U P I) -U.S. Am- iM IA M I meeting town affirmative action hiring ■ STEAK or GROUND ,^ _ ^ s s a d o r to Italy Maxwell Rabb Friday example, by the proposal to develop the CHICKEN OF THE SEA STUFFERS ItOtNO------W-A goals. 5 to 7 lb. average , Dtbught the wife of kidnapped American industrial park by Union Pond and the Penny said the goals have become un­ ROAST BEEF (Bone In Center Cut) General James Dozier personal | ^ P " A " 1'/■*■1-0 * proposal to renovate the Cheney Historic realistic, because with diminishing District. TUNA messages of “ hope” from President funds, the town won’t be hiring anyone, 6.5 oz. can Reagan and Secretary of State UPI WEAIMEB FOTOCA8T P< “ The only other alternative js for ali of blafk or white. Alexander Haig. us to decide we will not receive some of The housing shortage is another Tower owners ‘"They (the messages) expressed great the municipal services we have come to problem the board will continue to lb. concern and syrtipathy and hope that in expect.” face. this new year the hopes of Mrs. Dozier DiRosa, the board’s minority leader, say fioors OK about her husband are realized,” Rabb said services will be cut, but he was not NEITHER PENNY nor DiRosa Good Sun. Jan. 3 to Sat. Jan. 9 said to reporters after his visit with 47- Weather too pessimistic. thought opposition to the planned in­ AT PIC an SAVE HARTFORD (U PI) — The owners of a yearold Judith Dozier in her central “ I don’t think you’re eoin)lh to see a dustrial park at Union Pond, which sur­ SEMI-BCNELESS UNDERBLADE CHUCK RCAST ...... ib. * 1 .3 8 16-story office tower and a city-hired Verona apartment. drastic decrease in servlC6h,” he said. faced as the old year wound down, will YANKEE PCT RCAST Bone In, From Chuck...... ib. * 1 .2 8 consultant say tests show floors in the ■ Rabb, who also met with the Verona “ A lot depends on what happens with the snowball into a long-running controver­ USDA CHClCE BCNELESS SHCULDER RCAST ...... ib. * 1 .7 8 “ stilts building" can withstand weights police chief, said he was confident that state and if they can get their fiscal act sy, like last year’s dispute between Multi-Circuits Inc. and the Holl Street SHCULDER CUT LCNDCN BRCIL STEAK...... ib * 1 .8 8 they were designed to hold. the Italian police were doing all possible Today’s forecast together, we may get a better-picture. WITH this coupon S A ‘ 10 ' “ The state is quick to mandate neighborhood. The tests were conducted by a New to retrieve the one-star general abducted PURCHASE EXOLUDINQ COUPON ITEM BEEF SHCRT RIBS FRCM CHUCK ...... ib. * 1 .5 8 “ Multi-Circuits'was much more com­ York firm hired by the building’s owners two weeks'’ ago by a well-schooled Red Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island: Partly programs, 1>nt they haven’t contributed a TOBACCO after execessive cracking and sagging Brigades gang from his Verona apart­ to mostly sunny Saturday, highs 30 to 35 except 20s money for the mandates.” plicated,” said Penny. “ You had conflic­ CUBE STEAKS FRCM CHUCK...... ib. * 2 .1 8 floors were reported. ment. western highlands. Clear, cold Saturday night, in- Both directors agreed that personnel ting interest side-by-side. I think Union CHARMIN FRESH GRCUND CHUCK any size pkg...... lb * 1 .6 8 Forensic examinations of the Red creasihB^louds extreme west'by morning, lows lOto 15 will be laid off only as a last resort. Pond is an absolutely appropriate site ’The results were “ perfect, better than SAMMY BRAND SMCKED SHCULDER ...... ib. 8 8 * perfect,” said David Chase, whose Chase \ A Brigades communiques issued during the interior; 20 to 25 coast. Sunday, increasing cloudiness “ Our policy on personnel cutbacks will for an industrial park.” BATHROOM Family Partnership jointly owns the of­ Dozier kidnapping showed they were' with rain or snow developing west to east by late, highs be to avoid them wherever we can, but DiRosa agreed. WHCLE SIRLCIN HIPS Sliced to order, 13 to t sib, average Ib * 1 .4 9 typed on the same machine used by the there will be some,” said Penny. “ If this does become a controversial TISSUE fice building with Olympia & York Hart­ 30 to 40. PERDUE FRESH CCRNISH HENS...... 2 pack ib * 1 .0 8 ford Inc. kidnappers of Montedison executive Maine; Mostly sunny and windy Saturday, highs in the As an example, he cited the pending issue, it wiil be because of forces we 4 Roll Pack “ I have no question of doubt, any doubt Giuseppe Taliercio and Alfa Romeo teens north to low 30s coastal south. Fair Saturday recommendation to combine the can’t control,” he said. SWIFT’S BUTTERBALL TURKEYS le -ie ibs...... ib 8 3 * whatsoever, we have no problem in the executive Renzo Sandrucci earlier this positions of personnel supervisor and But then, as 1981 often showed, UPI photo night, lows from 10 below far north to low teens coastal FRESH STCRE MADE ITALIAN SAUSAGE Hot or Sweet . . ,b * 1 .6 8 year. assistant general manager. seemingly trivial issues often have a way building, no structural problem in the south. Fair north and east sections but clouding up with CCLCNIAL CENTER CUT BACCN ...... ib * 1 .4 8 building,” Chase said Thursday. the chance of snow in the southwest Sunday, highs in the “ We would try to make any cuts of becoming controversies once they Robert W. Bounds, a West Hartford teens north to 20s south. through attrition, but there may be reach the Board of Directors. Good Sun. Jan. 3 to Sat Jan. 9 engineer hired by the city to observe Today In history New Hampshire, Vermont; Mostly sunny and windy AT PIC an SAVE FISH DEPT. tests, said areas examined on the 15th Legal hassles On Jan. 2, 1968, Dr. Christian Barnard performed his second Saturday, highs in the teens north to low 30s coastal sec- FRESH PCLLACK FILLETS ...... ib. * 1 .4 8 floor “ tested aH right.” ijons. Fair Saturday night, loWs from 5 below far north successful heart transplant. He tells nevusmen gathered Outside the Min^ities 1982 FRESH CCD FILLETS ...... ib. * 2 .3 8 delay rescue ' to low teens along the coast, clouding up with the chance I Groote Schuur Hospital In Capetown, South Africa, that thl^operatlon of snow Sunday, highs in the teens north to 20s south. was better than the first. HONOLULU, Hawaii (U PI) — A Cana­ WITH THIS COUPON & A *10 Deaths mount dian family shipwrecked on a remote PURCHASE EXCLUDING COUPON ITEM South Pacific atoll must wait until Satur­ dairy savings Blacks review & TOBACCO during holiday day for an airlift back to civilization, the Soviet defector is buried rescue pilot said Friday. (barter pilot Fred C. Sorenson said BOUNTY By United Press International legal problems with the Island’s owner PORTLAND, Ore. (U P I) - A rare English and Russian over Tarasov’s Almanac forced him to scrap plans to rescue John BUTTERMILK BISCUITS . „ 5 / » 1 . 0 0 New Year's revelers straggling home layer of snow covered Willamette casket, draped in an American flag. Harrison, 39, an Industrial designer from o w e l s IMPERIAL O 7 $ ^ r \ C \ discovered streets and highways iced National Cemetery Thursday during the “ Far from his homeIand,9hls wife and gains in 1981 V Vancouver, British Columbia, and his MARGARINE nb qtrs^/ I .UU with sleet and snow Friday and the first child, he apparently was seeking a burial of a Soviet defector who jumped two daughters off the island Friday. traffic deaths were reported in the long freedom every human heart desires,” he By United Press International MRS. FILBERT’S off a bridge to his death because he was Harrison and his daughters Michelline, holiday weekend. said. MARGARINE SPREAD ..... 2 lb. bowl * 1 . 1 9 unable to bring his family to America. 20, and Kristen, 13, were stranded on Today is Saturday, Jan. 2, the second day of 1982, with A UPI count in the early afternoon BREAKSTONE'S Palmyra island after the mast of their 363 to follow. ' By Nancy Thompson town,” he said. showed 40 traffic deaths nationwide “ God creates everyone and permits The services were held at a Portland Although the town did not hire a SOUR CREAM . 16 OZ.'8 9 * since the New Year’s holiday weekend everyone to exist so they fulfill the pur­ 45-foot sailboat broke in a storm. The ’The moon is approaching its first quarter. Herald Reporter Good Sun. Jan. 3 to Sat. Jan. 9 funeral home, which performed the younger daughter has refused to set foot The morning stars are Venus, Mars, Jupiter and minority member as a police officer. AT PIC an SAVE SWEET LIFE began at 6 p.m, local time ’Thursday. The pose of life. To accomplish this, one burial at no charge. Under doctorine of The minority community in on another boat. Saturn. Smith said he counts the recruitment 6 9 * holiday will officially end at midnight must have freedom,” the Rev. Anastssy ■ the Orthodox Church of America, Manchester made significant gains CREAM CHEESE “ It looks like its going to be put off un­ ’The evening star is Mercury. drive as a success because several of the Sunday. of the St. Nicholas Orthodox Church said Tarasov was not entitled to a full church during 1961, a spokesman for black FROM PASTA ITALIANA til tomorrow morning while we get the ’Those bom on the date are under the sign Of applicants for the positions were Florida, packed with holiday sun during the brief ceremony for Nikolay V. funeral because he took his own life. FRESH PASTA .Ibpkg. * 1 . 5 8 releases and legal paperwork Capricorn. / residents said. minorities. Three blacks passed the seekers, reported nine deaths. Penn­ Tarasov. , “ In the last two weeks we assessed our straightened out,” including “ liability British General James Wolfe, the hero of Quebec, was written test, but did not rank high enough sylvania and Michigan reported six goals for ttfe year and how well we met to be considered for employment under WITH THIS COUPON & A ‘ 10 Tarasov lived in Portland for aiiraut releases, hold-harmless agreements, bora Jan. 2, 1727. deaths each and Georgia and Indiana The 27-year-old immigrant, who fled them,” Frank J. Smith said. “ We the town’s current hiring procedure. PURCHASE EXCLUDING COUPON ITEM three years. He sensed in the U.S. that sort of thing,” Sorenson said Friday. On this date in history: followed with four each. his homeland in 1977, jumped to his death exceeded them, quite frankly, “ We were called upon, specifically in a TOBACCO The National Safety Council predicted Monday from the Ross Island Bridge in Marines for eight months, hoping that ’The island — 1,100 miles southwest of ■ In 1788, Georgia ratified the Constitution and was ad­ frozen foods overwhelmingly.’’ the police case, (to recruit minority between 300-400 people would lose their downtown Portland. Friends said / ''m ilitary service might help him in his Honolulu — is privately owned and mitted to the Union. . Smith cited several achievements applicants) and we did our job,” SmlUi Value Pack lives during the long weekend and that Tarasov was despondent over his inabili-/ fight to reunite his family. Sorenson needs permission to land on it. In 1959, Moscow Radio announced a rocket had been With both the U.S. and Canadian launched toward uie moon. made by the minority community over said. between 14,000 and 19,000 may suffer dis­ ' ty to be reunited with his wife, Ludmilla, PAMPERS JIFFY 2 LBS. governments refusing to come to their In 1968, Dr. Christiaan Bernard performed his second the year, including: Elections were also a major Victory Toddlers - 48a abling injuries. and 5-year-old daughter, who live in a “ What we do today is commend the • Presentation of a seminar on rescue, the Harrisons have been living on successful heart transplant. for the minorities. Smith said, with SLICED TURKEY, SALISBURY STEAljI-4 •’The council reported 463 p^ple were small town near Leningrad. soul of this Orthodox Christian to God,” employment opportunities for minorities Extra Absorbent - 60s fish, coconuts and canned and dried ajxiut 500 registered to vote as a result of or BEEF PEPPER PATTIES I killed in traffic accidents 'during the the Rev. Anastassy said before in Manchester at an April forum a drive within the black conimunity, and New Born - 90s four-day holiday period a year ago. “ His despair must have been great in­ Tarasov’s body was taken to the foods supplied by the islands lone inhabi­ HOWARD JOHNSON'S C Q ( t called “ Black and White; Understanding with all the minority-endorsed can­ Another 20,300 were injured. deed,” the Reverend said as he prayed in cemetery for interment. tant and caretaker, Ray Landrum. One Another.” didates victorious, including the first MAC ’N CHEESE • Participation in a recruitment effort black elected to the Board of Elducatlon. iilanfl|falpr ral5 to attract minority applicants for “ We believe in the ballot box,” Smith *6.99 HOODSIESCUPS ...... 12 pack *1.29 openings on the police force; said. “ A lot of people voted for Dave Good Sun. Jan. 3 to Sat. Jan. 9 HEINZ 7 Q C • Organization of a communications (Dampier), but Dave’s candidacy was AT PIC an SAVE DINNER FRIES...... 24oz f » O fficial Mancheiter Newipaper network among minority residents to iniUatte and niirtilred by the black com­ Quote / Unquote BANQUET O / f i O C USPS 327-500 VOL. Cl, No. 78 keep approximately 500 minority munity and we’re very proud.” b o i l e d i n b a g e n t r e e s ...... 5oz.pkga.fc/ 0 % 7 residents of Manchester informed and Smith said in the coming year the Published daily except Sunday and certain holidays by Carson what Chrlstnias gNtvwas suitable (or black network hopies to “ work more "Violence breeds more violence. It’s predicted the Manchester Publishing Co., Herald Square, involved in public actions; Brooke Shields, star of TV commercials for WITH THIS COUPON a A <10 that by 1990, kidnapping will be the dominant Manchester, Conn. 06040. Second class postage paid at . • A voter registration drive and en- closely and be involved with groups — Jeans. PURCHASE EXCLUDING COUPON ITEM mode of social Interaction." Manchester, Conn. POSTMASTER: Send address .dorsement of candidates — all victorious such as tae Human Relations Commis­ a TOfiACCO ‘ — Woody Alton, comadlan-outhor. (Omni) “If Shakespeare walked In, would you run to the Changes to The Manchester Herald, P.O. Box 591, in the November municipal elections; sion, the Manchester Area Conference of fresh produce typewriter?" Manchester, Conn. 06040. • Election of a black resident, David Churches and the Manchester DAWN "Howard Cosell coaches 28 NFL teafns-evenT — Jimmy Lyon, pianist (or e New York Dampier Jr., to the Board of Education; Interracial Council — that are interested week, so I figure I can coach one mllOge team." • Hiring of a black woman to be the in working toward progress.” reeteuranL on ertiy he stopped playing when he To subscribe, or to report a delivery problem, call 647- DISH — Jo# Kapp, former NFL «fartorback, who' hew director of the senior citizens Smith said the review of goals and SUNKIST dieoovered thar eeneert pianist Vladimir ,9946. Office hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday woo hired by the Unlvorelty of CelKornla achievements was done by a core group HorowHx was dkilng at the salabliahmenL through Friday and 7 to 10 a.m. Satunuiy. Delivery: * LIQUID ORANGES ..... 138 medium size 13 for 99* (Berkeley) as head footbattxoach — deaplla hie • Apteihtment of black residents to of about 45 residents, each representing should be made by 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and by SWEET lack of previous coaching experience. "As much as I admire American cinema. It Is positions on the Economic Development a section of the town, with input from all 32 OZ. Bottle 7:30 a.m. .Saturday. > GREEN PEPPERS...... 3lbs.,»1.00 (Sports Illustrated) .not competent to make films about love.” (Commission, Conservation Commission, the minority residents in their districts. Suggested carrier rates are 8120 weekly, $5.12 for one U.8. NO. O Q l t — Francois Trufiaut, French flint director. Human Relations Commission, and the 1 "They are — most of them — bitter and envious month, 815.35 for three ihontto, 830.70 for six months, N (Pe<^ls) MAINE POTATOES ...... loib bagyo’*^ and humorless." I and 881.40 for one year. Mail rates are available on (Cheney la th e rs National Historic Land­ "I would have really put my foot down and there request. mark District Commission. About collecting OFF GOLDEN YELLOW ‘ — Phyllis Schlafly, anil-Equal Rights Amend­ W.oody Allen Reggie Jackson Several of the goals achieved by the Good Sun. Jan. 3 to Sat. Jan. 9 ment activlat, commenting on feminists. would have been no seasea” BANANAS...... 3ib.^l aUU minorities in 1961 had to do with affir­ Russ MacKendrick writes about AT PIC an SAVE (Ms. Magazine) — Reggie Jackson, iltar outfielder, oh what ho To place a classified or display advertisement, or to stamps, coins and almost anything >H Security benefits for some 3 million Americans. would have done H he had been an owner during mative action. Smith noted. "Hallelujah, praise the Lord, and amen.” report a news item, story or picture idea, c ^ 643-2711 collectible ^ in “ Collectors’ Corner,” tOCCOLI...... *...... bunch 59* the 1981 baseball strike. \ Office hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday throuidi . “ We’re concerned about the level of — Rep. J.J. Pickle, D-Texas, after the House of "(^ve the kid a dress." ‘committment to affirmative action and, every Tuesday in The Herald’s (Sportschannel) Friday. ’ , Repreeentetivee passed a bill rescuing Social -J Oore Vidal, writer, asked by NBC’s Johnny equal portunity on. the part of the Focus/Leisure section.

k' . . - ■ THE HERALD. Sat., Jan. 2, 1982 - 5

I - THE HERALD. Sat.. Jan. 2, 1982 Business 1982' OPINION / Commentary The big developmentltJvC. Penney ' •

By Lisa Zowada Herald Reporter The year 1982 will be one of continued economic What's wrong with b^k-to-basics growth for Manchester with a big year-end boost from the opening of the J.C, Penney Distribution Center in August, i f the visions of local officials are in focus. But things don’t appear as rosy in 1982 to local bankers % " - i :those crucial first, years we are Michael Pohl admits that “ ain’t” TRANSLATION: Students are challenges but offering rewards. and realtors. ’They aren’t counting on interek rates using books with boring plots and is one of his favorite words, at least coming out of the schools without a coming down, much or soon enough to make an inpact in As Barbara Hlgley, a Board of limited vocabularies that stifle the . the 1982 housing market. if measured by frequency of usage. sufficient grasp of reading, writing Education member, has repeatedly children’s desire to look any farther Town officials and retailers also predict the possible "I don’t know if you’ve heard me and arithmetic because students are Manchester pointed out, basics today are not the into the world of books. 8750,000 In renovations to the Cheney ^11 area, the talk,” he said. “ But I have a real given the responsibility to select Spotlight same as 20 years ago. Looking back over my own opening of new businesses, besides J.C. Penney, in the problem putting words together.” some of their o;wn courses. ^ckland Industrial Park and the development of the schooling, I remember what seems I beg to differ. With 38 pages of Courses like consumer math and Computer literacy is now almost a controversial Union Pond Industrial Park will be. large­ r't to be the better part of a year spent notes as my witness, I will swear English electives at the high school By Nancy Thompson — Herald Reporter basic educational need. Twenty ly responsible for brightness in Manchester’s economic learning the difference, between the Pohl puts words together quite hurt the students, he said. years ago, it didn’t exist. future.' well and quite prolifically. Therefore, he said, Pohl and many affect and effect — a difference I no BUT TH E long-awaited opening of the sprawling 46 Pohl came to the Herald office to of his peers are entering the armed The “ back-to-basics” attitude longer remember. ■ donT need 12 years of arithmetic acre Penney warehouse has their vote as the front page talk about the sad state of the forces instead of trying to make it in i^ a t I do remember is an elemen­ story of 1982. provide a choice of courses, based and grammar. Some students learn Manchester school system. As a the world of free enterprise. He is students. tary school unit on “ striving,” about "J.C. Penney will easily be the biggest economic shot member of the graduating class of going into the Air Force this month. on the idea that students have a the fundamentals the first time they AT THIS POINT, Pohl and I people who made decisions and hard in the arm for the entire year,” says Alan Lamson, town 1981 of Manchester High School, and range of ability levels and interests. are taught — and are prepared to go Pohl blames the school ad­ differ. We conde to a fork In the choices, not always based on moral planner and acting director of Public Works. a one-time candidate for the ’They also assume that senipr high on to study "Adult Fantasy” or the " I can’t think of time in the last decade,” says Lam­ ministration and the Board of reasoning. Pohl chooses back-to- teachings, but who kept climbing, Democratic nomination to run for a school students have the maturity works of William Shakespeare. son, “ when we’ve had the promise of a boost like that.” Education for his poor grammar basics as the proper path for the even when “ life ain’t been no crystal seat on the Board of Education, Pohl required to choose courses in­ Steve Warbner, the'town’s personnel director, says and inability to do math. That’s schools to take. stair,” as a Langston Hughes poem A RECENT AR TIC LE in Atlantic with the “ substantial tax revenue, not to mention 2,000 would seem eminently qualified to reasonable conclusion since the telligently, with some assistance included in the unit said. jobs,” the J.C. Penney opening is the big story for express opinions on the state of the staff designs the courses and the from teachers and guidance In my view, taking that road is Monthly by educator Bruno I agree with Pohl that the fun­ Manchester. schools and the quality of the academic structure, with direction counselors. taking several steps backwards. Bettleheim pointed out that the damentals are important, but I don’t J.C. Penney is expected to pay to the town 8710,676 in product they turn out. and approval from the Board of Admittedly, that guidance and Returning to the teaching of only the reason many children don’t like to think the way to teach them is by property tax in the next fiscal y ea r.. “ I feel, number one, that I ripped Education. maturity do not enter every selec­ basics is taking the easy road. read is that they don’t like what taking away choices. Students need The plant will soon start hiring some of the 1,500 blue myself off — but, number two, I feel I think some of the responsibility tion and some students ‘do slide ’The road I prefer for the school they’re reading. Attitudes toward and whitecollar workers it will need to operate the 820 Herald photos by Pinto to learn more about making respon­ worse because I was allowed to rip must lie with the individual through the system. ’The real ques­ system is one tluK continues to reading are formed by the end of million facility. sible selections, rather than less. myself off,” he said. students, however. The schools tion here is how to help those travel in forward direction, posing third grade, Bettleheim said, and in The August date is the third scheduled opening for the The site of the proposed Buckland Commons. There Is enormous potential for development here. warehouse. The facility was supposed to begin operations in 1980 and then in 1981, but missed the mark 1977 by the Manchester Environmental Coalition, a Bank, says he thinks rates will drop as soon as March. historic Cheney Mills will play a part in Manchester’s Guest editorial each time, with company officials blaming late equip­ group of citizens led by druggist Michael Dworkin, who He was, however, hesitant about predicting how much economic growth they say, nothing that voters must ment deliveries and the bad economy for the delays. think the plant is a threat to the environment and health of a drop, simply saying "the magic figure is 12 first approve the 8750,000 Cheney Mills bond in the ^ The future of the center has also been plagued by a of those living near the Buckland Industrial Park. percent.” special election Jan. 12. §3RKy{m..B0rW)e law suit brought against J.C. Penney and the town in The coalition is now filing for a retrial of the case, “ If we can get down to that then housing construction According to Alfred Werbner, “ the new addition of the following a state Supreme Courts decision which dis­ and buying will skyrocket,” he predicts. proposed industrial park, the glimmering of hope of The Reagan feUSAN COT- missed an earlier ruling by the Superior Court. ‘"The rates may come down in the spring,” Gerald development in the (iheney Mills area, and additions to ’The headaches the company has encountered since Rothman of Frechette, Martin and Rothman Inc. Manchester Community (College will be very important plans to build the facility were announced four years ago Realtors and .new president of the Manchester Realtors in ’82.” Werbner is a member of the Economic Develop­ had sparked rumors in the past that it was abandoning Association, says. ment Commission. Revolution plans to ever occupy the building. These rumors wre “ But,” he adds, “ I see no national signs that the readily dismissed by both company and town officials. Reagan administration will allow interest rates to come "With the changes in the mill area and the conversion of the House and Hale and Watkins buildings I think To ReTlte.... ’The “ boost” with the opening of J.C. Penney will be to a level where a typical family can afford an everage- Main Street will do well this year,” Joseph Garman, part of what Lamson predicts will be a “ steady growth priced house.” head of the Retailers Association and Main Street From the Boston Herald ting projects. Although he had at the same rate as in 1981.” “ There are too many variables that could dictate the American: far from satisfied everyone — “ We did a lot of commercial and industrial develop­ way the rates could go,” says William Hale, president of merchant says. “ I ’m looking ahead with cautious op­ timism.” and never will — with his tax ment in 1981 and we should continue along those lines,” Heritage Savings and ^ a n Association. “ Anything As the year has ended it is a “ I see a real possibility for at least four other in­ slashing efforts, he has made a says Lamson. could change them — th^ituation in Poland, oil prices, good time to take a look at what what happens in undev^ped countries.” dustries to begin operations in the Buckland Industrial beginning. economists have called the W H ILE SIGHTS were aimed high for Manchester’s “ Unfortunately I see no big change in the housing Park,” Lamson says. “ That will be a boost.” economic growth, local realtors and bankers don’t hold While the realtors, bankers and officials contacted “ Reagan Revolution.’’ Its The Reagan revolution did not market,” Lamson predicts. “ If the rates do come down, the same optimism for a lowering of interest rates and a gladly offered their predictions for 1982, they were quick turn the economy around over­ it will be too late in the year to have an impact in 1982.” success or failure is in the eyes better year for the housing market. to add that their visions should be taken with a grain of J night. Far from it. But the presi­ of the beholder, so Democrats Most say if interest rates do drop it will only be by a ON TH E BRIGHTER side for 1982, town officials salt. naturally take a dimmer view dent got off to a fast and im ­ percentage point or two and the drop will happen in the see several other strong boosts to Manchester’s “ Economists are great

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DALLAS (UPI) — In the space of r>-) HARDWAK just a few minutes on a crisp after­ DON WILLIS G^RAQE DOORS AWNINOS noon in the Ckitton Bowl Friday, a A 'A A ' relatively unknown WINDOWS CANOPIES SHUTTBIS who has spent more than half his Cotton Bowl SALES— SERVICE— INS TALLA TION collegiate career standing in the shadows carved out a spot in the YHW E ALUMINUM SERnCES Texas Hall of Fame. Alabama. march that kept the Longhorns un- !- SPECIALISTS IN GLASS S SCREEN REPAIR With all that Alabama tradition Alabama's setback cost it a shot ■ beaten in eight meetings with fesisns, staring him in the face, not to men­ 20 WARNEN STREET at the national championship and Alabarn^. BROAD STRCEt MANCHESTER CONN 06040 tion a 10-point deficit and a fast­ prevented the Crimson Tide from Brewer hit tight end Lawrence ; MANCHESTER, CONN. fading clock, Robert Brewer Manchesief Professional Pari*, Smte A-1 Belly Callanher, Prop. setting a record by capturing seven Sampleton with a 37-yard pass on 6 4 9 ^ 1 1 0 f t became an instant hero. bowl games in as many years. The ■‘third down, threw a lOyard pass to ; “Robert won’t dazzle you with his Longhorns’ victory also kept them running back Rodney Tate that took ' WE SERVICE AND INSTALL INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL footwork,” Texas Coach Fred Akers unbeaten in eight games against the the ball to the Tide's 34, and then " Complete Auto. Service had said earlier in the week. “He’s Tide. threw a 19-yarder to Sampleton that ■; AIR CONDITIONING - REFRIGERATION not fast and he’s not quick and he’s HEATING and SHEET METAL Brewer, a junior who had not put Texas on the Crimson Tide’s 18- , • STMrrais • COOUNO not a great passer. But he is a lettered in his first two years at yard line. e TUNE-UPS SYSTEMS winner. And that’s what we want.” Texas, took over the quarterbacking Two plays later. Brewer threw a • SNAKES And th a t’s what the Texas 10-yard pass to Donnie Little that . New England Mechanical Services, Inc • AL1TEIIIMT0RS •mnsiNO job at halftime of the Longhorns' Longhorns got Friday in the type of eighth game of the season — and he put the ball on the Alabama 8, and .' FACTORY TRAINED MECHANICS game that is suppos^ to take place has not lost yet. He directed the on the next play seldom-used 166 TUNNEL RD. between two firstclass football Texas offense to 359 yards Friday sophomore fullback Terry Orf ran VERNON, Ct. 06066 WINTERIZE NOW teams. without a turnover and time after the remaining distance on a mis- . 871-1111 In a nail-biter that is hard on the time produced the big play in the direction handoff. K-B AUTOMOTIVE iS iS if ” coaches and great for television UPl photo final quarter. Despite the comeback, the ratings, Brewer first scored on a 30- Brewer was named the game’s Longhorns had to sweat out the final - C1.YDE A MICKEY MILLER’S SfTviitfC u»i'4*r >*0 >t a . yard run and then drove the Most Valuable Player while defen­ moments, even after defensive back m - 649-3828 ' ftU TO Flanker TImmie Ware of USC hauls In pass Lions posted Impressive 26-10 victory over Longhorns 80 yards to a winning sive honors went to Alabama William Graham had intercepted a' before being downed by Penn State PARTS Trojans. in rallying fifth-ranked linebacker Robbie Jones. pass at his own 1-yard line with 1:48 PenHand TJie Florist linebacker Ed Pryts In Fiesta Bowl. NIttany Texas to a 14-12 upset of No. 3 “I think this game shows why you to play. Texas ran three quarter­ “AUTO PARTS FOR LESS” 24 BIRCH ST. play four, quarters of football,” back sneaks and after Alabama had HOURS Akers said. “In the last quarter we run out of time outs, punter John ' 8 TO 8 MON.-FRI. TEL. ei«3-6247 ______8 TO 5 SAT. a SUN. 643-4444 got better position and our defense Goodson surrendered a safety with F.T.D. wasn’t allowing the big play. 48 seconds remaining. 307 E. CENTER ST. (REAR) MASTEH CHARGE P e n n Stale routs USC, 26-10 Brewer showed what a great com­ On the free kick, Goodson left MANCHESTER DON WILLIS GARAGE HAS BEEN SERVING The Manchester Area AMERICAN EXPRESS WORLO WIDE petitor and operator he really is. Alabama at its own 40 with 43 BEHIND LENOX PHARMACY ... SERVICE “I think this was the greatest win seconds to play, but the Longhorns’ for 53 years. Since 1928 DON has been in operation at 18 Main St. DON of my coaching career. You will not pass defense, which had been WILLIS has always specialized in automotive repairs 6n all makes of find a classier man or program than pourous earlier iii the day, failed to CAP -N- CORK PACKAGE STORE Bear Bryant and Alabama," break in the final moments. 48S-489 No. Main St. automobiles.^ DON. WILLIS ING. take great pride in their work and Warner outshines Allen The final moments of Akers' Alabama had taken a 10-0 lead guarantee all(theiP'work 100%, a guarantee that; is not mere words it’s ISa 4?. biggest win, however, were blotted thanks to a 6-yard touchdown pass Kanchastar, Conn. from TV screens throughout six from Walter Lewis to Jesse Ben- 649-0591 ACTION. DON. WILLIS has been in business for 53 years because he southern states, including Alabama. dross midway through the second Remodeled & t'.nlnrf(ed does quality work and stands by it until you’re satisfied. A spokesman for CBS-TV blamed quarter and a 24-yard field goal by To Heller Serre You the trouble on , telephone line dif­ Peter Kim three minutes deep in the l»l CENTER8T. ficulties and said Alabama's final period. LIQUOR - 9EER - CORDIALS SPECIAL ORDER in Fiesta Bowl feature DON WILLIS GARAGE INC. is a FULL-SERVICE STATION, with the MANCHESTER, CONN. desperation attempts to win the Alabama demonstrated early it Large Selection of CAKE MON.-SAT. lO-S (203)646-0226 game in the final minute were not was going to attack Texas’ man-for- Imoorted a Dcmetlic VViiuf facilities to handle all your automotive repair needs. j THURS.10-9 shown in Florida, Arkansas, man pass coverage. Alan Gray, who "We weren’t ready to play and meeting between the powerhouses Allen then ^fumbled again near Mississippi, Georgia, South Carolina quarterbacked Alabama’s first TEMPE, Ariz. (UPI) — Under its series only to wind up fumbling the advanced billing, Friday’s Fiesta they were,” said Allen, who finished since the 1923 Ruse Bowl, gave Penn midfield and the ball was kicked and Alabama. MOHAWK INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY, INC. Bryant, who has taken Alabama to ball away at the Longhorns' 9-yard MANCWSTER OVER 45 Bowl might well have been sub­ the game with 85 yards on 34 State a 10-2 record. back to the Southern Cal 25 before SitfutUvrn of Snfvty l*rotvrtion DON WILLIS GARAGE INC. YEARS carries. The showing was the worst Southern Cal, 9-3, lost for the first Wisniewski, named the game’s out­ 23 consecutive bowl games, said line, completed a 22-yard pass to titled, “ Comes ■ to that his team won three quarters, Bart Krout on the game’s second MEMORIAL Cq. EXPERIENCE Town.” of the season for Allen, the first time in five bowl appearances under standing defensive player, collegian to rush for more than 2,000 coach John Robinson. It was the recovered. but lost the wrong one. play. •FOUL WEATHER SUITS But it was Penn SUte Uilback “They just whipped us in the The Crimson Tide did not throw as •ROOTS •HOSE IS MAIN ST. - S 0pp. Eeel CemetarV CALL 649-5807 Curt Warner who rewrote the script yards in a single season. worst post-season loss for the The Penn State offensive effort 649 4 31 Penn State tackle Leo Wisniewski, Trojans since dropping the 1974 was stopped at the 4, but Brian fourth quarter,” Bryant said. “Not many passes in some of their games and stole the show, rushing for 145 only did they have a better plan in this year as it did in the first half •GLOVES^TARPS^RESPIRATORS QUALITY yards and two as the voted the most'valuable defensive Rose Bowl, to Ohio State 42-21. Franco booted a 21-yard field goal. HARRISON ST. Warner’s first TD matched his ef­ Penn State missed opportunities to the second half than we did, they got against Texas, and it was a pass of. MANCHESTER sixth-ranked Nittany Lions defeated stronger toward the end of the game 37 yards by Lewis to Krout to the 5 Glen M . • Manchester • 643-5107 MEMORIALS! seventh-ranked Southern Cal 26-10 fort of the last Fiesta Bowl, when he put the game out of reach before in­ also scored the first time he carried termission, as Franco missed field than us.” Texas 12 that set up the only score of on a field dampened by rain. the opening two periods. “ He was the Heisman Trophy to start the Nittany Lions toward a goals from 36 and 37 yards out and Brewer had not been able to put a T a ilb a c k win against Ohio State. Blackledge was piled up at the goal point on the board during more than Even then it took an exceptional Yankee Aluminum Services vrtnner, he received all the publicity individual effort by Lewis to EVERYTHING IN GLASS but I’m not going to cry about it,” Southern Cal got its only break of line on a. keeper bn the last play of three quarters of frustrating action sto le s h o w the game late in the first quarter the half. against the swarming Crimson Tide produde the score. On 3rd-and-4 ■ WE CAN'T HIDE BEHIND OUR PRODUCT" Warner said. “It didn’t bother me from the Texas 6-yard line, Lewis ServiceMASTER that mudi. I just wanted to go out when All-America linebacker Chip But the Niltany Lions took the defense. Banks picked off a opening kickoff of the second half But with 10:22 left in the game. rolled right looking for a receiver. 20 Warren St., Manchester and play Well.” Blitzing safety Bobby Johnson had a J.A. WHITE GLASS GO. 6 4 9 -110 6 .Allen’s first possession of the pass and went 20 yards to allow the aiid moved 80 yards, with Warner Brewer ran a quarterback draw on player of the game, said that Stop­ Trojans to tie the score 7-7. But that scoring on a 21-yard run. 3rd-and-10 which stunned the shot at Lewis, but could not bring game, coming on the Trojans’ first the Alabama quarterback down. 6 4 B - 7 3 a a play from scrimmage, was in­ ping Allen before the crowd of 71,053 would turn out to be the Trojans’ Southern Cal’s final score came on Alabama defense. Texas’ junior i n ’EH 30 \ t: iHS i:\PEH iE.yI t: Professional Cleaning Services only touchdown of the game. its next possession, when Steve Jor­ quarterback ran 30 yards untouched Lewis found two more Texas Hom !* BUSINIM dicative of the way things would go. gave the Nittany Lions an early psy­ 31 BISSELL ST. MANCHESTER chological boost. Early In the second quarter, dan kicked a 37-yard field goal. to get the Longhorns back in the players bearing down on him as he •MIRRORS •SHOWER DOORS •STORE FRONTS SptclaKtlog In tnllf, eocn, uphoMund HinMur% His fumble — the first of two early threw across his body toward the oarpMftw 4 ataM r im Im M m. “It didn’t matter to me if Marcus Blackledge hit split end Gregg As the third quarter ended, Dave game. •SAFETY GLASS •BATHTUB ENCLOSURES •ETC bobbles — on the Trojans' 17 was end zone to the wide-open Bendross. recovered by defensive back Roger Allen had 200 yards, as long as we Garrlty on a 52-yard scoring pass — Paffenroth blocked a punt by Then, after finally stopping won,” Wisniewski said. “But I’m the longest aerial of the season for Southern Cal’s Dave Pryor and the Alabama at midfield and forcing a Texas moved the ball well early in . r w - Jackson. the game, but the Longhorns kept ' A 17-yard slant over the left side glad he didn’t. There’s no question Penn State. Garrlty moved into the ball rolled out of the end zone for a punt that carried into the end zone, FAMOUS BRAND stopping Marcus gave us the end zone unmolested after stepping safety. Texas put together the big play finding themselves in bad field posi­ J. B. aECTROMCS by Warner gave the Nittany Lions a tion. TELEVISION - APPLIANCES STEREO • MUSIC AMPS • TV 7^ lead 15 seconds into the contest momentum early in the ballgame.” in front of USC’s Joey Browner to M \m :i i i :s t i ;h S a l e s AND SERVICE and Penn State never trailed. The victory in the game, the first haul down the ball.

HDMI IMPROVUiniT •------n il DIV. First shutout in 29 years li/ r e 649-3589 TV But (0 Stop 1 Shop .lACK BERTRAND 643-1262

MERCURY I 8p^elfKtlngUiWln»$ _ Robinson's IDs OICOTT PACKAGE STORE I ! 654 Csntw 8tr*6t M«nclwst«r,CT| .R Pin. Bhopplng P in . ! Ptiona 040*2756 I ★ OUR OISCOUNT POLICY ★ I NO SERVICE CHARGE I 10% DIm o u iI on 800M PurchM. ol Liquor or Whw I I 10% DiMouirt on m ind A matdMd e n n • B «w nohM M 5 I Low m I pilen* unHnblt by law | propel triumph aMervellone lor • Holele • airlines • SteamsMiie ;■: Mnter Charg. and Vln Mo^Md ■ ‘I TMo«hMk.„ I 627 Main Strast Manclwtlar ■oral ohMk. eMtMd up Is tIBOM | -PASADENA. Calif. 4UPI) - tailback from San Jose, Calif., was novers. Hawkeye quarterback Gor- Freshman Jacque Robinson rushed named the game’s Most Valuable dy Bohannon fumbled twice and SPECIALIZING IN m i.Mt -m a .n p r in t in g thr a pair of touchdowns, including a Player. A crowd of 105,611 watched threw two and backup SUPERIOR MUFFLERS 4ti c^niR IT. • mncMum M t-im <^zzling 34-yard scamper, and a the game under partly cloudy skies quarterback Keith Gales threw the swarming Washington defense and temperatures in the mid 60s. third Iowa of the game. D8IIWILU$G«HII[.IIIC. i nnoik A cupvau Sana posted the first Rose Bowl shutout Robinson carried 20 times for 142 Pelluer, a sophomore from SPECIALISTS LOW COST PMNTHM tt> 29 years Friday .to propel the yards to lead all .rushers. His first Bellvue, Wash.,' completed 15-of-29 WHEEL ALIGNMENT • BRAKE SERVICE ■ WRECKER SERVICE (PHOTO MAOT) GENERAL REPAIRING Huskies to a 26-0 victory over Iowa. touchdown came on a 1-yard run on passes for 142 yards and was in­ Propane Cylinders Filled Tom Raimondo and Dick Suhie, owners of Yaiikee Aluminum Ser­ - Washington, the PacUic-10 cham­ fourth down in the second period to tercepted once in leading pion, finished the season With a 10-2 give Washington a 7-0 lead. Then. Washington’s offensive attack. He Air Conditioning Service vices, which has been serving homeowners in Mar Chester and surroun­ •SE4 us for engraved name plates TELEPHONE IS MAIN STREET •1RT OUR NEW M M B flIPMI completed four passes to Paiil Skan- B4B-4531 ' MANCHESTER. CONN 06040 ding towns for over 20 years, are shown here wil^i a sample from oml si for 69 yards and hit Anthony Allen new line of ener^ saving insulated replacemeht windows. We alscj with five passes for another 68 offer a complete line of storm windows, 35 styles pf storm doors in any yards. In two Rose Bowl Designs & Styles appearances, Allen has caught 11 color, aluminum canopies and roll-up awnings, vinyl and aluminum OSTRINSKY, INC. passes, one shy of the career Rose 7Q ’ shutters and aluminum railings. B4.I 7-js BowK record set in 1927. ( 731PARKERST MANCHESTER Iowa , entered the game with the kecord. The Huskies have appeared with 9:47 left in the game, Robinson rioth-best defense in the country, PERSONAL T€€ Expert glass and scree repair is done at our w()rkshop on 20 Warren hxA a handoff from q uartet .St. Our display room and workshop are open Monday thru Friilay, 9:00- f t threct of the last five Rose Bowl allowing an average of just 253 CALL US FIRST! fam es and their victory in thfr68tb Steve Pelluer, swept aro u i^^g yards per game. The Hawkeyes 4:00 and Saturciay 9-12 or call for a free estimate at 649-1106. 50 F T . TRUCK SCALE •enewal avenged a 23-6 loss to end and sprinted ln to ,J h » ^ xofej were also ranked fifth in the nation 1061 Main St., Manchester • Tel: 646-3339 !Mii»tiigan Jjut year. for the 34-yard TD. E' (X in rushing defense, allowing only 87 LICrNSED PUBLIC WFIGHTS ~'Por Iowa, the lou was a dismal Washington’s other touchdowns DEALERS IN IRON PA ■'i r - yards per game, and were ranked UPi photo M t t Pat Coelho, Owners Jim Coelho, Manager wniati to its first winning season in came on a 1-yaN run by Vince Coby seventh in scoring defense, giving 39 yean. The Big-lO eo^diampion and a 3-yaid TD run by backup up an average of 11.7 points per con­ ended Crimson Tide's first drive In Cotton llawkeyes finished with an 8-4 quarterback . test. Texas defenders Mike Hatchett and Eric record. ’The Husky defense shut down Washington plied up 328 total Holle slam Into Alabama quarterback Alan Bowl when Long Horns recovered ball. Robineon, a 5-foot-ll, 20^oiind : ^ a , taking advantage of five tur­ yards, 186 of them on the ground. Gray to force fumble In first period. Play

> I 8 — THE HERALD. Sat.! Jan. 2. 1982 THE HERALD, Sat., Jan. 2. 1982 — 9 Clemson solidifies No. 1 grid standing Scoreboard

MIAMI (UPI) - Top-ranked yarder with 2:36 left in the third kickoff but Craig’s fumble gave the period, moved the Tigers to a 22-7 Tigers their first break. JordM, Clenison, seeking Its first national ” - . 5 championship, turned two fumble lead, voted the game’s offensive MVP» Nebraska, however, refused to lost nine,yards on a third doym play American Hockey League FIESTA BOWL’ recoveries Into nine first-half points and Igwebuike’s field goal made it 3- By United Press International and used Homer Jordan’s IS-yard quit. Quarterback Mark Mauer Northern Division PSU . u s e drove Nebraska 69 yards on eight Basketball Hockey W L T PU. GF GA First downs 20 19 touchdown pass in the third p ^ o d On Nebraska’s next possession, Maine 24 10 3 51 144 112 Rushes-yafds 51-218 41-60 Friday night to secure a 22-15 plays ' with I-back Roger Craig New Bruns. 2D 13 4 44 L51 107 Passing yards 175 202 scoring on a 26-yard run. Craig then the (tomhuskers rolled for 69 yards; Nova Scotia is 18 3 39 ll?7 148 Return yards 78 38 Orange Bowl victory over No. 4 Springfield 15 17 3 33 110 139 Passes 11-24-2 16-32-3 Nebraska. ran 8 yards for a two-point conver­ on eight plays to take a 7-3 lead; Fredericton 9 23 1 19 116 181 Punts 4 -50.8 5-405 With the victory, Clemson, which sion to pull the Cornhuskers within Rozler, who alternates with Craig- Southern Division Fumbles-lost 3 -2 3 -2 seven vrith 9:15 left in the game but after each possession, returned the!! Binghamton 20 15 2 42 147 12T> PenalUcs-yards 7 -7 0 7 -4 9 finished the season as the only un­ NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOC. NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE Rochester 17 15 4 38 147 130 defeated team in the nation,-appears the Tigers’ defense, which had kickoff 30 yards and carried five By United Press International By United Press International New Haven 17 16 3 37 125 117 -Penn state 7 1090—M a certainty to capture the national allowed only one team this season to times in the drive for 16 yards (Tonight’s Late Games Not Included) Wales Conference Adirondack 16 16 4 36 136 131 Southern C^l 7 0 3 0 — 10 before taking a handoff from Mauer Elastem Conference Patrick Division Erie 14 21 4 32 155 17f. PSU-Warner 17 run (Franco kick) title. United Press International will score more than two touchdowns, Atlantic Division W L T Pis. GF GA Hershey 14 18 1 29 118 141 USC-^nks 20 interception return release its final ratings on Saturday were equal to the task. and hitting Steels for a 25:yard TD.: W L Pet. GB NY Islanders 21 11 5 47 180131 Friday’s Games (Jordan kick) They forced Nebraska to punt Gemson trimmed the lead to 7-jJ Philadelphia 22 , 6 .786 — Philadelphia 22 13 1 4f< 145.136 (No Games ^heduled) PSU-Garrity TS pass from Blackledge at 6:30 p.m. EST. Boston 22 7 .7T& Mi Pittsburgh 16 15 6 38 143142 Saturday’s Games (Franco kick) For the Tigers, who completed without a firqj^down on the on Igwebuike’s 37-yard field goalj York IS IS 8 . NY - Rangers L5 17 5 X 131148 Adirondack at Binghamton PSU-FG Franco 21 Cornhuskers’ next possession and set up by a 17-yard pass interference W ^ i n ^ n 12 16 .429 10 Washington 10 34 3 23 139160 Rochester at Hershey PSU-Warner 21 run (Franco kick) their best season ever, it was the New^Uersey 11 16 .379 llMi Adams Division Erie at Maine USC-F(3 Jordan 37 first game since they became the O n tra l Division Montreal 20 181 n o Fredericton at New Brunswick PSU-Safely, blocked punt rolled (>ut of seventh team this season to hold the MllwauV 21 8 .724 - Boston 22 to 4 41 I'O 118 New Haven at Springfield end zone Indiana 16 14 i)33 SVk Buffalo 20 10 8 41 148 117 Sund^'s Games A-71.0T3 No. 1 rating. I^ tro lt 13 17 .433 8>/i Quebec 19 15 5 4: 182 168 Adirondack at Erie With Pittsburgh defeating No. 2 Atlanta 12 16 .429 8Mi Hartford 10 18 9 2 128159 Sprin^ield at New Haven Chicago 12 18 .400 9 ^ Campbell Conference New Brunswick at Nova Scotia SUGAR BOWL Georgia in the Sugar Bowl and fifth- Orange Bowl Cleveland 6 23 .207 LS Norris Division Binghamton at Rochester ranked Texas knocking off No. 3 Western Conference 4 W L T Pts. GF GA Geo Midwest Division St. Louis 16 17 4 440 146 153 Pit Alabama in the Cotton Bowl, the First downs 27 It W L Pet. GB Minnesota 14 11 12 40 4 L57133 36-141 Chicago 14 14 9 37 3 164 161 Hushes-yards 44-208 Tigers can boast that they are No. 1. an Antonio 19 9 .679 — 261 83 took over on their 20 with 5:24 left. call against Nebraska safety Jeff Denver 14 If. .483 S>/k Winnipeg 13 18 8 34 3 140 172 Passing yards In the first half, CHemson’s stingy 11 17 9 31 3 .162 172 Return yards 35 57 Jogdan then put the game away by Krejci that put the ball on the Houston 12 18 .400 8 Toronto ft-15-2 Detroit 10 22 6 262 127 163 Passes 26-41-2 defense held the nation’s second- running 23 yards for a first down Kansas City 11 18 379 8Mi 2-44.5 6-39.5 Cornhuskers’ 25. I Utah 10 19 34S 9*.^ Smvthe Division Punts leading rushing offense to just 76 with 2:20 left. In the second period, Clemson Edmontun 2T; 9 6 f« 5 229 151 Football Fumbles-lost ,^r-3 2-2 Dallas 7 22 341 12>/^ 14-96 r^3f. yards in taking a 12-7 lead at inter­ Nebraska, which finished the muffed a scoring chance after Pacific Division Vancouver 14 17 8 36 3 140144 Penalties-yards mission. Los Angeles 24 7 .774 — Calgary 12 18 8 32 3 150 176 V season at 9-3, had one final chance to driving from its 24 to the Nebraska Los Angeles 13 21 29 154 185 - 18 10 .643 4V^ 0 3 714-24 .• a ik - .. Clemson noseguard William 9 23 24 104 181 Pitt.«burgli pull out the game but a desperation 10. But Nebraska cornerback Rick Phoenix 17 12 .588 6 Colorado Georgia 0 7 6 7-20 Devane recovered a fumble on the pass fell incomplete as time Lindquist intercepted a Jordan pass Portland 16 12 .571 6‘A (Top four in each division qualify for Geo-Walker 8 run (Butler kick) third play of the game at the Golden SUte 16 12 .571 &/t Stanley Cup playoffs.) Pit-FG Everett 41 expired. intended for Tuttle in the end zone. San Diego 7 21 350 15^ Friday's Games NFL Playoff Schedule PIt-Dawkins 30 pass from Marino Nebraska 28 to set up Donald Friday’s Results (No Games Scheduled) ’Thousands of Clemson fans, However, the Clemson defense; By United Press International (Everett kick) Igwebuike’s 41-yard field goal just Philadelphia at Portland, night . Saturday's Games (All Times EST) Geo-Walker 10 run (kick failed) dressed in orange, began the “We’re rated seventh in the nation against ilk. Kansas City at Golden State, night (All Times EST) Wild Card Playoff Pit-Brown 6 pass from Marino (Everett 3:21 into the game. After Nebraska Saturday's Games Buffalo at Quebec, 7;X p.m. Sunday, Dec, 27 the No. 1” chant as cheerleaders the rush, again came up with a big Herald photo by Pinto Boston at Edmonton. 6:(]r. p.m. kick) „ took a 73 lead on Mike Rozier’s 25- (All Times EST) AFC Geo-Kay 6 pass from Belue (Butler carried out onto the field a large play. Davis recoved Bates’ fumble Washington at Indiana. 7:X p.m. Hartford at Pittsburgh. 8:0(^r p.m. Buffalo 31, New York Jets 27 yard option touchdown pass to N.Y. Rangers at Montreal. 8:flf. p.m. kick) ■ . banner proclaiming the No. 1 status at the Nebraska 27 and in six plays New Jersey at Atlanta, 7;X p.m. NFC Pit-Brown 33 p«iss from Marino Anthony Steels, Igwebuike pulled Air ball Detroit a t New York. 8:05 p.m. Chicago at N.Y. Islanders. 8:0f p.m. of their 12-0 team. the Tigers reached the 2 before Minnesota at Toronto. 8:05 p.m. 27. Philadelphia 21 (Everett kick) Clemson within 7-6 on a 37-yard field Boston at Cleveland, 8:05 ^m . ^ Divisional Playoff- A-77524 Austin scored with 3:56 left in the Denver at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m. Vancouver at Washington, 8:05 p.m. UPl photo Gemson, which has now beaten Enfield's Mike Mgrijlchian (23) keeps eyes on the basketball Philadelphia at St. Louis, 9:Q5> p.m. Saturday, Jan. 2 goal with 2:04 left in the first period. half. A two-point conversion failed Milwaukee at C3iicago. 8:X p.m. TfFC Again the Tigers defense rose to three teams ranked in the Top 10 overhead while Manchester’s Ron Pedemonte (22) begins ap­ Philadelphia at Utah, 9:30 p.m. Detroit at Colorado. 9:X p.m. Tampa Bay at Dallas. 1 p.m. Georgia tailback Herschel Walker found no as Jordan’s pass intended for ’Tuttle Seattle at Phoenix. 9:35 p.m. (Calgary at Los Angeles, 10:05 p.m. ORANGE BOWL Flynn came up to make tackle after eight- the occasion. Defensive end Joe (Georgia, North Carolina and AFC running room against right sideof Pittsburgh yard gain. fell incomplete. proach In CCIL action Tuesday at Clarke Arena. Basketball Houston at San Diego. 1(}:X p.m. Sunday's Games San Diego at Miami, 5 p.m. Glenn forced Nebraska fullback Phil Nebraska) slipped into the No. 1 took lot of strange bounces in Indians’ 57-47 win. Manchester Dallas at Golden State, 11:05 p.m. Montreal at Buffalo Sunda^j^ Jan. 3 Nebraska 7 0 0 6-15 line In first period in Sugaf Bowl. Pitt’s Tom Sunday’s Games Pittsburgh at Hartford Bates to fumble and linebacker Jeff position after Penn State defeated Washington at N.Y. Rangers Clemson 66 10 0—22 will be at crosstown East Catholic tonight at the Eagles’ Nest Denver at Milwaukee Buffalo at Cincinnati, 1 p.m. Clem—FG Igwebuike 41 Davis recovered on the Pittsburgh 48-14 on Nov. 28. Before Seattle at Los Angeles Boston at Winnipeg NFC with a 7 o’clock start. ■ Detroit at Chicago Neb—Steels 2f- pass from Rozier (Seibel Cornhuskers’ 27. Six plays later, that, Clemson held the No. 2 spot for Kansas City at Portland New York Giants at San Francisco. 5 kick) four weeks. p.m. Clem- FG Igwebuike 37 tailback Cliff Austin took a pitchout Sunday, Jan. 10 ('len>-Austin 2 run (pass failed) from Jordan and scooted 2 yards ’The last Orange Bowl to produce a AFC and NFC championship games. Clem-^Tultle 13 pass from .Iordan around right end for a touchdown to ntional champion came in the 1976 Sites will be home cities of team s with (Paulltng ki(’k) Price right? the best record. Starting limes will be Clem—f’^J Igwebuike 36 give Clemson its halftime lead. ^ classic when Oklahoma defeated announced at a later date. Neb—Craig & run (Craig rum Pitt win dramatic Clemson’s offense, directed'"^ Michlgam 14-6. WASHINGTON (UPI) - An NBA- Jan. 24 A-72.748 Wrestlers spotlighted for a day Super Bowl XVI. AFC champion vs. Jordan’s running and passing, woke For the Atlantic Coast Conference team has a chance to' get NFC. champion, Pontiac, Mich., 4 p.m. up in the third period. After champion Tigers, it was their Georgetown freshman Pat Ewing oa Neb First downs 13 Nebraska was forced to punt, Jor­ eleventh bowl appearance and third the hardship clause “if the price is Rushes-yards 40-193 dan drove the Tigers 75 yards in 12 trip to the Orange Bowl. Clemson right,” the 19year-old, 7-foot Hoya There wasn’t ah- overwhelming crowd Both school’s ice hockey teams are slated ROSE BOWL Passing' yards 63 says. Saturday night at the Bolton Ice Palace and Rctlim yards 118 plays, capping the drive with his last played in the Orange Bowl 25 Tuesday’ afternoon at Garke, Arena. But it Iowa 0 00 0-0 f'asses 6-17-0 in last 35 seconds 13yard TD strike to Perry ’Tuttle, years ago, losing to Colorodo 27-21. “If the price is right I might,” the was big enough and vociferous to the extent those engagements should draw away from Washington 013 015-28 Punts 643.0 who set a school record by catching It was the (tornhuskers’ 20th post­ 19-year-old Hoya said in a New the hoop gate. Wash-Robinson I run (Nelson kick) Fumblcs-lo.st .3-2 that it made what was going on feel special. Thoughts Wash-Cobey 1 run (pass failed) Penalties-yards B-64 ' his eighth ’ scoring pass of the season appearance and eighth trip to Year’s Day interview after coach What was going on was the first Wash-Robinson 34 run (Skansi pa.ss from NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - Second- yard march and gave the Panthers to the Georgia 17 before being in­ season. the Orange Bowl. John ’Thompson lifted his ban oh Manchester Holiday Wreetling Tournament ApLENty Pellucr) j Clemson, as it has done freshman interviews. with host Manchester, East (tetholic. (teeney. Let’s go Giants Wash-Cowan 3 run (Nelson kick) team All-America quarterback Dan their first lead of the night, at 10-7, tercepted by Harris again on the ’The score came with 6:12 left in Len Auster, A-10rs611 Marino threw a 33-yard touchdown with only 3:01 gone in the second goal line. throughout the season, took advan­ Meanwhile, Ewing is enjoying Tech and RHAM in the four-team field. There ’Tis the holiday season and the the third period and Bob Paulling’s tage of turnovers to take its 12-7 college. He says his game is im­ are already plans on the drawing board for Herald Sportawrlter Iowa Was pass to tight end John Brown with half. Pitt had the ball back one play were most generous last First downs extra point made it 19-7. halftime lead. proving dffensively and defensively next year for the field to be enlarged to eight 14 • 22 just 3ft seconds remaining Friday Walker, although having his later when Walker fumbled at the Igwebuike’s third field goal, a 36- Sunday, enabling the New York Giants to Rushes-yards . 43-180 51-186 Golf night to give the eighth-ranked Pitt poorest game of the year when he Georgia 23 and a 6yard TD pass Nebraska received the opening under Thompson’s tutelage. schools. Passing yards 84 142 come away with a win in the NFC wild card Return yards 48 91 Panthers a dramatic 24-20 Sugar gained only 84 yards on 25 carries, from Marino to Brown had the Wethersfield, Glastonbury, Rockville, tilt. Pas.scs 10-21-3 15-29-1 Bowl victory over the second- had scored the Bulldogs’ first Panthers ahead 17-13 with 11:40 left Windham and East Hartford have expressed Punts 547.0 7-35.6 San Francisco is a different proposition but Fumbles-lost 2-2 0-0 ranked Georgia Bulldogs. touchdown midway through the se­ in the game. Georgia downed the en­ interest for ’82, reported Manchester (teach year. The Eagles lead the series, 12-1, with the Giants have an incentive. ’That being a 17- Penalties-yards 6-73 3-28 - h r - cond quarter on an 8-yard sweep suing kickoff in the end zone and Barry Bernstein, who Is responsible for get­ the lone Indian triumph coming a year ago by A 10 decision taken by the 49ers over the New after two plays earlier turning a ting the local tourney off the ground. Georgia had taken a 20-17 lead then drove 80 yards with Belue get­ the Bill Anderson-Pat Sllver-Joe Maher-Alex Yorkers earlier in the year. That came in COTTON BOWL By.United Press International with 8:31 left to play on a 6-yard short pass from Belue into a 31-yard ting 23 on a busted pass play and “I see this as being a major event for Spalding Pro-Am Cowboys' owner fears Britnell-Duck Wllliams-Joe Panaro-Mike week No. 1 of Scott Brunner’s tenure as the \ wrestlers in the area during holiday time,” At Pebble Beach. Calif . Jan. 1 pass from Buck Belue to Clarence Oleksinski bunch. Giants’ No. 1 quarterback. He’s improved Alabama 0 7 0 5—12 (Par 72) Jay set up by a 24-yard run by Bernstein envisions. “We’re going to make Only Maher returns from that group. since then. Texas 0 0 0 14-14 Jay Haas 67- 65-66-198 sophomore two-time All-America this a tournament of quality. Why should we Ala-Bendross 6 pass from Lewis (Kim Rick Acton 70-64-67-201 The match-up is intriguing in that there is And so have the Giants. The New Yorkers kick) Bobby Clartipett 68- 63-71-202 Herschel Walker, who earlier had try to get into a classy tournament when we no clear-cut favorite or underdog. Either can will have to stop San Francisco’s short Ala-FG Kim 24 A1 Geiberger 67- 69-71-207 Tex-Brewer 30 run (Allegre kick) Eric Batten 70- 69-69-208 scored two TDs himself on ri^ns of 8 can have one of our own.’’ Bernstein has been get blown out — or produce the blowout. It passing game, which enables it to maintain Tex-Orr 8 run (Allegre kick) Sugar Bowl Bruce Summerhays 60-69-70-208 and 10 yards. trying to get his matmen into a holiday Ala-Safety. (Woodson runs out of end about overconfidence should be a hum-dlnger inasmuch as it pits ball control, and to get another stellar perfor­ Forrest Fezler 60-72-67-208 Marino, who completed 26-of-41 tourney for a couple of years. zone 71- 68-71-210 two of the least talented teams floored by the mance from Rob Carpenter. A-73^43 Rod Curl N 71- 71-68-210 passes for 261 yards and three Now he’s found one. respective schools in years. It was a shame the New York Jets’ rally Craig Stadler By United Press International play on Saturday. We have a very Dave Barber 74- 66-70-210 touchdowns, carried the Panthers 80 gainer and had Georgia out front Walker breaking loose down the gotten stronger and stronger as the There have been many good wrestlers That’s not criticism, folks, just fact. fell short but Coach Walt Michaels and his ALA TEX Greg Powers 72- 72-66-210 yards in the closing four minutes of again at 13-10 with 6:42 left in the sidelines for 24 more for his longest tough football team coming in here season has progressed. The come out of the area. There’s no reason more Ask the coaches. team went out with class. They’ll be heard First downs 15 21 John Mahaffey 70- 71-70-211 third period on his 10-yard scamper Everybody’s talking about the and that’s what people ought to be Rushes-yards 44-163 52-158 Patty Sheehan 69- e?-7rr-211 the game, completing four passes run of the night to give Georgia a Dolphins did not allow more than 16 are not on the way. The reviews on the first Manchester comes in 3-1, off a shaky 57-47 from again. They now know what it takes to Passing yards 144 201 Rod' Funseth 71- 70-71-212 Dallas (towboys as if they were a thinking about.” 60-67-76-212 for 61 yards in the drive, which was immediately after Eddie Weaver first down at the Pitt 10. points in any of their last five games tourney are that it’s a smash. win over Enfield. Etesl sports a 1-3 mark, win. Return yards 3 4 Rav Carrasco sure bet to make it to the Super Tampa Bay (teach John McKay Passes 8-13-1 12-22-0 Bob Gilder 68- 76-69-213 capped by his long pass to Brown, recovered a Pitt fumble. Three plays later, as the Panthers and w o n ^ e last four in a row, And it should get nothing but bigger and bowing in the Trinity Christmas Tournament 75- 67-71-213 Bowl, and club president Tex agrees with Schramm. It’s easier to lose than to win. You have to Punts ,5-45.2 &-36.8 BUI Tindall who caught the ball over his Pitt running back Brian Thomas, bunched up to stop Walker, Belue allowing only a total of 37 points, to better. final to Holy Goss of Flushing, N.Y., 51-47. work harder to attain and maintain the latter. Fumbles-lost 1-1 0-0 Pat McGowan 73- 70-70-213 Schramm doesn’t like it one bit “I hear the folks^ in Dallas think Penalties-yards 1-5 . 4-17 Ron Cerrudo 74- 70«-213 shoulder in the middle of the end who said earlier in the week that he flipped a 6-yard TD pass to Kay, who wrap up the AFC East title at 11-4-1. Both clubs hustle. Manchester Gach Doug It’s very simple to lose — just show up. But 73-67-73-213 zone for the winning touchdown. The (towboys host the Tampa Bay they have a bye this week,” said Juli Inkster wanted to prove that he was just as caught the ball as he was running Buccaneers in a National Football ’The San Francisco-New York bat­ Pearson feels this squad hustles more than once you’ve gotten over that feeling it’s hard INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Jim Albus 65-71-77-213 Marino completed 14-of-19 passes effective as Walker, had a better out of the corner of the end zone, and McKay. “I don’t think Dallas is that tle matches two of the NFL’s best Only meeting any previous one he’s coached. But the hustle to be a loser again. RUSHING - Alabama-Lcwis 24-79, Joe Rassett 73-71-70-214 Conference semifinal contest Satur­ kind of team (that can run the Bucs Carter Fagan 5-15. Texas-Clark 7-68, Buddy AUin 71-70-73-214 in the first half but the closest he night statistically, gaining 129 yards Georgia was ahead by three again defenses against each other. The - has not matched the ability level of past That’s the case for the Jets — and Giants. Dan Pohl 70- 73-71-214 day and Schramm is very concerned off the field). But I know we can’t do Manchester and East (tetholic meet on the Jones 16-57. came to a touchdown pass in the on 25 carries and caught 5 passes for with 8:31 left to play. 49ers beat the Giants, 17-10, earlier hardwood . tonight at the Eagles’ Nest quintets. The Giants versus San Francisco? Take the PASSING - Alabama-Uwis 7-12-1-122, Peter Oosterhuis 67-75-72-214 first two periods was a long bomb he about the possibility of his club the silly things like dropping punts this season and held New York’s top Gray 1-1-0-22. Texas-Brewer 12-21-O-201, Mark Pfeil 60-71-74-214 40 yards. Pitt had a fourth-and-5 at the being overconfident. at 7 o’clock for the first and only time this A less than capacity crowd is anticipated. points. ClarK O-l-CM). threw from the Georgia 49 on the Marino and Thomas had the Georgia 34 and appeared to be run­ and throwing interceptions because rusher, Rob (terpenter, to only 40 RECEIVING — Alabama-Bcndross 4-78. final play of the half that was picked “All I hear people talking about is Dallas is too good a football club. Texas-Little 7-92. Panthers at the Georgia 35 before ning out of time when Marino, who New York and ^ n Francisco and yards. Since then, however, off by Bulldogs cornerback Ronnie turning the ball over on a fumble had been getting great pass protec­ “Dallas is a good team. But so are (terpenter has become the hottest, Harris at the Georgia 1-yard line. which team Dallas would want to we. I am comfortable With the and two plays later, after Sal tion all night — he was sacked only play and all. that,” Schramm said. runner in the league. Marino threw a 30-yard TD pass to Sunseri recovered a Belue fumble at once — let fly the long pass that thought of playing them.” San Francisco Coach Bill Wa lsh Soccer Julius Dawkins that capped an 80- ’’Everybody seems to have ’The Bucs are coming into Texas Haas on birdie spree the Pitt 43, Marino got the Panthers Brown caught for the winner. forgotten we have a football game to says flat out that unless his team Stadium on a hot streak. ’Iliey won stops (terpenter Jt may be a long four of their last five games and did afternoon. ’The idea for the 49ers is something nobody else — including to force the Giants into throwing the tor six under round the (tewboys — had been able to do n o r t h a m k r ic a n s o c c e r i.eac:u e (Indoor League) this year, beat Detroit in the Silver- Bv United Press International dome. PEBBLE BEACH, Gllf. (UPI) - Haas, who said he had only played Atlantic Conference SATURDAY nine holes of golf since competing in Eastern Division Best in New Year to the following “I know it may be a little more Jay Haas shot a 6-under-par 66 W L Pet GB difficult to defeat them on the NFLi 1 p.m. DallBR vs. Tampa the Mixed-Team Gassic in Florida Bay, Ch.3, WPOPj 5 p.m. Miami Friday at the Del Monte Golf Gurse Toronto 2 ? « road,” said McKay, “because they to take the 54-hole lead in a 1150,000 several weeks ago, said he had spent Montreal 3 3 v§. San Diego, Ch.22,30, WPOP quite a bit of time working on his Jacksonville 2 Jack Redmond, No. 1 ranking in New tion for his work with the youth in town over are more familiar with the surface invitetional pro-am tournament. New York and the weather is unpredictable NHLi 7:45 ’Whalers vs. putting. Central Division England singles tennis play for players 35 and the last quarter century,. Penguins, WTIC; 8 Rangers vs. The event is sponsored by 4 over. there (although partly cloudy skies “I always thought I was a fair Tulsa Canadiens, Ch.9 Spalding. ^ Chicago 3 Herald Denny Carlin, a thank you from all the and temperatures in the 50s are Haas, 28, who finished 15th on the putter until the tour statistics came Tampa Bay o , — , . forecast). But I can’t concern NBA: 8:05 Celtics vs. out last year,” he said. "Although I Pacific Conference Ralph DeNicolo, successful qualifying youngsters he has helped in the Midget Foot­ Cavaliers, WINF, WPOP, Ch.4 tournament players' association Northwest Division berth in GHO golf tournament and a finish Angle ball and Little League baseball programs myself with that. Everyone said we tour last year with earnings of $181,- was in the top 80 in fairways and Edmonton f 2 College Basketball: 1 Duke vs. greens hit In regulation, I was 143rd Vancouver 3 A ^ 2 among the top 25 players. over the years. had such a bad deal going into ball more and keep Carpenter from 894, got off to a fast start with bir­ Earl Yost, Detroit.” Louisville, ESPN, 8 Iowa vs. in putting, so I spent some extra Seattle „ ^ ™ ' running on their nickle defense. South Carolina, ESPNj 8 Clem­ dies on the first two holes. He Western Division John Phelps, some much needed help In Sports Editor George Caillouette, a flock of visits from Dallas’ main concern, other than finished the round with seven bir­ time practicing my putting and it San Jose 3 3 iW) - The Cincinnati-Buffalo contest son vs. North Carolina State, USA show^ quite a bit of improvement Portland 3 3 .fflO - 2 running the Little League baseball program. friends during his stay at Manchester M a^r Schramm’s fears of overconfidence, dies and one bogey. / , I 4 .200 IW features two of the NFL’s better Cable; 8 Holy Cross vs. this past year.” -San Diego is the Tampa Bay defense — which passers and, if the game is anything “I wasn’t quite as good from tee Friday's Games (tewboys’ (teach calls Providence, Ch.I2; 10 Notre (No Games Scheduled) Mike Simmons, wealth of talent which will Tommy O’Neill, a wide smile and firm at all like their previous meeting Dame vs. Missouri, USA Cable to green today,” Haas said. “But I Saturday s Games produce a winning football program at as fierce a hitting group as there is made the putts when I needed (All Times EST) Wilson Deakin, more softball umpiring handshake for all he encounters daily. earlier this year, figures to be a Scholastic Basketball: 6:50 Manchester High. in the league. nail-biter. them.” Jacksonville at Chicago, 1:30 p.m. assignments in major tournament play. In Saturday’s other National Foot­ Manchester vf. East Catholic, Tulsa at Tampa Bay, 8 p.m. Joe DiMinico, a full rounded program for Led by the passing of quarterback WiNF Haak had started the round one Molumphy, Sunday's Games Jude Kelley, a carbon copy with the East members of the Senior Citizens' (tenter. ball League contest, Miami plays stroke behind local favorite Bobby Jacksonville at Montreal, aft. Nate Agostinelli, a chance to redeem host to San Diego. Ken Anderson, the Bengals pulled New York at Toronto, aft. Catholic gridiron program. out a 27-24 overtime victory against SUNDAY (Hampett but moved into the San Jose at Edmonton, aft himself in art of fisticuffs against George On Sunday, San Francisco enter­ NFL: 1 Bengals vs. Bills, Seattle at San Diego Athanson. Dick ’Thorpe, a permanent trailer site at the Bills in the fourth game of the spot as (Hampett, who had a m- Joe German, blue ribbons for the work of the Lime Rock race track. tains New York in an NFC game and season. In that game, Cincinnati Ch.?2,30, WPOP; 5 Giants vs. Thursday at G rm el Valley, slipped Scott win his new hunting dog. Cincinnati plays host to Buffalo in rolled up scoring drives of 97; 91,84 49ers, Ch.3, WINF, WPOP to a 71 Friday and dropped back to Stan Hilinski, another hole-in-one on the an AFC clash. NHL: 1:15 Whalers vs. MAJOR INDOOR SOCCER LEAGUE golf beat. 70 and 58 yards against the Bills! third place at 202. Rick Actin moved By United Press International The San Diego-Miaml contest pits - Penguins, WTIC into second place with a 67 for a 2D1 A ste rn Division much to the chagrin of Buffalo’s net titles W L Pci. GB Phil Hyde, the class doubled for youngsters the Chargers’ explosive offense defense, rated No. 1 In the league in NBA: 8 Nuggets vs. Bucks, USA total. Garvey Fox, more opportunities to prove Woody Gark, the top of his game in his an­ taking tennis lessons Saturday morning at the against the Dolphins’ hard-nosed New York 8 2 .800 — he’s the best senior male tennis player in 1980> Cable Pittsburgh 7 4 .636 V /i nual battle with John Herdic for the club Racquet Gub. defense. College Basketball: 1 Murray Baltimore 7 4 .636 town. championshijS title at the Country Gub. Buffalo quarterback Joe Ferguson Two youngsters playing out of the Cleveland 5 5 .500 3 San Diego set records for total also had a big day, completing 25 of State vs. Western Kentucky, Manchester Racquet Club claimed Buffalo 5 6 .456 34 A1 Werbner, a can of tennis balls that do not yardage (6,744) and passing yar^ge Sports Slate New Jersey 3 7 J(» 5 Ken Irish, cold weather to - i r ^ z e over 46 passes for 287 yards. ESPN championships in the Boys’ age 12 Philadelphia 3 7 .300 5 Nancy Narkon, time to keep her game in spin off the racquet in crazy directions. (4,531) this year, breaking their own Soccer: 4 Jacksonville vs. Mon­ public ice skating areas in town which would top form for the New England tourney Bills’ head coach Giuck Knox and (iirls’ Age 14 Class B Singles Western Division records, and led the NFL In scoring heaped praise on Anderson. treal, ESPN; 3 Cosmos vs. Blla- Tournament this week at the local St. Louis 10 1 .909 - cut down calls to his park office asking when schedule. Bob Weiss, a king-sized tennis racquet to with 478 points, an average of just Saturday ' Denver i • 7 4 .636 3 "He throws the ball about as well sard, Ch.9 club. Memphis / 8 7 .533 4 sites will be opened. Herald photo by Pinto handle the cuts of A1 Werbner in their weekly under SO points a game. Charger ba sk e t ba ll Wichita ' 4 7 .364 6 Jack Goldberg, a tennis partner other than match. as any quarterback I’ve ever seen ” Scott Nelson defeated Len quarterback Dan Fouts set NFL said Itaox. ’^They’re both fine Manchester at East Catholic, 7 Rosenblattin the 14 finals, 6-3,3-6,6- Phoenix 3 8 573‘ 7 Hall of Fame committee, another good Bob Stone who will run him a little. records for pass attempts (609), ICE HOCKEY Kansas City 2 9 ;iB2 8 selection of three recipients for the 1982 , but Anderson throws 4, after gaining three previous Friday’s Games To all readers, the bMt in 1962, eqieciaUy in completions (360) and passing yar­ Herald Angle Maintains dribble (No Games Scheduled) honor. with more consistency.” Sunday’s Manchester vs. Rockville at straight set triumphs In the field of Tom Conran, some long over due recogni- the health depa'rtmenNit. dage (4,802) and threw 33 touchdown Bolton Ice Palace, 7:50 Saturday’s Games game marks the first playoiff Herald Sports Editor Earl Yo^t H- Manchester High’s Joe Maher (24) maintains dribble despite (All Times F.ST) passes. . keeps on top of sports in his regular East Catholic vs. Hall at BIP, 9:30 Phoenix at St. Louis. 2;X p.m. appearance for the AFC Central Sarah Molumphy captired the defensive pressure presented by Enfield’s Mike Baer (41) at Kansas Chy at Baltimore, 7:X p.m. Meanwhile, Miami’s defehse has champion Bengals since 1975, column, “Ihe Herald Angle,” on the WRESTLING Girls’ 14 Division by default. Four Clarke Arena. Maher had 11 (Joints In Silk Town 57-47 win. Pittsburgh at New Jersey, 7:35 p.m. . daily sports pages. Roekvilie at kuinrhester, noon girls took part. cievelai^ at Buffalo, 8:(K p.m.

■/ THE HERALD. Sat., Jan. 2, 1982 — 11 10 - THE HERALD. Sat., Jan. 2, 1982

Engagements / Weddings l People TV'Movies/Comics on rose parade

choice curbside seats were students and - PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) - A fans of the Washington and Iowa football ~ cavalcade of brilliantly flowered floats, teams that met later in the day in thc.„ including a top prize, winner dedicated to Rose Bowl football game. the children of Poland, paraded past one ■ A giant block party atmosphere Stained-glass million spectators Who braved rainy prevailed along the route despite the - weather raday to witness the 1982 Tour­ rain, but the chilly, wet weather drove.. nament of Roses. many to abandon their sidewalk cam p-" Overnight showers forced Grand sites, leaving behind sleeping bags and;;: Marshal Jimmy SteWart to put on his even hide-a-bed sofas. artist s career long underwear and drove thousands of Police reported nearly 300 arrests for visitors under plastic sheets and public drunkeness and other minor storefront awnings along the S.5-mile offenses by 10 a.m. but most of the crowd^ parade route, but dry weather prevailed remained festive and orderly. when the parade got under way. “’The Midwesterners don’t mind the^., The last time it rained on the New multi-faceted rainy weather at all and the drunks areTIJ Year’s Day parade was 27 years ago. too drunk to notice,” McAlister said, r:; Police estimated only 300,000 lined the Floats in the two-hour parade used a j;; route at the start of the parade, but as By Susan Plese watercolors for her own the weather improved thousands more total of 20 million flowers to depict -- scenes based on the theme. Most of the U Herald Reporter pleasure, but became interested poured into the- area ''and the crowd steel-framed floats cost between $50,000;; in stained glass when one of her swelled to about one million. and $100,000 and all were covered with She stands in her sunny children brought home a book on About 250,000 people usually celebrate showroom this earty morning, the subject 15 years ago. “I read o New Year’s Eve by camping out along fresh flowers, petals, seeds and other organic material. talking with a few customers. it, and I got hooked,” she says. the route, but foiil weather cut the crowd Rays of light stream through She holds classes for beginners to about 95,000, police spokesman Rocky multi-colored shards of glass in and advanced students several McAlister said. the huge windows, casting times a week, and she says that The Order of Elks float, titled “Elks colored images across her face. most of her students were Serve Children Everywhere,” and depic­ Fight leads She ducks'to avoid the glare, hooked, too, long before they ting brightly colored carousel animals, thrusts her hands in the front ever entered her shop. “They won the Sweepstakes prize for the most pockets of her denim work apron, spent more tiipe in church beautiful non-commercial entry. Earlier and then resumes work on a swiveling their heads, looking at in the week, the Elks dedicated the float to 4 arrests stained glass lampshade. the windows, than they did to the children of Poland, where martial Ann Madsen of 13 Northfield listening to the sermon,” she law was recently im post by the Com­ A New Year’s Eve fight led to the.; St. is an artist in stained glass, says. munist regime. arrest of four Manchester people, police ' and she works as manager of her Church windows, perhaps, are The float, which used more than 30,000 said today. own studio at the side of General the most outstanding examples roses in 18 varieties, featured a horse, Glass Service on 330 Green Road. of an artist’s craft, but they are Httrald photo by Tarquinlo East Hartford police first responded toX cat, ostrich, rabbit and giraffe moving to a call pf a fight occuring on Burnside;; The studio is a jumble of art seldom designed by an unknown. the music of calliope tunes with an old- Avenue in East Hartford. ’They could~ works in rainbow hues — small Ms. Madsen got her chance just Firefighters Scott Whittman, Ed Carini and William O’Brien of 1982 in Manchester — a suspicious blaze on Taylor fashioned chariot bringing up the rear. find no disturbance there but discovered . “suncatchers,” mirrors, boxes in two years ago, when the Grace difficult for her to express. "I There was, and the ornament (left to right) repack hose after responding to the first fire Street. The theme of this year’s parade, which a fight at 1182 W. Middle ’Turnpike andZ: various shapes, hangings, candle Lutheran Church in Plainville don’t know what I like test about was completed. featured 60 flower-covered floats, called in ManchesteiiMlice to assist. ^ holders, even a huge terrarium. began looking for someone to what I do,” she says, struggling In a studio so full of tempting marching bands and 27 equestrian units, Arrested in the msturbance were*^ A whimsical butterfly is design and complete 16 stained for an answer. “I guess I’ve designs, it is almost impossible was "Friends and Neighbors.” Robert A. Scabies, 20, of 14 Wilfreds suspended from the high ceiling, glass windows for the nave. always enjoyed working with my to pick a favorite, but Ms. The Avon float, c a ll^ “Beauty of the Road; Harold B. McNeely, 20, of 1182 W ." wings unfurled as though ready hands and drawing. Every day Madsen points to a panel hanging Orient,” won the Grand Prize as the to take flight. “WE HAD done some repair Burglars set fire in vacant house Middle ’Turnpike; and Lori A. McNeely, ^ work on two of their old win­ there’s something new — in the front window. “It’s nothing most beautiful commercial entry for its 18, of the same address and charg^ - Ms. Madsen, 45, has been on whether it’s a new shipment of special,’’ she says, “but I like it lush depiction of a garden of ming trees Green Road tor only three years; dows,’’ Ms. Madsen explains, department had the blaze them with interferring with a police o L " “then we expressed a desire to do glass or a new idea someone best.” The piece is done in art Burglars broke into a va­ damaged the lower, police family which lives across determined if anything had and red roses. A character dressed as prior to that, she had her own nouveau style, and uses blue, under control in an hour. been taken from the house. ficer. their Tiew windows. But competi­ wants me to make.” cant house on Taylor Street said. the street, Mott said. The the Grand Kabuki of Japan, her kimono diop in Haddm. She prefers her And the people really do come amber, and clear cut glass, No one was injured in the name of the family was not The second floor of the They recovered some Police also arrested Dawn N. Pagani,--; tion was very stiff, and we had no A view of her studio on Friday night and set a fire covered in orchid petals, stood amidst an 18, of 70 Benton St. and charged her with.^^' current set-up, working, in in with novel ideas, some of nuggets, and faceted “jewels.” in a second floor closet blaze which began about 6 known. Mott said the home home was destroyed. The draperies on the ground ocean of orchids. effect, for Mr. and Mrs. Gerald reputation for church windows. 330 Green Road (top first floor received some breach of peace. So when we met with the com­ which cannot be expressed in the The design is slightly which completely gutted p.m., according to police has been vacant for three across the street from the Many campers who braved the Taylor of 230 Porter St. who own medium of glass. “One woman asymmetrical, and the effect is photo) shows a mirror years but is furnished. smoke and water damage. All four were released on $250 bond for mittee, we brought a window we the upper floor and Sgt. John Mott. house. nightlong showers and temperatures that court appearances Jan. 11. the store and provide her space. came in and wanted kitchen very pleasing. that can be decorated The home is owned by a Moft said the town fire Police have not yet dipped into the low 50s to stake out had designed according to one of to fit the season. “I don’t have to worry about all cabinet doors,” she says. “She ALTHOUGH Ms. Madsen the headaches of nmning my own the themes they had suggested, ^7 as well as sketches for the was an dvIcTgardener, and an ar­ was an artist first, she says it is business,” she says candidly. “I tist in her own right. She had not really necessary to be Ann Madsen, 13 just have all the fun.” others. We got the job.” Getting the job was only the some lovely sketches of garden successful in stained glass. “I Northfield St., concen­ J Ms. Madsen’s fun is actually first battle, however. ’The next flowers, but they couldn’t be cut tell my students to learn the craft Obituaries quite complicated. Virtually all out of glass. It was hard for her trates on cutting a her designs are originals; year was spent researching, first, before they learn the art. pattern lor a Tiffany designing, and planning for the to understand that they had to be Until you understand the con­ “otherwise, people can’t see adapted." type lampshade what you are capable of doing,” project. “1 was brought up in an cept, you can’t design. may be made to the maternal great- Irish Catholic home with a ANOTHER unusual request “It’s expensive,” she con­ Anthony Caoali PLEASE READ she says, ^ , Herald photos by Cody Calvary Church, grandparents, Mr. and Swedish Lutheran mother, so 1 I came when a bride-to-be came to tinues, “And if you have no Anthony Casali, 81, of 40 Assemblies of God, Mrs. William E. Curtin of “MY PATTERNS all start up had to go back to Sunday School the studio in search of a special success, it’s a loss. But there are Portland St. died ’Thursday Building Fund. East Hartford, and several here,” ^ e says, gesturing to her for awhile to figure out what to gift for a bagpiper who was going many beautiful patterns at a local convalescent aunts, uncles and cousins. head, "then they go to the do,” Ms. Madsen says. The to play at her wedding. “To available. If you use someone A home. Services will be at the drawing board.” Her vision is church suggested themes to design a bagpiper, you have to else’s pattern, chances are, you He was bom in Italy, revolve around the church year, Bernard J. Lapine convenience of the family. then transferred to a one-of-a- know what one looks like,” Ms. will be successful.” Sept. 26,1900, and had been Burial will be in St. James kind work of art. ’The entire and the minister helped her Madsen says. “I looked in the The artist-in-residence at 330 a resident of Manchester Bernard J. LaPine, 76, of THIS AD! process is lengthy, and requires express the themes in library, in several books, and Green Road turns away again, Cemetery. Holmes for 54 years. Before his 1060 Main St., South Wind­ Funeral Home has charge patience and some manual theologically correct form. ’The couldn’t find exactly what I skillfully cuts a pattern, and retirement in 1967, he had sor, formerly of of arrangements. YOU WILL THANK YOURSELF! dexterity. windows were finally dedicated needed. Finally, I told my boss transfers the pattern to a jagged been employed as a Manchester, died Friday at Ms. Madsen’s art is almost in September of 1979. he’d have to buy me a bottle of piece of glass. She smiles slightly carpenter with a number of South Windsor Convales­ completely self taught. She bad Like many artists, Ms. Madsen Scotch, because I knew there in concentration. Her day’s work firms in the area. 'dabbled in oils, acrylics, and has a love for her craft which is cent Home. Loomis J. Martin would be a picture on the label,” has started. N He is survived by his wife. Alba (Fracchia) He was the husband of Loomis J. Martin, 54, of No Lower Prices Anywhere!!! Casali, a daughter, Mrs. the late Merle Bradley 20 Westland St., husband of William (Shirley) Shultz of LaPine. He was born in Sandra Canessa Martin, Manchester, and two New Britain on July 18, died Thursday at Rocky grandcliildren. 1905. Prior to retirement in Hill Veterans’ Home and CLOSED THURS. AT 5:00 & FRI., NEW YEARS DAY] Funeral services will be 1960 he worked as a chef at Hospital. Hartford Diner and the The week between the holidays is the p its ... Monday at 9:30 a.m. from the John F. Tierney Brown Thomson Cafeteria. Born in Limestone, Funeral Home, 219 W. He was a member of the Maine, May 24,1927, he had TO GET READY FOR OUR DREATEST EVER Center St., followed by a Knights of Columbus. lived in Wethersfield I’m not one of these common, or­ and Monday feels like Friday, and cooking is out of the question when taking the tree down. Some people before coming to 9. Nobody wants to schedule mass of Christian burial. He is survived by three dinary New Year’s Eve haters. I Saturday feels like Sunday, except you know you still have to face New like to tear the band aid off in one Burial will be in St. James Manchester 16 years ago. anything. There is an overwhelming sons, Bernard P. LaPine of hate the day after Christmas it’s Monday. And it doesn’t help one Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day. yank. Boom, the day after Christ­ feeling that it's better to wait uotfil Cemetery. Andover, James LaPine He was a veteran of the straight through to New Year’s Day. And all those how-to-use leftover- Friends may call at the bit that you haven’t gotten around to mas and there’s no sign that there after Jan. 1. Why. I’m not sure, but and Gerald LaPine of Korean conflict, serving These are the reasons why I hate buying a new calendar yet, so you turkey recipes in the newspapers ever was a tree taking up half the the week between Christmas and funeral home Sunday, 2 to 4 with the U.S. Army. He Manchester; two step­ these days. If you don’t agree, well, try to add days on to the old, ragged sound revolting. Unless you like living room. Not a pine needle New Year's is a little like camping and 7 to 9 p.m. The family daughters, Amie Dart of w as employed as a YEAR END SALE! that’s just tough. Write your own D^ember oiie, which looks like it’s pineapple chunks and walnuts hiding anywhere. You’re not one of these suggests that memorial Ellington and Lola Carl of carpenter in Hartford. out in the DMZ in your appointment contributions be made to Winchester, N.H.; a column. been through the subway at rush in your white meat, which you don’t. types, though, and you spend the book. Nobody wants to have lunch, the Manchester Memorial OPEN SATURDAY, JAN. 2nd. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.| brother, William LaPine of Besides his wife, he 1. 'Everybody’s in a bad mood. ’The hour, anyway. 6. New Year’s Day is a letdown. week between Christmas and New much less get together unless it’s Hospital Building Fund, 70 New Zealand; a sister, leaves two sons, John and store clerks turn from helpful San­ 3. You keep getting Christmas Year’s making weak swipes at the for New Year’s Eve. “Oh, let's wait Haynes St. g e n e r a l ELECTRIC WHIRLPOOL Ca i o J t OSHIBA Why can’t we schedule New Year’s Elsie Casperino of James, and a daughter, ta’s elves into Crabby Appletons. cards all week from tardy friends 4. Some people are on vacation, BEFORE Christmas. It always- tree, taking down an ornament here until after the first of the year,” is Corliss, all at home in Philadelphia, Pa.; and And Heaven help you if you try to whom you never sent cards to in the but you’re not. You hate skiing, but seems like an anti-climax to ipe. It’s and an icicle there, but never quite the universal rallying cry. Carmella PaganI Manchester; a brother, BCA LITTON -«ANA A _ CHW"'® several grandchildren and change the velour shirt you bought first place because you forgot. And, you find yourself looking enviously like seeing the Roiling Stones first, getting up the organizational spirit 10. All these “the year’s ten best" great grandchildren. Harry Martin of Carmella Pagani, 70, of your father for Christmas at the of course, it looks too obvious to at station wagons filled with ski and then Aztec Two Step. Or the guy to get the task done. And, of course, lists start cropping up in the Limestone, Maine; a poles. You entertain thoughts of 22 Foster St., wife of Funeral services will be Parkade and ask for a simple, shoot one back to them in the mail at who tosses 23 teacups in the air no one else offers to help. newspapers, and you walk around sister, Mrs. Eva Leavitt of buying a ski parka. You want to curl Romolo R. Pagani, died held Monday at 8:30 a.m. Caribou, Maine; a sister in straight-forward opinion like do this point, so you find yourself doing without breaking one AFTER you 8. There are dynamite sales going wondering how you possibly missed Friday at St. Francis up at some lodge in Vermont with a at the J.F. Tierney Funeral New Hampshire; and they think skinny, green and white stupid things like making serious see Perlman. Those of us who were on all over town and you’re so broke "The Hotel New Hampshire" or Hospital and Medical Home, 219 W. Center St. to several nieces and stripes are more flattering to a mid­ mental notes to send them Valen­ cup of cocoa, the way everybody from Christmas that you can’t af­ “Reds.” And. you call up a few Center. TYPICAL YEAR END SPECIAL BUYS! else is. bom oblivious to 23-yard lines find be followed by a mass of nephews. dle aged man tbAn wider, red and tine’s Day cards... or you send them New Year’s Day a trial by ford a knee sock, much less a new friends and say, “Let’s go see ...” Bom in Waterbury, Nov. Christian burial at the blue stripes... off a Christmas card anyway and 5. Food is boring. It’s not that you tape deck. But, of course, the signs Private funeral services VIDEO TAPE hangover. and they say, “Oh, let’s wait until 1, 1911, s(ie was a resident Church of Assumption at 9 25” RCA TV ZENITH 19” 2. You’re never quite sure what blame it all on the U.S. Mail and, of ate too much at Christmas dinner beckon everywhere and it doesn't of Manchester for 50 years. and burial will be held at i r i Y 19” Color TV after the first of the year.” a.m. Burial will be in Blast RECORDER day it is. Sunday feels like Monday, course, they know tetter. (though you probably did), it’s that 7. R’s time to start thinking about She was a charter member Cemetary. the convenience of the CONSOLE 6H R -VH 8 PORTABLETV hurt to look. Yes, it does. See what I mean? of Calvary Church, family. There are no Assemblies of God. Friends may call at the calling hours. * 5 9 * 2 5 7 Besides her husband, she funeral home Sunday, 2 to 4 LIMIT ONE p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Memorial contributions U N IT OIK 4 8 7 « leaves two daughters, may be made to the charity 2 Loretta Montalvo and of Me donor’s choice. RCA 19 ” I nattel WHIRLPOOL 5 3 C AM-FM TURNTABLE ... But the New Year will be^the best ever Gwendolyn Pagani, both of OELUKE-2 SPEED CASSETTE Manchester; two sisters, Saan Thomaa Carr Holmes Funeral Home is PORTAIUTV INTELLIVISION MULTI-TEMP MICROWAVE STBIEO-iEGEIVES in charge of arrangements. Mrs. Anna Kearns of . Sean ’Thomas Carr, in­ 6AME«247 WASHER OVEN W ITH SPEAKERS Manchester and Mrs. Louis I’ve been looking into my own • The New York Giants will win find them. crystal, and the electricity in the to the countray. I’ll be sitting here (Josephine) Frasciano of fant son of John T. and FsdirylMito 25 • The hair on my head will appear house won’t go off a single time all Maureen (Curtin) Carr, of future and here’a the way I see the the Super Bowl and I will watch it thinking 1983 will be the test year Ansonia: four * 2 9 4 •222 ‘ 2 4 7 year ahead for me: from a good seat on the 50-yard line. to be getting thicker, not thinner. year so that I’lLonly have to reset we’ve ever had. grandchildren; and six 112 Walker St., died Satur­ ‘ 3 4 7 ‘ 1 $ 7 day at John Dempsey DISHWASHER 2D00R WOULD f a m o u s ' • The year will go slowly, not Andy • Nothing will go wrong with the the clocks twice for daylight and great-grandchildren. THANKSGIVING s iia u x E FRiaiDAIRE • In my. part of the country, the Hospital in Farmington. 1 KERO-SEHE quickly the way 1981 did. furnace or any of the appliances in standard time. Funeral services will be NOVENA TO ST. JUDE S ir DELUXE WTOJKFROST winter be crisp and cold with Vatican City Monday at 8:15 a.m. from DELUXE DRYIR HEATER • Doctors will discover that being Rooney the house this year. There’ll be no • I will not miss a single train or Besides his parents, he ^REFNCaUTOR lots of snow but no melting periods Holmes Funeral Home, leaves his paternal grand­ • My It Jiii, ApiiOi Mrtir, r«Rl RAN8E overweight is good for you, big dis­ plumbing problems and the stove, plane. I will not get a seat on the and no slush. Spring will arrive Syndicated The state of the Vatican City and followed by a mass of parents, Mr. and Mrs. John li vHw a i rldi iiiriradii; Mir Um m hes of fee cream several times a th e washing machine, the shuttle to Washington that is shared other places over which the Vatican Christian burial at St. M. Carr of Manchester; his •( Jnm CkM, MfcW INirwiiir if |l * 2 4 7 ‘ 2 5 7 ‘ 2 9 7 week help ward off colds, uul a suddenly about March 1 with Columnist refrigerator and the television set by a mother and father with a baby retains control are remnants of the James Church. Burial will maternal grandparents, ■M HMM f W ipRM pWVMM* ■ IMI ‘ 3 7 7 drink of bourbon before dinner temperatures of 60 degrees that will will all work perfectly. If by any whose ears hurt when we take off. old Papal States. For almost 1,000 be in St. James Cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. ‘W Mii Tf |H I Im riMm frai Wi NO EXTRA CHAROES - FREE DELVERY -SnVICE - FREE NORMAL IN8TALUTI0N keeps the arteries free and clear of hold until the end of May. From chance something does go wrong, • My children will each call home years the papacy held vast temporal Memorial contritions Curtin of Manchester; his OirW if ay iM rt H i laaM f k if N «lM i debris. June through Labor Day the the serviceman will come and fix it several times a week with wonder­ possesions, including large areas of M hH |lv H m il RHw t i m m to • Ronidd Reagan will become the temperatures will be right around 75 with the tools and parts he carries ful news. Italy and, until the French Revolu­ Card of Thanks Mf MiiitoMc. M p M to ay prMnil ato JOYOUS HOLIDAY TO ALL OF_YOUI ^ I ------— 1 . most successful president in history with periods of heavy rain but no Florida will not be hit with any with him. There will be no charge • Ail th e money-raising tion, parts of southern France. ap n praouL a m ai i praaii» am We wish to express our sincere ap­ prolonged periods of drizzle. tm mm tm a ad tarn |«i b ti b. by ending the recession, inflation freezing weather for the first time because whatever went wrong was organizations who have my name preciation to our neighbors, friends and high interest rates. He will also. • One of the networks will come in years. covered by the guarantee. will lose their lists in a computer Hawaii , and relations for their many acts of [TAKE l - M EXIT balance the budget and in general up With a great new topical humor • Crime will diminish dramatical­ • I will not break a glass, a pair of disaster. kindness and sympathy shown to us St, I n t “Itr FtSan. Tim M dayi TO KEENEY ST. A t fiieJMtid midee me thoroughly ashamed of broadcast that will be fun to sit and The Hawaiian Islands were ly and my wife will stop locking the during our recent bereavement. ad Hviit.* aaSctliM H u t fet aadmtt glasses or a dish. • My lawn mower will start on the m n f m m i watch every Tuesday or Wednesday settled by Polynesian seafarers Many thanks to the pastors of ft Ml at, Tv ■> tts ui tSt M m iw 443-445 HARTFORD RD. ' MANCHESTiR. myself for not having voted for him. doors when she leaves the house. • My wife will announce that she first pull every time. nif^t from 8:30 to 9:30. from islands 2,000 miles to the south Emanpel Lutheran Church and d i lam. Ml ttm t M m ia MM mm,______• No ono I know or love will die. Although the police won’t recom­ doesn’t want to take a trip • Even though none of these about 700 A.D. The first Europeans .• The Itoles and the Afghans will • 1 will have a large glass of in­ everyone who took part. Mai b ML I Mt W M, rapnt MON..^THURO.. n il. TIL • 647-0807 mend it, whenever I pull a car into anywhere. things happen, iny optimism will re­ arrived at the end of the 18th cen­ ’Die Family of TUIS., W n., SAT. TIL • 047-8000 throw the rascals out and restore expensive fresh orange juice for my driveway I’ll leave the keys in • My watch will continue to keep main undiminished and next year at tury. Later there was a feavy influx “ Clifford Y. Anderson Sr. .^famocracy to their countries. . breakfast evm morning because the ignition so I’ll know where perfect time, I won’t break the this time, in spik^of all the evidence of Asian settlers.

• V; THE HERALD, Sat., Jan. 2, 1982 - 13 12 - THE HERALD. Sat., Jan. 2, 1982 News for senior citizens BIRTHDAY ALMANAC Weddings Advice Compiled by the editors of The World Almanac Book of Who Jan. 3 — Ray Milland (1903-), the actor and (jirector Center is planning who has appeared in films since the 1930s. His films include “Beau Geste,” "Dial M for Murder,” “Love Story” and "The Lost Weekend," for which he won an Prayer power stronger Oscar as best actor in 1945. new ethnic programs Jan. 4 — Don Shula (1930- ), the coach of the football team since 1970. He led the Dolphins DEAR ABBY: 1 started out there who are hooked Certainly some to Super Bowl championships in 1973 and 1974. taking diet pills two years as much as I was, and if I abstinence and. self-control . Jan. 5 — Walter Mondale (1928- ), the vice president Editor’s note: this column is Singers & Stage Band Bridge scores; Ed Hindle, 3,980; ago. 'Ihey killed my hunger could kick the habit with are necessary for natural • 'S Tom Regan, 3,790; Doris McCarthy, of the United States, 1977-1981. He was elected to the written by the staff of the Jan. 17: Variety Show rehearsal. and made me feel great. prayer, so can they. S i^ family planning to Manchester Senior Citizen Center. Those persons who would like to 3,390; Gerry McCarthy, 3,360; Irene Too great — that was the Dear Abby me... succeed, but implying that U.S. Senate from Minnesota in 1964 and served two It appears on Tuesdays and Satur­ celebrate their birthdays at the Walsh, 3,300. trouble. By nighttime I was FJIEE IN ’TUCSON this is such a great terms before being chosen by President Carter as his Pinochle scores; Ed Scott, 878; days. center must call and give us your overstimuiated and Abigail Van Buren hardship reduces humans vice presidential running mate. Gladys Seelert, 841; Ethell Scott, DEAR FREE: Your in­ birthday by Jan. 15, so we may plan couldn’t sleep, so I started to little more than animals Jan. 6 — Bonnie Franklin (1944- ), the actress and 834; Paul Ottone, 831; Sol Cohen, spiring message is well in heat. Besides, Abby, a for the correct number of people. taking sleeping pilis. Then worth the space of this dancer who has starred on the popular “One Day at a 826; Leon Fallot, 823; Bill Stone, more diet pills the next little “ Abstinence makes By Jeanette Cave For those persons who bought column. ’Thanks for confir­ 793; Elsa Lenhardt, 791; Helen day. I soon found myself so the heart grow fonderV’ Time” television sitcom since 1975. Director cookbooks, please make the ming that the power of Silver, 785; Andy Noske, 777; Maude hooked I couldn’t stop. (As ALSO FOR n a t u r a l Jan. 7 — Millard Fillmore (1800-1874), the 13th Senior Citizen Center following corrections: On page 75, Custer, 772; John Klein, 771. prayer can move moun­ FAMILY PLANNING a registered nurse, I should tains. president of the United States, 1850-1853. He worked there is a recipe called (Seam Menu for the Week; The Senior Center staff has out­ have known better.) DEAR ALSO: The for a compromise on the slavery issue but his support Cheese Squares. The second part is Monday; Jan. 4. lined a variety of programs for the Finally my nerves were DEAR AB BY: Your flip­ Planned Parenthood peo­ on page 4 under Cheese Mixture. Hamburg on a bun, french fries,. since I ’ve taken a pill, and of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 alienated the North coming year. Included are monthly shot from all the highs and I ’d be lying if I said the pant answer to “ For ple wrote to me to ask that These two recipes should be com­ cole slaw, pudding, beverage. I feel like a new person. and ruined his political career. birthday parties, new arts and lows, and I knew next few weeks were easy. Natural Family Planning” 1 recommend natural fami­ bined. J would like to thank Billie Wednesday; green pea soup, I ’m “ high” on being free Jan. 8 — Elvis Presley (1935-1977), the singer and crafts classes, informative talks on something had to be done. I ’ve never had two more reflects the pill-pushing ly planning as a safe, effec­ Elliott for this correction. grilled cheese sandwich, jello, from artificial stimulation, issues related to the elderly, cooking Even though I ’m not a difficult weeks in all my mechanical solution men­ tive alternative to other movie star who was a dominant figure in rock ‘n' roll for which always ends In classes, as well as instructions in Those persons going on the trip to beverage. religious person, I did life. More than once I was tality of Planned methods of birth control. more than two decades. His most popular recordings various games. Florida must make their final pay­ Thursday; baked ham, candied something I hadn’t done for tempted to get more pills, depression. Parenthood. It also puts include "Blue Suede Shoes," “Love Me Tender, ” . sweet potato, ^een bean casserole, years. I prayed. And by but I prayed for the I know 'all of this is too down women by implying DEAR ABBY: Your Since the Senior Citizen par­ ment to Pauline no later than "Hound Dog” and “All Shook Up." ticipants are representative of the January 10. Your cooperation is roll and butter, lemon tart, God (literally) I somehow strength to keep me from long for your column, Ab­ that the majority of us are evaluation of teachers who various ethnic groups in the com­ sought in making this pleasurable beverage. found the strength to take it, and miraculously the by, blit I hope you’ll find not intelligent enough to get crushes on their Jan. 9 — Joan Baez (1941-); the folk singer who was munity, each month we will trip. Friday; Chicken' rice soup. all those pills and flush strength came to me! space to print part Of it. read clear signals from our students ( “ They are im­ active in the civil rights and anti-war movements of the highlight one and offer various them down the toilet! It’s been five months I ’m sure there are others own bodies. mature — the same as 1960s. She founded the Institute for the Study of Non- ethnic programs on this theme. students who get crushes on their teachers.” ) was Violence in 1965. Programs will include ethnic dan­ (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.) cing, meals, crafts, costumes and not shallow despite the few Mrs. George R. Jay Mr. and Mrs. Joel E. Cavan possibly flms. We hope that each Drugs to help Polly's Pointers objections you received! ethnic group in the community will It is dangerous and un­ take part. If your group is not ethical for teachers to represented at the center, please become romantically in­ volved with their students, Supermarket shopper Jay-Warner Cavan-Berdat contact me so that you may be part of this program. heart patients Butcher block sticky who are usually naive Our goal of planning for total children in a very confused Michelle Marie Warner of South Windsor and George Darlene Ann Berdat, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry utilization of the senior center period of their lives. The fact that occasionally these Raymond Jay of Manchester were married Dec, 26 at Berdat of 59 Scarborough Road, and Joel Edward facilities and increased participa­ BOSTON (U P I) - Hundreds of drugs will “ provide a whole new By Polly Fisher here’s my solution; ’Turn the pie toothpaste has just the right amount involvements produce St. Mary’s Church in East Hartford. Cavan, son of Mrs. Rita Cavan and the late Gerard tion by those who already do not thousands of cardiac patients who pillar of treatment for angina pec­ plate upside down and fit the un­ of abrasive to safely polish the lens. long-lived relationships Store lacks DEAR POLLY: My butcher The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Cavan of Norristown, Pa. were married Oct, 24 at First presently visit the center can only suffer from sharp chest pain could toris.” baked crust onto the OUTSIDE of Do be sure- to rinse thoroughly, Assembly of God Church. block top has become sticky. No does not excuse the lack of Warner of 30 Woodside Drive, South Windsor, and the be achieved with your help. Staff is benefit from the first of a new class Dr. Eugene Braunwald of Har- , the pan. Prick all over with a fork though. Any trace of toothpaste groom is the son of Mrs. Flora Jay of 67 S. Alton St. The Rev. Ralph Jelly of East Hartford performed the matter what I scrub the wood with, ethics inherent in such con­ in the process of forming com­ of drugs expected to receive federal vard, chief of medicine at Brigham and bake, upside down. When the could sting when you put the lens in double ring ceremony. The bride was given in marriage it remains sticky. I would ap­ duct. Don’t back down, Ab­ The Rev. Carl J. Sherer of St. Francis of Assissi mittees to attain these goals. If you clearance next week, it was and Women’s and Both Israel crust is baked, it will probably have your eye. And use this on hard lens by her father, preciate any pointers to relieve this by. You were right the first Church, South Windsor, performed the double ring are interested, please call the reported Friday. Hospitals, said calcium channel shrunk just enough so that you can only! - MR. K. Laurie Berdat of Manchester^ sister of the bride, was problem. — HELEN time. coupon items ceremony. The bride was given in marriage by her center. New ideas and participants The drug nifedipine has been blockers will “ probably have a very remove it from the outside of the father. maid of honor and bridesmaids were Donna Knowlton of are always welcome. TOM SMITH (MY REAL tested on 16,500 patients suffering wide place in practice of medicine.” DEAR HELEN: You don’t say pan and fit it perfectly into the in­ DEAR MR. K.: Thank you very Wallingford; Carolyn Caruso of Wayland, Mass.; and Program activities for the month from angina pectoris, the chest pain NAME) Wanda Marie Pelletier of East Hartford was maid of The drugs work in part by what you’ve scrubbed the wood side for filling. — MRS. J.M. much. I tried this and it worked honor and bridesmaids were Sherri Warner, Renee Claudette Quimby. of Bluebell, Pa,, sister of the groom. of January are as follows: that occurs when the heart is relieving spasms in the arteries with, but if you haven’t tried beautifully. I also chec^'-w ith my DEAR TOM : Thanks. I By Martin Sloane Joy Quimby of Bluebell, Pa., niece of the groom, was Jan. 1: Center Closed. starved for'oxygen. About 1 million DEAR POLLY: To avoid Warner and Suzanne Warner, sisters of the bride, all of chlorine bleach, I recommend that. own eye doctor first to make sure it needed that. flower girl. Jan. 4: Meals resume — pool tour­ feeding the heart and are said to be shrinking, buckled pie shells I nest DEAR Clip ‘n’ file refunds South Windsor, and Lori Bouchard of Vernon, Hillary Americans suffer from angina pain. Wash with mild soap and water, was OK for me to use. Since the Clifford Satterfield of Philadelphia, Pa., was best man nament begins. effective In relieving unstable an empty pie tin on top of the un­ SUPERMARKET ^^__^,._Qi5 rn3 5 -«Mjlastonbury was flower girl. The Boston Globe said results of rinse thoroughly, treat with the toothpaste idea is a bit controver­ Getting married? Beauty Products (File 11-C) and ushers were, James Stowell, Norristown, Pa., Jan. S: Scrabble starts. angina, or chest pain without exer­ baked crust. This can be removed SHOPPER; I am very up­ Greg Lessard of Manchester was best man and ushers the study have been favorable bleach and dry quickly and sial, I suggest any readers in­ Whether you want a formal Clip out this file and keep it with similar cash-off Robert Berdat of Manchester, brother of the bride, and Jan. 6: Welcome tea for director. tion, the Globe said. halfway through the baking process set with one of the local were Raymond Warner of South Windsor, William enough to persuade the federal Food thoroughly. Then rub a very light terested in using It give Uieir own church wedding or a sim-, coupons — beverage refund offers with beverage Richard Busenbark, of Peterborough, N.H. Jan. 7: Speaker on "w in ter The paper said mostly car­ to allow the shell to brown. — MRS. supermarkets. On several Bouchard of Vernon, Thomas Tomko of Manchester and and Drug Administration to approve coating of mineral oil into the wood dbctors a quick call as well. — pie, “ do-your-own-thing” coupons, for example. Start collecting the needed Following the ceremony the reception was at Willie’s weatherization and hypothennia, ^ diologists believe that calcium K S occasions when this store Robert Charnas of Glastonbury. nifedipine for widescale marketing. to recondition and preserve it. POLLY ceremony, get Abby’s new proofs of purchase while looking for the required Steak House. The couple went on a wedding trip to Lake Jan. 13 and 27: Medicatve channel blockers will become the DEAR P O LLY : My eye doctor offered to double the value Cardiologists estimate that a third booklet. Send $1 plus a refund forms at the supermarket, in newspapers The bride attended Manchester Community College Harmony in the Poconos. Theye are making their home third leg of a triad of drugs for If bleach does not remove the recommended what I think is the o f manufacturers' assistance. \ \ of the nation’s 1 million angina long, self-addressed, and magazines, and when trading with friends. and graduated from Computer Processing Institute. She treating cardiac disease, along with stickiness, try rubbing the board perfect cleaner foi hard contact Polly Will send you one of her coupons, I found that it was in MontClare, Pa. Jan. 14: Dental and dentur^earcr^ patients could benefit from stamped envelope (37 Offers may not be available in all areas of the coun­ is employed by the State of Connecticut as a terminal The bride is a grauate of Manchester High School, long-established nitrates such as with salt or cornstarch, then wash lenses; toothpaste! Just rub a tiny PV Jan, 18: Legal aid clinic. nifedipine or similar new drugs signed thank-you newspaper coupon cents) to; Abby’s out of certain items for try. Allow 10 weeks to receive each refund. operator. class of 1976, and Northeastern University School of as indicated above, rinse and again Jan. 20: Ceramics resumes. called calcium channel blocking nitroglycerine and the newer beta amount of toothpaste on both sides clippers if she uses your favorite Wedding Booklet, which I had high-value The following refund offers are worth $13.59. This , The groom is attending Hartford State Technical blockers. recondition .With mineral oil. — Pharmacy, 1981. She is employed by Rite-Aid Pharmacy Jan. 21: Speakers on Senior Intern agents, the newspaper said. of the lens between your fingertips, Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her 12060 Hawthorne Btyd., coupons for the whole week's offers h q ^ a total value of $24.90. College where he is studying engineering. He will in Ardmore, Pa. POLLY then rinse thoroughly. Use your Program and White House Dr. Peter Stone of Harvard’s The beta-blocking agents, ap­ column. Write POLLY’S Suite 5000, Hawthori double-coupon period. Bonus! This offer doesn't require a form . graduate in May and then plans to further his education The groom is a graduate of Berklee College of Music, regular wetting solution before in­ Conference on Aging. Brigham and Women’s Hospital, proved in October, act on the sym­ DEAR P O LLY : In response to POINTERS in care of this Calif. 90250. I recently found a $l-off REVLON COLORSILK, Box 2219, Maple Plain, at the University of Connecticut. He is employed by Boston, Mass, and Maxwell Institute and is erriployed by Jan. 26: Seniors birthday party. serting the lens'tn your eye. TTie newspaper. rapon for a popular brand which has followed about 350 pathetic nervous system that con­ the reader with shrinking pie crust. Minn, 55348. Receive a $2 refund and a 50-cent Oxford Liquor, Wetware Interface of King of Prussia, Pa, Jan. 28: Manchester Round Table o fi^ n d ry detergent. When patients on nifedipine, said the trols the heart rate. coupon. Send one box top from Salon Formula this supermarket chain Colorsilk and the register receipt with the price offered aouble coupons, I circled. Expires June 30, 1982. visited fouK of its stores These offers require refund forms: Engaged Short waist is too wide several timeh\during the CLAIROL Balsam Color Refund. Receive a re­ Sandra O'Connor promotion. T n k shelves fund equal to the price of one box of Balsam Color. were always empt^sjn this Send the required refund form, the proof-of- DEAR DR. LAMB: Do give you a program to DEAR READER: item. purchase seal from one Balsam Color carton and The double coupon? Newest justice creating stir in Washington you have any good .exer­ follow. Others who want^ Well, you missed at least .register receipt. Expires June 30, 1982. ended on a Saturday. The cises for us short-walsted this issue can send 75 cents'' one. I have' discussed CUTKX NAILCARE $1.50 Cash Offer, Receive a with a Idng, stamped, selT icorice in relation to next day, I visited the people? Even though I $1.50 reRH^ and a nailcare booklet. Send the By Lisa Shepard court sat the first Monday in October. But that’s addressed envelqpe for if chain’s supermarket exercise for 30 minutes Your Health bewing tobacco. Some required r ^ n d form and the front portion of any Washington Correspondent the usual workload for a justice. to me, in care^'ofs.thi^ closest to me. Sure enough, every day, plus go to exer­ bVands contain licorice. Cutex N a ilc ^ package. Expires April 30, 1982. She has missed six of the 60 arguments made newspaper, P.O. Box 1551, the product was on the cise classes, and walk Lawrence Lamb, M.D. Aral some people swallow GENTLE-TREATMENT, Johnson Products Co. WASHINGTON — Almost every weekday before the bench in the last three months. Radio City Station, New it. 'The result is a loss of shelf. A truck must have morning at 8 a.m., the Supreme Court’s newest Because justices don’t have to explain their ac­ when it is nice outside, I Inc. Receive a\$2 refund. Send the required refund York, N Y 10019. potassium and high blood made a delivery at mid­ form and the entire front panel from one Gentle- justice can be found on the floor of the court tions, O’0)nnor has not said why she missed the can’t get my waist down. I You need exercises to pressure. night on Saturday. Treatment Conditioning Creme Relaxer Kit. gymnasium kicking up her tegs. / 1 arguments. But speculation is, that the cases don’t want to lose any weight as I’m already strengthen your abdominal Natural libance contains I don’t know whether I ’ll Expires MayJIO, 1982. O’Connor, 51, the first woman to sit on'the were in some way related to her husband’s law ever find out whether the rather thin. I ’m 5 feet 5 in­ muscles. That includes a substance thhLacts like L ’OREAL Frosting Kit Refund Offer. Receive a bench in the court’s 191-year existence, has also practice in Phoenix, and to avoid any conflict of properly done leg lifts for aldosterone, a {mwerful store held back this been seen around town kicking up her heels at ches and weigh 118 pounds $2 refund. S^d the required refund form, the top lid interest O’Connor removed herself from them. the lower abdomen. Sit-ups hormone from the Itorenal product. But if it did, as I and I ’m very uncomfor­ of one L ’Oyeal Frosting Kit carton and the register some of Washington’s endless social functions. O’Connor’ s husband, John, has now joined a dominal muscles its string. are for the upperabdomen. suspect, I don’t think that table wearing a size eight, there a buffalo hump but gland. It is a rare c ^ s e of receipt. Eixpires Aug. 31, 1982, In the first instance, 0 ’Ck)nnor routinely exer­ D.C. law firm that does very little Supreme As you bend the spine And you may need posture high blood pressWe. it was being fair. What do yet a size 10 is too baggy in the spine shortens making ROl^FANCI-FULL Offer. Receive a $1 refund. cises each morning at a class she organized for (^urt litigation, so she may not continue bowing forward you bring the tip of training. You may also you think? — P.B. from the hips and seat. I want to the abdomen protrude. For However, the licorrce Send ine required refund form, the round collar women employees of the court. The other social out of many cases. your breastbone closer to a good waistline, ypu do need to strengthen your marketed in the U n it^ Colorado Springs, Colo. events she attends represent a small fraction of In the meantime, O’Connor spends about 65 get this waist down and not fronf the box of the Roux Fanci-full bottle and the your pubic bone. That n e ^ good posture. back muscles to provide States is made with ar-' DEAR P.B.: It is easy to register receipt. Expires Feb. 28, 1982. the deluge of invitations she receives daily. taxing hours a week going through the flood of look like an earthworm that has swallowed an allows your abdominal Of course you cannot proper posture. ti-fical licorice that understand why the chain TENDER-TREATMENT. Johnson Products Co. Justice 0 ’(k)nnor is very much in demand. legal material crossing her desk — with the help muscles to go slack, just as reduce your waistline if provides the flavor but may be reiuclanl to display Although the pattern has been for Supreme olive. Inc. Receive a 50-cent refund. Send the required re­ of just two male^nd two female law clerks. if you bent the two ends of you have fat inside your ab­ DEAR DR. LAMB: I does not have that action. a product during a double­ Court justices to maintain a low profile — fund form and the entire front panel from Tender- Court statistics show that one new case comes to DEAR READER: You a bow and watch the string domen without eliminating read your articles con­ Thus licorice made in the coupon promotion if many staying out of the newspapers, never granting in- Treatment Super Penetrating Conditioner. Expires Sandra M. Brindley the Supreme court every 20 minutes during a 40- are correct in saying that a go slack. As the spine the fat, regardless of your stantly and have not seen United States will not hurt of those $1 coupons are in Donna Obzut tervipws and shying away from the social May 30, 1982. hour work week. That amounts to about 5,000 short waist can cause shortens you can have the other measurements. It is anything advising the you - other than the circulation. Here is a refund form to write for: Carnation- butterfly scene — O’Connor hasn’t adopted that new cases a year. problems in controlling same problem. This public as to whether or not calories and sweets it The second $1 of the dis­ Obzut-Miller Brindley-Leclerc like trying to reduce an ab­ Hershey's Free Egg Offer, P.O. Box 460-A, Pico mold. The justices decide to hear about 200 cases a ' your waistline. The reason happens particularly in domen when you are preg­ licorice is harmful. I have provides. 'This is one exam­ count comes out of the Mr. and Mrs. Walter Obzut of 16 Mr. and Mrs. Robert H.Brindley Rivera, Calif. 90665. Your request for this form But then the conservative statei>-appellate year — percent of what they receive. But that is that your spine and ab­ women after the nant. heard several rumors that ple where an' artifical store’s pocket. That may Phelps Road announce the engage­ of East Hampton announce the must be postmarked by Feb. 15, 1982. judge from Arizona most assuredly is different. means they stiil have to weed through the dominal muscles are a lot menopause when the I am sending you the eating licorice is not good product is healthier than equal its total profit from ment of their daughter onna Obzut engagement of their daughter, San­ No matter how she performs on the court, (she thousands of cases defendants take to the court .like the mechanics of a vertebrae get smaller or Health Letter number 17- for your health. Also, the natural product. Unless the sale of $100 worth of to Dennis R. Miller of 76D Imperial dra M. Brindley of Middletown to hasn’t yet had much of an opportunity), she has of last resort. bow and its string. ’The degenerate as os­ 12, Winning the Battle of which is more harmful, red you are having your groceries. No supermarket If you nave had a similar subject, please write to me Drive, son of mr. and Mrs. Russell Normand E. Leclerc Jr., son of Mr. unalterably changed the once-male bastion. And on top of that, O’Connor is still learning ' spine is the bow and the ab- teoporosis. Not only is the Bulge, which will or black? licorice shipped in — enjoy. likes to see its profit quick­ experience or would like to in care of this newspaper, E. Miller of 47 Buckingham St. and Mrs. Normand E. Leclerc Sr. of People have a craving to see Washington’s the ropes of one of the nation’s most demanding, ly disappear in a flurry of express an opinion on this The bride-elect is a 1973 graduate 69 Jensen St. new celebrity in action. Attendance by the public . and prestigious jobs. coupons. of Manchester High School. She is The bride-elect is a graduate of at Supreme Court arguments traditionally tends Just keeping up with the paperwork is more But it is bad business to employed as an analyst with Pratt East Hampton High School .and is to be populated by tour bus lemmings who follow than a fulltime job for any justice, but because purposely keep certain and Whitney Division of United employed at Hartford National their guide. But it shot up 30 percent in the first 0 ’Ck>nnor is the new kid on the block with a items out of stock because Technologies. Bank in Middletown. SANDRA O’CONNOR two months O’Connor was on the bench. highly usual job, she’s quite popular — far more Poetry for a new year of a promotion. This prac­ The prospective bride-elect is a The prospective groom is a While spectators may expect something ... Working and socializing than any other justice — and that concerns some tice doesn’t violate any law 1973 graduate of Manchester High graduate of Windham Tech of different from the striking looking woman In a friends. that I know of. But it does School. She is employed as an Willimantic. He is employed at black robe seated next to the other eight of the court tend to sit back in their chairs “ I worry about her stamina. Justices work 60 ’ DEAR READERS: will not hurt them a Write to Dr. Blaker at cause consumers to lose analyst with Pratt and Whitney W ilson E le c tr ic Co. Inc. in justices, O’Connor’s presence hasn’t mumbling questions to nervous attorneys, while to 65 hours a week — and those are grueling These poems by Susan tremendous amount. the abovW addreess. The trust in the store when they Division of United Technologies. Manchester. dramatically turned the court around. O’Connor sits forward and speaks loud and hours,” said a Washington friend who knows her Polls Schutz may give you And isn’t it likely that he volume of mail prohibits figure out what is The prospective bridegroom is a A May 29 wedding is planned. “ I don’t think it’s changed things. People here clear. well. “ In the past this has meant virtually no all some inspiration for a will find out at some point personal replies, but happening. In other words, 1968 graduate of Manchester High are treating her as just another justice, and she “ But she’s just as rude as the other justices,” Ask social life for them. Y et Sandra has also been meaningful New Year’s about his best friend’s in­ questions o f general in­ the store destroys the good School and a 1970 graduate of happens to be a damn good one,” says a Wall noted the observer "She’s not afraid to charge socializing.” resolution. volvement? Unless, of terest will be discussed in image that it has worked so Manchester Community College. He ’The National Geographic Society, Street Journal reporter who regularly covers the right in and interrupt a lawyer mid-sentence, Dr. Blaker But O’Connor’s lifelong ability to juggle a ■ “ Am I my Image or is c o u rs e , you plan on future columns. hard to create. is self-employed as a building con­ founded in 1888, is the world’s court. “ She asks the questions that need to be blasting away with her own questions.” family, political career, and legal respon­ my image me? Karen Blaker, Ph.D. vanishing into thin air with The answer to this tractor in Manchester. largest nonprofit scientific and asked.” Up until the court recessed Dec. 14, O’Connor sibilities have admirers convinced she can han­ Did I create my image two separate but complete­ problem is straight­ An April 17 wedding is planned. educational institution. Another court watcher observed that the men issued only one opinion of the 11 issues since the dle the pressure. by things I did ly. unrelated explanations. Looking for a second car? forward. A store should not or did other people who Perhaps your plan seems The Classified section is a offer double coupons if it never met me easier because it is the complete car-buyer’s must go “ out of stock” on certain items in order to do c r e a t e a w ay th ey You need the confidence The most important least painful for you. guide. so. wanted me to bet to know that you don’t need thing is that he not find dut I’m sure there are many factors to be taken into ac­ I think I know who I am to hide, his best friend is in vo lve^ Join your friends and Soil makes liar a champion but it is often strange Your real self is great.” I will wait to read your count which you have not having a self and an im­ comments in the paper elaborated on in your short DEAR DR. BLAKER: I letter. See a therapist and neighbors in support of BURLINGTON, Wis. (UPI) - front yard is the back and the Don W. Carey II, Warrensburg, “ One time we'were anchored before it sprouted,” be said. He hung it on the\living room age before I took this drastic have fallen in love with my talk it over. The clay soil in Dale C. Carlson’s back yard is in the front.” Mo., got an honorable mention off the coast of San Francisco for William A. Carpenter, Upland, wall. and when things get dif­ action. ,v Manchester Memorial husband’s best friend. It is backyard is so hard he had to That yam won Carlson the title four days. The Navy had to hire ficult it is sometimes con- Does your job have you for his story on how to grow huge Pa., told of roofing bis neighbor’s “ During the winter, CM J)W ELL OIL, INC. a terrible situation but I DEAR READER: You Hospital’s $3,000,000 Com- rent a gasoline-powered post- as the Burlington Liars’ Club’s potatoes. four tug boats just to puli us off house when a dense fog came up. .fjiMiQ — ^ tied up in knots? Write for the room felt considerably have decided that 1 want to are absolutely correct: hole digger to loosen it up a bit. 1981 World Champion. “ What I do)^’ he said, “ is ihe coffee grounds,” be said. “ We kept right on roofing and Dr. Blaker’s newsletter. nriunity Fund drive. warmer than the other rooms in start off the New Year by This is a drastic move. And “ But it was still difficult to dig John Soeth, president of the plant onions beV/y^ the hiUs^bf Paul D. GaiseK Salina, Kan., when the fog cleared we found we - as to what is real.” “ How to Reducee Job the bouse. being totally honest with 1 certainly cannot tell you Please send your contribution to because of the large number of club that has been around — spuds. The onionsdause'tiieeyes won an honorable mention fo r , had shingled six feet beyond the Stress.” “ i don’t like phoniness. myself. whether or not to go ahead. Send 50 ceiits and a 115«9 G.O.D. stones underground which caused minus a two-year period when it of the potatoes to water which in .-'^ tU iig ^ w he planted a field o f peak of the roOf,” ,he said. “ So the next summer, I painted Manchester Memorial Hospital Take off your mask and I am going to leave my 1 can urge you, however, stamped, self-addressed the digger to bind,” he said. was disbanded — for more than turn keeps the potato p l a i ^ wheat wU^3yhorse-drawn And then there was the one told a similiar piqtures and hung Building Fund let me see ycur face. children with my husband to proceed slowly. A lot is envelope to Dr. Blaker in “ All of a sudden I got the thing 50 years, said Wednesday the watered.” ------planter. by James Hetzel of Carbondale, them in each loom. The entire Take off your affection and run away with my at stake here. care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 1409 stuck so bad it turned my whole number of entries was down this Jim Kubath, Burlington, raid “ The seed was so potent I had III., who said two summers ago house remained so comfortable ■ and let me hear you talk. lover. ■ Any other solution First of all, there is no Manchester, Conn. 06040 lot around and now my house year, but the quality of the lies (b drive the horses at a gallop so throughout the winter I no longer P.O. Box 475. Radio City 649-8841 sailors are noted for drinking a be painted a picture of a ' Take off your smile and would hurt tny'husbaimjoq way of leaving your hus­ Station, New York, NY 646-7086 faces west instead of east and my was more than up to snuff. lot of coffee. the sped would lie in the ground fireplace glowing with embers. have to pay fuel bills,” he said. ______' let me get (o kilbw you. much.-f band and your children that 10019. T THE HERALD, Sat,, Jan. 2, 1982 - 15 14 - THE HERAED, Sat., Jan. 2, 1982 Pay time TV TV Saturday Saturday MODNINQ AFTERNOON Bill BIxby and Leslle-Anne Down SKW \2tOO (pictured) star, with Olivia de ® Banny Hfll ) 0 0 Nawa Hall. The Bowery Boys Investigate Martha Scott. The story of Ufa, love Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara salute 8 NtwtmakurSaturcMiy Havilland and Helen Hayes as 5:30 Midday MORNING 8 HHHH7%MM?7WNBC Tfm 0 Underdog the disappearance of abeautifulgirl. and death In a small New England the best of HBO's sports, specials special guest stars, in Agatha Qltngan'a Island (Mon.) 8:00 (90 mink.) town.(2hra.) and movies of 1961 and pop tha cork ^• h vW u Patecp 8 Leurol And Hardy Char In Concert (Mon.) (2^ Laur«l And Hardy 10:55 dZ) Preeentel on the big events in store for 1962. 8Movi4-(Drama)*** "LIbal Oiristie's MURDER IS EASY, an _ 6:54 Uvlno Faith 5:20 C D 8 SchoolhoueoRoek 2:30 8 Sneak Previews Critics Gene 1959 Dirk Bogarde. Olivia de adaptation of the Christie novel, to 8 Morning Prayar 8 8 Paaaword Plua CD Nawt 10:56 ^ We’re Movifis Slskel and Roger Ebert review the Havilland. Engliahman'a auK for libel be broadcast on "The CBS Satur­ 5:55 Taka Tw o 5:30 goes badly aa he waa difficulty 8 Today’aWoman Various Programming CDCD In The Newt- ® OliHgan’eleleiid newest movies in town, including: day Night Movies," January 2. D Undardog 11:00 CD National Football Conference ‘Taps/ starring George C. Scott and remembering detaila. (2 hra.) ttOO Movia 6:00 CD Four Hours For Ufa Playoff Game Due to the tentative : and 'Heartbeeps.' (82) Movie -

THE HERALD,.Sat., Jan. 2, 1982 — 17 MACC News Religious,Services Annio — Leonard Starr y " ■ I

milt, minister of visitation and IHAVETOOftSH BeflTSflLLHOW OH.HfeXBEEN Andover outreach. 9:30 a.m., Sunday OOWNTDHN, ANNIE/ •(DRORBePS A FOOT! HOW school; 10:46 a.m., worship, Astro^graph F1/66EROOT SOME WAY sword FIRST CONQREQATIONAL WHEN TORO ARRIVES m & s n t r o n tC H O lM S m ABOUT Christmas CHURCH of Andover, UCC. children’s church and nursery; 7 ’ STOPFAYIN’ TORO p.m., evening service, nursery. FOR HIS LESSON, THX HIS LESSONS- ■ t a r m - m WE lean Route 6 at Long Hill Road. R< PERTEaiON MONEY- Richard H. Taylor, pastor. 9:£ CALVARY CHURCH HIM l U BE RIfiHT THEN TO PASS SOME ON THAT (Assemblies of God), 647 E. Mid­ . THROUSHTHtf'^ a.m. Church school; 11 a.r eXM6 SHOW IMWE AllPT^__ TBACHER worship service with nursery, dle Turnpike. Rev. Kenneth L. '^ m n o H s v F SCARBfffWM |™, ACROSS 41 Doctor's Answer to Previous Puzzle Gustafson, pastor. 9:30 a.m., FRI0IP O’ HIS/ assistant coffee hour after service. I jMilMryS, 1962 Sunday school; 10:30 a.m., ser­ STUPYIN6.'- 1 Family 43 Mean has two faces vice of worship: 6:30 p.m., Your eyas will be opened to OEMINI (May 21-June 20) Be member 46 Criminal Bolton evening service. new vistas In Ihe year ahead. A very selective of your compan­ 4 High die 50 Condemn number of revealing happen­ ions lor tun Involvements CONCORDIA LUTHERAN number 51 Gorilla CHURCH OF 8T. MAURICE. 32 ings will lead you to seek fresh CHURCH, (LCA). 40 Pitkin St. today. Sourpusses could put a 53 Old Dutch By Nancy Carr Hebron Road. The Rev. J. Cllffojrd avenues for satisfying your damper on activities that 7 Thus (Lat) help the children; Marilyn Turner, John Rev. Burton O. Strand, pastor; coin. Curtin, pastor. Saturday maasjat desires. should be enjoyable. 10 Paradise Executive Director and Isabel Reid. Fiorence Linden, Rev. B. Stacy, associate pastor. 55 Soggy 5 p.m.; Sunday masses at 7:^0, CAPM CO m (Dee. 22-Jan. 19) CANCER (June 21-Juiy 22) Be 12 Author of Manchester Area Conference of Jeanette Gouies, Keith Carey, Pat 8:30 and 10 a.m. Holy Commu­ 56 Decimal unit 9:15 and 11 a.m: 1 This Is not the day to start careful today that you don’t "The Raven" i nion, nursery care provided; 10 C h u rc h e s Schardt, Pat Gonsalbes, John and Jenny. BOLTON UNITED METHODI$T things where you may either take an unpopular position on 13 Bird 57 Old Testament CHURCH.‘ 1040 Boston Turnpike. a.m. Sunday School through lack the lime or Ihe means to something the majority 14 Sailor's book We are in Vermont, on the hahdful of Poweii, Mr. Coltman (for his special grade 6 In classroom wing. 58 Ideal gas buying), to Pack 157, Bolton, and to A. Rev. Marjorie Hiles. pastor. 9:30 complete them satisfactorily opposes. You could waste Motley's Crew — Tem pleton & Form an patron saint acres we are developing on the side of a.m., church school; 11 a.rh.. UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST Unlinlahad proiects will cause emotions defending a stance 15 Massachu­ condition Adshade for the so needed gifts for worship service, nursery. | SOCIETY: East, .163 W. Vernon trustratlona. Find out more of not worthy of debate. setts cape (abbr.) one of the Green Mountains. My grizzled St. Rev. Arnold Westwood, babies (we had three newborns.) ST. QEORQE’S EPISCOPAL what lies ahead In each of the LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Persons 16 Jug 59 Compass and beloved husband, our youngest son 11 Our (Fr.) 39 Compasi CHURCH. Boston Turnpike. Rev. minister. 10:30 a.m.. Service. seasons following you! birth­ to whom you assign tasks point Also, to those who brought in gifts to TRINITY COVENANT 17 Iron (Ger.) 13 Of God (Lat.) born when I was long since white-haired, S '’ ■ John C. Holliger, vlcai*. 10 a.rn., day by sending for your copy of today will work better If they 60 Heartbeat point share with the elderly and those in con­ CHURCH, 302 Hackmatack St. 50 19 Judge 18 Vast period of and me and my cane. There is.no phone, Family Eucharist; 11 a.i^., Astro-Graph. Mall $ t for each feel they are not being loo chart (abbr.) 40 Over (poetic) COHeRATULATIOMS 21 Giraffe-like an time valescent homes: Helen Joyce, Mrs. Nursery program and coffee Rev. Norman E. Swenson, pastor; to Astro-Graph, Box 489, closely supervised. Issue your 42 Tableau no television; in fact, there is no elec­ Milton Nllson, assistant pastor. 8 Radio City Station, N.Y. 10019 directives, then back oti. FOR BEIklGr imal 20 Fruit pastry Clifford M. Sterling, Mrs. Philip fellowship. I DOWN 43 Paint layer tricity or running-water. The outhouse, 23 Coronet 22 S orer' BOLTON CONQREQATIONAL and 11 a.m., worship services, Be sure to spedly birth date. VIRQO (Aug. 23-Sapt 22) CUIRVO/ANT.. Moshier, Mr. and Mrs. Aian Anderson, AOUAMUa (Jan. 20.Fab. 19) 27 Less 44 Rollick or rather the functional lower half, CHURCH. 228 Bolton Confer nursery for Infants; 9:26 Sunday Continue to be cautious In joint 1 Attend to 23 Yield Mrs. Patrick Doughtery, Dr. and Mrs. . Bible School: coffee time at 10:30; Be very careful today that you ventures of a financial nature. expensive 45 Baseball which is all we have built, is buried in the Road at the Qreen. Rev. J. Stqn- 2 Unused 24 Rivers (Sp.j don’t unintentionally let some­ Misunderstanding could cause 32 One (Ger.) official (abbr.) snow on the other side of the meadow. Donald Aronson, Mary and Dave ton Conover, minister; 9:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m. evening service. 3 Half (prefix) 25 Indefinite per­ ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL thing slip that was told to you serious problems which would 33 Exclamation Colbert, Valerie Fiano, and John and worship service, Sunday Schojol, 4 Administer sons 47 Type of poem Melted snow provides water for our hot CHURCH, Park and Church In the atricteat confidence. be hard to unravel. 34 Affect (2 Susan Peak. nursery; 10:30 a.m. Coffee Hqur corporal pun­ 26 Past o( to be 48 Slime cocoa and bath water. And most blessed streets. Rev. Stephen K. Jacob­ PWCEB (Fab. 2IMIIateh 20) LISRA ( 8 e ^ 23-Oct 23) Com­ wds.) ishment 28 Totals In Chandler Hall; 10:45 a.pi. Continue to be extremely pru­ panions will find you ‘annoying , 49 A c to r_____ of all. the deep quiet of these hidden Thank you to those who brought in son, rector; Rev. Alan J. 35 Active person 5 Positive pole 29 Harbor Forum Program. | dent In your financial affairs today It you behave too Imjed- Douglas acres bring a great easing sense of peace baskets and food'and turkeys: Bill Chap- Broadhead, assistant to the rec­ 36 Err 6 Athenian 30 Small articles tor. Rev. Frederick P. Moser, today. Don't spend now for sl’vely. Don't change your mind 37 Musical 50 College mann, R.L. Quinn, Cathy Martin, something which could be at the last minute and mesa up historian case and the opportunity to look back at the Coventry assistant to the rector. 7:30 a.m. instrument degree (abbr.) Charles House, Joseph Murphey, Mr. painful to pay off at a later evsryone’s plans. 7 Planted 31 Capital of last hectic days with, some sense of Holy Eucharist; 9 a.m. Family ser­ 52 Enclosure COVENTRY PRESBYTERIAN data. SCORPIO (O c t 24-Nov. 22) 38 Perfume 8 Thought (Fr.) Italia and Mrs. Thibeau, Debbie and Brian vice and Eucharist with church perspective. .Silent moments in which to CHURCH, Route 44*A and Trew- ARKS (March Zl-Aprll 19) Beware of tendencies today to ' 40 Port of Rome 9 Heart (Lat.) 33 Kiss 54 Price label Swarz (who saved up their paper route school. 11 a.m. Holy Eucharist. see more clearly the two faces of Christ­ Usually you're not the type who turn what should be relatively bridge Road, Rev. Brad Evens, Holy communion every .money to buy food), Anne Messacore's pastor. Sunday. 9:30 a.jn. puts things oft, but today you easy tasks Into something diffi­ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 mas. Wednesday at 10 a.m. How familiar and welcome the faces third grade at Highland Park School, to . worship; 10:45 a.m. Sunday could make excuses and cre­ cult and complex. Use simple SOUTH UNITED METHODIST ate unnecessary delays affect­ methods, not tedloua ones. the students at Bowers for five boxes of school; 7 p.m. Bible study and CHURCH, 1226 Main St, Rev. Dr. 10 11 12 13 held up to us. Trucks, teddy' bears, and fellowship. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. ing several people who are 8AQITTARRJS (No*. 2»-Ose. food, to Phil Viner of the Meadows who George W. Webb, Rev. Laurence, tinsel. Smiling faces, cheerful greetings, prayer rheeting. ; depending on you. 21) Today, avoid pals who are M. Hill. 9 and 10:45 a.m. Worship 14 15 16 warm hugs and handshakes, families and offered a special Christmas dinner in the PRINCE OF PEACE TAURUS (AprH X H U y 20) hard to find when the check conference room to twenty, to the hun­ LUTHERAN CHURCH. Route 31 Use your common sense today arrives. Involve yourself Instead friends gathered close, the almost fran­ EMANUEL LUTHERAN and North River Road. Rev. W.!H- In health matters. Don’t eat or with friends who never taka 17 18 ,9 20 dreds of people who left gifts and food at CHURCH. Church and Chestnut tic effort to get everything done and Wilkens, pastor. 9 a.m., Sunday drink things you know are not advantage of your generosity. the fire stations, Parkade and Heritage streets. Rev. Dale H. Qustafson good lor you. INEWSFAPCT ENTCRPAiaa ASSN.) ■ everyone remembered. Bright bows, school; 10:15 a.m., worship ser> and the Rev. Michael R. 21 22 and whose names we do not know but vice. glittering paper, the church filled with Lohmann, pastors; Jeff Henricks. • whose kindness we saw, and to all the ST. MARY'S CHURCH. Route the glowing red of massed poinsettias intern; Rev. C. Henry Anderson, , 23 24 26 31. Rev. F. Bernard Miller, pastor; 25 28 29 30 31 generous contributors to the Seasonal pastor emeritus. 6:30 a.m. and the joyful welling up of song and Rev. John L. Suprenant, 1 Sharing appeal; Worship^ service; 9:45 a.m. ■ prayer. associate pastor. Saturday 32 33 34 Church SchoQl, Adult Forum. Bi­ There is another hidden side of Christ­ masses at S and 7 p.m.; Sunday David and Lynda Hulme, Walter and Wilma ble Study, 11 a.m. Nursery; 11 1 masses at 7:30. 9:30 and 10:45 Bridge 35 36 mas — those for whom there are too Joyner, Kslher M. Peterson and Ruth E. Murrav. a.m. worship service. a.m. many empty hours, broken only by the John and Julia Melcsko, Robert and Elaine NORTH UNITED METHODIST SECOND CONQREQATIONAL 1 Neiswanger. Helen Flavell, David and Patricia CHURCH. 300 Parker St. Rev. Dr. meal tray. On Christmas Day the only CHURCH, (United Church of 38 39 40 Berrill, Howard L. Love, pastor. 9 a.m. visitor the memory of family and friends Also. Lena M. Speed, Effie and Raymond Blake. Christ). Route 44A. Rev. Robert.K. ■ Adult Bible class, nursery for Bechtold, pastor. 9:30 a.m- 41 now gone. For some there are not even Joseph Schauster. William and Eileen Dalton, children 5 years old and,younger; Karn trophy winners Church school for all ages; 11 Frances Helfrick. Ralph and Anita House. James 10 a.m. Church school and good memories but the bitterness of a.m., worship service (child care Levy’s Law — James SchUfrJeister F and Anne McLaughlin. Andrew and Edith Spiron. worship. Coffee fellowship 43 44 45 ^ ■ 4 6 47 48 49 always being different, always being the provided). phy donor), Howard Schenk- Eric and Kathleen Sinnamon. Concetta Gallo. John following service. FIRST congregational en, David Bumstine, EUnor outsider: crippled, brain damaged, and Phyllis Alvord, North United Methodist. Maher SECOND congregational CHURCH OF COVENTRY, 1171 N<»TH l-MS Murdoch, Oswald Jacohy, 50 51 52 53 54 schizoid, autistic. Associates. Ruth and Alfred Sieffert, Clarence and . Herald 0hoto by Tarquinlo CHURCH. 385 N. Main St. Rev. Main St. Rev. Bruck J. Johnson, ♦ AJ4 Waldemar von Zedtwltz aira The hustle and bustle, the cheerful . Alice Peterson. Whiton Publix Library. E^dward and Dr. Jam es D. M acLauchlln, minister. 9:30 a.m. Church School Barbara Moriarty, Lennart and Mildred Johnson. pastor. 1(7\a.m. worship service B J. Becker. 55 56 57 caroling, the reaching out to others of at Church Lane House; 11 a.m. ♦ KQ91 Gerald and Joan Sullivan. Marion C. Ford. Robert and c h u rc ^ s c h o o l; 11 a.m. The event was discontin­ Christmas painfully emphasizes such UNITED METHODIST CHURCH IN BOLTON Worship service, nursery care and Veronica. fellowship hou ♦A 9 863 ued In 1960, but the winners 58 59 CO provided in Church Lane House. aching loneliness, such as separation. In Also. Stanley and Helen Opalach, Roy and CENTER CON^EQATIONAL W E S T E A S T read almost like a who’s who t other homes there are fights and bitter Margaret Vaughn. Samuel and Phyllis Pierson. CHURCH. 11 Center Street. Rev. ♦ess oiotsi of brlto, except that until David Richards of Metro Bowl. Bowers School Manchester Newell H. Curtis Jr., senior ?KJ1064 fQ» Silvia Stein of Detroit won in (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN) recriminations when he discovers that 1958 no other woman man­ she has spent part of the rent money on Grade 2. Peter Gourley. Carl Mikolowsky, John and pastor; Rev. Chet Copeland, 67663 64 Lynn Nelligan, Robert and Lois Stoker. Joseph and Church calendar QOSPEL HALL. Center Street. associate pastor; Rev. Clifford O. 64 M Q Jlti: aged to win. E3inor still lives an expensive doll for their 5-year-old. Lucille Tully. Norma and Richard Marshall. Anna 10 a.m., breaking bread; 11:45 Simpson, pastor emeritus. 10 in Birmingham where she Not even boots. A doll! They suffer loud­ Dolan. Mildren Dennison, Jeffrey Clarke. Robert a.m>> Sunday school; 7 p.m., a.m. Worship srvice, sanctuary: S O U T H still occasionally plays in ly or silently from his inability to unders­ and Kathy Johns, Raymond and Marianne Wilcox, gospel meeting. 10 a.m. Church School. - 6KQ7 tournaments. tand her desperate need to provide a Francis and Elaine Sampson. Danny Morales, FULL QOSPEL VAI762 Here Is one of the bands CELEBRITY CIPHER Frances and Scynia Helfrick. William add Elizabeth Anonymous in Luther Hall, Emanuel INTERDENOMINATIONAL 6AJ10I that helped her win the 1934 Catabrtty Ciphsf cryptoprsms srs crsstsd from quoUtkxis by famous peopJs. past smail piece of her daughter’s dream, or Lander, Kerwin and Harriet Spencer, Richard Emanuel sets CHURCH, 745 Main St. Rev. ♦ 7 individual. The bidding was and praaant. Each lattar m Iha dphar stands lor snothar. Today's clue: P aqua/s D. Krajewski, Al Siefferl’s Appliances, Mr. and Mrs. Lutheran Church, 60 Church St. Philip Saunders, minister. 10:30 hers or his own. Tears instead of tinsel, Financial advice Vulnerable: North-South what mljht be expected bitter words over the Christmas carols Herman Johnson. Richard and Victoria Jennings. weekly events a.m., praise, worship service and from a 1934 infUvldual and Edward and Maureen Otto, Jane and Russell Bible study; 7 p.m., deliverance Sylvia Porter tells how to Dealer: Exit Elinor found benell in seven and even more.of the rent money gone service. C a p ta in Easy — Crooks & Lawrence Holmes. Mrs, James McCrowe. $outh United Weft North Eut Saath FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, 52 get “Your Money’s Worth” diamonds. when in wild anger and frustration he Also, Meredith Adams. Peter and Elizabeth Events scheduled at Emanuel , 36 DU. Dummy’s ace of clubs won Sadlowski. Tom and Mary Breen. Richard and Joyce Lake St. Rev. James Bellasov, — ^ily on the business ‘*IZLWKXZ AH HABZLI Kl A B Z ^ £ A slams out and heads for the nearest bar. Lutheran Church for the week of Jan. 3: Pan 4V the first trick. Elinor saw N O eoO V LL r JACK, WHERE'S Armstrong. Walter aqd Margaret Burnett. Sophie slates events pastor. 9:30 a.m., Sunday school; page in ’The Manchester P us ,«e We stand with outstretched hands Pan 36 that she needed to make all PIMP YOU ( YOUR LITTLE Mulcronka. Ronald and Suzanne Schiera. Norris and Sunday: 10 a.m., Mini-Musical 10:30 a.m., worship service; 7 P su 4 NT Herald. Pan Pan eight trumps sed a tely in HERE,EASY. L NIECE,ERIN? between givers and recipients troubled Joyce Stephenson. William E. Buckley. Terrence between services presents vocalists Nan­ Events scheduled next week at South p.m., evening service. Pan 76 by the two faces whirling before us. Our CHURCH OF THE Pan O l d e r to come to 13. She and Rose Donnelly. Women s Club of Manche.ster. cy Linger and Eric Earn; and pianist, Uiiited Methodist Church; thanked the gods of chance gifts of food, clothing, and toys ease the Syndet Products Inc.. Rosemary and Roland Monday: 7:30 p.m.. Administration ASSUMPTION. Adams Street at Pauline Earn; 6:30 p.m.. Youth meet at Thompson Road. Rev. Edward S. About collecting for not having inspired West EHQ JME NHL EHGL LHHO BZLZ ache for a few precious moments. But Deslippe. Edith Howland. John and Grace Shea. church to go ice skating; Junior High Board, education wing. Opening lead: to lead a trump and proceed­ William John and Hildegard Meldrum. Walter and Pepin, pastor. Saturday masses Russ MacKendrick the gifts of health, physical and mental, Youth Group New Year’s Party. 'Tuesday: 7:30 p.m.. Religion and at 5 and 7:30 p.m.; Sunday ed to use perfect cross-ruff Grace Holman, Frida Elvera Nordgren, Gerald and writes about stamps, coins or being born into warm and loving Frances Lynch. William and Elanor Rook, Raymond Monday: 3:30 p.m.. Staff meeting; Race, 179 Pitkin St. (Weinbergs); masses at 7:30, 9. 10:30 and technique! by cashingcat all her and Elizabeth Karpe. Florence C. Byrne. Annette 11:45 a.m. and almost anything top spades and the club and families cannot be packaged. Only one of 6:45 p.m.. Scouts; 7:30 p.m., Church Women’s Prayer and Study, 1208 Main By Oswald Jacoby hem aces. and Thomas Barlow. Paul and Janet Damiano, CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST collectible — in “Collec­ asdAlaa Seotaf the gifts given to men is equally Council meeting. St.; OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS. Wood- Then she ruffed a heart HC ZMLAB.” — OGBMOOMP MQK William Luettgens. Robert and Edna Hohwieler. tors’ Corner,” e y ^ r y available to us all — the priceless gift of Tuesday: 10 a.m.. Old Guard — "rhursday: 6:30 p.m.. Junior Choir, side Street and Hlllstown Road. with dummy’s deuce of Robert and Georgia Worsley, Frederick and Irene ’Tuesday in ’The Hefald’s faith and even thafgift must be shared Hughes. Edwin and Shirley McCabe. speaker, Cynthia Bercowicz. All retired Pumpkin Patch; 7:30 p.m., Adult Study Wendel K. Walton, bishop. 8:30 Backinmi.tbeUteWU- trumps and was able to ' for to hoard it is to extinguish the only Also. Marjorie McMenemy in the name of the men in the community are invited to at­ & Sharing, 224 Indian Hill Trail, Glaston­ a m.. Priesthood and Relief Focus/Leisure section. lard S. Karn ^ve'a trophy claim the last seven tricks Richard E. Martin family. Janet Boyle, Sally Jo. Society; 11:15 a.m.. Sacrament for a LUe Masters Individu­ since her trumps were high light which may make all the other in­ tend. bury (Daishers). Meeting. Rubin, and Lee Langston. Gail Peters, Paul and al Tournament limited to 36 and could be scored sepa­ PREVIOUS SOLUTION:"My Rhodes scholarship has made equities bearable. Wednesday: 1:30 p.m., Friendship Friday: 10 a.m., Al-Anon, education SALVATION ARMY. 661 M4in rately. Helena Dutelle. Wilbur and Belly Jane Messier, The inside story players. The first seven football seem less Important to me; It brings it down to earth." To all of you who in small ways and wihg; 6:15 p.m., Youth Choir, Pumpkin St. Capt. and Mrs. Arthur (NEWSPAPER ENTER PREE ASSN.) Theresa and Arthur Perreault. Edward and Mary Group Epiphany gathering: 6:30 p.m., winners were Karn (the tro- — Pat Haden large reached out to comfort and fill the Sulick. Russell and Charlotte Granniss, Kevin and Emanuel Choir potluck. Patch; 7:30 p.m., ■ Chancel Choir, Carlson, corps officers. 9:30 a.m., ■Jack Anderson tells the ache our thanks. May God grant a con­ Maureen Slone. Francis and Mary Rohan, Ll. Col Thursday: 10 a.m.. Prayer Group; Pubpkin Patch; United Methodist Youth Sunday school; 10:45 a.m., inside story in Carl and ('arol Allen. Maryann Falkowski, Gary and holiness meeting; 6 p.m., open- “Washington Merry-Go- tinuation of our sharing and caring for Ann Matre. Hazel Christiana. Robert and Pauline 11:15 a.m.. Care & Visitation; 1:30 p.m.. Fellowship, youth lounge. air meeting; 7 p.m.. satvatipn l-'riBcilla’s Pop - Ed Sullivan one another throughout all the days of Maddeu. F.dward and Marion Atkinson, Marguerite Friendship Group snow date; 3:45 p.m.. meeting. Round” — every day on the UNITED PENTECOSTAL opinion page of The the New-Year' O'Connell. Marion Eddy, Edna Anna Gcach, William Bell Choir; 6:30 p.m.. Confirmation Kit ‘n’ Car.yle —- Larry Wright and Lucy Desmond, .lohn and Ada SulLvan, Caroline CHURCH, 187 Woodbridge 8t. Herald. classes. I^azarene sets Rev. Marvin Stuart, minister. 10 Chr/stmas sparkles Geer. Edward L, Besser. Genevieve Mennillo. Friday: 8 p.m.. Twelfth Night a.m., Sunday school; 11 a.m., ikanV. you to all who in the last two Maxine E Stewart. Edward and Ruth Ralph, Matthew Moriarty. Manchester Emblem Club, Festival. its programs worship; 6:30 p.m., prayer;j 7 Open Forum days came into our office with toys to Madeline Uccello. Saturday: 8 p.m.. Alcoholic p.m., worship. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. 43 The Manchester The following events have been Spruce St. Rev. Richard Qr^y, H erald ’s Open Forum scheduled for next week at the Church of pastor. 10:30 a.m., worship ser­ provides space for reader the Nazarene, 236 Main S t.: vice. nursery; 9:15 a.m., Sunday school; 7 p.m.. Informal worship. dialogue on current events. Tuesday: 2 p.m.. Service at Crestfield ST. JOHN'S POLISH Address letters to the Oj^n Afhiesf's son works for Christ Convalescent Home; 3 p.m.. Service at NATIONAL CATHOLIC CHURCH, Forum, Manchester 23 Qolway St. Rev. Walter A. Vernon Manor; 7:30 p.m. Board of Chris­ Herald, Herald Square, tian Life and Finance Comfnittee Hyszko, pastor. 9 a.m.. mass In English; 10:30 a.m., mass In Manchester, CT 06040. Frank and Ernest — B o b T haves meetings. English and POlish. j By Dave Pettinari lawsuit that made waves Once we give them to the Wednesday: 7 p.m.. Children’s ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S / throughout the country. kids, they become their Caravan; 7:30 p.m. Midweek service. CHURCH. 741 E. Middle Turn­ PUEBLO, Colo. (NEA) Bill was named as one of possessions and cannot be Chancel Choir rehearsal. pike. Rev. Martin J. Scholsky, ^ the CPEAnoNl^Tf WERE — Bill Murray, the son of the plaintiffs in the suit. taken away by school of­ pastor. Saturday mass at 5 p.m.; WHAT'/ TO AB(H jE f ' ^ ’^ursday: 9:15 a.m., L.I.F.T. Bible Sunday masses at 8:30, 10 apd VAi CPE/VTSPr ANO THE h America’s leading atheist, In 1963. she won the case. ficials.” ^ < ASOuTt-- stikdy group. 11:30 a.m. ; y J l EvOi.OT‘2ri»^TS E voLvfiD .^^l Madalyn Murray O’Hair, But later, God won her son, ST. JAMES CHURCH. Rbv. Murray, who at one time Murray said his mother Saturday: 9a.m., Cromwell visitation; has tears in his eyes when loja.m. to 4 p.m.. Young People’s Snow William F. Carroll, Rev. Francis; V. r he speaks of his mother. was executive director of was always devoted to Krukowski, Rev. Robert. Bur­ He says that she is mis­ the American Atheist overturning the established Festival at Fitchburg, Mass. bank. team ministry; Rev. Edward erable and that he prays Association started by his order and became more J. Reardon. Saturday masses at 5 radical by the year. and 7:30 p.m.; Sunday masses at, "Many of us spend half our for her every day. But they mother. In 1980, he took a Qholr concert 7:30, 9 and 10:30 and noon; and time wishing for things we never speak, and she will ’’Saul on the road to She has campaigned to at 5 p.m. not read his letters. Damascus” turn to Jesus remove “In God We Trust” i$ scheduled ST. BRIDGET CHURCH. 70 could havie if we didn’t spend* M urray, 35, whose Christ. from federal currency, Main St. Rev. Philip A. Sheridan half our time wishing.” ’^ e Vernon Chorale will present a con­ and Rev. Emilio P. Padeill, co­ (Alexander Woollcott) mother was responsible for Ever since, he’s been prayer from the ■ ■WAVE5 i/u e t cert of music for choir conducted by pastors. Saturday masses at 5 the banning of prayers in traveling the country, legislatures and “so help and 7:30 p.m; Sunday masses at Of the futility of mere public schools 18 years ago, trying to undo the harm he me God” from the Herbert Chatzky at the Second 7:30, 9. 10:30 and noon. wishing! This is not to belittle The Born Loser — Art Sannom spends 10 days a month says his mother has presidential oath of office. (Congregational (Church of 385 North JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, 647 dreaming, for it is the stuff away from his Houston wreaxea on the nation. ^ i n St. on Jan. 31. Tolland Turnpike. 9:30 a.m., Bible from which achievement is She has sued to prevent discourse; 10:20 a.m., group dis­ Our Boarding House — Carroll & McCormick home, speaking to Murray contends that the 'Ihe program will include music by woven. But dreams are not to Bugs Bunny - War,i?' Bros. clergymen from visiting cussion. W lWKLV, .WHAT'VB 'toU eOTA<2WP 5r churches about how he atheists’ association was patients in hospitals that Brhhms, Verdi, Puraell, and a medley of ZION EVANGELICAL be confused with mere wishes ■THE NOTORIOUS PEPS The su a r d s brought I P 1 6 came to Christ and financially faltering when receive federal funds and songs from Porgy and Bess. LUTHERAN CHURCH (Mlsaojurl — fantasies without sub­ A BUNCH OF BLOODHOUNDS Synod), Coopor and niyiiHigh Buwia.streM - JANUARV 2™*. tdSZ, LE PEW MAS ESCAPEP denounces his mother’s ac­ he took it over in 1975 but ^ e concert will begin at 7 p.m. and stance. Rather they consist of AW I TILL HKVEKT j u g K I P ? BILL MURRAY to take religious names off Rev. Charlae W. Kuhl,ihl, pastoripaatoii 9 5 FROM -rHE STATE TO TRACK HIM DOWN- tivist atheism. that he built it from an in­ doors will open for seating at 6 p.m. meaningful imagination >^AW.A6>.NSLE V(?W hospital buildings. ' a.m., Olvina worahip;p; 10:15 a.m C f - 4 PKISO/N. He was 14 years old in come of $2,000 a month to An members Of the Vernon (Chorale Sunday School and Youth Foriim. which motivates one to 1960 when he and his family $40,000 a month. She even advocates ar^ admitted by audition. (Chatzky is Holy Communion firstrtt and tNlrd calculated action. 1 D D A '/ , , , Murray and Faith Foun­ preventing the astronauts Sunday. i YEAR'S RESOLUTIONS,, attempted to defect to the former conductor of the Hartford The problem with so many Murray later owned a dation Inc. have. been from praying in outer Symphony (Chorale and the Hartt (College CHURCH OF CHRIST. Lydall THE PETEBMINED Soviet Union but were printing company and a and Varnon straata. Eugana people is that they possess a thrown off a few school space, since federal Chjorus. denied entry. taxi cab company. He also Brawar and Steva Holt, mlnlatars. wishbone instead of a campuses for handing out monies are used to send Sunday tarvlces: 9 a.m. Bl|)le When they returned to backbone. Spending one’s worked in the aviation in­ notebook folders that con­ them there. classes; 10 a.m. worship; 6 p>m. the United States, his dustry and today is an avia­ tain the Lord’s Prayer and Center Church worship. WadnesdaY. T p.m. Vi­ time idly wishing, spurred on mother took him to school tion consultant. the Ten Commandments. Murray, who says he tale study. Nursery provided lo t all by Madison Avenue bombard­ to enroll him in the ninth .ans services sarvlcaa. ment, is to feel frustrated at “We have taken separa­ The folders .have been dis­ formerly smoked and rii FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, grade even though the tion of church and state to best, or cheated and resentful Wtnthrop — Dick Ca- tributed in 36 states thus drank heavily, accepted I Events scheduled next week at Center SCIENTIST, 447 N. Main St. 10;30 term had started. She the extent that we suppress far. a.m., church sarvlca, Sunday at w orst One of the tragedies Christ as his savior when, Cpngregational (Hiurch are as follows; became furious, he says, freedom of speech and in his despair over the school, and cars lor small of our time is^ the creation o f WEU.,’SFC3TL£Sa WHAT CO bCU when she heard pupils assembly,” he says. “They "The kids bring them to JSunday: 10 a.m .. Worship service. children. wistful desires in the abseaoce financial ruin of his avia­ Holy Communion, church school, COMMUNITY BAPTIST THINK <5F THE (SOUNTRYS saying the Pledge of have caused atheistic school every day,” said of substantive ambition. 1110 tion business, he turned to venth and eighth grades; 11:15 a.m., CHURCH. ESS E. Center St. Rev. BCONOMtC OLSTUXX'^ Allegiance and praying the humanism to be the state Murray.'"! think they will Jamas I. Meek, minister. tj:1E Bible commends constructive the Bible for comfort. He jilgrim Choir; 11:15 a.m.. Coffee Lord’s Prayer. church. T h^’s what the be the subject of conversa­ says that he was also a.m.. Church achool for all agaa, labor over unproductive fan­ She argued with a school tion in schools. I think it Shoppe. kindergarten through Qrad# 4 tasizing, ynies. 10-11, tried to pre- driven to Christianitjy J)y continuing during the counselor, calling prayer herica would not be will give Christian kids the Tuesday: 6:30 p.m.. Sacred Dance in schools “un-American,” the hatred and resentinent G^oup; 7:30 p.m., Diaconate. 10:30 a.m.. Morning worsfilp, if it were not for opportunity to invite others niiraary provtdad. that he beliefs are part W ^ esd a y ; 7:30 p.m., (3uncel Choir. and soon thereafter filed the to go to church with them. and parcel of (the atheism. ' CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Thursday: 7:30 p.m., Property com- 236 Main St. Rav. Neale M o l^n. LydlN^MMI '1 1 njittee. senior pastor; Rev. Qaorge fm -

Cmm■A.«a..1MRi«U FWtTMOa 18 - THE HERALD, Sat.. Jan. 2. 1982 THE HERALD, Sat., Jan. 2, 1982 - 19 Trauma m encxnel (N th Na $t$ to try just about anything to better the ficials refused to delay action on im­ NAttRIKCM I \K »(vertftftMOv«inovr20’. / 0-14 William Cotter, D-Conn. convicted of carrying a gun without a »«R<>»a4»**<**«***«4*ak**f**M 5 O-tQ bottom line. ports. The firms and the United 0-20 Illness invaded politics again in late permit and a five-year minimum man- emmuTMOWN CHANNEL® Allegheny Ludlum Industries Inc., now Steelworkers of America announced a fall when a heart attack forced O’Neill , datory prison sentence for persons con­ •«9.n«9...... • «a44**444*4**l44a f« 4a4 fH>4 S Allegheny International, started 1981 new effort to have the government block into the hospital on Nov. 20. He un­ victed of using a firearm in a serious lIBCH NUT MOWN BAMYAMERICMi 2 having divested namesake Allegheny imports. Ra9>ff.t9 derwent double bypass heart surgery. crime...... 10 iq ft carton Fireproof Ludlum Steel Corp., the nation's largest While domestic firms and the govern­ Doctors subsequently pronounced bim in Highly paid lobbyists turned out in economical ft irwM ng U V t 3 0 9 0 — RPC. stainless steelmaker. ment debated im orts, a group of im­ better shape than before his heart at­ droves to oppose a bill to repeal the uM dbrtdc After trying to improve return and porters denounce^he issue as nonexis­ tack. minimum markups on liquor prices — a SHUHERS & DOORS MAftiVRR tILVERSTONE * -r: 1 ; p r n i^' : v ; r . ' sr’i * . . diversifying into other fields when steel tent. X The hospitalization marked a stressful neariy haif century old statute that small COOKWAREtiT was ailing, ALI arranged to sell the The American Ins&ute for Imported year for the governor. package store owners said was needed to AND UNFINitHIO iM IllSRt M flOOft Wm 1A 2 r t M ucaponj 8* 4 n r try business to oil millionaire Dallas Cow­ Steel said, “...U.S. steelmakers are The final days of the popular Mrs. keep them competitive. 1S% Off OW MMIIMMHCtt ONM& lltM P<*« OKI 5 0. dutch ovan No4M97 D-14 boys owner Clint Murchison. using imports as camouflage in a cam­ Grasso’s life cast a shadow over the A compromise was struck to repeal the Murchison pulled out of the $195 paign to obtain billions of dollars from opening of the legislative session in mandatory markups on hard liquor and million deal at the last minute, but the public in inflated prices for steel, tax January. At the same time, the usually beer as of Jan. 1, and wine a year later. buyers were found and ALI’s diversifica­ relief and exemption from pollution con­ affable O’Neill grew more and more The Legislature included a provision to tion was total — it was out of stainless trol at the same time they’re abandoning tense in his forced bn-the-job training. prohibit issuing new package store per­ PulyKerMTOOIbt si* steel production. t a e i i.f v ...... >**«**Mf4»4**«*«*4>*< >«4«»44*»4» l44 4a44«$«4t 44»M4k»«4 4l 4 4 4 444*4«- traditional steel commitments and The first several months for O’Neill mits for five years. Ra»H iM More prominent was the recent $6.3 diversifying.” were complicated when two of his com­ The Legislature also passed laws to »»444**444«4*«4** l•H 44•*44««4f»f•*•«••»44• tAVE2B90 billion bid for Marathon Oil Co. by U.S. The import situation coupled with the missioners became embroiled in con­ allow doctors to prescribe marijuana for Steel Corp., whose announcement of 1,- recession made for a grim industry out­ M* |^RC»lR9RRR4 4«4 444 4 4l 44» l*4 4M 4»a4 4*M 4l« 44^ * i r * 4«M44*«4 4»«4**«4 4»4*M 44««4 44«4* 1 TNiRMO-MiST troversies. patients undergoing chemotherapy, and DIIIVBATINO22$IM.niftmi|Of0eilft 800 Christmas Eve layoffs in Fairless look for 1982, Only its oil market looked Education Commissioner Mark Shedd to ailow husbands and wives, and live-in HUMIDiFliR . E N l||^ E R R *R 9 R«*«k4 4»«4«a**444*4*4»4t 4»f«t»«M 4»**#»44»44**44*4 4*#44* f«'*»4 4**4 4a«(4 Hills, Pa., led to its receiving “The good. sheepishly revealed in February bis roommates, to charge each other with hurnkSfei 1$ aeny Scrooge Award” from union officials. “Steel looks like nothing for 1982,” agency had made a $29.2 million school rape. 40’Bi^i.mff...... IllllZIIIm w to w w ft NdSH-37 0-15 In Findlay, Ohio, however, U.S. Steel said one analyst. “1981 was disaster. funding error. Several studies later As in all election years, the politics of S'MIMMIUMSIVUDOtt ' and chairman David M. Roderick could Currently capital goods are up in the air, Shedd and a half dozen employees paid a 1982 intruded on the business of 1981. Dulytallng200k>iSNp»MM800«»its.|l.t* do no wrong in the eyes of Marathon and Detroit is unbelelievably bad and con­ small percentage of their salary as There was ■ no competition in the ...... 3 2 .9 R YOUR that firm’s employees — being hailed as sumer durables are down. The next 6 penalty. Democratic Party when it came to DUTY SMmO 280 til. SIlMiniD ISM lift _ _ the hero saving it from “evil” Mobil months look bad.’’ The political dust was still swirling filling Cotter’s seat. Secretary of the CHOICE yMM.4 4«***t4*44444»M4M 4*«a44fta«>***4»4**444M «4M 4 4a f44$ l4»««4 4M 4*«4 444 4*a»4 NP^lr i Corp., Marathon’s other suitor. One specialty steel spokesman said he around that one when Donald Long, com­ 32” State Barbara Kenneily was unanimous­ s'lmiiiwoODfiiftUDDa! Ill WOOD fltO U D O n ROOmiHAWTIME But U.S. Steel’s action prompted was optimistic, but added, “The first missioner of Public Safety, was hauled in ly endorsed. protest from Congress, labor halls and > • 9 . 1 4 9 9 ...... lV*#M*4*4j | ^ 4*l«*#M 44»*44»4*«»*4*» OFF quarter doesn’t look that great. We’ll be by a legislative committee to explain The Republicans had several can­ each MDWAIIDTHBtMOilAr elsewhere. up in the second or third. The Reagan Rag. 499 why state troopers were not dispatched didates and a primary. The GOP can­ 8 ’ 1 1 9 . $9.99...... I*4*ir«4>««4#4«444«*«»««44*a4« * ;4»l> Critics said it showed U.S. Steel’s HRR to 7.99 plan is starting to work ... While you see to Meriden on March 21 when a Ku Klux didate nominated for the election Jan. 12 i m H WOOD S lip tMMMM hypocrisy — the firm sought government production dropping, interest rates and Klan march turned into a rock and bottle t4 4*44»a««»»«»»a«M*4 4f 44 4«44»94»l SAVE 2 .0 0 was former Hartford Mayor Ann a«»4499 .1 1 .9 9 0.15 aid for steel where it claimed to need inflation are going down and if a pattern ' throwing spree. Ucceiio, who defeated Colleen Howe of 4 ra sr.’!sgsr 2 0 GALLON relief, then bid for Marathon with money develops the plan should work.” The issue ballooned from one incident Glastonbury, wife of hockey great Gor­ •'K^$i7.99. '• • • • 4a«4»a4 4aM 4**44»«44**««9<»*999»«$WM4a9«**»44a»44«» BLOW-MOLD that could have been spent on steel Jones & I^ughlin Steel Corp. also to a makeshift trial of Long’s tenure as die Howe. — - r - t p i plants. expects no pickup until the second half. commissioner. In the end he was The U.S. Senate race was ripe for TRASH CAN CEILING TILES^ I ' * &JfT PANELS. “That’s the most ludicrous thing I ever J&L’s president, Thomas , Graham, stripped of most of his responsibilities, speculation about possibie candidates. will not rust dent or leok 3 heard of,” said one industry observer. “1 told a recent congressional hearing some although left with a secretary, desk and Rep. Toby Moffett, D-Conn., thought to 4'49i^ill»NCX <28O8ll0»8iE0ee*4we9*wea«44»94H#a»8*eea*$9«ia4i»4i»*«iaaa4ae4e#a4*eejjt^^'SHfRL yr. warranly • t9 .ftt9 NO.PR206 ^ D-14 think with steel going down the tubes it 77,000 industry employees were on layoff telephone. be wavering between a gubernatorial run makes no sense with plants needing or short weeks as of Dec. 7. Mills were Much later in the year, another com­ and the seat held by Sen. Lowell H|>naTeUl 4OTISfv#vV4*a«4M44»aa4aa«4f*a4a«4aa«4a«44H449»a4aM4»*«#a4*«a«#49NB^W^W^Ifc tAVI293 SAVE 3 .0 0 money. working at only 59.3 percent capability. missioner made headlines: Arthur Weicker, R-Conn., officially entered the vaaa*I tt nmipiiV lAOLVk “They cut the legs out from under the Frustration abounded at yearend Powers, head of the Transportation Senate race Dec. 1. tsss^pgas'sgsi^^ 2 0 GALLON TRAIN BAGS Congressional Caucus which is fo^ because the industry began the year on Department. Powers resigned Oct. 23 Weicker had more problems than mWw- iiPwpr CjBlliwi.lWMH m TRASH CAN 50 count boat wHh fiat ora hao-ply. them,” he added, referring to steel state the heels of a poor 1980, optimistic amidst a grand jury investigation of Moffett. A mutiny was taking place in his »a44at4»M4»a«4k$««e«l4a»4»»*)(V««1a»9«^«9«4K99»4»»«4»a»i»»»aa$a44»9aeW»i»Ma»»»* »••*•• RRwRrWEim Ba9.«L99 for the umpteemth time in recent years. year and that on balance, 1982 will early retirement, and Richard Bradley, George Bush. Imports rose to the second highest provide only a slightly stronger steel en­ who was in charge of public transporta­ Two other candidates deciared early in ...... “ “‘“111 5UA IAVB400 level of the year in October, the vironment.” tion. There were several demotions and the year as challengers to Weicker — American Iron and Steel Institute “Any way you slice it, the outlook for policy changes when O’Neill’s appointee, AUaPIMPOSE Westport consultant Brad Peery and ^ 9 ^ * Wi||^3Wy4W44*^a»H«*H4»a9H^ >Vam>»»'9^MW«i*»M'*M»M«aa>»n9»«»9«««>Me>«a»90wa*»«*»>9>at»a*a*»*94»4a___ _ vinyt No 1630 0-14 over 12,778,000 tons a year before, interest rates fall. ty over his budget proposal. and Lewis Rome of Bloomfield, and Roderick said his company would file "I’m a little more optimistic about A coalition of renegade Democrats Sens. Gerald Labriqla of Naugatuck and um 'I *’ • Ra9.1s.99 anti-dumping cases against overseas that than most, ” he said. took advantage of the tight, 82-69, party Russell Post of Canton. S ttS S S f OUO 'IM IftM MMSIS' ON < U V I 4 Q 0 majority in the House to stall action on One surprising development was the ftimiio0 400 OAMN eU M aU H '- the budget until leaders agreed to give declaration for the office of attorney 20% O ff m m i T x m i w them token cuts. general by former Senate Majority CUARABICE 0 f t 5 SNILF STORAGE UNIT Government ends effort The House problems were exacerbated Leader Joseph Lieberman. It is unusual iwmttQldetat POM lrhks/rM >neiiM iftD \M n lia lic Ifi INTItlK>R_UrEX / mind being governor. for the 3rd District congressional seat in 4Y(i'x8»’M lllietltQ M P ------The Senate, minus Senate President 1980. His challenge to incumbent At­ 1/3 OFF 4Yt8WiCWlXIIIIOilWllOOO...-,.™::L^^^ BELTSVILLE, Md. (UPI) - Joseph Fauliso, now lieutenant gover­ torney Generai Cari Ajelio was seen as a VS&if S A M l i O When he and University of Maryland nor, floundered in the first several weeks t way to make a comeback. 4Y(Vxio*ieypixiMOK»uwooi> ------America’s 20-year effort to find plants botanist Dr. James Reveal returned in J OUR REGULAR FUT containing anti-cancer chemicals with new leaders who were not as adept The 6th District race was left wide V •• Ai'4 early September from a month in China at diplomacy as Fauliso. open when Moffett opted for the Senate U ltX H M U PAINT appears doomed. searching for exotic plants that could PRICES ON... The prospects might be brighter if only The stormy session centered on the campaign. By year’s end two candidates 4'xl'X l/4' 'M a4a*r»4«ca44)»«i«4> ^ Eoiy toopplv kuTKinv colon. provide the cancer breakthrough budget. The eventual $2.97 billion plan in­ the m^icinal effects of the Madagascar researchers have been looking for, they had declared for the seat — Sens. A 'nV aiW F>4»«««**4» # t4a4««*ai’a '^ 4H 44^ ii U«4aaaifaa44»a4*a«4 cluded a version of the governor’s tax on ...... f t M ^ periwinkle had been discovered in some encountered a discovery of another kind. William Curry of Farmington and Clifton IfllD S unincorporated businesses and increases Leonhardt of Avon — and many more other fashion. The National Cancer Institute had •CHRISTMAS TREES The periwinkle, from which a highly in the corporation and telephone and were expected to follow. « ani4Yis*icoN0i«rsitiD. >4M4 4aa«4fa4a»««#a«at9q»faa*»aM»94»««MtaW • BOWS & GIFT BOXES decided to cut Duke’s $480,000 research I r i f i b i i t M effective drug used in treating childhood program for fiscal year 1982 by more 2*x4‘KrwiniDee4eai44ae44»*aea44ae4a#aa»*9*t94«W4i*f*##v*wfa*wa#iMta**i^9*4i<1 •PLUSH STOCKINGS •OUTDOOR f leukemia is derived, was discovered than half. NCI’s Dr. Matthew Suffness, 2'!lC8'l(y SflMFSmi6a4*4ei4eea*aa4#eeeaeee«a»«eeae4*a«aw#*f«v»4*a»«aiy4»H^<*e»R •TREE SKIRTS DECORATIONS • w ; m almost by accident during a test for its asked about funding for Duke’s program QeiHng effect on diabetes. ••4a«*4444a«44a*4«aM4aaaa.M>«^mMLa9*i(#»««a*a«tejHw4f«4 •CHRISTMAS •HOUDAY WREATHS in fiscal year 1983, said, “If I had to Weicker is confident yXS^HS SfUO f S A V t i ^ “That is the most, important plant in NOVELTIES • TREE TRIMMINGS guess. I’d say, ‘Zero.’” » ^rw we-rr weweF4#f»e#.a44aee4aa««4*ei4ea4k4#ti*H#tfaM«*9H*#a«#aww»a»e;1 MR.IN*|)I« FLAT the world for plant derived anti-cancer The $200,0()0 left in the program this 4ef4eaee4aee4ai4.teeee44494Fm**»«4mai*W»9***9A9e**a«l •CHRISTMAS CARDS •ELECTRIC CANDLES UICtC«UNGWHin drugs,’’ said Dr. James Duke, a research year will be barely enough to bring back, rxiws»/PniiD botanist who for the past three and a half he'll win nomination 2 47 1 •TREE STANDS •ELECTRIC NOVELTIES Covan gittekly A avanty. Ot^Xau separate and categorize the specimens *i( tWI«ffSIIID•aa«»an4*a4 4aaaaaaa#a444*M«t«aW*#aa«»a4««v*49a*44aM<* E fomMaftivhowRiavailftiyho«rR«~ ' D-« years has headed the plant collection Duke and Reveal found in China and that •UOHTSETS •WAX CANDLES portion of the U.S. Department of HARTFORD (UPI) - Sen. Lowell The lawmaker said if he decides to PINNNIWfmPI .M- |9C4 other teams collected from the wilds of Weicker, R-Conn., an outspoken critic of seek the GOP nomination, it was rxftwiHwciHinKiisnupft.;»»aa#4M«**Ma4f4*Ma»»*494«4m»M^ 1 •REPLACEMENT A HOLDERS Agriculture’s “natural products’’ Venezuela, Madagascar and Australia. research program. 'That’s the his own party as well as the opposition, “likely” he would have to then compete BULBS •PAPER PARTY OUR REGULAR PRICES “The periwinkle is already worth the government’s attempt to find natural cost incurred to date,” said Duke. apparently doesn’t plan to change his in-a primary with Presents. Bush Jr., •ORNAMENTS GOODS lBt9.14t9 maverick streak as one of his New the brother of Vice President George ON ALL PORTABLE ELECTRIC substances that can kill cancer cells. "Tomorrow’s periwinkle should more IW W #20011110*.,>tee»M4»Ne»«9*ae<«#a4#a«e#l**#W 4«9e#e»#4i»aaiH*«9 Year’s resolutions. Bush. •TINSEL GARLAND •TREE TOPS lA W iiN } To Duke, the Madagascar periwinkle than repay the (cost of the program for) illustrates the promise his program the next 25 years.” Weicker says he’s confident he can win He conceeded conservatives tend to fT iW #100*11011..•••••••4aa4na««»9M#«*#aa*«9«4*a«»aa*t4a«44aa*«v9M HEAHRS AND CONSOLE •GIFTWRAP A RIBBONS lUFiimiONi^FUT holds for medicine in generai and cancer Suffness said the program has cost the Republican nomination for re- turn out for party eiections and noted, rKirx8'#aoowiieM >aaaaa«4««M »aaa49f«af»a»M fV 9M(99*«a*«at*9 i election despite a strong conservative “I’m more electable with the general HUMIDIFIERS IN STOCK U n X lN A U PAINT victims in particular, but also the failure taxpayers about $1.2 million in each of t7(12Y(W>#lCO|N*W ••#aa*4a«*aat44M44F94aa«aaaa4*MaM44maM *«a9«4< Limited to store stock only. Roiti t9*t(rt ftwoihobie Avoliabie of a program that has not made even one the last two or three years. move within his party to oust him. But he constituency.” .SWee. Limited to store stock only. ssa a sH ' ■ rcotort hasn’t closed the door on running as an Weicker, who has often placed himself Noroinchecks Noroinchecks D-24 discovery equalling the importance of “As an end result of clinicall^ a c tive OMVANOD " T IM f i M C M i •4a4iaiia«a»aa«9»4a4Ma*9a4«a«4aa4a D-19 finding the periwinkle. indpendent. as a thorn in the side of the Republican NffltnaiMaiuno niatim am not arcuiMD. drugs from plants, we haven’t tflrSffhp “I’m a darn good, common sense leadership on Capitol Hill, again declined Like gamblers at a slot machine much. We’ve turned up a iW/if m Republican,” said Weicker in a “Face to pledge full support to the Reagan ad­ hoping the next pull of the lever will hit teresting compounds, taken quite a the State” interview to be aired by ministration. the jackpot, Duke and his associates number of clinical trials, but none turned WFSB-TV at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. He He said he preferred to take on each of have looked throughout the world for out to be widely applicable. So that'isob- rejected the claim by Democrats that he the president’s initiatives and decide on plants that will provide a cure for viously a factor in that decision to cut was a man without a party. whether to support them on an individual cancer, the number two killing disease in back that program,” he said. the United States. Duke, who has already had to lay Off “I expect to get that nomination and I basis. SAVE GAS&TME FREE! "ROW TO" ROOKLETS FREE USEOF: C IU WAUV MIXBTT, expect to win again in 1982 as I did in 1976 On other subjects, the outspoken COFFEE TINEI mm lha Chaaaal "laaia Raatar,"* “Enemies of the cancer program say, four field botanists and expects to lose and 1970,” said Weicker. Republican said the U.S. should tell its CHANm HONE CDrrEBS a M •4 ChaaMbaai .dlManal baahUli • MX TOr CARXIEXI _ Capa tala ■■ ie> callaa DtnsinmATM oiJL 4a4l.raaiMll ‘You’Ve been (messing) around here for half his staff, said he recognizes the • • ELCCTMC KAIL CRKt T O S iaO M L CHANNEL 20 years and haven’t come up with dearth of disoveries made by the natural However, he indicated he could change allies “if Poland is not important to 4MlfBa4 la kalp yaa haadia aay '.'HiL W v P*aMaai. latl 4lal lalMaai ARE CLOSE TO HONE • POITKOU; BIOCERI >alar4ay aafaiag, AXB Ifn v RVmM anything bigger than this (the his mind and decide to riln as an indepen­ them, they are not important to us.” f 1 • da-ll-yaarMli piafacl iBccaiiially. aalU aaaa. FOB f 09B C0M9BRBRCI HOME CENTERS c o n . (9M) t$t4B U products program, but said, “I’m not WHEREVER TOO LIVE • ITAPLEOffHI periwinkle) and this was an accident,” saying it’s not worth it, but some people dent, a decision he said Iw would make He praised Israel for its decision to LLlI It’s rXBt, . 1 '•AnwHea'* No. 1 Do^-Younotf Stona' before the state Republi^n convention annex the Golan Heights, criticized the Duke said.' would.” in July. / administration’s sanctions against NAMCBfRB PA lU in His response; “We’ve only looked at 10 “We have stuff in the pipeline now that B T im n i PLASB WIST MD»U TPBB. soorniNUTON w a t o b d it Weicker said he won’ymix his options. Russia over Poland and defended his re­ AcumuruisAiTVBii OVIIN______B. PLBIX EBTTMCB PLAM, percent of the plant kingdom and, if we might be the next periwinkle, but you’ll n . BBB a u i BT.) a a lB I O ie S T . “I'm not going to go p the Republican cent vote for a bill requiring consumers ^ B U TB ie m . a B B i i u b t . saagoiusv. EOiCOTT IT. locked up on one ‘biggie’ in the first 10 never know.” track and l^e it and then go in- to pay fo part of the $50 billion natural percent, then there must be nine others Duke now says he may shift the Copyright. Chonnol Home Center*. Inc 1982 out there waiting for us.” dependent,”.^he said. gas line to Alaskd'.. . •) ■ emphasis of his re^arch from seeking a But Duke and his staff of about IS k' cancer cure to seeking plants that could SALE ENDS 1/3/82 N-001-01 botanists may never get the chance. help prevent cancer. a