MANCHESTER CONNECTICUT Wetlands loss Victims of fire Whalers, Tippett less on Route 6 return to state end drought ... page 3 X ... page 4 ... page 11 Mmxdmtn ) Manchester — A City of Village Charm Hrral^

Monday, Jan. 5,1987 30 Cents Workers find J

more bodies .c" A inside train

By Holden Lewis night had pulled 11 bodies from the The Associated Press mangled wreckage by 4:30 a.m. r today. As dawn approached, rescue CHASE, Md. — Rescue workers workers found two more bodies, N using cranes and saws today found and another 'Was found shortly more bodies in a crumpled Amtrak afterward, said Sue Martin, an train that derailed after a high­ Amtrak spokeswoman at the scene. speed collision with a freight ’Hie dead included an Amtrak engine, killing at least 14 people and engineer and a 6-year-old boy. injuring 175 in Amtrak’s worst Officials this morning had re­ accident ever. ported 15 dead, based on the The collision at 1:30 p.m. Sunday removal of two b ^ y bags from the piled three passenger cars atop site at about 8:30 a.m., but each other, blocking traffic on the Baltimore County police spokes­ busy Northeast rail corridor at the man Jay Miller later said one of the end of the New Year’s holiday bags contained parts of a body weekend. recovered earlier. At least 24 trains had been “ We do have concerns there may canceled, Amtrak officials said. be more’ ’ dead trapped inside one m e Service was expected to be restored of the crushed cars. Miller said at this afternoon or Tuesday morning, midmorning. “It’s very slow be­ the railroad said. Meanwhile, Joe cause they’re in there with cutting sii Nall, of the National Transporta­ tools.” tion Safety Board, said seven The Colonial, bound from Wa­ investigators had arrived to begin a shington, D.C. for Boston and tbur-to five-day inquiry. Springfield, Mass., with about 400 In Washington, presidential spo­ people aboard, slammed into one of kesman Larry Speakes told repor­ three f^rail locomotives at at photo by Tuckor ters that President Reagan today least>^V >pb on a switch that asked for a report on the crash. • tracks into two. Crews worMng throughout the le Ubnilail diesels had appar­ Snow Job ently rinrTi stop signal, officials said. Dr. David Moyer blows snow from a driveway on Gardner Other areas of New England were hit much harder by the All 12 cars of the Amtrak train Street Saturday morning after a storm on Friday dumped storm, which one meteorologist called an “East Coast Signals derailed as.well as the two electric up to 8 inches of the white powder in parts of the state. bomb." Amtrak locomotives, and five of the passenger cars toppled on their sides, Case said. at center “ You were sitting there, and there were a few bangs, and then you were on the floor,” said Reagan surgery goes ‘very smoothly’ 5 passenger Larry Habber, 27, of of probe New York City. Carol Bourne, 30, also of New Bv Michael Putzel prostate involves the insertion of a WASHINGTON (A P) - An auto­ York City, said she helped pull a The Associated Press small, flexible instrument into the mated signal system to route trains 4-year-old girl to safety. “ She was The president’s White House physician. Col. penis and through the urethral along one of the nation’s busiest rail screaming. I just grabbed her, and WASHINGTON — President John Hutton, said all tests so far ’’show no canal, which passes through the corridors likely would be the center got out of there. I couldn’t look for Reagan underwent what was des­ prostate to the bladder. of an investigation into the collision my bags.” cribed as “ very routine” prostate evidence of a recurrence of the cancer The instrument has a tiny, of an Amtrak passenger train and At least 12 people died in the surgery at Bethesda Naval Hospi­ found in July 1985.” electrically charged wire on the three freight locomotives. wreck. Gov. Harry Hughes said at a tal today, and his doctor said end, which is used to cut away The National Transportation news conference Sunday night. afterward a preliminary examina­ pieces of the prostate obstructing Safety Board investigators also By 4:30 a.m. today, 11 bodies had tion “ shows no suspicion of the canal. ■were expected to examine the been pulled from the wreckage, and cancer.” similar to several found in earlier Sunday tests were completed said, The president is expected to “ The president feels good and -activities of the two Conraii locomo­ rescue workers, who used cranes to Army Col. John Hutton, the examinations,\from Reagan’s remain hospitalized for several immediately began reading brief­ t iv e crew members and the Amtrak pull apart some of the metal, were presidential physician, issued a colon. Speakes "said today that days. Doctors say full recovery ing papers on items on the presiden­ engineer to determine whether searching for more. brief statement saying the opera­ laboratory examination of the takes as long as six weeks. tial decision-making agenda.” Sunday’s crash, which killed at Rescuers used a saw to cut a hole tion “ began at 8:15 (a.m. EST) and tissue overnight showed they were During the physical on Sunday, The 75-year-old president spent Reagan’s third follow-up to check least 14 people and injured at least in the top car’s roof and worked for took about an hour. It was a very “ benign, as expected.” the night at the hospital after being 175, was the result of mechanical or hours using prying tools to try to routine transurethral resection. Speakes said Reagan was awake for any recurrence of the colon admitted Sunday morning and was human error. reach two women, a man and a girl. ‘“The procedure went very during the prostate surgery, being cancer discovered 18 months ago, scheduled to undergo surgery today the president had a cardiovascular Over the years concern has been More than six hours after the smoothly. There was nothing out of performed under a spinal anes­ for an apparently enlarged pros­ examination, including a stress raised among some rail safety wreck, the girl, one woman and the the ordinary.” thetic that numbs the lower body tate. His wife, Nancy, accompanied test, followed by pulmonary func­ ^experts about fast-moving pas- man were removed, dead. The operation, to relieve what a without rendering the patient un­ him to Bethesda and remained at tion tests and chest X-rays, a White "senger trains using the same tracks The other woman was taken by spokesman described as “ mild, conscious. The spokesman said the hospital’s V IP suite to be House statement said. _as freight traffic, and those con- helicopter to University of Mary­ recurring discomfort,” was per­ Vice President George Bush was in 7»ems also were expected to be formed after a weekend physical his office at the White House during present for the surgery. “All were normal,” Hutton re­ land Hospital’s Shock-Trauma Unit Speakes said the president has ■lievived as a result of Sunday’s rail examination that found no new the surgery but that the 25th ported. The internal examination of in Baltimore. suffered “ mild, recurring discom­ the large intestine, called a colonos­ tragedy. “ She is in extremely bad shape, evidence of colon cancer, which Amendment was not invoked to fort” and has known for some time copy, “ went smoothly,” the presi­ : - A team of NTSB investigators but she’s still alive,” said Frank Reagan suffered in July 1985. transfer power to Bush, as was done he probably would need the opera­ dent’s physician said. It was during •went to the scene of the accident Wilson, spokesman for Baltimore Presidential spokesman Larry just before the president underwent tion, known as a transurethral that portion of the examination that ^ d were likely to spend the next County Fire Department. Speakes said the surgery began at major surgery for colon cancer 18 resection. He had a similar opera­ doctors found and removed the "few days examining the wreckage, Officials said there apparently 8:15 a.m. EST and concluded months ago. tion 20 years ago. polyps. ^including mechanical devices were no passengers in the crushed shortly before 10 a.m. White House Chief of Staff Donald Speakes said there is no evidence Polyps such as those discovered 'which record a train’s speed and There was no immediate word on T. Regan visited the president at bottom car. Reagan has cancer of the prostate, in the examination Sunday tend to ■the position of the last signal The crash reduced one of the the results, but the procedure is not the hospital shortly before Reagan a sex gland surrounding the urethra . occur more frequently as people • -a.' diesel locomotives to rubble and generally regarded as particularly went into surgery “ to transact a .'p a s s ^ . at the base of the bladder. Exami­ grow older, and Reagan’s colon has ; - Such recorders, which also ripped a four-foot section of the risky or complicated. couple of items of business,” nation'of tissue removed during the demonstrated a propensity to pro­ -should show whether any brakes train’s first car cleanly away. On Sunday, Reagan's private Speakes said. The spokesman said procedure is normal in such cases duce them in recent years. They The Amtrak engineer was killed, physicians, working at Bethesda he did not know what was .lyere applied, were recovered from to determine whether any malig­ 9 generally cause no serious symp­ la Conrail locomotive and a switch, and the Conrail engineer walked Naval Hospital just outside Wa­ discussed. nancy is present. toms but, if left alone, can grow into -said Federal Railroad Administra- away from the crash, said spokes­ shington, found and removed four A brief written statement issued A transurethral resection of the cancerous lesions- s by Pinto •tion Administrator John Riley. woman Susan Martin. small polyps, small fleshy growths by the White House shortly after the tor’s TODAY’S HERALD had Prominent tojwn educator, author dies itory Lobbyists ready Gone after 35 years He had been active in local public 8 By John Mitchell of Manchester, Connecticut,” to When the 1987 General Assembly If you dropped by Massaro’s West Herald Reporter coincide with the town’s sesquicen- service for the last 60 years, convenes on Wednesday, all of the Side restaurant on Center Street tennial celebration in 1973. according to Mary LeDuc, chair­ action won’t be on the floor of the expecting to eat a hot Italian meal Successfully combining the roles “He was always available to man of the town’s library board, House and Senate. There’ll be a lot and found it dark inside, there was of educator, historian and author, answer any number of questions,” which he served on from 1944 to more going on in the galleries of the good reason. Michael and Mary Wiliiam E. Buckiey of Manchester Sutherland said, adding that he 1983. " I think he was marvelous,” two chambers. There, lobbyists Massaro closed the doors for the was passionate about his work and took time out to share his knowl­ LeDuc said, citing his recall of representing cities and towns, last time Christmas Eve, ending 35 the town he Uved in, friends and edge with student and scholar alike. historical events as one reason. business, insurance, the health­ years of service in Manchester. associates said. “ It’s hard to wax eloquent about “ He had good insights into things care industry and other special Story on page 10. that were concerning the 7 The comments came in memory someone who doesn’t need it.” interests, will be plotting how best of Buckiey, 95, of 560 E. Center St., The son of the late John J. and community.” they can get what they want out of who died at a Manchester convales­ Mary Jane (Bowler) Buckley, John F. Jackson, library direc­ the coming five-month session. Index cent home Friday. Buckley graduated from Yale tor, said the Manchester libraries Story on page 5. 20 pagoo. 2 oocMoni “ He was Manchester’s history, in University in 1913 and received a would be closed Tuesday from 9 some respects,” said John Suther­ master’s degree from Trinity Col­ a.m. to 1 p.m. in honor of Buckley. Advice I « H « T y 2 land, director of the Institute of lege in 1927. He was awarded an Buckley helped found the Man­ Business______0 Obituartes—— 10 Local History at Manchester Com­ honorary doctorate from Trinity in chester Historical Society, becom­ Ciessifled _ 19-20 Opinion 6 munity Coilege. “ He was . the 1957. ing its first president. “ He was a C om ics______8 People . , 2 uitimate gentleman.” Buckley taught history at Hart­ most remarkable man,” said Dr. Clear and cold Connecticut -j4-5 S po rts____11-10 ford Public High School for more Charles E. Jacobson Jr., who also At Sutherland’s recommenda­ Clear tonight with lows in the Entertainment 18 Television------10 tion, Buckley, who was a lifelong than 40 years. He retired in 1961 but helped begin the society , and was a U.S.AVorid____7 WILLIAM E. BUQKLEY teens. Sunny Tuesday with highs 35 Focus------17 resident of Manchester, wrote “ A continued to lecture at Trinity and Locai n e w s -3 ,10 Weather 2 . . . dead at age 95 New England Pattern: The History Manchester Community College. Please turn to page 10 to 40. Details on page 2. MANCHESTER HERALD. Monday, Jan. 5.1987 — 3 t - MANCHESTER HERALD, Monday. Jan. 5,1987 WEATHER Town, 8th District to talk Wednesday Connecticut forecast negotiators to talk more freely. He Central, Eastern Interior and Sontbwestem George Loyng Herald Reporter said a statement could be issued Interior: Clear tonight with lows in the teens. Sunny ifter the meeting. Tuesday with highs 35 to 40. ; Negotiators from the town ^ The state Freedom of Informa­ West Coastal and East Coastal: Clear tonight Manchester and the Eighth UtllF' tion Commission has said that talks with lows 20 to 25. Sunny Tuesday with highs 35 to ties District will meet Wednesday involving a political subdivision 40. to set up an agenda and ground can be held in secret if the talks Northwest Hills: Clear tonight with lows 5 to 10. Miles on future talks on a number of center on the sale of real estate, and Sunny Tuesday with highs ^ to 35. areas that have long divided the two If there would be a likelihood the aides. purchase price would increase if T ip T o e ; The meeting, involving negotiat­ talks were held in public. The talks Coastal forecast Classic ballet originated in 15th century dance per­ ing teams from both governments, on Wednesday aren’t expected to formances before Italian and Spanish courts. But ballet ik scheduled to he held in public in center on these issues. Long Island Sound to Watch Hill, R.I., and Lassow said no dates for future performers didn’t start dancing on their toes until the Lincoln Center, according to a Montank Point: Winds northerly 10 to 20 knots letter from Mayor Barbara Wein­ meetings have been set, although Low today and about 10 knots tonight. Variable about 10 1800s. Marie Taglioni, shown here, first popularized berg to Eighth District President he expected these details would be Temperatures knots Tuesday. this new tip-toe style in 1827. At first, few dancers were Walter Joyner. ’The letter was worked out on Wednesday. Seas 1 foot over Long Island Sound today and less able to imitate Taglioni’s ethereal style. In those days, released this morning. The effort by both sides to than 1 foot, decreasing further Tuesday. negotiate differences follows the slipper toes were stuffed only with cotton or silk. However, there appears to be a Mostly clear through Tuesday. disagreement on whether to have decision by an overwhelming Blocked pointe shoes were not developed until late in the meeting open to the public. In number of Manchester voters in m FRONTS: the 19th century. her letter, Weinberg said that the November to defeat a referendum town wants the meeting, open question that would have taken J Warm-^v Cokl<«'^ Across the nation DO Y O U K N O W — Who composed the music for the because of the “ level of public away the Eighth District’s ability to ballet “The Nutcracker”? interest and concern in this fend off a merger with the town. Showers Rain Flurries Snbw Occluded Stationary ^ A storm sent snow, rain and gusty winds through matter.” The Eighth District has provided FRIDAY’S ANSWER — In “Madama Butterfly, ” a Japanese f much of the West tiklay, while another storm off But Eighth District Director fire protection and sewer service to girl falls in love with an American soldier. most of northern Manchester for NATIONAL FORECAST — Cold weather Is forecast for the western half of Florida pushed rain across broad sections of the Gordon Lassow, a meipber of the South. 1-5-87 ‘ Knowledge Unlimited. Inc. 1986 district’s negotiating team, said almost 100 years. Its board of the nation Tuesday. Rain is forecast from central Texas to the eastern Elsewhere, mostly clear skies prevailed over the today the district wants the session directors and supporters fought the Plains. Snow is expected from the Texas Panhandle and northern New middle Atlantic Coast region,* the Northeast, closed. He said this would allow the change, while Democratic town Mexico through most of the Plains. Georgia, the Tennessee and Ohio valleys, the Gulf A Newipaper in Education Program directors, including Weinberg, sup­ A Coast region, the middle and lower Mississippi Sponiored by ported the ballot question. Valley and the central and southern Plains. The Manchester Herald Hospital names Although bitter criticism was Snow was falling across the Colorado Rockies exchanged, representatives of each Htrald photo by Tuckor and mountains of southern California and Arizona, two managers side said after the election that they were willing to work out differences and was developing in the New Mexico mountains. Manchester Memorial Hospital through negotiation. Last month, The old-fashioned way Ski areas near Wrightwood, Calif., in the San has announced the appointment of both sides appointed negotiating Gabriel Mountains of southern California already Almanac two new employees. teams. had foot-deep snow. Jonathan Jordan clears off the fluffy debris the for several automobile accidents In Manchester as Walter Payne has. been named Lassow has said the two major Rain was falling along the coast of southern Today is Monday, Jan. 5, the in ’Tuskegee, Ala., at the age of issues he wants to see addressed old-fashloned way Saturday morning on Summit Street. motorists struggled with the accumulated snow. N director of partial hospitalization California, with as much as an inch more expected, fifth day of 1987. There are 360 81. services and Barbara Lticey is the first are a proposal by the town to Friday’s storm, which swept the East Coast, was blamed while another 2 inches of rain was possible for the days left in the year. In 1949, in his State of the Union . new manager of medical records. share the town’s Buckland fire­ lower coastal slopes. Today’s highlight in history: address. President Harry S. Payne worked for three years at house with Eighth District firefigh­ The storm off the eastern coast of Florida spread On Jan. 5, 1896, the Austrian Truman labeled his administra- * the Yale Psychiatric Institute as ters, and settling who will collect rain from southeastern North Carolina across newspaper Wiener Presse pub­ tion the Fair Deal. director of adult recreation servi­ the fees from those who use a sewer eastern sections of South Carolina and Georgia lished the first public account of a In 1970, Joseph A. Yablonski. ces and as unit director for the the Eighth District plans to build in D O T trims Route 6 wetlands loss through Florida. discovery by German physicist an unsuccessful candidate for the * sociatherapy program. For the last northwestern Manchester. Mountain areas of southern California were three years he has been with Weinberg has said the first issue Wilhelm Roentgen — a form of presidency of the United Mine ; existing wetlands with man-made conduct another in;Klepth study of under winter storm warnings for snow, gusty winds Families in Crisis, a Hartford the town wants to see addressed is If the proposed Route 6 express­ “ In our minds, changing from 79 radiation that became known as Workers, was found murdered ‘ the environmental impact of the and blowing snow. A winter storm warning for a community agency. He holds a the sharing of the Buckland fire­ way is built from Bolton Notch to or 80 acres to 60 wouldn’t change ones, he said. X-rays. with his wife and daughter at If the Corps approves the prop­ highway. bachelor’s degree in therapeutic house. In December, the Demo­ Windham, only about 60 acres of our feelings,” Higgens said. She foot or more of snow was issued for the cen ^ l On this date; their home in Clarksville, Pa. osal, known as wetlands mitigation, In a preliminary recommenda­ recreation services from the Uni­ cratic majority on the town Board wetlands will be destroyed instead said that if 60 acres were destroyed, mountains of Arizona. / 589, Catherine de Medici of In 1981, police in England ‘ most of the wetlands would be built tion, the Corps decided to ask for versity of Connecticut and a mas­ of Directors proposed to build an of some 80 acres as previously it still would be the largest taking Winter storm warnings were posted fo^h e FrancejcUed at the age of 69. a rre s t^ Peter Sutcliffe, a truck in the eastern part of the project, another Environmental Impact ter’s degree in public administra­ addition to the station that Eighth thought, a state Department of ever by a highway project in New mountains of western Wyoming and a sn driver later convicted of the Byrnes said. The DOT would Statement. In addition, highway a Brlffsh naval expedi- tion from the University of New District firefighters could use. Transportation official said this England. advisory was issued for lower elevations of “ Yorkshire Ripper’’ murders o f! , replace as much wetlands as opponents and the EPA have by Benedict Arnold Haven. As for the sewer line. Joyner last morning. The EPA has long opposed the western Wyoming. The storm had dumped up needed to make the man-made requested that another study be Richmond, Va. 13 women. ,— Lucey, with more than 10 years’ month said it might not be economi­ expressway because of the damage inches of snow in sections of Yellowstone Natioi areas functionally equivalent, done. The DOT is hoping to avoid 1895, French Capt. Alfred Ten years ago: Senate Dchno-. experience in hospital medical cally feasible for the Eighth Dis­ James Byrnes, the DOT’S envir­ it would do to the environment, and Park, Wyo. which could mean that more or less that because it would take at least fus, convicted of treason, crats named Hubert H. Humph- /,■— records, was quality review super- trict to build the sewer if it cannot onmental planning director, said has instead urged that other Heavy snow warnings were issued for the than 60 acres would be created, he two years to complete. was publicly stripped of his rank. rey to be deputy president pro '' visor at Madison (Wis.) General collect the outlet charges from actual examination of the 11.8-mile alternatives be explored. southwest mountains of Colorado while travelers’ said. He was later declared innocent. tern of the Senate, one day after Hospital before coming to Man­ those who would use it. The town, path of the highway found that the But Byrnes said information advisories were in effect for the mountains and The EPA strongly opposes mit­ The Corps would use the EIS In 1925, Nellie Tayloe Ross Humphrey withdrew from the/ chester. She has a bachelor’s though, has maintained that it department's previous estimate currently being prepared for the MORNING CLOUDS — Weather satellite photo taken at 2:30 a.m. shows western valleys of Utah. igation. Higgens and the EPA's already submitted, or a new one, to became the first woman to race for Senate majority leader, degree from the University of needs those fees to pay for down­ was incorrect by more than 20 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers — regional adminstrator, Michael decide on whether a permit should layered rain clouds from coastal South Carolina to northeast Florida and Snow-prompted travelers’ advisories were become governor of a state as she won by Robert C. Byrd. Wisconsin and is continuing her stream improvements to its sewer acres. Since field crews have been the agency that will decide whether Deland, have said mitigation be issued. The EPA has strongly low-level shower clouds over southern Florida. These clouds are issued for high country of centrai and eastern assumed office in Wyoming to graduate studies. system. compiling additional data for the to issue permits to build over the wetlands — will demonstrate that should only be attempted as a last warned that it might veto a (decision Nevada and across southeast Idaho. finish out her late husband’s $170 million project, it has been associated with a developing storm off the northern Florida coast. Rain there are no other viabib alterna­ resort. The agency has said the by the Corps to grant <*i .vetlands Today’s forecast called for snow across the term. found that less than 60 acres of shower clouds at the lower elevations and snow shower clouds at the high wetlands would be claimed, he said. tives, such as widening the existing DOT has not adequately explored permit. Rockies and central and southern intermountain In 1933, the 30th President of Lott^y spots over the southern half of California, Nevada and western Utah are However, Elizabeth Higgens, a two-lane Route 6. other options. Higgens said that representa­ region. the United States, Calvin Coo- P Z C gets site plan associated with an upper atmospheric trough of low pressure Just west of review coordinator with the federal He said the report, requested by Byrnes said the DOT’S report to tives of the EPA and the Corps were Temperatures around the nation at 2 a.m. EST lidge, died at his home in the Corps will be completed later scheduled to fly in a helicopter San Diego, Calif. Mostly middle and high clouds extend out across the Connecticut daily: Environmental Protection Agency, the Corps in October, will maintain ranged from 4 degrees below zero at Glens Falls, Northampton, Mass., at the age said today that if about 60 acres that the plans for the highway are this week or next week. The Corps today over the path of the planned Rockies and Plains states. N.Y., to 68 at Key West, Fla. of 60. Saturday: 540 for 25 condo units were taken, it would still be “ a very acceptable. Those plans will in­ will then use that information to highway to examine what wetlands In 1943, educator and scientist substantial impact.” clude a proposal to replace the decide whether the DOT should would be damaged. George Washington Carver died Play Four: 9222 The Planning and Zoning Com­ This is the second time in a year mission will hold a public hearing at that the Frechettes have proposed 7 tonight in the Lincoln Center to build 25 condominiums at the 5 hearing room to consider a site plan site. The PZC approved the first School has O n the Light Side proposal by two Coventry develop­ request last year, but limited the PEOPLE number of units to 15. At the time, ers seeking to build 25 condonii- nium units at the intersection of the commission said local roads one class could not handle the additional “ When the Going Gets Tough,” Park and St. James streets. Singer checks in stein’s collection of unusual Queens mailman takes Muller, 35. has received most traffic that 25 units would bring. from “ Jewel of the Nile.” b their proposal, Herman and canes. of his tickets while ontReToBT^ Annette Frechette have proposed to That decision prompted a lawsuit about AIDS Rock star Elton John checked ’The group Berlin recorded top honors for tickets ’Tyson gave Bernstein an elabo­ “ They tell me to take a train to put four living uniU in the existing by the Frechettes against the PZC. into a private hospital in Sydney, “ Take My Breath Away,” Richie rately carved African chief’s NEW YORK (AP) - Accumu­ my route; but I ’ m not going to house and 19 units in two large Although that suit is still pending ^'fecohied “Say You, Say Me,” Australia, today for throat cane from Kenya, while Suther­ lating parking tickets is the price take my bags of mail on the train, buildings they plan to build at the in court, the Frechettes’ attorney By John Mitchell Cetera recorded “ Glory of Love” Herald Reporter surgery. land gave him a ship’s captain’s Jim Muller pays to live and work so I drive,” he said. rear of the site. has said traffic conditions in the “ It feels OK today, which is and Ocean recorded “ When the cane, complete with compass in New York. Every morning Muller has to In addition, site plans show, two area have changed now that half of great,’ ’ he said to reporters, at Going Gets Tough.” and telescope blended into a fight for one of eight spots condominiums with access for the Interstate 384 connector is One class in the Manchester school system offers information on times speaking in a whisper that The winner will be chosen by brass handle. ’The Queens mailman has col­ designated for postal workers in handicapped people would be put in complete. AIDS, and there are no plans to was barely audible. subscribers to The Music City An Irish shepherd’s walking lected almost 60 tickets over the front of the postal station, which a fourth building the developers Planning officials have said they expand on instruction, the director John, 39, was plagued by a News, a national country music stick, fitted with a whistle to years, enough to make him the has 100 employees. At night, he plan to build on the 2.7-acre site, will consider the current proposal of curriculum said last week. throat problem during his recent publication. summon sheep came compli­ winner of the second annual which is zoned Planned Residence on its own merits and will not let the has another parking headache “ We don’t have any (classes on Australian “ Tour de Force” and Parking Ticket Competition Development. lawsuit influence their decision. ments of Keach. trying to find a spot in front of his AIDS) except at the eighth-grade was advised last week to undergo A cane is Bernstein’s sign-off sponsored by the New York City home. level,” said Allan B. Chesterton, exploratory surgery, which is No rain on parade symbol on his television shows, Alternate Side of the Street Muller estimates he’s spent director of curriculum for the scheduled Tuesday. Actors Patrick Dnffy and John produced by ’ ’Cane Parking Calendar. between $500 and $700 on tickets Manchester schools. “ Nothing will “ With any luck there won’t be a ’The calendar lists the days on Marlow’s buildings Astin didn’t let the first storm of Productions.” in the 20 years since he got his be altered.” full-scale operation,” said the 1987 keep them out of a “ We Love “ It’s an affectation,” said which parking rules are sus­ license. One mandatory eighth-grade British singer. “ I don’t think it Santa Monica” parade, organiz­ Bernstein, 49. “ I carry a cane pended and offers tips for avoid­ “ You got to do what you got to class, “ Focus on Wellness,” fea­ will put my career in jeopardy ers said. every day just for fun. Without a ing tickets. do,” Muller said. in shape for move tures two lessons on infectuous but I just want to get it over The parade in Santa Monica, cane, I’d feel I had on just one diseases during its life cycle unit. with.” shoe.” “ AIDS is mentioned under this,” Calif., Sunday was organized by struction project, with the town and John canceled one of his the lay Buddhist organization • Two buildings in the path of a Chesterton said. : proposed access road east of state sharing the remainder. Australian concerts, collapsed LIONEL RICHIE Nichiren Shoshu of America, Manchester Herald ; downtown Main Street are structu- The estimated construction cost Chesterton said that state offi­ on stage at another and has . song of the year? which has had headquarters in cials determine this type of educa­ scrapped all remaining perfor­ ' rally sound and could be relocated, of the Main Street project is $4.8 the coastal community for nearly Today’s quotes ' a consultant engineering firm has million. tion in the schools. “ At some point, mances in 1987. USPS 327-500 VOL. CVI, No. 81 when it comes down from the state, 20 years. About 550 people : determined. Kandra said today he assumes “ It was very disappointing to it will be discussed,” he said. “ I ’m watched the floats and a march­ “ Someone yelled ‘calm down,’ Publlthed dally except Sunday Suggested carrier rates are $1.90 ; The firm, Kahn and Bayer of there is an established procedure have to cancel concerts, but and certain holldaya by the Man- to the songwriter rather than the ing band, police said. and then everyone started pan­ weekly. $6.50lor one month, $19.25 ■ Manchester, has informed George for financing the relocation of sure at some point in time we will there was no alternative,” he chaatar Publlahing Co., ISBralnard for three months, $3a50 for six performer, and is to be an­ “All the 3,000 participants icking.” — Jane Whitney, 26, of : Marlow, owner of the two buildings, structures in the path of roads. expand this.” said. Place, Mancheater, Conn. 08040. months and $77.00 tor one year. Recent information that intrav­ nounced Jan. 20. were determined to march, des­ Philadelphia, a passenger on an Second claaa postage paid at Man­ ! that they are sound enough to be Mall rates are available on request. Marlow said there is no problem enous drug users in Connecticut The finalists are Giorgio Mor- pite the rain ... but most of the Amtrak train that derailed in a chester, Conn. POSTM ASTER: ; moved if it is economically feasible over the proposed new location for Send address changes to the Man- have replaced homosexual men as 9 oder and ’Thomao Whitlock, who parade was done with no rain,” high-speed collision with three • to move them, according to George Richie a finalist chaater Herald, P.O. Box 501. Man- To place a classmed or display one of the buildings, the one at the the number-one risk group for AIDS wrote “ Danger Zone” and “ Take said parade spokesman John locomotives, killing at least 12 : Kandra. Manchester’s public cheatar. Conn. 00040. advertisement, or to report a news north end of Purnell Place. But he didn’t surprise Chesterton. He said My Breath Away,” both from the Ford. people. Item, story or picture Idea, call 643- works director. Singer-songwriter Lionel Ri­ ] said there is some problem over the he had read reports that indicated 271l.Ofnca hours are 8:30a.m. to5 ' If it proves economical to move chie is one of five finalists up for movie “ Top Gun; ” Peter Cetera, If you don't rscalvo your Herald location of the building at Purnell the switch was coming and added p.m. Monday through Friday. : the two buildings, which house a the movie song of the year award David Footer and Diane Nini for “ I don’t like to call it dead on by 5:00 p.m. weekdays or 7:30 a.m. Place and Oak Street. that it could swing back again. as his “ Say You, Say Me” goes “ Glory of Love,” from “ Karate Strange collection arrival, but it’s obviously going Saturday, please telephone your ; total of six businesses, a major Kandra has suggested two sites, against “Danger Zone,” re­ Kid Part II;” Richie for “Say to be reworked considerably.” — carrier. If you're unable to reach The Mancheater Herald Is a mem­ obstecle to the reconstruction of your carrier, call subscriber service one fronting on the access road and He said he thought this new corded by Kenny Loggins. You, Say Me,” from “White Actress Cicely ’Tyson and ac­ House Republican Leader Ro­ ber of the Associated Press and a •downtown Main Street would be at 647-0946 by 5:30 p.m. weekdays member of the Audit Bureau of Cir­ one fronting on Oak Street. Marlow information had little bearing on The honor in the seventh Knights;” and Billy Ocean, tors Donald Sntherland and bert MichM of Illinois, on Presi­ for dathrary In Manchester. : removed. said he would prefer to have the culations. Marlow and operators of some of theschools. “ I don’t think we have a annual National Songwriter Wayne Brathwaite, Barry Eait- Stacy Reach all have contributed dent Reagan’s record $1.02 building front on the access road, 8 ; the businesses have strongly ob­ lot of intravenous drug users,” he mond and Robert John Lange for to television producer Jay Bern­ trillion federal budget. but he said Kandra’s plan puU the Awards in Nashville, Tenn., goes jected to demolishing the busi­ said. “ It’s not necessarily more of a building farther away from the risk.” nesses to make way for an access access road than he would like. road. The road would handle traffic State officials estimated that of while sections of Main Street are When the Manchester Board of the last 70 diagnosed cases of AIDS, closed for reconstruction. It would Directors meets Tuesday, it will about 40 Involved heterosexual FREE CLASSIHED ADS also provide access to parking lots consider approving a third supple­ intravenous drug users, their sex­ behind businesses on Main Street. mental agreement with the DOT ual contacts, or their children. over design cosu for the project. Kandra said today he does not The state has distributed $100,000 7 The newest agreement increases To all Herald Readers who have something to sell for know the mechanics involved in to drug-treatment programs in read classified finding out how much the moves the ceiling on design costs to New Haven, Hartford, Stamford $388,000 with the state paying up to ’99 or less. We will run your ad for 7 days — FREEI would cost and who would pay for and Bridgeport so they can hire $3^,000 of it and the town the the relocation. Marlow said Friday counselors to offer AIDS antibody r------remainider. No matter what your advertising message, 1 he will not pay for the move. testing to drug addicts. The move is Fill out coupon (one word 2 0 4 The project is being designed by Officials with the state Depart­ the first of its kind attempted by per opaco) and mall or the Manchester engineering firm of more peopie in this area wiii read it in • ment of TransportaUon could not be bring to the Manchester 9 7 • any state, officials have said. reached tills morning for comment Fuss and O’Neill. Herald Office, 16 Bralnard Many changes have been made in ciassified. W e’ii heip you reach the right • 10 on the relocation. But when Marlow Place. 11 10 and the town administration agreed the plans since the project was first proposed. Major modifications peppie, too! Ciassified ads get results. Clearly state Hern and price ia 14 10 10 in October to consider moving the were made after the state rejected EMERGENCY In ad. One Item only per buildings, a DOT official said the the first plan that was the subject of Fire — PoIlQB — Medical ad. No pot, tag sale, or department would support the Name. Phone a ^ b lic hearing. Since then, other Call 643-2711 for Classified. commercial ads accepted. relocation plan If it did not violate DIAL 911 state standards. changes have been made to reduce Federal funds will pay for 85 the Impact of losing parking spaces In Manchester percent of the cost of the recon- on M ^n Street. MANCHESTER HERALD. Monday. Jan. S, 1987 - 5 4 - MANCHESTER HERALD, Monday. Jan. 5 ,19»7 S ta te Survivors of hotel fjre Connecticut in Brief Traffic, storms ap p eals return to state for care PestIcldfdJarn allowed to burn SUFFIELD-A1 Ire that ignited a bam and 20 tons of pesticide was allowed to bi I after experts told Suffield firefighters that claim twp^ Richard Bums cf Paterson, N.J., groundwater! I be contaminated if water were used to douse By Suian Okula “ He’s home. He’s fine,” said the blaze. a c q u itta l Joan Benevento of Woodbridge, a burn victim, was flown to By The Associated Press The Auoclated Press The flptC which began late Friday, destroyed a 25,000-square whose 43-year-old husband, John, Maguire Air Force Base In south­ ern New Jersey, then taken to St. foot born owned by the Kogut Nurserieaof Meriden and nearly all Two winter storms and heavy ANSONIA (A P) - In an unusual NEW HAVEN - Eight people was taken by ambulance to Y a le -, New Haven Hospital for treatment Barnabas Medical Center in Liv­ the farm machinery stored wlm the powered chemical, said Fire holiday traffic led to two deaths and move, state prosecutors have filed injured in the Dupont Plaza Hotel 71 injuries in motor vehicie acci- of broken bones in each foot. Mrs. ingston, N.J., officials said. Robert Chief Thomas L. Bellmore. ILW aktinally put out late Saturday an appeal of the acquittal of Daniel fire in Puerto Rico were carried off Rowland of New York City and afternoon, he said. \ dentSj^pver the longNNew Year’s a U.S. Air Force plane in stretchers Benevento had returned from Stuart, a Milford man accused of Robert Silverman of Long Island The pesticide is manufactured by\the FMC Corp. and called w ep l^ d , Connecticut State Police to begin treatment closer to their Puerto Rico earlier in the week. the 1982 rape and slaying of a were flown by helicopter to the Zineb, but is more popularly known a^“ tobacco dust.” It was left say. 5-year-old girl. homes. A team of doctors from Yale-New Cornell Medical Center in New by the previous owner of the 280-aci^ farm, the Consolidated If the appeal is granted, the A C-9 cargo plane, outfitted as a Haven Hospital boarded the plane Eve G. Barest, 66, of Torrington York. Cigar Co., Bellmore said. original 1983 conviction would be flying hospital, also carried about to examine the patients, who were was kitled shortty after 2 a.m. The burning chemical gave off a siilphur-like smell and the upheld for Stuart, who had served two dozen uninjured family then taken off by a forklift. The Gomez-Marcial said other people Thursday on Interstate 84 in almost four years in prison before members and other hotel guests uninjured were greeted in Tweed- taken to hospitals from the plane firemen wore self-contained breathing apparatus. Newtown when her car was hit from being acquitted in a second trial home to a teary welcome late New Haven Airport by New Haven were Edward Kohn of Fairfield,' “ The chemicals degenerate into harmless compounds when behind by a speeding car. The granted when new evidence was Sunday. Mayor Biagio DiLleto, friends and who had a broken leg and fractured exposed to heat,” Bellmore said. “ That was why we were told to driver of the other car, Jeffrey uncovered. “ For two days, we’ve been family. vertebrae: Frank Lawrence, 41, of leave it bum .” Morteza, 27, of Waterbury was State prosecutors say the appeal, waiting to get on this plane to get The injured were in the Dupont Shelton, who suffered bums on 19 charged with second-degree mans­ filed in Superior Court in Ansonia, home,” said Lorraine Massaro of Plaza Hotel when the fire broke out percent of his body; and A1 Bianco, laughter with a motor vehicle while is the first in recent history of an Hamden. Her S5-year-old husband, on New Year’s Eve. The flight was 46, of Bridgeport, whose injuries Woman set to Join Foot Guard intoxicated and released on $5,000 acquittal in a criminal case. Pasquale, was transferred from the for any hurt Americans or their were not immediately known. bail, state police said. WEST HAVEN — Karen L. McCoy Fremuth will soon make AP photo The 35-year-old man had been plane to Yale-New Haven Hospital relatives who wanted to come Robert Polacko, 33, of Stafford- home, said Chip Parker, a spokes­ history when she plays her flute with the Governor’s Foot Guard. J sentenced to life in prison in June for treatment for bums, a damaged THE DEATH TOLL stood at 96 ville was killed Friday after his car Fremuth, 23, is on the verge of becoming the first woman in the 1983 in the rape and killing of vertebra and a sprained ankle. <4 man for Rep. Sam Gejdenson, Sunday. Ninety-four bodies were collided with another vehicle on Against the tide Constance Roberts of Milford, the Four of the injured were taken to D-Conn. recovered from the 26-story hotel foot guard, the nation’s oldest military organization in snow-covered Route 19 in Stafford, daughter of an acquaintance. Yale-New Haven Hospital and a Harry Gaynor, president of the and two people died in the hospital. continuous operation, and the country’s only foot guard. authorities said. A high tide sightseer runs away from the Bouievard. While coastal areas expe­ fifth was taken to St. Vincent’s New Jersey-based National Burn Two Connecticut men, Jerome “ I ’m not a super feminist. I believe in being treated equal,” she He had been granted a new trial The driver of the other car, rienced some flooding, most of Connec­ Hospital in Bridgeport. Three oth­ Victim Foundation, said the pur­ Mandell, 59, of Easton and Alvin said. sea waii at Hampton Beach, N.H., Friday on the basis of suicide notes in 27-year-old Wayne Russell, also of ers were taken to hospitals in New pose of transferring patients to the Cohen, 56, of Hamden have been Fremuth and her husband, Volker Fremuth, 23, also are the as a rare combination of astronomicaiiy ticut was spared the full wrath of the which Joseph Salomone, a Milford Staffordville, suffered multiple York and New Jersey. mainland was to bring bum victims identified as having died in the fire, first m arried couple in the foot guard. Joining the foot guard, he storm. man who hanged himself during bruises and lacerations, state po­ high tides and a northeaster pushed Stuart’s first trial, confessed to Dr. Carlos Gomez-Marcial, an closer to their families to help in while seven other state residents says, is “ a good way for me to get out a little.” lice said. water over the wali and onto Ocean sexually assaulting an unnamed emergency medicine specialist their recovery process. are listed as missing. Karen Fremuth’s status is not official yet. A girl. who helped attend the injured on Mandell and Cohen were among Raymond J. Guarino, the major commandant of the Second “ A PATIE N T WHO is traumat­ Even though the second trial Jury the 3>A-hour flight, said all of the an informal group of 33 friends who Company, which Fremuth Joined, has not sworn her in yet ized or suffering from bums needs of nine men and three women never paUents were in stable condition. travel to the Caribbean every because he is waiting for the results of a required state police The injured, who live in Connecti­ the support of family and friends. Lobbyists ready to converge on Capitol saw Salomone’s notes, whjch were background check. cut, New Jersey and New York, It’s a crisis,” said Gaynor. “ Many year’s end. not admitted as evidence, it still The fire injured about 140 people. were suffering from either bums or miles from home, you can’t get that acquitted Stuart last month. AP photo Twenty people remained hospital­ By Judd Everhart make it. sociation and the Connecticut Food lawsuits, attorneys fees and dam­ But the chief state's attorney’s bone fractures, he said. kind of support.” Several groups have already Stores Corp. age awards, was designed to make John Benevento said White House ized Sunday. NU says license extensions safe The Associated Press office believes a second trial should More than 800 people were announced their hopes for the new insurance more available and Frank Lawrence, 41, of Huntington, is carried into ABOUT 40 RELATIVES, friends officials authorized the plane. Labor also wants manufacturers never have been granted. staying at the hotel when the fire BERLIN — Northeast Utilities is seeking approval to run three HARTFORD - When the 1987 session. affordable. N and onlookers were waiUr ____ , ^ The plane, based at McChord Air to be required to give advance “ The state now seeks permission Yaie-New Haven Hospital Sunday after he and other broke out in the afternoon before of its nuclear power plants three to five years longer than allowed General Assembly convenes on For example, the Connecticut One bill filed for the 1987 session the plane, but were kept behind Force Base near Tacoma, Wash., notice before closing a plant or to appeal. It does so because it survivors of the Dupont Plaza Hotel fire in Puerto Rico the New Year’s Eve celebration. Wednesday, all of the action won’t Business and Industry Association, would repeal a key provision in the fence. Among the onlookers was a ,flew to the island from Charleston, by their existing operating licenses. making a major layoff — an idea believes that the first jury verdict Many have left the hland since on be on the floor of the House and a powerful business lobby accus­ taw eliminating “ Joint and several were airlifted into New Haven aboard a U.S. Air Force child who held a sign that said, i,C., where reservists had been The utility said it could save its customers M45 million without long opposed by CBIA and the was set aside in error and that a commercial alrllne41ights. Senate. There’ll be a lot more going tomed to getting pretty much what liability,” which ailowed a plaintiff new trial was unwarranted,” Chief plane. “ Welcome Home, Grandpa.” . sitting in the sun on this particular porch at this routinely and purposely dropped in with the London Fog Raincoats (rog. 140) NOW 99 SAVE 41 particular house in Miami. afternoon meal. PIgsuede Jackets (reg. 125) NOW 79 SAVE 46 He says it began some years after Fidel Castro Hernandez says the men in his prison went on Mlnl-edHortal CUBE STEAKS...... *2.39ib. Leather Jackets (reg. 285) NOW 199 SAVE 86 took over the island of Cuba. Hernandez was bom Hernandez on the porch. The place is owned and strike at one point, to protest the conditions. But NOW 50% OFF in that country and wanted to stay, so he tried at operated by a group called the Historic Political rather than relent, the connmunist authorities sent Talk about your teaijerkers! It seems the Robert Stock Jackets (reg. 47*-82) first to accept the new government. But he soon Prisoners of Cuba, and it’s supported by dues, some of the dissidents to their death. Quietly, nation’s arms dealers, gathered at a $550-a-head grew disillusioned, and eventually bitter, and he donations and some government assistance. Hernandez says those dissidents are the people who conference recently, complained that the From Our Deli Dept SPORTSWEAR — 8 says he wound up trying to kill the dictator. Hernandez is one of six current residents. He are now enshrined here on the honor roll of heroes. Iranian/contra weapons deal had hurt the Sweathers (All wools, selected Orlons and Cottons) 40% OFF RUS8EH BAKED ^ j . The plan was to do it with explosives. Hernandez says he pays $10 a month for room and board, and industry’s image just when increasing foreign Cashmere Sweaters 50% OFF it’s something like an anti-communist center; the THE OLD MAN TREMBLES as he remembers competition and a worldwide glut of military was a sanitation engineer, working on the sewer Sero Flannel, Twill, Billiard Cloth, and Paisleys 40% OFF system of downtown. Havana, and the way he tells walls and the philosophies are posted with the comrades. He does not like to think about the hardware had already brought hard times to the VIRGINIA HAM ...... ^4.29ib. Velours, Rugbys, & Cotton Turtlenecks 30% OFF it is that he wanted to rig dynamite in the drainage references opposing Castro, Gadhafi and the Soviet times. He says he would just rather sit on the porch merchants of death. 'Ilieir grief to truly LAND O’LAKES of a government building and then detonate it Union. at the prisoners’ home, take in the sun and think heart-rending. In fact, we can’t recall feeling so Merona Sportswear 3(Fh OFF remotely when Prem ier Castro paid a visit. how fortunate he is to be alive, to be free again and sorry for honest, misunderstood businessmen since MOZZARELLA CHEESE...... »2.79ib. Fancy Dress Shirts 40% OFF lERNANDEZ POINTS to a bumper sticker to at last be safe in the United States. the success of the civil righto movement put a' TH E PLO T. HOW EVER, failed in 1968. sutoorting the Nicaraguan contras. And he salutes He can never forget, though. The song of the crimp in the market for cattle prods and fire hoses Due to the drastic price reduction alterations are at cost (except trouser 7 Hernandez says the police caught him stockpiling a photograph of Cuban liberator Jose Marti. Other Cuban political prison was despair. He says the From Our Owrt Bakery bottoms which are FREE) and the only charge cards accepted will be master the assassination materials, and be was tossed into residrats say that American intelligence agents guards would not let him sleep a full night, he was (Manchester Store Only) card and VISA. prison. He stayed there for two long and difficult have dropped by to put fliers on the bulletin board, forced to punish himself at hard labor, and he grew decades; when he was released last year, he left and th esis an honor roll of dead anti-Castro accustomed to the taste of spilled blood and to a iMaitrhpalpr Hpralh heroes. permanent sense of lost hope and disgust. immediately for the Cuban exile community in Founded In 1881 ANGEL FOOD CAKE...... *1 .6 9 . south Florida. It can be sald^hat all of the residents in the home Hernandez says he wakes up in bed sometimes Itoib-Oat 0 AM - 0 MC asa 0 AM - • M l He arrived with no funds, of course. And his have come closetoL^ing includM on the latter thinking that he is still struggling for survivla in P B * H f M. SIEFFBtT...... DOUGLAS A. BEVINS...... annus jail. And it’s not altogether comforting to find out ® e G e i youth had been spent. So that’s how he came to this roll. And Hemandezlhe.e{!gii)Mr is a good ...... EiweuUvaEdllor ALEXANDER QIRELU d c fcfQaslonbuiy Q house in Miami. The house is the Casa del Preso, example. He says he serveotinie in several Castro it’s a nightmare. He says he can’t help wondering if ...... AtMdMeEdNor 317 Highland St. Route 44 he will yet wake up to And that the struggling is Mancheater Coventry the prisoners’ home; it is a privately run charitable penitentiaries, where he was beaten, starved and DENISE A. ROBERTa .... Advert Woo Dlieelor 8 4 6 0 M AIN BTREBT, OLA8 TONBURT, CONNBCTlOtIT 0 6 0 SS TBLBPHONB: 808-6 8 3 -6 8 0 8 institution that offers refuge to retired soldiers of pushed psychologically to the brink of his real, and the Casa del Preso is the dream. MARK F. ABRAITIS HICHLAKB PARK MARKET 646-4277 742-7361 SHELDON COHEN ...... BudtMM MMiger the waragainst Castro. existence. ....Compodno Mwiiger / ROBERT H. HUBBARD .... Pfweroom Mwiiger h OURS: Tues.-Frl. 10-6:00; Thurs. until 9:00: Sat. 9:30-5:30; Closed Mon. The home is in Miami’s “ Little Havana.’’ There The torture has recently been documented in an Tom Tiede to a columnist for Newspaper JEANNE G. FROMERTH...... CtoouIMkm Maimer are Cuban and American flags flying over excruciating book called “ Against All Hope.” It Enterprise Association. V-

t - MANCHE8TER HERA: Monday. Jan. 8 .1M7 MANCHESTER HERALD. MondavT.Jan. 5.1987 — > w . HAQAR T H I HORRIBLE SNAFU by Bruce Beattie FBANUTS by Cbariea M. Sehirii . J TRIER BUT I WMEM I WA$ A I AL-WAYi? YE5.MAAM..I 6UESS ,. , PONY TAKE AUU. CAN'T BE NEAT I^IANTBP T& UVB IN A Tpee K3I2T TNEUBMON-YBLUAN IT WAS KINP OF A ^LIKE MARCIE NERE.^ ANP BAT JBULY 0BANS/ O h l E S « . BUSINESS ______I ME55V PAPER... I** IT. Companies going public must file

QUESTION: — printed in red ink on the cover are handling. Ip there any way page — that the prospectus has not to find ’ out, a r^ jS ito t/t^ fS you 5H0ULP SEE HER ' I THINK SHE yet been reviewed by the SEC. QUESTION: I made a small KEEPS HER SOCKS/you RE ahead of time, initial investment with a penny ROOM AT HOME, MA'AM.. the names of HER CLOSET ANP DRESSER IN ALPHABETICAL (WEIRR Investors’ QUES’TION: After learning that stock brokerage. On Sunday night, O small U.S. com­ a certain brokerage firm was going the broker phoned me at home and THERHANTOM by Lm FaNi A By Barry DRAWERS ARE 60 NEAT... ORPERJ A 5 I R . . panies planning G uide to handle a new stock issue, I went said his firm was going to offer a ’ T A R A W im I7| tb “ go public” in to the firm ’s office, said 1 wished to new issue of stock the next day, at the near future? U William A. Doyle open an account and buy 100 shares fl.50 per share. I agreed to buy 1,000 I would like to of the new issue. shares. dbtain informa­ A broker was very helpful filling The next night, the broker called tion about such out the papers to open an account, again and said he could get only 500 a o m p an ics, something I had never done before. shares for me, but he would like to “ Dangl How should I Itnow what a their products and which brokerage firm s also print such lists. I f you But she told me I could not buy any sell me more shares of the same 10-gallon hat Is In the metric system?" houses will handle the initial have a brokerage account, your of the stock I wanted at the offering. stock, at $2.15 per share, which was offerings. broker might be able to provide She said the new issue was sold out, the current market price. even though the sale was not What is your opinion of th is' It CAPTAIN EASY ®by Crooks A C asale u|)dated lists, even if his or her ANSWER: Every American or brokerage house is not going to scheduled to take place until later left me feeling a little I "LUCKILV, TOMMY WA& A foreign company planning to make in the week. apprehensive. PRETTY RESOURCEFUL KIP''... participate in the listed offerings. an offering of its stock for sale Every registration statement is I feel the brokerage firm should throughout these United States is condensed into a prospectus; every have been required to sell me the ANSWER: Only a ’’little’’? When required to file a registration, Reg A filing into an offering shares I wanted at the new issue you got that second phone call, you containing all the information you offering price. Am I wrong? should have said, “ Sell.” Of course, BLONDIE by Daan Young A Stan Drako circular. Brokers handling new s^ek and more, with the Securities stock issues are required to distrib­ you would have had to settle your OUR CHRSTAWe TREE eCHOCK. IS OPEN ASAIN, and Exchange Commission. ute those shorter documents to ANSWER: Yes. You ran into a purchase by paying $750 before IS IN THE TRASK. AND MV TOES ARE On a sizable offering, a very buyers. rather common situation. When collecting the proceeds of the sale, P-PREEZING detailed registration statement A word of caution about new brokerage firms are preparing to which might or might not have been must be filed. F or an offering of no issues. They are not sure roads to market a new issue, they normally made at $2.15 a share. more than fl.S million, a shorter riches. Although some have pro­ contact their established custo­ The market for “ penny stocks’’ — “ Regulation A” filing is required. vided financial rewards to buyers, mers and take “indication of those trading below $5 — is a wild Filings with the SEC are a matter many others have been investment interest,’ ’ in effect, preselling the and wooly operation. Your expe­ of public record and many financial duds. stock before the official offering. rience has the strong aroma of con publications list that information, Before putting any money on the Naturally, brokers contact their job. ARLO AND JANIS • by Jimmy Johnson under headings such as “ Recent line for a new issue, try to obtain biggest and best customers first. SEC Filings,” “ Securities In Regis­ and study its preliminary prospec­ There are time when smaller Doyle welcomes written ques­ BOTI KNOW rT6 There.' WU% CHIPPER mMORNINGI niSJMWNPi’/IftUDOCNLV VOO PR0BA6LV WON’T TAKE tration” or “ Pending New Issues.” tus, known as a ‘ ‘red herring. “ That established customers don’t get tions, but he can provide answers HAVE M ) WEEKS VACMIOM IT TiLL SUMMER.' Many full-service brokerage nickname stems from the warning cracks at new issues their brokers only through the column. TIME AVAILABLE.' ^ A P photo i ON THE FA8TRACK by Bill Holbrook Bank failures hit post-Depression high Whiskey waterfall \T6TFi)B,t0S W£Ve &5TTO Fi6HT 60fAl2,TrieRe'& WHM" PVA , 60 fiJii Baker Beam tests the alcohol content of distilled whiskey Trii6 WITH U£ No 5I6NoFTHI& IT. WASHINGTON (AP) - Nearly William Seidman noted in congres­ sion, from 1934 to 1939, bank "ABOUT 79 PERCENT of sav­ as it gushes Into the "try box” at the James B. Beam ings and loans are prosperous and I>RfeAD«>TAKHV£RMN&,l& I 3ENfrAJlS£QLg one of every 10 U.S. banks is in some sional testimony last year. "The failures averaged 67 per year, or Distilling Co.’s bottling plant in Clermont, Ky. Beam is the kind of financial trouble, and a agricultural and energy sectors half the current rate. will continue to be so,” McKelvey GoiUftAPTEiei^sneACK.' ) ^ ! r m 1£ AR£ grand-nephew of Jim Beam, who began producing the 60(WlVAL 60(2£M5. post-Depression record of 138 insti­ have been exceptionally weak and Still, the figure was far below the said. “But we have some real' tutions failed last year, many of are in the midst of a painful dandies in the other 21 percent.” golden-brown bourbon whiskey about 200 years ago. IKEOIS? early years of the Depression, when which were casualties of troubled adjustment process. accounts were not insured and The 21 thrift closings also set a oil and farm industries. “ These adjustments are not rumors could spark bank runs by modern record. Ten thrifts col­ ALLEY OOP ®bV Dave Qraue The Federal Deposit Insurance confined to the non-financial people frantic to withdraw their lapsed in 1985, nine in 1984 and six in Corp. said 1,484 banks as of firms," he said. “ The banks that deposits. An average of 2,277 banks SO MISS ELLA MAE THEN WHAT \ RIDE, f THAT I 1983. Before that, no more than one mid-December were on its list of serve these sectors are affected as failed each year from -1930 to 1933, THOUGHT I MIGHT SAY WE RIDE / MISTER I OVER thrift a year had foundered since in s t e a d a y OOP? o n ' troubled institutions needing spe­ w ell.” Winter NEED A LITTLE HELP with an astounding 4,000 failures in WALK? ^ WHAT? the Depression. IN RNDING M Y WAY, cial monitoring out of the 14,948 1933 itself, according to the F^IC. DID SH E? SEIDMAN SAID many banks banks whose deposits are insured Meanwhile, the Federal Home^ McKelvey said most of the thrifts by the FDIC. were reluctant or unable to diver­ U.8. ACRES by Jim Davit Loan Bank Board reported that 21 in serious trouble got away from During 1986, Texas had 26 bank sify their lending and thus were savings and loan associations their traditional role of lending hi a Clearance ' ,SHELW)N.\ /FM LITTLE> failures, the most.of any state, more vulnerable to economic woes closed their doors in 1986, whiley43 home mortgage money and moved HOW ARE V PEPRESSER followed by 16 in Oklahoma, 14 in in oil and farming. VOO POING? A BOOKER were ordered to change manage­ into more questionable real estate The 1986 failures marked a Kansas, 10 in Iowa and nine in ment and 22 were forced into loans for development and con­ Missouri. six-year surge of bank collapses. mergers with stronger partners. struction, often outside their local California and Louisiana had The 138 failures compared with 120 area. at eight failures each; Colorado and in 1985; 79 in 1984; 48 in 1983; 42 in In addition, about 250 thrifts out Wyoming, seven each; and Ne­ 1982; and 10 in 1981. of some 3,250 whose deposits are “ They get over their heads in braska, six. The figure also was the greatest insured by the Federal Savings and many cases,’’ he said. "When they “ Economic |>erformance has not number of bank failures since the Loan Insurance Corp. are in get into trouble, they try to grow out TweM^s Specialtj^ THE BORN LOSER ®by A rt Saneom ^ e n favorable for ail sectors of the FDIC was created in 1934. During trouble, said board spokesman Pat of their problems and it doesn’t economy,” FDIC Chairman L. the late years of the Great Depres­ work.” . ( wink DDE$N'TiWAK^ TfeAH,!, BUT I’lI’VE KNOWii M cKelvey. BROIHEf^ A reprobate SOMPREPR: REPROBATED ■ S h o p JfM PAVfei is -e i 1H0RHAPPI.g, ______liU H iAAIr'CllUniAMf'C A A 1987 brings worries : I

P u x x le s A a t n t g r a p h NEW YORK (AP) - If you feel a recently, the ratio of debt to equity (ownership capital) in non- Up to 50% off little trepidation as the country ENGLAND’S financial companies has lately hit a m i embarks on a new business and financial year, you need not con­ record high. 4 Result Answer to Previous Puzzle ACROSS sider yourself paranoid. “ The buildup of corporate lever­ selected items 5 Rubber tree [o JJ _T ’Z TH[£ _E Plenty of the so-called experts age during an extended, yet moder­ 1 Roadster 6 Easy task dfeur _T _N _T agree that there is a lot to worry ate, expansion is not, by itself, an PLUS 4 Put out 7 Reserved l £ 3. ^ r t h d a y #1 mORTGAGE E T 1 E A M about. alarming trend,” s a y ^ P analysts 8 Yours and mine 8 Grain [p R ^ n F Consider, first of all, that eve­ in the firm ’s p iw i^ tio n The 12 Wide shoe size 9 8iblical □ O B BBDDDB FRANK AND ERNEST ®by Bob Thavet Jan. 6,1987 ryone will be operating under a new Outlook. Pendleton Specials 13 Arm bone preposition I s i l | E P t I O R E M l tax system whose impact on However, th^y add, “if the 14 Indigo dye 10 Small Two old projects will be beneficially SSCIDBE1I1I3 BDEIEJD economic activity can only be economy wera Xo urexpectedlv 15 Singing syllable stream concluded In the year aheatl and you'll X PIP Not 5AY guessed at. slide into reiMS^on, ov^everage^ 16 Beverage pot (2 11 Toboggan be appropriately rewarded for your ef­ forts. They'll be replaced by ventures ; Consider that the recovery in companies/^uld experiencej^- 637 Main Street wds.) 17 Needle case which are new and different. business conditions that began in ble m eetinM Hgjr oJiUgations. 18 Greek dialect 19 Comparative Manchester late 1982 is rapidly aging by , “ In such CRseETsha^corporate 20 Darling suffix PI^PIN(5 Y o u p . CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) Don't historical standards, and that over finances would induce dividend Hrs: 9:30-5:00, Mon.-Sat. 21 Antique 23 Red chalcedony come down too hard on others tc^ay for the past couple of years it has been cuts, red ink/Nand in a worst case, 22 Dawn goddess 25 As well not doing things which you should have 643-6196 struggling to maintain its business insolwncy. ’’ 24 Acorn, e.g. 26 Bottomless taken care of yourself. Do your duties, fnomentum. IS Year Fiaed Rate Annual Percentage Rate 30 Year Fixed Hate I Annual Percentage Rate 26 Rug before 27 Rowing tools don't delegate them. Major changes are w ith tw o points w ith tw o points ' Consider, also, that the year, entrance 28 Odd (Scot) ahead for Capricorns in the coming year. Send for your Astro-Graph pre­ begins with a lot of old debts unpaid. Rates tased on 20% down. Rates subject to change. 30 Poetry foot 29 "Gone with the 41 Shrivels up 52 Noel dictions today. Mail $1 to Astro-Graph, ; The federal government is the 34 Part of corn Wind" home Cl IMS by F«A. Inc THnvss >-5-87 The most competitive rates, ooooo oooo 44 40s film star ' 54 Hitler follower c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, largest debtor in the world, and its plant 31 College group 56 Behold (Lat) and an unmatched special level of o Take a Look Paul_____ Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be sure to budget deficit has been so big for so 35 Ages 32 Roman highway 57 Seizes service are why COMFED remains 46 Actress Francis state your zodiac sign. WINTHROP ®by Dick Cavalll long that it has taken on the status New England's number one mort­ C ^ F = D 37 Eight (comb, 33 Actress 58 Part of a MORTGAGS CO ., INC. 48 Theatrical cou­ o f a permanent institflUon. form) Imogens____ ple church AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Your ac­ gage lender. You can bank on It I THINK ITVAOULP ALTHOUGH r CAN'T r NEVER SEE ANY LION The nation’s banks arefaced with 38 Is human 36 Dry 50 Scot. e.g. 60 Mai d e _____ tive imagination is one of your greatest When it comes to yo'ur mort­ assets. However, today you might hold BE FUN TCP BE A IMAGINE WHAT FOOCP CCMAMERCIAL.S a w elter of bad or shaK^, loans in 872-2140 40 Sketched 39 Crafty 51 Farm measure 61 Make laca gage. you can bank on COMFED. too many negative visions about things LION... I WOULD EAT. ON TV. energy, agriculture, refill estate iMgaRon fiHfilmum prtoa tuN ael ta ehanga 42 Former nuclear 1 2 3 1 Isttierumai? that will never happen. and, of course, foreign coMtries Orange agency (abbr.) Windsor Locks PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Try to with severe financial problems. 43 Religious poem 12 1-800-842-3235 627-9486 1-800-922-3260 795-0551 make due with the cash you have on "T h e re ’s an ongoing cycle Wher­ 45 Plains Indian hand today. Loans shouldn't be re­ eby banks, with the consent of WHSON CONNECTICUT MORTCAGE OFFICES; Greenwich 795 0551 Litchfield County 868 753Z 47 Actor Brynner 16 quested from friends except under the Mystic S36 4277 Orange 795 OSS 1 Windsor Locks 627 9486 most dire circumstances. ’ worldwide monetary and economic true? 49 Airline informa­ ,r o 10 officials, lend countries additional tion (abbr.) ARIES (March 21-April 19) People with 5 0 Cheerful whom you'll be involved today might money so that they can make not be Interested in the same objectives J!* principal and interest payments on 53 Religious sister - MANCHESTER HERALD, Monday. Jan. 8. 1987 Massaro closing SPORTS sad for owners

By John F. Kirch unique restaurant in Manchester, Herald Reporter she said. . ^ Giants leave 49ers shaking their heads "W e had a clientele that we If you dropped by Massaro’s West carried on today," she said. "W e Side restaurant on Center Street took on our customers hot as expecting tq eat a hot Italian meal customers, but as friends. It Bv Tom Canavan Giants play football the way San "W e just got shattered by a great and found it dark inside, there was became emotional at times, be­ The Associated Press Francisco played it in the Super team,” Bill Walsh said Sunday good reason. cause people had been coming in for Bowl years of 1981 and 1984, the after the Giants’ 49-3 playoff rout, Michael and Mary Massaro 35 years. , ^ „ EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. — 49ers could do nothing except shake his worst loss since taking over as closed the eatery’s doors for the last "W e could set our clocks (to .After . watching the New York their heads. the 49ers’ coach in 1979. " I think the time Christmas Eve, ending 35 people)," she said. "On Saturday Giants played a perfect game. They years of service in Manchester. night you would know that so-and- didn’t make a mistake.” The Massaros were squeezed out so would be calling for a pizza with New York took a giant step of business by a tight labor market pepperoni. That’s the kind of place toward its first Super Bowl appear­ that made it nearly Impossible to it was." ance as Phil Simms threw four get and retain employees, Mary The Massaros bought the busi­ touchdown passes, Joe Morris ran Massaro said today. It is a problem ness in 1951 when it was known as for two more and the Giants’ that many businesses across New the West Side Tavern. Mary Mas­ defense limited the 49ers to 184 England have been facing with saro described it as a "little hole in yards total offense and sent quar­ little success over the past few the wall” at the Ume, but It grew terback Joe Montana to the hospital years. For a small operation like considerably since then. with a concussion. h^ssaro’s. It became too much. Between 1961 and 1965, the All that separates the Giants Wlien the restaurant closed, the Massaros bought pieces of the J from the Super Bowl are the Massaros had one other employee property and the building. In 1067, Washington Redskins, who the they converted the business Into the besides themselves. Giants heat twice during the The lack of help meant that Mary West Side Italian Kitchen, although regular season. The two will meet Massaro, 66, and her husband, it was still considered a tavern. here at 4 p.m. on Sunday, with the H*rald photo by Pinto Michael, 72, were working all the That changed in 1976, when the winner heading to Pasadena, Calif., time. Considering Michael Massa­ family made its first additions to for Super Bowl XXL White Christmas, a week late ro’s heart condition, the family the building and obtained a restau­ The 49ers, with the exception of decided it would be better to retire. rant license to begin serving Montana, who spent the night Last year they sold the business to fancier dishes. Five years later, in hospitalized in New York City, A Although there was no snow in Manchester for scene Friday night when a combination of rain, snow and Michael Lynch of Lynch Toyota. 1981, the Massaros made the final simply headed west Sunday, to Christmas, there was plenty of It at Manchester's nativity sleet drenched the animals and the three Wise Men. “ It was heart-wrenching for us,” renovations, adding a lounge and pack and go home. Mary Massaro said this morning. bar, and it became Massaro’s West The 49ers made enough mistakes “ It was part of us for 35 years." Side restaurant. for two teams, beginning on their For three and a half decades, fourth play from scrimmage when Now, all that comes to an end. Massaro’s West Side was the type of wide receiver Jerry Rice fumbled Obituaries ’The Massaros said they plan to place one went to see familiar after breaking into the clear with spend part of their new free time in faces. Families have loyally eaten what seemed to be a 50-yard there for generations, making it a their house in Florida. Alexander Ferguson; touchdown pass from Montana. N W alter Rau Lucy 8. McGehan Kenny Hill of the Giants eventually midget football coach Walter Hans Rau, 94, formerly of Lucy S. McGehan, 97, of 26 recovered in the end zone for AP photo Manchester, died Friday at Salerno Marshall Road, died Sunday at a touchback, giving New York the Alexander (“Alex”) W. Fergu­ N^w York tight end Mark Bavaro hauls in McKyer made the futile attempt to break son, 69. of 128 Autumn St., died Bay Manor. Port Salerno, Fla. local convalescent home. Educator and author ball at Its 20. Sunday at Manchester Memorial He was bom in Germany and had Bom in East Hartford, she had Ten plays later, Simms hit Mark a 24-yard pass from quarterback Phil up the play. The Giants had San Hospital. A longtime coach in the lived in Manchester until his lived in the Hartford area all of her Bavaro on a 24-yard touchdown Simms for a first-quarter touchdown Francisco's number, 49-3, to advance to Midget Football League, he re­ retirement to Florida In the early life. Ieav68 mark on town pass and the Giants had a 7-0 lead against the 49ers on Sunday. Tim the NFC championship game. ceived the Unsung Hero Award 1970s. Before he retired, he was the She graduated from New Britain Instead of Rice and the 49ers. from the Manchester Sports Hall of owner of Maple Laundry and State Normal School in 1909. Before Ray Wersching cut the margin to Fame in 1985. He was the husband Cleaners in Manchester for 20 she retired she was ennployed as a Continued from page 1 sense of humor and was quite a 7-3 with a 26-yard field goal with threw touchdown passes of 28 yards of Norma (Brock) Ferguson. years. During World War T he teacher by the city of Hartford for conversationalist. “ He probably 1; 20 left in the first quarter, but it to a 15-yard touchdown pass from tackle Jim Burt on the play, past president of the Pitkin Glass Bom in Manchester Oct. 23,1917, served with the United States Navy. 40 years, spending most of her time' knew more about Manchester his­ was all Giants after that. Simms to Bobby Johnson with 50 suffered a concussion and never to Phil McConkey and 29 yards to Works Inc. “ He had a concern for Zeke Mowatt. and Morris capped he had lived in town most of his life. He was a member of the U.S. Power at the Washington Street School. tory than any other man or woman, AP photo Morris, who gained 159 yards on seconds left in the half. Lawrence returned to action, leaving backup the welfare of his fellow man.” ^ the scoring with a 2-yard TD run, all He was head custodian at Tiling Squadron. She was a lifetime member of St. for that matter,” he said. 24 carries, scored on a 45-yard run Taylor made It 28-3, intercepting a Jeff Kemp to face the Giants. Buckley, a Democrat, served on ‘“They were playinglike wolves,” Junior High School for more than 10 He is survived by a daughter, , John’s Episcopal Church, East Buckley is survived by a sister, New^ York nose guard Jim Burt (64) hits San Francisco one play after Herb Welch picked Montana pass 22 seconds later and in the third quarter. the Manchester Board of Education “ If they get somebody on a roll years, and retired eight years ago. Janice Anderson of Honolulu, Ha­ Hartford, and was a longtime Ellen J. Buckley of Manchester; off a Montana pass, making it 14-3. returning it 34 yards for a Kemp said. “ They had a fabulous from 1933 to 1964. In 1955, he was quarterback Joe Montana in second-period action they will beat them just as badly as He began playing football in 1933, waii; one sister, Ema Bissell of member of Friendship Circle of the two nieces, Elizabeth B. Miller and A blown 49ers’ coverage on a fake touchdown. day. We didn’t start off well and we while in the Civilian Conservation Pompano Beach, Fla.; and one Kings Daughters of East Hartford. honored by the town when Buckley Marie B. Langrill, both of Massa­ Sunday at Giants' Stadium. Montana suffered a field goal and a dropped intercep­ Montana, who was eight of 15 for didn’t get any better.” School on Vernon Street was named Neither did the score as Simms Please turn to page 13 Corps, and played for the next 20 nephew, Harry Bissell of Stuart, She is survived by several nieces chusetts; and two nephews, Walter concussion on the play and did not return. tion by Ronnie Lott eventually led 98 yards, was hit by Giants nose for him. years. He was a member of the Fla. and nephews. J. Buckley of West Hartford and American Legion, Silk City and Burial and memorial services The funeral will be Tuesday at 11 Other books by Buckley include Richard Buckley of Bolton. the “ History of the ^tkin Glass Merchants teams in Manchester, will be held in Manchester at a later a.m. at St. John’ s Episcopal The funeral will be at 9:45 a.m. Works,” for which he won an award and was with the Merchants team date. Aycock Funeral Home, Church, 12 Rector St., East Hart­ ’Tuesday from the John F. Tierney when it won the New England Stuart, Fla., is in charge of ford. I>rivate burial will be In from the Connecticut League of Funeral Home, 219 W. Center St., Elway rolls Pats out of playoffs Historical Societies earlier this championship. arrangements. Center Cemetery, East Hartford. followed by a mass of Christian For 22 seasons Ferguson was a There are no calling hours. year, and the textbook “ Connecti­ burial at 10: 30 a.m. at St. Maurice coach in the Midget League pro­ Memorial donations may be cut and Its Government," which he Church in Bolton. Burial will be in co-authored. where I was going as soon as I saw Eason said he was confident the gram, including 10 years as head Frank FabryckI 8r. made to the McGehan Memorial St. Bernard’s Cemetery, Rockville. Bv John AAossman said. “ At halftime I went into the “ He was an extremely thorough Blackmon jumped offside,” Elway Patriots “ could come back and win coach of the Giants. The Giants took Fund, care of St. John’s Episcopal Calling hours are Monday from 2 to The Associated Press training room to see if he was all Frank Fabrycki Sr., 73, of Union- and precise individual,” said Jac­ right, and it looked like a M.A.S.H. said. it until the safety. We’ve done it all the championship twice in that town, Pa., formerly of Hartford, Church, East Hartford. Newkirk & 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. obson, who also praised Buckley’s DENVER — With just a few unit in there’” "Vance was not the primary year.” decade. For several years, he was died Thursday. He was the husband Whitney Funeral Home, 318 Bum- Memorial donations may be mental vigor and.^-extraordinary minutes left in the first half, Denver Trainer Steve Antonopulos app­ receiver on the play,” Reeves said. Elway. who had cost Denver a the football coach at Tiling and he ALEXANDER FERGUSON of Sophie L. (Dudkiewicz) Fa­ side Ave., East . Harriord, has made to the Mary Cheney Library. vocabulary. “ I thinkiie was a man quarterback John Elway limped off lied some medication to the ankle “ It was a smart play. It was John’s touchdown in the first quarter after led that team to its first undefeated . . . longtime coach brycki and the brother of Jenny charge of arrangemdnti^ Edward Timbrell, principal of who was very close to himself,” the field with a sprained left ankle and retaped it tight. Elway stepped option after he saw the offsides.” angrily spiking the ball and draw­ season in 1973. He also worked with Dellaripa of Manchester. Buckley %hool, said he expected Jacobson said. “ He was always and it seemed he was taking the gingerly on the ankle during The score put Denver ahead ing a penalty when he was ruled the Manchester High School fresh­ He also is survived by six sons, students,^teachers and the PTA to expanding his horizons.” Broncos’ chances of beating the warmups prior to the start of the 20-17. short of the end zone on a running man squad. Frank Frabrycki Jr., Stanley Fra- recognize Buckley by contributing John Kaptonak Edson Bailey, retired principal of New England Patriots with him. second half, but said: ’"The more I New England had four subse­ play, had scrambled 22 yards for a He was a U.S. Marine Corps Helen F. Costello brycki and Walter Fabrycki. all of to the library fund. Timbrell said second-quarter touchdown to put veteran of World War IT, serving for John Kaptonak, 73. Route 85, Manchester High School, a friend of But with a little tape and a lot of walked on it, the more it loosened quent possessions. On the first two, Hartford, Theodore Fabrycki of Buckley used to attend holiday Denver ahead. 10-7. 5 Helen Frances (Agnew) Costello, Buckley’s for more than 50 years, hard work, Elway returned and up.” quarterback Tony Eason wa's three years in the South Pacific. Amston, John Fabrycki at home Colchester, died Sunc y evening at programs at the school but had 66. of East Hartford, died Saturday said the two first met when Buckley threw a 48-yard touchdown to It was as if the entire Bronco sacked on third down, forcingX Tony Franklin’s 38-yard field Besides his wife, he is survived by and Richard Fabrycki of Gaithers­ the William W. Backus Hospital, been unable to in recent years. He at Hartford Hospital. She was the was on the Board of Education. “ He Vance Johnson on the final play of team felt an obligation to compen­ punts. On the third, the Patriots goal just before the first half ended a son, Alexander S. Ferguson of burg, Md.; four daughters, Mrs. Norwich. He was the husband of hoped to make current students, wife of Edward L. Costello of East went along with many changes in the third quarter, sparking the sate for Elway’s diminished physi­ faced a fourth-and-1, debated g o ii^ had tied the game 10-10. Bristol; four daughters. Alexandra Jack (Loretta) McManmon of Las Anna (Tynda) Kaptonak and the who see Buckley’s picture in the Hartford and the mother of Edward education,” Bailey said, “ and Broncos to a 22-17 divisional playoff cal ability in the second half. for the first down, then decided to Eason’s 45-yard touchdown pass DuBois of Manchester, Karen Vegas, Nev., Mrs. Arthur (An­ father of Alice Kaptonak of office but don’t know him, more L. Costello Jr. and Patricia Dion, never permitted his being a teacher victory Sunday over New England. The offensive line, trap-blocking punt. to Stanley Morgan on a flea-flicker Maillet of East Windsor, Susan toinette) Piourde of Hartford, Mrs. Manchester. aware of his accomplishments. both of Manchester. to interfere with decisions that had Denver, which had dropped four superbly, opened up holes for Finally, with 1:37 left, defensive put New England ahead 17-13 with Gochee of Manchester, and Carol Holbert (Viola) Springer of IJnion- He also Is survived by his mother. She also is survived by her to be made.” “ He certainly was a remarkable straight playoff games since its Sammy Winder and (Sene Lang as end Rulon Jones sacked Eason in 2; 50 left in the third quarter. Ferguson of Manchester; a town. Pa., and Mrs. Sterling Pauline Koptonakc, anotherdaugh- mother. Helen (McCarthy) Agnew Bailey said Buckley had a good man,” Timbrell said. the Broncos showed an effective the end zone for a safety. It was the ’ "This is a heart-breaking loss.” brother, Walter S. Ferguson of (Sylvia ) Burnsworth of Allison No. ter, Mary Anne Castle of East 1977 Super Bowl season, now of Wethersfield; two brothers. advances to the American Clonfer- rushing attack for the first time sixth sack of the game for the said Morgan, who also had a Manchester; and a sister. Cathe­ 2. Pa.; 26 grandchildren; four Haddam; one brother, Frank Kop- Francis Agnew and Edward Ag­ since early in the season. Denver Denver defense. 19-yard touchdown reception in the rine Bagley of Independence, Towa; great-grandchildren; three great­ tonak of Waterford; one sister, ence championship next Sunday new, both of East Hartford; two ran 27 times for 122 yards in the ‘"There was no play bigger than second Quarter. “ We didn’t get it six grandchildren; and several grandchildren; three brothers, Olga Phil of Colchester; and two against the Browns in Cleveland. sisters, Lorraine Haas of Marietta. second half, giving the Broncos a the safety at the end by Rulon.” done. It doesn’t matter how it ends, nieces and nephews. Chester Fabrycki of Charmaine, grandchildren. He was prede­ ’Hie winner of that football game Ga., and Maryjane Burbidge of First storm cleanup 2-to-l edge In time of possession Reeves said. the fact is it’s ended.” The funeral will be Wednesday at Pa., Walter Fabrycki of Enfield ceased by a brother, William advances to the Super Bowl Jan. 25 Carmel Valley. Calif.; and three after intermission. “ It was one of those games that The Broncos’ thoughts, mean­ a time to be announced at the and John Fabrycki of Fontaine. Koptonak, who died in June 1986. in Pasadena. Calif, against Wa­ AP photo grandchildren. Down 17-13 late in the third go back and forth, back and forth,” while, turned to Cleveland. Watkins Funeral Home. 142 E. Calif.; two other sisters, Helen The funeral will be Tuesday at 10 shington or the New York Giants. The funeral will be Tuesday at 9 is nearing completion Cleveland defeated the New York quarter, Elway, given a free play New England Coach Raymond “ Cleveland is an excellent Center St. Burial, with military Schiavone and Josephine Looney, a.m. at the Colchester Federated a.m. at the Callahan Funeral when Patriot linebacker Don Berry said. “ I figured it would go team,” Reeves said. “ When you are Denver quarterback John Elway (7) is sacked by New honors, will be in the East Ceme­ both of Hartford. He was prede­ Church, Colchester. Burial will be Jets Saturday in the other AFC Home. 1602 Main St.. East Hart­ divisional playoff game. 23-20, in Blackmon jumped offside, went down to the wire and we’d win it. down by 10 and then win, you can England linebacker Andre Tippett during second-period tery. Calling hours are Tuesday ceased by a brother, Alex Fa­ in Linwood Cemetery, Colchester. The 4 to 5 inches of snow that fell about an hour, according to another ford. Burial will be in Hillside double overtime. deep to Johnson, who beat corner- ’The only big surprise was we didn’t. beat anybody. (Quarterback Ber- from 7 to 9 p.m. brycki. a brother and two sisters, ’There are no calling hours. Bel­ on the Manchester area Friday and spokeswoman. action of Sunday's AFC playoff game at Mile High Cemetery, East Hartford. Calling “ I was really worried when I saw back Ernest Gibson at the goal line. ‘"The Broncos made about one nie) Kosar is exciting to watch.” Memorial donations may be who died in infancy. mont Funeral Home, 19 S. Main St., Saturday caused numerous auto­ In Manchester, road crews were Stadium. Elway, shrugging off an ankle injury, returned hours are today from 7 to 9 p.m. John being helped to the locker “ I saw where (safety Fred) more big play than us. It was that “ We need to go to Cleveland with made to the Annual Alex Ferguson The funeral was today in ijnion- Colchester, is in charge of mobile accidents and scattered busy this morning removing Marion was going, and I knew close.” our guns loaded,” said Elway. to lead the Broncos to a 22-17 victory. Sportsmanship Award for an Indi­ town. Pa., foliowed by burrai in arrangements. power outages, but officials report mounds of snow from the curbs on room,” Denver Coach Dan Reeves vidual of the Manchester Fresh­ LaFayette Memorial Park. Brier Memorial donations may be that cleanup is nearing completion Main Street. Officials in Andover, man Football Team, in care of Mary Goldsnelder Hill. Pa. made to the Colchester Federated and power has been restored to all Bolton and Coventry said all roads Tiling Junior High School, 327 E. Mary Goldsnelder, 56, of 819 CTiurch or the Colchester Hayward electric customers. in their towns have been cleared, Middle Turnpike. Grant Hill Road, Coventry, died James W. Helsler Fire Department. No fatal automobile accidents but sand is being spread in trouble Friday at Hartford Hospital. She occurred in the Manchester area, spots and drifts are being plowed Lawless and the Whalers break out in a big way Francis K. Peterson was the widow of John W. Golds- James W. Heisler. 16, son of though state police said they away. ^ Douglas D. Heisler and Audrey Francis K. Peterson. 78, of neider Sr. responded to numerous calls for Five accidents involving injuries (Gilmore) Heisler, of Vernon, died Hermlne Julia Emare Simsbury, husband of Marjorie Born in Hartford, April 17, 1930, minor accidents on major high­ occurred in Manchester Friday wing after the Whalers’ loss to early in the second period and Friday at Hartford Hospital. Hermine Julia (Reboks) Emars, Bv Len Auster (Flanagan) Peterson, died Satur- she was a resident of Coventry for ways. In Manchester, seven car night and Saturday, the most Chicago lamented he couldn’t put exited. Dineen told Evans to expect He was bom in Manchester and 84, of 161 Hawthorne St., died Sports Editor * day at a Farmington convalescent 27 years. She was employed at J.C. accidents were reported Friday severe occurring Saturday after­ the puck in the Pacific Ocean. He him back for Wednesday’s game at was a student at the Regional Sunday at a local convalescent home. He was the father of David Penney for the last five years. night after snow began to fall and 14 noon on Adams Street. Police said a had gone eight games without a St. Louis. Occupational Training Center. home. She was the wife of the late HARTFORD — What slumps are Kinney Peterson of Manchester. She is survived by three sons, accidents were reported Saturday, car operated by Mark A. Dwyer, 27, goal, and had only one In his last 16 ’The win lifts the Whalers back Besides his parents, he is sur­ Girts Emars. you talking about? He also is survived by a daughter, John W. Goldsnelder Jr., Todd A. police spokesman Gary Wood said. of 107D Sycamore Lane, went out of games. into sole possession of first place in vived by a brother, Stephen Heisler Bom in Ventspils, Latvia, on For one game, at least, all talk Mrs. Michael (Frances) Platnerof Goldsne’.der and Scott A. Golds- That number, he said, was above control on the icy pavement and He tallied goals No. 11 and 12 of the hotly contested Adams Division of Hartford; two sisters, Laura April 21, 1902, she came to this about slumps was shunted aside. North Granby; and three neider; and three sisters. Lee the usual five accidents per day, but collided with another car, operated the season against the Leafs, and at 20-12-6 for 46 points. The idle Heisler in Oregon and Jennifer country in 1950. She lived in Slump-ridden Paul Lawless had grandchildren. Blancht rd, Pauline Triggs and not unusual given the weather by Jorma Nurmi, 77, of 39Foxcroft added four assists for a club-record Montreal Canadians are in second 9 Willimantic for five years, and had two goals, the powpr play scored Dorothi Bean. Heisler of Vernon; and his paternal conditions. Andrew Beck, spokes­ Drive. six points. Seven different Whalers. place at 19-16-6 for 44 points. The funeral will be Thursday at 11 been a Manchester resident since twice and the The funeral will be Tuesday at 11 grandmother, Emily Phillips of man at Manchester Memorial Nurmi was listed in critical but Including Francis held the previous Hartford has played three less i a.m. at the Simsbury United . Lee, Mass. 1957. She was a member of the cbllectlvely scored a season-high Methodist Church, 799 Hopmeadow a.m. at the Holmes Funeral Home, Hospital, reported today that there stable condition this morning at standard. ‘ "They moved the ocean a games than the Canadians. The funeral and burial will be Willimantic Latvian. Lutheran eight times in snapgjng out a mini St., Simsbury. Burial will be Friday 400 Ma n St. Burial will be in East were no storm-related emergency Hartford Hospital, where he was little closer to the Civic Center,” Some strong goaltending from private and at the convenience of Church. slide with an 8-3 thrashing of the in Rockland Cemetery. Sparkill, Cemetei'y. Calling hours are today cases other than those resulting taken by LifeStar helicopter. said a smiling Lawless afterwards. Steve Weeks kept the Whalers in the the family. There are no calling She is survived by a daughter, Toronto Maple Leafs before a N.Y. There are no calling hours. from 7 to 9 p.m. from auto accidents. Dwyer and a passenger, Darcy ‘"They finally went into the net. game early. Weeks, 7-1-1 in his last hours. Burke-Fortin Funeral Dzidra Dzenis of Manchester, with crowd of 12,710 at the Civic Center Bifemorial donations may be Northeast Utilities reported brief Therrien, 18, of 107D Sycamore Tonight, things just fell together.” eight games, made a pad save on Home, 76 Prospect St.. Rockville, is whom she made her home; a son, power outages throughout the area, Lane, were treated at Manchester Sunday night. mdde to a charity of the donor’s The Whalers were winless in two Things fell together for Lawless Miroslav Ihnacak on a breakaway in charge of arrangements. Ojars Emars of Willimantic; a ail caused by fallen tree limbs. On 'Memorial Hospital and released. choice. Vincent Funeral Home. Blanche Carocarl straight, having dropped a 3-2 and the fellow members of the LEG at 5:12. Ihnacak rang the left post 27 Memorial donations may be sister, Milda Piro of Westwood. Friday night, 19 customers on Dwyer was charged with driving Sim sbury, is in charge of Blanche (Gatti) Carocari, 67, of Saturday matinee to the Chicago line, Stewart Gavin and Dean seconds later and had it bounce out. made to the Muscular Dystrophy N.J.; three grandchildren; a niece Vernon Street in Manchester lost while intoxicated, failure to drive Weeks stopped Vincent Dam- arrangements. 347 Oak St., died Sunday at Blackhawks, and had dropped Evason. Gavin added a goal, his Association. 701 John Fitch Blvd., in the United States; and several electricity for about two hours, and right and operating without insu­ Manchester Memorial Hospital. three of their last four and were 12th of the season to open the phousse on a point-blank wrist shot South Windsor 06074. nieces and nephews in Latvia. three customers in Bolton were rance. He is to appear Jan. 26 In 1-3-1 over their last five. In their last scoring at 14:08 of the first period, at 5:50 and then smothered Russ Roberta James She was the wife of Richard A. The funeral will be Saturday at 11 without power for about three Manchester Superior Court. six games, Hartford had notched and three assists while Evasonliad CourtnalTs 10-foot wrister on a Carocari. Doriu A. Brown a.m. at the Watkins Funeral Home, hours, a spokeswoman said. Early Roberta (Hibbard) James, 57, of Bom in Manchester Dec. 23,1919. only a dozen goals. In a stretch of 17 a goal, his 10th of the year, along 2-on-l Maple Leaf break. 142 E. Center St. Burial will be in Saturday morning, three custo­ Former Nazi Adolf Eichmann “ He (Weeks) was tested early,” 1 Main St., widow of Reginald she had lived in town all of her life. Doris A. Brown, 78, of East games, in which they remarkably with two assists. the East Cemetery. There are no mers in Coventry and 192 in was put on trial as a war criminal Evans said. "W e let guys break in James, died Saturday at North Until her retirement, she had been Hartford, died Sunday at St. were 8-6-3, the Whalers only had 45 “ It was a great performance by calling hours. Andover were without power for in an Israeli court in 1961. there. He made some hig stops. He Country Hospital. Newport, Vt. a secretary for the social work Franc s Hospital and Medical Cen­ goals. the LEG ’S line, and an absolute awesome performance by Paul had trouble with rebounds part of 7 Bom in Hartford, she had lived in department at the Manchester ter, H irtford. She was the sister of The eight against Toronto, in Windsor before moving to Man­ Board of Education for 25 years. Agne.> Batsie of Manchester. Game No. 38 of the season, Lawless,” offered Whaler coach the game but he then settled dowii. chester six years ago. She was a Besides her husband, she is Shf also is survived by three represented a season high for the Jack Evans, “ I haven’t seen He hadn’t played in some time, that member of the Manchester survived by a daughter, Mrs. brothers, Allen J. Brown of Bloom­ LOOK ROBERT J. SMITH, inc: Whalers. "The pressure was on us anyone skate that fast for the entire may have been the reason for it. But Grange. Arthur (Marla) Ilurst of Manches­ field and John P. Brown and Ronald FUEL O IL but we came out of It tonight,” said length of the game. He was skating he keeps on winning and I like She is survived by a son, ter; her mother, Tnnocenza (Gado) F. Brown, both of East Hartford; Whaler captain Ron Francis, who faster than the puck. It was just an that.” Christopher James of Ashford; a Gatti of Manchester; and a and several nieces and nephews. INSURANSMITHS SINCE capped the explosion with his 11th awesome performance,” the 58- After Weeks’ heroics, it was the offense’s turn to arrive. And it did, daughter. Carol Ann James of granddaughter. The funeral will be Wednesday at of the season at 17:11 of the final year-old Evans cited. Herald photo by Tucker ^ Colorado Springs, Colo.; and two The funeral will be Wednesday at *: 15 a.m. from the Callahan Fun- 1914 period. "W e had everybody going Evans was forced to juggle his in bunches. The Whalers scored lines through the game. The Whal­ twice in a seven-sqcond span, tying grandchildren. 8:15 a.m. at the Holmes Funeral .eral Home. 1602 Main St., East Senior Citizen & tonight. We just wanted to bear Whaler left wing Paul Lawless (28) had at*, four assists for a club-record six points The funeral will be Wednesday at Home. 400 Main St., with a mass of Hartford, followed by a mass of down a little more and when we had ers opened the game minus second- a club record set previously by Volume DIacounta . . . . . ______a * ______I A n 0 . 0 lAilPl / \ U A r 1 p.m. at the Carmon Funeral Christian burial at 9 a.m. at the Christian burial at 9 a.m. In St. a chance make sure It went in the leading scorer Kevin Dineen, who Garry Howatt and Doug Sulllman nlght^alnst the Toronto Maple Leafs in leading Hartford to an 8-3 win over Home, 6 Poquonock Ave., Windsor, Church of the Assumption. Burial Mary Church, East Hartford. Bur- 649-5241 missed his first game of the in 1981, and then setting a club he v i^ 't soon forget. Lawless, in a Toronto Sunday night at the Civic THRIFTY OIL CO. " w .. .. record with three goals in a with burial in Palisado Cemetery. will be in St. James Cemetery. wl will be in St. Mary Cemetery 65 E. Center 8treet The one Whaler who bore down campaign with an injured ligament goal-scoring drought that saw him score Center. ' Windsor. Calling hours are Tues- Calling hours are Tuesday from 7 to East Hartford. Calling houl^ are 289-8843 Manchester, Ct._____ maybe the most was the 22-year-old in his left leg. And John Anderson day from 7 to 9 p.m. 9 p.m. Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Lawless. The 5-11, 185-pound left strained his right Achilles tendon Please tani to page 13 just once in 16 games, had two goals and I t — MANCHESTER HERALD. Monday. Jan. 5,1987 SCOREBOARD

Football Hockey 4 1 S - 4 1 4 4 - 1 Period—1, CMcogo, Presley 14 (Prossr, O lcM ), 5:22. Ponaltlos-1.udk4(, m (Mebolldclno), 4:44; FOIIu, Col (raughlne}, ll:a ; Mocoun, Cal (biter- fursnco), 14:35. tw id a y , D k . M WALESCONPniBNCa .j Ucond Porlod-4, Colgerv, Moclnnls 9 N «w Y o rkt J ^ _____ th 35,______Kama* City . IS ~ krkk DIVttItn (OHo, Bradley), U:M (pp). Ponettlso By LEWIS WITHAM WoMilnofM W, Let AneelM Romt 7 W L T Pit OPaA_ H u ^ , Cal, motor (fM itlng),4:W ; Phaser, _ f t o r f y , Jan. S Philadelphia 24 11 2 54 144 HO a i, motor (floMIng), 4;W; Take the number of seasons Clevoland 21, Now York Jot* a , 20T N Y Itta n d o rt 19 17 3 41 147 1 * M cD on oM , cot (hoMbig), W :U; LMhIk, (8,10 or 12) Fred Akers coached W O oM nolon 27, CM cobo 13 P itts b u rg h 14 14 7 39 144 134 O it (hooktng), 14:0^ Robwts, Col (hook- Texas football, multiply by Sonaov, JOT. 4 N Y R angers 14 17 4 34 159 1 9 ^ ) , 14:a; Otto, Cal (rcuOTbig), 14:57 Ted Sator thinks he has the hones Now York G lonl* 49, Son Frandtoo 3 Stisohy, Col, misconduct, 14:9; PopIbiskI, the number of Cotton Bowls to N ow J e rs e y 14 » 3 35 145 141 in Buffalo to make a stretch run in Donvor a Now England 17 W ashing ton 13 » 4 » 117 151 Col (roughing), 14:S7; Nvhmd, CM, which Darrell Royal led them l onany, Jon. i i Adamt DhrMon douMo m bior (rougM ntf, 14:57; Sovord, (6, 8 or 10) and add the year the NHL. He intends to give them Donvor at Clovoland, 12:K p.n«. » 13 4 44 ia 114 Chi, mlscondud, 14:57; Socord, CM Cent. Michigan 75, Bowling Green 41 every chance to do so. WoNilnoton at Now York G lantf, 4 p.m. M o n tre a l 19 14 4 44 143 131 (roughing), 14:57; Moclnnls, Cal (Inlor- Akers last coached a Texas Cent. Missouri n , M issouri Western 44 fonanv. Jot. a B oston 14 14 4 40 i n 121 fsnsnoo), 19:24. team in the Cotton Bowl (’80, '82 D o llo s B a p tis t 48, M a rv c re s t 55 Sator, who is 3-2-1 as Sabres Super Bowl at Potodona, C alif., 6 p.m. Q uebec 14 19 4 34 139 134 Third Porbid—3, Cotoorv, Tonolll 11 or ’84). DavM Lipscomb 97, Bristol 81 coach since replacing Craig Ram­ Buttalo 10 24 5 a ia 151 (Bradley, Sutor), 4:B top). 4, Calgary, D enve r 19, D o rd t4 2 say on Dec. 22, saw Adam CAMPBELL CONPBIENCE Tonolll 13 (Bullard, 13%. 5, Calgary, D eP aul n , D ayto n 44 rrts DtvNlOT „ Moclnnls W (C. Wilson, Loob), 1S:M. P A Y O F F : The answer was E. Illinois a, S. Illin o is 57 St. Thomos, R g'fe7M e^n io * 82, OT Creighton, John Tucker, Bob Logan D e tro it 14 15 7 39 i a i a Ponames-Brown, CM (hoMIng), 7:«; E v a n s v ille 79, M ia m i, O hio 49 and Jeff Parker score goals in a 7-2 T Im o T B A also Royal’s total NCAA Division T o ro n to 14 17 5 37 137 1 » McDonoM, Cal (holding), 9:9 ; Sovord, Grand Valley St. 95, Aoulnos n Wh.-Oshkosh 99, lllln p ls Jed» 93 rout of the Quebec Nordiques S t. L o u is 15 14 4 34 130 142 Chi, mlscondud, 15:a. l-A coaching victories. Illin o is 95, M ic h ig a n 84 YenM jjsOToraa^ C h ica g o 15 » 4 M 147 171 Shots on gool Coloarv 10-17-10-37. Illinois St. 41, Iowa St. 59 Sunday night. All but Creighton are Chicago 1211-9^-33. Indianapolis 716, Ind.-Pur.-Ft. Wayne 45 W. VIrginlo SL 98, Gordner-Webb 71 j M in n e s o ta 14 19 3 35 149 144 22; Creighton is 21. Powsr-ptav Opportunities—Co (gory 2 of tmvtho Dlvtslen __ 981 -= 98 -I- 01 X 01 :H3M8NV lnd.-S . B ^ 74, ln d .-K o k o m o 42 “ You’ve got to give your young 8l«rtt 49.49irt 3 EdiTKmton a 12 3 a 143 in 4; Chlcogo 0 of 5. Iowa n, Northwestern 44 _ Wovnesburg, P d^> Glenville St. 75 C a lg a ry a 14 1 47 157 147 Goalies—ColgaiY, Lomolln (U shots-a Iowa Wesleyan M l, St. Ambrose 100 colts a head and a chance to run,” W in n ip e g 19 14 4 42 i n i n saves). Chicago, Souve (37-33). g ) 19SS. NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. Kansas N ew m an 107, B e th e l, K an. 74 So t P ra n d te o 3 4 4 4— 3 A —17,404. said Sator, who was dismissed N.Y. Olant» 7 11 21 Lo s A ngeles 17 19 4 n 143 m Kent St. 81, Ball St. 79, OT _ Vancouver 11 24 4 24 in 154 Referee—DoyeNowetl. Linesmen Oord LOTS S u p e rio r S t. 84, N . M ic h ig a n 73 Sunday’a eoltaga hoop acoroa earlier in the season as coach Of the Broseker, Gerard Gauthier. NY—Bavaro3(paMtromSltnmi(Alleere Saturday's Oomos Memphis St. 41, Missouri 99 New York Rangen. All we’re k ic k ), 7:31 Chicago 3, Hartford 3 Mich.-Dearborn 54, Ferris St. 52 SundavYCollegoBgskeltaG Scores askitig is for Adam Creighton to do SF-FG W ortdilne 3 6 ,13:40 Boston 5, N.Y. Islanders 4 Blazm 12B, Kings 111 M in n e so ta 49, W isconsin 47 M o n rn ln g s ld e 71, S outh D a k o ta 48 B y The Assoctalod Press what Adam Creighton can do well.” Soeond Ouorlor Pittsburgh 4, Montreal 3 Black Hawka 3, Whalara 2 EAST H*r«ld photo* by Tuckar N Y — M o rris 45 ru n (A llo g re k ic k ), 7:21 N.Y. Rangers 5, Quebec 2 M t. Vernon Nozorene 83, Bluffton 73 Creighton knows why he is doing SACRAMENTO (111) M u skin g u m 44, B o ld w ln -W a llo ce 47 Boston U. 74, Veimont 48 ^ _ NY—Jotmson 15 pats from Slmcra Philadelphia 4, Washington 1 ISaturdaygama) Chorieston, W.Vo. 97, EfnPorta St. 78 things well right now. A Toronto 7, New Jersey 2 T h o rp e 7-13 2 7 18, T y le r 210 0 0 14, N ebraska 70, C re ig h to n 45, OT (Alloero kick), 14:10 Thompson2132511,Smllh2127-72S,Theus Davis A Elkbn 89, SItoperv Rock 87 "I'v e got confidence now,” the NY—Tovlor 34 Inttrceptlon return (Alle- D etroit 3, Minnesota 2 Neb.-Wesleyon 93, Nova 91 Hartford's defenseman Dana Murzyn (4) swings by Toronto’s Rick Vaive tries to get away McEwen, tries to get into the play St. Louis 7, Calgary 4 4 2 1 - 3 2100«S, Klelne24(H)4, E. Jehnson2122914, N o rth P o rk 70, P urd ue-C a lum et 44 N ia g a ra 111, C o lg a te 48 center said. ” I didn’t have it before ore kick), 14:32 W ilson241-27,StepM 1-2202, (Xberdlno1-1 Northeastern 91, New Hampshire 44 from Hartford defenseman Dave Babych Sunday night. Babych had a power-play TMrd Goarlor Edmonton 4, Los Angeles 1 4 1 1 - 9 N. Illinois 81, Valparaiso 49 because I wasn’t playing but now I Toronto’s Steve Thomas during action Sunday night at SOTdavtOamot R rst Period—None. Penalties—Manson, (HI2, Presslw20000,Rogers1-2202. Totals Ookkvtd cny 74, Union, Ky. 71 Notre (tame 44, Yqle 49 NY—McConkoy 3B pots from Simms Chi (cross-checkine), 7:44; Samuolseon, 428421-30111. Siena 73, C onlslus 59 the Civic Center. Thomas had a goai, his 17th, in the as another Whaier defenseman, Mike goal, one of two, for Hartford. (Allooro kick), 4:04 Hartford 4, Toronto 3 Ohio U. 40, E. Michigan 59 am. Buffalo 7, Quebec 2 Har(haMlng),10:a. PORTLAND (120 O tte rb e ln 94, M t. U nion 70 Vlllanovo 4A St. John s 54 NY—Mowa1t29patsfromSlmms(Allegre C a rr 5 0 2 0 1 0 , V o n d e w e g h e 2 1 7 3 3 15, S. West V irginia 44, Duouesne SO "When Ted arrived, he told me he iosing effort by the Mapie Leafs. kick), 13:02 Winnipeg 4, Vancouver 2 SecoiKf Period—1, Chlcogo, Secord 18 Purdue 87, M ichigan St. 72 Calgary 4, Chlcooo 1 (Ludzik), 7:17.2, Chicago, l-ud ilk5 (Socord, Johnson21121020,Drexler2142024,Porter St. F ro n d s , In d . 83, M a nchester 70 SOUTH _ was going to give me a chance to NY—M orris 2 run (Allegre kick), 14:44 Presley), e:44. 3, Hartford, Ferraro 13 242412,Jones1-22-24,Holton(>3200,Kersey S outhern Tech 70, M o n te v o llo 52 A —744B4. Monday’s Oomos St. Joseigh's, Ind. 79, N. Kentucky 45 prove myself,” Creighton said. " I MoiTtreal at Boston, 7:35 p.m. (DIneen, Anderson), 14:09 (pp).Penalties— 2112414,Poxson7-122419,Duckworth342-2 St. Louis 47, Indiana St. 44, OT MIDWEST Nylund, CM (holding), 4:10; Socord, Chi ATotolS 49992237128. Indiana 92, Ohio St. W think I owe a lot to him. He showed a SF NY Minnesota at N.Y. Rangers, 7:35 p.m. S t. M a ry 's , M ic h . 70, O a k la n d , M ic h . 40 W ashlh^n at St. Louis, 4:35 p.m. (high-sticking), 10:43; Brown, Chi (hold- Siena Hts. 83, Ohio Dominican 81, OT T o ledo 90, W . M lc h lg o n 72 lot of confidence in me.” N 21 R rs t dow ns 9 Ing), 13:11; Lawlass, Hor (trlppbio), 14:13; 31 M » 34-111 WIs.-WhItewater W l, M t. Mercy 92 Rushot-yords 20-29 44-214 Tuesday’s Oomos S. D a ko ta S t. 48, N eb.-O rhoha 52 The 11th pick overall in the 1983 Vancouver at Qud>ec, 7:35 p.m. Secord, Chi (roughing), I4 :n ; DIneen, Hor 39 34 32 31—128 S. Ill.-Edwardsvllle93, SW Baptist, Mo. 85 SOUTHWEST ^ „ Lawless, Whalers explode In big way P a n in e 155 ISO Three-point opals—Kersey, Pax- NHL draft, the A-foot-S, 202-pound 11 New Jersey at Philadelphia, 7:35 p.m. (holdlng),14:». W. Texas St. 75, NE Missouri St. 45 Return Yards 134 son. Fouled out—Thompson. Rebounds PAR W EST Comp-Att-Int 15-37-3 10200 Toronto at Detroit, 7 :a p.m. Third Period—4, Chicago, Murray 4 SW Missouri St. 74, Mlnn.-Duluth 44 Creighton had played only sporadi­ Minnesota at N.Y. Islanders, 4:05 p.m. (Donnellv, O lczyk), 4:19.5, HarttOrd, Cote 1 Sacramento 44 (Thorpe W), Portland 53 Tri-Stote 75, Ind.-Pur.-Indpis. 72 O regon S t. 81, A riz o n a S t. 75 Sodcod-Yords Lost 1- 7 1-9 (S. Jolmson 13) AssMs—Socramento cally for the Sabres before Sator playing all that badly. Tonight been scoring recently,” Evans and averaging two goals a game.” Whalers are in St. Louis on 7-44 (Bobych), 8:n. Penalties—Allanson, Chi W . K e n tu cky 74, B u tle r 73, OT UCLA 84, California 81 Continued from page 11 P u n ts 1040 (slashlne),4:51; Klelnderst, Har (slashing), 27 (Thorpe, E. Johnson 5), Portland TOURNAMENTS arrived. things just fell together. It was cited. Evans noted. Wednesday. Winnipeg on Friday, FumMos-Lost 2- 1 00 W ic h ita S t. 79, M n A m e ric a n 72 4:51; M urray, CM (hohttng), 14:04; Gavin, 34 (Orexler 10). Total fouls—Sacramento W ilm in g to n , O hio 82, Joh n C a rro ll 75 SINC Tournament “ Adam can play in this league,” Penoltlet-Yards 11-42 3-23 Har(holdlna),15;14. 25, P o rtta n d 2 3 . A —12444. 63-second block. lovely to see,” Lawless spoke of his Toronto came within a goal of the Minnesota on Saturday and New TImo of Possession 25:24 34:34 W ts.-(5au C la ire 48, O ru ry 57 said Tucker, who was drafted on the Shots on gool—Chicago 2124—24. Hort- W rig h t S t. 100, W ooster 75 Dakota Wesleyan 84, Dakota St. 82 Gavin put the Whalers on the anni-cpnrtng drought. Whalers twice at 3-2 and 4-3 but Ulf WHALER NOTES - The three Jersey next Monday. The Whalers Whilcri 8. Mipla L m Is 3 ford17-14B-40. Xavier, Ohio 75, Coastal Carolina 49 fourth round in 1983 and, like board at 14:08 as his rebound shot Defenseman Dave Babych made stars were 1) Lawless, 2) Gavin, 3) aren’t home until Wednesday, Jan. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Power-play Opportunittes—Chicago 0 of Creighton, was a junior hockey Samuelsson’s first goal of the R U SH IN G — San F ra n c is c o , C ra ig 5-17, 3;Hortford1of5. Lakire121.Jin113 deflected in off of defenseman Al it 3-0 at 15; 11 as he fired a blazing Evason. Evans said he didn’t talk to 14, when they begin a home-and- RattMnon 3-4, Cribbs 124. New York Giants, starin Canada. “ He was a great season, on a perfect feed from 2 1 » - 3 Goalies—Chicago, Souve (40 shots-a Howtoptwanty farad lafarate’s skate past Ken Wregget. slap shot from near the blue line. Lowl»»««! nc the former flew up a Lawless about his lack of scoring. home series with the Bruins. . . M o rris 24-159, R ouson t-26 C o rtlw n 4-17, saves).Hartt0rd,Llut(2l-a). junior and he’s getting a chance to Simms 1-15, Anderson 4-2, Manuel M m lnus Hartford 3 2 3-4 U T A H (113) Seven seconds later. Lawless fi­ Babych at first looked perplexed by “ You leave them alone. You don’t There were only 10 minor penalties Rrst Period—1, HarttOrd, Gavin 12 A —1 4 « 3 . M a lo n e 17-24 1-4 35, T rip u c k a 7-13 2214, SOUTHWEST prove him self and he’ s wide-open slot and redirectei) it 5 ). Referee—Terry Gregson. Linesmen— Baylor 99, So. Methodist 55, OT How the top twenty teanM In The ■ nally had the monkey off his back. the power-play goal. Maybe with harp on them not scoring. They whistled by Referee Bill McCreary, PASSING—San Frandsco, Montano (Lawless), 14:08. 2, Hartford, Lawless 11 Eaton4O1-29,R.Green272210,Hansen »9 responding.” past Wregget, restored a two-goal (Evason, Samuelsson), 14:15. 3, Hartford, John D'Am ico, WOvne Forsev. 22 4, G rlfnth 211 1-2 11,Stockton2-444 H ouston 48, Texas Tech 45 Associated Press' college basketball pell ' He broke in past the Maple Leaf good reason. Hartford was 2-for-33 need encouragement and you just five to a side. . . Right wing Mike 4-15-204, Kemp 7-221-44. New Y ork Giants, Houston Baptist 95, Texos-Son Antonio 85 faredthlsweek; Buffalo took a 4-0 lead in the game spread at 83 after two periods. Simms 2100134, Rulledee 1-1-023. Bobvch 5 (Ferraro), 15:11 (pp). 4, 3, Bollev492210, Iavaronl21200, Curry 1-1 defense and flicked a wrister past with the man-advantage in its last encourage them to keep going.” .. Millar was recalled from Bingham­ Toronto, Thomas 17 (lafrate), 15:34. 5, 222, Scurry 1-1444. Totals429717-24113. 1. N evodo-Los V egas (1241) b o o t N o. 9 - and coasted. But the Sabres still RECEIVING—San Frandsco, Crolg L a m a r 73, M o rg a n S t. 45 Nawl04-79;beatCall(ornlo-lrvlne114-72. Wregget. eight games. They went 2-for-5 Three goals in the final 20 Anderson may miss two or three ton to take Dineen’s place. Millar 4-a, Clark 252, Rice 344, Fronds 224, Toronto, Clark 30 (L o n z , C o u rtn a ll), 18:34. have the worst record in the NHL, Penalties—McGill, Tor (slashing), 2:31; LA . LAKERS (111) N. Texas St. 90, Alcorn St. 74 2. Purdue (9^1) lost to No. 4 North ’ “ 'The defense took off and left me against the Maple Leafs. minutes iced the easy win for games, according to Evans... With has played nine games with the M a rg e ru m 1-12, C rib b s 1-2. N ew Y o rk NW Louisiana 47, E. Texas St. a Carollna9A81; beat Towson State94-5I; beat Giants, Bovoro 247, Rouson 2B , Mowott MacDermId, Hor (tripping), 10:31; Lanz, A.C. Green 7-9 2214, W orthy 2141-219, 10-24-5. all alone.” Lawless spoke of his "This was good for us. We had Hartford. " I thoroughly enjoyed Ice Capades in town, Hartford hits Whalers and has two goals and one Tor (tripping), 15:05; Tippett, Har (hold­ Transactions Abdulvlabbor2175021, Johnson 12232224, Oral Roberts 87, Alabama St. 78 M ic h ig a n S tate 87-72. 1-29, M cC on key 1 -a , Johnson 1-15, P h illip s 74, B e n e d id in e , K an. 47 3. J i^ (130) beat Callfornlo-lrvlne first goal. “ I didn’t think I was talked this morning that we hadn’t that cushion after going six games the road for four games. The assist. G o lb re o th 1-9, C o rth o n 1-7, M o rris 1-2. in g ), 18:14. Scotl27224,Cooper2151-115,Rambls1-322 J0to 4, Canucks 2 Second Period—4, H orttord, Lawless 12 2, Thompson 210 2212, Matthews 25 224, Stephen F. Austin 43, Texas Southern 41 10^(33,‘ O ( ^ N o rth w e s te rn 80-44. Texas 72, R ice 52 4. North Carolina (11-1) beat No. 2 Goalie Pokey Reddick was the MISSED FIELD GOALS-None. (Gavin, Evason), :58. 7, Toronto, Clark 21 Smrek 21200.Totals 521041218121. (Courtnoll), 8:a. 8, HarttOrd, Samuelssoni FOOTBALL Texas Christian W, Arkansas 77 urdue94-81; beotSouthernMethodlst8S84, star for the Jets with 29 saves, (Lawless, M illar), 15:58. Penalty— U ta h » 15 38 34—113 PAR W EST ST ; b e at L a S a lle 79-72. including two key third-period Clark, Tor (hooking), 13:9. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS-Activated LA. Lakers 34 34 31 19^111 A b ile n e C h ris tia n 44, N o rth rld g e S t. 43 5. AubOrn (7-2) lost to Texas-El Peso Broncos 22, Pitriolil? Third PerloCh-9, HarttOrd, McEwen 5 Mike Ruth, nose tackle, from Inlured Three-point goals—Cooper 2. Fouled B lo la 100, Lu b b o ck C h ris tia n 43 87-82; lost to No. 11 Kentucky 4380. saves against Vancouver’s Moe (B arr, Tippett), 13:14. W, HarttOrd, Evason B oise S t. 78, E . M o n ta n a 55 4. Indiana (10-1) beat Ohio State 9280. Giants completely reserve. Placed Mel Block, linebacker, on out—Thompson. Rebounds—Utah 53 (Ea­ Lemay to preserve the victory. 7. Syracuse (128) beat Boston U. 9487; 10 (Lawless, Gavin), 13:54. 11, Hartford, Inlured reserve. ton n , L.A. Lakers 53 (Johnson 10). Brigham Young 77, Wyoming 74 Doug Small scored the winning 4 14 7 4—17 Francis 11 (Lawless, Gavin), 17:11 (pp). NEW YORK GIANTS-Actlvoted Lionel Assists—Utah 35 (R. Green, Stockton 10), C al P oly-P o m o fK i 83, B a k e r 70 b e a t C o n n e cticu t 88-71. 3 7 14 3—a (Xil Polv-SLO 44, Cal-Dovts 53 8. Georgetown (9-1) beat Long Beach > Penalties—Lonz, Tor (tripping), 3:45; Manuel, wide receiver, from Inlured L A . Lakers 39 (Johnson 11). Total fouls— goal when a Doug Lidster clearing First Quarter McEwen, Hor (holding), 8:10; M. reserve. Ploced John Washington, defen­ U ta h 18, L .A . L a k e rs 23. A —17405. C lo re m o n t-M u d d 87, Azusa P a d fic 82 S to le 84-77; lo s t to S eton H a ll 74-53. pass deflected off a skate. Small Den—FG Korlls 2 7 ,12:12 C o ll, o f Ida ho 117, C a rro ll, M o n t. 79 9. Navy (4-n lost to No. 1 Nevodo-Los Ihnacnk, Tor (holding), 16:33; F e rro ro , sive end, on Inlured reserve. leaped at the puck and blasted it control the 49ers / .. Second Quarter Har (cross-checking), 18:24; Murzyn, Hor HOCKEY C o lo ra d o C o ll. 74, Judson 48 Vegas 104-79; beat North-Carollna- N E \M o rg a n 19 pass tro m Eason (hIgh-stIckIng), 19:41. Nattenal Hockev LecBue Fresno P a c ific 77, T a b o r 75 W 1lmlngton^5l. past Vancouver goaltender Frank (FrankW iaekLuSe Shots on g o a l— ^Toronto B-9-8—a . H a rt­ HARTFORD WHALERS-RecolledMIke Buns 104, Wirrlori 101 F resno S t. 45, F u lle rto n S t. 47 10.St. John's (9-1)beatNo.18GeorglaTach Caprice. Continued from page 11 games for the Giants. They have D e n -E lw o v a run (Karlls>clck), 7:18 G onzogo 79, Ida ho S t. 42 4253; lost to Vlllonova 4254. tOrd 12124-34. Minor, rbiht wing, from Blnghomton of Laurie Boschman, on a power now won 10 in a row and 15 of 17 this NE—FG Franklin » , 14:54 Power-play Opportunities—Toronto 0 of the . Grand Canyon 91, Dominguez H ills St. 82 11. Kentucky (7-2) lost to Gaorglo4948; TMrd Quelle 5; H o rtfo rd 2 o f 5. PHOENIX (MS) beat No. 5 Auburn 4380. play, recorded his 100th goal as a the Bears beat people last year and season. They are undefeated in nine COLLEOE Addison 3S 22 I, Pinckney 27 25 9, Den—FG Korlls 22, 9:10 Goolles—Toronto, Wregget (34 shots-a ALABAAAA—Nomed B ill Curry head Ida ho 49, H o w a llN Ilo 43 12. Kansas (7-3) k>sttoOhloState7278,OT; Jet, while Thomas - Steen and as badly as we beat people the year games at home, the only team to do NE—Morgan 45 pass from Eason saves). Hortford, Weeks (2222). football coach. Named Steve Sloan athletic V anos2l220, Davis 12231S21, Humphries Loyola, Calif. 114, U.S. International 104 beat Hawaii 8180, OT. 4 ' ' 492311, Sanders29231, Adams 12152525, before,” said Randy Cros, a three­ that this season. (Franklin kick), 12:10 A — 12,710. d ire c to r. M a rq u e tte 83, C o lo ra d o 48 13. O kla h o m a (2 2 ) b e a t A rk o its a s S t. Andrew McBain. into an empty net, Den—^Johnson 48 pass from Elwov Referee—B ill McCreary. Linesmen— Gondrezick 24 24 3, Bedford 49 1-2 9, Montano Tech 90, Rod(V Mountain 77 77-57; beat McNeese State 4883. got the other Winnipeg goals. time All Pro guard. “ I ’ve got all the “ All I wanted to do was play next NEW MEXICO-Nomed Ed Lambert Galtlson 22220, Homocek 344-410. Totals (K o r lls k ic k ), 15:00 John D'Amico and Wayne Forsev. offensive coordinator, Steve Fairchild N. Arizona 84, Brooklyn Coll. 43 14. Temple (11-1) beat (Seorgla Southern faith in the world if they win the week.” said Simms, whocompleted Fourth Quarter 4092243)104. 8841; beat Toledo 7588; beat Rhode Scoring for the Canucks were Stan ouarterOTck coach, Michael W hite line­ N. M o n ta n a 91, R egina 88 next one, they’ll take Pasadena.” nine of 19 passes for 136 yards. “ I Der>—Safety Eoson tackled Inendzoneby backer coach, A rt Valero offensive Ibte GOLDEN STATE (191) N ev.-Los Vegas 114, C a l-Irv in e 72 Island 8188. Smyl and Jim Sandlak. Jones, 13:a Ballard2144417, L. Smlth4422A Carroll New Mexico 88, San Diego St. 84 15. Ita P a u l (1 80) b e a t P ep p e rd in e Fuller, a 49ers safety, said he has knew sooner or later we would hit coach and Marvin Lewis, David Doty and 7-1921423, FIOVd2144418, M ullln2145421, 5 A —74,105. A rt Dominguez graduate assistants. O regon 55, A riz o n a 54, O T 9275; beat Dayton 8884. Flames 4, Blackhawks 1 never seen the Giants play better. some passes and make some big 8abraa7.Nordlquaa2 McDonald 14 22 2 Whitehead 1-3 14 3, Porlland 47, Montana 45 14. Illin o is (2 2 ) b e a t M ic h ig a n 9584. NR Den Higgins24257, Teaole23220, Moss 1-122 Regis 49, Pomono-PItzer 53 17. Pltlsburgh (22) beat Arkansas 11482; John Tonelli had two third-period “ Right now they are the best plays.” First downs 12 23 2.Totols 35922239101. S. Oregon St. 77, Humbolt St. 44 beat W isconsin9882; beat Provldence7487. goals and defenseman Al Maclnnis team.” safety Jeff Fuller said. “ I Rushes-vords 24-121 48118 Quebec 4 1 1—9 S. U ta h S t. 101, C al B a p tis t 79 The 49 points were the most ever Buffalo 4 2 1-7 21 19 37 34—198 scored the other two for Calgary in don’t think the Redskins can beat P o ttin g 15D 253 San Jose St. 73, Long Beach St. 54 18. G e o rg ia T e ch (7 8 ) lo s t to N o. 10 S t. scored by the Giants in a playoff Return Yards 15 35 Rrsf Period—1, Buffalo, Ramsey 5 Basketball Golden SHrte 3014 14 29-iti Santa Clara 82, Seattle 43 John's 4253; beat Wake Forest 4859, OT. a meeting of two of the hotter teams them if they (the Giants) play with Comp-Att-Int 182(4) 18382 (Kurvers), 4:43 (sh). 2, Buffalo, Tucker K> Three-point goolt—Floyd 2, Bollard. S outhern C al C o ll. 123, C h ris tia n H e rtto g e 19. North Carolina State (22) beat Loyola, game, two more than the team (Anderson, Palement), 7:n. 3, Buftalo, in the league. The victory was the the same intenslty^s-ttxlax^ Socked-Yordt Lost 844 14 Fouled out—L. Smith. Rebounds—Phoenix 74 III. 97-85; b e a t M a ry la n d 49-47. Giants llnebapkCTHarry Chrson, scored in defeating the Chicago P u n ts ^ 850 844 Follgno 12 (Creighton, Arnlel), 14:9. 4, 40 (Pinckney 15), Golden State 59 (L. St. M ary's, Calif. 47, Montano St. 40 20. Duke (21) beat Appalachian State Flames’ seventh in the last 10 FumMos-Lost 14) 04) Buffalo, Smith 6 (Parker, Anderson), Smith, Carroll 11). Asslsto-Phoenlx 23 S tanislaus S t. 104, C a l-L u th e ra n 73 8850; beat Northwestern 10855; beat games, while Chicago has only four who h elrc d ^ is team hold San Bears 47-7 in the 1956 N FL cham­ Ponaltlet-Yords 545 820 19:M. PerraHles—Smith, Buf (holding), NBAatandInga (Humphries 9), Golden State 19 (FlovdO). Texas-El Paso 84, Hawaii 71 V irginia 7883. pionship game. 4:30; Ramsey, Buf (tripping), 8:14; losses in its last 11. Fran cist^o 29 yards rushing, said Tim e of Possession 24:31 35:29 Total touls—Phoenix 29, Golden State 24. U ta h 78, C o lo ra d o S t. 48 the club has a mission this year. The loss was the 49ers' worst Dykstra, Buf (slashing), 0:27; K um p el, Technicals—Whitehead, Golden State Utah St. 77, New Mexico St. 49 Goalie Reggie Lemelin played a INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Que (hIgh-stIckIng), 16:26; Hough, Que, Atlantic Division Illegal defense 2. A^,244. W. M o n ta n a 85, NW N ozorene 83 major role in the win, making 32 “ We’re cool, but we know it ain’t since a 5814 decision to Dallas in RUSHING—New England, Collins 246, malor (fighting), 19:0; Dvsktro, Buf, W L P e l. (» W . O regon 102, NW C h ris tia n 94 1980, and second worst in club double m lnor-m olor, served by Lacombe Collage hoop atandinga saves. over.” he said. “ It’s good we won, James 1031, Eason 3-23, Dupord 218, B oston / 21 9 .700 Baturdsy’s collsga hoop scoros W lnlhrap 75, A ir Force 44 history, exceeded only by a 587 loss Hawthorne 1-5, Fryor Hm lnus 2). Denver, (hlgh-sMcklng, Instigator, tIgM Ing), 19:52. PhliadMphla 17 14 .548 4l4i TOURNAMENTS “ He stopped all of our tip-ins, but we still have some things to do W inder 19-1B, Lang 11-44, Elsrov 218, Bell Second Period—5, Buffolo, Logan 2 W a s h lM o n 14 16 .467 7 Bkw Devil Tournament which most goalies are not sup­ and we have a ways to go. We to the Los Angeles Rams in 1958. (Follgno, Creighton), 4:45. 4, Buffalo, N ew J e rs e y 9 21 800 2 Southwest CotifsrOTce M lSewell23,W lllhlte24. EAST vnompvoniinii Cenltrsncs A ll posed to stop,” Chicago’s Wayne played pretty good, but it’s only one It was also the most lopsided PASSINIS—New England, EOson 12240- Creighton' 3 (Follgno, SmMh), 9:17. 7, N e w /Y o ri( 9 22 .290 12V .700 Kings, Pa. 83, Drexel 82 .384 Lehman 45, Baruch 42 Thbd Place Third Period—8, Quebec, Ashton 23 U tah 19 12 .813 2Vmpassing missions, the Chi­ G irts Basketball Goalies—Quebec, Molorchuk (9 shotv Golden Stole 18 15 .545 0 Taylor 49, Earlham 44 cago Bears and New England turnovers and no stupid penalties. plays and Bemie Kosar led the New York wide receiver Bobby Johnson quarter of Sunday’s NFL playoff game Rocky HIM at Bolton, 7:30 19saves), Gosselln (0:00thlrd,7-4). Buffalo, S eattle 15 15 .500 916 N Y U 94, Jo h n J o y 45 A ir F o rce 7 3 .700 P h lla . T e x tile 101, U rsinu s » Rorlde Southern T l .. .. H a w a ii 1 .000 5 7 .417 Patriots vowed that nothing less You can’t have those against a good Browns to a 22-yard field goal by against the 49ers. San Francisco’s Tim Portland at Caventrv, 7:30 Cloutier (4240). P hoenix 14 18 438 i m Championship cradles the football in his arms after A _ 11,385. L.A. Clippers 4 24 .133 20V6 PlttsburOT 74, P ravldet^ 47 Son Diego St. 1 .000 2 9 .182 than a return to the Super Bowl team.” Mark Moseley that forced T U E S D A Y St. Fronds, N.Y. 94, Long IskmdU. 91,OT Lehigh 74, Rorlda Southern 72 Colorado St. 2 .000 4 7 843 gathering in a scoring strike from McKyer (22) comes flying into the Referee—Andy Van Hellemond. Saturday’s Oomet T h b d P loco would be satisfactory this season. The Redskins certainly proved overtime. Bovs Basketball Linesmen—Wayne Bonney and Swede New Jersey 118, L.A. Clippers 97 St. Fronds, Pa. 79, Springfield 49 picture too late to break up the play. East Cothallc at Xavier, 7:30 K nox. Atlanta 114, New York 93 St. Joseph's 80, Duouesne 74 This weekend, those missions they are that with their second Moseley missed from 23 yards in quarterback Phil Simms in the second St. Peter's 74, Iona 99 Plorldo Tech Classic W L P e t. Cheney Tech at VInal Tech, 7:30 C hicago 124, D e tro it 119 Chomplorahip came to an end as neither team straight postseason victory. the first overtime but atoned for it Rackv H ill of Boltan, 7:30 Houston ia , Seattle 114 S eton H a ll 74, Ge o rg irfe w n 53 Ita P a u l 10 0 1.000 S. Carolina St. 85, Coppin St. 71 R o rld a Tech 48, S t. Leo 48 M a rq u e tte 9 2 .810 (tauld reach its conference cham­ with a 27-yarder 2:02 into the Partland at Coventry, 7:30 D a lla s 104, San A n to n io 09 Third Place Browns 23, Jets 20 Beys Swimming M ilw a u k e e 104, C levela nd 95 Stony Brook 82, Staten Island 77 N o tre D om e 7 2 .778 second OT. Kosar set N FL playoff Syracuse 88, Cormecttcut 71 Concord 43, Salem, W.Va. 40 New Orleans 7 2 pionship game. Manchester vs. East Cathallc (at Jata4,Canucki2 P o rtla n d 114, D e n ve r 1M .770 Instead of the defending N FL If the Giants get to the Super records for passing yardage (489) MHS pool), 3:30 SOTdev’s Gam es Temple 81, Rhode Island 48 Poui4tale Classic Pan American 8 3 .887 Giants dynasty of 1986? P b s l R ound Portland ia , Sacramento 111 Tow son S t. 98, R om opo 70 Tennessee St. 8 4 .400 champion Bears and AFC titlist Bowl, they might find the Browns completions (33) and attempts (64) W E D N E S D A Y V a n c o u v e r 8 1 1—9 L.A. Lakers 12\, U ta h 113 W ovnesburg 90, G le n v ille S t. 75 Shepherd 97, Bloom field 70 B ro o k ly n 5 5 .580 Patriots, the New York Giants. 9 O lrts Basketball W in n ip e g 2 8 9—« P hoe nix 104, G olden S to le 101 SOUTH Prerdc Ntunnoii Invitational Chlcooo St. 5 5 .500 Manchester at H artford Public, 5p.m. Rrst Period—1, Winnipeg, Steen 4 Alabama 44, Mississippi St. 49 Chomplorahip D ayto n 5 5 .500 Washington Redskins. Denver they have won their last three by an although how much more oomph 8Aendav*s Gomes O hio W esleyan 90, S t. A n d re w 's 73 By Dove Goldberg Ic e H e c k e v (Berry), 4:10. 2, Winnipeg, Boschnton 10 L.A. Clippera at Phlladelphia, 7 :a p.m. Ala.-Birmingham 85, South Alabam an SW Louisiana 5 5 .500 Broncos and Cleveland Browns aggregate score of 131-34, an can a team that’s scored 55 and 49 Fermi vs. Manchester (at Bolton Ice (Ellett,Howerchuk),14:a(pp). Penalties— A m e ric a n U7 44, E . C a ro lin a 33 T h b d P la ce U tic a 5 7 .417 The Associated Press Indlorw at Dallas, 9:X P4n. Kalamazoo 52, Lincoln, Pa. 49 stayed alive In the race to be in points in its last two games need? Palace), 8:15 p.m. Neufek), Win (elbowing), 10:9; Richter, Tbeedgy’s G om es Armstrong St. 47, Radford 43 Florida AI.M 3 8 .333 average of 43-11 per game. Eost Catholic vs. South Windsor Von (holding), 14:11. Atlanta at New York, 7;X p.m. Athens St. 73, Bethel, Tenn. 44 U.S. InteriMitnl 3 7 .300 Pasadena. Calif., on Jan. 25 for the EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — They are also discovering new Does that mean the N F L ought to (H artford Arena), 8 p.m. Second Period—3, Vancouver, Smvl 12 L.A. C lippm at WasMnolon, 7:30 p .m . A u s tin P eay 109, B e fm o n t 80 M ia m i, R a . 3 7 .300 Super Bowl. The Bears bowed out B a p tis t, S.C. 104, A u g u sta 48 W estminster 43, Allegheny 71 The NFL seems to have found in the stars for a defense that next to call off the playoffs and anoint the W re s tlin g (Pederson), :15. Penalties—Richter, Von, Chicago at Cleveland, 8 p.m. Texas-Arllngton 3 9 .250 Saturday in a 27-13 loss at ^ome to Xavier at Manchester, 4 p.m. mlnor-molor (roughing, fighting), 8:48; B Irm .-S o u th e rn 88, M l l l l m 48 Third Ploco N. Illinois 3 11 .214 New York Giants the successor to Chicago’s is clearly the N F L’s best Giants? Of course not. New Jersey at Milwaukee, 8 :a p.m. H ope 110, H ira m 49 Valley Regional at Cheney Tech, 4:30 Marios, Win, molor-motch misconduct Indiana at Son Antonio, 8 :a p.m. Columbus Coll. 83, Ala.-Hunlsvllle49 Md.-Balt. County 2 0 .200 Washington, and the Patriots fell in and left Walsh cotinually using the Cumberland, Ky. 73, Georgetown, Ky. Gold Rush Ctassbi the San Francisco 49ers and the p .m . (fighting), 8:48; Butcher, Van (trippina), Houston at Golden Stole, 10;X p.m. Cent. Conn. 2 9 .102 Denver, 22-17, on Sunday. word “ shattered” to describe what The final obstacle to their first- 10:a; Hamel, Win (hooklne),15:04; Richter, 19 Cent. Rorlda 2 9 .102 Chicago Bears as the 1986 season’s Denver at Sacramento, W :a p.m. Xavier, NO M ^M tanltcChristlan44 In the other game on Sunday, the ever trip to the Super Bowl is the T H U R S D A Y Van (holdlrrg), 17:34; Smyl, Van Phoenix at Seattle, 10:X p jn . Delta St. 85, Ark.-Plne Bluff 48 E. WcOTIngtOT 2 11 .154 designated dynasty. it did to his offense. 8 Washin^on Redskins, dethroners Obis Bosketboll (roughing), 9:00; McBoln, Win (charg­ D uke 70, V Irg in lo 43 T h M P taco Giants routed San Francisco 483 For example, nose tackle Erik Eckerd 8), K e n i^ 81 LemovneOwen 94, Southern, NO 91 Can anybody beat the New York Cheney Tech at Crom well, 4 p.m. ing), 20:00. and will host the Redskins in the i i , Howard and linebacker Pepper of the Bears Saturday, but two-time East Hampton ot Bolton, 7:30 Third Period—4, Winnipeg, Small 9 Big Eaat atandinga Elizabeth C ity St. 88, Cent. St.,Ohlo81,OT Giants, who have scored a total of losers to New York this season, Coventry at Rocky H ill, 7:30 (MocLeon), 3 :3 7 .5, Vancouver, Sandlack 8 Iv y Lsd pue NFC championship game next 131 points the last three games and Johnson, two of the four defensive (Hodgson, Bruce), 5:59. 4, Winnipeg, Big East Conference O ’d ll Flerida 87, Georgia 80 St. Anselm 99, A lb a n y , N .Y . 55 C sa^srsaco AN Sunday. Cleveland edged the New 27-20 in the Meadowlands and 24-14 Men’s Basketball feature a crushing defense? players taken with second-round MCC ot M iddlesex, 8 p.m. McBoln 5 (Steen, Kyto), 19:9 (en). W L W L Florida ASM 87, W. Illinois 80 T h b d P lo c o W L P e t. w L P e t. York Jets 2820 in double overtime at RFK Stadium. Penalties—Hodgson, Van (tripping), V lllo n o v a 2 0 9 3 Rem an 73, Appalachian St. 54 St. Lawrence 83, W estfield St. 78 D a rtm o u th 0 0 .000 5 2 .714 “ We were beaten by a great team choices in last spring’s draft, look Go. Southern 85, Georgia St. 79 Y a le 0 0 .000 5 to earn the right to host the AFC F R ID A Y 11:55; Banning, Van, motor (high- S y ra c u s e 1 0 12 0 2 .714 that I believe will go all the way/’ like they may join Lawrence Only once since the AFC-NFC Beys Basketball sticking), 19:9; Berry, Win, molor (hlgh- Pittsburgh 1 0 9 2 Georgia SW 48, Aub.-Monlgamery 45 P rin e e to n 0 0 .000 5 4 J58 Oeorglo Tech 45, woke Forest 99, OT C term on 93, H a w a ii P a c ific 74 B ro w n 0 0 .000 4 5 final. San Francisco Coach Bill Waira Taylor-Harry Carson, et al, as- \ format took effect in 1970 has one Manchester at Rockville, 7:M sttcklng), 19:a. St. John's 444 “ I had a dream, it didn’t come Fairfield Prep of East Catholic, 7:30 Seton H all H ord m S im m ons 88, C e n te rw ry 75 T h b d P taco C ohim M a 0 0 .000 4 5 444 said after the Giants destroyed his defensive standouts for years to team defeated another three times Cheney Tech of Crom well, 7:30 Shots on goal—Vancouver 211-12—31. Georgetown Indtano-SE 90, Thomas M ore 70 F o rd h o m 107, A lo s k o -F o lrb a n k s 83 C o rn e ll 0 0 .000 3 4 429 true.” Beara Coach Mike Ditka come. Heritage DrokoClosslc H a rv a rd 49ers 483 in an NFC semifinal in one season — in 1982 when the 7 Eost Hampton at Bolton, 7:30 W innipe g 27-9—24. Providence J a c k s o n v ille S t. 78, U y tm is ta n 73 0 0 .000 4 8 400 said. { Johnson, who makes the Giants’ Coventry at Rocky H ill, 7:M Power-play Opportunities—Vancouver 0 Boston College J a c k s o n v ille 90, F lo rid a S t. 78 "W e didn’t get it done,” echoed Sunday. Miami Dolphins beat the New York Obis Basketball of 3; Winnipeg 1 of 3. Connecticut James Modlsen 80, George Atason 77 Drake44, Tmra AAMM “ If they play like they played second linebacking unit better than Jets twice during the regular R ockville at Manchester, 7:45 Goalies—Vancouver, Caprice (ashots-X K ennesa w 70, M o b ile 98 PIflCS New England wide receiver Stan­ most teams’ first unit, had an Kerilucky 43, Auburn 40 Texos-Arilriglen 47, SE Louisiana 42 today, nobody is going to beat season and again in the AFC title Beys Swimming saves). Winnipeg, Reddick (31-a). Satnrdoy’s RasnHt ley Morgan, who caught two interception Sunday to set up a Manchester at P latt, 3:45 p.m. A — 11,945. Syracuse 88, UConn 71 K y . W esievon 106, S. In d ia n a 82 " e & L L S them.” linebacker Jim Fahnhorst game. Referee—Denis M orel. Linesmen— Seton H all 74, Georgetown S3 Lander 81, Erskine 93 touchdown passes against Denver. touchdown. Howard replaced in­ Fairfield Prep at East Catholic (ot Upsata 74, w S h!‘a'jeff.'57 said. MHS pool), 3:30 Kevin Collins, Randy M ilton. Pittsburgh 74, Providence 47 Ubertv 81, Rockford 40 Rcc basketball “ It doesn’t matter how It ends, the jured Pro Bowl nose tackle Jim Giants Coach Bill Parcells went W re s tlin g Snndnv’e Resott U n re sto n e 7S, Le n o lr-R h yn e 98 T h b d P taco Guard Randy Cross added; V lllo n o v a 43; S t. J o h n ’ s 54 Lo ngw oo d 78, H ffln 45 SI. Vbicent 85, Case Western 72 fact is it’s ended.” ’If they continue on this roll, then Burt for two games, including out of his way after the second' Eost C atholic at Fairfield Prep, 4 p.m. A staggering offense that quar­ Tedov’t Games LouSvIlle 79, R utgm 49 they will beat teanns just as badly as Washington, with no appreciable game to say he expected to see Syracuse at Providence Morehsod St. 104, ainch Valley 48 Mldgata terback Doug Flutle couldn’t in­ S A T U R D A Y Panhandle St. 92, Philander Smith 79 the Bears beat teams last year and falloff. Washington again and reiterated it G irts Basketball Akron at Pittsburgh Morehouse 77, Fort Valley St. 71 spire in the second half, and St. Joseph at East C atholic, 1:30 p.m. M urray St. 49, Kentucky St. S3 K^cks 22 ( Cindy BoNIcello 4. Jeff we did two years ago.” Their presence means more rest Sunday. UConn at Seton H oll (M eodowlonds), New Orleans 77, Oklahoma St. 48 P itts b u rg S I. 108, M M -A m N ozorene 74 Belcher and Leland Boutlller ployed Washington’s big-play attack did in ;T v e been saying all along that Men’s Basketball Lo Jeho Ooeelc How much of that is true and how for Carson andBurtand more depth Massasolt at MCC, 4 p.m. Radio, T V 8 p .m . NIcholls St. 73, M hs. Vdlitty St. 72 w e ll) C e ltic s 14 ( M o N L e s c o e 10. A «tato the Bears. the Redskins were the best team Vlllonova at Boston College Norfolk St. 48, C lerk, Go. 40 ZIruk ployed well, Ben Blounte hod much hyperbole? in case of injury. Ic e H e c k e v “ He didn’t have his best day. but AP p h oto Manchester vs. South Windsor (ot Wednesday’s Game N. Carolina Sf. 49, M aryland 47 Cal-San Otego 99, C lark, M ips. 93 eight aulsts) The Giants have now won 10 in a Offensively, the return of wide we’ve faced this year,” hesaid. St. John’s at Boston College N. Alabama 81, M M w Ippl Coll. 73 Corneglo M ellanM , Rochester M BBullets u lli...... M (Pete Slrols 14, Including the kid will bounce back,'' Ditka The 49ers, who lost t w w to the H artford Arena), 7:50 p.m. TONIGHT Lock Novon Tograpmenf row, with half those wins against receiver Lionel Manueraftec 12 Im m oculate vs. East Catholic (Boltan Sofordov’e Gamee Q u lim lp la c 88, B e rry 85 the gome-winning basket with six said of Flutie. who hit only 11 of 31 Giants and once to the Redskins, 7;M College basketball; Syracuse vs. Georgetown at PItfsburoh Richmond 48, W illiam 8, M ary 44 seconds left. Pete Julloni also played Qiants’ coach Bill Parcells is dripping with Gatorade after playoff teams. Moreover, after a weeks on injured reseroe provides Ice Palace), 7:15 p.m. Providence, ESPN passes, one for a 58yard touchdown W re s N ln g Seton H all at Syracuse RelHns 84, Sewonee SO. « Lock Haven 75, Oowlbig 71 well) Jazz 24 (Todd Lengo 12. Todd getting his traditional victory shower following his club’s series of two, three-, four- and a little more oomph to Phil Simms, naturally thought otherwise after 9:W College basketball; M ichigan vs. Providence at Vlllonova Shenandoah 71, Houghton 44 Thbd Ptaco W illiams and Peter Leonard ployed to Willie Gault. Flutie. making only Manchester at Danbury, noon seven-point victories at midseason. Joe Morris and Mark^avaro — Sunday’s wipeout. Cheney Tech a t Foron, 1 p.m . Purdue, ESPN Boston CoHege o f St. John’s South Carolina 4), OavMson 54 Pembroke St. 44, Rondol|)h-Maoon 99 w e ll) his second N FL start, was Inter- 49-3 win over San Francisco on Sunday. i i t ' : / 14 — MANf^HBSTER HERALD. Monday. Jan. 8 .1»87 Syracuse just too strong

By Paul Ofria "W e do not have the individual time shorthanded,” Manchester confessed. “ Our plan was to shoot tonight,” the m k ie coach said. Herald Correspondent talents of a lot of hockey teams so assistant coach Clay Farao said. from any which angle, and we did. I “ We seemed t^get the puck up to we’ve gone at it as a system “ We were thinking that if we could our wings aqaforcedxit through tne One minute later, sophomore thought the fellow in goal (Oatway) BOLTON — Flash back to spring approach and team play both stay out of the box and bring it to played very well for them.” neutral zone pretty) good, too,” for talent-thin Connecticut them, we could win the game. But Garrett Plona blasted a 39foot slap and the 198986 Division II semifinal offensively and defensively,” said Tulimieri added. A - ) shot over Manchester goalie Brian Another bright spot for the game. Wethersfield High vs. Man­ first-year coach Dennis Tulimieri, again, we came out and got a Manchester WiH ne ShootIng for Oatwa’s stick-side shoulder and Indians has been the play of glas, Syracuse’s leading scorer this chester High. A wide open shootout who was the East Catholic High penalty.” Gagnon, the freshman defenseman its first win of the season Wednes­ Syraause sophomore Sherman “ Except for 3 or 4 minutes in the Wethersfield took the lead to stay. By Jim Tierney season, was the key and has , featuring two explosive offenses. junior varsity coach for four years. turned winger, who leads the team., day at 8; 15 p.m. against Fermi first half, 3 or 4 minutes the second Junior Wayne Napierata added Herald Sports Writer Douglas, who inherited the role of capably filled Washington’s shoes. “ Tonight is the kind of game where Junior Geoff Oblack broke the in scoring with three goals and four High at the Bolton Ice Palace. half, I feel we played a pretty good third-period goals, the first one on point guard after the departure of " I think Sherman does all the The script has been changed, it showed up nicely.” scoreless tie with 2; 04 left in the assists. “ Andy is providing the Dwayne “ Pearl” Washington to the basketball game,” Calhoun said. the power play, as the Eagles won NEW HAVEN - Nobody told things that a point guard is however, and so have the charac­ opening period with the Eagles first offensive punch that we need,” Coach Jim Calhoun that his first NBA, scored a game-high 20 points The crushing blow to tlie Huskies their second game against four Wathorifleld 1 1 2-4 supposed to do,” Monroe said. ters.. Only the'outcome remained Manchester, 97, clearly played of two power-play goals. Danny Farno said. “ He is coming along Manchetttr 0 1 0—1 year at the helm of the University of on lO-for-15 shooting from the field materialized in another spurt by losses. Scoring; “ Obviously, right now he is the the same as the Eagles skated to a its best game of the year. The Logan and Tom Lang assisted on V- and adjusting to the speed of the Connecticut’s basketball team and dished out eight assists to lead the Orangemen in the second half First porlod; W- Geoff Oblack (Tom backbone of our club.” Douglas 4-1 victory over the Indians Satur- Indians trailed by a slim 2-1 margin the play. O a tw ^ played a strong game in high school game very well.” Long, Paul Healv) 13:56. would be an easy task, but more of the Orangemen past the Huskies. which proved fatal for UConn. With feels comfortable with his role. “ I ' day night at the Bolton Ice Palace. after two periods, but penalties and Brian Hughes, with his fourth the Manchester nets, turning back Despite the strong Manchester Second period: M- Brian Hughes (Luc an upward stuggle due to an “ Our guards were good and that UConn trailing, 54-51, Syracuse Larose, Andy Gagnon) 1:23, W - Garrett don’t really think the pressure is Both teams have straggled in the a faster Wethersfield club kept the goal of the season, tied it at 1; 22 of 26 of 30 shots. His counterpart, effort, the game belonged to the abundance of inexperience and was a big key,” Syracuse coadi Jim scored 10 straight points and Plona (unassisted) 2:22. with me as it was in the beginning of ' early part of the 198987 season young Indians away from their first the second period for Manchester Damian Gerardi, saved 12 of 13 Eagles and Tulimieri’s system. Third period; W- Wovne Noplerata lack of enough talented players. Boeheim said, referring to the play outscored the Huskies, 16-2, over a the season,” Douglas said. “ At this - adjusting to new philosophies and. win of the season. when he converted an Andy Gagnon Manchester shots. “ We’ve been working on set offen­ (Evans) a:19,W-Naplerata(Oblok,Tlm Unfortunately, UConn did adhere to of Douglas and senior Greg Monroe six-minute span to forge a com­ Suffish) 13:0S. stage. I ’m real comfortable. I do in Wethersfield’s case, a new "W e had six penalties in the first pass from the left wing corner. “ They were a lot stronger in goal sive plays and all three lines were the latter scenario Saturday night. who combined for 35 points. ‘”rhat’3 manding 70-53 lead. Shots on pool; Manchester- 13, the things I like to do. I ’ve been ' coach. two periods, that’s almost half the Center Luc Larose was also cre- than I anticipated.” Tulimieri able to execute most of them Wethersfield- 30. a terrific backcourt tandem,” “ That’s what kills us,” UConn The Huskies, in what may have pleased with my performance.” been their sternest test thus far this Calhoun added. captain Gerry Besselink said, ref­ Cliff Robinson paced UConn with season, battled seventh-ranked ’The young Huskies, who outre- erring to the spurts by Syracuse. 19 points and Jeff King had 15 while bounded the supposedly stronger ‘”rhat’s how good teams win, by Syracuse University in a valiant Besselink and Phil Gamble,^added Syracuse front line, 36-32, caused taking advantage of another team’s performance before succumbing to 14 each. “ I think our kids hung in the powerful Orangemen, 88-71, in the Orangemen some problems mistakes. That’s what they did to Disastrous quarter, foul shooting do^m the Eagles there.” Calhoun summed up. early on with their zone defense and us.” Big East Conference action Satur­ “ When we really worked the ball we J led by as many as five points in the , Boeheim, who wasn’t pleased day night at the New Haven were able to post them and get the Coliseum. first half, 13-8, at the 15; 20 mark. In with his team’s performance re­ A disastrous third period, and its O'Nelll (B ) pinned Steve Classon :34, ball inside and do some nice things. a game which was actually decided bounding and on defense, saw the inability to connect from the foul 119 Serollno (B ) pinned Brett Lassen Syracuse remains perfect for the We just weren’t able to maintain it ;20, 131- Ferrere (B ) pinned Jim season at 12-0 and is 1-0 in the Big by two major spurts from the two spurts as the key. ’ ’Defen­ line, proved to be double trouble for H.S. Roundup for the full 40 (minutes).” MePhee ;17, 139 Tolls (B ) W B F, 139 East while UConn drops to 5-6 visitors — one in each half — sively, we played in two spurts,” the East Catholic High basketball Classon (C T ) pinned Veleos 3:00, 149 SYRACUSE tiS) — Howord Trich e 4-7 team as the Eagles fell to visiting Galas (B ) pinned Jason Grivols :51,147- overall and 0-2 in the conference. Syracuse broke a 23-23 tie with 9; 23 Boeheim explained. “ We played 1-1 9, Derrick Coleman 2-3 2-2 4, Rony Pera (B ) pinned Ron PIrtel 3:03, 157- The Huskies wil travel to the left In the half and outscored defense two times in two spurts and Selkolv 5-104-814, Greg Monroe 7-12 0-1 St. Bernard, 48-43, in All Connecti­ Urso (B) pinned Hunter ;59,169 DInda Meadowlands in East Rutherford, UConn, 15-3, to take a 38-26 lead that got us the lead. We played six IS, SherrfHin Douglas 10-15 0-0 20, Steve cut Conference action Saturday (B ) pinned M ark Aspinwall ;19, 187- Thom pson>7 2-2 8, Rodney Wolker 3-5 night at the Eagles’ Nest. Armstrong (B ) pinned Romano 2:40, N.J., Tuesday for a game with with 2:29 left in the half. ’The minutes of defense in a 40-minute 0-0 4, Derek Brower 1-3 O-O 2, Herman Girls Basketball Unlimited- Ogden (B) WBF. Seton Hall at 7 p.m. The Pirates Huskies fought back, though, and game and that’s not gonna get the H orrl^b zO -l 2, Keith Hughes 0-00-00, East is now 92 in the ACC and 1-4 Cheney vs. Stratford— 99Guallellonl A whipped previously unbeaten and Tate George’s hoop right before job done.” It certainly was enough Glen Bogginl 0-0000, Mott Roe2-2004 overall while the Saints, bolstered East upended (S) WBF, 109 S.Murray (S) won by H trild photo by Tuckpr Totols 3804 11-15 88 „ by the return of high-scoring Will default, 107- JB.AAttrrav (S ) pinned eighth-ranked Georgetown, 74-53, half closed the gap to five, 40-35, at to get the job done against the UCONN (711— Clift Robinson 7-20 2-4 MIDDLETOWN — ’The good Classon 1:59,/'Tl9/6.Murrov (S) dec. Saturday night. the intermission. Huskies, though. 19, Jett King 4-113-4 IS, G erry Besselink Flowers, won its second in two news for the East Catholic High Lessen 91, 121- Moore (S) pinned “ I think we got outplayed by a George, the 6-5 freshman point The Syracuse balance was evi­ 7-13 OO 14, Steve PIklell 20 OO 5, Phil nights to move to .2-1 in the MePhee 1:07, 129 See (S ) W B F , 134- UConn’s Cliff Robinson (00) has a concerned look on his Gamble 5-103-414, Tote George 1-3 2-2 4, girls’ basketball team was the fact Closson (C T) pinned Conetta 3:50,149 face during recent Husky action at the Field House. superior team,” Calhoun admitted. guard, was not expected back until dent with 10 Orangemen hitting the Robert Urserv 0-10-10, Greg Economou conference and 92 overall. the Eagles registered their highest Varvella (S ) pinned Grivols 1:49, 147- “ They’ve got depth. They’re very ’Tuesday’s game but turned in a scoring column. After Douglas’ OOOOO, James SprodllngOOO-OO Totals The Saints had a 24-19 lead at the point of the season. The bad news Proeyk (S ) pinned PIrtel 5:32, 157- Robinson had 19 points and 7 rebounds but potent game-high 20, 6-foot-lO Rony Sei- 28-4211-14 71 half with Flowers and Todd Elling­ Hunter (C T ) pinned Stolzenberg 5:12, talented and they really play 19-minute effort. He had missed two Three-point field goals; Syracuse (1) was that host Mercy High aiso had 169 Eller (S ) pinned Aspinwall 5:18,187- Syracuse proved too strong, winning 88-71 over the together as well as any team I’ve games with ankle ligament kaly had 16 points and Monroe — Monroe. UConn (4) — Robinson 2, ton doing the bulk of the damage its shooting eye as the Tigers Welner (S) pinned Rouelle 5:52, PIklell 1, Gamble 1. Huskies at the New Haven Coliseum Saturday night. seen in quite awhile.” damage. added 15 to pace Syracuse. Dou­ with 10 and 9 points, respectively. outdistanced East, 7964, in Aii Unlimited Guard (S) WBF. N Cheney vs. Morgan — 99 dauble That convinced East coach Ray Connecticut Conference action Sat­ forfeltA09 double forfeit, 107- Denflord Page to go to a triangle-and-two urday night. (M ) pinned Classon 2:28, 119 DeNoto defense on the Saint pair in the third (M) WBF, 121- Grieder (M) pinned The loss leaves the Eagles’ 1-3 in MePhee :50, 128- Fortunoto (M ) W B F, stanza. the ACC and 3-4 overail while 139 Classon (CT) pinned Flemming The defensive alignment worked Mercy is now 91 in conference play 1:51, 149 G ram m (M ) pinned Grivols Big East already showing signs of its balance well as the pair was held to two 2:498, 147- Calabrese (M ) pinned PIrtel apd 5-2 overall. 1:13,157- Hunter (C T ) pinned DeCaprIo points in the period. But the Eagle Both clubs shot a high percen­ ;41, 169- Delllng (M ) pinned Aspinwall offense went one less than'that, tage, noted East coach Donna 2:15,187- Demchak (M ) pinned Rouelle ^ . . . . . ______I 1...A r/v -I r No. 9^ NavyMmtfw 72,T9 UNC-WllmInglon 1 ;38, Unlimited- Double forfeit. Bv The Associated Press attempted just 50 shots from the however, with Andy Klopfer’s free Ridel. Mercy had a 2915 lead after field in losing. 88; Guard Cliff Rees scored 26 throw the lone point for East. The points and Navy, despite the one quarter and 38-31 halftime The Big East, traditionally one of "Our goal was to hold them down N C A A H o o p 24-19 halftime deficit went to 31-20 bulge. The margin remained seven strongest conferences in college inside. And we accomplished that,” ineffective play of All-America after three periods of play. “ The EC loses three center , beat North points, 5949, ^ e r three periods of basketball, is already showing it Massimino said. defense worked well, but we went play. East pu\Ted within four points WETHERSFIELD - It was a may be one of the most balanced. “ We played outstanding de­ Boilermakers trailed 21-11 with Carolina-Wilmington in its Colonial cold from the floor and the foul Athletic Association opener. in the final stanza but couldn’t frustrating day on Saturday for the Villanova sent No. 10 St. John's to fense.” Massimino said. "W e’ve 12; 18 left in the first half but scored line,” Page cited. ” It must have East Catholic High wrestling team Robinson, averaging 30 points, narrow the gap any fJraier. its first loss of the season, 62-54, on been giving up a lot of points inside 14 straight points to go ahead. been my halftime speech.” the East Junior point guard Amelia as the Eagle matmen fell three Sunday — one day after visiting but we didn't today.... We’ll get bur Stephens had six points in the rally. fouled out with 4; 30 to play after second-year coach quipped. East’s scoring just 12 points. 'The 7-foot Bearse was hotter than a smoking times. The Eagles bowed to host Seton Hall trounced No. 8 George­ shots, but defense is the key to how Purdue, 9-1, also got 21 points difficulties from the charity stripe Wethersfield High, 38-30, suc­ Robinson had 14 rebounds for Navy, pistol for East as she connected on town, 74-53. successful we will be.” from Melvin McCants. were game long. East, shooting 75 cumbed to Hartford Public. 4930, 6-3. 19of-12 from the field for a ” We think we’re as good as Harold Jensen and Doug West No. 3 Iowa 80, Northwoalarn 44: percent from the line through four career-high 20 points. Theresa and to RHAM High, 54-10. anyone in the conference, so we scored 16 points each for Villanova. Iowa, off to its fastest start in No. 13 Oklahoma 88, McNaoaa St. 83; games, couldn’t find the range in McCready also turned in a fine East, 96, is back in action Friday don’t look at this as an upset. ” Seton 9-3"bVer^l. Willie Glass led St. history at 13-0, won its Big Ten Oklahoma won its own Sooner this contest, hitting just 9of-I4 effort for the Eagles with 12 points at 6 p.m. at Fairfield Prep. Hall Coach P.J. Carlesimo said John’s with 19 points, but was one of opener by routing Northwestern. Invitational as Darryl Kennedy attempts. “ We were horrible from and 6 rebounds. Sophomore Karen Mike Manganello (132) won two after handing the Hoyas their first three Redmen to foul out. Kevin Gamble, and scored 20 points against McNeese the foul line,” Page said. Mozdzierz and senior Deb matches by pin for East. Jeremy loss. “ The score, though, was “ It was a very physical game, B.J. Armstrong scored 11 points State. East, despite the poor third Houghton were also in twin digits Palmer (115) had a win by pin and absurd.” and that's what happens when ,each for the Hawkeyes. Iowa ied TheSooners, 10-2, led 56-55before quarter, came out firing in the for East with 10 points apiece. Liz another by major decision. Matt Villanova rolled to a 34-19 le^d at Villanova plays St. John’s.” Massi-^ '^37-15 at halftime after holding the a technical foul on McNeese State fourth quarter and doubled its point Lynch led Mercy with 28 points and Terzo (141) had a win by pin and a halftime and the visiting Redmen mino said. Wildcats scoreless for 4; 07. Coach Glenn Duhon helped Okla­ total with 23 points. Among them Paula Kohs added 21. tie and Jeff Villar (135) had a win by No. 4 N. Carolina 70, La Sallo 72: never got closer than five points the Villanova led 48-31 with 11; 03 homa score the next six points. were two three-point field goals Mercy also took the shortened pin and a major decision victory (or rest of the way. remaining in the game before St. Jeff Lebo made two foul shots with No. 14Tampla01, Rhodo Island88: ~ from Scott Altrui and Klopfer. The junior varsity game, 31-20. Heather the Eagles. ” I didn’t think the first half would John's went on a 14-2 tear to pull 1;26 remaining to give North scored 31 and > Eagles were able to trim theSaints’ Osinski led the young Eagles, now Rtsults; ever end.” St. John’ s Coach Lou within five points with 4; 11 left. The Carolina a 73-72 lead, and the Tar Temple beat Rhode Island in a 2 lead to two points, 4943, with eight 6-1. with 9 points. East vs. Wethersfield— 99 Mayo (W) Wildcats still led by five with 1;30 Heels held off La Salle. Lebo scored WBF, 101- Monoca (W ) WBF, 109 Eric Carnesecca said. “ They played as fight-marred Atlantic 10 game. A ~ seconds left when East was forced East is now idle until Saturday NItschke (EC) WBF, 119 Jeremy perfect a half as you can play. We left and then scored the next four 13 of his 14 points in the second half bench-clearing brawl that lasted -2 to call a timeout it didn’t possess. when it hosts ACC foe St. Joseph in a Palmer (E C ) mal. dec. Keene 19-11,122- played much better in the second points. for North Carolina, 11-1. five minutes broke out midway Ip^ ‘ Paul Washburn, who was a perfect 1:30 p.m. start. Mangonello (E C ) pinned Roslonec ;50, In Landover. Md.. Seton Hall beat scored 22 points as 129 Stewart (W ) dec. M ik e Carlson 3-3, half, but that was a big hole we were the second half, and some Rhode 4-for-4 from the foul line, converted M ERCY (78) — Liz Lynch 12 910 38. 139 Villar (E C ) pinnea Densmore1:39, in.” Georgetown for the first time since North Carolina won its ninth Island fans had to be kept away ,. both shots from the technical and Paula Kohs 8 7-8 21, Joelle Buorglorno 1 141- Terzo (EC) tied Loura 2-2, 148- Two other Big East teams in the 1977, a span of 17 games. The straight game. from the court. 7 St. Bernard added a single digit to 0-02, Sue NegrelllOO-OO, LorlUgucclonl Prvbson (W ) dec. Mark McConnell 14-7, 5 defeat, in the Hoyas’ conference No. 11 Kontucky 83, No. 8 Aptam 4 94 11, Chris Hickey 3 0-0 4, Joonno 159 Peruta (W ) pinned L a rry Wyland Top Twenty won Saturday. No. IS DaPaul 80, Dayton 84: ‘ escape with the victory, LIseo 0 2-4 2. Totals 27 1926 70. 5:18, 179 Krvstopa (W ) pinned Peter Seventh-ranked Syracuse beat Con­ opener after nine straight league 80; Guard R^lfhapm an scored 21 Kevin Edwards scored 24 points i: “ We went to fullcourt man-to- EAST CATHOLIC (64) — Amelia Meyer 3:59,188- Spero Stamboulls (E C ) necticut 88-71 and No. 17 Pittsburgh victories, was the worst for George­ of his 24 pmnts jin the second half and 21 as unbeaten 7 man pressure and got the ball into Bearse 10 91 20, Karen Moziizlerz 4 2-6 WBF, Unlimited- Davies (W) pinned 10, Deb Houghton 5 92 10, Jo Marie Kevin Kennedy ;27. defeated Providence 76-67. town since a 21-point loss to and Kentucky held off Aiibum in a DePaul broke a five-year losing ' Damian (Canny) in the fourth Hgrtid photo by Pinto Rucel 1 2-4 4, Karen Wuschner 2 0-0 4, East vs. Hartford Public — 94- Elsewhere, it was No. 1 Nevada- Alabama in the 1982-83 season. Southeastern- Conference game. streak at Dayton. quarter.” Page said. “ And we got Theresa McCready 5 9212, Katv Fisher Proctor (HP) WBF, 101- Moseley (HP) Mark Bryant led the Pirates with Chapman made five three-point 0 2-4 2, Theresa Sombric 0 (M) 0, Patty WBF, 108- Proctor (HP) i pinned Las Vegas 114. Cal-Irvine 72; No. 2 The Blue Demons, 10-0, outscored ' the three-pointers from Altrui and Manchester High’s Cinque Barlow has^ )rd^75-62 victory over the Bobcats. Evans 1 0-0 2, Brenda Mozdzierz 00410. 24 points and IS rebounds. Seton shots in the second half in helping AP photo NItschke :57, 119 Rivera (H P ) pinned Purdue 87, Michigan State 72; No. 3 the Flyers 7-2 in the final 2; 12 of the Klopfer.” he added. Canny, a 93 his shot swatte

Atwell mskes All-New England team ’The Manchester Community Col­ lege basketball team, ranked third Jen Atwell, a Junior m ember of the Manchester High School in New England, split two games giris’ soccer team which went undefeated (lS>li-l) during the this weekend. The game they won, Fight insurance fraud regular season last fall recently acquired two honors for her though, was an exhibition. MCC outstanding play at midfield. Atwell was named to the Class L bowed Saturday night to Massachu­ All-State team and was one of 10 players from Connecticut to setts Bay Community College, When m ore The cases they turn over to the make the All-New England team. 92-81, before coming back Sunday than 100 Blue prosecuting authorities are ready to nip the Quebec (Canada) Provin­ Cross and Blue for trial.” cial team, 92-91 in overtime. Shield subscrib­ \£%\ Investigations by the unit headed Baseball card, collectible show The Cougars slip to 10-2 while ers called. the by William Huston, the. former Mass. Bay, which is ranked 10th in anti-fraud ho­ Sylvia The second annual Opening Pitch Baseball Card and Sports state police director who heads the New England, raised its record to tline at Blue anti-fraud unit at Blue Cross' and Collectibles Show will be held Sunday at East Catholic High 9-4. Cross and Blue Blue Shield Mutual of Northern School. Show hours are 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Admission is $2 for Porter In Saturday’s game. Mass Bay Shield of Michi­ Ohio, have led to 95 criminal adults, $1 for children and all children arriving during the first broke a 65-65 tie with 10 minutes to ) gan to say that indictments since his unit was set play and outscored MCC. 27-16, hour of the show will receive free gifts at the door. they had never up in 1983 — 35 of them in 1986. d o ^ the stretch to win going away. « t Highlighting the program will be the first availability of 1987 heard of a man Among those convicted was a ShaWn Brothers paced Mass Bay by Donruss baseball cards to the retf on’s hobbiests and collectors. who called him­ physician who falsified patients’ scoring 24 of his game-high 32 For further information, contact Mike Chartier at 376-0935. self Allan Klein, the 30-year-old years in prison and a $1,000 fine. diagnoses to justify bills for a large points in the second half. Five chiropractor was doomed. It took Specific anti-fraud squads set up number of expensive tests. In Cougars reached double figures three years of investigation by the by Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans another case, Huston said, his staff with Chris Galiigan’s 21 leading the Legion baseball committee to meet Blue Cross and Blue Shield anti­ across the country are uncovering had made 26 undercover visits to a way followed hy Tyrell Hartfield 18, fraud sleuths and the U.S. Attor­ and combatting such health care drug store after an anonymous tip. The Manchester American Legion baseball committee will Bernard James 14, MikeStowell 13, ney’s office. But Klein will spend fraud schemes that add millions to ’Their investigation resulted in the meet today at the-American Legion Home on Legion Drive at 7 and 11 from Donald Cost. the next 10 years in prison and our health care insurance premi­ conviction of three pharmacists for p.m. It is an open meeting and anyone interested in attending is MCC had 22 turnovers in the repay more than $308,000. The J ums each year. Gregory Anderson, dispensing generic drugs and bil­ welcomed. The meeting is to formulate fund-raising plans for the game. Paul Swartz had eight charge — submitting faise X-ray director of the Michigan Blue Cross ling the Blue Cross and Blue Shield rebounds to lead the Cougars. 1987 summer season. claims to Blue Cross and Blue and Blue Shield Plans anti-fraud Plan for the more expensive On Sunday. MCC outscored Qu­ Shield of Michigan and to unit estimates “ from 5 percent to 15 brand-name drugs. ebec, 19-14. in the final 10 minutes to Medicare. percent of the $425 billion a year Hot lines are a most effective tool send the game into overtime. MCC Youth soccer registration Is set In an even more bizarre scheme thM we spend on health care in this for uncovering fraud. Huston points had led at halftime, 52-39, behind 16 that netted fraudulent payments of country can be attributed to white- out. The busy hot line at his Blue Manchester Rec Department will conduct youth soccer first-half points by Hartfieldand 11 more than $10 million over a collar crime. The dollar amounts,” Cross and Blue Shield Plan aver­ registration on three Monday nights, Jan. 5,12 and 26, from 6-8 from Cost. A balanced attack in the seven-year period, five Michigan he says, “ are just too great to ages 511 calls a month. Calls from p.m. at the Tiling Junior High cafeteria each night. second half sent Quebec to the lead, "business executives,” a medical ignore.” not just from subscribers, he says, A There are four divisions; Pee Wee (ages 6-7), Midget (ages 68-63, with 10 minutes left. Key foul Haratd photo by Pinto director, and three chiropractors but also from among the honest 8-9), Junior (ages 10-11) and Intermediate (ages 12-14). Pee Wee shooting by James. Stowell, and enticed poor and unemployed peo­ The -painstaking investigations majority of doctors and health care is co-ed with the other three offered to boys and girls separately. Cost saved the day for the Cougars gym. Galligan led MCC with 21 points The Cougars’ Chris Galligan (30) drives ple to come to five clinics they and aggressive criminal prosecu­ providers who want the offenders to as they tied the game with 17 Age is determined as bf Dec. 31,1986. to the basket in recent ftotary Club Saturday but MasyBay took a 92-81 operated. The bait was $30 to $50 for tion by the Blue Cross and Blue be caught. seconds left in regulation. A $4 Rec membership card is required at time of registration making commercials testifying to Shield anti-fraud units have netted You can help, too. by carefully A Galligan basket and two foul Classic action at the East Catholic High verdict from the Cf^gars. and there is a $5 registration fee. the quality care they had received. more than $51 million in savings in examining the explanation of be­ shots from James gave MCC an To speed registraton, Rec membership cards may be just the past two years, the National nefit notices you receive from your 86-82 lead in overtime. 'Perry Hartfleld 8 2-4 18, O n ie Grant 0 04) 0, For a fictitious persistent back­ purchased at the East Side Rec, Community Y, Mahoney Rec down the victory. M A S*. BAY(91)/l KenWtlondOIMIO, Anti-Fraud Advisory Board re­ health insurer and reporting suspi­ Douglas’ three-pointer with 1:39 MCC’s next game is Thursday at Jeo Konnody 00^ Paul Connolly 04-5 Donald Cost42-311, Mike Hardwick 104) ache, they would get an examina­ ports. In addition, three Blue Cross Center and Highland Park Community Center. 4, K tn Boon 5 3-3' Johnnie D ollar 8 6-9 2, Chrit Galligan 8 5-531, M ike Stowell 6 tion by a chiropractor, a variety of cious billings. N There is a maximum number of participants that will be left in overtime closed the gap to 8 p.m. against Middlesex Commun­ 23, Shown Brott 16 0-1 32v Lou 1-113, Bernard James 6 2-614 Totals 34 and Blue Shield plans — in 88-87. Another Galligan hoop and a ity College at Woodrow Wilson High lnduitrlout,94-7 ihun Testier^ 3-36, 12-18 81 \ . expensive and unnecessary tests, Michigan, Ohio and the state of accepted and once that number is reached, no further MIko Gotely 3 1- Three-point field qoalp:>d|p: Moss. Bov (For advice on personal money pair of free throws by Stowell nailed School in Middletown. 1(ptolf■ 36' 93. alleged chiropractic treatment, Washington — have helped to get registrations will be accepted. There will be no registrations M CCtSD — Paul S« LTyrell (0).- MCC------(1)1 _— C oCost? s t3 and the cash payment. management send $9.95 plus $1 for accepted after Jan. 26,1987. legislation enacted providing stiff mailing and handling to “ Sylvia The costs were billed to Blue felony penalties for even attempt­ Porter’s New Money Book for the Cross and Blue Shield of Michigan. ing to defraud health insurers. ’80s,” in care of the Manchester Coghlan will be ready for Indoors , People made good money, testim­ Plans in other states are working Herald, P.O. Box 419150, Kansas Penn State voted^sjmtlonal champs ony at the trial pointed out. by being with their legislatures to get City. Mo. 64141. Make checks Eamonn Coghlan, the world-record holder in the indoor mile “ sick” and by recruiting new similar legislation enacted. payable to Andrews, Mcmeel & and three-time winner of Manchester RoadRace, has recovered patients. The clinic owners were NEW YORK (AP) — Penn State, Arizona State, which beat Michi­ Texas A&M slipped from eighth to Parker.) AP photo rapidly from a recent dog attack which damaged his calf muscles Lions held off the Hurricanes 14-10. charged also with receiving more About 90 percent of the 76 Blue with its victory over No. 1 Miami in gan 22-15 in the Rose Bowl, vaulted 13th. Penn State, ranked sixth in this than $2 million in kickbacks from Cross and Blue Shield Plans have in his native Dublin, Ireland. the Fiesta Bowl, has won its second from ninth place to finish fourth Alabama, a 28<6^v^nner over season’s preseason poll, lost a laboratories performing tests on some type of anti-fraud unit and Snowy stroll Coghlan is intent on regaining his indoor reigninihe mile which national college football champion­ with 938 points. Michigan dropped Washington iji^meMSun Bowl, Gen. George C. Marshall was chance to win last year’s national blood and urine for the five clinics. about half of these are “ dedicated was dominated last year by fellow countryman and Villanova ship in five years. , from fourth to eighth. advanced frbm ^th to ninth. named special U.S. envoy to China mont Community College in Morgan­ title when it was defeated by All nine of those charged were units whose staffs have profes­ These two Morganton, N.C., residents alumnus Marcus O’Sullivan. Coghlan said Sunday ^e will not Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl. Nebraska advanced from sixth to in 1945 to try to end hostilities convicted on 102 counts with each sional law enforcement experience enjoy a winter stroll across the ton. A storm hit the area Friday and miss any indoor meejadue to the injury, including the Mestigious The Nittany Lions got 54 of 57 fifth with 937 points after beating The Second Ten consists of between the Nationalists and the count carrying a penalty of five and do complete investigations. continued up the East Coast. Millrose Games at^adison Square Garden on Jasr 29 where first-place votes and 1,137 of a Miami finished second with 1,064 Louisiana State 30-15 in the Sugar Arizona. Baylor, Texas AltM, Ckimmunists. snow-covered campus of Western Pied­ Coghlan will try po become the first man to win the Wanamaker possible 1.140 points from a panel of points, and Oklahoma, which Bowl. LSU drooped from fifth to UCLA, Arkansas, Iowa, Clemson, Mile seven tir sports writers end sportscasters routed No. 9 Arkansas 42-8 in the lOth. Washington, Boston College and Saturday in The Associated Press’ Orange Bowl, remained third. Auburn beat Southern California Virginia Tech. Supermarket Shopper final poll. Oklahoma, picked No. 1 in the 16-7 in the Citrus Bowl and moved The final regular-season Second Nllbsc ( s World Cup event Penn State and Miami were the preseason poll, got the other three from 10th to sixth with 791 points. Ten listed Ohio State, Washington. Alabama, Baylor, UCLA, Arizona, MARIBOR, Yugoslavia -- Sweden’s unheralded Camilla only 11-0 teams going into Friday first-place votes and wound up with Ohio State downed Texas A8cM Georgia, North Carolina State, Nilsson won her first World Cup event, posting a stunning victory night’s Fiesta Bowl at Tempo, 1,045 points. The Sooners’ only loss 28-12 in the Cotton Bowl and Jumped Precooked meats, diet chocolate soda coming in 1987 Ariz.. and the then-No. 2 Nittany Iowa and Stanford. of one minute, 23.59 seconds Sunday in the slalom by coming from this season was to Miami. from 11th to seventh with 762 points. the unfavorable 24th starting position and sweeping past two By Martin Slodne numbers. Double and triple coupons are still around ittle sushi items like a California Roll, made of crab What innovation would you like to see supermarkets Swiss favorites. United Features Syndicate and are moving in and out of cities with unpredictable stick, avocado, sea vegetable and roe rolled inside rice, pioneer in 1987? How about a cash-register tape that Switzerland’s Vreni Schneider and Corinne Schmidhausen, speed. Shoppers in Dallas were surprised when double he har seems to be a success. This just proves that you comes with a carbon copy? second and third in 1:23.84 and 1:24.37, respectively, also Paterno savoring secondriational title coupons came back several weeks ago, but they may be can never tell what you might run into on your next trip Whatever 1987 brings, 1 would like to wish all my expressed delight with their showing on an icy 49-gate course. What does supermarket shopping have in store for us just a coupon clipper’s memory by the time this article o the supermarket. / readers a happy and prosperous New Year. in 1987? appears. By Ralph Bernstein “ I ’m not going to let a bunch of . One coming innovation is precooked meats. No, not ’The hottest new supermarket promotion will take Masur wins Aussie net crown The Associated Press ^ statistics change the score.” he the deli varieties, but meats like chops, roasts and you on a trip hundreds (or even thousands) of miles f ^ one free Colgate said. rib-eye steaks. In 1987, leading chains around the from your favorite supermarket’s aisles. Super­ Receive a coupon good ADELAIDE, Australia — Wally Masur of Australia held off Regular Toothbrush. Sei required refund TEM PE. Ariz. — It’s too soon for Paterno came out of the Fiesta country will begin introducing precooked meats that markets will soon be offering big discounts on air Clip *n’ file refunds form and two Universal 'roduct (^ode symbols American Bill Scanlon with a second-set tiebreaker Sunday to Joe Paterno to start talking about Bowl more determined than ever to only require heating before being served. They have travel in exchange for cash-register tapes. This win the championship of the South Australian Men’s Open tennis been poineered by Kroger in Cincinnati. Kroger offers Personal Products (File No. 11-B) from two Colgate Regul Toothbrushes of any 5 next season. campaign fora Division lA national promotion, which was recently run in Boston and size. Expires Jan. 31, 198' tournament 6-4, 7-6 (7-2). “ Hey. let me enjoy this,’’ the championship playoff system. 26 meat dishes to choose from .and shoppers have liked Atlanta in conjunction with Continental Airlines, didn’t Clip out this file and keep it with similar cash-off Scanlon, from Dallas, did get one title Sunday, combining with Penn State coach said. “ Call me in “ I don’t know if this is a the taste, tenderness and convenience. make life easy for avid refunders, who save their coupons — beverage refund offers with beverage SCHICK Free Super IlXPlus Coupon Offer. Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia to beat Australians Peter Doohan about a month and we’ll talk.” significant step toward a playoff.” On the supermarket shelves, 1987 promises to be one register tapes, but the promotions gave everyone a coupons, for example. Start collecting the needed Receive a coupon good fo K a free five-pack and Laurie Warder in the doubles 6-7, 6-3, 6-4. Paterno is savoring his second Paterno. said- “ I do think this game of the biggest years for new products. “ Calcium chance to travel economically to 55 cities in the United proofs of purchase while looking for the required package of Schick -$imer IINPlus. Send the national college football champion­ highlights how much the public added” is a phrase you will see printed on many more States and six more in Mexico. Other supermarket forms at the supermarket, in newspapers and required refund form antLOie Universal Product ship. clinched with Penn State’s wants it. food packages this coming year, and a host of other chains are expected to jump on the new “ buy now, fly magazines, and when trading with friends. Offers Code symbol from the fi^e stop saying “silly goose,” “blind as 6:30PM (D WKRP in Cincinnati GD weekend hours available. His children want him to have a many children would feel good McKee. 1985. Rated PG. anything and everything. Richard Pryor. hour. 742-9116 for set up tools necessary. kends off while earning a Street, Manchester. Previous mMical expe­ In the Mondiester Herald Uaiqas fsatarss la> A a bat,’’ “eats like a pig,” “stubborn dD 99 ABC News [U S A ] Prime Time Wrestling (2 hrs.) 1983. Rated R. Interview. Monday through Satur­ Is subject to the Fair “girlfriend,” but they don't want about a father who would divorce as a mule,” “sly as a fox,” “mean Recoptlonist-Manchester competlve hourly rate rience Is v ^ helpful. We dw k: alamlaani tld- their mother upset, so she is not to an institutionalized mother to ff9 Benson 11:35PM (3D Entertainment Tonight doctors office. Must be day. Benefits and vaca­ plus excellent benefits. Special Education otter a^jcompetltlve start­ Housing Act of 196S, which as a snake,’ “I’m so hungry I could 8:30PM C3D Nowhart (CC) Michael is Sales - Inside. Some expe­ tion. Coll 243-5457. makes It Illegal to adver­ lag, alMsrs to dock, know about me. Abby, I do not care m arry another woman? eat a horse,” and all the other 0 9 Odd Couple recruited to write a romantic love letter ET visits Liza Minnelli on the Chicago set dependable, mature, and Put your supervisory teacher position effective ing salary plus a weekend (29 Too Close for Comfort to help a love-struck Larry impress the of her latest film, "Rent A Cop". conscientious. Atternoon rience preferred. Com­ skills, experience and lob January to teach In class differential. Interested ap­ tise any preference, lim­ fteiml lo yord oo qoM to socialize with people who think sim ilar phrases I could think of in pany will train. Part time-work at home itation or discrimination (29 (39 NBC Nows girl of his dreams. 11:40PM [H B O ] MOVIE: 'National hours and Tuesftav even­ knowledge to work In an for students with behov- plicants pleose contact that being a mistress is good DEAR ABBY: My husband and I five minutes? Manchester location. on the telephone servicing hosed or. race, color, reli­ strooL Movo la c ^ l- (29 Nightly Business Report C§D Million Dollar Chance of a Lifetime Lampoon's European Vacation' The Gris­ ings. Coll 646-5153 and atmosphere geared to lorlal disorders, ages S to JoAnn at 721-7393 between enough for me. My friend is angry disagree about this problem; We RICHARD ANDERSON. wold family takes Europe by storm when leave message. New offices. Salary to our customers. Ask tor high quality patient care. 10 at state approved 9 and 4. gion, sex or national tioal By owaor, because I refuse to attend dinners have a friend who we think has “I” 9 9 Noticiero SIN @ 9 Novala: Herencia Maldita 22K. Call Sharon at 20i2- Penny. 646-1530 or 52S- For more Information and special education tactllty. origin, or an Intention to BURBANK. CALIF. they Win an all-expenses-paid trip on s *M,500. Coll 843- and social events with his children. trouble. She brags about herself 9 9 Silver Spoons [DIS] Here's Boomer game show. Chevy Chase, Beverly D'An­ Sales Person-Immediate 9232, Advanced Careers. 035S. Interview call 643-5151, Send resume to; Com­ make any such prefer­ Money is a big factor in his constantly. She is absolutely DEAR RICHARD: Those time- [C N N ] Showbiz Today 9:00PM (JD. MOVIE: 'Footloose* A gelo, Eric Idle. 1985. position for retail soles Pom Olenchack DSD, munity Child Guidance ence, limitation or dis­ 4B12 oftor 6 p-m. N Receptionist - needed tor crimination. The Herald children’s actions. As things pres­ shameless when it comes to prais­ honored figures of speech have [ES PN ] Action Outdoors with Julius Bo­ young man raises the ire of an entire 12:00AM (3D Kojak person with rapidly ex­ Ambitious Person-Large Crestfteld Convalescent School, 317 North Main ros community by trying to gain personal our new office located In notional company Is look­ Home, 565 Vernon St., St., Manchester, Ct. 06040. will not knowingly accept ently stand, everything will go to ing herself. Examples; “I was by been around since Pike’s Peak was dD Nightlife panding tv-oppitonce freedoms for himself and his friends. outlet. Excellent benefits Salmon Brook Park In ing for aggressive Individ­ Manchester, Ct. EOE. any advertisement which their mother, and then to them. far the best-looking woman at the a pimple, so here’s one writer who 7:00PM d D CBS News Kevin Bacon. Lori Singer. John Lithgow. (39 Star Trek EDINSTRUCTION and opportunltv for ad­ Glastonbury. Filing^ typ­ ual with ambition to earn Is In violation of the low. TODAY'S He can replace me much easier party." And. “Oh. she’s a good« is not about to “ kill the goose that dD (29 (39 M*A*s*H 1984. 9 9 Talas of the Unexpected A filmmak­ ing and telephone skills sn,000 a year or more. vancement. Salary plus (General Ottice-Must hove than I can replace him because of player, but, of course, she’s not as lays the golden eggs.” dD (29 Wheel of Fortune (!3D Best of the National Geographic Spe­ er's wife, with ulterior motives, wants a necessary. For more In­ College degree not neces­ Nurse Aides Cu rr«^y ac- Plano Instruction- Need repairs around thei Insentives, experience ne­ diversified office back­ / ( ( ’(•(/ l-.stnli the law of supply and demand. good a player as I am.” “It was a dD (39 4100,000 Pyramid cials (60 min.) naive author to invite her to lunch. formation please call sary. Qualifications: neat ceptlng oppltcccatlbns for Conservatory graduate, home? Coll an expert. cessary. Call for appoint­ ground and be able to type experienced teacher. Be- What can I do? good group, but I was by far the Problems? Write to Abby. For a (T9 Jeffersons (3D ®8 MOVIE: 'On Fire’ (CC) A man (29 MOVIE: 'Baltimore Bullet* Two clever ment. 647-9997. Mindy or Lori at 741-2557. appearance, good charac­ our Nurse Aid training You’ll find the help you faces an uncertain future after age dis­ pool hustlers decide to take their class that will begin soon. 40 wpm. Send resume to; glnlng or advanced levels. need In Classified. 643- CONFUSED IN NEW YORK most intelligent one there.” personal, unpublished reply, send a d 9 Carson's Comedy Classics ter, and common sense. Meadows Manor, 333 Bid- crimination forces him to retire as chief chances against a sleek master hustler^ Cook-M/F. Full time, pay We will train! Apply at the Also accepting oppllco- For Information call 560- 2711. I say this woman is suffering self-addressed; stamped envelpe to ( ^ MacNeil-Lehrer Nawshour arson investigator for a major city fire Part Tim e Mold wanted. well St., Manchester. At­ James Coburn, Omar Sharif, Bruce Box- negotiable. Apply In per­ Quality Inn, Rte S3 Ver­ llons fro C N A ’s. We offer 4567. by Norma DEAR CONFUSED: Not much. from an inferiority complex. My Dear Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los (29 Barney Miller department. John Forsythe, Carroll leitner. 1980. Weekends. Apply In perso- tention Personnel Affordable East Hartford Your gentleman friend has already husband says she is suffering from Baker, Woody Strode. 1987. n:Essex Motor Inn, 100 son: Antonio’s Restau­ non, Tuesday January 6th excellent starting wage Tedford Angeles. Calif. 90069. All correspon­ @ 9 Hollywood Squares (39 Alfred Hitchcock Presents rant, 956 Main Street, at 10am, 2pm, and 5pm. and benefits. Please con­ - 549,900 - Spacious two decided that his children’s appro- a superiority complex. What is your dence is confidential. (3D MOVIE: Th e Sand Pabbles' An East Center Street. Retail person to work In WANT ADS ore the bedroom unit In conve­ @ 9 Novela: Maria de Nadia American is forced to take a stand when 9 9 Ask Dr. Ruth Manchester. Ask tor Mr. TIbullt. tact; Director of Stott Developement at. Crest­ hardware store. Responsi­ friendly way of finding a nient location. Close to dZ) Nightly Business Report opium is planted aboard his gunboat on 9 9 Novala: Amo y Senor Waitresses - full and part bilities Include stocking, the Yangtze river. Steve McQueen, Ri­ Reps Needed-tor business fteld Convalescent Home- cosh buyer for applian­ Hartford and busline. Coll d 9 Maude (59 Sanford and Son time, all shifts. Apply In Pain ters-Ex ponding displaying merchandise, ces, musical Instruments, today for details. Joyce G. chard Crenna, Richard Attenborough. accounts. Full time, crews on 1st and 2nd shift. /Fenwood Manor. Mon­ [C N N ] Moneyline [C N N ] Newsnight person at LoStrodo West, and helping customers. cars and a host of other Epstein Real Estate, 647- 1966. Pert 1. 560,000-550,000. Part time, Painters and painter day through Friday, 7om Cough and hernia unrelated [ESPN ] SportsCanter [ESPN ] One on One 471 Hartford Road, Some hardware knowl­ Items. 0S95.a (29 (19 Herman Melville: Damned in Par­ $12,000-510,000. No selling, to 3pm at 643-5151. EOE. AfTaitchesfer. helpers. Experience help- / edge and or retail expe­ [T M C ] MOVIE: 'Jewel of the Nile' (CC) adise (CC) A documentary examination [U S A ] Dragnet repeat business. Set your ful but will train. Flexible Novelist Joan Wilder and adventurer of the author's life and work, including own hours. Training pro­ Munson's Chocolates Is rience helpful. Good pay, D EA R DR. location photography, interviews with 1 2:05AM ( S Simon & Simon Rick Legal Secretory for 1 man work schedules available. flexible hours. Apply at DEAR DR. GOTT: I wake up Jack Colton race against an evil Middle and A.J. are hired to find out who is vided. Coll; 1-612-930-6070, accepting applications for biographers and critics, and film clips law office. Shorthand ne­ Above average pay. M/F, Conyers Hardware. 646- A MATTER OF GOTT: Upper- every morning hurting across the Eastern leader in pursuit of a fabulous blackmailing a union leader who was a M -F, 0am to 5pm (Central full time employment. jewel. Kathleen Turner, Michael Doug­ from adaptations of his writings. (90 cessary. Coll 646-2425 call for appointment. 071- 5707. Ask for Bob. G.I. X-rays kidney area, and when I take a deep draft resistor in the 60's. (70 min.) (R). Standard Time). * 7013. Monday through Friday. RECORD show that I have las, Danny DeVito. 1985. Rated PG-13. min.) (R). weekdays 9-5. Part Time. breath, it hurts worse. The pain In Stereo. @ 9 Novela: Cicatrices del Alma 1 2:30AM (3D True Confesaiona Hours ore 0am to 4:30pm. One of the most produc­ a small hiatal Full benefits. Call for Electrician: Connecticut tive offices for a pros­ goes away after I get out of bed and [U S A ] Riptide C S Entertainment Tonight ET visits Liza KlnderCore learning cen­ Waitresses anil Walters New Coble TV advertising Earn Extra Cash! hernia. I take [C N N ] Larry King Live wanted. Full time, port appointment at 647-0639. Department of Transpor­ pective h Allla (CC) Kate and [U S A ] Hollywood Insider Onretaff at TEDFORD to P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, Ohio and reactions are more likely to Allie make a separate sacrifice in order [M A X ] MOVIE: 'Police Academy II: are significant because they can Their First Assignment* (CC) The worst 1:10AM [M A X ] MOVIE:'Heaven Help jnnrrfnrrrmrhrr REAL ESTATE, CEN­ 44101-3428. Be sure to mention the take place. Also, feet naturally get to buy the other a gift for their third an­ Us’ Mischief prevails at a Catholic boys TURY n is pledged to contribute to the neuromuscular niversary together. students ever to go to s police academy ATTENTION; title. larger as the day goes on; natural graduate into the worst police officers high school during the 1960's. Donald FULL TIME tarther aad malataln the weakness called myasthenia gra­ dD Best of the National Geographic Spe­ Sutherland. Andrew McCarthy, John PHOTOLAB aaaking materials stretch along with the vis; they also may be linked to some ever to walk a beat. Steve Guttenberg, DEPARTMENT CRAFTS hlgliesl ethical stan­ DEAR DR. GOTT: Every time I feet, but manmades have less give cials (60 min.) Bubba Smith, Howard Hesseman. 1985. Heard. 1985. Rated R. full and part tlms halp dards of the real estate non-AIDS immune-deficiency dis­ MacGyver (CC) (60 min.) Rated PG-13. Sales & Delivery ladastry. Whether yon — and this can cause numbness and (SD 1:15AM 3D m o v ie : Th * Father , PEOPLE- sxporloncsd In wear imported shoes constructed orders. No one is certain how and MANAGERS are haring a new home from manmade materials, my feet tingling. The answer to the problem dD News [U S A ] Robert Klein Time Knows Best Christmas Reunion' The ori­ Person Wasted NORITSU Equipmsnt why this tumor appears; therefore, ginal cast of the television series is reu­ Positions avallabla start­ or a re-sale or are plsn- get numb and tingly. My doctor said is to purchase shoes made of (39 MOVIE: 'Cloak and Dagger* A young 10:30PM d9Naws To display vary hstpfull there’s no known way in which to boy. to the disbelief of his elders, be­ nited for a Christmas celebration. Robert ing Immediately in tha fol- alag to sell yonr prop­ I was allergic to some material that non-synthetics. (29 (39 Roll On Manatee Young, Jane Wyatt, Elinor Donahue. Part or Full time. your creation Msdical bansfits. erty we give riddance so avoid it. comes involved in murder and espion­ lowlng area*; Misty that yoar transaction Is age. Henry Thomas, Dabney Coleman. (39 Honeymoonars 1977. Nights and week­ Spottswoar, Lingerie and call PIsaaa come Michael Murphy. 1964. [H B O ] MOVIE: 'Sno-Line' A cocaine czar ends. Pleasant comMeted to yonr satis- 11:00PM C3D (3D (22) (39 @9 News Jewelry and Accaaeorlaa. In or call. factiai Onr office is d 9 MOVIE: 'Blindfold' A New York psy­ uses his dairy as a front for drug traffick­ 649-8181 C3) 3 9 Late Show: Starring ■' an Rivers working conditions Good atarting ealary. Ex- located on Rt. 44A, Bol­ chiatrist gets involved in the tug of war ing. Vince Edwards, Paul Smith, June in modern phar­ Th-Frl-SM. lOiSO-SiSO between two opposing governments for (£ ) Carol Burnett and Frien..<. Wilkinson. 1985. Rated R. cellant benellte and a ton Notch, Bolton, 047- Here’s a lump-free gravy macy in large shop­ pleasant working anvl- M14. Hoars: M hour ser­ the mind of a scientist. Rock Hudson. d 9 Odd Couple 1:30AM 99 in n News Guy Stockwell. Claudia Cardinaie. ping center. Apply at ronmant. Opportunity for Victoria Ashley vice - 7 days a week. 1966. (39 Mission: Impossible |39 Bizarre DEAR advantage to this method is that no once to- NOhatmar- advancement. Plaaae HINT POLLY: I (29 MOVIE: They Died With Their Boots (29 Hogan's Heroes [C N N ] Newsnight Update apply In parson at the: fat is needed to make the gravy. [D IS ] MOVIE: 'Invitation to the Wed­ J Professional appraisers simply cannot On* The events leading up to General (29 Sneak Previews get much of their infor­ Thus, you can make a low-fat, Custer's famous last stand against Chief (29 Tales of the Unexpected ding* An aristocratic British family's M anchiitir make flour- Sitting Bull at Little Big Horn are de­ scheme to save their ancestral home ^ggett Pharmacy mation from public re­ low-calorie gravy by stirring the ® M*A*S*H thickened gravy cornstarch and water mixture into picted. Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland, from developers goes awry when their Maacbastsr ParfcaRe D & L StDro illanrbFatpr lirralb cords. without lumps. Pointers Arthur Kennedy. 1941. @ 9 24 Hores daughter doesn't marry into the wealthy a flavorful but fat-free broth. Wine, (29 u 9 Remington Steele Remington SCTV Network family they expected. John Gielgud, SeRWastMiMsTslM. 352 West Middle Tpke. Can gravy be fruit Juices or milk or cream can Ralph Richardson. 1983. Rated PG. Polly Fisher and Laura's honeymoon in Mexico is in­ [C N N ] Monayline Manchester Parkade NEWSPAPER made with corn­ also be used to vary the flavor and terrupted when jungle guerrillas attack starch instead? [DIS] Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet [ES P N ] Auto Racing Freddie Spencer texture of gravy. and the two newlyweds' must rely on a explains motorcycle racing. CARRIERS I u se it to mysterious archeologist they meet in the [T M C ] MOVIE: 'Class of'44* The adven­ Hope this solves your lumpy jungle. (2 hrs.) In Stereo. tures of three boys, as they graduate [U S A ] Kays to Success thicken Chinese dilemma! - POLLY NEEDED.. stirfrys. How (29 Survival .Special: King Penguin: from high school, are shown. Gary 2:00AM 3D McMIllan and Wife: Stranded Beyond the Falklands (CC) The Grimes. Jerry Houser, Oliver Conant. Downshift to Danger much corn- 1973. Rated R. ■MKUEtTEO breeding season and courtship behav­ (3D MOVIE: 'Children Shouldn'^ Play 9 starch would one use to thicken UU gravy, increase the cornstarch to Polly will send you a Polly Dollar iors of the king penguin are seen on the [U S A ] Alfred Hitchcock Hour with Deed Things' An acting company meat gravy? — SANDRA two tablespoons per cup of liquid. subantarctic island of South Georgia goes to a burial island to shoot a movie ($1) if she uses your favorite 1 1:30PM dD 99 ABC News Nightline This compares to two tablespoons (60 min.) (R). and find strange creatures there which pointer, peeve or problem in her (3D Cannon Ns. Male 1 Uolon SL Aroa ill DEAR SANDRA: Certainly corn­ of flour for the light gravy and four (23) MOVIE: T h a Goddata* A lonely the director decides to use in his film. NoOsaa t l ill starch can be used to thicken gravy. tablespoons on flour for the thicker column. Write Polly's Pointers in woman dreaming of Hollywood stardom 9 9 Honeymoonars Alan Ormsby, Valerie Mamches, Jane care of the Manchester Herald. struggles her way tg the top, Kim Stan­ (29 Twilight Zone Daly. 1969. MaooMo R1 all Cornstarch-thickened gravies are gravy. ley. Lloyd Bridges, Patty Duke. 19B8. EXTRA (22) (39 Best of Cerson Tonight's guests 9 9 [U S A ] To Ba Announcsd. Nc Ela IL Ml more translucent than flour- The cornstarch may be either (23) MOVIE: T h a Lett of Shalla' A wi- are Dr. Armand Hammer, photOjournal- [E S P N ] Mazda SportsLook thickened gravies. And it does seem stirred into fat or meat drippings as dower invites six Hollywood personali­ ist John Dryson and classical clarinetist Woarilrliia t l 18-280 to be easier to make lump-free you would use flour, or it may be During World War II, the French ties aboard his yacht for a deadly game Richard Stoltzmann. (60 min.) (R) In OHoiuOL all of whodunit to see who killed his wife. Stereo. 2:30AM 9 9 To B* Announced. CASH Join our team! gravies when using cornstarch. mixed thoroughly with a little cold navy at Toulon scuttled its ships James Coburn. Joan Hackett, Richard [C N N ] Sports Lataniflht Mviral 8L m Generally, one tablespoon of water, then stirred into simmering and submarines in 1942 to prevent Benjamin. 1973. (29 MOVIE: 'Full of Life' A young couple That’s right! You can expecting their first child must get help [ES P N ] SportsCanter Lomi all cornstarch will thicken one cup of liquid, cooking until the mixture them from failing into the hands of 9 9 Novela; Monte Calvario make extra money Edwards is on the move. A i^ right now from his father who moves in with them 2:35AM (3D CBS News Zllflhtwatoh CaaMOio 8t all we're seeking ombitiousindividuals who liquid to a light gravy. Fora thicker reaches a full boil and thickens. One the Nazis. (39 Nature (CC) The land-based animals and completely disrupts their lives. Judy by selling unneedei Joined In Progrsss North Mala 8t ill wont to build o solid career os port ol items to readers of WaoMoMOl all our team. the Classified columns. 8lraii|8L all The positions available ore. Thoughts You’ll be surprised just NMa^OL III Bcxkeiy Cleiks • CcBhieis • Deli Cleiks 7 Cinema how quickly your ad We also hove immediate openings lor port will pull response. HARTPORD Child (PG 13)1,7:15,10.— AnAmarlcon vwvuw noma ir o i 7:29, y*is CALL NOW time (aiocerr Night Criew Stock Cleiks 11 pm One of the most difficult qualities creation from public schools. ment of many respected scientist CIMIM City — No Mercy (R) 1:45, Toll (G) 13:15. — “Crocodlla" Oundaa — No M arcylm 7:15,9:15.— Lady mnI Readers will be calling to 7 am . — 1,2.3. or 4 nights per week Efforts to mandate an even- with the vertical evolutionary con­ 4:10, 7:10,9:3S. — Round Mldnlolrt (R) (P(5-13) 2, 7:30, 9:30. — Th* Mornlno ^Tro m p (G) 7:10,9:30.— ThaOoldM to develop in interpersonal rela­ 1:15, 4, 7, 9:45 — Lodv and th* Tramp Attar (R) 13:45, 7:15, 9:50. rhiiH 7;ts, _ ThrS you before you know 1^ 043-2711 / 047-9940 Storting pay lor Night Stockers S5.CX) per hour tions is fairness. This problem is handed exposure of children to an cept, our children are being insu­ (G) 1,3,4:45,6:45, S:40. — Children of a No experience necessary. Apply at store or especially evident in the realm of academic presentation of both lated from its obvious flaws. Latter God (R) 1:30,4:30,7:20,9:55. MANCHRSTRR UA Thidtars Rdtf — Th* Color of coll store monogei at 653-2423 and ask tor ideas. I find it burdensome to theories is being opposed bitterly Catastrophism is receiving in­ RA*T HARTPORD Money (R) 7 :» , 9:40. — No Mtrcv (R) WINDSOR details. tolerate views conflicting with by evolutionists. The very school of creasing attention in the academic RMlwood Pdh R ChMNM — stand by 7:15,9:30. — Stand by M t (R) 7:40,9:40.. Fldid— Th* Color of Menay (R) 7:15. mine. thinkers who decried the ohstruc- community as a viable alternative. M t (R) 7:30. Poor Rlchdrd*t Pdfe R ClnoiiMi — VRRNON Prior to the famous Scope’s trial tionism of creationists earlier, now Yet secular creationism is being Stand by M t (R) 7:30,9:30. CbM 1 • 2 — stand by M* (R) 7:10, British naturalist Charles Dar­ protect oirxfail(lren. in Tennessee in 1925, the evolution­ are following obstructionist me­ excluded from curricula by en­ Showcato Clhowidt 1-9 — Star Trtk 9:10. — Th* Color of Menay (R) 7,9:30. win published "On the Origin of MANGHESTBI lEcIwards ary theory of beginning scarcely thods to keep the creationist trenched forces. Justice, fairness is IV: The Vovogt Horn# (PG) 18:30,7:25, 9:50. — Crimat of th* Heart (PG-13) WRIT HARTPORD Spedes” in 1IS9. It was a paper In could be presented in any form in philosophy from the public forum. indeed hard to come by. - 205 Spencer St. 12:40,7:40,9:50.— Three Amlootl (PG) ■IR11R I — Stand by Mo (R) 7,9:30.— which be explained hit theory of HERALD p w o p t o r e a d ^ public classrooms. Now its advo­ It is being blithely dismissed as 1, 7:15, 9:50. — Maorffaraofc Rldo* (R) Th* Color of Money (R) 7, 9:W. evolution through natural adoc- d a a t H M a d s Manchester, CT cates have the political leverage to religion, not science. Eigene Brewer 1:30, 7:30,10. — LIttIt Shop of Horrors c l a s s i f t o d (PG-13) 1:05,7:40,9:SS.— Tho Metoulto WILLIMANTIC Uon. The work set off a oontroveray I M 3 - 2 7 1 1 An Equal Opportunity Employer virtually exclude the theory of Despite the growing disenchant- Chnrch of Christ Coast (PG) 1,7:1S, 9:40. — Tha Golden I Sdddrt Claiwis — Star Trtic still felt today.