•y ,20 - MANCHESTER HERALD, Saturday, A uk. 10. 1985 \ • MANCHESTER U.S./WORLD SPORTS WEATHER bo6s roulette New evidence gives Playotfs continue Clear, cool tonight; ^ lead to a ticket? stafue to New Jersey at Moriarty Field • sunny da Tuesday ; r ' ... page 2 ' / Business Ch§ck interest rates on charge-cards • ‘ • ... page 3 ‘page 5 / . . nage 11

^In B rie f Have you studied with care recently the interest But bewai-e: Some banks now charge interest from rates you pay ort your batik and department-store the.date of purchase, so even ifyou pay promptly, you , . 2- charge cards? will incur'jnterest charges. . Viets advances at CBT Using -myself as a guide. I ’ll wager you haven.!t — Your ' One way tb'consolidate is by taking out a personal _ Duniel P. Viets has been elected a ^eniot. viFe and therefore, you are-unaware of how much you M o n i c y - s loan. You can borroW money at rates several points president of the Connecli^gpt Bank a'nd Trust Co<, spend on this interest alone. Wh'ile interest rates hp-ve below what' you spend for credit cards. Look at' charges at Credit'Unions and smaller banks,- Hartfopfl, the bank dropped sharply, from the peaks'of the early 1980s, Worth a h n o' u n c e d. rales on bank cards-still Jloat high above those, .. “ In most areas, it takes less than-a week to shop for recently.. charged on,most other fqrms of credit. In fact,' , Syivia Porter . a personal loan," observes Marla Karplan, at Bank.c'a'rd Holders of America. ",'If you qualify, you’ll, ■ - Viets. elected a \ predit'card rates average 19.6, percent nationwide. - > ■ Monday, Aug. 12, 1985 — Single copy: 25C vice president in Most'of us love our piastre. Debt on'credit cards gef-lhe loan quickly.” .• Manchester, Conn. — A City of Village Chai^m /R ates.w ill be lower if you have any type of 1979, began his ca­ hovers afSllO billion, and few people shpw'slgns o.f* reer at CBT in 1971. stashing their cards in a drawerand using cheeks tor r . acceptable colfaleral. It would be worth considering a- He progressed even, cash).- ^ ‘ coritinulng high rates. 'home equity !loan as one way to-raise cash to through a nurtiberof But awareness of and opposition to steep rates is -But savvy consumers respond that annual fees consolidate yoiir debts in a logical way. positions, beconiihg- growing. Several states are considering seUing a ranging from $18 to $5b — are designed to pay • Explofe-the possibility of getting a loan through East Hartford-com­ ceiling on the rates banks can charge on Credit cards. administrative expenses," . your brokerage house and paying ofLypur credit-card mercial division While rnany states have nolimits atall, the maximum No'matter If you decide you don"t want to pay high debts with the cash raised. At niany firms, you can manager in 19B1 and rates in others are eye;popping. The topxate in New interest charges any longer, you have several options. borrow to 20 percent agatp-st your securities at area manager for V'ork. for instance, is 25 percent, and in Florida and • Prune your pla.stic portfolio and carry only oneor practically the lowest rates around., crash and the second worst - air the north central- Illinois. 18 percent, 'according to a recent study by two bank cards (say. Visa. MasterCard) and one or b Consider how deeply rates on certificates of TOKYO (U P l) - A Japan Air a m. EDT)-takeoff, officials said. diately available. The Kyodo news service said the 1 reported rain and ligt)M ng at the disaster in aviation history. — , ', - commercial area in Bankcard Holders of America, an educational group. two travel and entertainment cards' ^American depo.sit and rfioney market accounts have dropped. In Lines jumbo jet carrying 524 .Japan Air Lines said the plane Police in UsAda,,a central town, cockpit crew radioed at 6:39 p.m. time. f *" In the worst single plpne disas' . t,... 1983 Concern is stirring in Congress,' loo. Congressm_pn Express. Diners Club). view of this, you might pay off your card debts or people on a domestic flight caught carried 509 passengers and a crew near the crash site, said residents reporting trouble with a left, rear Witnesses repdfled seeing a 'ter, 346 people y ere Rilled March 3, Vrets has a bache­ Mario Biaggi , D-N.Y ., has introduced a bill that would Gel rid of your oil-company and department-store make a big-ticket purchase with the proceeds of a fire ancl crashed today in a storm in of 15. It was not immediately reported the plane cut a wide door and said they would attempt low-flying plane pamaverhead on 1974, when a Turkish DC-10 jet lor's degree in eco­ set a cap on ,the rates banks can charge on credit charge cards, since bank cards and travel/entertain- mature CD, ' a mountainous area of central known if any foreigners were burning swath as it slammed into to make an emergency landing at fire. Kyodo quoteirS.her witnesses. crashed at Ermenonville near nomics and a mas­ / cards. Hearings are set for later this year.- ment cards are widely accepted. Incidentally, cutting • Shop for the best rates on credit. When you get Japan, authorities said. ■" The aboard. the w(y>ded hillside. Other officials the U.S. Air Force base at Yokota. in the area as'haviqg spotted a"' Paris. * t e r ’ s d e g re e ' in li is not Surprising that the banking industry cries down nn the number of cards you carry lessens your next credit-card bill, cull the toll-freb number" number'll^ casualties was not Most of those- aboarikwere told Japanese news agenciej that ""burning falling object '... in a The p laie vanished from radar ‘ The worst disaster in aviation' business adminis­ foul and claims that current rates compensate for potential fraud and abuse of yoUr card numbers w'hile and-check on the interest rate. " , ’ immediaWyfknown-. Japanese and the crash comes at burning wreckai^was spread over wooded area.’" Daniel P. Viets screens at 6:59 p.m. history came-March 21,1977, whdn tration from Cornell those years when usury laws prevented them from reducing your opportunity, if not your temptation, to If you resent the rale, check around at ^ r io U s The Boeing 747, JAL Flight 123, the height of the Japanese reli- a 3-mile area. T -<^ The crew of a U.S.- Air- Force ,^582 people were killed id-the . University. He is treasurer of the Coventry Gam e’ charging the leyel of rates necessary to make moqey. overspend. .' banks in yoiir neighborhood A few banTfS-'^ctually was on a domestic-flight frpm^gio'uS holiday Obon when families A Usada poliae spokesman said N-agano police said the plane • C'130 transpo"Tt plane nearby also ^collision of a KLMjBoeing^47 and a ■- - Club arid a member of the East Hartford and East Moreover, the banks argue that credit cards carpy • Pay off your balan.ee and try in-the future to pay have begun to recognize that- they can attract Tokyo"s Haneda Airport to the;^ visit the graves of relatives, the area was scvijlountainous and crashed during a storm near the reported seeing a plane aflcfiyier' 0 high administrative costs: hence, the need for If all the passengers aboard the. taxiing chartered Pan-Am 747 aU •. ; Granby chambers of commerce your-charges iri full as soon as you receive your hill. customers with better rates. Call around. western city of Osaka and went A JAL spokesman said at least rugged that rescue teams were town - of Aikimura, 370 miles 2 Saint Cruz de Tenerife, Canary down in ,the district of Nagano eight non-Japanese were aboard having, trouble reaching the crash northwest of Tokyo, a mountainous J'apanese airline died in the crash, rural area. A police spokesman it would be the'worst single plane Islands, Spain. Gerber sets cash payout Manchester at Work' .j^.some 40 minutes after its 6 p.m. (5 but identifications were not imme- si*'' SOUTH ^ N D S O R - Directors of Gerber- Ho end in sight Scientific Im V^ave declared a quarterly cash Moffett: dividend of 3 cents per share, payable Aug. 30 to Wrieck in storm stockholders of record .Aug 16. for fongest open u p ^ . CBT promote^ Garside industriai strike closes 1-84 lane Dorothy S. Garside, of the main office the NORTH KfNGSTOWN, R L (L'PI) - Striking Manchester and 46 customers in ■rJ Connecticut Bank and Trust Co., Hartford, has Brown & Sharpe -Manufacturing Co. machinists By Kevin Flood Bolton. NU-spokesman Stephen been elected a vice vowed Friday t.o continue their four-year fight in the Herald Reporter Kelly said this morning. ■ president . nation s longest-riuining industrial strike despite a ft Garside joined the union order to end picketing which began in 198). A tractor-trafTer truck rolled Kelly said the.-Manchester out­ age came at 8:10 p.m.. when HARTFORD — Democrat Toby batik in 1969 and "We art- not conceding and the strike is'not over, " over on Interstate 84 i(i Manches­ '\ • A Moffett called on his party’s top .served as an assist­ said Robert Thayerr liusine.ss agent for fhe local ter during a heavy thunderstorm l^htning struck a fuse on an NU pole on Indian Drive, knocking out elected officials today tb drop a ant branch man­ machinists union ' ' Sunday evening, knocking down 14 ager at office.s in About 1.600’ Brown & Sharpe machinists walked off guardrails and closing off one lane power to 1s3 customers on that federal court challenge to a Republican plan to open some'GOP Rockville,-. Groton the job Oct 18, 1981, and never returned The main of the highway for about two hours, - street. Work"M-ews restored power ^ and Hartford before issue was not money but the company's demands for ktate police said this morning. there by 12130 a.m. today,, he said. 0 primaries to the state's 600,000 assuming her cur­ more flexibility iri work assignments. The driver of the trUck, Terry • Kelly said there were two unaffiliated voters', . ' 1 rent position as Most of the employees have found other job.s, Vanepsen, 31, .of South Royalton, outages in BoltOn. The first, he Moffett said his Democratic main officer branch said, came at 7:16 p.m., when 24 Party should'adopt its own, wider ■8'- Thliyer said; . ' Vt., suffered minor cuts to. his rn^nager in 1983. The union has-goiie to codrl and the NationaFLabor ecalp in the 6; 50 p.nri. accident and customers lost power. They re­ "open primary|’S?lan rather than ’’/(Jarside. who Relations Board in it« fight against Brown & Sharpe, was later" treated at Mbncl\ester gained it at I H 14 p.m., he said. appealing a r u lin ^ y the 2nd U.S. live^ in Manchester, The second Bolton outage came Circiiil Court of ^pf^als upholding A A which designsamd manufactures measuring instru­ ('V ^ Memorial Hospital before being has received Ameri­ ments. fluid pow-cr componentsV.andj:jpelal-eutXing 'Ml, released, state police and a hospi,- - at 7:25 p.m,, Kelly said. The 22 the opep primary-plan, . -■ ■m- can Institute ’ of machineJools. ' ^ customers afifected by that outage The New York-based appeals ' ' I "ip" -'v-V -1, V" tal spokeswoman said.. Banking certifica­ The International Association of Machinists and regained Ihejr power at 1: 45 a.m. court last week upheld a decision tion and is a gradu­ State police said Vaneusen had today, he said. by U.S. District*’Judge Jose A. Aerospace Wolkers, the national union representing been traveling east on 1-84 during a V ate of the New Eng­ the strikers, notified members that begfhning next Kelly said this morning that he Cabranes, which ruled invalid heavy thunderstorm, when slower land School of Thursday it will no longer Sanction the picketing did hot know which area's of Bolton state election laws prohibiting ■ L Banking at W illi­ traffic ahead of him forced him to lost power in the storm due to a . Republicans from allowing unaffil­ 3 The decision eiiminates the $70 weekly strike pay ams College. She slow down quickfy. He-lost control computer malfunction this morn­ iated voters to vote in. their the union members have been receiving from their of the,vehicle between exits 92'and Dorpthy Garside has completed parent union - * ing at N U ’s offices. primaries.- '4 ' H courses through the .92 and knocked down guardrails on ' The Eighth District Fire Depart­ Mosltfiemocratic state officials, " As far as w-e r'e concerned the strike continues but U American Institute' of Banking, Manchester the right side of the road before ment and the Town Fire Depart­ led by Gov. William, A. O’Neill, the battlefield shifts frofn, tpe picket line to the coming to a stop g a in s t a ""Jersey Community College and- Greater Hartford. courts, " said Thayer, an executive with District 64 of ment both reported this morning have steadfastly opposed the open IS, barrier” on-the left side of the road, that thu'n'derstorms touched"2off a Community Colleg^. the I AM Aw , . ' ib '« W t!' ''.'x primary plan, adopted by the GOP She 15 a member of the Wadsworth Alheneum, a state police said. number of alarnq^ around 6:30 ,, at a special convention "crhe frust'rations'have been out there on the'picket Town firefighters were called to member of the National Association of Bank lines for four years,"' said Thayer, who added the jj.m , Sunday. - , The Democratic’ elected offi­ Women, and an adviser for Junior Achievement the accident scene whea about 20 Eighth District s|>okesman Tho­ cials,-^.^owever,’ have not yet picketing would probably end ev^n though some gallons of fuel oil leaked from the in East Hartford ' . strikers have vowed to stay on the lines. ■n-:. mas O'Marra said firefighters decider whether to press thieir truck. Deputy Fire Chief Robert from that department were called opposition and (prther appeal the "1 don^t'\now why they ^ ive to stop the $70. " said Bycholski said this morning. The G Hurteau in new Job at NU Manuel Arrbda, one of the 350 strikers who ha"Ve to Slater Street at about 6:35 p.m. case to tpe U.S. Supretne Court,'^ oil did not catch fire, he said. G ‘’"remained on the picket line since 1981. "It keeps you Sunday when power lines fell on a “ I think an appeal is ill- - Valerie R. Hurteau has been piiimoted to -i;\' 'Siv State police said the right lane going. At least you can pay your electric b ill" tre d ," ' ^vised,” said Moffett, a former 'associate methbds and procedures analyst at near the accident scene:was closed Arrudu worked for the company 33 years before Town firefighters said they congressman 'and likely chal­ rvTortheast Utilities, Berlin. off for about two hours while walking off the job more than three years ago. J- received nufherou8. reports of lenger to O’Neill for next year’s Hurteau jpined the conipany in 1983 as a authoritiesr tried to remove the George Poulin. lAMAW's general vice president, lightning strikes in the Sumniit Democratic gubernatorial customer service representative in Hartford. In truck from the highway. The truck informed the local union oj the decision to end Street area, but none of them nomination. v February IBB.A, she was reassigned to the Office was eventually towed to a service picketing in a letter dated Tuesday,'.offidals said. caused any damage'.' Moffett said he agrees with Management Services Department in Berlin. station in East Hartford, "It may be painful to conpede biit an honest Around the state, the thunder­ O’ Neill that the Republican plan Is A graduate-'of Manchester High School, Vaneusen was - charged with appraisal of- our prospects basedr-^pon tactics storms knocked out power.to about lacking since it would only allow Hurteau holds a bachelor's degree from Westfield traveling too fa.st for conditions. employed.to date does notreveal any li^ t at the,end of ' 7,000 homes and forced the closing unaffiliat'ed voters to participate in StateCollege, Westfield, Mass,^She is'studying for State police said they did not know the tunnel. " the letter s^iid. "Your battle is being of Bradley International "Airport primaries for statewide offices and V ^ a master's degree in busiifess administration at what Vaneusen had been carrying continued and enjoined on the field of law."' for more than two hours after .' Congress and'not for all offices, -.. the Hartford Graduate Center. in his truck or where, he was torrdhtial rain flooded runways Sloffett said Democrats should^ ' She is the daughter of Elizabeth Ppek of Poulin"s letter said the legal struggle between the heading prior to the accident. union and company " could continue for thi^next 10 and ramps and- lightning knocked now take the. lead from the GOP Anaheim, Calif., and Fred Peck of Manchester. Sunday- even in g’s thunder­ years."' out the airport’s radar system, a I and adept their own party rule storms knocked out power to 23 An administrative law judge has been holding I- Department of Transportation - owning all primaries'— from ^ ^ Haraid photo by Tarquinio Northeast Utilities customers in Luvs pins suit on Huggies sporadic hearings into whether Brown & Sharpe spokes^nan said, ’ "Heralb photo by Tarquinio i^n icip p l races .to statewide con­ DAIJ-AS — Luvs is upset with Huggies, so it has violated federal labor laws and provoked the strike by tests — to the "State’s more than Joanne Parkinson of Coventry bundles She is.vifie president of the-5-year-o|d 600,000 unaffiliated voters. , pinned a lavvsiKt on the competition that claims its 1.600 machinists, . rattan from Singapore-’at Connecticut company. Taking care of business Hiiggie's copi/d the Luvs patented expandable If the company is found to have violated labor laws, 'W e’ve Aieen .backpedaling and . waistband. / ' the workers could receive millions of dollars in b'bck Cane and Reed Co., 205 Hartford‘Road. . ' U.S. again urges we’re on the defensive. We really In a suit filed Wednesday in U S, District Court, pay and be eligible to win fheir jobs back. -- Jennifer Piano, a senior at Bolton High The daughter of the" stand's owner, should- have had better, leader­ Procter & Gamble Co^, maker of Luvs, alleges Piano has been'working at the stand for ship," Moffett said, adding’thatthe School, checks corn tor quality as she limited open prim ary plan adopted Kimberly-Clark Corp.,- which makes Huggies. Profits vary • sets up vegetable stand, Birch Mountain five years. “ has been and still is " using the Procter & ^end to apartheid by the GOP earns the party “ high Gamble waistband. Farms, today on West Center .Streef. marks for hypocrisy.’” Competition is fierce in the disposable diaper business, and "the pewest thing ip the field is Bv Norman D. Sandler these waistbands which -expand," said a United Press International Leak sickens 149 Competition now to the pay phones . John Paul II joins spokesman for the Cincinnati-based Procter & Gamble. SANTA BARBARA. Calif. - The criticisnri of Pretoria “ It keeps the moisturd where it's supposed to B v ^SarQh-SthJfisenP - administration is wa'rning South be." spokesman Allen Gerstei'n added. “ Moms Unft^Press International tion service,,’ ’ O'Hara said ' Africa, that its failure to move — see page 5 want the good product for their kids, so the Also perplexing are innovations ^ away faster from apartheid could Charleston mayor faults- Carbide While pay phiones may or may not present a nice profit phones themselves. “ -Pell had no reason companies are continually trying- to develop ■^^^EW YORK — It had to happen. leave President Reagan powerless to update the technology," Dunn said,-. improvements"' Sooner or later, the 'deregulation of opportunity for buyers,, those seeking to establish to stop a growing American Newer models are computerized, of a m i^re'of aldicarb oxime, 'oxime is used, to make Temik, a Luvs is asking the court to prevent Huggies AT&T had to give rise to competitive backlash to Its racial policies. the legislation,’’ Speakes said. INSTITUTE, W. Va. (UPI) people were hospitalized overnight themselves in tha business face perils-and decisions. eliminating the need for dn operator. - pesticide that also contqins methyl from, using the waistband and-to order Dallas- entanglements in pay telepjiones. As Reagan began a 23-daJ* At the, same time, he- said the Charleston M ayor' Mike Roark for observation, 119 were treated dichloromethane, carbon monox­ 0 Some models sport spiffy: if less than ide anid sulfur compounds being isocyanate or MIC, the cheml^l based Kimberly-Clark to pay Procter & Gamble In the. monopoly days, businesses California vacation Sunday, White U.S. delegation in Vienna, headed accused Union Carbide today of at five,hospitals for burning eyes’, perfect, extras like' the voice chips lungs or nausea, and several stored in a reactor tank vented into that killed at least 1,70|D people ip 2 an unspecified, amount of damages. installed pay telephones as a customer . . . ■ "f ■ ■ - ■ I House Spokesman Larry . Speakes by national security adviser-Ro­ not providing adequate informa-’ \ American Tele-Coin is avoiding for others were' examined at an the air when a gasket failed and the Bhopal, India, Taljt December ' A Huggie5 spokesman denied his diaper, service. Now others are trying to horn V,arieties: Bell-operated public phones While pay phones may or may not confirmed a high-level delegation bert McF-arlane, made the South tion about a leak at its pesticide now, ";Sometimes the voice sticks," he when it leaked from a Union infringed on the Luvs patent. in on the pay phone business, worth an and Bell-operated semipublic phone.S. present a nice .profit opportunity for of U.S. officials delivered that Africans aware thaf'the realities. plant .that unleashed a chemical emergency aid station. tank pressurized. ’ said. . - - Carbide plant. ,. estimated $4 billion annually. Bell’s 1.5 million public puy phones buyers', those Seeking tg establish, blunt message to South African o f the situation" point tbpassageof cloud over four .cities,* sickening Officials said nearly 500 gallons’ Plant officials Said aldicarb ""The, free enterprise system will Investment report Among the choice^ in customer- alone generate som^- $890 million themselves'in .the business face perils " officials la^ week in .Vienna. a sanctions bill with strong back- 149 people. Wash it out,’j,Dunn said, "UntiJ then, owned coin-operated telephones — or . annually, according to estimates; and decisions. , While indicating Reagan still ii^ o n Capitol Hill. . * "They did not notify anybody Investment prices, courtesy of Advest Inc., are there’ll be a lot of problems," COGOTs fOr short -r- are (fre-pay or Although' the big D-for-deregulation , - "'We have a product supply prob-- 'm ay veto economic sanctions ’ /The hope of sustaining a vettjof other than making an inttial call to as of 3 p.m, Friday. » - A final — {)ut important — point in Grant is soqght to help retarded a post-pay, quarters-only or mUdels with day was Dec, 31, 1984, derfegulation'in lem,’ ’ Dunn «aid, with only-5,000 sets expected to be approved by Con­ /such legislation, he said,;,"then the county,” Roark said, "and the selecting phones is a new phone like the voice chips. , pay telephones continues to>roll hdross manufactured a week by all makers of gress after its summer recess, the ' depends on what the mood of information that c§me from them Price old one. "You can't re-educate the Change Some companies .ire leasing'oul pay the country. States now dropping ’ pay phones. . - U.S. officials warned an override Congress and the public under­ was sparse to say the least.” By Alex GIrelll at 699 E. Middle Turnpike. social service organizations that Friday This Week public, " said Dunn. ” It has to be like the has applied to participate in the phones to businesses as vending fran­ quarters into non-mpnopolislic pay • Another problem companies--like could be . in the - wind unlesi standing is." Roark said he would seek a Herald Reporter , ’ The latest decupant of the' Bell phone." • - Neighborhood Assistance pro­ chises, netting the proprietor about 20 phones are Arizona, Colorado, Dela- American Tele-Coin face is one of Pretoria acts in the next few weeks'" Underlying the assessment deli­ meeting -with Union Carbide offi­ market building was Pic An’ Save. Advest Inc. 9. „ dti '/. gram under which coroporatlofis percent of the silver. Others sell phones . Ware, Kentucky, Maryland, Minnesota, education. With all the fanfare the to alter its policies vered ifL Vignna was a recognition cials to convey his displeasure A new non-profit social service* • -Fine has a master’s, degree in Acmat I0‘/« up that make contributions receive to businesses, who then keep between 60 Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, breakup received, people still are very "The presi ent’s decision on '^by,4fie administration that public over their handling of the accident. corportion has been formed in aging from the University of Aetna 47'/. . dn Vi state tax credits (See story on page percent and 70 percent of the revenues. - Pennsylvania and Texas, confused .about the role of AT&T in the whether to veto or not to veto will patience around the world with the Union Carbide sounded its emer­ Manchester to work with mentally Bridgeport. Bank of New England 46 nc 3). The financial goal lis t^ by New Commission arrangements vary frorr) Profits vary. Turher Alston, of Alston telecommunication's world. .Carbide iinit be based on his own personal South' African government has gency sirens when the chemicals retarded adults and senior citizens She said it Has not yet been Finast 23V. up ‘/I Seasons under,that program is$1.7 state to state. Brothers Car Wash in Cincinnati, has opinion as far as the pros and cons been tried by the bloodshed- re­ vented at 9:25 a.m. Sunday. in long-term health care facilities determined whether New Seasons First Conn. Bancorp 551/^ up ‘A "A re you allowed to dp this?’’ and’’Is Currently, COCOTs can onli* be installed an American Tele-Coin phone this legal?” are two questions Dunn . 1 of sanctions — the advisability of ported ' since the imposition of a Kanawha County officials de­ and in the community. will receive the grant or what the million. First Hartford Corp. V. dn ‘/I installed in semipublic places, an area which earns him about $50 or $60 a said he. hears frequently. plans layoff^ state of emergency July 21. clared an emergency and warned amount of it will be. She said she Spokesmen for the Department Hartford National , The founder of the organization 29'/i 'dn I'/i where the telephone company says it month, he said. Reagan said last week some people to stay inside and turn off expects to hear by the end of the of Mental Retardation were not > Hartford Steam Boiler ANMOORE, W.Va. (UPIl - Officials — which is called New Seasons Inc. ■ 49'/i dn V. doesn’t break even. But Amerlfcan Tele-Coin estimates provisions of the sanctions bill ventilation systents. Police plosed month.. available for comment this Ingersoll Rand STATE RESTRICTIONS ADD TO , at Union Carbide’s specialty graphite — is Belle Fine of l05 Joan Circle, 52 ' dn i/i that a contract for a heavily trafficked , "could be helpful” in fostering two highways near the plant, some Fine said the aim of New Seasons morning. J.C. Penney 48Vi complexities. New York, for example, operation in Harrison County say 71 Inside Todays who moved to town from Bridge­ dn '/. UNDER AT&T, AN AVERAGE pay New York City Bagel Nosh will fetch change in South Africa bqt^anc- 10 miles from Charleston. will be to provide leisure activities ' Fine and her husband received Lydall Inc.. 13'/2 .recently did away with a libense hourly workers will be laid off one week port last month to head the * dn ‘/I station brought in $300 monthly, but $900 a month. tions genpi'ally ’’would beliarm - The yellow chemical cloud, for retarded adults discharged- approval from the Zoning Board of Sage Allen, 19 requirement-for pay telephones. That from today.' organization. nc paid the establishment owner’s just About 50 percent of the phone calls fuj” 'not only to blacks in that which smelled like rotten eggs and from health care facilities, to teach Appeals in June to open a’day-care SNET ^ - 39V. move eased the way for newcomers in a The layoffs are needed at the ’ -20 pages, 2 sections dn 'A small change in commissions usually made on the average pay phone are country but also surrounding na­ rolled ’’like a fog” over 20,000 Fine said today, she has applied skills of dajjy living and to assist ip center at the former supermarket. Travelers 44'/i market that is 99 percent controlled by. Anmoore facility because of high dn Vi about $11.50 a month, according to Jim credit card calls and won't make any Advice—_ ObUuartMObUuarlet. -- - i tions with close economic ties. residents in Institute,- Dunbar, to the state’s Department of Interpersonal relationships. At the time, an attorney for the Tyco Laboratories » 38Vi Nynex Corp., Dunn said. inventory, plant manager Herman' dn I'/i Dunn, a branch manager for American money for the phone’s owner, said Butlneet _ Ojnniorinniori. The legislation would ban bank Nitro and St. Albans, dissipated in Mental Retardation for a grant to Fine said it has not been Fines told the ZBA the center United Technologies 41 Vi But all the issues can be'overwhelm- Overcash said. CiMilfled. .16-10 PMpletalk. nc Tele-Coin, one of the companies out to - Betsy O’Hara, district staff manager loans, importation of the gold 90 minutes. County officials ended operate the program. Its dhief determined yet how many people would provide vocational, physical New York gold ing, according to Nynex. Comlo Spnrta----- $321.65 up $1.15 cash in on pay phones. ' for advehismg foe. New York Tele­ " I t ’s because of business conditions”^ Entertainment Teleylalon__ Krugerrand coin and the sale of the emergency declaration about function would be to run a day-care ' the day-care facility will bie able to ’ and recreational rehabilitation for “ Our phones let you call anywhere in hes'aid. "Our inventories areextremely*' Lottery--- Weather____ Once pay phones came in two phone", part oil Nynex Corp. the world and we provide free informa­ nuclea.r technology and noon. center that is to be located in part accommodate. about 80 clients and would be high. We just have to react to ttat.” computer’s. - No one was seriously hurt, but 24 of a vacant supermarket building New Seasons Is one of many staffed by 30 employees. , MA.M HESTER HERA.LU, Monday. Aug. 12, 1985 - 3 '

t - MANCHESTER HERALD, Monday.,Auk. 12, 1985 r on''World War II photo Roulette not used Cleaning autographs." said Mitchell. The ieads to into conflict in tht Korean War and dent of fhe^Amerit^ Museum pf very important document. Not so • The picture shows Nimitz sitting Historicar^Do6uments, got the effort...... ‘ resulted in each-signatureon • ’-natureon in figuring fine Bv RIcHard Luna at a table .signing the surrender never met again. So it was unlikely the picture Weing 'legally United Press International much the actual photograph or they would put their signatures on picture, other than "through an A. 11 ■ r an'^le, btrt-the fact that it is signed document. WacAVthur, H^sey and authenticated. Sherman- standing ■ b^frtd, with something knowing the other had attorney who represented -. Mitchell’s corporation began a house fire HOUSTON - A photogr.aplj-of byo some of the. greatest people . signed it after that time. ... This someone.” / from that era. As far-as we know,,, more military officialirTrom Allied program of distributing reproduce State mandates^me, the cerenriony ending World War II armed services standing in the might be- the only paper in the Mitchell contacted the National • tinns to certain individuals and that bears the signatures of ' it’s the only photograph of its kind. world with both signatures on it." Archives. MacArthur «Memoriali Part of a hou.se off I,inc01n Street -■’Other than the. photograph of background. institutes nationwide. One -was but town sets otheriB President Harry Truman and Gen. Carney is the only ■ surviving Mitchell, who .has a degree in Harry S. Truman Library, Naval ■ given to President Reaganl one.to. tniriM'd SaturdiVy evening when the Douglas MacArthurcouldbeoneof. the Iwo Jima flag raising, this is history from the University of the' Historical Center, U.S. Army- pilot light of a basement hot water- the single, most recognizable •signer of the photograph. While he Carneywmd fithers to the National the most important ' historical has not acknowledged signing, he ■ South m Sewanee. Tenni, said it is Milita/y History InstitutcA and Archives,-Harry S. Truman, Li­ heater ignited fumes from a pan of ■ Items discovered since the war,“the 'picture fi^m \y*rld War II." unknown who had the picture Admiral Nimitz Historical State By, Kfcvln Flood speeding If they are eSught traVel- . gasoline, town fire officials said , has accepted a moUnted-reproduc- brary MiicArthur Memorial and Herald Reporter ■ jng ovef.61 mph on local roads or 70 picture’s owner claims. tion given to him by MitchelL. signed.- ,rfe said a number of Park and was told the photograph Admiral Nimilz State ’ Hi.storical this nuy'hing No one was injured. .. dames K.'Mitchell of' J a ^ r , \^tr u Man was not p r e s e n t similar prints are in ciroulation,.. was indeed unique if the signijiurys mph'OB intersfale highways. Wood _ Deputy Fire Chief Robert By- at the signing abdard the U^“^USS' . . Mitchell said one interesting Park Ypu have just found yoursell the said. But in those cases, he said, an ’ Texas, a World War II history buff: aspect is that Truman and MacAr- but none bear the Signatures. were gepuine. -C cholski said this morning that bought the photograph in 1982 from Missouri in Tokyo Bay -Sept..X. - Mitchell thqn' asked Historical jiroud riew owner of a j-alher appearancp in Supccior*Court is . thur both signed the picture. It was "It’s possible one, of the signers ma’ndatory. Judges generally Steven Muisc’ was using .the . ' The Amertgan Museum of Histart: 1945, but he app3i^j^-y ^ „ . Triim^, furious over the general’s •had it signed,” he.' said; "It Document' Reproduction Inc. to' expensive traffic ticket. ■' . gasoline to clean molorcycle parts cai Documents in Las Vegas, N ev.^ picture aipng witnt/MacArthi|i;, de,t_erminc-the authenticity i issue fines based on the system . e outspoken criticism df Washing­ definitely was somebody who knewN Crystal And you’re wondering how that - used for 55-60 mph dffsndcrs. Wood, ft the,basement of his home at 8 . The photography ;'also bearing Nimilz, Halsey, Vice AdimCharles what he was doing because he got Russell D. Osborn of.Osborn and ayvful fine was determined. Does Lincoln fit. at -about 7:30 p.m. A. Lockwood .Jr., Vice-Adm.,'John ton’s conduct'of,the Korean War, The Greek word kryllqs, or frost, said, but they do hav^lhe discre­ Ml authenticated signatures of such • «-hr. dismissed MacArthur frbm the signatures of the most impor­ Associates in New York, the oldest the amount you hpve to pay for Kuuirday when the fire.started.» high-ranking naval officers as H. Towers, Rear Adm. Robert B'. questioned-document nrm in the is the correct name for a snow- tion to charge, what they feel is his fopr U.N., Allied and. U.S. tant peopPb” fhike A snowfUk'e is formed when having your foot a bit too close to proper in particular eases. ' Muise had been ■'cleaning the Adm. Chester W.'Nimitz and Adm. Carney arid Rear Adnt. Forrest P. country, conducted “the most • the floor depend on wh'at day of the parts near a hot water healer and William F. Halse'y Jr , is one of a Sherman. Three of the men later commands in 1951. complete signature anal^vsis ever ' hydrogen and oxygen atoms are ■’Aftar conferring on Wake Island, MITcNe LL would not r e ­ held together by electric charges. week, it is? Does the police pfficer ALL THE SPEIEDING FINES had momentarily left the area just kind, said Mitchell. . . . . ■ became chief of nav'bl operations veal where Todd Axelrod, presi­ done concerning these famous. who pulled you over keep a roulette before the fumes ignited, By- "I think, without a doubt,"it is a . , — NimitzvSherman and Carney. ip 1950, said Mitchell, ’’They came are set by the state. Butotherlypes -wheel in his cru'sier? Was it * of fines are»discretionary on the cholski .said. When Muise re; something you said” • , part of towns and cities. turned, the deputy cftjef said, he Manchester Police Department In Manchester, for inst«nCe. the found the pan on fire. spokesman Gary Wood said Fri­ c h a r^ is $25 for parking in a if Muise ,,-lt first-tried to put the Weather day that traffic fines arA deter­ handicapped z6ne — $10 le,sSilh,ab flames out, Kul was .soon forced to" call the fircdeparlmehl, Bycholksi i ■ f ■ mined in a number of ways. The the state recommends. Wood said. (■ way they rine calculated depends Of course, there are those times said When firefighters arrived oi> , Today’s forecast on the type of offense. Wood said. when motorists escape with'only a the scene.-he said, they found Gospel video ■ warning for a motor-vehicle viola­ flame.s shooting through one base­ JFK niece marrtes hunk .Connecticut,, Massachusetts .. Motorikts caught traveling too k r. ment window and smoke pouring Pat.Boone fays he became a video version Of a fast on local roads — but not oySrSB - tion. Wood said warnings are and Rhode Island: Mostly suqny usually given out in cases of from several others. ^ Maria,Shriver,’niece of the latePresidebt John disc jockey betause he was appalled by what he lodayytooler with highs in the mph — are charged $4 fot-feach ' Firefighters brought the blaze F. Kennedy, plans to mdrry Arnbld Schwwze- mile per hour they were traveling ffrst-time .equipment violations, .ijegger, best Known^ saw on MTV.. mid 70s to around 80. Clear and such as faulty headlights. under control W^hin 15 minutes, "They rarely play cooler tonight. Lows around 50 above the speed limit. In addll^ion. ■ 'Bycholski said. Bychpiski said that . for his movie role as he said, they are charged a $5 fee In riiost othericaseSj Wood said, -'•Cohan the Barbar­ gospel videos on northwest to the mid 60s sou­ it is up to the officer on the scene to although the damage was confined 2 MTV because the and a $10 surtax. The $5 fee goes ■to the ba.scmenl of the two-family ian," a published theast. Mostly sunny Tuesday. tovyprd training of municipal po--- ■ determine whether to issue a ticket' report said. . deejays find ft hard Highs in the mid 70s to around 80. ■ or a warning. "It’s usually a ■ hbusc, health officials were forced to switch from lice officers. Wood said. driver, 29, is the Maine; Mostly sunny today. That system, however, only matter of how blatant Iffc offense to declare it uiffit for occupancy .daughter, of 1972 Sheen* Easton to. Highs in the -70s to, lower 80s. is," he'said. "If it’s very blalanL he because the fire had burned out its Petra (a gospel . applies in cases where motorists electrical system'and melted its v'ice,/presidential ' Clear, tonight. Lows in the 40s are caught with the aid of a radar should give a ticket.’* candidate Sargent group) - or from Some motorists — usually those water pipes, leaving occupants Prince to Amy- north and upper 40s to mid 50s ■ gun or some other timing device, Shriver and his wife south. Becoming partly sunny WooA said. When a police officer who have just gotten tickets — without water or electricity. . Eunice Kennedy. . ram," he'said. believe that p'olice oncers are The upper floors of the house Boone plays vi­ Tuesday. HighS near 70 north tq decides that a motorist is speeding suffereA smoke damage in the the president’s” sis­ near 80 south. - .based on his own judgment, the obliged to give out traffi?tickets in* ter and founder of tdeos on his "Gospel order to meet a quota established blaze, Bycholski said. Gold" show on the New Hampshire: Mostly ■ motorist is fined a flat $35, along t h e ' S p Ax i a 1 sunny today. Highs in the 70s with the $5 fee and $10 surtax. by their superiors." Olyrhpies. ^ Christian Broadcast" . Network and the north to near 80 south. Clear "'Not true," Wood said. , "We She is the West BOTH OF THOSE systems cbme assign our traffic vehicles to ureas Coast feature repor­ fare is-conslderably tonight. Lows in'the40s north and different from whht upper 40s to yiftd 50s south. under fhej:h'arge of "traveling too vf'here there are hfgh accident ) ’a s ter for the CBS fast" in tkP^tate law bosks. Wood rates. Our main goal is to prevent A >. Morning News. you get on MTV, Becoming par\w sunny Tues­ Calls "The only one day. Highs in the 70s north to said. Both systems apply only in ' accidents.” , t - Shwarzenegger,' cases where a motorist is caught ' ' Wood said the Ma.nche'ster. Po­ is a former played on MTV ig near 80 south. Go ahead and Jump lice DepartmenU" currently has Manchester DeGarmo arid Key ’s Sunny and pleasant exceeding the speed linjits on local Today: mostly sunny and pleasant. Highs near 80. Tonight; clear and roads, but not exceeding 55 mph. three police cruisers assigned to do Friday, 2:54 p.m. — medical body builder who "666,” the anti-Ghri'st tiJday. Highs 75 to 80. Clear and designation -from cool LoWs near 60. Tuesday: sunny and warm. Highs near 80. Today’s In cases where rriotorists are ''nothing else but monitor traffic in ' V i , call. 92 Hilliard St. (Eighth’Dis­ Shwarzenegger Sprang to fame in Pat Boone, cool tonight. Lows 50 to ,55. Sunny weather picture was drawn by Sandy Brindamour, 9, of- 34 Carol caughttraveling between 55 and 60 town. One cw is on duty during trict, Pardtriedics). -. the movie "Pump­ the Book of Revela­ at firsTTH^sday then clouding tions.in the Bible,;’ Boone'said. "It’s so violent Drive, a student at Verplanck School , mph on local roads. Wood said, . each of the department's three Friday. 8:04 p.m. — medical ing I ronx’ ’ The couple met at the Robert Kennedy that MTV edited it dofvn. We played the un edited up. Highs 75 to 80. they are charged with "speeding," shifts, he said. call, 709, Main St. (Town). Pro-Celebrity Tennis, Tournament in 1977, the version on our show and^tripled our rating the which carries the same fine , Wood clairned Manchester" po­ Reason to smile Friday. 10:45 p.m..— public Boston Herald reported'Saturday. imposed under the "traveling-too- lice compare favorably to police >. service call. 43 Mill. St. (Eighth The Kenriedys have repeatedly denied reports first night. We kept it intact because it has a Extended outlook strong message.” fast” charge: $4 fqr each mile per departments in other towns when it - Brian D.onavan of the Muncie's Muds- way. Donhyan apparently.had no need District). that the family frowns on the relationship, the What does Boone think of rock ’n’ roll? "Groups Extended outlook, for. New ■hour over the speed limit. But in comes to enforcing motor vehicle ters team was in the thidk ot it Suhday as for a mouthpiece,‘during the game, • Fft-iday, 11:J)1 p.m. — lockout, 36 newspaper said. laws. "I’d say we’re stricter than like Iron Malden, Black Sabbath and Judas Priest England Wednesday through ' addition Jo that, he said, motorists a mud itootbalf game sponsored by -the which was held at a ipeal farm. Thompson Road, (Town) . A In fact, Schwarzenegger, a Republican, said he are into sado-masochism, .incest, rape, murder, Friday: face a $10 fee and a $15 surtax. other towns." he said. "It’s a. Friday, il:17 p.m. — medical enjoys friendly political debates with Sen. Connecticut; Massachusetts Motorists are also charged with priority with us.” Ipswich, Mass., Lior^'s Club got under call. 9 Laurel St. (Town). - Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. ' , . . suicide, drugs and the-occult," he said. "1 wonder. "It’s very stimulating when you have opposite ^ If patents know thatis the kind of thing their kids and Rhode Island: Fair Wednes­ Friday. 1L20 p.m. — medical are-seeing, on TV ” • day. Chance of showers Thurs­ call. 130 Broad St. (Eighth District, opinions," the body builder said. "My biggest Paramedics). challenge is turning Teddy around. ” day. Fair Frjday. Lows in the Goal In the millions mjd 50s tp mid 60s. Highs 75 to 80 Friday. 11*38 p.m. — medical along the coast and in the 80s call. Main and Woodbridge streets (Eighth District, Paramedics). King of the wild frontier inland. Vermont; Warm and humid Saturday, 12:36 a.m. — gaMag H Remember the Davy Crockett television series , Wednesday and Thur^i^y with a Many seek neighborhood assistance funds washdown. 19 Henry St. (Eighth Sibling rivalry of the 1950s” U starred Fess Parker, in a coonskin chance of thundershowers. District). cap. Saturday, 8:57 p.m. — medical Page Hannah, 21. has had a tough time ever Highs in the 80s, lows in the 60s.' • Community Child Guidance» heart patients; $5,000 to expand a children who- have been transportation to elderly and han­ call| 38 Strickland St. (Eighth Since her sister Daryl Hannah, 25, made her big Parker. 59: is now a businessman in Santa Manchester , area communily / .. Dry and cooler Friday with highs Clinic, with a goal of $35,000 t6 program for people with substance abandoned. dicapped people.' District, Paramedics). splash in movies. They started their- acting Barbara, Calif.,- and says he is considering a bid in the 70s and lows in the 50s. service organizations with funding • Senior Citizens’ Center, with a for the U.S. Senate. He told jhe San Francisco | goals totaling $6.2 million are siipport psychiatric outpatient ser­ abuse problems; $1,080 to held '• Visiting Nurses and Hjime Saturday, 9:53 a.m. — medical careers orothe same day and Page got the first job Maine: Chance of showers support an emergency response Care of Mwchester, with a goal of goal of $6,800 for a watering system and first steady work. But Daryl Joecame an Chronicle on Saturday that he may seek the 'seeking to be included in the state’s vices to children and lor preschool, call, 4 Pearl St. (Town). Wednesday and Thursday. Fair, programs for autistic children. ■ systAtn, for people at risk; $1,300, $11,000 to support a psychiatric for-the greenhouse, for a dark­ Saturday, 12:46 p.m. — motor immediate star with- "Splash” and Page is Republican nomination for the post now held by • Neighborhood Assistance prbr- room, for power tools for fhe hobby Democratic Sen. Alan Cranston. on Friday. Highs in the mid 70s to gam this year. • Crossroads of Marichester, for weekly, care of children with ■ case management proar,afn in vehicle accident, High and Cooper suffering from a,frustrating case of little-sister mid 80s. Lows in the 5ps to lower parents Who have identified them­ which a psychiatric nurse will shop, for shuffleboard and bocc'i G Parker says he has consulted with , Stuart with a goal of $20,000 for counseling, streets. (Town). _ syndrome. Th^rogram allows businesses selves as abusive' or neglectful; provide care to recently tfeipstitu- courts. "When I see somebody else’s little-sister, I Spencer, a veteran political advisor of President 60s. , _■ Sotelllte view and education to' prevent -sub­ Saturday, 2:22 p.m. — medical New Hampshire: Chance'of that contribute to qualified agen­ stance abuse in adolescents. and $5,000 for treatment of patient-s tionalized people. think, ’Oh, this is the one who can’t act,” she says Reagan, and will rent a hospitality suite at the » cies to get a state tax benefit. call, 5% Bush Hill Road (Town). showers Wednesday and Thurs­ Commerce Department stellite photo taken at 4:00 a m. EDT shows • Disabled American Veterans, recently discharged from psycjii- In addition, the Town of Man­ Saturday, 6 p.pi. — motor in Glamour. "'She’s getting parts because her Republican state convention in San Diego next chester itself is an applicant for sister is famous.” I thmk that’s probably bow month. Parker retired ffom actiijg 25 yeark ago day. Fair'on Friday. Highs in the intense thunderstorms over the northern Plains. Mid and high level The Manchester Board of Direc­ with a goal of $17,500 to erect a . atric facilities. ' Fair Deal vehicle accident,with injuries, 134 mrd 70s to mid 80s. Lows in the tors will be asked Tuesday to monument to veterans of. the consideration under the program Mather St. (Eighth District,' people feel about me.’’ and now operates a mobile home park in'Santa cloudiness extends sbuthwestward.to Arizona and New Mexico. Manchester §pholarship..Foun­ Town projects up for consideration Page, wbo gets.'her first starring role in the Barbara. 50s to lower 60s. * ■ ' . approve the programs proposed by Korean War. dation, Mjith a goal of $60,000 to rides again Paramedics). the agencies. But the final decision • Instructors of ’the Handi- are the followiijbj,, Saturday,'7:16 p.m. — medical upcoming movie "Insidq Adam Swit," says she provide schofarships and loans for • Board of EHUcatioo, with a and Daryl'are considerably ejiffererit. "I don’t Across ths nation ’ on whether the programs qualify cap(£d, with a goal of $275,000 to post-secondary-education. In spile of the heavy downpour, call,-Qak Street (Town). for the assistance plan will be builaa swimming pool for hande goal of $2,500 to support a Kiwanis last night’s Last Fair Deal concert Saturday, 7:28 p.m. — structure have the body shh does," Page said. "I’m a thin Club program to help young small redhead and she’s a big tall blonde." Showers arid thunderstorms made by the state’s Department of capped people. • Manchester Symphony Or­ at the Bicentennial Band Shell was firefJLLincoln St. (Town). . Wedding belle for Riffle will extend from Montana across Revenue Services. • Literacy Volunteers EriSt of chestra and Chorale, with a goal of persons at' risk of becoming not rained out. About 40 people sat Suturday, 9:52 p.m. — dumpster Star football player Doug Flutie cotnpleted his the northern PJains, the central Under the program, corpora­ the River, with a goal of $8,000 to. $26,000 for concert presentations. community proplems. '• in the shelter of the stage to hear fire, 45 North School St. (Eighth prettiest pass Saturday when he mhrried his high Missouri Valley, the northern tions, are given tax credits for the foster increased literacy. • ’MARCH, with a goal; of • Emergency.Medical Services he CO District). , half of the Mississippi' Valley, contributipns, which are then tE'’LittIe Theater"of Manchester, $516,84o'to provide group homes for Council, with a goal of $2,400 to help ■TheThere, will be no "rain-date" school sweetheart, Laurie Fortier, " teach citizens cardiopulmonary Some 325 relatives and friends, including many Wisconsiri and upper Michigan. applied against any corporate 'With a goal of $1,157,000 to people who are mental^ retarded concert tonight, as had been Tolland County Now you know of Flutie’s former coachgs- and teammates at Showers and.thu'nderstorms will business taxes due the ^tate. The rehabilitate Cheney Hall. ' and developmentaily rlisabled. resuscitation. originally announced. But -for • Elderly Outreach Program, Sunday, 1:41 a.m. — medical - Alexander the Great and Louis XIV conducted Boston College, witnessed the ceremony in St. also ,be scattered from the credits are either 50 or 70 percent, • Lutz Children’s Museum, with • Mary’s Field, with a goal (of. those who did not brave the storm Patrick’s Church in Natick, Mass. MissikstppH'Delta across Flor-- depending-on the type of social a goal of $100,000 to renovate the $45,000 to provide care for unmar­ with a goal of $5,000 to assist older last night, another epneerf has call, School Street, Coventry busijte^s of state from their be*dk, Johri Milton, citizens isolated in tfieir homes. JonAttfbn Swift, Marcel Proust and Elizabeth Flutie and Fortier had jjeeh dating since their ida,-Hlghs will be in the 60s from service program, to which the museum building on South Main ried pregnant women arid mr been, arrranged with the same (South Coventry).' sophomore year at Natick High Scho'Rl. The contribution is made. ■ Street.* battered wives and abjRled ■ • Fuel Assistance, with a goal of bluegrass group Sunday. 2:56 p.m. — medical Barrett Browning wrote major works in bed, and florthern Minnesota and JJorth $5,000 to provide heating {pel for Rossini frequently composed music in bed. couple planned a Bermuda honeymoon. Dakota across much of Montana. John Post, human services ana­ (P Manchester Area Conference chlldren.;,i”»>^. ,, —. Tbe concert will be Aug 23 at 7 call. Notch Road, Bolton (Bolton). lyst for the town, said in a report to of Churches, with a gdSl of $45,000 • NewHopefttanor, with a goal needy families. p.m. The band shell is on the , Sunday, 4:08 p.m. — medical" Highs in the 70s a ^ low 80s will of $7,000 to sUpprirt the home for • Manchester Phone-A-Ride, campus of Manchester Commun­ call, Avery Shores Drive, Coventry reach from New England across the Board of Directors that in the to help operate an emergency three years of the program busi­ shelter and a soup kitchen, and substance-abusing girls. with a goal of $25,000 to provide ity College. ’ ■ (Soutfi Coventry). th^ Great Lakes arid from South $10,000 for assistance to people in • New Seasons, with a goal of Dakota across- the northern nesses have contributed $88,558 and received tax credits of $42,000. need who are not eligible for other $1,700,000 to begin a service for the Almanac Rockies. Highs will reach near Each organization must solicit resources. ■“ employment and recreation-needs 100 from much of the southern its owri contributions. ,W Manchester Association for of severely \o profoundly mentally Plains across southern Kansas. CONGRATULATIONS UPl WEATHER FOTOCAST ® The board meets at 8 p.m. R'diarded Citizens, with a goal of retarded adults and senior- Today is Monday, Aug. 12, the Highs will be 100 to 110 through Tuesday in the Lincoln Ceriter $15(KoOO to relocate the MARC citizens. kelly 224th day of 1985 with 141 to the desert semthwest. hearing room. The (ollowmg is a bakery and to add to the service • River East Home Care, with a PAUL & KARLA — MANCHESTER ■follow. list of the organizatioif^eeking thatlprovides food for the Meals On goal of $5,000 to deliver meals to The moon is moving toward its National forecast approval by the direetdfs: Wheels service. homebound people. WINNERS new phase. -' High and low • American Association of R e­ • Manchester Early Learning • Time Out for Parents, with a During early Tuesday^mornlng showers are forecast for parts of the "TENT SALE " DRAWING • MINI-SOMEDSET GO-KART The morning, stars are Mer­ The highest temperature re­ tired Persons, with a goal of $2}^ Center, with a goal of $1,200 to buy goal of $60,000 for |i;risis interven­ cury, Venus and Mars. ported Sunday by the National Upper’ Mississippi Valley and the Upper Great Lakes Regions. to assist newly widowed a mlcropomputer for education of tion child care and for parent The evening stars are Jupiter Weather Service, excludirig Scattered showers are expected through tl\e Central and Southern individuals. schoolchildren and preschool counseling to prevent child abuse. and Saturn. Plains and parts of the Intermountain Regloh\E|sewhqre the feather • Child and. Family Services, children. • Transitional Living Center Alaska and Hawaii, was 108 Foundation, with a goal of $150,000 Those born on this date are. degrees at Bullhead City and will be fair. Minimum temperatures wlllX Include: (Maximum withpgoal of $31,000 to support day • Manchester. Memorial Hospi­ temperatures In parenthesis) Atlanta73 (92), Bmton62'(79),'Chlcagp tal, with' a goal .of $5:000 to to provide temporary bousing for- 2 2 under" the sigh of Leo. They Gila Bend, Ariz. Today'slow was care placement of children of low subsidize a treatment program for ■ chronic runaway children, and for include novelist Mary Roberts 31 degrees at Ely, N^ 71 (87), Cleveland 68 (91), Dallas 78(100), Denv^57 (88), Duluth 53 income or with special needs.' (75), Houston 73 (93), Jacksonville 72 (92), Ka'nsaaCJty 70 (87), Little Rinehart in 18761 arid movie; ^ ■■ - producer Cecil B. de Mille in (94), Los Angelos 54 (71), Miami 79 (90), ^}ieapoll8 81 (81), Police Roun<(Up 1881. New Orleans 74 (92), Novv York 70 (84), PtTOSPlx79I104),St. Louis73 /Q.'n(93), San Francisco 55 (74), SeaHte-55-(B7L Washinglon 73 (91). "* - On this date in history; In 1851, Isaac Singer was i u o t t e r y granted a patent for his sewing Wrecks c^se minor injuries machine. Singer set*up business Manchester Herald ' in Boston with a total of $40 Richard AA. Diamond, Publisher A Pleasant Street woman suf Main St., failed to stop for a stop" and released "shortly lifter the capital. ; fered a shoulder Injury Saturday sign at the intersection. ShMto did accident, police . and a hospital In 1898, a peace protocol was Connecticut daily Penny Sadd AAark F. Abraltls -signed ending the Spanish- : "when her car collided with another not have to stop at the intersection, spokeswomati -said. He was American War afl,er hostilities Saturday: 933 .Associate Publisher Business AAonooer car at the intersection of Cooper police said. charged with driving while under ^ and H i^ streets, ^lice said this Heslen said later that she failed the influence of alcohol in connec­ had lasted three months .and 22 Pl^y Four; 5371 USPS 327-5IX) VOL. CIV. No 2B4 Presenting the car to the Winners are^ 'X days. The United States acquired morning: to notice the stop sign because she tion with the accident.),,- Puerto Rico, Guam and' the Publlthtd dally except Sunday Suggested carr.ler rotes ore St.20 Elaine F. Shelto, 31, of 7 Pleasant was' "thinking qf something other Donald Piretti, Sales Manager and and certain holldaVi by the Man­ weekly, S5.12 tor one month, $15.35 St., was treated at Manchester than her driving,” a police report Gross lost control his cycle and Philippines, and annexed Other numbers drawn Salur: chester Publlihinfl Cb., tSBralnard for three months, $30.70 (or six fell off it as he headed east on Roger Ruel, Salesman Hawaii. day in New England: Place, Manchester, Conn. 06040. Se­ months and $61.40 for one year. Memorial Hospital and released said. She was charged with failure cond cldss postage paid at Man­ Mall rates are available on request. following the 12.46 p.m. accident, t'o stop for aatop sign, .^hello's car Mather Street, near Parker Street, In 1978, Pope Paul VI was chester, Conn. POSTMASTER:, at about 6 p.m. Saturday, police buried in St. Peter's after an Vermont daily: 7*7 Send address changes to the Man­ police and hospital spokeswoman had to be toWed from the scene. chester Herald; P.O. Box 591, Mon- said. The cycle slid along the street outdoor funeral. To place a classified or display UPl pKoto Chester, Conn. 06040. said. at first, but then slid across both a In 1984, the _XXIir Olympic Maine dailjes: 100 a\id^7511 advertisement, or to report a newt Police said Shelto had been A Coventry man suffered multi: GUARANTEED DELIVERY: If Item, story or picture Idea, call 643-. Mather Street lawn and a Parker Cardinal Buick Games ended ^oothly in Los 2711. Office hours ore i:30a.m ’. to S heading along Cooper Street when -pie cuts and bruises Saturday you donj-recelve your Hergid bv 5 Street lawn, police said. The cycle A n g el^ with a record attend­ Rhode Island daily: 68*3 p.m. weekdays or 7:U o.m. Satur­ p.m. Monday through Friday. a Becond car heading along High when he "lost control of' his Today In history “Lot-O-Bucks” : 9-10-*0-*6-*8 day, please telephone your carrier. slid a total of 67 feet. 81 Adorns St., AAoncheWtar ance bHF.S million people despite If you're unable to reach your car-' Street struck her at the intersec­ motorcycle on Mather Street, a Soviet-led boycott, and with the NeW Hampshire daily: 3659 rier, coll subscriber service at 647- The Manchester Herald It d sub­ tion of the two 'roads. Police said police said this morning. ^ Police said both lawns were- 649-4571 In 1982, Henry Fonda died at the age of 77. The actor is Uhited States' as the leading 9946 bv 6 p.m. weekdays or 10 o.m. scriber to United Press Interno- damaged. He Is to appear in court Saturdays for guaranteed delivery tlonal newtserviceonditamember the driver of the second car, Herbert Gross, 27, was-treated at shown in a scene from "On Golden Pond," for which he medal winner aitiong 140 partici­ Massachusetts daily: 930* In Mdnehester. .of the Audit Bureau of Clrculotleni. S4-year-old Debbie Heslen, of 709 Manchester Memorial Hospital Wednesday on- the charge. won an Academy Award. pating nations. “Megabucks” : 7-13-17-*l-3*-35 MANCHESTER HERALD, Mondiiy. Aua 12, 19B5 - 5 ^ « - MANCHESTER HERALD. Monday, Aug. 12^1985 \- Eight cities get Activists funeral U.S./Witrld brings new violence In Brief special funds Island Salvador army bombs towri< JOHANNESBURG. South Africa lawyer Griffiths Mxehge. who was murdered by unknown assailants .in DULCE NOMBRE DE MARIA, Efl Salvfld ,A newly discovered docurpent V (UPl)’i) -1— Police said they killed a black rtliern El Ntfoulh in Mamelodi and a manwas found 1981. . The Army bombed the nortl1^rn villa' ►signed in 1889 reveals the Statue Meanwhile, in Fort Beaufort. .500 Ocotal Jn a region of -heavy guerrilla activity, \ \ for AIDS ^abbed'to death in Soweto today as woman and her two children- and \ miles south of Johanne.sburg, ,U.S. kiflfng a of Liberty is actually in Nevy racial violence flared following the 10 other civilitins. 'ticcording to funeral- of plain civil rights lawyer Appeals Court Judge Nathaniel Jones of wounding Jersey and not New York. Cincinnati-said Sunday charges that he residents Bv David,E. Anderson Connecticut \iictim Victoria Mxenge. United Press Internatlonol Police fifed .shotguns and tear gas at a illegally entered a black township Witnesses told Uqjted Press International w(7uld be dropped; Sundtt.v'Jn army major came to the h.-iiitlet of El tries to fight stigma mob of stone-throwing youths in the Ocotal, some 10 miles north of Dulci'\^ombre de WASHINGTON - Eight cities Mahhattah black township of Manlclodi. near Jones, who was arrested Saturday, have beep awarded $145,000 from ' — see page 7 Pretoria, killing a black youth and said he had been given. n() official Maria and tibout 41) mile.s norlbeasl of Stin the U,S, Conference of Mayorg to injuring a-black man and woman explanation by the atlorney general of Salvador, to apologize forthe Tuesday bombing. help pay for ahti-AIDS* projects, lerseyi Eastern Cape Province for the decision -' He told us it was a disgrace, and that 7. , Youths tossed gasolirfe- bombs at - something like that would not happen again, including a “safe sex musical” to City 'buses and two private cars were The maximum penally under South f cut the incidence of the deadly damaged near Mamelodi, and a cur was Africa's 23-day-old 'Stale yf emergency said one man. a resident of El Ocbtal. The villager tracks." for such an infraction is 10 years in jail. said the armv officer did not identify himself (fisease; torched by mobs in nearby Atteridge- r, "He said it'was a miscalculation and a mistake The awards were announced Appearing with Mason was Rep. Gcvefnors Island ville, police said< Jones is- in Soutl) Africa with the Sunday as the head of the Centers Henry Wfixman, D-Calif., who In Soweto, the huge black township International Cornmissinn of Jurists to of the pilots, and tyhat if we wanted.to slay there, for Disease Control in Atlanta said cdhiplained the administration has , outside Johannesburg, police said they observe the trial of 16 United Demo­ the government would give 115 help" the resident the pest way to stop the spread of “shortchanged, research " 'on ^ ^ arrested three youths who.pelted police cratic Front members charged with of El Ocotal said , AIDS, a charge Mason denied. ^treason. Mxenge was among lawyers Military officials refused to comment on AIDS is for the government to vehicles with rocks. Police said they;,,., reports liy six residents who said they fled to persuade Americans to "develop a Recipients . of the grants are Brooklyn found 11# body of a black man who was defending the 16 dissidents. socially acceptable type of stx — non-profit, private .local groups apparently slabbed to death. In black townships around Durban,- Dulce Nombre de Maria after El Ocotal was safe sex," ".with established ti^s td risk In other areas police said they more Iban 4,000 Asians have abandoned bombed The conference grants are to-be , groups, including gay or bisexual clashed with youths hurling rock.s artd homes and shops in the Inandti area used to continue a public education, men and.IV (intravenous) drug gasolijie bombs.', they shared with Zulu tribesmen. Most drive against acquired immune abusers. " officials said. TJie latest death's brought the death df the buildings havp been razed by Little violence In paradee deficiency tyndrome, a spreading Much of the emphasis of the toll to 540 in nearly a year of-racial mobs during riots following Mxenge's viral diseilse that' destroys the education campaign undertaken violence across South Mn^ir"About 100 murder BELFAST. Northern Ireland — Catholic and body's natural immune defenses by the local groups-will stress lieople have died since the state of Thousands ol heavily armed Asians Protestant militants marked Northebn Ireland’s and is typically fatal. providing “safe sex" information emergency was declared fh 36 magiste patrolled the borders of Itninda and one ttirhulenl history with noise, marches and Mayors' conference officials to reduce the incidence of the- rial districts on July 21. group w-enl into the township, burning chanting, but there were only sporadic flashes of said the grants, the second round disease and feature innovative and miles Enraged mourners attending the 10 black homes and w4ninding one black violence. awardeti by -the group, are .fi­ attention-grabbing techniques. funeral of Mxenge Sunday stoned to man ' , . •. About 10,000 Catholics defied a police ban on nanced with $145,000 provided by The cities and projects are death and burned a black police officer. demonstrations and marched through west Nashville, Tenn., Aid to End AIDS UPI Graphic / C. Broadway In the Umlazi and Kwamashu black Belfasl Sunday behind the orange, green ;ind the U.S. Public Health Serv'ice. Police said two other blacks were townships.! groups of up to 2,000 / Afi estimated 1 million Ameri­ Committee. Rorlland, Ore., Cas­ burned to death Sunday in separate white banner of the Irish Republic. cade AIDS Project; Denver, AIDS members of the moderate Zulu political The march was to stir memories of the/Br^tisb UPI photo cans carry the AIDS virus in their ■ A Nevy Jersey state historian claims a ne\A^y discovered incidents near Pretoria and about |i00 movement Inkatha patrolled witli bodies and more than 12,000 have P4JUCT: Miami. Health Crisis rniles southwest of Johannesburg at .policy of internment imposed 14 years ;igo that spears and stocks, assaulting members was. u.sed to arrest and jail without trial Irish California until Sept, 2, The Reagans helicoptered to come down the disease, which has Network Inc.; Seattle, Northwest document reveals the S,tatue of Liberty is actually in New Jersey Cradock. of the rival United Democratic I'ront President Reagan reaches out for ^jpport from First been fatal jn about half the cases A1D3 Foundation;, Berkeley, and not New York. He ba'sed l>is claims Qh an 1889 treaty Three more people were killed during Republican Army members suspected of terror­ Lady Nancy Reagan as they board fOfarine One at the Andrews Air Force, Base, ^ Calif., The Pacific'Center AIDS Meanwhile, the wife of South Africa’s ist activities. repart so far. f between the two states. a sixth day of clashes in black ghettos leading black spokesman. Nelson Man­ Dr. James Mason, who as head Project. Detroit, VD Action Coali­ near the Indian Ocean port city of Internment was abandoned after four turbulent White House Sunday, The First FamilWwiil vacation in dela, said Sunday his release from years of fighting between Caiholic.C and of the CDC is leading the U.S.' tion and wellness Network Inc.'; Durban, bringing to 65 the number of prison would not calm racial unrest as battle against AIDS, said Sunday San F-rancisico, Westside Com­ Protestants. ' , ' ' people killed in the area since Tuesday, 'long as the policy ol apartheid remains The Catholic marchers were joined by about 100 on-ABC's “This Week with'David munity Mental Health Center. police said in place. Brinkley” that progrqgs has been The Denver gl"oup. with a $17,353 Document puts statue Mxenge, a well-known civil righl,s American members of NORAID. the fund-rajsing President begins summit homework grant, plans to develop a “travel- ■’1 think it's difficult to imagine that organization that has been acensTd-ttirWashing- made in the past fivb years biit lawyer, was killed by four black fnen to the there is still “a long way to go” 'ing safe sex musical review" to Aug. 1 as she left her home near releasing him to the same apartheid he ton and Dublin of supplying mopey Bv Ira R. Alien authority,, announced this week, will be Although the Soviet Union has ■ before a cure is found. carry^AIDS information to gay bar Durban. Blacks attributed her death to fought against would be a'solution in outlawed IRA. United Press International Rollins and Max Friedersdorf, enough to allow him to veto not agreed to discuss hupian In^the meantime'. Mason said, patrons. “Safe sex" brochures will in Jersey’s government-sanctioned death squads, itself, " Winnie Mandela said in an the overall congressional strate­ sanctions expected to be approved rightsy Speakes said Reagan the best tactic is prevention. be distributed at the end of the and her d(!ath touched off a new wave of interview from South Africa for the iSANTA BARBARA, Calif, - gist, have said they are leaving by Congress next month, plann/d to raise the subject “We know how this disease is show. British Broadcasting Corp. sepanately from the other three. RIVER ED&E. N. J. (UPI) - A nCwly The Dec. 23, ■ 1’889, ,- treaty . and violence. President Reagan, starting his their posts later this year. Speakes said-a format had Been tra'nsmitted," he said “And if we The Portland project, with a accompanying map were the work of a She was buried Sunday near fiisho. Mandela, 67. the leader of the banned Flghtlng> subsides In pelrut 23-day vacation, has begun study­ The moves are seen as a agreed upon, for the Nov,; 19-20 r can convince people to shift their , $19,860 grant, will include develop- discovered document conclusively capital of the blaak homeland of Ciskei African National Congress, has been in. dis.cussions and involved nineC-. proves the Statue of Liberty is actually Joint Boundary Commission and stated BEIRUT. Lebanon - Three' ^ y ’s of' bloody ing briefing papers in preparation strengthening of the guard as the lifesty^, if people will develop a ' ment of a “Great Northwest SEX" the boundary controversy was “finally alongside her husband eivi' jail since-1962 on charges of sabotage for his nine hours of Official administration tries next month to hoifrs of formal talks^between the Responding to a report that socially acceptable type of sex.— brochure and the use of comic strip located in New Jersey and not New shelling and street fighting /between rival Gorbachev is planning to .turn the l“ : York, 5 New Jersey state historian and conslusiveiy" resolved, he said Christian and Moslem militias'^ subsided today meetings with Soviet leader Mik­ regain the offensive with Congress two leaders plus two or three hours safe sex — a single, monogamous characters on cocktail napkinsand The treaty was signed three years hail Gorbachev in November, over expected battles on tax together at/receptions, summit into a propaganda forum, relationship,’then we can stop the posters to illustrate safe-sex says. after 10 people were killed and at least 55 wounded The first day "would be spent on Speekes^aid, "We're going there­ “There can be no argument anymore after the Sta-lpe of Liberty’s dedication White'House spokesman Larry reform and further-spending cuts, transmission of this disease in i|s techniques. - on Oct. 28, 1886, and three years before Pope assails apartheid ^ in the worst fighting in eight weeks. Speakes said Reagan has already

/ V j I ■_ . MANCHESTER HERALD. Monday. Aug. 12. 1985 - 7 6 - MANCHESTER HERALD, Mortdiiy, Aug. 12; 1985 '•L. Here’s Oiana’s reply to Penny’s letter about the firehouse Connecticut In Brief AIDS victim fights disease, stigma but one of fears on my part," . Wagner S?iid, The reluctance to To restate my recommendations » Celestial fireworks grace state LITCHFIELD, Conn. - A 31- ■ that I had It, too,” he told the touch br talk with an AIDS victim professionals. I-would be the first: scurrilous, unwarraqted attack Register-Citizen'! "I didn’t say Wagner said. Here is the text of the Aug. 9 To properly 'discuss this /ery excu.ses, including covering areas to r^olve this probleiti imme-^ year-pld man, who lost his lover to "fights that basic goodness inside one to admit that I am n'ot an upon that person’s honesty and anything and put.it out of rny mind About 12,000 Americans have letter from William J. Diana: serious issue, certain facts Mve to' that were never intended to be diately Ure as follows: •NEW BRITAIN;- The'annual display of Persei^meteor AIDS and now has the fatajidlsease ’all of. us that says that no one expert in this area, nor are any integrity. — Michaelt« care and w^l-being contracted AIDS in the past five Republicah minority leader on the be placed on the table and serviced by that station! At the .1. Sell the Buckland firehouse }o showers reached its peak in Connecticut, with a Karrage of himself, is fighting both the should be treated like a leper." other members of the Board of The sooner this problem is was the only thing that matemattered to years.'Half of 'them,have already Board^f Directors, to Deputy resolved. First of all. Station No. 5 same time, they ignored the needs tlie highest bidder. j shooting stars streaking across the night skies. disease and its isolating stfgma Wagner has started .'la one-man (Directors, as far.as I know. resolv'ed, we the elected members, with a national informational me.” died. T-he recent highly publicized M^yor Stephen T. F'enny, regard­ was built while a suit was in of other growth areas in 2. Take steps to hireiirofession- ; The spectacular but sileht celestial show lit the night sky case of Rock Hudson, who it campaign to force insurance com­ As senior member of the Board of tbe Board of Directors, can go campaign. ing Penny's - request that . the litigation concerning the,jurisdic­ Manchester. back to taking care of the needs of als to study the fire needs for the Sunday with more than 100 meteors per hour, said David H. suffering -from the disease in -a panies and the medical profession Secondly, common sense would ' ■ of Directors, 1 have established an Gerard Wagner, in an interview WAGNER SAW MICHAEL Republiearr Party abandon its tion of fire coverage for Buckland. all of the people of Manchester, Town of Manchester. , • Menke, astronomy professor at Central Connecticut State THROUGH to the end, although Paris hospital, has^broughl to to address the problems of AIDS \ petition drive aimed at forcing the When the court's rqling was dictate that the firehouse be'sold enviable rbeord in the area of 3. ' Relocate the firemen in ; published Friday in the Register- -victims,Including increasing fund­ public safety). I pride myself in my because in the final analysisjth" University. Citizen of Torrington, Conn., said the eimotional and physical toll \^s matter to the forefront of the news. town to sell its Buckland firehouse issued, the court, found that the immediately and the moneys re­ ■ ■ ■ • ‘iicke ■ Buckland to other firehouses in • "These celestial firfeworks are quite spectacular. You can see As of Aug. 2, i43 cases of AIDS ing for home-care. ceived used to provide fire protec- accornplishments for the .Town of real losers in this constant bi his friend Michael, 34, a successful te rrib le .,"! remember having to the highest bidder over $400,000. Town of '.Manchester had no town in ah attempt'to build-theif . them in your backyard,” Menke said. have been diagnosed in Connecti­ tion in^reas where the town has r . Manchester. In fad. I have never, ^ii;g are the taxpayers.- New York fashion model, died In thoughts pass through my head, j.urjsdiction for fighting fires strength up to' tbe minimum of Thejneteor showers.occ.ur annually this time of year when the cut, Patricia Checko'of the stale HE HAS APPEARED ON a New jurisdiction.'In addition, a study met a Manchester elected official, In conclusion, reviewing the his arms May 21. like "When is this going to end? I •. Dear Steye; where the firehouse was.biiilt. The fafcts and yourjettpr of July 26, four. ■ . , . .. i. Earth passes through th^remnants of the Smith-Tuttle comet. don.’t think I can do it all much Department of Health ' Services York radio talk show and plans to, Thank you for your letter of July sensible thing to have done at that should" be immediately com­ whether Republican or Democrat, Let us hope and pray that ju s tic e - Wagner had moved Michael travel to the Midwest for more who was not concerned with the’ 1985, I see no'~?bason why the The comet is named for the two scientists who first detected the from their part-time-Manhattan longest-", Wagener said. "I some­ reported. Of those, 77 have died. 26, 198,'5. I appreciate your very time Was to stop construction and menced by qualified individuals and common sense will prevail in . Checko said the Cejiter for radio programs; safety .of all of Manchester's Republican effort to petition for orbit, strewn with celestial debris. ^ ’ apartment to their Litchfield home times have some guilt about those busy schedule and-1 hope I didn't move the. firehbuse to some other (not politicians) to dkermine th e' this very serious jssue.'in fairness Disease Control in Atlanta projects "Nearly everyone' will be af­ fire needs for the whole Town of citizens. Whether I Jiave- agreed the sale of the Buckland firelrouse so he could die in the country. honest feelings." pfa6e additional pressure on you. location. Many people in Manches­ should be discontinued. 1 to all of the citizens of Manchester. . A few weeks after the funeral, 40,000 new cases of the disease will fected by AIDS in the future. ” he Also, it was a lot easier readiqg the ter have said that this was the Manchester’s jurisdiction. Unfor- with them or not on Certain issues, Thank ybu again for your, kind ; "He loved the natural surround­ said. '"’They will either get it, or a I have never questione'd their thought you favored having the Mother scheduled In court today ings here, and said that he wanted •Wag’ner went to-the doctor and be reported in 1986, 400, or one letter.in' the quit.;l comfort of my worst political blunder in Man­ ' tiinately, in reviewing your*lettqr, indulgences imthis matter. percent, in Connecticut. relative will, or they will come in you give the impression that you sincerity and dedication to the electorate voting on local refer­ to die in the bedroom,” which had’ what he knew was confirmed. He . home rather than iri the circus chester history. Unfortunately, the enda questions.'Vou had the people NEW BRITAIN — A woman believed to be the mother of a child Wagner said he has .already contact with someone who has it. are a fire expert. It was always my safety of our citizens. To accuse glass walls oh three sides with had AIDS, or Acquired Immune ; atmosphere of the so-called Board Democrat majority, in their anx­ of this town vote on the HUD issue . Very truly yours,. found dead in Farmington last weekend is due to appear in court Deficiency Syndrome, which at­ begun to suffer the effects of the That is not a ’maybe;’ it is a, iety to justify the placement of that understanding this is a very any elected official of not being views of the woods and flower of Directors meeting which wps three times. William J. Diana today on narcotics charges following her return from Puerto tacks the body’s immune system, disease. He is sometimes tired, ‘definitely” ' , called for al .S p.m. firehouse, have used many types of. specialized field preferably left.to interested in public safety is a gardens." . For himself, at this point the Rico to Connecticut, police said. Wagner knew he had ARC, a making it vulnerable to any dizzy, nauseated and he .has had Gloria Lugo-Velez was arrqsted earlier this month by New some infections. But the worst treatment he is receiving is syndrome associated with AIDS, infection. "non-aggressive” And until he is Richard M. Diamond, Publisher r Britain police in Puerto Rico on two unrelated counts of Wagner decided to go pubiic with effect is how friends, neighbors for about a year before Michael incapacitated, he will continue to ■possession of narcotics and waived her right to extradition. the disease and the homosexuai and casual contacts recoil from Douglas A. Bevins, Managing Editor i died. . , • fight for recognition of the prob­ She was returned to New BVitain Friday night and was held in In the last weeks of Michael’s r'blationship he had shared with hirh. Michael in an attempt to make the "People at the post office hesi-, lems of victims despite his fear and ^ James P. Sacks, City Editor j lieu of $40,000 bond in the New Britain police lotkup pending an life, Wagner also knew he had > loneliness. appearance in New Britain. Superior Court. public aware of both the (gangers of tate for a moment and ask full-fledged AIDS. themsleves, 'What should 1 do — 1 "It is,not so much a matter of' OPINION Uugo-Velez was not charged in connection with,the discovery of "About two weeks before'we the disease and the terrifying 6 : living for every rrloment as endur­ moved up permanently, I found a isolation victims must bear. don'twaptapt todto deal^with that person, the unidentified infant and police refused tg^shy if she was a or even;irsli»k'e thejr money? ing every moment,’’ Wagner said. suspect in any. criminal investigation. . lepion on one,of my legs and knew "This is not an act of bravery,' Relatives of the woman sajd her 18-month-old son, Efrain Luis £TtA ® ' ? 'FoI?Twfl((nw — 9 5 Ustiliano, had been missing since about July 10, the day his HULtAe U.S. still involved jjnother and her boyfriend, Michael'Navarro, left for Puerto Rico, . NEA police said Police had not yet determined whether Lugo-Velez is Lawyer challenges the mother of the 18-month-old child whose decomposed body state gives belated with ESP-ionege was found on a wooded trajl near Batterson'Park Lake in Farmington. racing drug rule^ salute to Viet vets WASHING­ Judge sets deadline for arguments ~ I TON - A de­ MERIDEN (UPI) - The lawyer Plpinfield track opened in 1976, 37 NEW MILFORD (UPI) - He said that Vietnam vets n for a former trainer at the trainers hav#been charged when About 1,000 Vietnam veterans '"should be as honored as any cade , ago, an HARTFORD — Lawyers for a doctor accused of beating his other vcterpn. They fought in a i ‘ A m e r i c a n wife to death in their posh West Hartford home must file defense Plainfield Greyhound Park pla’ns drugs were fou(jd in their dogs were honored at what Was billed J as the state’s first 'welcome controversial war. However, agent pene­ . arguments in the murder case by Sept. 13, a judge has ruled. to challenge a state gaming when they, raced. * Ja c k home’ parade. . ' ' they should be held in the trated a pre.- Superio’T Court Judge J. Purtill set the deadline for arguments re’gulation aimed at keeping rac­ Solomon said the basis on which ing dogs at the track.drug free. highest esteem” V i ou s 1y u n - ' A nderson and other pre-trial rhotions, but did not rule Friday on a request Hop^ood was fined — his sole Marching barfds, veterans The veterans- marched in frodi» Russell F. Manfredi that is intended to help him regain Attorney Alan M. Solomon of responsibility for ^ogs under his and one float — ,a cage made of known, Meriden said he will fight in groups, some with friends from top-secret So­ cu st^ y of his children. care — was "unjust" because the sticks and barbed wire hdiding the same unit, others from us Manfredi, 32, wants to hire a psychiatrist to interview his three Superior. Court the- $500 fine state sequesters the’dogs for more handcuffs and-jungle fatiques viet military imposed Friday on his client, Vietnam veterans groups, in* young sons in-connection with his custody claim. than one hour before they'race and combat boots — passed by eluding a group of veterans IPO NOT base in the. arguing the regulation that makes thousands of spectators Sunday Urals. The spy A condition of Manfbedi’s release from jail in March on $150,000 a trainer solely responsible for The attorney also criticized a from the Bronx. along the tree-lined parade Some wore red T-shirts read­ wfruRg described the base in minute The stamp of secrecy keeps us bond prohibited him from speaking or writing to his sons because dogs under his care is unfair. recent change in drug regulation the state considered them potential witnesses against their route. ing "Vietnam Vet," others wore '4 detail, according to a Central from knowing for sure. Unless, of The state Division of Special policy as "absolutely unfair” to father. The children are staying with relatives in Pennsylvania. Joe Cochoran, A'eteran froqj their old Army fatiques. A few Intelligence Agency report. course, we choose to sit back in a Revenue fined Todd M.Hopwood, Hopwood. The cardiologist pleaded innocent . to killing his wife, In mid-July, the state declined to Woodbury, said marching in the wore wearing business suits, "He say.s he'6 Superman He cjiarted railways, rtiachine chair, close our eyes, and imagine 30, after two greyhounds under his Catherine, whose body was found slumped in a.opr near the care were found to have the fine six other trainers whose dogs parade was “like taking a bath. others wore the black leather and he's just waiting to shops and laboratories. H^ e^Vn ourselves into the privacy of Grill Manfredi home. Police and prosecutors-claim Manfredi kille^ painkiller procaine in their sys­ were found to have pf'ocaine in You feel dirix and the more jackets and head banda'has get his suit back from the reported that "an unusual propor­ Flame Central, . his wife in their home. tems after races in February 1984 their urine oecause department cleansingAfTadcJHfies along, the associated with rhotorcycle tion .of women” were working at riders. cleaners." at Plainfield. officials 'said small quantities of better ymi feel.’ the facility. Diplomatic dlgM Racing officials believe procaine procaine could be due to the meat "People ate startiiig-4o real­ Parade organizer Gordon M. Jam es Bond should be so suc­ The Soviet Union has be^m ore J UConn plans return of mansion could affect a dog’s perfomanceby fed the greyhounds. ize that we’re normaT lik? Littlefield of the New Milford cessful. Unlike his fictional coun­ than willing to sell arms to Syria, | acting as a depressant and stimu­ State officials , defer^^-^lKe everyone else," Cochoran said - Veterans Committee, said the its favored Middle East client. The ; WOOl^STOCK — The University of Connecticut wants to lant, much like alcohol, and change, saying that witlfOW'hold- Gov. William A. O’Neill parade is overdue. terpart, this agent was not particu­ “There’s a wouncf there that larly or- dashing. He didn’t Kremlin has even offered discount ■ return a Woodstock mansion, and farm given the- school four through its painkilling qualities. ing a single person responsible it raised a black POW-MIA flag in front of the New Milford post time is slowly healing and this W e’re scaring each other to death parachute deep into Soviet terri-. ■prices to bring Syria’s soldiers up ’ years ago because of the high cost of maintaining the 120-acre The drug mighl allow a dog to would be difficult or impossible to run when it was not at full strength, deter drug use and maintain the office on the village green. should help," he said. tary or even slip across the Iron to date. B ut' it hadn’t been as property. ■. / ' The estate was bequeatfled-.^o tne university in 1981 by without bettors being awarelif the integrity of the races. ,i not a better way than to line up years the slogan of our Strategic Curtain under cover of darkness. ■ generous with economic assist-; "Ju st say Dorothea Richardson-, who-wanted it used a?a wildlife center by animal’s.condition, officiats said. " I ’m hoping to throw out the permanently either with the doc, Air Command has been "Our In fact, America’s agent was ance, and’that has put Syria in a ; we're in terri­ the school’s college of Agriculture and Natural Resources. State regulations bar the use of absolute insurer rule." S olomon V trine of "Mutual Assured Destruc­ business is peace.” And soil seems bind: It can’t afford the army it j ble, terribte f Patrick Price, a bulky, balding The farm' has fallen into disrepair-and Attorney General any substance, other than a said. "What happ^^tolhe grey­ to be with the huge buildup on the would need to take advantage of its ■ trouble. We're tion" or the hope of survival by ex-police commissioner from Bur Joseph I. Lieberman filed suit in May against UConn for not heartworm medication approved hound racing ^pdt^ry isn’t rpy Soviet side. . Soviet arsenal. . . problem. F-dtave a client to on the verge of means of the frightfully expensive bank, Calif. — the spawning maintaining the property. by the state veterinarian, on G eorge and highly debatable technologv'of As we contemplate these next 40 racing greyhounds. Since ,the protect." blowing our- grounds df some of Hollywood's Watch on waata selves up God "Star Wars ' years with the bomb, it might be' most successful spy movies. Dur­ WAN' M cGovern useful to consider whether our gave us ■ this "We're scared of them, and ing the entire mission, he never left The Internal Revenue Service*’ by University 6f Hartford Soviet partners in this mutual earth, to take they’re scared of us," Menningcr the comfort of the Stanford he- office in New "York City has begun suicide pact are not acting at least State drops an4 Pj^att & Whitney care of. and has said. "We need to get to know search Institute laboratory in a pilot program to allow nine of its as much from fears as from a what have we them. We have to get over some of Menlo Park, Calif. criminal investigators to work out doctrinaire determituition to cap­ investment done with' if’ our paranoia. Maybe they’re more Price, who has since died, was a of their homes. The IRS will foot \ ■ We've taken it to thb brink of is the strategic doctrine that has ture the world. If (he view haVany self-proclaimed psychic. His am­ the bill to wire the homes with afraid of us than we are of them.” / destruction." preserved a nervouS peace be­ validity, it may help us to better azing “mission" was part of a telephone lines and computer fraud case tween Moscow and Washington This is- what I have long understand the cause and possible' series of tests sponsored by the terminals, a cost that will nm into Those words spoken by Dr..Karl and indirectly "shielded" Western suspected is the truth — that the- control of the arms.race. ’ Cl A. "The purpose was to determine the thousands of dollars. A spokes­ Mehninger, father of American HARTFORD (UPI) - A Massa­ Europe from the Red Army Arriericans and the Soviets arg!^' It nright aUo shed some light on if people who claim unusual man says it is part of a ’’morale' psychiatry, are particularly im­ chusetts woman accused’ of cheat­ literally st;aring each. other to Soviet behavior — or misbehavior. powers of telepathy could describe boosting program" to keep agents ing Connecticut residents out of portant now with the 40th death. I do not believe that the — in Eastern Europe and Afgahan- THAT DOCTRINE is now^bcing scenes in faraway places. on the job longer. But there’s an more than $900,000 apparently will anniversary of the nuclear bomb­ Soviets have any more desife for istan. Is it,possible, for example, challenged from several quarters, added expense to the Treasury, be spared prison despite - her K A Y D O l ing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki war with the United St'ate.yahd that Soviet determination all these failure to pay back her victims, including the- Reagan administra­ BEFORE DISMISSING this as Efnd a bonus to the'agents — they’ll MANCHESTER COMMUNITY COLLEGE, CLASS OF '81 behind u.4 and the Geneva summit Western Europe than we do with years to control^matters in the prosecutors say. tion, which has suggested at hallucinogenic hokum, the taxpay­ be able to write off some of their ■ Armed (with a good education) and conaidered lucceaiful between President Reagan and them. There is no evidence that states along the Soviet border is various times that it might be, ers should know that our govern­ home expenses from their tax Connecticut Assistant State’s Soviet President Mikhail Gorba­ their huge military machine is based not,so much on their desire Attorney Ernest J. Diette Jr. said Ms. Dorn drt'ided to attend Manchester G)mnmnily possible to fight and prevail in a ment has spent — and continues to returns. chev set for November designed any more for offensive to take over Europe as on their fear Friday he was unable to prosecute College to study liberal arts when her youngest nuclear conflict. This "hope ” has spend — millions of dollars on this daughter started high school. She was editor of the ambitions than is ours. of another invasion fpem the West? the state’s last remaining criminal During much of the past four been buttressed by the administea- hush-hush research. It began with Confidential file student newspaper in addition to taking a full-time It is gdod that arms-control charge against Nadine Gan of West decad'es — a long lime by historical tion’s “Star Wiws" defense initia­ , the CIA’s “Project Scanate" in the For all the tens of millions of course load. After graduating from MCC, A ^ standa'rds for major world powers INDEED. EACH SIDE is driven discussions, however slow and Springfield, Mass. earned her B.A. in organizational communicationsitions tive — a schemKwhich, it i,s said, early 1970s, and has since become 'doflars jn security measures, and as to avoid war with each other — the by its fears of the other to sacrifice frustrating, are taking place at Diette also blamed another from the University of Hartf^d. She now works could create within th6‘ next the Defense Intelligence Agency’s all the president’s spy-masters, writer in the confmunications department at ' prosecutor for allowing four other SECTION two superpowers have lived with more and rnore of its productive Geneva between .representatives quarter of a' century a shield to- "Project Grill Flame.” the nation’s largest spy outfit, t|ie & Whitney and edits their in-house newspaper the knowledge that all-out War resources on the altar of "de­ of the two supdVpbwers. It is also felony chargas against Gan, 61, to protect the United States against But Jhe same Stanford Research National Security Agency, cannot would be mutually suicidal. "Mut­ fense." The most frightful weapon good that the two principals will be lapse, and claimed the woman Cf!l'on the WANTED liai. certain types of Soviet missiles. Institute physicist has been in protect itself against a single Manchester CcxTimunity CkJlIege ual Assure'd Destruction," for we now have — the MX missile — is meeting this fall. We need to get may have stashed the money in Call 647-6142 now. charge all these years: former- misg.uided NSA employee who foreign bank accounts while claim­ which the apt acronyte is "'MAp, ' named the' “Peace-keeper." Fpr know them, as Menninger has said. To be published ■ atop In and reglater any Tueaday, 11.7. One can only wonder if ther Natiojjjld Security Agency em­ chooses to sell the secrets. A top ing bankruptcy. SO Bldwell StrMt ployee'Harold Puthoff. The go­ It could change your life. MahchMter, Connecticut I NSA official admitted as much to a Diette told Superior Court Judge vernment uses Puthoff as the Wednesday^ August 21 congressional committee recently George D. Stoughton he had no Santa Claus for psychic research; in these words: "Our most secure choice but to nolle, or not prose­ Open Forum funds are channeled through him electrical communications could cute, the pending charge of violat- and to other research institutes. conceivably be compromised ihg probation. Gan had faced a Puthoff refuses to speak about through insider espionage — (via) possible total 22 years, in prison on fraud-related charges. Friday, August 23 at Hartford Hospital. faces and the gracefulness in the project. And Stanford Re­ delivery of cryptographic key and Donnelly also forgot to’ mention search Institute’s doors have . The probrtion charge, which Company didn’t On Monday, Aug. 12, Peter will that Frank Sweeney brought alive which a dance is presented. related security information to the Happiness is 30 years rarely been opened "'to invite carried a two-year sentence, grew \' be transferred to the Grtaenery, a four puppets, providing voices for I sometimes wonder ff reviet^rs opposition.” Read: Russia. skeptical examiners into the secret out of a March 1984 plea bargain in design facilities skilled-nursing rehabilitation fa­ each. • wouldn’t do better polling the' which Gan pledged to repay her sanctums. But several 'sources cility in Brighton. Mass. When he is 1 don’t know where Mr. Donnelly audience after the show. Mr. Mlnl-aditorlal /'■' victims $222,240 within 12 months of Alias seivice To the Editor; close to the mind-expabding study moved out of state his medical was sitting, but I saw almost Donnelly might .have .gained an On Sept. 2, Washington’s music and officials promised not to The Wednesday Section will Indude: claim solid successes. expenses will be covered. There­ everything. I.was very impressed insight into the show he seenVed to community will hold the first prosecute the other four charges. ■ We've been doing^llpiness with Atlas Oil for I Correction re "The sewer plant: The most striking oc'curretPWhen fore, 1 am closing the Peter Frank with the strobe-light effect of the lack. annual Washington Labor Day Diette said Gan has been de­ l.et’s do it right." , ’ one of the institute’s top psychics, 30 years and never had a bad service call. Their Fund. juggling act which took place, fn I, for dne, and I’m sure I’m not' Concert on the Mall near the clared bankrupt in Massachusetts It has'eome to my attention that I given only the geographical coor­ and authorities cannot prove she Act I, not Act 11 as reported. Again, the only one, enjoyed immensely Washington Monument. The con­ work, deliveries and service have always been erred in indicating that the firm of dinates, described the Semipaia- has any assets. Her two houses in 2 cert will focus attention on the 2 Marjorie Frank was Mr; Donnelly really there? the time I spent at the "Carnival” Massachusetts were sold to pay 7*rSchool Calendar fo r ' efficient, well-planned and Fuss and O'Neill participated in tinsk nijclear facility in Soviet 52 Constance Drive The choreography was great, and will be back next year. Keepup capital’s thousands of homeless fhe design of our waste treatment •Central Asia .in detail only con­ creditors, he said. Manchester which 1 will admit if you were the great work. 'N. citizens, and is being sponsored, in well done. We had a new '’facilities. It. did not. Mr. O’NeiU’s firmed afterward by satellite spy “It would be a debtors’ prison and things he thought sho^lld have part, by the Community for ■ituation," Diette said^ explaining involvenfent was ak Manchester’s photos. the 1985-1986 School Yeqr. Riello burner installed this been done, rather than reviewing . Jeanine Cowles Creative Non-Violence. Those at­ the U.S. Constitution prohibits director of public works. . past year and we are ‘Carnival’ gr^at, the great things that were accomp- 284 Green Road tending are-asked to bring a can of jailing a person simply because of I apologize for this inA;curacy.' . tished given such a-small stage. V Manchester THE PSYCHIC also described vegetables, dried food, plothing or the inability to make restitution. lA'Yaluable School Information. totallv satisfied with the review wasn’t I will credit him for - at least equipment resembl^g accelera­ blankets to give to the homeless. Gan told officials last year that a Allen Lutz tors unit and with the reading his program to mention rs and electron injectors kept in The Comrnunity for Creative Non- man identified only as "John” was ' To the Editor;' involved in the alleged investment 9 Stephen St. the four leads and their fine voices. Congratulations, an underground cavern at the Violence lias helped the nation's ^Timely Ads From local Merchants. Atlas service." Manchester facility, which has since been (cheme and would help her repay Ipnevef ceases to amaze me how ' We get the impression Mr. Don­ homeless in many imaginative the money taken from Investors. Walter Moske, nelly would Have rather been Zone 8 champs reported as a “directed energy” ways. The concert is yet another some people, given a very small facility. ' "John was fictional. It was a Vernon, CT space, can accoiriplish great and somewhere else that night. He To the Editor; example, and we applaud them, chance that we took,” Diette said. Town’s kindness seemed to have missed the power­ The CIA smelled fraud, though, » The prosecutor charged that magnificent things. Others can when he talked about giant steel only tear down the great 1 make ful voice of Laura Nadeau as she Gan never intended to repay her is dverwhelming Congratulations should go out to spheres at the location which, they Weference to Mr. Donnelly’s stage sang "Humming," or the great victims and speculated she proba­ the Post 102’s American Legion knew, could not possibly stand the L«tt«rt policy bly had deposited the money in review of the Universal Players’ voice of Gary Dalton as he sang Zone Eight champs! Advertising Deadline Is Wed. August 14th ' To the Editor; stress associated with laser and The Manchester Herald wel­ ■ecret bank accounts in Europe. production of "Carnival." and danced in "A Sword, a Rose A "well done" to Cobch Steve particle-beam research. comes original letters to the editor. “I don't believe that she is broke, To the people of Manchester: Mr. Donnelly seems more quali­ and a Cape." The vocal range and .^Armstrong, his staff, and espe­ Once again. In the years that Letters should be brief and to the but the problem is proving the I would like to thank everyone fied at reading a set of blueprints tone quality of Frank Sweeney \ cially his players. Not followed, the CIA found to its point. They shouljd be typed or negative,” Diette said. tofor their contributions to the Peter ^ Jman writing a stage review. Of singing "Her Face" would bring since 1981 has the Post’s 102 had the For Your Space Reservation, Call The 4 chagrin that the psychic was right. neatly handwritten, and, for ease rank Fund, i have no idea who course that’s actually what he did; chills[tills to anyone. The feeling that chance at the state tournament in e Soviets had developed a in editing, should be double- itlas bintiM you are, but the kindness shown by he reviewed the stage and not the Jennifer / Joy put into Che song Middletown. lu e s oil jcess of “flux welding,” which spaced. Letters mustv be signed this community has overwhelmed production. "M ira" actually brought tears to K EMERGENCY voiloii cool could hold the spheres together with name, address amd,dByUme 643-2711 His comments were all about the one's eye's. It’s a shame these four Fire — Police — Medical Robert J, Arson during the military research. telephone number (for Peter's condition has stabilized things he claimed he couldn’t see watching the dancers’ feetet ypiypji^ . ^ Historian/Pnblicity Is all this ESP-ionage a boondog-<. verification), medically. He is in light coma, but talented people were grouped as would not have been able to s ^ 649-4595 Dtlworlh-Comell-Qney Pott lOt gle, or hps the government- The Herald reserves the right to DIAL 911 4t4 Tolland Street • East Hartford • 289-6435 he is not responsive. He has just that instead of getting the Mr. Donnelly was, correct on that In Manchester 20 American Legion Drive sponsored team stumbled on to 555 East Middle Tpke,^ • Manchester 249-8611 684-5d5» individual Credit.due them. Mr. point. I prefer to look at smiles on edit letters in the interest! of received the best of medical care Mancbeeler something? brevity, clarity and taste. r 1 . '"A MANCHESTER HERALI). Monday, Auy. 12, 1985,- I g - MANCHESTER HERALD. Monday, Aug. 12, 1985

CAPTAIN EASY ‘ by Crooks & Casale WAiri HOLD I B E L IE V E Competing with shuttle VOUJ^ GROUNPi VOU A R E Monday TV F R IE N P 5

8:30 PM CD Carol' Bumett French build Amazon spaceport 6:00 PM CD (£) ® Nows - Friends CD What's Happonfng . C h a n n e l s (D Tic Tac Dough. CD Poltco Woman [DIS] Mousterpiece Theater/ Bv 'AI Rossiter Jr. (Jf) Private Benjamin w F s a Hartford. CT ) WNEW Naw Xprk. NY i 9 :0 0 P M (D Kale & Allie Allie dates a United Press International m : a *s * h WTNH Now Haven. CT t younger man and worries about being 'the ® D r VVho won Naw York, NY 9 older woman.' (R) * KOUROU, French Guiana — A 11 ® Or«o't>av at^a Time WPIX New York. NY CD Merv Griffin modern all-European spaceport WTXX Waterbury. CT ;o ^ 9 Newswatch WWLR% Springfield. MA. . • 3i CD (S9 MOVIE: 'A rth u r' (CC) A young has risen from the edge of the @ Reporter 41 WEOH Hartford. CT 2* millionaire faces a firtadfial dilemma when Amazon jifrigle in this largely he falls in love with a girl from the wrong (S?) MecNejl/Lehrer Aewshqyr ^ WVIT Hartford. CT 30 undeveloped land previously W8BK Boston. MA 31 side of the tracks.' Dudley Moore, Liza known best for its prison colonies @ ) Tony Randall WGGB , Springfield. MA 40 Minnelli, Sir John Gielgud 1981 ARLO AND jANJS"* by Jimmy Johrison *• »* [CNN] Prog Cont'd WXTV Paterson, NJ 41 ( D m 6 v IE: 'Koroshi' A British secret and butterflies, WGBY ' Springfield. MA [ESPN] Aerobick-Bodiet in Motion agent combats a band of assassins oc­ .'NCmilNGBUT.THE With the enthusiastic support of WTIC Hartford, CT «i cupying a strange Oriental island. Patrick France, Ariane rockets launched [HBtO] MOVIE: 'The Adventures of CNN Cable News Ntwrk ICNNI McGoohan. Yoko Tani, Amanda Barie (W ERON E.XPHE95 BILL,^ Buckaroo Banzai' Buckaroo Banzai doves from the Guiana Space Center on DISNEY Disney Channel loisl 1967 ; : I t AS, his high speed jet car through mountains Sports Network I^SPNl ESPN 9 9 ^ MOVIE: 'Living Proof: The Hank the northeastern coast of South Peter Weller, John Lilhgow, Ellon Barkin. HBO Home Box Office iHSOl America have already become the 1984 Rated PG IMAXJ W illiam s Jr. Story' (CC) The “son of a fa­ CINEMAX Cinemax mous country singer tries* to imitate the primary competitor of the Ameri- It:' Movie Channel iTMCl [MAX] MOVIE; Tok' An oa§Y going and TMC success of his father Richard Thomas, Al- USA Network lu'SAl 'can space shuttle for the world’s vulnerable IS-yoar-old is caught in an USA lyn Ann Mcberie. Lenora May: 1982 emotional tug-of-war as ho trios to grow commupications satellite laungh. up without parental guidance ^tatt Dillon. (S3) 9 9 Smithsonian W orld (CC) Speak­ ing business. Jim Metzler, Bon Johnson 1982 Ratod ing Without W ords Tonight's program PG. [ESPN] ESPN'S Inside Baseball examines the different methods of com­ And a second launch complex, [USA] Dr^net ' munication between human beings and using mobile launch platforms nice [TMC] MOVIE: 'Dreamscape' A gihod other creatures (R) (60 min ) young psychic learns how to participate in S :0 0 P J V I Scarecrow and Mrs. those pioneered by the United CD 9 l) La Noche . other people's dreqms Dennis Quaid, Max King Amanda is reunited with British agent Stales 20 years ago, is undergoing Von Sydow, Kate Capshaw 1904 Rated Lady family Farnsworth at a political recep­ 9 9 Ironside final testing and will receive its PG-13 tion ^ )'(6 0 min ) [CNN] Larry King Live first rocket section in September [USA] USA Cartoon Express ^ CD PNI Magazine [DIS] Disney Family Album \ for launching in December. 6 :3 0 P M CD One 6 ^ at a Time CD (40) Hardcastle and McCormick (CC) ALLEY OOP ■ by Dave Qraue > “We can offer to our custom ^ , 9 : 3 0 P M C DN ew hart Larry, D ^ y l and UPl photo 00) Benson Hardcastle trios to help his old girlfriend, . Darryl win $30,000 in a jingle contest, who has been charged with her husband's WHEW.' V DON'T MENTION (or the next 10 yeaits one of the bftt Bosom Buddie’s ' prompting qne of the Darryls to leave THANKS, services found in the world," said murder (R) (60 min ) homo. (R) . space workers are,housed in hotels at (P) NBC Nightly News MR. OOP.' Charles Bigot, director-general of Family members -of Guianii Spafe CD News U>IS) MOVIE: 'Oklahomal' Two men vie the space center during launch @ ) Nightly Business Report ^ (11) Mayberry RFD for the attentions of a pretty young farm the French company that runs the Center workers spend their leisure time Jeffersons (j29 MOVIE: 'Scarecrow' Two drifters girr Gordon McRae, Shirley Jones. Eddie Ariane program. on the topless beach near the Kourou "campaigns.” Albert 1955 Rated G’ 'More expartsion is planned and if . iO) ABC News (CC) meet and learn about life, fbve and carirtg o M River in French Guiana. The European ® Noticictto SIN*^ Gone Hackman. Al Pacino, Dorothy Tris­ [HBO] The 30-Second Seduction Con­ the Frenfch have their way, astro­ tan^ 1973 ®D Phyllis sumer Reports focuses on television ad­ nauts of the European Space (2 tl 9 9 TV's Bloopers & Practical Jokes vertising Agency will be flying into orbit 10 [CNN] Showbiz Today Bruce Jonnor andWiIlie A^mes are the vic­ -ward rotation. from a rebuilt firing pad originally 2 1 0 : 0 0 P M CD Cagney & Lacey (CC) years from now in spaceplanes southeast, by two northward flow­ [D IS ] Adv. of Ozzie and Harriet tims of this week's practical jokes. (R) (60 Most satellites launched by constructed (or the Europa II m in) Cagney files sexual harassment charges launched from the base. ing rivers that had to be crossed by rocket that failed on its onlj" launch (ESPN) Mazda Sportslook against Captain Hennessey, and Lacey be­ The once-sleepy fishing ivillage ferry. . ' Ariane are bound ior stationary 94^ Mystery! (CC) Reilly Ace of Spies friends a bag lady (R) (60 mm ) orbits 22:300 miles above the atfempt. 7 :0 0 P M CD CB6 News The Last Journey ' Despite a death threat, . of Kourou, just south of the space Now bridges speed transport dC p News equator. In such an orbit, a CD QS) m ''*a -S-h , ' Reilly travels back to Russia to chock out .center, is now a bustling city of along the Iwo-lane highway linking Ariane, 154 feet tall in its initial an anti Bolshevik organization (R) (60 ( ^ Harry O satellite's speed matches Earth's CD ABC News fCC) 8,000 and still growing. Kourou with Cayenne. TherC is version, was developed under the min ) . ^ 9 9 Alive* from Off Center A program of rotation and the spacecraft re- CD Bosom Buddies UPl photo Lillie while Renaults bearing the little traffic, however, and virtu­ supervision of CNES by lO mernber 99 MOVIE;,'Woman Times SeVen' A new open-air summer dances' is pre-. ally no tourism — a shhrp contrast rriains over one area of the globe to CID Jeffersons comic examination of the modern female . senled (30 mm ) label of tlie Centre National serve as a radio relay station or a nations of the European Space Barney Miller Shirley MacLaine. Alan Arkih. Michael 9 $ Odd Couple ' An Ariane focket blasts off from the Guiana Space d'Etudes ^patiale, the French to NASA's Kennedy Space Center Agency to free Western Europe Cair>e- 1967 jj that has become one of Florida's weather watcher. Wheel of Fortune GI9 Dancinp Days' Center in July. From this undeveloped land previously government agency called C^tES from dependence on the United • (S ) Bianca Vidal major tourist attractions.' Thus the closer a launch base is MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour * (59 Alive from Off Center Storytell©f known for its prjson colonies and butterflies, a modern, that built and operates the space . to the equator, the easier it is to Slates for satellite launching (^9 Family Feud ^ 9 ^ Survival Specials (CC) Sharks The Spaldirrg Gray performs his autobiographi­ center, seem to be scurrying about ' French Guiana’s link to the rest services. Perfect Predators ' Peter Berfchley nar- cal monologues European spaceport has arisen, the primary competitor of the world is Air France. 'The place a satellite in an- or|)it Benson ..rates this study of the diverse species of everywhere. • . ’ A 1976 agreement between 91) How to Make It in America of the American space shuttle for the world's airport at Rochambeail outside of paralleling the equator. Rocket*" Topacio sharks (60 min ) In contrast to the town’s ol^ launched from Cape Canaveral, at France and the European Space [C N N ] Evening News native section, where descendants Cayenne was expanded in the Igte Nightly Business Report 9 l) Man From Uricle communications satellite launching business. 28.5 degrees north, have to use 17 Agency guarantees access to the [ESPN] Auto Racing '65: Nascar of slaves live in wooden shacks,' 1960s and noiv Air France 747 Starsky and Hutch [CNN] Prime News percent more energy to reach Guiana Space Center and Champion Spark Plug Ifvt from many of the 600. space center jumbo jets regularly fly there. A facilities (or ESA and its member ^ ' [CNN] Moneyline [ESPN] 1986 McDortald's Gymnastics Brooklyn.Ml. equatorial orbits. Challenge (USA vs China) workers live in attractive pastel- supersonic Concorde flew a load of slates. [D IS] MOVIE: 'TheSwo'rd in the Stone'' [HBO] -Missing Persons; Four True colored houses with coficrete block VIPs in from Paris (or the last Rolockets cannot be launched into The animated classic tale pf’ a young boy [HBO] MOVIE; 'Brian's Song' The Stones This documentary looks at the The second Ariane failied in May guided to his destiny as King of England by friendship of two professional athletes. walls and metal roofs. More are Ariane launch July 2. nortlrth-south polar orbits from ' cases of f/>ur people who suddenly disap­ Competition forces 1980 and the fifth ende(jjip in the Merlin the Wizard Voices of Sebastian Ca­ Brian Piccolo and Gale Sbyers, is por­ peared under construction afid all are There is a daily flight from Paris Florida without endangering land bot, Rickie Sorensen. Karl Swenson trayed James Caan, Billy Deo Williams, to Rochambeau, usually by way of areas to the north or south. That is A-tlantic Ocean in SepterrfBfer 1982. 1983 Shelley Fabaros 1973 Rated G [M AX] MOVIE: 'Police Academy' (CC) air-conditioned against the heat When forced to comply with an open ad­ and oppressive humidity. ' Martin'que,_or Guadeloupe in the why NASA is, using Vandenberg But the next eight were successful. [ESPN] Sportsdenter [ m a x ! MOVIE: 'The Beach Boys: An missions* policy. a police academy must The last Ariane lauriched July 2 American Band' The history of one of Arjiane price cuts Lower Antilles. But there is only Air Force Base, Calif., for south- [U S A ] Radio 1990 cope with a motley crew of misfits Steve FRANK AND ERNE6T ' by Bob Thavet sent ESA's Giotto spacecraft to­ 'America's favorite musical groups is re­ Guttenberg. G W Bailey, George Gaines DURING A LAUNCH “CAM­ one direct flight a week to the launched polar orbits. 7:30 PM CD p m Magazine vealed in this documentary featuring rare 1984 Rated R PAIGN,” a modern three-story United States, t French Guiana, bordered on the ward a March 1986 rendezvous filrp footage and concert sequences. Rated KOUROU, French Guiana that; we have been obliged very CD Archie Bunker's Place [T M C ] MdVIE:^'Oxford Blues' A brash hotel on the mouth of the muddy , Arianespace, the company that south and east by Brazil and with Halley's Cornet. PG 13 I T U f c E THIS (UPI) — The head of the French often to reduce the price compared Three more Ariane launches are CD Wheel of Fortune Amdrican pursues an English aristocrat with the European price in order to, Kourou River and its two annexes / launches Arianes, delivers the Surinam to the west, is an overseas CD Sale of the Century [T M C ] MOVIE: 'Love Letters' A young while studying at Oxford Rob Lowe. Ally company that" markets Ariane rockets to Kourou by ship from departjp^nt of France and depends scfteduled this year — on Sept. 11, wbman finds inspiration for her own life Shoedy, Amanda Pays 1984 Rated PG- Compete.. are jammed with Europeans,'^ (ID Independent News rocket services says his company France. The voyage takes two heavily on Frante for financial Nov, 15 and Dec, 11. when she discovers passionate letters that 13 hgs had to shave its satellite launch although the activity does not All In the Family reveal her 'mother's former secret rom­ weeks. support. ESA turned the rocket’s opera­ A [USA] Cover Stofy $U<^cesSFuLOf prices fpr some customers in order "Of course, we are not able to do appear to disturb cows munching (g) M*A*S*H ance Jumie Lee Curtis, James Keach. that everywhere. We have done grass along the river front. The France's first successful satel­ France used Guiana for more tions over td Arianespace last Amy M ^igan 1983 Rated R 1 0 : 3 0 P M m 99 From/Americen to compete with America’s spate Entertainment Tonight t h f ANTtpore^ — - that (or a small number of hotel’s beach is crowded on sunny lite launch, using a Diamant A than 150 years as a dumping year. The commercial rocket [USA] MOVIE: 'Doctor's-Story' A dedi­ Film Inst. Born of Water ' The son of a Shuttle. rocket, came in 1965 from its ground for convicts and political company was formed in 1980 by 36 (49 Barney Miller cated young physician risks his career and fundamentalist ofeachor questions. his But Charles Bigot, director- customers because we wanted to days with families of space" Wild Worid of Animals . marriage to champion the rights of an eld­ - own religious.b«[efs. (R) stay in the market." Hammaguir missile range in Alge­ prisoners. Devil's Island, where a European aerospace companies, T P FY '/^ F general of Arianespace,. vehe­ workers. 13 European banks .and CNES, [CNN] Crossfire * erly patient Howard E. Rollins, Jr . Art Car­ (3.6) Dick Van Dyke He said if NASA raises its prices, When the French government, al ria. But the.'agreement ending the notorious penal colony was situ­ ney 1984 mently denies claims bysome U.S. , which is the biggest single share­ (19 2^ Horas . ' til ah-fiwFs:. as it is expected to do soon. the behest of President Charles de Al^rian War in 1962 called for ated. is within sight of Kourou. £ -I'T- space officials that Ariane’s costs F^nce to close its Sahara base in The Guiana Space Center is built holder with a 34 percent interest. i [USA] Hollywood Insider are govemment-'Subsidized. Arianespace’ probably will in-, Gaulle, commissioned CNES to crease its-iaunch prices. construct a newlaunching basd in 196?. on lar i that once served as a prison In all, French shareholders own 1 1 :00 PM 3D CE) O) ®i) ®8 dr) "I am the boss of Artaoc and I 59 percent of Arianespace with ' News Guiana in 1964, Kourou had a Why did France go to South camp. All were closed in 1945, a H can say to you thaC I receive "We need lb bavc a higher price population of 400. The whole America to establish a new space year before .Guiana became an West German interests holding CD WKRP in Cincinnati absolutely no subsidization,” Bigot in order to balance our accounts," 19.6 percent. Interests in Belgium, CD Bizarre WINTHROP - by Dick v»U he said. "We ^aid very clearly that country then had only 50,000 base? Because Guiana has-close to official administrative dislricTnf CAGNEY & LACEY said in an interview at the Guiana an ideal location (or space shots, France. Denmark, Spain, Britain, Italy, (39 Independent New^ Space Center. "I don't receive any if the shuttle is increasing their inhabitants arid is now up to ipore 'WlhJTMKOf^ p e a k ".,. lU TE LL HIM ABOUT b etter than that of. Cape the Netherlands. Sweden, Switzer­ 9(3) Ethiopia: The Nightmare Continues money from any governtnent." price, we will also increase our than 60,000 — the si?e of a small ' WlNTMPOf^ MONEV"... TME OTHEP HAME& Canaveral. THE GUIANA SPACE C E N ^E ^ land and Ireland own the rest. WAIIe her partrier befriends a 9$ Dr. Who Bigot acknowledged that his price, (but) maybe not in the same city in the United States. ' OJTie-Pie".. rOAAOKKOW. Rockets can be launched from became operational in" 1968 with Arianespace has had some sig­ beguiling el.derly woman, (S) M"A*S*H company has lowered launch costs proportion." ’ Work on the base started in 1965 Bigot said Ariane's prices for and CNES spent $40 rriillion Kourou to the east or north without the launch of a small sub-orbital nificant marketing Recesses in its ‘ Cagney (Sharon Gless) press­ 99 MOVIET Melody M aW ' for non-European satellite owners endangering land masses and the sounding rocket. Its first satellite competition (or customers with es ahead with sexual-harass­ [CNN] Moneyline to win business'from the National launching c«|nmerciai communi­ building living quarters, a school, G cations satellites — now ranging hospital, a water treatment plant, base's location just 5 degrees 23 was launched in 1970 atop a slender communications satellites to G ment charges against a cap­ Aeronautics and Space [H B O ] MOVIE: 'Red Dawn’ (CC) Teena , between $25 million and $30 million power station and telephone lines minutes north of the equa)^ Diamant B rocket. The last Dia­ launch. It has won contracts to tain of another precinct, on gers swing into action when their home- Administration. means rockets going east can take mant took off in 1975 and then there launch 14 non-European satellites "Cagney & Lacey," airing toyvn m Colorado is invaded .by the “If we goto the external market, — do not attempt to recover the as well as roads and a harbor. Russians Patrick- Swayze. C Thomas optimal advantage of the sling was a lull until December 1979 that could have been carried into MONDAY, AUGUST 12 on We are facing the competition of initial, investment in developing Kourou then was isolated from Howell, Lea Thompson 1984 Rated PG - the rocket or its launch facilities. Cayenne, the capital 36 miles to the effect provided by Earth's east- when the first Ariane blasted away space by the American shuttle. CBS. . [USA] Gong Show the shuttle," he said. Because of CHECK l i s t in g s FOR EXACT TIME Dig; 1 1:1 5 PM 99 Reporter 41 (Hikid' 11:30 PM CD Three's. Company Probe at issue Friends CD Kojak CD 9 ^ ABC Neyva NightMne (D Hawaii Five-0 Astrograph Interim boss ready for RIHMFC Ci9 Odd Couple ( ^ . 9 ^ Tonight Show Gu^st host Joan DiPrete also confirmed Satur­ Crossword Rivers welcomes Brool^- Shields and * tive. It you have singleness of purpose, It . By MIIIv McLean the DiPrete administration, would, 'ernor blamed his Democratic David Brenner (60 min ) \ VIRGO (Aug* 23-Sapt. 22) Don't be re­ day that his chauffeur, state luctant to asli advice from those who are can be accomplished. ’ . United Press International be the top candidate for the post if opponents for creating what Di­ Hogan's Heroes ^ o u r more experienced If you’re hung up on a Murray is forced to resign. Prete considers an' unfair'yloud trooper Harry “Dick” Speight, is ACROSS '59 CIA forerunner Answer to Previous Puzzle PISCES (Fab. 20^March 19) Forjtuna being investigated for allegedly 93) La Traicion new project. They'll have the answers. lends to favor you over the competition PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Freder­ “I feel comfortable with the job over Murrayls aetjons.- DOWN MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour birthday today, so go In with a positive attitude. ick Vincent says he doesn’t plan to on an interim basis,” Vincent said "The thruaf of what they were receiving an improper mortgage 1 RIvar in Ruula . LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Rewards you saying (is) that Bob had done from RIHMFC. 1 Energy [CNN] Sports Tonight are now earnestly striving lor will be Play to win and you will. do anything special now that he has "I don’t know how long it will be 4 Athlatas (si.) [ESPN] Sportscenter Aug. 13. 1985 been tabbed to lake over as interim for.” something that had raised a cloud. Speight allegedly received a 2 Pottery clay forthcoming. However, keep in mind ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) A delicate DiPrete called Vincent an "ex­ I don't think Bob did anything $60,000 low-interest mortgage to 9 Away from 3 Ba ambitious [ m a x ] MOVIE:JVideodr6me' A TV ex­ you’ll only be paid. In proportion to vour executive assistant to Gov. Ed- v ecutive finds a Strange and violent pro- . matter may be concluded In your favor- refinance his home and failed to 12 Waa'tarn haml- Bonds will be re-established this coming efforts. ' today. There will be some profit or ad­ ward DiPrete. cellent" administrator. - intentionally , wrong,” DiPre$^ 4 Chinaaa idol gram being trarismitted from an unknowrf year between you and someon&'with "The job will be different but I Murray was forced into taking a said. list his previous ownership of the aphara organiza­ 5 Openings source and becomes obsessed with its' SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov;22) People with vantage associated with thg victory but whom you were oricb close, bjut from It’s not apt to be too Ibrge. just want to contmue the agenda leave when his name surfaced The governor said the public home on the loan appli'eation. The tion (abbr.) 6 Labor group content James Woods, Deborah Harry, whom you’ll be involved today will sense ^onja Smiis. 1983 Rated R.* whom you have sin«g.drlfled apart. The. the governor has set forth,” recently as part of an ongoing outcry ovpr Murray’s mortgage refinancing is specifically prohi­ 13 Bay window (abbr.) relationship will now be more meahing- you mean business when you speak ' [T M C ] M O VtE:'Vam ping' A saxophone TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Take to : invekigation of, the scandal- has been "grossly exaggerated in bited by RIHMFC! regulations. ful and productive. your mlrtd. They're not apt to take llber- heart what is told to you today by a Vincent said Sunday. 14 Unitad 7 Range of eight .player losses his musical inspiratioq only lies or doubt your veracity Vincent, 36, of Cranston, was plagued housing Corporation. He relation to the outrageous things “He reiterated that in the fall of 15 Tanglad mats 8 Twist about to'try hts skills at burglary Patrick Duffy, trIend whose counsel you trust. He or", 1984 he filed an applieation. He LEO (J^y 23-Aug. 2 2 ) Once you under­ selected by DiPrete Saturday to allegedly signed a false bank that have been done by some Catherine Hyland, Rod*Arrants. 1984 Sa g it t a r iu s (N o v. 23-d »c . 21) The she will offer you constructive advioa 16 RIvar In France 9 Muckisr Rated R ^ take an assignment today, be tenacious replace Robert Murray, who took affidavit when he got a mortgage people in the last eight years." . went to lawyer Joe Pari and as far wheel is now turning and someone you that you can apply to your benefit. ' as he knew he didn't do anything 17 Buddhism type 10 Rough [USA] Make Me l_augh- and see It through to Its conclusion. Do­ were kind to in the past will be setting upr an unpaid indefinite leave of he didn’t qualify for from the He called Murray's temporary 11 Principis ing what you % ^out to do will give you GEMINI (May 21-Juna 20) Financial ’ housing agency in 1983. exodus “a tragedy for the people of wrong,” the governor said of the 16 Ltyara 1 2 : 0 0 A M . CD Sinv>n & Sirnon , something nice for you today. absence frofn )iis $55,626-a-year pride ol accomplishment. Major conditions are still favorable. What ap- ; “ I am concerned that the public this state." trooper. 20 Surrender 19 Strsngsnass CAPRICORN (Dac. 22-Jan. 19) (I It's post: for allegedijr receiving an CD Bamaby Jones changes are ahead tor Leos In the com­ pears to be a nominal opportunity today •• 21 State of nerjessary for you to negotiate a matter improper mortgage, from , the debate of this matter has some­ “They’re a bunch of phonies," Joseph Pari committed suicide rights (39 Honeyniooners ' » ing year. Send lo r yo gr A stro -G ra p h p re ­ can be built upon later. suspansiorsioff-^ with an old friend today, It might bg wise Rhotje Island Housing and Mort­ what detracted from your impor­ DiPrete said, Referring to Lt. Gov. in May, shortly after the state 9® MOVIE: 'The Great Catherine’ Cath­ dictions today Mall $1 to Astrp-Graph. 22 Put on the 36 Cafe amployse 46 6 o y ^ cout to make concessions, even though he or CANCER (Jupo 21-July 22) When m an-- tant agenda," Murray wrote Di­ Richard Licht and Democratic began investigating RIHMFC. He 23 Cafes erine the Great imprisons and tortures a Bpx'489. Radio City Station..New York. gage Fitiance Corporation. payroll 38 French she may not be entitled to them. , aging -others, don't be afral^ to use B"' was the brother of Ralph Part 24 Compass point activity newly arrived Britisher Peter O’Toole. NY, 10019. Be sure to stale your zodiac At a news conference on Satur- Prete in a letter. State Committee Chairman Salva­ (j«n. 20-Fab. 19) Don t be firm hand today I] things look-as though . 23 Energy-saving conjunclicxi Zero Mostol, Joanne Moreau 1968 sign. . dqy, DiPrete lashed out at his “Until my own personal situa­ tore Mancini, who have called for former executive director of the 25 Claf 47 Kelp (Lat.) hesnffnttD'-Sel^ tougher career objec­ they are beginning to get out ol control. - , time (abbr.) 39 Bullflghtar Mandrel! Sisters and Family * opponents as he announced that tion is resolved, I gm therefore Murray to s t ^ aside.-0- agency. 28 Actor Hsflin 40 Brushes against 2 26 Vagatabla 50 1060, Roman 9^ Charlie's Angels Vincent, his policy director, woultj respectfully requesting an unpaid 2 32 Shsitsred aids 41 Opinionated 27 Mora booriih 51 Mina 93) PELICULA: Deportados Julio Ale­ take over day-to-day duties for leave of absence. I'look forward to 35 Modal of tolar person man, Juan ^Gallardo, Norma. Lazarer\oi a full and vigorous resumption of 29 Eagle Murray. 29, of Cranston, until his ayatam 44 Sits down 52 Always (poet.) [CNN] Newsnight Bridge case .is resolved. , my responsibilities at the earliest Creative Crafts 30 Author Flaming [DIS] In Beaver Valley Vincent, who was city planning^ _possible date," Murray wrote. 31 English [ESPN] 4th Annual Cracker Jack Old director in Cranston before joining ' Th«,first-teriTi Republican gov- cathedral city Timers Baseball Classic Coverage of this NORTH 8-12 85 the bidding.) Concluding that Baft' Celebrates . BasebdII Classic is presented from Wash­ Locating 33 Compata point ington DC, - 6 A 5 had the diamond ace. South played a VK84 heart back to his ace and led a di*-' 34 A ctrtai [USA] Edge of Night ♦ KQ 107 missing honors Stakeout brings drug bust Banadarat mond to dummy, inserting the 10.’ 1 2 : 3 0 A M ® N » k « d c itv ♦ AQJ5 When that card forced the ace. he waa 1st Anniversary Sale' - 35 Ba in debt to ( £ Saturday Night Liva By James Jacoby * 23 24 2S WEST EAST in good shape but still had to play BOSTON (UPl) -Jr Three sus­ Boston addresses, and are be­ 37 Soflant (5 ) Space: 1999 ♦ K Q 10 8 3 6S72 • OUr thanks to' Houston rubber with cauUon. East led a spade pected heroin dealers arrested lieved to be New Yorkers who sell 41 Arm (Fr.) ® C HiPt VQ7 V ^063 bridge pundit Ira Chonish for today's through South's jack to Weft's Q^io over the weekend after Boston the drugs in and around the city's 20% OFF 42 Ftm alt saint ^ Late Night w ith Davi^ Lettam ian To- 6 JB6 ♦ X 9 5 3 2 exercise in declarer skill. Congratula­ and West played another spade’ police officers spent a month Roxbury section. (abbr.) night's guests are Andrea Martin, Gaylord ♦ K73 64 tions to North-South for arriving at Declarer ruffed carefully with hiding in bushes to catch them 'Police confiscated 90 bags of Perry and Larry Bud' Melman (R) (60 mm.) the superior contract of five clubs. dummy's club jack, trumped a dia­ UPl photo heroin in the raid, a street value of 43 Intimfdatai SOUTH were to be arraigned Monday. Most Merchandise (6) Star Hustier/$ign Off 6J64 Three no-trump would have no play mond to hU hand, and led the club 10 $4,500, and 61,850 in cash. Evans 46 People of The weekend arrests cap|>ed off [D IS ] DTV VA952 with the lead of the spade king. When that won, he was able to take All’s well in Mashpee a month of surveillance work by said. All Week 8/12 - 8/17 County Cork [USA] Haartlight City 64 There's a simple philosophy to the another club«finesse and mtdie II drug control unit officers -Joe The dealers had allegedly set up play of today's hand — when you need 47 Bird's homt 1 : 0 0 A M CD Columbo 6109862 tricks. Janis Cosby gives a big hug to her foster child, Santos, Driscoll and Arthur O’Connell, shop on the Jamaica Plain side of a finesse to make your contract, I 48 Understand 3 ) News . What If West plays the queen of who spent their dSys cllnibing'- the park that was closed to through Vulnerable: Elast-West assume it will work. Then figure out 11, during an emotion reunion in Mashpee, Mass., over 4 9 Spur (S) Joa Franklin Show Dealer: West hearts instead of the third spade? trees and crawling under bushes to traffic anefoyergrown with brush, See Maryanne the probable location of the o(her key DecUrer must then resist the IncUna- the weekend. A Bay State judge ruled that Santos, who Driscoll and O'Connell werfe tipped 63 Environment O ) Fish We*t N orth E a it cards. catch the dealers. Soath tlon to discard .both his losing hearts socialtworkers say is "unadoptable," can ret#n to the Arrested on heroin trafficking off to the operation on the streets, 25B. Olcott Street agency (abbr.) ® Film/Sign-Ofi Pass 1# Pass IV Declarer won the spade ace. 16 on the K-Q of diamonds. Instead be Cosbys' Nashua, N.H. home. The boy had lived with the cltarges were Billy Banks, 22, Evans said. ' 54 Ray dirt ICNNJ Croasfira 2 6 Pass S6 Because he needed the club finesse ti: Manchester, CT Pass 4 6 Pass must trump a low diamond In his Robert Anderson, 24 and 'Thomas Evans said the three men 6 6 _____ liglu [H B O ] MOVIE: 'Vica Squad' A Holly 5 6 work, he placed the club king wiU Cosbys for a year until a state-supported agency took Pass Pass Pass band and then proceed with the club Reed,' 35. They were to be ar­ arrested were believed to be 66 Soak flax I wood cop enters the sleazy underworld, of West. But if West held the club kins finesse. him away iri April. Atter ruling that the youth can return prostitution to hunt down a murderous raigned Monday in West Roxbury members of the Gunsmoke Gang, 646-5825 87 Noras deity as well as the spade K-Q, how could 4 for a.^weekend visit with tne family. Judge William pimp. Season Hubley, Wirigs Hauler, Gary Opening lead: 4K he also bold the diamond ace? (As District Court. successors to the Capsule Boys in 68 Ipara (C)1965 by Inc 12 Swanson Rated R Party politics determine who is to ' HIghgas Jr. said Santos "had one gooaH)iing going for Det. Mary Evans said the dealing heroin throughout Rox- dealer he surely would have opened sit where at a formal dinner. him and I want to keep it alive." suspects all gave non-existarit bury. MANCHKSTEft HERALD. Monday. Ana. VI. 1985 — 11 10 - MANCHESTER HERALD, Aug. 12, 1985 OjfiGials say st|ite drivers dyck insuranc •s. The letters demand writ- SPORTS State Rep. Morag L. Vance, insurance carriers. • HARTFORD (UPI) - A loop- ranee companies to notify the state Connecticut's nb-Tault law re­ “ft would be a deadlyjSb I roof of insurance and the quires owners to be insured for up R-Trumbull, who i§ House chair­ rations of those who fait to '”^h o le in Connecticut's no'-(ault insu­ Department of Motor Vehicles man of the Legislature's Insurance coordinate,"-Vance said. rance, law has allowed as/fhany as when an owner drops - no-fault to $20,od0 per person and $40;000 respoTO-within 15 days .are per accident for bodily injury and and Real Estate Committee, said The state Insurance Department 150.000 motorists each year to coverage, and many scofflaws use many people would rather take the estimates one of five motorists revoked. j register their vehicled despite a the loophole to flaunt the law and - up to $10,000 for property damage. change iiiAirance companies each Legion eliminated from state tournament chance pf being fined than pay lack of mandated coverage, state avoid paying premiums. Since mid-March, 860 letters Owners also must maintain hefty insurance bills. year — meaning 300,000 to 400,000 have been mailed to drivers with 10 officials say. "A certain percentage didn't insurance through the two-year Since 19'i'9. state lawmakers cancellation reports would flood The law requires m'otor vehicle have insurance prior to the law or more points orftheir licenses foy M.hita ,1 -iitfintT three and fanning tion, runners at first abd third. However, he was quickly erased registration periodTor risk losing have suggested .insurance com- the state annually. Lm — If Chris Ogden ha"chv.’$ hit the Wlllimantic. But plenty were left in owners to provide proof of no-fault going into effect," said Robert violations, and another 1,528 jM- scoring position.>‘We’re not going six. He was particularly tough in Armstrong was- thinking of a as a liner scorched by Feshler was both registration and driver's panie.s'simply be ordered in fo rm A computer link between com­ ters have gone to motorists lacking Sports’31"^ Editor ball so hard in the first inning, speared on the mound by Elliott, insurance coverage in order to Clinch, a spokesman for the license for one year or more. An the state when drivers drop panies and the state would not to hit that much anyway. But we the second inning when Williman- delayed steal in the sixth but neve|[ department's licensing division. insurance cards durin^^emissions •Larry Stanford, aboard at second ,-ttt(jjgw 3.5-7, j)ut runners at second got a chance. “I was going to put ;i who e-a’sily turned it into a register vehicles. insurance card must be carried in coverage, but Vance agreed the work, Vance said, because not all MIDDLETOWN - What if... base on a double, might have been had situations where we' could . The minimum coverage is de­ "The only reason they get the card each vehicle as proof of coverage. solution is not that simple. companies usfe compatible sys­ inspections. make things happen but we didn't . a n d lh ird with no outs. He play on the second pitch but he doubleplay. signed to pay the owner's expenses is to register a vehicle. The same Manchester, which found itself able to score. But Ogden's laser- swung at the first, " Armstrong Ogden and Stanford each col­ At . least six people have been Each insurance company would tems and the Motor Vehicle catching no breaks, can ask for a ‘ beam shot madeitouttoleftfielder get the key hit," Armstrong cited. proceeded to get Craig McDonald . in an accident regardless of who is group of people will beg, b(tf row or • Department has just started phas­ By the beginning of August, 105 and Joe Russo on pop ups and said with a shrug. lected two , hits off Elliott. The steal to get a card." * arrested this yea^-as part of (an have to notif}^ the Motor Vehicle ' registrations had been suspended second “what if” after it was Ken Vallierp in two seconds and he It was not a good tournanrient for Willimantic, blanked 2-0 in 10 bottom five in the Manchester at fault, but perhaps 10 percent of Department of cancellations and ing in computers. eliminated from the State Legion handled it cleanly. “There was no whiffed Valliere. “1 stayed tough," the state's 1,5 million registered Those owners- stop paying their investigation by Wethersfield_and and additiobal letters are mailed Manchester catcher Brendan Helin ^aid. “1 come back with innings in its tournament opener, order were held hitle.ss. state police of false insurance new customers to make sure fhose The department has set up a Baseball Tournament Saturday way I was going to send him McCarthy: He came in as the vehicles are driven without insu­ insurance premiums aftfer the • who dropped no-fault coverage seven-member unit to send out each week, a department spokes­ runners on, I just wish 1 didn't get pushed across its first run in 17 Manchester, Second during the insurance card is issued and allow cards and safety inspeetion morning at Palmer Field in Ig^tanford)," Armstrong said. club’s leading RBI man with 22 buf innings in the seventh. A one-out regular season in Zone Eight, rance, officials say. • with one Company did not change letters at random to motor vehicle man said. Middletown by a 1-0 count at the the runners-on." The law does not require insu- their coverage to lapse, he said. — If Wlllimantic shortstop Phil went l-for-8 in the two games, Winning Mike Elliott, grounder by Russo to third base- earned the trip to the ■''State V . hands of Zone Nine's Wlllimantic. stranding seven runners. He was man Mike Custer couldn't be tournament by taking the Zone The Zone Eight champs could Jenkins hadn’t smothered Ogden’s 7-J, scattered six hits while strik­ single in thQ sixth, Brian Feshler at the plate with two teammates ing out 1o. He walked none. "WC handled and Russo was aboard. Eight playoff, besting East Hart­ P C B au d it take, solace in that their second- aboard in the opening inning of "We made the one mistakit and it ford two straight. “You can say day performance was 1000 percent iViight have been waved home from beat him in the high school season second base. Instead the D^nches- both games — but failed to hut he pitched a fine game today. cost us," Armstrong said. what you will about the playoffs Obituaries better than their opening 15-3 produce. -H^ttfr got Valliere to fly out but today I think we were not a bad outing against Trumbull."! want ter runner had to hold at third. “If He was always up on the count,” has begun , it is in the outfield. I'm sending him McCarthy was far from the only Armstrong said. Elliott said he before Elliott helped his own cause representative of the Zone. Other to give our guys a lot of credit. by slicing a single to right U'adoff than the one inning (against Agnes* Wrobelski Charles Dean Nursing Home In After yesterday it was real easy to .(Feshler)." Armstrong said. one who experienced bat failure relied upon screwballs 60 percent Greenville, Maine. ■ (or Manchester.’ Younger brother of tlfe time. "My curve wasn't sticker Brian Spdgyalski then lined Trumbull) we have nothing to be Agnes (Panek) Wrobelski, 88. pack it in, but we dMh't," offered ' _ If it 'had played flawless the first pitch to centerwith Ru.sso ashamed of, " Armstrong said. U.S. says . Post 102 coach Ste'yjB Armstrong. Sean McCarthy was also l-for-8. working as usual and I was East Hartford, widow of Joseph I . defense, as Wlllimantic did. Man­ George Scaglia.and Mik.e Custer- spotting the fastball. 1 was just scampering home. "He hit 'a “Today we showed people we Wrobelski, died Sunday at her Manchester came back against chester committed just one error, fastball that was supposed to be , can play. We didn't roll over and Wlllimantic as lefthander Chris each l-for-7, and Larry Stanford trying to keep them off base," home. She was the mother of Jean Klejna that howeven leading to Willman- 2-for-9, Only Ogden, who was Elliott said.' outside (corner), " Helin said. The die,” Helin added. Henry Wrobel and Raymond By Timothy Bannon Helin turned, in a fine pitching tic's only run in the seventh inning. offering split the plate and Spe- Jean (Kose) Kiejna. of 133 United Press International performance — “We're not going 4-for-8 in the two games, expe­ Manchester's two best chances Wrobel, both of Manchester. Ludlow Road, died Saturday at “It’s ashame one time is enough to rience success at the plate. “He came in those first and sixth cyalski jumped all over it. She was born in Poland, Sept, 27, Hartford Hospital. She was the to get much better than that," hurt you, but..., " Afnlstrong said. Mancjiester's last gasp turned Manchester 000 000 000 0-6-1 WASHINGTON^— Government Armstrong said — but Lady Luck hit theT)all best of everyone the two frames. Brendan McCarthy Wlllimantic 000 000 lOx 1-8-0 1896. and had lived in Manchester wife of Thadiits 4 Kiejna.I — If it had been able, to hit in the days," Armstrong concurred. fanned to end the first with runners out to be the eighth inning. Sean Helin and McCarthy; Elliott and for more than '65 years before auditors are inspecting electrical was not with Post 102. McCarthy got his first hit of the Born in lyiyXchester. siW lived transformers in federal buildings There were plenty of 'ifs' for clutch. Manchester had nine hits Helin, 9-1, was touched for eight ■ at the corners iihd he grounded out Russo. moving to E!ast Harford two and a hert.all her life. She was a-lormer Jiits in the losing performance. in the sixth with the same situa- tournament, a one out ^single. W P-Elliott (7-1), LP-Helin (9-1). . half years ago. She was a merptjer nationwide, checking for possible Manchester. For example: against Trumbull, six against 2 member of the Ladies of Colum­ of ST. John the Baptist Polish leaks of cancer-causing PCBs that bus, and a member of St, James in a fire would emit highly toxic National Catholic Church and its Church and the Latliqu. of St. Women's Solidarity Society. James. She was activtfjin the diokin, pfficials say. She also is survived by a The audits were planned before Bldwell sUffs Imaglneers annual St. James fair. Before she leaky transformers filled with daughter, Jennie Kandrysawtz of retired, she worked at Pratt & East Hartford,- with whom she • Whitney,, and, previously, for Dr. PCB oil were found July 18 In liv.ed; 11 grandchildren; and T(f Donald Morrison of Manchester, museums of tjje^Smithsonian Insti- great-gran^hildren. besides her husband, she is ■ tution in Washington and at the The funeral .ftqll b^Wednesday , fvived by two ddughters, Bar- White House 11 days later, said MBs host Marco Polo tonight at 9:15 a.m. fiwTUie Holmes , Banu UnsworthVof Lee, Mass., and Dan Peyser, counsel to the inspec­ Funeral Home, 400 Main St , with a Doi^a Stack of Hartford; her tor general of the General Services mass of Christian burial atlO-.a-.m. mother. Alice P. Kose of Manches­ ..■f Administration. at St. John the Baptist Polish ter, a brother, Edwin Kose of PCBs, or polychlorinated- bi­ National Catholic Church. Burial Manchester;'a sister. Helen Sun- phenyls, have been shown to cause in Twilight playoffs at Moriarty will be in St, John Cemetery, cancer in laboratory tests and, tava of Manchester; and seveh i Columbia. Calling hours are Tues­ grandchildren. when burned, emiidioxin' day fron\ 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. The funeral will be Tuesday at Medical studies huve shown an Bv Bob PapettI Sunday night with Marco Polo was foe's bats to the, size of Ringo lined a single — Mort's first hit — Memorial .donations may be 9:15 a m..from the John F Tierney increased risk of heart disease and Herald Sports W riter stormed out and is rescheduled for Starr’s drum sticks. But Bidwell's into left to plate Sullivan. Bill madeto St, John the Baptist Polish Funeral Home. 219 W. Center St., cancer in sgpae )gr(jups-exposed to tonight at the Manchester host site bid for 10 straight may have been Chapulis delivered Petersen with a National Catholic Church. 23 Gol- followed by a mass of Christian dioxin. The only thing that was guaran­ at 8 p.m. saved by the staunch MB leather, sacrifice fly, and then Ray Gliha way St. Peyser said trte discovery of the teed for Moriarty Brothers in this primarily theAone brandished by doubled in Chotiner with the third f " > burial at St. James Church at 10 Irt Sunday's earlier second- a m. Burial will be in St.fame's leaky transformers at the Smith­ season's playoffs is that the round action of the^ double­ cente.rfielder Dave Smythe. marker. Cemetery, Calling hours are today sonian '.‘had nothing to do" with the defending champions were NOT elimination tourney at Moriarty Smythe, a welcomed addition to The MBs padded their lead jn the Richard K. .George inspections in nine of the 11 service going to score 60 runs in five the Moriarty cast in '85 as a potent fourth. Jeff Johnson and John ,, Richard K.-George, 70, of Ware­ from 2 to-4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Field, the Newington Capitols Memorial donations may be areas of the GSA, which manages games. ousted Big Dollar Liquor, 10-2, . lead-off hitter and swift fly-chaser, Hagerty chased Brink byrapping house Point, died Saturday at his made to the §t James School 9,000 federal buildings. It was a year ago that the MBs made a spectacular, back-handed singles to ignite the frame, but- home. He vVas the husband of UPI photo while Katz Sports polished off the Fountlation • or the Manchester . A federal investigator familiar shook the Twilight League tp its Irpagineers, 5-1. grab on the dead run in the Johnson was thrown>out trying to JoAnne (Nadeaiij George. Visiting Nurses. , with the condition of a number of foundations with a highly unlikely left-center gap to rob the Imagi­ advance to third. Sullivan then He vvas born ' io Manchester. ‘tip ’ In ‘Spoons’ GSA transformers said federal -r- though very, timely — offensive The winners' bracket contest neers’ Mike Morris of at least a greeted reliever Jack Gracey with A Before his retirement, he was workers are cap’tive.to “a serious detonation that tidal waved five between Society for Savings and two-run double in the top of me a run-scoring double, and SmjAhe. employed 'as a carpenter for the Arthur E. Smith ' Mallove’s Jewelers was pbstponed House Speaker Thomas P. "Tip” O’Neill a network situation comedy,this year. problem'' that has been ignored for easy pieces en route to the fourth. / followed 'with an RBI-single to city of Hartford-for many years. ,A memorial service for Arthur too long. post-season title. after five innings with Society “That was the turhing point." make it 5-0. .He was a U.S. Navy veteran of E* Smith will be held Thursday at 2 is made up for his appearance in an Earlier this yeaf, he appeared on Last week, after ,EPA officials “That was freak,” admitted ahead, 5-0. The tilt will be resumed noted Johnson.. “We had a 3-0 leaH Chotiner and dliha were the only World War II. He was a mernberdf p.m. at Concordia Lutheran episode of the television series "Silver “Cheers,” the popular show based on a found leaking transformers at the Moriarty coach Gene Johnson. tonight — in the top of the sixth — and that would’ve put them right batters in the game with two hits at 5:30 p.m. An elimination contest the Society of American Magicians Church, 40 Pitkin St. Smith, of 28 Spoons,” being taped at his Boston Boston bar. The "Silver Spoons” '•White House complex, which in­ “No way it. was going to happen back in it." apiece. and was known as “Dick the between Katz and Ne\yington (both The Imagineers were also de­ The Imagineers. who were elimi­ Raymond Road, the retired chair­ office. It is 0 ’Neiirfe(|econd acting job in episode will air in October^ cludes the Old Executive Office agaii^ But we'll be in there Tramp. " He was a member of the man of United Technologies Corp .. Building, the GSA said it would swinging." 1-1) is featured at 6 p.m., with the nied a sure run in the top of the first nated by Katz, 5-1, Sunday, scored Goofus Club of Springfield, Mass. died Tuesday. ' ' begin refilling 19 PCB trans- As expected, the regular season Moriarty-Marco Polo, game to when slick shortstop Ray Sullivan their lone run in the fifth on ijo He also Is survived by a son, Paul follow. ' »P| Photo U Watkiiis Funeral" Home, 142 E. . formers there with other coolants. champs were in there swinging made a diving, back-handed stop ’throwing error by catcher K. George of Windsor Locks; three Center St., is in charge of arrange­ Reporters as nOn-professlon^ls In -February, GSA inspectors when the Jack Rose Memoriai Bidwell, now an unblemished in the hole and then retired batter Hagerty. daughters, Mrs. Robert (Nancy) ments. There are no calling hours. found eight leaking transformers Playoffs started Saturday at Mor­ 10-0, dispersed six hits in the . Bill Nardi for the final out in the “I’m happy with the win,” said Red Sox's Jackie Gutierrez is too late for the tag as Pelletier, Mrs. Charles (Mary) and a "large drum of PCBs” in the iarty Field, parlaying eight hits route-going performance. He stanza. Coach Johnson “We didn't win the Yanks' Ken Griffey steals second in fourth frame at Severns and Mrs. Joseph (Velma) Alton A. Hall Alberquerque (N.M.) Federal into five runs in a 5-1 opening round struckout four and walked one in , Moriarty. which finished 23-6-1 last three games we played, (two Fenway Park Sunday. . Beauchesne, all of Enfield; l6 Guild argument is about-face Building, described in a report to win over the Imagineers. And in what .Johnson described as a for a firsUplace 47 points, piled up losses and a tie), but as far as I’m grandchildren; and. five great­ Alton A. Hall. 83, of Vernon, the inspector general as a “serious case a, covert critic or two was “typical Bidwell game." seven of its eight safeties in two concerned, this is the second grandchildren. formerly of Manchester, died tempted .to label it as ‘one- The versatile Bidwell, equally innings — the third and fourth — season." The funeral will be Tuesday at 11. today at Malmhester Membrial condition." Bv David singleton closely Although the Monitor’s editorial • The inspectors called for an dimensional’, top-seeded Moriarty adept at throwin_g a ball from the while tallying three and two runs. And Moriarty has yet t* lose a a m. at Rosa Hill Funeral Home, Hospital. He was the husband of "I see a certain irony here, in employees are not unionized. The displayed a few other weapons mound or tossing barbs from the Sullivan and' Chris Petersen game in its second season in two G ■ United Press International, immediate cleanup, asking “if . 580 Elm St., Rocky Hill. Burial will Mildred (Lipp) Hall. that publishers want to upgrade Newspaper Guild is sufficiently discrepancies reported by other from a weli-rounded arsenal, — bench, heaved a few sighs of relief opened the winning rally in the years. Yankees sweep be m Rose Hill Memorial Park, He was born in Chaplin .April 18, CONCORD, N.H. - A small New their people to professionals so concerrted with the case that it- field offices remain uncorrected," namely, the Perfect 10 pitching of Saturday. third by drawing bases on' balls Imaalneers 000 010 0 1-6-3 Rocky Hill, Calling hours are today 1902. and had lived in Manchester they don’t have to pay them as filed a court brief in support of the veteran wit Dave Bidwell and “I get by with a little help from from losing hurler Kevin Brink. M o ria rty 003 200 x 5-8-3 of Louisiana. “Sure it was hot, but from 2 to4 and 7 ta9 p.m. A Brokfen Before moving to Vernon three Hampshire newspaper, in a case and noted Albuquerque officials Brink, Gracev (4th) and Nardi; Bv United Press International that could affect journalists na­ much. " said Spencer Klaw, editor government’s position. were warned in Ndvember about some ciutch defense. , ■ my friends,” chimed Bidwell, who With one down. Twilight League Bldwell and Hagerty. the humidity wasn’t like it is down Wand Ceremony will be held years ago. Before he retired 18 of the Columbia Journalism' "What's at stake is' whether Moriarty’s second-round game has grown accustomed t’oTeducing .batting champion Steve*Chotiner WP- Bldwell (10-0); LP- Brink. there. I didn’t feel had at all.” tonight during the calling |iours at years ago. he worked as a foreman tionwide,' is challenging 40-yet>r- the leaky transformers. BOSTON — What a difference a , old federal regulations that clas­ Review. newspaper reporters can continue Half of GSA's estimated 1,800 few months can make. Leading 3-1 in the eighth, the Jhe funeral home. at the central -office of Southern That suggestion sits uncomforta­ Yankees scored two runs fo chase ^ Memorial donations may be New Englgnd Telephone Co., Man­ sify newsroom employees as to be. covered by the Wage and , transformers cooled with liquids ' The last visit "non-professionals." bly with George Wilson, publisher Hour Act,” said David Eised, containing PCBs' are- in or near to Fenway Park was to open the reliever Steve Crawford, Don made to North Central Hospice, 26 chester, and had worked for the of the 178-year-old Monitor, a information director for the Guild, Mattingly doubled to left and Park St., Rockville, Q6060, orto the conipany for 43 years. After he The Newspaper Guild has. en­ federal buildings in the Washing­ season and the Boston Red Sox tered the case involving overtime privately owned newspaper in New which represents about 20,000 ton area, agency officios said. Juniors swept three games. scored when Winfield bounced a Warehouse Point Ambulance. retired, he spent his winters in Hampshire’s capital city. high chop that went by shortstop Associaiton. Daytona Beach, Fla. pay at the Concord 'Monitorrwilh newsroom employees in the United Used in the Whit^Moilse, Pen­ On Sunday, the Yankees com­ the union arguing, ironically, that “We re not taking on a weighty States. tagon arid State Department, in­ pleted a 180-degree shift in fortune Jackie* Gutierrez for a double. He was a member of South industry issue," Wilson said. "It United Methodist Church. He was journalists are not “It would rnean that reporters, stallation of the equipment wa§ from the beginning of the season, Griffey then lined a single off the Conrad Van Hyping "professionals." . • was really a quandry presented to particularjy those working on barred by Congress in most cases hot in beating Boston 5-3 to sweep a body of Crawford, moving Winfield a 50-year member of Manchester . us by what we considered a very Conrad Van Hyning, 84, of Lodge of Masons, and a member of AU issue is whether — under papers like the Monitor' and in the late 1970s. three-game set. to third. Don Baylor fdllowed with Wlllimantic, died Aug. 3 at a the Telephone Pioneers. federal labor-law guidelines — large (overtime) claim. We're not smaller — and for miserably low Nationally, 140,000 are in use, Dave Winfield aqd Ken Griffey a (louble M score Winfield. Banlior, Maine, Jiospital. He was Monitor copy editors, reporters raising any flames high. That 's not salaries, I might add — would be with more than half — 77,000,— in each drove in two runs to help New “We just didn't stay close," Besides his wife, he is survived our intent,” tourney the husband dt Mary W. Van by one son, Roger A. Hall of and photographers are "profes­ forced to work overtime without densely occupied structures built York to its sixth straight victory. Boston manager John McNariiara Hyning. Manchester; one ^daughter. Mrs. sionals," that is, people with He said the newspaper simply' any overtime compensation." before the mid-1970s, such a s ' Which kept it seven games behind said. “Our pitching wasn’t consist­ He also is survived by two Roger (Barbra) Schubert of West- special skills who perform their' believes Labor Department rules In- its briefydhe Guild points out shopping complexes, stadiums, EAST HARTFORD - Manches­ the first-place Toronto Blue Jays in ent and we couldn’t find any timely dau|hters, m Jean Small of boro, Mass.; one brother, Milton work with creativity, judgment "thal^ere written for.a factory- that journalists, unlike profes^on- •' office and large apartment build­ ter Junior Legion js aiive and weil the America/i League East. hitting." Tolmndollanc and Patricia E. Plunkett of and independence. are not appropriate to a als such as qoct'ors and lawyers, New York scored twice in the Hall in Rhode Island; one sister, ings, said Denise Keehner, an EPA in the East of the River Invita­ Meanwhile, Boston, which Has / Silver Spring, Md.; a son,"Conrad Mrs. Arthur tJean) Spooner of The Monitor, a 21,000-circulation newsroom " need not have formal training. official. tional Touranment at Ray lost foiir of its last five, dropped 13 sixth to ^ake a 3-0 lead. Mattingly Van Hyning Jr. of Guilford, Maine; North Windham; six grandchild- daily, maintains they are profes- "The department’s views are McKenna Field. games, off the pace. . singledito start the Inning and and 10 grandchildren. ren; and one great- sionaJs. The U.S. Labor Depart­ essentially that reporters are The Juniors, unbeaten after “It’s never easy in this park," Winfield followed with a triple. A'.meinorial service was held on granddaughter; and several nie­ ment disagrees, claiming journal­ stenographers and editors are recordihg a (>air of hard-fought, said Winfield, who had a double Griffey then looped a short fly to Thursday at the Neal Funeral ces and nephews. ists — like janitors and factory proofreaders and photographers one-ritn victories this weekend, and triple. “We got good pitching,' left that fell in front of Jim Rice for Home, Guilford, Maine. Funeral arrangements, which ■ w h rk ersare entitled to overtime take snapshots,” he said. “ (Based 22nd Annual will meet host East Hartford, also had a lot of hits and had a good an RBI double. ^ Memorial donations may be are incomplete, will be handled by ' pay for overtime worked. on those views), there's no discre­ 2-0, Wednesday night at McKenna overall series. It doesn't matter The Yankees broke a scoreless given to the Mayo Regional Hospi­ the Watkins Funeral Home, 142 E. Although journalism's status as tion, no judgment. Anybody off the at 5:30 p,m. who we're playing, but we have to tie' in the fourth against Roger tal, Dovef-Foxcroft, Maine, or the Center St. a profession or a craft has been street could do it." J im m y F u n d Manchester, now 21-10-1 overal continue playing 'well to catch Clemens, 7-5. Mattingly led off debated for decades and still Labor Department regulations rode the double-dip pitching of Joe Toronto." with a single and advanced to divides the industry, the issue is define a “professional” as some­ Casey and some timely hitting in After banging out 32 hits and second as Winfield grounded out. slated to move to a new forum later' one whose work requires special Benefit Softball Game beating Herb’s of West Hartford, scoring 17 runs in the first two Griffey followed with a single to Ex-WTNH reporter this year. training or who produces work that 5-4, Sunday, aq{l Hebron, 7-6, in games, the Yankees relied on the right, scoring Mattingly to make it U.S. District Court in Concord is “original and creative in charac­ nine innings Saturday. pitching of Ron Guidry, who won 1- 0 . • • will hear a 1981 Labor Department ter," with a reliance on invention, The locals erupted for four runs his ISth gamef tops in the AL. The Red' Sox broke through feared dead in crash complaint accusing the Monitor of imagination and talent. in the third inning to nip Herb’s. A Guidry, battling better than against Guidry li) the sixth, nar­ 2 ■failing to pay about $45,900 to 54 The government interprets the two-run single by Rob Stanford 95-degree heat, allowed seven hits rowing the deficit to 3-1 on Bilj employees for overtime worked statute to exclude most members Tuesday, Aug. 13th ‘ capped the rally. Casey chucked and three runs over 7 1-3 innings. Buckner's RBI ground out. 2 SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - ■ KGO officials had received no from 1978 to 1980. The case was to of the “quasi-profession" of jour­ the first four frames and .was' finished for his fifth The Red Sox scored twice in the Coroner's deputies, aided by den­ word about Johnson's wherea­ have come to trial in June, but was nalism. Exceptions include editor­ relieved by Danny Wood, who save. eighth on a, run-scoring single by, tal charts, hope today to identify bouts and were unable to contact postpone'd. ial writers, columnists, critics and Charter Oak Field worked the final two. The game “This was nothing compared to Wade,,Bogg8 and Buckner's sacri­ The newspaper argues that the. the victim of a car-truck collision her at her Sausalito, Calif., home, what the Labor Department calls was halted after six innings UPI photo back home," said Guidry, a native fice fly. in which a television weather KGO assistant news director An­ gov^nment's interpretation of “'top-flight' writers of analytical because of Sunday night's violent reporter was feared killed. drew Shinnick said. /, regulations written in the 1940s, and interpretative articles." 7:30 P.M. storm. ' Mets' second baseman Wally Backman Durham of a single in the sixth Inning at “I'm just praying, she‘misread classifying the employees as “non- A car registered to Beverly Pinch-hitter Aeris Leonard dives to Tiis left to rob Cubs’ Leon Shea Stadium SuncTay. Johnson, 36, a weekend weather- the schedule," safd Shinnick. professionals" and thus entitled to LABOR DEPARTMENT LAW­ came through in the clutch to key caster for KGO-TV, Saturday “Maybe she lent her car to- overtime, is as outdated as green- YER John easier, who is handling Saturday’s come-from-behind win. Twins sign Howe slammed headoji into a newspaper someone else," Before joining tinted visors and hot type. the case, said “the guts of the Channel 3, WFS^ Leonardpelivered a twb-out, two- delivery truck on the Doyle Drive Channel 7, Johnson worked as The journalism community, • department’s position is in the run.double (o tie the game in the top . Bv United Press International Twins manager Ray Miller said approach to the Golden Gate weather anchorwoman for station from The Newspaper Guild to the regulations." He declined to dis- of the seventh. Both teams traded a he would use the left-hander in late Bridge. WTNH in New Haven, Conn., like American Newspaper Publishers - cuss specifics of the government's vs. ' run in the eighth, before Manches­ Mets’ timing is just right MINNEAPO'l IS - Relief innings. The auto was heading north­ KGO an ABC affiliate. Association, is watching the case case. ter produced the game-winner on .pitcher Steve Howe, released by "I don't think he can go three bound when It drifted into the an RBI-grounder by Rich Sullivan Bv. Mike parnei 6-2 victory over the Cubs. “Eddie comes in after Gooden the Los Angeles Dodgers earlier innings yet,” Miller said. "He’s southbound lane and hit the San Manchester Fire/Police in the ninth. United Press Internatlonai The triumph, the Mets' seventh and gives you a little sinker, a little this, season at his own request, ready to throw (in a game) right Francisco Chronicle vehicle, the The Juniors had taken a 2-0 lead straight and 13th-in their last IS slider, a little changeup. He moves Sunday signed a contract with the now." California Highway Patrol said. CALDWELL ROBERT J. SMITH, inc. in the first. Lead-off batter John , NEW YORK - On the day after contests, produced a one-game the bail around.” Minnesota Twins. "I was getting awful antsy Roe singled, and then Mike Char­ lead over St. Louis. The Cardinals The truck driver, James Bolds, ,.(,. Dwight Gooden, the New York Added Lynch: "We’re two guys Howe twice has been treated for waiting in the clubhouse," Howe 26, escappd with niinor injuries buj Robert J, Smith JiK. ter and Sullivan followed with Mets send Ed Lymch to the mound. lost 4-1 in Philadelphia. chemicql dependency and was said Sunday. "I'm real anxious tp OIL INC.) Donation $1.00 consecutive RBI singles. New York manager Davey John- with two different pitches. He’s got the womarf-ilriver of the car was g INSLIRANSMnUS INSURANSMITHS SINCE The plan is designed to destroy the a rising fastball and sharp curve. suspended in December 1983 for throw, real anxious to throw for crushed to death, the CHP said. Hebron chased starter Stanford opposition's timing — and it's sqn said he got the idea for his the entire IBM season by former this club. with a run in the first and two in the current rotation ploy from his days I’ve got the sinker and slider. It’s The victiml whs so badly disfig­ 1914 Donated by ’ working. gotta effect them.” commissioner Bowie Kuhn. - ured that visual identification was 86.9 second. Jim Kitsock twirled shu­ Lynch, whose best fastball rivals as an Orioies' second baseman. > "We are pleased to be able to Howe-Jias thrown batting'’prac- not possible, a coroner’s spokes­ per gal. C. O. D. tout relief until the ^sixth, when the speeid of a Gooden changeup, "When I was at Baltimore., I Lynch, who entered with the offer Steve this opportunity to tice since Friday and was clocked liked Palmer followed by Dobsoil, man said Sunday. ^okn J. ^ u n m r a t 3 i Hebron tallied two rnore. Casey, exhibited near-perfect controISun- major's fourth lowest walks per resume his career,” said Twins at 90 mph Saturday in a 16-minute Johnson, who joined Channel 7 a 649-8841 649-5241 nc. who singled to open the tying rally, ' day and batterymate Gary Carter McNally followed by Cueller," he nine innings ratio (1.74), walkkl president Howard Fox. "We feel workout, ' year ago, failed to show up for 65 E. Center Street worked thq remainder of th’e game walloped a pair of two-run homers said. "For a batter„when you get one, struck out one and scattered that playing in the Minnesota area Howe, 27,^ had expressed ^n PrfcM Subi0Ct to changt- 219 WEST CErtTER ST. on fte mound to register the to move New York into first place tuned to one kiifd of pitcher, like a will enhance his chance of making Interest ip the Twins this season, work Saturday in time for her Manchester, Ct. MANCHESTER. CT 06040 ’seven hits. Every Cub who reached ' evening newscast. (303) 643-1221 •trlimipb.. in the East with a power pitcher, it's eai(ier. ( base did so after two ^ere out. a strong comeback. working out a couple weeks ago. / \ MA.\( IIKSTKH UKRAl.D. Monday, H - MANCHESTER HERALD. Monday, Aug/l2, 1985 r 14 - / AL’ f'ouridup :)

Mike Donald 1,660 73- 72-50-71— 2% 69- 75-76-78— 298, Chisoxj^inor leaguf^rs wske major debut Hal button l,53f Indians 7, Tigers 2 D.A.^Welbrlno 1,536 72-71-77-78— 298 Ron SIreck 1,536 70- 76-77-75— 298- Baseball Arnold Palmer 1 ,^ 75-72-75-76— 298 hit a bases-loaded triple, Ruppert DETROiT ■ I i/?CLEVELAIW /fcLEVELAN Phil Blackmar 1,536 71- 7463*70— 298 By Collins Yeorwood Milutaukee manager Oeorge Bam­ ' r Ob r h bl j oB r b bl bl J- c Mike Reid 1,500 72- 75-75-77— 299 UnItecL Press International berger smd. "H e was a youitg kid Jones and Gary ‘Pettis each hit a Trm m ll sy 5 0.2 1 Nixon If 3 110 M ark.M cNulty L500 74- 7377-75— 299 pair of RBI singles and John Garbev Ib S 1 2 0 Butler cf 3 10 0 7374-76-77— 300 coming in and.he threw strikes.” Rober.t Hoyt 1,500 Candelaria notched his first AL,^ American Leagu^ standings Gibson :rf 3 0 10 Fronco^ss 4 13 1 Kevin Morris 1,500 72-74-78-77— 301 The fourth-place Chicago White Davis struck out six and walked PorrlSh c 4 0 « 0 Thorntb dh 3 0 1 0 David Glenz 1,508 7372-76-79-302 two before turning the game over victory, lifting the Angels. Cande­ Herndon It 4 0 0 0 Jocobv 3b 4 1 1 0 74-7380-75— 302 Sox*'sitting eight games, off the Edit Al CJelberoer V,500 to Dan Spillner. Bob James pitched laria, scattered five hits over fiYe Lemob ct 4 12 0 Bernird 2b 2 2 1 1 Mike Smith 1,500 71-76-8375— 305 pace in the-' W L Pet. OB Sanetli dh 4 0 1 0 Harorv lb' 4 0 3 T- ..the ninth for his 19th save. • innings in his second start since 70 41 .tft ,West, reacl)ed down to their minor Toronto Brookn^ 3b 4 0 1 0 Vuhovch r*»l 0 0 1, I A two-()ut single by Cecil Cooper joining California Aug. 2. New YorK 62 47 .SW, BJvnn 2b 4 0 2 0 C o rte r' rf 1 11 1 leagues Sunday in-an attempt to Detroit 58 51 .532' Bondo c .3011 LPGA results move up in the standings. \md B double by Ben Oglivie, his Blue Jays 5, Royals 3 Boitan 56 53 .514 Totals 37 2 11 1 Totals • 28 7 12 6 ^ 1 Davis and Joe De Sa, both L ^ t h career' hit. produced a B o H n o re 55 S3 :509 ' Detroit . . 100 000100— 2 '$210/000 LFOL P O A A r/ ^To T ^urno r i m tnt At Kansas City,-Mo., Al Oliver 49 58 .458 called up Sunday from the White sixth-inning run for Milwaukee — . Mlliraukee Cleveland ^ 0l l lt 02 12x— 7 At Hloti Point/ N.C./ Aug. 11 and Garth lorg'homered^n the 10th CKv.elond 36 73 .330 r Game-wInrtlno.RBI — Fronco(71. Sox’s Triple-A affiliate in Buffzflo^ the only one off Davis. West (Par72) _ inning to lift the Blue J a ^ . Oliver E— Heaton, Scherrer: DP— Detroit 4, Nancy Lopez, 31,500 66-67-69-66--268 N.Y.,1teyed Chicago's 4-1 triumph Greg Walker, the designated Californio 63 46 , Cleveland 1. LOB— Detroit 9, Cleveland7. 60-71 ■^7-72— 278 belted a 2-2 pitch over the right- Kansas CItv M 49 Vol Skinner, 19/425 over the Milwaukee Brewers. hitter, hit his home run in the first 2B— Garbev, Sanchez, Franco, .Carter. Lori Garbaez, 12,000 71-68-73-68— 280 field w^ll against Joe Beckwith. Odkland 59 50 SB— GIbsOn, (231', Bernazard (111. 7O^7.7O.73_20O Davis pitched a five-hitter over inning to stake Davis to a 2-0 lead Chicooo 54 53 Jane Geddes, 12,600 l-5.^Rfrg connected for his third SF— Vukovich, Bernazard. Betsy Kino, 8>925 68- 73^-72— 281 seven innings and De Sa chipped in ovejLMilwaukee starter Ray Bur-“ , Seattle 50 59 70- 70-73-60— 282 homer. Tom Henke, the fourth . MInnesoto 48 59 M.S.-Devlin, 6,773 one of three Chicago home runs. fIT 6-9. De Sa homered in the . IP H (t ER BB SO Kathy Boker, 6,772 71- 72-69-70— 282 Toronto pitcher, improved to 3-0. Texas 41 68 Ootrolt 70- 72-72-69— 283 second inning in his first at-bat Sunday's Results Rosie Jones, 4,935 After losing five straight for O'Neal (L S-5) 5 2-3 9 ' 4 4 4 1 Debbie Massey,w4,935 73-70^-71— 283 since being recalled to spell Mariners 9, A% 6 Cleveland 7, Detroit ,2 Scherrer 1-3 0 1 0 3 0 Buffalo to drop to 2-5 with a 4.79 California 12, Minnesota 0 . 'L .7 V • Alice Rltzmarr, 4,935 71- 70-71-71-283 Walker at first base. Bair 1 1-3 2 2 2 1 ' 2 75-69-71-60— 284 ERA, Davis was a bit awed to be At Seattle, Al Gowens and Dave Chicago 4, Milwaukee 1 Rec photo JoAnfte Garner, 3,837 Berenguer 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Am y Benz, 3,836 69- 72-73-70— 284 making his major-league debut Carlton Fisk became the seventh New York 5, Boston 3 Cleveland Henderson each drove in two rtrtis Toronto 5, Kansas CItv 3 (10 Innlnosl Holils Stacy, 3,364 73-69-73-70— 285 Sunday. player in White Sox his'tory to hit 30 Heaton (W 6-12) 9 J1 2 2 1 10 K. Postlewalt, 3,364 71-71-70-73— 285 to highlight ap eight-run” third Seattle 9, Oakland 6 -13,475. home runs when he clobbered a 1-0 W P— Bair. T — 2:54. A- Pee Wee Ea^t champs^ Mitzl ,Edpe, 2,699 70- 70-78-68— 286 “ It feels like a shock,” said inning that carried the Mariners. Baltimore 9, Texos 4 pitch from Burris into the left-field Monday's lOames Vicki Fergon, 2,699 71- 72-74-60-286 Davis'. '-'After the first batter (Paul Bill Swift, 4-6, survived a six-run (All Times EDT) White Sox 4, Brewers! row: Andrew Ladyga, Jason Culver, Janet Coles, 2,699 70-73-73-70— 286 Molitor, who stiAick out) I calmed uppendeck in the fourth inning. The Mustangs won the Pee Wee East 70.74.71.71— 286 Oakland first inning and went eight Oakland (Codiroll 108 and Mura OOl at S. Bertolaccinl, 2,699 down.” Minnesota i(Blvleven 10-12 and Schrom Division title this summer- Team Bryan Burney, Robbie Medhurst, An­ M.F.-DottI, 2,699 70-73-72-71— 286 Indians 7, Tigers 2 innings for his first major-league 8-121,2,5:35 MILWAUKEE CHICAGO drew Dorin, Jason Blakesley, Sal Papa, Dale Eggeling, 2,699 66-73-73-74— 286 Managers for both clubs were victory. Reliever Rick Langford, Cleveland '

U - MANCHKSTEH HERALD. Monday, Aug 12. 1985 Straight set win [l becoming Sports In Brief -« , if

% ^ Camacho captures WBC crown for McEnroe \ LAS VEGAS. Nev. —Since hcemergedontheboxingscene. the burial ground for ultra-flashy. Icfs-say-tacky Hector Camhcho has been By United Press Internotlonol baseline gSme and now has to work criticized on consistency to be in top shape said. "But back 25 years ago, we First, there were the clothes. Screaming, jittering clothes for the U.S. Open crown, which he Bv Randv MInkoff season and win the Cy Young The National League also had STRATTON, Vt. — JohiTMcEn- didn’t chart pitches. Innings made with more metal and plastic than fabric. The brash kid has won four times. He will play Unlted'Press International ' award, only to fall on hard times. seen some problems with its Cy roe proved he was alive, well'and pitched were not even a big. from Puerto Rico looks more like a used car sales lot than a this week at the Canadian Open in Mike Flanagan of the Baltimore Young award winners of late. still able to play a mean game of consideration. It was wins. You boxer. Montreal. CHICAGO - "Fhere are all sorts Orioles won the award in 1979. He Steve Carlton picked up his tennis this week. measured a guy by how many wins Then came the rumors, unsubstantiated rumors, of drug use. McEnroe had a couple of run-ins of alleged” jinxesS in baseball. went 23-9 and hasn’t approached fourth Cy Young Award in 1982.-Hp McEnroe concluded a week he had '■ • But through all the negative stories and whispers. Camacho where he did not lose a set with a, with officials earlier in the tourna­ There is the ^-called "sopho­ those statistics since. won only one game this season and continually proved one thing: He can fight. 7-6 (7-4). 6-2. destruction of Ivan ment, but was pretty quiet on the more" jinx for second-year play­ In 1983. he spent more than three has been on the'disabled list niost Frey pointed out that farther Saturday night, in a plu.sh. carpeted convention room at the of the year. back than the 1950s, pitchers used Lendl Sunday to capture the final day. After; 15 minutes of play, - ers after outstanding rookie cam­ months on the disabled list with an R iviera Hotel that seemed to be the'perfect environment for the $315,000 Volvo International tennis rain struck Sunday delaying the paigns. There are also jinxes arm injury., He hasn’t beerr-the However, it , can be cited accu­ to go every fourth day and pitch swaggering 23-year-old who admits his love for the fa.U life, he tournament for his first Grand match for 85 minutes. attributed to national sports maga­ same pitcher since. rately that at Carlton’s advanced complete games. _ age of 40, injury problems were an . proved it again in the biggest test of his pro career. ■ Prix title since late April. McEnroe served an ace when the zines such as Sports Illustrated. The following year, Steve Stone " I was in San Francisco a while expected risk. For those who didn’t get to .see his impressive demolition of match resumed. There may be room for one more won 25 games for the Orioles and back and they introduced two guys McEnroe was asked if the But not so with teammate John .World Boxing Council lightweight champion Jo.se Luis Ramirez. And how had he maintained his jinx in baseball — the Cy Young won the Cy Young award. Two who pitched in a game and went 25 victory represented a comeback. Denny, who won the 1983 Cy Young Camacho offered this description: concentration during the delay? "I Award jinx. years after that. Stone was out of "Where was 1'?" McEnroe said. award for the’ division winning innings and then came back four "I was great." Camacho said "I wasunbelievahle Imthckid watched the Mets game on T V ," he Consider Rick Sutcliffe of the baseball due to an arm injury. days later anj each went nine ' 11 can be a comeback for the press Phils. of the-'80s. I win dominate this g;ime. From now on every fight, said. Chicago Cubs. The bearded righ­ The following season, Rollie innings," Frey said. "So, I don’t who wants to write about that. But thander came over from Cleveland Fingers of Milwaukee won the Cy Denny was 19-6 in 1983. Bothered /i •will be a million dollar.s. because this kid deserves it. " "Lendl’s three-set semifinal know whether a guy who has a a comeback means you've gone "\ast season and led the Cubs to the Young award. The relief pitcher with an assortment of injuries last When a person talks like that, he'd better be able to back it up. match Saturday against Jimmy great year is really risking himself away and then come back. I ’m still NationatLeague Eastern Division had a strong campaign in 1982 until year, Denny slipped to 7-7. This Camacho can definitely hack it up. number ohe in the computer Connors must have been a drain,” and can get hurt in a big year. " flag. August when he, too, went down year, he has had difficulty regain­ He overwhelmed Ram irez with speed and power to capture the ranking, still, number one in the McEnroe said. ing the form that saw.him rated as There are also exceptions to the McEnroe pressured Lendl from He went 16-1, was the toast of the \yith an elbow injury. Fingers WBC lightweight crown with a lopsided unanimous 12-round world” the premier pitcher in the National Cy Young jinx. Willie Hernandez, the outset with his serve and by WindJ City and a runaway winner hasn’t been the same since. decision. League two years ago. last year’s AL winner with Detroit, The 26-year-old New Yorker rushing the net. He earned $40,000 of the Cy Young Award winner in Pete Vuckovich of the Brewers It was the second world title for Camacho, the forjner WBC There are some theories as to is again having a good season. started his stretch run toward his and a new car for the victory. the National League.^ captured the award in 1982. By the super featherweight champion who ran hisrecord to 28-0 with the why Cy Young award winners may Bruce Sutter of the Atlanta defense later the month ofhis U.S, . Leridl said he was pleased with This season has been a night­ end of 1983. he had rotator cuff one-sided beating of>Ramirez. have troubles after they win the Braves won a Cy Young award and Open title by dominating the event the way he was getting ready for mare for the-Cubs’ hurler. He is problems and his career is still in Camacho knocked down Ramirez, who brought an incredible honor. Some argue that by going is still pitching effecitvely; if not as at the Strattan Mountain resort. It the U.S. Open by improving with currently on his third stint on the jeopardy as he attempts to re­ 90-4 record'with 74 knockouts into the bout, with a crushing left in full tilt in one season, the pitcher good as the year he won in 1979 with was McEnroe's first tournament each match. disabled list after partially tearing bound from the injury. . the Jhird round. The blow broke the champion’s nose and sent LaMarr Hoyt didn’t get injured, will either ignore a minor injury or the Cubs. since being upset by Kevin Curren a hamstring in a game against, ' UPl photo blood gushing down his face the rest of the fight. in the quarterfinals at Wimbledon "The more points, the more Atlanta in late May. but he slumped to 13 wins after bring one on by pitching so many Sutcliffe may still come back. six weeks ago. matches, the more minutes I spend " I don’t know if he’s jinxed; our winning 25 for the Chicago White innings. - even this year. He was 8-7 when he Philadelphia's Steve Carlton is among the several former "I was a little worried that on court will show up (in a strong - entire staff has had problems like Sox in winning the 1983 AL Cy Frey isn’t so sure there is one went on the DL for the third time. physically and mentally I couldn't showing) at the Open," he said. that, but it was tough," said Young award. Hoyt was traded reason. But chances are Sutcliffe will have Cy Young Award whiners who’ve come down with arm to wait until 1986 before he has a Russian sets high jump record put it together again,” McEnroe In the doublef'final, unseeded UPl photo Manager Jim Frey. last season and is enjoying a"'strong "You hear so much about miseries. Part of Carltons’ problems can also be David Pate and Scott Davis upset \ campaign with the San Diego pitching a guy too many innings or chance to get over any Cy Young DONETSK. Soviet Union — Rudolf Povarnit.sin of the Soviet said. ”I was worried about getting Sutcliffe isn’t the only pitcher in attributed to age but... myself in a rut” Davis Cup teammates Ken Flach recent history to have a sparkling P a d re s. having too many pitches," Frey Award jinx. . "* Union Sunday set a world record in the m eli's high jump of 2.40 , John McEnroe gets air as he lunges for a ball hit by Ivan 7 McEnore said he. was pleased and Robert Segnso, 3-6,>7-6 (7-5), meters (7-feet- lO'-'j) at the national Soviet^Union cup. Tass with his - serves, returns and 7-6 (7-0). Lendl in the finals of the Volvo International. reported. The 23-year-old’s mark was one centimeter better than the Mantle’s homer said longest previous record oU2.39 (7-10' O set June 10. 1984. by the Chinese Giants jumper. Zhu Jian Hua. in Eberstadt. West Germany, said Tass ' win and Sam worked together for 'giant-killer^ Bv Richard L. Shook the ,370-foot mark, "through the Evert Lloyd many years and knew each other united Pr,ess International light tower, deflecting off a pipe American cycies to Swedish titie and disappeared from sight, ” well. have to “ Baldwin showed Sam the pre­ Bv United Press International DETROIT — A Chicago man. a Susman said. It was hit into a ANDERSTORP. Sweden — American Freddie Spencer cise spot where Mantle’s drive self-professed Mickey Mantle buff, crosswind Sunday became the first man ever to win the world 2.'i0cc and landed on the fly. When I inter­ TORONTO — At 30 and in her . is claiming a 1960 home run belted "It was the longest ball I ever SOOcc m'otorcycling world championship.s-in the same year with viewed Sam he didn't hesitate an 14th year as a professional, Chris out of Tiger Stadium by the former saw,’’ Tigers broadcaster George his victory in the Swedish SOOcc Grand Prix be wary instant as he pinpointed the exact Evert Lloyd claims she is at the top New York Yankee great is the Kell told Susman. ”1 was just so^ Spencer, who clinched the 250cc world title last week, won landing site," Susman said. of her game. longest ever measured — 643 feet, impressed by this bjast” Sunday’s race on his Honda in 49 minutes 26.73 seconds, more, Her play Sunday did nothing to ,0069 inch. ^ Harwell told Susman "Mantle’s The Tigers’ Kirk Gibson hit a than 20 seconds ahead of his fellow countryman. Eddie Lawson. dispute that notion. Bv Dave Raffo Dr. Paul Susman, a clinical blast was about the longest we’ve home run over the' roof onto the The 23-year-old from Shreveport. La..-boosted his overall Evert Lloyd whipped giant-killer United Press International pyschologist in Skokie, 111., and seen” street.in 1983 but it was less jjhan standings to 141 points. 23 more than Lawson. wiJJj only the Sept . 1 Claudia Kohde-Kilsch of West Mark Gallagher did the measuring The late Ed Browalski of the 600 fee't. Tbe 1971 All-Star Game Imrtia race remaining in the season’s corjtpetition. Germany. 6-2. 6-4. in the finals of EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J - Polish Daily News and veteran ■ 1 r." . ■ . , and interviewing while Bob Schie- home run Reggie' Jackson hit y the $280,000 Canadian Open. Any optimism the New York wie, a mathematics expert, app­ Detroit newspaperman Edgar would have been in the 600-foot The triump boosted her 1985 - Giants have about coming off their lied the Pythagorean Theorem to Hayes decided to deterrnine where category had it not struck the On The Road AgairriA/ins again earnings to $692,569 surpassing second playoff season in 21 yeark is come up’with the final distance. the ball landed at the time and told transformer housing on the light her previous record of $689,458 set tempered by memories of three Susman an eyeWitness, the late tower in right center and bounced M ONTREAL — On The Road Again picked up the 38th victory "I.had always been a tremend­ in 1982. seasons ago. ous Mantle fan most of my growing Paul Baldwin, told them the bull back onto the field. 1 . „ of his 49-race career Sunday with an im pressive quarter-length "I’ve had the best year of my Parallels between the 1981 and years," Susman told U Pl from his cleared 110-foot wide Trumbull "M ost of his (Mantle’s) longest 5 win in the $133,000 Bluebonnet Challenge career," Evert Lloyd said. “ 1 know 1984 seasons Can't be ignored. The Skokie, 111 , office. "I heard this Avenue adjacent to Tiger (then homers were obstructsd by lights, r"' The sensational pacer owned by Blue Chip Partners of Wall kill. I am getting -to the end of my Giants finished 9-7, made the particular home run on the radio Briggs) Stadium and landed in the roofs or something," Susman said. N.Y.. covered the mile in 1:.53 4-.S. pushing hiS career earnings in career, but I’m concentrating ■ playoffs as a wild c'ard team, won and was so entranced by Ernie Brooks Lumber Yard across the "U nspent more than two years of excess of $2.3 million. more and 1 have confidence going their first postseason game and Harwell’s description I always street. research on this.” ' -- Because he would have been the favorite in the field of six. On into the (U.S.) Open. were eliminated by league cham­ » 4 1 1 1’^ "W e found a lumberyard worker remembered it. " Some of Susman’s work has the Road Again was taken off the betting board as he beat This was Evert Lloyd’s second pion San Francisco in both , Mantle clubbed the memortible named Sam Cameron who has appeared in a Baseball Digest Greener Pastures at the wire. straight Canadian Open title. The seasons. home run off Detroit’s Paul been a long-time dependable em­ article on Mantle’s home runs. He Supreme Jade finished third for the place money, while the victory was worth $40,000. It was In 1982, the Giants fell to 3-6 in the Foytack on Sijpt. 10, 1960. The ball ployee of the Brooks Lumber now plans a book on the same topic. show money was paid out for fourth i^ace Aerobatic Evert Lloyd’s 139th career tourna­ strike-shortened season and lost went overthe right-field roof above Y ard," Susman sa|id. "Paul Bald­ ment title qnd gives her the No. 1 Coach Ray Perkins to Alabama. computer ranking for the U.S. Bill Parcells, entering his .third West German swims'^to sixth medal Open later this month. year as head coaclr, was defensive Fifth-seeded Kohde-Kilsch re­ coordinator under Perkins and SOFIA. Bulgaria — West German Michael Gross Sunday ceived $20,000. remembers 1982. collected his sixth gold medal of the European Swimming Rohde-Kilsch, a 6-foot serve- " I ’m under no illusions. ” said Championships thanks to a dramatic disqualification in the final and-volley player had staged the Parcells, who suffered through a • event of the competition. , upset of the tournament Friday 3-12-1 rookie season before turning The Soviet Union just beat the West Germans to the touch in the when she defeated second-seeded things around last year. "E very UPl photo 4xl00-meter medley relay but were disqualified for a faulty Martina Navratilova in a three-set year’s different, it’s a struggle, change-over. quarterfinal. It was only Navratil­ “ It’s like building a race car,.you Harold LeMaster, 70, stands amidst a seas of his Mirror ^ Gross hauled the West German squad to within'half a second of ova's fourth loss of the year. get it up to where you’re going 200 UPl photo Lures in a work area of his plant in Largo, Fla. mtoiAS* the Soviet team with his excellent butterfly leg. He then watched - Evert Lloyd said Kohde-Kilsch miles per hour and some other guy i ^ anxiously as compatriot Alexander Showtka tried but failed to 'Was noticeably tired after Satur­ Top se§d Chris Evert Lloyd reaches fora Claudia Kohde-Kilsch during the final of comes along and goes 202” day’s. tough two-set semifinal With quarterback Phil Simms catch Vladimir Tkachenko on the fingl freestyle leg. forehaM as she returns the ball to the Canadian Open. It looked; Ijj^e silver for the W esf (Germans, who had not victory over fourth-seeded Helena finally healthy, the Giants put the expected to'win. But after a LS-minute examination of films and Sukova of Czecho^ovakia. petal to the metal last season. "I think I got Claudia on a day "the greatest of my career. West German was down break "A t 4-4, I thought if I could just Simms had the first full season of Fish lure inventor records of the race, the judges disqualified the Sovi« squad when she was affected by those " I think I used some points a point four times before she was «o ld my serve I could get back into because Tkachenko went too soon on the final change-ov^r. his six-year career in' 1984, setting tough matches,” E ven Lloyd said. littlO bit today and I couldn't able to hold her serve and go up 1-0. the match,” the 21- year-old teams records for attemps (.533) r- It was a rccord-Ureaking sixth gold medal for-jGross. who "Mentally I ’ve had an easier time concentrate as much aS I usually Kohde-Kilsch was down 4-3 in the Kohde-Kilsch said. "But in the completions ’ -(286) and passing earlier in the week set a world record by adding the 200-meter this week. I really didn’t expect her can." second set, but broke Evert Lloyd important moments Chris hit great yardage (4,044) while throwing 22 is into ‘swingers’ butterfly title to the 100-meter butterfly and 200-meter freestyle to come out 100 percent.” The opening game of the first set in the eighth game to draw even. shots. touchdowns.. titles and freestyle relay golds ho had won. Kohde-Kil.sch, who won a tourna­ established the tone for the 90> ^ Evert L^loyd returned the favor in Evert Lloyd now turns her Also encouraging was the devel­ Harold LeMaster. " I didn’t know ment in Los Angeles last week, minute final. The game went to the ninth game without giving up a attention to the U.S, Open, which Bv Ird Kaufman opment of .the Giants young much about tbe business world, but MUFFLERS ‘Hot Rod’ Williams stands trial / said the past two weeks have been deuce nine times. The powerful point, to go up 5-4. begins Aug. 26. United Press International receivers, as third-year tight end 1 sure knew how to make lures. I Zeke Mowatt and second-year NEW 'ORLEANS — The Tulane University point-shavtng LARGO, Fla. — After a lifetime designed my first lure when I was wide receiver Bobby Johnson tied scandal that rocked college basketball could be unraveled of luring, 70-year-old Harold LeM ­ 16 and I caught two wall-eyed pike ■for the team lead with 48 catches Monday as NBA draftee John "Hot Rod” Williams goes on trial NFL roundup aster is finally into swinging. with It. I made my first jointed lure on charges he-accepted cocaihe and cash from gamblers. each .• In the latest innovation he has in 1937 and that produced much A Tulane player and three other Tulane students already have In hopes of improving a running offered to L&S Bait Company Inc., greater action. We also put eyes on Two front or pleaded guilty inthesch‘?me. Williams. a6-foot-10Tulanecenter. game that ranked 25th in the N FL .company founder LeMaster has dur lures while all the others just Regular two rear wheels (most cars) - is the first suspect to stand trial with four others scheduled for with 1,660 yards, the Giants designed a revolutionary swinger ^painted eyes on." ' lose All-Pro guard drafted George Adams of Ken­ blade which he says significantly Another LeMaster irinovjition later hearings. tucky in the first round and signed increases the effectiveness of came in 1952 when he designed <29r Williams. 23. had been set to face a six-person jury beginning -Regular ^7 4 ?® Maurice Carthon from t$)e USFL fishing lures. The Vibrating blade reflectors for his lures that "acted Aug. but his attorneys gained a last-minute delay to study new Bv United Press International really come on and got the Angeles Rams squeezed by Hous­ Team rosters eontinue to be in a New Jersey Generals, They'll join creates tail propulsion and flash like mirrors, thrdwing light and evidence. Orleans Parish Criminal Judge Alvin Oser Wednesday recognition he deserves in the last ton 7-3, San Francisco beat the Los state of flux wtih Houston and . incumbent starters Rob Carpenter that has made LeM asier’s lure sparkle in the water. ” THE ECONOMIZER denie'd a request for an additional delay. Exhibition losses, are not sup­ few years.” Angeles Raiders 28-21, Philadel­ Seattle adding players. BRAKE SPECIAL •and Joe Morris. popular with most varieties of LeMaster’s latest invention, the In appeals of Oser’s ruling. Louisiania's Supreme Court Friday posed to be very painful and foi; . Bud Grant, head coach of the phia trounced the New York Jets Running back Dwayne Crutch­ The offensive line will feel the gamefish. The new blades have swinger blade, has him very DRUM BRAKES voted 4-3 to affirm rulings by the judge and the state 4th Circuit Miami Dolphins coach Don Shula Vikings from 1967-83 before-retir­ 37-17, Kansas City topped Cincin­ MUFFLER DISC BRAKES field joins Houston for the second loss of center Kevin Belcher, quickly become standard equip­ buoyant. (2 Frofrt or 2 Soar Wfioolt) V Court of Appeal that upheld the state’s sports bribery law and the final score was not what hurt ing last year, enjoyed a successful nati 35-27 and Pittsburgh overpo­ (2/ronl Of a Hoof Whoolo) time in his four-year career and injured in an'offseason car acci­ ment on most of the company’s ’'I never want to retire because dfenied-Williams a separate trial for each of the three games he is the most. •return. wered Tampa Bay 42-27. • Free 4-wheel brake • Free 4-v^‘cet brake the Oilers also packed up defensive dent, and tackle Bill Roberts, who lures. that means you’re dead," he says, INSTALLATION INCLUDED In dropping a pre-season game It was a strong victory for a club On Friday night, St. Louis beat ■ inspection inspection , • accused of helping fix or conspiring to fix. lineman Reggie Lewis. hurt his knee in camp. The "A ll these designs come out o f ' standing up from his chair. “ I ’m to the Minnesota Vikings 16-13 in which endured season-long prob­ Chicago 10-3 and Detroit played • Replace pads with pew • Replace .shoes with new Williams’ lawyers had a^gued the state’s sports bribery law strength of the unit should be the my head," says LeMaster, who always trying to figure olit some­ The Economizer muffler from Midas fits overtime Saturday night, the Dol­ lems under Les, Steckel in 1984.' Buffalo to a lO-lf^ tie. St. Louis will be at the Los guaranteed disc pads guaranteed linings was unconstitutional as applied to someone accused of taking a right side of guard Chris Godfrey still keeps th^ hand-carved wood thing new that will help people phins also lost Ed Newman, their However, Grant wouldn’t allow A t the Orange -Bowl, Jan Angeles Rams Thursday night to (Dost American-made cars and trucks. Your • Resurface rotors • Resurface drums bribe. and tackle Karl Nelsoq. lures he devised in 1937. “ You don’t catch,more fish. All of a sudden$ • Inspect wheel cylinders All-Pro offensive guard, for the himself to fully enjoy the triumph. Stenerud helped make Grant’s begin next weekend’s slate of satisfaction with this product is assured. • Replace grease seJis The Supreme Court also refused Friday to order that Williams Lawrence "taylor, the most makle'it in this business by copying analyzed the idea of a swinger Inspect and repack • Inspect hold down 2 season with a knee injury, Shula While admitting he was glad to be return a happy one when he kicked exhibitions, with Detroit at Seattle 2 be given information his attorneys say is needed to prepare for feared defender in football, re­ blade and (jKored it out in my springs said Newqaan may be unable to /back. Grant complained, “ Nothing the following night. Next Saturday other peo'ple. 1 first picked up a wheel bearings a 25-yard field goal with 8:32 left in turns at the weakside outside mind. I visualized it in April and a • Llibncate backing plates his trial. - • play football again. has changed, even the officiating." night it Will be Houston at New fishing pole at age 15 and my school • Inspect calipers overtime-^After winning the toss to linebacker spot. Taylor, who led month later, we had it on virtually Guarantee: The Economizer Muffler is • Inspect hydraulic system • Inspect hydraulic system Newman underwent an arthros­ Grant contends that Miami gets Orleans, Indianapolis at Chicago, was right out there on the water," start tW extra session, the Vikings the team with lU/i sacks in the all our models. • Lubricate caliper anchors • Readjust brakes copic examination of his knee ■preferential treatment from the the Jets at Cincinnati, Philadel­ LeMaster started his plant here warranted by Midas for one year from the Marauder upsets NIhllator drove 72 yards in 11 plays, with regular season and 3'/i more in the "Fishing’s the best escape in the • Inspect- (luid levels • Road test Sunday, which showed a partial referees because Shula is on the phia at Cleveland, Atlanta at in 1948 and until a decade ago his date of iristaliation and will be replaced Allen Rice gaining 21 yards on four playoffs, will be joined by Byron world," he says. "My advice to '• Add (luid i( required MEADOW LANDS. Pa. — Marauder was the upset winner over tear of the medial eollaterab NFL competition committee. ■ T^mpa Bay, Buffalo at Miami, baits were also made in Bradley, and Archie Manning completing Hunt, Carl Banks or Andy Headen people just staring put is to get free of charge if it fails during this period. • Road test prohibitive favorite Nihilator in the $242,400 Adios Pace ligament and a full tear of the ' In other exhibition games Satur-' Green Bay at the Giants, New 111,, where LeMaster and former two passes (or 36 yards. on the other side. Pro Bowler yourself a spinning rod and peel • Metallic pads extra anterior cruciate ligament. He will day. New Orleans defeated New England aUKansas City, Pitts­ partner Phil Schriner began pro­ Saturday, but the 3-year-o'ld’s winning trip around The Meadows’ Miami had a chance to Win with Harry Carson and second-year' and observe what other people are Ouarantea: M k ln braka ih o M atsd ditc brake pan* ara undergo surgery Tuesday. E n g la n d 32-20, W ash in gton duction in 1937. LeMaster’.s son. oval was anticlimatic. < 11 seconds remaining in regula- burgh at Minnesota and Dallas at man Gary Reasons will play doing out there. Observation is warranted for aa long aa you own your American or. fonalan "When you'lose a guy that’s a stopped Atlanta 17-14, the New San Diego. Bill, Is company presideiit and 80 Though Marauder became just the second horse to defeat ,tion, but rookie Fuad* Revlez was Inside. your best help. Soon ydu’ ll forget n r. van or IlghI truck (under 14,000 Iba.) It they ever wear out. Pro Bowl ballplayer, that’s some­ York Giants beat Denver 30-20, San percent pf production comes from new MIdaa brake aboiaa or pada w ll be InataUod witbout Nihilator by taking the first heat of the Adios in a world wtde left with a 41- yard field goal On Sunday, Washington will be All-Pro cornerback Mark all your troubles. If you’re bo­ thing that really hurts^" Shula Diego edged Cleveland 12>7, Dallas a plant in Costa Rica. charge for the ahoaa or pads or the labor to InstaM tha aboaa record-tying tim e of 1:52 1-5. he won the blanket of orchids by the attempt. Revlez had tied the score at the Raiders and the following Haynes’ holdout leaves a void in< thered by hypertension, fishing said. "H e ’s just been a real solid defeated Green Bay 27-3, Indiana­ " I had a little knowledge and orp^,A d(lltloiial partaand/orlabor risquirad to raafora tha harness racing equivalent of a default. in the fourth quarter with a-W-yard night it will be Denver at San the secondary. Until he comes Phjl had a little money,” says will drop it 20 points, easy." Offer expires 8/26/85 ayalam to operational condition are extra. guy for us over the years. He’s polis beat Seattle 19-7, the Los field goal. ^ Francisco. back,', Kenny Daniel on Elvis Bloom fM d 243-M30 MIddlalown 647-6100 WaMIngford 208-0066 Houk grabs wrestling crown Patterson will fill his,left corner- Branford 4S1-23M Haw Britain 224-6167 Watarbury 707-0366 back spot. Cornerback Perry Willi­ Brlatol N2-79B3 ’ Naw Havan 660-6111 W jtarbury, ams and safeties Terry Kinard and MANCHESTER MIDGET FOOTBALL OSLO. Norway — Michael Houk of the United States Sunday E. Hartford - liaiM London 447-1711 (WoldotlBt.) 766-7661 Bill Elliott wins ninth NASCAR event Bill Currier are the other returning 622-0171 won the light heavyweight title in the m ajor upset of the World ] First Practice and Late Registration Enflold 74B-030S Norwich 666-6463 W. HarMord ■ starters, Qrpfon Rocky HIM 066-1607 Waat Havan 064-2020 Greco-Roman Wrestling Championships.' where East Blot Bv Richard Ghook^ 445-S129, five seconds in the 400-mlle event caution flag and, less than 40 laps Champions, nosed out Gant for ,. Nose, tackle Jim Burt and ends Hamdon 24E-6327 Southington 621-6663 Wllllmantlo 460-1706 cometitors figured in all but two of the eight finals. United Presa International Monday, August 12,1985 at Mienrg.an International later, he was back in the top five. second. Leonard Marshall and Curtis N. Hartford 246-4«2t Torrtnflton il62-7647 B. Hartford 240-8127 Speedway. M cGriff make up the defensive' IJWe’re better than_ w e^^fv8i\ at 6 P.M. Manotioator 646-4606 . Vamon 676-4640 • BROOKLYhfTMich. - Bill Elli­ He set a record in qualifying, With the aid of another caution line, with George Martin playing flag, Elliott won his 11th race in his been, ” Waltrip said, “ but we’r e ' Bob rolls to bike title ott wins races when he starts first, 165.4’76 mph, but an unscheduled on passing downs. last 22 with an average speed of still running second.' We’ve helped Martin SchodI he wins when he starts last. All. fiftp-lap pit stop to change his left Parcells is iooking for ipprove- V A IL, Colo. — Bob Roll of Pleasant Hills, Calif., won the ninth 137.430 mph. the motor, we’ve helped the car. that’s left is for him to try from a front tire and smooth out a dented ment in both his kicking and stop By For A Free Inspection And Written Estimate Today. of 16 stages in the Coors International Bicycle Classic Sunday, We’ve done everything we can do. ” Dartmouth Rd. different race track. fender mov'ed him to the back of punting game. AH Haji-Sheikh, the beating Stephan Guay of France by five lengths, in the 50-mile Waltrip, who made a miscalcula­ Exce|| figure out how to beat Your Estimate Is Our Promise. can Elliot won his ninth NASCAR the 40-car field. Giants’ main offensive weapon in Vail Criterium. tion Saturday that cost him $75,000 Elllot;^bo won $57,600 that aa- Boys ages 10 thru 13^ t i a o event in 18 races this year Sunday, The mild collision that dented I W , slumped last year and hit just when he finished fourth to Harry sured him a NASCAR beating Darrell Waltrip by nearly aiBgla> Elliott’s fender came during a Gajnt in the International Race of season earnings record. 17 af n Held goal attempts. J

, MANCHESTER HERALD, Monday Aug. 12. 1985 - 17 18 - MANCHESTER HERALD. Monday, Aug. 12, 1985 > Advice FOCUS Edueation, research are key About Town lllnes^ from to prevention, cUre of AIDS •9 WATES meet at Orange Hall ticf(s on rise Manchester \fATES will meet Tuesday at V p.m. at DEAR under way. Orange Hall, 72 E. Center St. Members will be READERS: If All sexually active people should weighed between 6 ahd 7 p.m. you have no in­ avoid sex with multiple parlueis: terest in AIDS, They should also avoid eonlaet in Northeast what it is, how with semen (Condoms, loi pxam Overeaters meet Wednesday people get it. Dear Abby pie, may ofler some lU'oleeUon I BOSTON (UPI) — A rupid increase in the number of how w id e s ­ It IS important lor all ol us in (he tick-borne"illnesses. particularly in the Northeast but Overeaters Anonymous will meet Wednesday at 8 pread it is. and Abigail Van BtSren human family to show compassion in other parts of the country as well, has public health p.m. in the. meeting room-cafeteria of Manchester how to protect and understanding to the victims specialists concerned. Memorial Hjospital. yourself from of AIDS. They should not he Of particular concern is Lyme disease, an illness Overeaters Anonymous is not a diet ciub. It foliows becoming a vic­ avoided or ignored. 1 repeat. AIDS first identified during ah epidem if in Lyme, Conn., in the principles of Alcoholics Anonymous in helping tim, skip this cannot bo "caught " by touching or column. In an 1975, whjch sometipifs leads to long-term heart pfeople deal with problems underlying compulsive contact other than sexual And effort to get the facts, 1 consulted sexual intercourse with a person disease and arthritis. eating. although about 70 percent of the Since its identification, Lyme disease has been Dr. Michael Gottleib, the eminent who has been infected by the AIDS AIDS victims arc homosexual (qund in 14 slates mostly Concentrated in the UCLA immunologist who disco­ virus. While most cases have men. It is not strictly a homosexual Northeast, upper Midwest and the Pacific coast. vered the AIDS'syndrome in 1981. occurred among homosexual or disease. Also, of concern is bftbesiosis, a generally,^mild Miss Venus contest set The information in this column bisexual men who have had was confirmed by an information multiple partners. AIDS is not AIDS victims should be visited illness that can turn deadly when Victims are 60 years Women ages 17 to 29 who have never been married officer at the Centers for Disease exclusively a homosexual disease. by their friends and relatives. or older, especially if their spleens' have been may enter'the Miss Connecticut-Venus USA Contest Control in Atlanta. An increasing number of cases is There is no danger to anyone who removed or are malfunctioning. . set Aug. 23 to 25 at Treadway Cromwell Hotel m "W e're beginning to sec thousands of cases a year, What is AIDS? It is the name for being found among heterosexual visits or cares for a person who has said Dr. Andrew Spielman, a. professor of tropical Cromwell Acquired Immune Deficiency Syn- (Straight) men and women. All AIDS I repeat. AIDS is transmit­ public health at the Harvard School of Public Health, For- information and application blanks, contact dome, a virus that attacks and sexually active men and women, ted by sexual interaction with a who is the leading authority on the transmission of Lee Vine, pagehnt director, at 374-6030 between 10 destroys the ,immune system, gay or straight, should be person who has it. Hugging, these two diseases. a.m. and 6 p.m, Monday through Saturday or write to leaving its victims vulnerable to concerned. caressing, holding, shaking hands Both are transmitted to humans by a tick called Vine, Box 1350 SMS, Fairfield. 06430. totoetions and innumerable dis- The virus is also "Spread by with or being in cTose.contact with Ixodes dammini. Also called the Northern deertick, it * ^ s e s , including types of cancer. sht#red contam inated needles a victim will not put one at risk ol The state winner will receive a Caribbean vacation How widespread is AIDS? The among dj^ug abusers. Also through being contaminated. lives its adult life on deer. for two, and will be eligible t o . compete^^ for a The lick's dependence 6n deer explains why the epidemic is almost worldwide. blood products given to hemophili­ DoiTrassumc that every person It’s a polka party. scholarship in the national contest in Bridgeport. who has AIDS is sexually promis- 2 disease is becoming more common. By the turn of the Since 1981, more than 12,000 cases acs and other recipients of blood century the northern deer had almost 'been eliminated have been diagnosed in the United Some good news: Transmission .cuous. One contact (even years the Polish National Home in Hartford, ago) with someone who had it is John Jeski's Polka Party will perform,at from the Northeast because the'area's forests.Jtiad LTM holds ‘Celebration’ casting States alone, of which nearly half Through blood Is expected to over WRYM-AM radio. The audience is beetp cut dowA for farming. have died from it. It is epidemic in decease since the screening of sufficient to infect a person. A wile the Manchester Bicentennial Band Shell A‘s farming became le.ss common in the Northeast, The Little Theater of Manchester will hold its final Central Africa and Haiti, and has blood donors to delect the- AIDS can get it innocently from a on the Manchester Commun,ity College invited tb wear soft-soled shoes and join the forests regrew and the deer became ^bundant open casting tonight at 7:45 at the theater workshop, ' also spread to Europe'dvi Austra­ virus began in early 1985. bisexual husband who had been campus on Tuesday at 7 p.rn. Jeski, who the performers in polkas on the band once again. 210 Pine St., Mr-the musical "Celebration." lia. It is estimated that 500,000 to 1 How AIDS is not spread: There is infected years ago by an AIDS shell'e new dance floor. The polka party . absolutely no evidence that AIDS victim. sings and plays the accordion, broad­ Other ticks arc spreading comn|on' tick-borne million people have already been will be Thursday in case of, rain. diseases such asequine-encephalitiff, Rocky-Mountain There are foi/r m ajor roles, three men and one exposed to the virus. All individu­ is spread by casual contact with / How can one obtain more infor­ casts a program Sundays at noon from spotted fever and canine heart w.orrn, which m ^ be young woman. There are also roles for chorus, both als exposed do not necessarily infected individuals. It cannot be mation about AIDS? A national transmitted to humans by mosquito. men and women. , succumb to AIDS, but they do have spread by sharing towels, food or hotline with an informative record­ ing can be reached by calling (800.) "They appear with alarming regularity in New Many roles are suitable for high w.hol and college an .increased risk of developing it. eating utensils with a person who 342-AlDS. Many cities have a local England and some are deadly," said an article in the students. Students from Manchesfdb and other area There can be an incubation period has AIDS. Neither can it be spread AIDS information hotline. Your Health Sciences Report, published by the Harvard high schools and colleges are welcorhe to try out, said of several years between exposure by touching, hugging or body AIDS diagnosis is catastrophic telephone operator can adviseyou. School of Public Health. "Disastrous epidemics are David Newirth, LTM president. to the virus and the development of contact other than sexual possibler in the view of heallh'authoritiesand Harvard AIDS, but the exact period of time intimacy. Now, you know as much about scientists." Rehearsals for “ Celebration" will begin on Sept. 4. is not known. What can be done about AIDS? A AIDS as I. And if you know Bv Al Rossiter J re­ the Alcohol. Drug Abuse and hopeless, have low self-esteem, Even if the deer were eliminated the problem would They will be held on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday How is Albs transmitted? The massive national program of pub­ someone who can use this informa­ united Press International Mental Health Administration. and may withdraw,...... or isolate not be solved. and Friday evenings tbtpughout September. Rehear­ most significant route is by anal lic education as wel| as continuing tion. please pass it along. The virus responsible for the themselves from society. "The potential for epidemics of animal-to-man sals will be held on Monday, Wednesday^ and Friday sex, oral sex and “ old-fashioned" research for a vaccine is now ABBY WASHINGTON - A djugnosis ol . disease that cripples the- body's "Anger directed toward the disease is increased by current adaptations by «venings in October. AIDS can be doubly devastating to defenses against infection cun be illness, medical care, discrimina­ wildlife," said Spielman "Ractoons and skunks have "Celebration" will be presented at East Catholic X a palKmt, according to a psychia­ .spread by sexual contact, by tion and pitfilic response to the become more numerous in the cities of the Northeast. High School ailditorium on Oct. 25 and 26, and Npv.'l ' trist who has studied victims of the contaminated needles- used by disease is Often intense." Opossums, once seen only in the South, are becoming and 2, • . t It’s hard to be all ‘salt-free’ disease. intravenous drug abusers and There frequently is discrimina­ adapted to New Tlngland. Those who come to the casting are advised to wear The diagnosis carries its own occasionally by Iranfusions of tion in housing, jobs, health, care "Even the desert arriiadillo, host of leprosy, is suitable clothing and footwear, for dancing. psychological weight because blood donated *by a person with and public assistant programs extending its range into colder and moist regions.The J D E A R DR. less " food dyes can cause life- AIDS is usually fatal. In addition, AIDS or use of products derived because of fear of contagion and new nonhurnan residents of the Northeast threaten to GOTT: Is it safe threatening reactions in persons however, patients may also suffer from donaled'blood. , . also prejudicial feelings about the share their diseases with the human inhabitants. " for . a healthy who are sensitive to them. Person­ rejection and feelings of guilt When AIDS is diagnosed. Hol­ perceived lifestyle of the: victim. A Harvard investigators strongly suspect thut migra­ person to be on ally. 1 agree with your position that because of the social implications land said, it may create a crisis in "These irrational fears and tory birds are responsible for the movement of the Births a salt-free diet? all components of a medication — of the disease and unfounded fears which a man's otherwise private negative responses of the public ticks” into new regions. Gan doing with­ Dr. Gott or a processed food, for that matter of contagion. sexual p’reference is revealed are a continuing problem which Lyme disease begin.s as a red area of skin that out salt cause — should be listed on the container. Health cure workers and even publicly, or it may bring public Herald photo by Tarquinio are confronted daily by patients, enlarges slowly around a darker central portion problems? Peter Gott, M D. I suppose the reason this isn't done family may *hun patients, afraid identification of the person as a Bilodequ, Kyle James, son of Michelle (Dvorak) families and advocacy groups," where the tick bite first occurred. This phase is is that it is too "expensive" and loo they might catch the syndrome. drug abuser. Melting moments and Russell Bilodeau of Wallingford, was born July 8 Holland said. accompanied by fever, headache, painful joints and at Yale-New Haven Hospital, New Haven. His DEAR much "trouble " for the manufac­ "Painfufenough foV adults, even "Hemophiliacs and blood trans- malaise, with occasional chills. Brian Girouard, 2'/2, finds the sun. bright certificates of accomplishment maternal grandparents are Mr.' and Mrs. •Tierman READER: turers. You know, that sort of children with AIDS have become fusion'recipients receive the most She said the need for care by- others in a home, hospice or Symptoms are often absent in babesiosis, but'may josa wivj successfully completed Dvorak Of 203 Mountain Road. His 'paternal Salt-free means thing. Maybe the drug companies isolated . from schools and from ■symp ithetjc response due to the include malaise, muscular'pain, and chills. Jaundice — but he enjoys his icQ cream sandwich different things are reluctant to list all ingredients -other children by frightened par­ perceived random nature of the nursing home, together with finan­ H grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Russell Bilodeau of and enlargement of the spleen have been reported in a anyway. Brian accompanied his mom, rary's summer reading program. 180 Ferguson Road. His paternal great-grandparents to different people We all need advise healthy people to go without for fear you wouldn't buy 'the ents. " said Dr. Jimmie Holland, exposure." she said. cial ruin, "m ay erode the patient's few cases. ‘ . - Kay Girouard of Hyde Street, to the There was even an unexpected visit are Rose Bilodeau and Susan Woodward,- both of sonie salt, but for those people who salt, although they may wish to cut product if you know what was in it. chief of the psychiatric service al Homosexual AIDS patients al.so sense of prior social and profes­ down on obviously salty foods. Health experts recommend that pedple who expect Mary Cheney Library’s end-of-summer from the town fire department to answer Bristol. retain inordinate amounts in their, the Memorial Sloan-Keltering often feel guilt th allheirw ayoflife sional rtfle. to be in tick-infested areas wear long pams lucked into systems, restriction is There is one exception. Premen­ DEAR DR. GOTT: Can diabetics Cancer Cente/ in New York. brought on their troubles and from "For JUDS patients, who have their socks. They should check themselves frequently ice cream party on Friday. There were^ a false alarm. appropriate. strual syndrome may be helped if use fructose safely? Is it really that "People are afraid of them." • concern that their sexual behavior often seen friends through these Begin, Jessica Tracy, Marc and Anita for ticks and if foftnd remove them immediately. two cartoons, ioe cream sandwiches for It's alrriost impossjble to avoid those women who have it make an different from regular sugar? AIDS most often occurs in may endanger others. clinical stages to death, the ad­ (Tracy)' Begin Of ^Vernon, was >orn July 23 at eating salt. All meajs. and fish effort to reducesubslantially their homosexual men and Holland said "The emotions associated with vanced and terminal stages of Manchester Memorial Hospital. The maternal contain it, as do dairy products and dietary salt during the few .days DEAR READER: Glucose is the most people who are told they have harboring a conta'gious agent iwsy- diseasiy. are apt to be especially grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Tracy of Supermarket Shopper vegetables. Processed foods con­ before their periods. sugar with which diabetics have fhe disease have been worrying cause the AIDS patient to feel like frightening and painful Warehouse Point. The paternal grandmother is Lois tain large amounts of salt. So going trouble. Fruit sugar or fructose is. about it for months^ 'a l^ e r , '" she said. 'The multiple losses of job. Begin of 47 Hoffman Road. The baby has a brother, on a truly salt-free diet is virtually , DEAR DR. GOTT: FDA regula­ for the diabetic, safe in modera- "They're in a high-risk grpupTso- ■— -Hwlfmd said many AIDS pa­ strength, social role, mental acuity Matthew,-14 months. impossible, without starving. tion is allegedly stringent — but tiqji. Like any *sugar, however, it's like the shoe finalljyJropped, " tients talk of suicide, alQiough few and independence are psychologi­ why doesn't the agency require- fructose supplies calories; for the she said at a seminar sixinsored by carry it out. They are sad, feel cally devastating, " she said. Stores are paid for refund displays Plank, Joseph Richard, son of Gary R. and Debra Normal people will excrete that (irug manufacturers list all weight-conscious patient, fructose (Black) Plank of 127 Wethbrell St., wasborn July 24at whatever salt is not required for ingredients? Many over-the- .calories must be figured iii the Manchester, Memorial Hospital. The maternal metabolism. Within reason, salt is counter items must contain sugar, daily allotment. Bv Martin Sloane grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Lester Black of 92 not harnjful for healthy adults. Salt sodium, etc., ,that some people ■1 Thoughts United Feature Syndicate Clip ’n’ file refunds SCHERING qORP. CHLOR-TRIMETON $1 Linwood Drive. The paternal grandparents are Mr. depletion, however, is a dangerous Should avoid, but labels only list Refund Offer. Send the required refund forth and and Mrs. Buckeley Plank of Glastonbury. condition which can result from "a c tiv e " or.major ingredients. Send your questions to Dr. Gott DEAR M ARTIN; On a recent ti^p W the store, I lose contact with good people who reasonable tendencies with a'more the Chlor-Trimeton name cut out from the front excessive sweating or profuse at P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH ■ It is a rare human who does not noticed a fresh pad of refund forms. The form on top, Health Products (File llA ) might have been your friends. Due .realistic philosophy of life and a panel of any size (except trial size) Chlor- Casey, Christopher WlJIlam, son of Robert J. and diarrhea. Salt restriction can be DEAR READER: I don't know. 44101. Due to .volume of mail, occasionally find self torn between which was differenfTrom the rest, said "Special $1 Clip out this file and keep it with similar to past experience, your unreason­ firmer faith in God's fatherly Trimeton Allergy Relief product package. Carol (O'Donnell) Casey, of 48B Drive, was more debilitating than'salt abun­ Some "inactive" ingredients maj^ individual questions cannot be unreasoning wants, feelings, and Display Rebate Certificate." On the. back of the cash-off coupons — beverage refund offers with ing emotions may cast ‘ your involvement in everything that Expires Sept. 30,1 983. born July 28 at Manchester Memorial Hospitaj. The dance: the normal human body turn out.to be "active." especially answered, Questions of general emotions on the one hand, and certificate were the words: "We hereby certify that beverage coupons, for example. Start collecting self-image in an unfavorable light. concerns your true well-being. He TYLENOL Free Band-Aid Offer. Receive a maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. William J. has much less difficulty handling in people who are allergic to them. interest will be answered in future intelligent desires, ideals, and we have displayed brand X along with the consumer the needed proofs of purchase while looking for You may sincerely feel that God did not create you to lose you, but to store coupon good for one free package of O'Donnell of Melrose, Mass. The paternal grandpar­ salt than the Ipck of itj^ I don't ,As an example,- certain "harm- columns judgment on the other. offer mail-in pad.' Beneath it, there wasa space to fill the required forms at the supermarket, in thinks the same about you. You assist you daily toward the eternal Band-Aid Brand Adhesive Bandages ($2 limit) ents are Mr. and M rs ^ o h n W. Casey of Franklin, / in the narnt and address of the store'. newspapers and magazines, and when trading may need to reflect often on the fulfillment for which your spirit Send the required refund form and the entire Mass, 'i’he baby has a brother, Robert John, 3, You may try to comply with the Are refailers paid by the manufacturers to display with friends. Offers may not be available bn all truth that "God is reasonable. He yearns. With Him you cannot fail, outer carton of any package of Adult Tylenol needs or wishes of others without the refund form pads? The pad I saw leads me to areas nf the country. Allow 10 weeks to receive will not burden you beyond your no matter how few your, talents. product (except trial size), along with the due regard for your own legitimate each refund. Diminico, Laura Ashley, daughter of Joseph and Why store Wine on its side? ’ how weak your good will, and how believe that they are, but if so, why are they so needs, limits or obligations, or you V strength, nor lest you beyond your The following refund offers are worth $9. This cash-register receipt with the purchase price Janice (Lavalle) Diminico of 33 Windemere St., was reluctant to display them? may build up unwarranted resent­ endurance."ndu It is not a matter of poor your daily performance. week's offers have a total value of J16.75. circled. Expires Sept. 30, 1985. born July 26 at Manchester Memorial Hospital. The ^UTH MESCHER longer to go through a bowl of ments toward those who merely "feelin g." It is a maU^C-Ot ” These offers require refund forms; Sinex/Inhdler Tissue Offer. Receive up maternal grandparents are Dorothy Lavalle of 13^ DEAR MANNING, IOWA popcoijnthis way. too! It's great seem to have no concern for your on God's part, and a matter of ANACIN $1 Cash R-efund Offer. Send the to a $1 refunthgood toward facial tissues. Send the Llynwood'Raod„ Bolton, and Oliver Lavalle ot 179 . P O L L Y ) Why for a long, rainy afternoon! well-being; or finally, you may feel “ faith" on y'our part. You can be Rev7 Philip A. Sheridan required refund form and the entire outer carton required refund form and the ^ t ir e front panel Middle Turnpike. The paternal grandmother is are wine bottles DEAR RUTH; Supermarkets do receive allowan­ Yopr helpful Pointer earns you obliged to withdraw indiscrimi­ more disposed to counterbalance J St. Bridget Church of Anacin 200's tablets or two cartons of Anacin from one package of any size of Sinex Regular, Josephine Diminico and the great-grandmother is stored on their ces from the manufacturers for putting up product the Pointer of the Week award, a nately from others, and thereby ybur negative emotions and. un­ Manchester 30's tablets, along with the cash-register receipt , Sinex Long-Acting or Vicks Inhales. Expires Maria Perrina, both of 39 Eldridge St. The paternal sides? Is this displays, and these displays often include paefs of liecessary? Pointers copy of my book "P olly's Pointers: with the purchase price circled. Expires Sept. 30, Sept. 30, 1985. great-grandfather 'is Ferdinand Diminico. The baby refund forms. PR 1081 Helpful Hints for Making 1985. Here's a refund form to write for: Up to a $3 has a.sister. Heather Marie Diminico, 5. A special ccrUficate, such as the one you noticed, is Everything Last Longer," Others sometimes used by the manufacturer to verify that DRISTAN $1‘Refund Offer. Send the required rebate. HOUSEHOLD PRODUCTS DIVISION Polly Fisher refund form and tile entire outer carton (box) of /3M, BTS REBATE, 223-4S 3M Center, St. Paul, DEAR ,P.R.: who would like this book can order the display was, in faet, put up. (In most cases, the Dudzlk, Shawn James, son of James and Kathleen Wine b ottles it for $6.50. Make check payable to Cinema clerk who simply tosses the pad of refund forms on the any size of Advanced Formula Dristan Tablets or MN 55144-1000. This offer-expires Oct. 31, 1985. , (Rocks) Dudzik of 82 Russell St., was bom July 29 at While waiting for the form, save the Universal sealed with tra­ Polly's Pointers and send to shelf will forget to tear off 'the special Display Rebate Capsules (except the 12's tin ), along with the Manchester Memorial. Hospital. The maternal Product Codes from the following Scotch Band ditional corks P olly’s Pointers, Box 1216, Dept. Certificate and give it to the store manager.) cash-register receipt with the purchase price grandparents are Mri and Mrs. Robert Rocks of Hartford v. Chariots of Fire 9:25. EVtro-TerrestrlalEkt (PG) 1:05, 3:20. — circled. Expires Sept. 30, 1985. packages: Four rolls of M a ^ -’Pgpes,- $1; two afre stored on 55, Cincinnati, OH 45201. Clnsina City — The Clinic tR) 7:20. Vernon * The Block Cauldron (PG) 1:05, 3:20, Glastonbury. The baby has two sifters, Kelly, 6, and CInel E l — Rambo: First Blood Port 7:05,9:10. The reason we don't see more displays is becauseof rolls of Mailing Tapes (strapping, package their sides so that the wine can drying out. It is also important to POLLV '9:15. - ir P r Iiil'i Honor (R) 7:10,9:35,— PERCOGESIC $3 Refund Offer. Send the Heather, 3'A. . The Gods M utt Be Crozv (PG) 7, 9:25. II (R) 7, 9:10. — St. Elmo's Fire (R) Wlhdsor. ' limited space. In each store, there are a limited required refund form and the full front panel from sealing, or package mailing), $1; three packages keep the cork moist. If the cork is store the wine in a cool, dry place — Mv New Partner (12) 7:30t9:45, 7:30,9:30. -piaia — The Black Cauldron (PG) 2, number of end-of-aisle or in-aisle locations that can a Percogesic analgesic50's or 90'spackage, along of Post-It Note Pads (50-sheet size only) or one allowed to dry out during long so that it ages instead of spoils. DEAR POLLY:'Whenever my West Hartlord 7.— Explorers (PG) 8:45. accommodate product displays. And when too many periods of storage, it may shrink or Cheers! kids get a box of crayons, the East Hartford E lm lE l — Rambo: First Blood Part with the cash-register receipt with the purchase Post-It Note Pads with free dispenser (catalog Werkhoven, Sean Stephen, son of Stephen P. and II (R1 2, 7,9:15. — The Black Cauldron Drive-lns; 2 displays are put up, ^hoppers find themselves Sandra L. (Zinsser) Werkhoven of 54 Lyness St., was crumble, destroying the seal. POLLY crayons end up being dumped ouU Eastwood Pub ft Clneiba — St. price circled. Expires Sept. 30, 1985. No. 213), »1. (PG) 2, 7. — St. Elmo's Fire (R) 7,9:15. Bost Windsor — My Science Prolect 2 Elmo's Fire (R) 7:30. bumping into them, and into each other. born July 25 at Manchester Memorial Hospital. The Obviously, inexpensive wines and the box ends up ripped and Poor Richard's Pub E Cinema — St. Wllllmantic (PG) 8:15 with Splash (PG) ID. that are sealed with screw caps do crushed. Now I put all the crayons Jlllson Square Cinema — Weird Manchester— Reopens Friday. maternal grandparents are State Sen. and Mrs. Gfirl D EAR PO LLY: When you make Elmo's Fire (R) 7:30, 9:30. Science (PG-13) 1:10, 3:10, 7:10, 9. — Monstleld — Summer Rental (PG) D E AR M AR TIN : Every Friday afternoon, our local Zinsser of 176 Ralph Road. The maternal graat- not need to be stored on their sides. popcorn for the kids, let them eat it in a large cookie tin. The crayons Showcase Cinomos — Pee-Wee's Bio Notlonol Lampoon's European Vaca-. with Witness (R) ot dark. — Silverado DEAR DIANE: Supermarkets that have checkout Adventure (PG) 12:45, 2:45, 4:45, 7:10, supermarket puts out its dented goods with prices lettering or the code number that appears underneath grandparents are Violet Zinsser of Manchester and Neither do bottles sealed with with chopsticks! This will teach are easy for all the kids to get at 9:40. — Real GenlustPG) 12,2:15,4:30, tlon (PG-13) 1:10,3; 10, 7:10,9. — Real (PG-13) with The Bio Chill (R) at dark. marked down for quick sale. When I pfSk up these cans counters equipped with electronic scanners will black the black-and-white bars. . plastic corks, such as many them how to use these "n ew ’.' without dumping them out. It's 7:20, 9:40. — Frioht NIoht (R) 1, 3:05, Genius (PG) 1,3:15, 7,9:15.— Back to — Sesame Street Presents: Follow Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Watson of Manchester. ’The the Future (PG) 1, 3:15, 7, 9:15. — That Bird (G) with The'Never Ending and boxes, I always find that the Universal Product out the Universal Product Code symbols on scratched 'I f you notice that a clerk has been overly champagne-type sparkling wines. utensils and keep them occupied also a lot easier for the kids to put 5:10, 7:40, 10. — Weird Science (PG) paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Theunis 12:45, 2:45,4:45,7:40,10. — Bock to the Friohl NIoht (R) 7:05,9:10. — E.T., the Story (PG) at dark. C ^ e symbols have been scratched out. and dented items in order to prevent the cashiers from enthusiastic with a marker pen, include a bit more of Werkhoven of 88 Santlria Drive. The paternal In fact, if you’re only keeping a for a long time. Chopsticks are free thecrayons back into the cookie tin Future(PG) 12,2:15,4:30,7:10,9:45. -r- inadyertantly^Tiassing tMese items over the electronic the package or label, s,o there is no question that the great-grandmother is Sophie Bush of Manchester. bottle for a few weeks, you don't * when you eat out at Chinese or than to struggle with a sma-U box. Notlonal Lampoon's European Vaca­ • ( When'the manufacturer asks consumers to send in a scanner (which would ring them up at the regular Universal Product Code came from the proper really need to store it on its side, Japanese restaurants. DEBBIE tion (PG-13) 1,3, 5,7:30, tO.-r Summer Something Different...... Wish Someone A Universal Product Code in order to obtain a refund, price). product; Rental (PG) 12:30,2:45,5, 7:30,9:40. — PoslemsU, Danny Frank Jr., son of Danny F. and even if it has a cork. In'that short a MRS. J.P. Cocoon (PG-13) 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 9:40, will these scralched-out codes be accepted? If the The people at the fulfillment agencies who check Unless the refund- offer requires you to pay a Diane (Pelkauskas) Postemski, of 153 School St., time, the cork will not dry out. — Sesame Street Presents; Follow offer also asks for a cash-register tape, will one refuyl-offer proofs of purchase understand this. They minimum 'price for the item, the fact y ou got a bargain Polly will send you a Polly Dollar That Bird (G) 12, 1:50, 3:40, 5:30. — Happy Birthday Coventry, was born Jdly 26 at Manchester Memoiral However, if you plan to drink the DEAR MRS. J.P.: This is a showing the marked-down price be accepted? are not concerned that the black-and-white bars may will not prevent you from getting your refund. ($1) if she uses your favorite Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (PG- Hospital. The baby has a brother, Darren K. wine many months or years later, really fun — and unique — idea. 131 7:40,9:50. with A Herald Happy Heart DIANE SADAR be scratched out — as long as they can identify the That's as it should be. Smart shopping should never Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her Postemski, 11, and two sisters, Darlene E. Postemski, you should store the bottles on their The kids Idito practicing with the ^O R T LAUDERDALE, FLA. Universal Product Code sym tol from the surrounding be penalized. column. Write Polly's Pointer in Manchester 8. and Deardra K. Postemski, 3. sides to prevent the corks from chopsticks and it takes them much UA Theaters Bast — Rambo: First care of the Herald. Blood Part II (R) 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. — The Black Cauldron (PG) 2:15, 4, 5:45. — , Simon, Paul M., son of Eric D. and Sandye Pale Rider (R) 7:15,9:40. — St. Elmo's (Berman) Simon of 169VVoodlandSt., wasiM m July28 Fire (R) 2:10, 4:30, 7:10, 9:30. . » Happy Birthday ^ Mansfield Neighborhood groups plan show of strength at ManchestejywMemorlal Hospital. The maternal Where to write for ^vice Translux Collets Twin — Mod Max grandparenu are Mr. and Mrs. A. Berman of West Bitter growth Beyond Thunderdome (PG-13) 7, 9. — ■ WYNNEWOOD, Pa. (U P I) - About Watch Association in an atteibpt to A niinutemah, dressed like Paul tlon that will let criminals know that Hartford. The paternal grandparents are Mr. and Hereis where to write the syndicated advice columnists 10 million people in 45 states are rally support for the successful pro­ Revere, will gallop into the Philadel­ we're mad and fighting back," said Mrs. T. M. Simon, also of West Hartford; whose coijimns appear daiiy in the Manchester Heraid: Celery should be "blanched" expected to take a seat on their front grams to combat crime. phia'suburb of Lower Merion Township Matt Peskin, project coordinator. "It’s Dear Abby — Abigail Van Buren, P.O. Box 38923, during the last stages of its grdwth. This is done by placing soil arouild Only stoops and turn on their porch lights ' New Orleans is promoting the pro­ to deliver a proclamation and then ride a united effort involving big cities, Ward,. Amanda Marie, daughter of).Peter and Hollywood, Calif. 900'^8. the plant to prevent sunlight from EMERGENCY Tuesday to demonstrate the yalue of gram with Mardi Gras-style pai^e j f n to alert residents of the watch hour. small towns, people from all.Income Pam ela (Sloan) Ward.of Rockville, w'aS'Bom July 30' $6.00 Dr. Gott — Peter Gott, M.D., Box 91428, Cincinnati, OH reaching - any part of the plant Fire — Police — Medical community crifne watch programs, the while a utility company , in Oklabbrna' Cincinnj^ Mayor Charles Lukens is to levels and from all across Amerioa." at Manchester Memorial Hospital. The maternal 44101. except the leaves. If allowed to organizers of "National Night Out" City is donating light bulbs to residents taftc-ndighborhoods With McGruff, a grandparenu are Nfr- and Mrs. Edward Sloan of 18. Call.... grow naturally, the stalks would DIAL 911 have announced. and New York City Mayor Edward police dog. Peskin said the response, to the Conway Road. The paternal grandmother is Betty Polly’i Polntera — Polly Fisher, P.O. Box 1216, Cincinnati, have a dark greenish color and a In Manchester The effort is organized by the Koch is preparing an address for guests project,' in its secontf^ year, lias been Ward of Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. The tuiby baa a- OH 45201. 643-2711 Pennsylvania-based National Town at a.Manhattan block party.. ''Night Out is a symbolic demonstra- outstanding. brother, Brendan, 2. bitter taste. MANCHESTER HERALD, Monday. Aug. 12, 1985 — 19_ Ig — MANCHESTER HERALD, Monday, Aug. 12, 1985

KIT ‘rJ’ Ci^LYLE ®by Lerry Wright r a n HOMES HELP WANTED I ^ F O R SALE BUSINESS & SERVICE DIRECTOI^Y MTTieH 6WM0?5 MANbBoo^' Manchester - $129,900. Never J-ate a 'vytaYv uol/'ose - 643 Something Special. -tatto o b w ay frigh-tcn yeur k itte n . Classified.... F.or advertisements to be Business Opportunities 2% Store/Office Space Household Goods ' Rates That's what this house Isl Notices Resort Property Misc. for-Sole published Monday, the dead- Beautifully decorated, 3-4 PMNTIN6/ BUIUHN8/ Situation Wanted . 23 Minimum Charge: Babysitter — Full time. Misc. tor Rent Home ond Garden line is 2:30 p.m . on Friday. Reliable person for 3 bedrooms, first floor ma- P J^R IN G CONTRACTING Lost/Found...... Em ploym ent Info...... 24 $3.-00 for one day , hoganey panelled family 1 I Wanted to Rent Peb chllbren. My home or Personals...... Instruction...... 25 O... room, rec room, fully Roommates Wanted Musical Items Per W o rd : yours. Bowers School FoVrond Remodeling,.— Announcements ■1-2 d a y s ...... 20e ReatinYour Ad Area. 647-9097. ^ landscaped, see It today'l Oilad fobs. Tru c k in g . Expgrltnctd Hou$9cltan- Cabinets, roofing, gut Recr«dtional Items Joyce G. Epstfein Real Sm» rtpalrs. You nomt Ing of your convIonjMCjj. O.Q. Potorson A uction s...... Antiques 3-5 days ' 18 Moving dentlol or comrnerclol. Apartments for Rent timates. Siwclol conaldar- Painting, Poperhonglng Electricol Problems? Holiday/Seasonal 61 Misc. Automotive ment plans. Call 633-4681, woodwork, newly reno­ 8i Removal. CAll 646.S781. 649-4291. ) Help Wanted ...... ’... 21 43 otlon tor* Elderly and Han- Need A large or a small Jim Fracchia tor an vated kitchen, one car dlcM pM . 647-7553. t appointment. garage. Offered at $82,500. Painting and Poperhong- Repair? We Speciolixe In Cofpentrv and remodel­ Residential Work. Joseph ing services — Complete Jackson & Jackson Real Delivering rich loom — S Ing — Exterior and Inte­ Nurse Aides Certified — Estate, 647-8400 or 646- rior, ceilings repaired. Dumas. Fully Licensed. home repairs and remo­ vords, SAS.plut tax. Send, Free Estimates. 6466253. deling. Quality work. Ref C EL^ITY CIPHER Positions ore now availa­ 8646.— ^aravrt, If OtonO. 60-9504. References, fully Insured. ble tor weekends, 7-3,3-11,' Quality work. Martin ijrences, licensed and In­ Ceiebnly Cipher cryptograma are creaied HELP WANTED HELP WANTED All types remodeling or sured. Coll 646-8165. famous people, past and preteni Each leiier in iha cipher stands Notices ANNOUNCEMENTS HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED 11-7. Apply In person. Eureka! Another New Mattsson. evenings, 649- lor another Today's clue X equals I I t Will CleM Cellwa, attics, repairs — Complete kit­ Meadows Manor, 333 Bld­ Listing! Cute as a button - houses, fiM ot rtiorge for 4431. CIrcle-A CorpenttV"’— by CONNIE WIENER well Street, Manchester. 6 rooms plus beautiful rec. chens, boths, garages, od- Emergency? In Manches­ Newspaper dealer needed Ironing Lady — Once a Bed Maker — 8:30am-' usable Items. 6444JS4. ditlons, do-nmers Specializing In decks and Housecleanlng. Glaston- RN/LPN — Charge nurSe room with wet bar. Polnipfo, Paper hanger- “j i V UGFBVFB BG SVEVENV8 ter, . dial 911 for tire, position on 3-11 shift. Part for our South Windsor week, 3 "hours-yrGood 12:30pm, 5 days per week. porches,es, deckdeCks. No lob shingle roofing. Alsooddl bur,y area. Full or part An excellent part time ' Part Time position availa­ Lovely fenced yard, alum- TrMS and Brush Cut and 30veorsexperlence. Qual- LOST AND FOUND police, medical help. time positions for 7-3 and area. Call W7-9946, Man­ hourly wage. Must have too lorge or small. Coll tions, house repairs and time, must be neat and position Is now available' ble for mature, dependa­ ' Inum siding. Intercom sys­ removed. Pointing done, ity Work guoronteM, fine reliable. $5.25 per hour' 3-11 shifts also. Excellent chester Herald. references. Call 649-2094 Larry, 64^3985. remodeling. Pointing Is BYKB BYGAV lY O UKF EKWV Local Insurance Agency, to help service our elderly ble person as T\/ tem. Ottered In low $80’s. driveways sealed and craftsmonship, fair ly i- ovollobte for summer Lost — • Shepherd/Collle ’ looking for individual ex' plus mileage. Call Maid to benefits or no benefit rate. ------<------after 5pm.- residents. Please call Attendant. Afternoons Jackson & Jackson Real houllng done. 649-2021 be- ces. Call fw estimote: R o b e rt E . J a r v I $ ,...ttme. 643-5206. mix, ttmale, 10 years old, Employment perlenced In personal and Order 659-2953. Call Connle^'GIbbs, RN, and weekend hours. Must Estate, 647-8400 or 646- tween 5 and. 7pm, Mike. . 247-2221,7244215. GEVPVBBVA H80HVSPM UKF OG mid-July, Andover Lake DNS. 647-9191. Waitresses — Days and Mrs. Lapnl, RN, 646-0129, B o 11 d I n g-R em odkUng commercial claim work. Manchester Manor Nurs-' be flexible. Retirees are 8646.— area. Answers to Boomer. Call 646-0187 between 8am- ^ ^ ------weekends. 8am-2pm Specialist. Additfons, gar­ HEATING/ & Educajion Ino Home, 385 West Cen­ encouraged to apply. Call Office Machine Repairs interior Pointing 8, Wol- FGBYXFL VPAV.” — YXPKX8V A Any Information, please, 4pm. Carpenters Framers — To dally. 11am-3pm part time 649-1600. , ages, roofing, siding, kit­ ter Street, Manchester. Brand New Listing!'Con­ and Cleaning — Free pick ipapertng — Coll even- chens, bathrooms, re- PLUMBING call 643-4051. work in Middletown, year dally. Antorrlo's, 956 Main temporary Cape with up~

J ■} to - MANCHESTER'HERALP, Monday, Aug. 12,^98^ WEATHER BOLTON FOCUS CONNECnCUT PBC seeks money Some people pick Woolf steps aside Clear, cool tonighf; } BUSINESS^ to. pay fire.^irchitect for sheer pleasure from Hutton inquiry^ warmer Wednesday ♦ ..,page3 ...page 11 ... page 7 ... page 2 Business You can save money s on car car. ) Iri Brief youlre in the market for a used car, look for a ■ Show the history to your fcn mechanic. Get his sticker * a window telling you whether the car is opinion about the kinds of Ww...^k to4$fe— ------done.— being■sola^‘ia^Y6'’.or whether the dealer is offering a Your One more feature ifhakes looking at used rentals Benito, joihs new company warranty. That's part of a rule the Federal Trade worthwhile: Most companies offer warranties. That’s Brian M. Benito of ManchesterVhas joined Commission put into effdet in early May to help you, a looney's not always the case where d ^ e rs are concerned and Monhrch Direct , of Springfield, Ma^., ds a first-time b u y e ro f a uied car, cope Wip# the problems certainly not the case you buy a car from-.a involved in this area. production W orth private owner — unless me car still has a valid V supervisor. If you’re joining the huge numbers buying used- new-car warranty that can be transferred. Benito holds an instead of new cars at this peak season fOr buying cars Sylvia Porter and with prices at all-time highs, note, tpo, wlyether Whether you exploit .the used rental market Tuesday, Aug. 13, 1985 — Single copy: 25if associate's • degree ’ directly through the agencies, or f&rn to your local Manchester, Conn. — A City of Village Charm from Manchester the sticker sugge^ you get'wmr own mechanic to dealer, you will be looking for the same qualities in the CoYnmunity Cc"e^ inspect the car-befbre y ou buyrChe sticker will tell you —^ ^ c a r : .fuel efficiency', good condition, excellent and a bachelor'#^- little more, but even so. the rule offers the first-time buyer in the used-car market some valuable.guidance cond^ion, "’explaiils'Robert Norton, director-of fleet maintenance histbry, better price. gree frdfn the Uni­ in the car-rental'division of National Car Rental. If the used rental market appeals to you, consider versity of Hartford. — and. more important, flashes warnings in/itself. ■ Where are the best places to buy used c ^ ? >^hey,have to be," Norton continues, "because the that companies usually mpke available the. best cars He and his wife, directly to private buyers. National’s Norton^ Itria, have twc^sons, The major car-rental companies — whichiew of you company doesn't want to have to rescue a driver would think of exploring. Yet. most o^ these ’stranded when his car breaks do\#n." estimates that about 75 percent of its cars'are sold to Rescuers save 4 Brian M. Jr. and individuals. The rem aiii^r M to dealers. ■ * i Matthew. companies se llj^ a high percentage of their fleets ■ Noftbh^i^mphasizes,'toOf that although you can't each year, either directly to egnsumers or to dealers. escape th e j^ t that many drivers already have used But do not expect to hhagl^’’Our prices are firr*; You may get a surprisingly good price on a used car the car, the nhmber of drivers doen't really matter. we really don’t get into, bargaining.” Nortoiv-sap. Bank raises via this route. And you can select from a broad range *'i;equent servicing uncovers key problems. "We think our prices are already very low, and we’re of cars, since agencies generally rent cars in all sizes. Another selling point: Some local rental offices will not bargaining down." / its dividend What's more, the common assumption that used Jet you rent the car you want and if then you decide to Of course, shop around — no matter what you re BOSTON - Di­ rentals have been driven into the ground is not a valid it, w^l subtract the rental charge from-the sale told. Know what to look for and go after it. amid jet wreckage rectors "of Bunk of assumption. Good car-rental companies service their' Jric^TTs a nifty way to get a real'test drive and For additional tips. National offers a booklet: New England Corp. cars frequently — far more often than the average suggests an hone^rental office, ■Used Cars: Where to Shop, How to Buy” It’s free. owner of a private auto. They must — or risk losing Rental agencies often provide a copy of the car's Send a postcard to National Car Rental Systems Inc,, have approved an 11 7700 France Ave., S., Dept. SP, Minneapolis, Minn. percent quarterly customers who refuse to rent junky cars. maintenance history — a good way Jto elirhinate much By Todd R. Easthom 55435. dividend incr.ease to Brian M. Benito ‘‘Cars that are sold are generally in excellent of the mystery surrounding the purchase of a used United Press International .50 cents per share, payable Oct 19 to stockholders of record Sept. 30. ■ TOKYO — A tanker crew in Bank, of New England and CBT Corp. of —"Manchester at Work waters outside Tokyo today disco­ Hartford, Conn., merged June 14. As of June 30, vered a crucial tail section of a the combined corporation reported assets ex­ Danbury area Japan Air Lines jet that'may have , ceeding W.4 billion, a staff of more than 10,000, and fallen from JAL Flight 123 before it an expanding network of branch officers and crashed. Four of the 524 people automatic teller facilities in Connecticut and aboard Were found alive. Massachusetts. expects pinch Rescuers who found the' survi­ vors amid the smoking wreckage of:the Boeing 747 jumbo jet on a CIGNA promotes Schulze remote mountainside earlier today for housing^ feared the other 520 pag^engers Denise Schulze of Bolton has been appointed and crew were killed, making it the assistant director of marketing in the Employee most deadly crash involving a •Benefits and Health By United Press'International single airplane In aviation history. Care Group of CIGNA Six Americans were aboard, Rapid job growth. po|julation ^cceijses and JAL spokesman Masaru Wata- • Schulze joihed the shrinking households in western Connecticut wilt . nabe said in an interview that part company in 1978 as result in a housing shortage by theof the century, of the vertical stabilizer, a rudder an underwriter in a Regional Plan Association report rejeased today that provides essential directional the Group Insurance projects control in the tail of a plane, was and Services Divisio Jobs will continue to increase more than population, found by a the crew of a construc­ n. Since 1983, she according to the report by the New 'V'ork-based tion tanker in Sagami Bay. about has served as group Regional Plan Association, which is dwwted to 60 milese stabilizer could provide auto marketing cons coordinating development of the New Yerk-New investigators with the cause of the ultant in the division' Jersey-Conriecticut area. disaster aAd coincided with re­ s marketing departm The analysis predicts job growth in Fairfield, New ports that the pilot had trouble ent. Haven and Litchfield counties will decrease from Schulze is a gradua controlling the plane prior to the about 16,000 jobs a. year over the past five years to crash. te of Central Connect somewhat more than 15,000 per year. The part was found on the flight icut State University. Between 1982 and 2000, theassociation Plan projects path of the Osaka-bound airliner, a one-third jump of 275,000 jobs in the three counties, which had set out from Tokyo on a from 842V.500 in 1982 to 1.2 million in 2000. southerly-course over Sagami Bay Aetna buys Population, on the other hand, is not likely to but then veered far to the north and part of firm increase more than 225,000, to 1.95 million, a west. The tail section was found one-eighth rise. morethan 100 miles from the crash HARTFORD - Ae benise Schulze This trend continues the sharp increase in the ratio site. tna Life & Casualty of population to jobs in western Connecticut. The "Without a vqrtical stabilizer Co. has announced it has signed an agreement Regional Plan projects 60 percent of the western you can't control an aircraft,” with the largest financial institution in Spain to Connecticut labor force will work w.ithin the area by Watanabe said. He said an intact acquire S significant minority interest in Spanish 2000, well above the 52 percent for the whole New York vertical stabilizer is about 24 feet multi-line insurance company. urban region. high, 11 feet wide and 27 inches Aetna has reached the agreement with Banco The Association also predicts the size of the average thick. ,UP1 photo 'Hispano Americano to acquire 40 percent to 49 , household will shrink in the remaining years of the Watanabe said the part was century from an average 3.07 persons per household in percent of La Estrella, which has assets of more Herald photo by Tarqulnlo being transported to Tokyo for A rescue helicopter lifts up one of the four survivors of than $84 million. 1980 to 2,15 persons by 2000, In line with the rest of the examination by JAL engineers but the dc\8^d Japan Air Lines jumbo jet on the slope of Mt. BHA currently holds 89 percent of La jE.sfrella region. Tight squeeze said it was “highly likely" the part Osutaka ^early today. Officials feared the othei^ 520 with the public holding the balance. This trend reflects the aging of the population and belonged to Flight 123. He declined Aetna estimates it will pay $8 million to $10 the preference of the younger generation for living in passengers were killed in the Monday night crash. company leases this property where to speculate how the tail section million for the share of La Estrella. smaller hou.seholds, the report said It looks like a tight squeeze through a could have been lost. Vj Kenneth Veit, Aetna's vice president of Population increases combined with the decrease iq narrow gate, but personnel of Pegasus Brainard Place and Johnson *Terrace A Japanese military spokesman International Insurance Operations, said, "Our household size is expect^ to create a housing demand Truck Lines of East Hartford are not meet from the Economy Electric earlier said search teams had at the mountainside crash site. Hospital in the neighboring town of' joint venture with BHA is consistent with Aetna's increase of about 45 percent. And the association Fujioka by midafteiroon. Ope was impressed with the difficulty. The Company. recovered 52 bodies from the Officials feared the crash could be strategy to expand our international financiiil^ predicts that most of that demand will be from the age densely wooded mountainside 60 the worst single plane tragedy and reported in serious^onditlon. services activities." ■ . groups that typically are buying first homes or miles northwest>pf Tokyo where the second worst disaster in A makeshift mui^ue was set up Aetna has insurance operations in Canada, trading up to second ones. the plane crashed Monday night. aviation history. in a gymnasium In Fujioka. A city Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Brazil, But the association predicts that demand for as Authorities at first feared all JAL officials said the- plane spokesman said huMreds of peo­ Chile and England. much as 275,000 housing units will not be satisfied and aboard were dead but I^agaiio carried 509 ipa:passengers and a ple gathered to await word of many wanting separate households will not be able to Buckland service could mean police said rescue teams dropped crew59 3nvn __/ relatives. One truck loaded with afford them. in by helicopter found two women The Americans aboard were bodies awaiting identification was The report said many "will double up in one way or and two girls alive in the wreckage identified as three members of a shipped to the morgue. another, young people staying with parents longer 12 hours after the crash. Korean-American family — Chris­ JAL made arrangements to bus than they would like, or joining other unrelated new rescue unit for district All four survivors had been topher Kim, Okja Kim and Scott more than 1,000 relatives'" of people, older persons moving to congregate livii>g of sitting in the repr of the plane. Kim Wallach Ward, an English passengers to Fujioka from Tokyo some kind.” There were reports from the scene teacher employed by JAL, and two and Osaka. JAL President Yasu- The housing pinch will also "price out moderate- Any firehouse the Eighth Utili­ The two firefighters stationed at new piece of equipment would be of more survivors being found but Colorado businessmen: Edward A. moto Takagi publicly apologized to income households and so deprive the job market of ties District occupied in Buckland the town’s Buckland firehouse needed and would be housed in that police could not confirm them, Anderson Sr., 52, of Englewood and the families. needed unskilled workers or require long-distance Monday afternoon declined com­ bay. f "I am very sorry. 1 humbly commuting into western Conneeticut or deter firms would house one of the district’s The tower takes up one of the two authorities said. Michael Hanson, .40, of Aurora. / > Herald photo by Tarqulr>lo four pumtiers and a new mini­ ment on the Controversy, Thousands of police and troops About 70 troops of the Air apologize to you all," he said. from locating there." pumper of some kind, probably The Eighth District has pre­ longer bays while the rescue tpdek scoured the mountainside for other Self-Defense Forces had beep JAL Flight 123 left Tokyo’s About one-third of the job growth is expected to be in much like the district’s present viously offered to buy the. fire­ and a pumper occupy tlwrot survivors but the search was airlifted to the crash site by noun Haneda Airport at 6:12 p.m. the white-collar areas of finance, insurance and real Paul Colino hopes to b'eepme well- Manchester. He has been associated Rescue 5 truck, according to house, hut has been turned down by long bay. The bays broken off at 6 p.m. (5 a.m. EDT) today to comb the still-smoldering Monday for the city of Osaka. It estate, along with rapid jumps in miscelleanous known in Manchester. Paul's Pizza. 57 with the restaurant industry for 24 years, Democratic members of the town drive-through. ” y crashed at about 7 p.m. services. District Director Jdseph Tripp. 'Asked if the district ^ I d h^dyse because of approaching darkness, wreckage, spread over the slopes East Center St., has ^een open for about most recently with the former Horseless -Tripp, who is the district fire Board of Directors, who hold a six police said. The search was to of two mountains, Mikuni. and The pilot reported about 20 ManufarttJfing jobs in western Connecticut provide to three majority on the board. two pieces of equipment in a single minutes before the crash a right a larger proportion of total employment tha'n in the a month, Colino’s first business in Carriage Restaurant in East Hartford. commissioner, said Monday that bay, Tripp said it might be resume at first light. Ogura. th^ intent of the district if it builds a Asked Monday how district Police said when rescuers Some 3,000 tOj*t,000 soldiers were rear ca^in door had burst its slal, region as a whole. equipment would be distributed if possible, depending on the abrupt$v depressurizing the pas- new fire station is to build one with equipment. reached Mikiko, she murmured ordered to the cra$h site to help two drive-through bays, a bunk the Eighth District-establishes a her name. recovenbodies. Hobby becomes business room, a day room, a kitchen and an Buckland location. Tripp gave this There were no other signs of life TheLsurvivors arrived at Tano Pleate turn to page ID 7 office. breakdown: Une suggestion of the Demo­ The district last year purchased • At Buckland there would be a cratic majority on the town’s land just two lots west of Station pumper and the new mini-pumper. Board of Directors is that the , No. 5 on which it.has announced • At the Fleming Road location town’s Buckland firehouse be Economists concerned Firms’ art collecting .sound investment plans to build its own firehouse to there would be two of the district shared with the district. As mat­ serve the Buckland area. puiripers and a service truck. ters stand now, the ballot for the The pumper* and mini-pumper • At the station at Main and Nov. 5 local election will include an \ >• By Sarah Stlansen Buildings with art also rent faster, and ums. That willingness has sparked a for the center and conservation work” would be stationed there,. along, Hilliard streets there would be the advisory question that will ask United Press International a higher rent can be charged per sq,uare flurry qf touring, with many companies annually, said James J. Finnegan, with a night crew of fi^ or six towef truck, one of the pumpers voters if they favor having the Retail sales remain stagnant foot. footing the bill to have their collections executive director of the InterNorth Art volunteer firefighters, T rw said. atid Rescue 5. Town of Manchester Fire Depart­ 3 2 Therapy office opens / NEW YORK — Corporate art collect­ A spurt in the construction of seen anound the country. Foundation as well as the InterNorth He said the district now has.mpre According to Thomas O’Marra,* ment share the firehouse with the By Denis G. Gulino 2.2 percent after falling 1.2 percent Three physical therapists have opened a ing has been around as long as the corporate headquarters has helped fuel Sponsorship of art exhibitions now Foundation, its philanthropic arm. ' volunteers in the Buckland areh^ In spokesman for the district fire Eighth District Fire Department. United Press International in June. physical therapy office at 15 W. Middle Turnpike. » Rockefellers, but companies are buying dem'and, with companies budgeting in accounts for as much as 20 percent of "We feel — as do a'num'ber of the past, Tripp expressed concern department. Rescue 5 is a quick- The firehouse is located in Wholesale inflation In an even stronger turnaround, Known as Comprehensive Physical Therapy into'the visual arts with increasing artful decoration from the earliest the corporate dollars earmarked for the companies — that support of the arts is that not enough volunteers were iny response apparatus wifh pumping territory in which the district has WASHINGTON - Despite a upslightly in July building materials sales were up Inc., the office is run by therapists Angela sophistication. stages. arts, Jedlicka said. part of being a corporate citizen. It’s a that section. capacity as well rescue and the right to fight fires. The strong rebound at department an even stronger 5 percent after a LaBella, Nancy Perlotto and Karen Walther. It Rather than a fine canvas by the Consequently,' companies are now One example is InterNorth, an vehiclq to, reach a number of segments, The district fire department has . m ^ical equipment. Democrats have argued consist­ stores and construction supply — see page 20 -C.7 percent fall in June. contains treatment rooms,-a gym, consultation chairman’s favorite painter to grace commissioning special pieces in Omaha, Neb.-based gas company that not the least of which i^efnployees,” he a total of about 110 volunteers. Tripp said that the smallest of - ently that despite the fact that the outlets, the nation’s retail stfles Furniture store sales improved rooms and other equipment, with a focus on the boardroom, companies are more greater numbers, rather than buying just completed a $2.3 billion merger said. / The same deployment of equip­ the three btiys at the Main Steet '\-flrehouse cannot be used for Improved just 0.4 percent in July, by 0.9 percent, halting the decline preventive health care. ^ apt to hire professional curators to through-dealers. with Houston Natural Gas, forming ment yiould be used if the district station would be emptied, at least firefighting in the Buckland area, the Census Bureau said today. i that saw a 4.6percentdropin June. Areas of expertise include'neurologic, geriat­ decide on acquisitions, pay commis­ "We’ve seen more of that than ever HNG InterNorth. adquired tl^ town’s Station No. 5 temporarily, if a new Buckland it is still-needed for fire protection The lack of strong Improvement | Auto sales "were a drag .on the But clothing stores fell 1.7 ric. podiatric, obstetric, pulmonary, orthopedic sions to contemporary artists and before," Jedlicka said. Its collection of the work of Karl on Tolland Turnpike, Tripp said. station were to-be established. He in a large part of the northern held only disappointment for econ­ numbers, failing 0.5 percent after percent, after a 0.6 percent gain in and sportsdnjured patients. promote collections in museums. American business spends an esti­ Bodmer, currently winding down a Strike ends The fate of that controversial said he-assumes that eventually a section of t9wn. omists hoping the second half of Juiije’s 1.9 percent drop. Were auto June. The office is open from 8 a.m. to B p.m. on Business also is learning to use art for mated $55 million annually for its national tour at New York’s Metropoli­ firehouse hinges on a battle .the year would gOt a more vigorous sales excluded, however, overall . Restaurant sales were down 0.8 Monday, Tuesday and Thursday, and from 8 a.m. tax breaks and to enhance the value of purchases in the arts. About 60 percent tan Museum of Art, includes over 100 between the Republican and De­ start. But pt the same time the sales would still have been up only its real estate. in Bridgeport percent after not changing the to 6 p.m. on. Wednesday and Friday. Flexible of compamies in the Fortune 500 have works by the Swiss artist, mocratic parties in town. The Sex revolution bottom^ out , figures encouraged investors who 0.7 percent. ,• month before: J Saturday and emergency hours are available as "More and more corporations are collections. Total corporate collectiops ‘'^JBqdmer’s renderings of American Republicans are petitioning to believe the Federal Reserve will The sales figures included sev­ needed. hiring a person to oversee the corporate are valued at about $2 billion. Indians were done on a 13-month BRIDGEPORT (UPI) — Union tex­ have the voters pass an ordinance NEW YORK (UPI) - The But the conservative swing does be forced to lean toward lower eral sharp turnarounds yet did not art collection,” said Judith A.nledlicka, Contemporary arj^ontinues to have expedition with German naturalist tile tyorkers at American.T’abrics Co. Nov. S thqt would require the town "sexual revolution” has bottomed not apply to men. The percentage interest rates because of the af^pear strong enough to clear up president of the Business Committee the most appeal, because of its Prince Maximilian in 1832. - are scheduled to return to work today to sell the station to the highest out, ^according to a sociologist of male college virgins continued weakness of the economy. the confusion among economists. for the Arts, a non-profit association. relatively low price. But selection is The collection cost InterNorth after overwhelmingly approving a new bidder who' offered more than whose study shows virginity is to fall from about the same rate as Although slight, the Increase Investors and money market trad­ Get Sylvia’s book by mail Several factors are changing corpo­ very personal, Jedlicka said, with most $500,000 when it was acquired from a- three-year contract that ended an $406,000. The Democrats are peti­ making a comeback among col­ women in 1978 to 28 percent in 1984, was the first of any size since April, ers about whether the American Inside Today rations’ attitudes toward collecting, she "Sylvia Porter’s New Money Book for the 80s,” companies buying art that fits comfor­ New York art dealer in 1962. Thanks to almost nine-week strike. tioning to have the voters pass an lege women. Sherwin’s study found. when sales.rocketed ahead by 3.1 economy is closer to the sturdy said. Pah of it is an effort to make the tably into their corporate culture. the skyrocketing value of American Members of Local 240 of the United ordinance that would forbid selling Robert Sherwin, co-author of a Seventy-five percent of the percent. rebound expected by tpe White 1,328 pages of down-to-earth advice on personal workplace more attractive, and a belief 20 pages, 2 sections money management, is available through her Some stumble into purchases that Western art, the collection now is Textile Workers of America voted 223-4 it at. all. 21-year study of sexual behavior at women' in 1963 said they were Sales were worth $113.7 billion in House. y® that involvement in the visual arts will turn out to be rapidly appreciating valued at about $11 million. Friday night to ratify the pact that will Station No. 5 currently is staffed Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, virgins, but Sherwin said he July after seasonal adjustment, Sales are running 5.7 percent Advice—^ _12 ObItuarlM. column. Send $9.05 plus $1 for mailing and add a classy sheen to a company’s B u tin M t . handling to “Sylvia Porter's New Money Book for investments, but Jedlike said few Finnegan says the company is bring $1.05 an hour in wage hikes by two town firefighters at all said in the September issue of doesn’t expect the pendulum to only $363 million more than June. ahead of a year earlier but the ..-•20 Optnion ^ public image. companies see their collection as a “relatively low-key” about promoting through May 1988. times. It has two drive-through Glamour- magazine that the per­ swing tjjat -far back. The report also revised downw­ latest three months have gained C lM tlfie d . 16-10 PaoplaUlk. ' the BOs,” in care of the Manchester Herald, 4400 Other factors are less aesthetic. By Com ica. _ 6 S p o f1 a ^ _ Jqhnson Drive, Fairway, Kan. 66205. Make strictly financial investment. its Collection, on permanent loan to the The employees also won a new bays that hold two pumpers, centage of female virgins at that While many college women do ard June's performance, to a 1.4 only 0.8 percent from the previous Entarlalnmant...^ 12 Taitvialon . incorporating artwork and public space Lottery------2 Weather _ checks payabie to Universai Press Syndicate. A new wave of art collecting has ■ Joslyn Art Museum in Omaha. contract provision that makes periodic including one that is used as a school has risen from 38 percent in not sleep alone, there is a growing percent decline from the originally three months. into a building, companies can some­ removed art from the walls of head­ Apart from the expenses of touring, wage increases automatic, instMd of spare. 1978 to 43 percent in 1984. reluctance to engage In casual sex. reported 0.8 percent setbacjtr\^ Department store sales jumped times get a $g||lic amenity tax break.* quarter^, sharing it publicly in, muse­ . InterNorth spends "in excess of $100,000 relying on a merit evaluation g y U s n . . 4 I .