TAG SALE!!! 4 Days for the Price of 3! PLACE YOUR AD ON TUESDAY, BEFORE NOON, AND YOU’RE ALL SET _FOR THE WEEK. JUST ASK FOR TRACEY OR IRENE |N CLASSIFIED

CARS Sell Your Car CARS GARS CARS FOR SALE FOR SALE cm PBRSALE FOR SALE n m c M E anrliFBtrr lirralJi OLDS Omega 1983. Dual Manchester - A City o( Village Chan power, air, automatic, PONTAIC J-JOOO 82. Air T BIRO 79. MIchelln tires. CH EVY Monza 78. Blue, 4 Linesns — 10 Days excellent steering, su­ coditloned, 37,00 miles. Excellent condition. no body rot. Sunroot, SOS charge, each addi­ Good condition. $2200. $1500 best otter. 643- am-tm cassette. $800. per condition. $3000. 646-5087. 0220, 563-6541. Tuesday, July 28,1987 tional line. You can 649-9504. 646-8223 atter 5:30. cancel at any time. TOYOTA 76 Corolla PONTIAC Sunbird 1978. 6 SUBARU 81 GL. 4 door, 5 CLYDE 30 Cents wagon, engine excel­ speed, air, stereo. Ex­ CHEVROLET-BUICK, INC. SORRY. cylinder, sunroot, new c e lle n t condition. NO REFUNDS OR lent, body good, 150k. brakes, tires and R O U T E 83, V E R N O N $700. 647-9449 evenings. $2200. 659-3619. ADJUSTMENTS clutch. $750 or best 62 Bulok Regal dr. otter. 643-6370 or 742- •6495 CHEVROLET Custom FORD 19/b Mesta 2 door, SCRANTON S3 Chevy S-10 XCab CALL HERALD Nova 1975. Runs good. 7667. 7am-2:30pm. beige. 80k. Good condi­ •6295 CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH. INC. Needs battery. $350. tion. 8800/best otter. S3 Skylark 4 dr. •4995 NCJi.O R AV I N U L • V t R NO H • B / b 3311 AND SeLECT USED CAR8„ 64 Celebrity 4 dr. w » District, town accord is in danger CLASSIFIED •7295 646-4816 anytime. TORINO Wagon 1976. V-8, 649-8968.______SOME t .t% riNANCINO OR LE88I 87 LEBARON COUPE 1 351 engine. Power 64 Skyh. < 4 dr. we •5995 I OLDS 67 Deimont 88. 425 64 Olde Clara 4 dr. 6 4 3 - 2 7 1 1 MERCURY Bobcat 1976. steering, brakes, air. 87 VOYAGER *15,595 •7495 By Alex GIrelll concessions. engine. Running condi­ counterparts from the town. Running condition. 70,000 miles. $450. 644- tion. $200. 643-9504. 643- 87 LeBARON 65 Cavalier 4 dr. w » •7495 Associate Editar had already made their opposition Best otter. 646-3957. 1855. OTSTurtx) *12,205 65 Chav. Caprice 4 dr. •6495 The negotiators in turn told the When the meeting Monday night the directors would be on shaky Landers said Monday that if the 9505 evenings. directors that If they are not public. 87 PLY VOYAGER *15,895 65 Eacort H1>ack •6195 The prospect of an agreement ended, James Sarles, one of the ground under the state’s Freedom district takes fire jurisdiction over 87 RAMCHARGER 65 Camaro Biut satisfied with the progress of Bums, while not supporting the •9195 between the town and the Eighth negotiators, asked district Presi­ of Information Act, Landers moved the Bryan Farm s area, now In the 4«4 *17,595 66 Camaro rm negotiations, they should take over agreement as it has been outlined •11,495 Utilities District over fire jurisdic­ dent Walter Joyner rhetorically, to have the discussion held in town’s jurisdiction, it will be taking 86 THUNOERBIRO *0,605 66 Century 4 dr. the negotiations themselves. said she favors sending it to district •10,295 tion and sewer service was jolted “What are we going to do Aug. 3?" public. The motion passed over a hostile area from which a 86 DODGE R/uLo«M *11,495 66 Cavalier 4 dr. •8395 The exchanges, at times heated, voters. The other three want the unanimously. 86 RELIANT S.W. Monday night when four of the The directors who indicated they move for consolidation with the 67 Spectrum 4 dr. •6495 took place in an hourlong debate at negotiators to go back to the table Under the accord worked out in 86 DODGE Mm/pKm district’s seven directors indicated are opposed to the terms of the town could arise in the future. 67 Chavilla 2 dr. •5495 the district firehouse at Hilliard with limited authority. 86 LASER Tu«o agreement as worked out so far are broad terms, the district would take LaBelle, one of the negotiators, 67 Beretta a dr. •10,995 opposition to the accord as it has and Main streets and ended in an The discussion Monday night was 86 DODGE been worked out by the negotiators. Thomas Landers, who had pre­ over the firehouse built by the town later said, “ I personally don’t have OR 191, PER MONTH impasse. originally to have taken place in an in Buckland and would give up its CHARGER *7.695 Three of the objecting directors viously supported it; Ellen Burns, a executive session, closed to the any worries about a fifth column in 88 CELEBRITY *7.795 872-9111 No motion was made on the new director who has not made any sewage-collection system. At a Bryan Farms.” New 1987 Chrysler wanted to send the district negotiat­ negotiation question. press and public. 86 PLY. HORIZON m *6,995 ing team back to the table with public statement on the progress of district meeting July 20, a number Landers said he had changed his The negotiators are scheduled to When Joyner said at the outset of 86 CHY. GTS Tg,t» *10,295 limits on their authority to make negotiations; Joseph Tripp; and of district residents staunchly mind about the terms of the 66 600 Conv. isi meet again Aug. 3 with their the meeting that John D. LaBelle opposed surrendering the district Samuel Longest. Tripp and Longest J r ., the district’s legal counsel, felt Stvting *13,695 CAMPERS/ sewage-collection jurisdiction. 85 VOYAGER *9.295 Please turn to page 10 65 COUGAR *8,995 TRAILERS 82 PONTIAC J2000 *2,995 1971 FLEET Wing 17 toot 79 BUICK SKYLARK *2,795 travel trailer. Retrlg- 84 LeBARON < dr.. Nk» *6,595 erator, stove, hot wa­ 62 HORIZON ter, turnace, sleeps 6. Meese defends 4 dr. AC. Auto *2,995 Good condition. $1200. 742-9379. 8 7 5 - 3 3 1 1 w n i m r o ^ i i T i a j ^ i d G r o to n N e w 1987 c ra s h his first inquiry C L Y N E W Y O R K E R Firefighters stand By Pete Yost next to a Piper express concern that several of the PRE-OWNED CAR SALE The Associated Press president’s answers at the session MANY LOW MILEAGE SPECIALS AND MOST Cherokee that were Incorrect. He said Poindexter WITH REMAINING FACTORY WARRANTIES crashed at Qroton- — Attorney (Gen­ assured him that a “ correction or a ★ AFFORDABLE FINANCING ★ • 1 5 , 8 0 8 . * eral Edwin Meese III today de­ clarification” had been issued. New London Airport fended the preliminary Iran-contra 1987 CHEVY • Described attending a session SPECIAL 1987 1887 CHEVY Monday morning. inquiry he conducted for President MOOO SPECTRUM CHEVY CELE8RITY W J ! : 1 the following day in Poindexter’s CHEVEHE i 4 Or. 8«dftn. P.W.O.. 4 Or.. Fuol InL. P.W.O.. a Dr.. OrMv, Boor Dot.. Reagan last fall, telling congres­ office at which White House aide Milo. Pb. BIu*. AC, The pilot of the Auto. PS. PB. Bluo. AC. Cloth Int, Buokot 9mm, sional investigators there was Oliver L. North proposed having Cloth im. Muoliof TInisd glM*. Cloth Int. AM7FM M o. Bomolnor y Includk omt oaaMnohiniBeoemwrttliiM em ientii plane suffered a fatal 8«olt.BOOO MIIm AM/FM Biwm Rotfto. ^ PvfoM kKoKiOe m tm tai. otM* fooMraMol^MA initially "no hint that criminal REBATE 8Hi. tlTSIA of Foolery Worronty. Poindexter and former CIA Direc­ 7.000 mHM. 9tk. fOTSIS 9.000 ML. Bik. fOTSaSA Chrytlof CradH O tm 4 f S U l heart attack in flight activity was in any way month wNh down ptymont of IISOO oath or tradt 16lS% APR tor William Casey tell Congress the and the plane was implicated.” next day that “ no one in the U.S. Testifying under oath and with­ 1987 CHEVY SEREHA ' CHEVY GAVAUER government” knew in November 2 Or.. Auto. PS. Bloek. A& Tlnlod OImo. brought in safely by out immunity at nationally tele­ Cniloo. Boor Dot.. Cloth Int. Bue. Sooto. 6 Sptf.. Ft. Boor Oof.. 1985 that an Israeli shipment to Iran Conoolo. Sloroo Bodto. Blh. OtTaro his wife, who does vised hearings, Meese also said contained U.S.-made missiles in­ not have a pilot’s “ m y own counsel” was to support stead of oil^lrilling equipment. the secret sale of arms to Iran when '500 license but has had That statement was false — and his opinion was asked'in January some officials present knew it— but CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH, INC. a course in landing 1988. He said he advised the CLYDE ^NEVROLET m as.w,nd!0,4r! 872-9111 SSrtlND^R AVfNUl«VERNON*87S 3311 Meese said he was unaware. WLTUC BUICK, INC. V.HVJ in case of such president it was legal to withhold Secretary of State George P. REBATE notification of Congress for a brief Shultz testified last week that an emergency. period. Poindexter and Casey were en­ Story on page 10. “There was no one” among gaged in an effortduring this period Reagan’s senior advisers who to hide the true facts of the Xiiiea Lo^. recommended that Congress be Iran-contra affair. Shultz said those told immediately, Meese recalled. two sought to have Reagan make Meese was the second Cabinet misleading statements to bail them '500 officer to appear before the House out of difficulty with a policy that and Senate investigating commit­ was becoming unraveled. STOCK ZBA nixes liquor store in mills area tees at hearings that entered the In his statement, Meese said the 11th week today. The attorney entire policy of secret arms sales REBATE general sat alone at the witness was made known within the Reagan B y Andrew J . Davis table while several aides occupied Manchester attorney Joel E. Janenda. who Janenda asked to confer with his clients. After administration on a “ need-to- « / o O B Herald Reporter seats one row behind him. represented Weintaub and Grossman, said the a three-minute conference, he stated that a know” basis. board should consider the request because six Meese was expected to undergo The Manchester Zoning Board of Appeals package store would definitely be the “ Indeed, I was not even kept previous restaurateurs had failed in that spot. occupant. strenuous questioning about his advised” after the White House NEW Monday denied a request by two local preliminary inquiry into the affair He told the board it was obvious that such an “ I got the impression that the applicants are meeting with Reagan and his businessmen to allow a package store to open enterprise could not be successful there, and last November, an inquiry which in the former Feast restaurant. trying to veil the occupants (of the site) by advisers on Jan. 7, 1986, when the '500 1987 SABLE GS’s' that a retail store would have a better chance. listing three or four (possible tenants) and many lawmakers have criticized as arms sales were discussed, he said. Businessmen Aaron Weintraub and Max “ There have been several restaurants there inept. Grossman had requested that the board award then in three minutes coming up with one. R National Security Adviser John STOCK (and) none have been successful,” Janenda Meese began by reading a at an a variance to allow a retail package store to doesn’t sit well with me,” I,attanzio said M. Poindexter and CIA Director said. '"The bottom line is that the site is not Planning Director Mark Pellegrini in­ 17-page written statement in which William Casey “ favored the initia­ REBATE open in a section of town zoned for industrial he stressed his “ limited role in the successful as a restaurant.” formed board members that they should also tive; Secretary Shultz and Secre­ use. The former restaurant was located at 250 events” until last November. He AFFORDABLE PRICE But when Janenda was asked what type of be aware that the site was located in the tary Weinberger opposed it,” Hartford Road. However, the board voted 4-1 said he began his inquiry “ plain and establishment would locate at the site, he said Cheney Historical District, which future plans Meese said, referring to the meet­ to deny the variance request. simple” to find out what the facts that decision had not been made. A package sit with the planning commission. He also told ing in Reagan’s office where Meese “I think we’re over-stepping ourselves on were and to report back to the store, a bathroom shop, piano shop, and leaded the board that the city guideposts on future said he first learned details of the this," said board alternate Thomas Lattanzio. president. glass specialty shop were among those being zoning use had designated a half-mile section arms-for-hostages plan. Other board members agreed as the considered, he said. “ Indeed, on Nov. 21, 1986, there applicants were directed to take their of Hartford Road, where the business would be However, when informed by board located, as residential. was no hint that criminal activity '500 copcerns to the Planning and Zoning members that a decision was impossible was in any way implicated in the Please Inm to page 10 Commission. The information only seemed to reinforce unless a definite decision had been made. both polar opinions Iranian arms transactions,” he STOCK said. REBATE Questioning of Meese was led by TODAY House committee counsel John Cheneys didn’t want workers boozing Nields, who began by asking the attorney general whether he had Clear and cool 3 . 9 V " any knowlege that the Israelis had When the Manchester Zoning Board of “ It was in the deeds not to drink ” sold American-made weapons to Clear and cool tonight with low in deeds. The only choice the new owners had Appeals turned down a request by two local Sutherland said. “The mill itself supported Iran in the summer and fall df 1985. the SOs. Mostly sunny Wednesday was to consult lawyers and town officials in an businessmen to build a package store in the keeping the community dry. (The Cheneys) As he has many times before, with high 75 to 80. Details on page 2. '500 EVERYBODY NEEDS A Cheney Historic District, it continued a effort to have the anti-drinking provisions Meese said he was unaware of those had such a large labor force, it was to their removed, he said. tradition of the non-use of alcohol in the area, advantage to keep the town dry. Sometimes shipments until November 1986. Index said a Manchester Community College history they won, sometimes they lost.” Monday, the Zoning Board of Appeals struck Nields led Meese through a long SABLE GS AT THIS PRICE professor. down a zoning variance request by local REBATE However, old stories that ail members of the recitation of events and meetings 20 paggt, 2 sgcMono businessmen Aaron Weintraub and Max According to John F. Sutherland, a history Cheney family were teetotalers are not true, leading to the attorney general’s Grossman, who wanted to build a package professor and a director of the Institute of he said. While some family members did not disclosure on Nov. 25 that proceeds ^ OR store at 250 Hartford Road, in the national Obituaries___ 10 Local History, Cheney Bros, had a history of drink, wine was often served at family of the arms sales had been diverted distaste foralcohol. In fact, when the company gatherings, the professor said. historical district. The board voted 4-1 against to the contra rebels in Nicaragua. Opinion _ _ _ 6 * , * ^ e r^u e s t, stating that It was up to the People______2 12 999 began to build employee housing alongside the Among the disclosures, Meese; The last of the Cheney mill houses were sold Planning and Zoning Commission to make Connecticut__ 4 Sporte___ 15-17 ALOADED A A AVI I amWITH , ALL THIS _ _. . EQUIPMENT; . mills in the 1800s, alcohol was banned from the in 1937, Sutherland said, which often created • Said he personally telephoned • &OHtaren VBanolna • TimadQlaat • Aan halogan haadlampa a ila m ta rm window premises. such decisions, said Edward L. Hachadourian. former National Security Adviser Entertainment 14 Telsvielon___ 14 • Multt-pofl alactfonlo • ww* wmoow oamiaitrt chaos for owners who found out about the fualIniacUon a Haollnlne twin oomfort aaata datraaiaf ZBA chairman. Focus______11 • Inlarvil wtndahMd vdptta a AutomaHc parking John M. Poindexter after Reagan’s U.8./World_B. 7 '1000 • Baotronle tnoina a Baotronlo AM/FM atorao wHh braka ralaaaa Coflirola (EBC-IV) • eialnleaa aledi dxtanddd ' four apaakara news conference last Nov. 19 to Local new s-3,10 Weather______2 We dKheuel tyelem aOIgMoloek • 4 tpaad aulomaUo ovardrtva a Analog Inttrumantation wWi • 6]mmittee on due to requirements Imposed by lated cases, or whether the (Rea­ control,” Sarbanes said. delays in processing work.” u n e F a d o r y coming out of the agency, accord- human resources and intergovern­ new tax and immigration laws. gan administration’s) cuts in staff "Beneath the surface, courage­ Jpg to congressional testimony mental relations on SSA staff cuts Social Security cards now must be She said claims processing times W a r r a n t y and other adminstration changes ous agency employees continue to today from whistleblowers, retired under the Reagan administration. issued to all children between 5 and are shorter than they have ever are causing a range of serious tell us... that indeed SSA may bean managers and lawmakers. Some 40 million Americans re­ 18 years of age, and to all aliens been and payment accuracy for deficiencies to the elderly and agency on the brink of unraveling,” Rep. Ted Weiss, D -N .Y ., chair­ ceive Social Security checks total­ granted amnesty to live and work disabled,” Weiss said. he said. retirement and survivors claims is Mt RCIIHV man of the House Government ing more than 8200 billion each legally in this country. 09.6 percent. Hardy also cited a O t w /IVIO R IA R ^Y BROTHERS/ Sen. Paul Sarbanes, D-M d., said “No matter what data you are Operations subcommittee on hu­ year. recent General Accounting Office Ckmgress has received conflicting being furnished, the fact is, service I IN . 0| N man resources and intergovern­ The administration has said it Sodai Security Commissioner survey that found 80 percent of information about services since to the public is indeed suffering in HOURS; mental relations, said the panel has plans to eliminate 17,000 of SSA’s Dorcas Hardy contended in her clients rated service as good to very the staff cuts began. some form or fashion," said Robert OPEN EVENINGS — r'.Ti WK i j i .' received complaints from all over 72,000 positions by 1090. Nearly testimony that SSA performance good. That w ai up from 70 percent T IL 9 P.M. “ On the surface, stable produc­ Thackston, retired SSA district gut* 301 -315 Center St. the country about problems In 4,500 Jobs already had been abol­ “is significantly better today than it in a similar survey two years FRIDAY & SATURDAY tivity arid performance indicators manager from Lynchburg, Va. T IL 6 P.M. Moncheatery Connecticut #43*SI31 ished by the end of fiscal year 1080. was a few years ago, when the earlier. -5— MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuciiday. July im?

MANCHESTER ni:.nAL,u.HERALD. Tuesday,fuegday, July 28,2t 1987 — 3 the weather REGIONAL WEATHER •w • A M , WectoesdBy, July 29 stronger laws may put the bite on owners A pit-buii owner in town says he favors tougher rules; others aren’t sure By Andrew J. Dovls ___s_' Herald Reporter pure breed and two mixed-breed pit bulls in Manchester. Fines, now $40 for a minor first bite, director of the animal department Owners of other types of dogs also ‘Tm all for It, of course. But it’s a case would be increased; but how high of the Otnnecticut Humane Society. Some Manchester dog owners expressed their support. such penalties would go have not "There’s no real reason for these agree with a proposed law to place been determined, he said. ‘T m all for It, of course," said (where) it’s not the dogs, but people.” dog bites. The animals should be stricter controls on vicious dogs in By toughening legislation on under control of their owners.” Connecticut. Bev S. Witham of Manchester, who — Bev S. Witham of Manchester owns a German shepherd named vicious dogs, Intimo said he owners “ It certainly doesn’t surprise 1 flualms about the Duke. "But it’s a case (where) it’s German shepherd owner will be forced to control their me,” said Harry A. Shook, execu­ legislation at all,” said Richard T. not the dogs, but people." animals more. He said stiffer fines tive secretary of the Connecticut Sky Scraped Day of Manchester, who owns would also make owners think Veterinary Medical Association. Brandy, a part pit bull and part twice before letting their dogs roam On this day in 1945, an Arm y B-25 bomber lost in the NOT EVERYONE is in favor of “ There is a problem. We’d cer­ boxer. “ I think if we have a problem freely. tog crashed into the Empire State Building in New York stronger legislation, though. Those ter. There were 98 in 1983 and 85 in tainly take a look at it because with dogs biting people, we need dogs be registered and that fines be Such legislation would encom­ we’re very concerned about it” City. Thirteen people lost their lives in the accident. In opposed to it include Manchester’s 1982. legislation for it. People come dog warden. imposed against dog owners for the pass all dogs, and not just a specific 1857. Elisha Graves Otis made the age of the skyscraper first.” misdeeds of their pets, Intimo said breed, he said. Though pit bulls, Since the proposed legislation OTHER PROFESSIONALS are ACCORDING TO Frank Intimo, laws need to go further. also known as the American possible by developing the first passenger elevator The proposed legislation has been was prompted by the publicity also concerned about vicious dogs. chief of the state Department of He said that there are 3,000 to Staffordshire terrier, have been spurred by the recent publicity given to pit bulls, and since there Included in that field is Dr. Marilyn with adequate safety devices. After the Chicago fire of Agriculture’s canine control de­ 3,500 dog bites reported each year grabbing the headlines recently for given to attacks by pit bulls and have never been any recorded K. Kent of the Animal Medical 1871, designers helping to rebuild that city took ad­ other dogs, state officials said. Such partment, stricter laws are needed in the U.S. though that is only a their attacks, Intimo said breed- pit-bull bites in Manchester, Ri­ to control vicious dogs, Such Clinic, a private veterinary clinic in Hot weather persists vantage of Otis’s invention to begin exceeding previous incidents have surprised Day, since small fraction of the number that specific laws often are deemed Manchester. chard Rand said in his upinion. legislation is only in its beginning height restrictions. in the seven years he has owned his occur. It is not mandatory to report unconstitutional when challenged She said she has not heard of current laws are adequate. stages but should be presented to a dog bite. in court. dog, he has had no problems with ‘ T m not against stricter enforce­ anyone being seriously injured by a K N O W — What is the tallest building in the his dog biting. the General Assembly by earlv Officials from the Connecticut across much of nation ment. I have no problems with 1988, he said. dog in Manchester, but people world? IF PASSED in its current form, The Days brought Brandy not that,” he said. "(B ut) I think we Humane Society and the Connecti­ should be concerned. Dogs often By The Associated Press “ We’re in the process of develop­ the proposed legislation would Coast. realizing it was part pit bull, said have a very good law right now.” cut Veterinary Medical Association take on the personality of their MON^IMY’S ANSWER — Kim II Sung is the President of ing the language for much of the make it mandatory for dog bites to Mostly clear skies prevailed Jeannette B. Day. She said the dog Last year, there were 72 reported also said they would probably owners, so even though some North Korea. proposal.” Intimo said. "W e want be reported. In addition, a dog’s A cold front today brought really looks more like a small dog bites in the town, a decline from support such legislation, though it breeds may be more ill-tempered across most of the rest of the to address that problem. We’ll try potential to bite would have to be relief from a heat wave to parts of hunting dog and is very gentle. 92 such bites the year before. Rand may be too early to tell. than others, an animal can be nation as cool air making its way to address that is.sue before some­ noted with authorities, and animals the East and Midwest, but hot A Newipaper In Education Program According to town Dog Warden said. In 1984. there were 113 reports one gets bit.” "W e would be in support of taught to be vicious, she said. slowly south lowered tempera­ ffl © Sponaored by Richard Rand, there are only two would have to be put on a leash and strongei legislation on vicious weather and mostly clear skies of dogs biting people in Manches- Though current laws require that "An ill-mannered dog is like an tures a bit in the Ohio Valley and The Manchester Herald muzzled on certain occasions. dogs.” said Ravmond E, Denette. ill-mannered child,” she said. prevailed nationwide. mid-Atlantic states. Thunderstorms ranged across Hot weather continued over Minnesota, Wisconsin and North most of the nation except the Dakota early today. Showers and Northeast. Temperatures early Cities find that pit-bull laws thunderstorms also were scat­ today dipped into the 40s in Almanac tered across Georgia and Arkan­ sections o f northern Maine and sas and along the mid-Atlantic northern Michigan. Tornadoes damaged homes July 28. 1987 TDOAY’S MDDN: Between are extremely hard to pass Book Three Great and buildings on several farms in Weather Trivia Today Is the 209th r s new moon (July 25) and first southeastern Minnesota on W Wt».tt oOMti W.lt.-r t.-mfvr.iliif. Today’s weather picture was drawn by Kristin Young. 9. of day of 1987 and the quarter (Aug. 2). □ By Fred Boyles Monday. But the breeds have a sinister reputation. Bred over ir. t.ivofi-fl »

MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday. July 28,1967 - 7 OPINION Stark captain says probe didn’t go ‘high enough’

Bv Norman Black careers. rank of commander instead of The Pentagon has said the attack harsh penalty,” said one Navy The Assocfoted Press Adm. Frank B. Kelso, the captain, thus “ Incurring a substan­ occurred wlUiout the Stark taking officer who asked not to be named. commander-in-chief of the U.S. tial loss in retiredj>ay,” the Navy any defensive action, in part “ For an officer, it’s the same thing Raise delay WASHINGTON - The captain of Atlantic Fleet, decided to issue said.. T because the Iraqi warplane was the USS Stark, forced to retire at a as saying your career is through, letters of reprimand to Capt. Glenn Brindel, a native o/ , “ presumed friendly.” Nonetheless, lower rank bMause of the attack you’ ll never have a shot at R. Brindel and Lt. Basil E. was promoted tdthe rank of captain the ship’s failure to take standard command.” Jack that killed 37 sailors on his ship, Moncrief and forgo courts-martial last January. Under federal laiv,N defensive precautions became the While Brindel and Moncrief did says in an interview published because nothing further would be however, a military^ officer mtisU central focus of the military in Bolton not appear in person before Kelso today that the investigation didn’t gained through legal action, the serve at least three years “In inquiry. DELTA AIR LINES Anderson go “ high enough.” during the admiral’s mast, as was Navy said Monday. grade” to retire with that rank. The letters of reprimand were Capt. Glenn R. Brindel said he is While confirming a military Moncrief, 32, of Corpus Christi, their right, “ each admitted respon­ Issued by Kelso following an sibility in writing,” the Navy said. disappointed in the military for board of inquiry had recommended Texas, the Stark’s tactical action “ admiral’s mast” on Monday dur­ is prudent blaming him without scrutiMzing courts-martial for the two on officer, had served only about eight ing which he reviewed the circum­ “ Capt. Brindel and Lt. Moncrief the actions of his superiors. charges of dereliction of duty, the years In the Navy. As a result, he stances of the attack. admitted and accepted accounta­ I STRIP. “ The investigation didn’t go high Navy said, “ Both (men) accepted submitted a letter of resignation An admirai’s mast is a type of bility for the lack of readiness and enough, but that’s all I ’ll say about responsibility and both volunteered “ and will be separated by the inadequacy of measures taken to Raises for the Bolton town clerk and tax 'V disciplinary proceeding in which a it,” Brindel told The San Diego significant personal sacrifice In Navy,” forfeiting any opportunity senior officer reviews evidence of protect Stark on May 17, 1987. The Union. collector are probably warranted, and town Students rob acknowledgement of accountabil­ to obtain a pension, the service misconduct or negligence. Such a basic charge ... was negligence in services m ay be threatened by limited office The interview was conducted ity. Adm. Kelso, after a review of said. proceeding is one step short of a the performance of official duties.” Monday, when the Navy said the investigation, felt that it was hours, but the Board of Finance has acted Thirty-seven sailors died and 21 formal court-martial and can result Kelso said he decided to forgo Brindel and the Stark’s weapons unlikely that any new facts would were injured when the Stark was in various disciplinary sanctions, properly in delaying the salary increases. courts-martial because of various officer, Lt. Basil E. Moncrief, will be uncovered in a (court-martial).” stmek by two Exocet missiles from including a suspension from duty, aid programs not be court-martialed because factors, including the fact the Iraqi Brindel, the Stark’s 43-year-old the Iraqi plane on the night of May The finance board decided Monday night to temporary forfeiture of pay, a attack was “ unprovoked and indis­ they have accepted responsibility skipper, has submitted a request to 17 while on routine patrol in the put off approving the raises until the town letter of reprimand or a letter of criminate” and “ originated from a WASHINGTON — Just as a tiny minority of for the ship's failure to defend itself retire, the Navy said. By taking PEANUTS G LENN R. BRINDEL Persian Gulf. Iraq called the attack admonition. source considered not likely to act attorney provides a written legal opinion on against an Iraqi warplane. It said that step now, Brindel will have to welfare cheaters gave ammunition to critics of the a mistake, an explanation the Within the military legal system, in a manner hostile to a U.S. naval granting pay hikes to elected officials during . . . forced to retire they agreed to end their naval entire system, a few greedy students, parents and retire with a pension pegged to the United States accepted. a formal letter of reprimand “ is a vessel.” the budget year. The finance board already school officials have given a black eye to the ~ had an oral opinion, but members wanted it in federal student-aid program by flouting the writing because they were concerned that eligibility requirements. And with only a limited Jane’s says they might set a bad precedent by allowing amount of funds available for grants and low-cost In Brief 'imJM the Board of Selectmen to boost salaries at loans, the crooks and chiselers are depriving will. honest applicants of help they deserve. Iraq won’t extend ban on attacks N A S A now The Education Department has not been blind to The finance board’s prudence in this case Washington Wire abuses of the student-aid system. The WASHINGTON — Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz says Iran m ay be a result of the criticism heaped upon department’s inspector general pursues the Is taking advantage of a suspension in Iraqi attacks on Persian too cautious board members after they paid an cheaters and embezzlers with a vengeance, getting' Gulf shipping and aims to “ blackmail” countries in the region. unsubstantiated bill last month for back the misdirected funds and turning in the worst- Iraq, which halted the attacks 12 days ago, has since agreed to LONDON (A P) - The Chal­ observe a cease-fire resolution ordered by the U.N. Security zoning-enforcement work. The change in the offenders for criminal prosecution. lenger disaster sapped NASA’s Council, but Iran so far has not gone along. confidence and its will to put people bo ard ’s approach is m ore than welcome. Ida runs for president From a recent Education Department inspector Aziz, emerging from a meeting with Secretary of State George general’s report and from interviews with an in space, while the Soviet space But the ensuing remarks from the leader of P. Shultz on Monday, told reporters that Iran wanted "a partial program has made steady gains, official in the inspector general’s office, our the Board of Selectmen were disturbing. halt” to the shipping war in order to continue its invasion of Iraq says the 1987 edition of Jane’s By Lawrence L. Knutson reporter Karen Talley has assembled these steep for awhile in part of the were having themseives a ball,” and to “ get hold of the whole gulf region.” Spaceflight Directory, issued Finance board members were told that they outrageous examples of student aid gone awry: history of the nation. the policeman said. “ Any partial implementation of the resolution will help the today. were making a mistake, that they were i WASHINGTON — Her name • Two brothers managed to get low-cost federal And, suddenly, the policeman "So I asked, who is Ida?" Iranian position, the Iranian position of blackmail and “ We couldn’t disagree more,” usurping the power of the selectmen, and that , was Ida and despite her 90 years, loans in excess of legal limits by submitting said David Garrett, spokesman for noticed that one particular group “ And they they toid me that Ida intimidation,” Aziz said. they were threatening town services. the buttons worn by her friends applications in three states. They were eventually the National Aeronautics a nd Space of people walking through his door was a 90-year-old woman who for The foreign minister did not say how long his government proclaimed she was running for caught, and have repaid about $60,000 they weren’t Administration. “ The United If anyone has been threatening town was just a little different from the years had made a special trip with would wait for Iran to respond to the cease-fire. president of the United States. entitled to, with $80,000 to go. States space program is coming rest. her friends. And every year her services, it has been the Board of Selectmen. It was, said the Capitol police­ • One enterprising college student collected back, stronger, safer and better granddaughter did something to Greece’s heat wave In ninth day than ever before.” The board frequently rejects proposals that man, a hot and steamy day, and All of them were elderly. more than $100,000 in federal assistance In four make that trip memorable.” The directory is a 551-page might cost a few extra dollars, even if they tourists by the thousands were All of them wore political-style years. He did it by using spurious information — ATHENS, Greece — Gravediggers worked overtime and This summer, the summer of roundup of developments in the could avert larger expenses at a later date. streaming through the metal buttons. like aliases and fake Social Security numbers — to tourists plunged into Athens’ fountains as a heat wave that has the congressional Iran-Contra world’s space programs. It is detectors of a security-conscious All of the buttons read, “ IDA enroll at 11 colleges in four states and the District killed 688 people stretched into a ninth day today. f l ' l.Hi And the Board of Selectmen also has made hearings highlighted by the ap­ i. published by Jane’s Publishing Co., Capitol building to see the Senate FOR PR E S ID E N T .” of Columbia. A Weather Bureau spokesman said the temperature in Athens which issues authoritative year­ history by ignoring pleas from an parently magnetic testimony of and House, to view the statues of “ Not one of those people was • The owner of a Reno, Nev., beauty school wouid not rise above 104 degrees today, and that northerly books on military and civil topics, overburdened town employee, who ultimately Lt. Col. Oliver L. North, Ida’s the famous and th» forootten. to less than 75 years old and they conned the government out of thousands of dollars breezes would gradually cool off the Greek capital. including Jane’s Fighting Ships. granddaughter found new resigned and left Bolton without building, by collecting double tuition for some students. He “ We’ll know by early afternoon whether this Is justa respite for ’’The fact is that currently NASA inspiration. sanitation and zoning expertise for months. urged them to apply for federal grants to cover a few days or whether the heat’s really over,” said the has lost the will to fly men in “ She told me that when she saw ’The selectmen a re right to seek m ore their tuition — even though a local community spokesman. space,” Reginald Tumill, editor of the signs and buttons that said the Spaceflight Directory, wrote in Open Forum college was paying the fees. The man pleaded Most of the 688 dead were elderly Greeks with heart ailments money, and thus provide more services, in the ‘O L L IE FO R P R E S ID E N T .’ she the book’s introduction. guilty to embezzlement and had to return about and people with respiratory problems, said city coroner offices of the town clerk and tax collector. had buttons made up that said, Philippos Koutsaftis. No foreign tourists were reported to have “ Only those executives emphas­ $13,000 to the Education Department. Once the Board of Finance gets its legal ID A FOR P R E S ID E N T,” ’ the died in the heat wave. izing ‘the conservative approach’ • A joint FBI-Education Department opinion in writing, the raises should be Congress panel and shortcomings. I am appalled policeman said. In the port of Piraeus, an Athens suburb, the coroner’s and ’safety must come first’ find investigation caught three top officials of Sioux favor in the hierarchy,” he said. AP photo by their vacillation on support of According to the policeman, assistant at the Piraeus morgue said coffins were piling up approved. The board should be applauded, not Em pire College in Hawarden, Iowa, getting federal ’Tumill said that as a result of the John Demjanjuk, on trial In Jerusalem on a witch hunt the contras, their inability to who is the only source for this because “ there’s no room inside.” testimony. Demjanjuk testified that he criticized, for its return to responsibility. loans in the names of students who they knew Challenger disaster, NASA had meet their own budget goals set story, Ida did not actively cam­ for Nazi war crimes, talks with police had never been inside Treblinka. To the Editor: weren’t attending the school during the loan period,' suffered an “ unnecessary sense of by Gramm-Rudman while still paign for the job while she was on officers during a break in Monday’s The three officials pleaded guilty to misapplication ^ Tobacco foes push total ad ban national humiliation over an acci­ pouring millions of our dollars the Capitol grounds. dent that should have been ac­ I am shocked and dismayed by of student-aid funds after they were indicted. into pork barrels, and generally Instead, while her friends made WASHINGTON — A crusade by professional athletes and cepted as the unfortunate but the spectacle of a congressional • “ Financial aid counselors” who worked for tbs' their inability to accomplish forays into the Capitol, then came appeals in memory of a high school football coach who died of inevitable price of leadership.” committee insulting and trying to Wilfred beauty academy chain in Massachusetts ; anything worthwhile except hold back to rest on stone benches in a lung cancer mark the opening of a new congressional effort to ban The Challenger space shuttle intimidate two good Americans “ coached and encouraged” students to overstate Demjanjuk denies charges hearings. Count me among those lobby, she sat outside in the shade all tobacco product advertising. exploded minutes after liftoff on like Oliver North and John their financial needs to get aid they didn’t deserve. who are guilty of “ contempt of of the trees. Scott Wedman of the Boston Celtics basketball team told a Jan. 28, 1986, killing seven crew Poindexter. It reminds me of the Congress.” The seven employees pleaded guilty to charges of House panel Monday that he and other members of a 7-month-old members. Since then, the U.S. JERUSALEM (AP) — John But her campaign had some late Joe McCarthy and his making false statements and aiding and abetting organization called “ Athletes Against Tobacco” want to “ send a shuttle program has been Demjanjuk today again denied he vigor, nonetheless. communist witch hunt. Emil E. Werstler the commission of a crime. They had been indicted strong message to our nation’s youth that tobacco use and sports grounded. NASA’s caution follows was the brutal Nazi prison camp ‘I would have sold my “ They told me that people who It has been apparent from the 64 Greenwood Drive after a joint FBI-Education investigation. do not m ix.” disclosures of quality problems in guard known as “ Ivan the Terri­ had seen the buttons had contrib­ the program that contributed to the very beginning that the commit­ Manchester • A Nigerian collected $17,540 in both state and Wedman and others said the tobacco industry sends exactly the ble,” and he also said he had lied uted 6180 for them to spend to explosion. soul for a loaf of bread’ tee’ s motives were not to get at federal student aid by falsely claiming to be an opposite message in its ads and routinely violates its own on his application (or U.S. citizen­ ’Tumill wrote that “ disarray” in the truth "for the American better enjoy their trip,” the American citizen. voluntary advertising code. Among other things, the code ship to avoid deportation to the policeman said. the U.S. space program has had Soviet Union. anyone. “ Never, I couldn’t even John Gill of Cleveland that he had people” but rather to attempt to • A woman in New York lied on a parental prohibits depictions of smokers engaged in athletic activities and kill a chicken, my wife had to do “I tell yoli,” he said. “I was unfavorable impact on the pro­ The 67-year-old retired Ohio lied in applying for U.S. embarrass the administration. financial statement to make it appear that her ads that suggest smoking is “ essential to social prominence, it,” he tesUfied. & Letters policy grams of Europe, Canada and autoworker also told the thr^- citizeship. When they were upstaged by really proud of them. They were distinction, success or sexual attraction.” Prosecutor Yona Blattman daughter was eligible for thousands of dollars in Japan, while the'Soviet space effort judge panel at his war crinms He said he had listed Sobibor North and their fond hope that The Manchester Herald really having themselves a good then began cross examination, federal assistance. The mother understated the is advancing steadily with the Mir trial that conditions were so bad and the names of several other “ Reagan knew” was dashed by welcomes original letters to the tim e.” arguing Demjanjuk’s statements family income and overstated the number of space station and plans to fly to in Nazi prisoner-of-war camps towns on various forms at the editor. One or two mysteries remain U.S. to make ‘Important proposals’ in Israel contradicted testimony Poindexter, they retreated to dependents. When confronted with the Mars. that “ I would have sold my soul recommendation of a United innuendo and self-serving moral­ Letters should be brief and to about the Ida campaign. Tumill, who visited NASA facili­ during U.S. court proceedings Nations refugee official. investigators’ evidence against her, she returned G E N E V A — U.S. negotiators called a meeting today with their for a loaf of bread.” izing. The liberal print press and the point. They should be typed or The policeman never found out ties, wrote: “ The general lack of about when and where he re­ Demjanjuk claimed the official the money. Soviet counterparts on medium and shorter-range nuclear The Ukrainian-bom Demjan­ her last name. conndence in NASA’s recovery moved a tatoo from his left warned him to conceal his Uk­ TV news gleefully joined the hunt neatly handwritten, and. for ease missiles “ to make important proposals,” U.S. spokesman Terry juk is accused of operating the • Several students in Kentucky colleges are effort, freely expressed in its own armpit. The prosecution argues rainian origins or be forced to to prove that Reagan and his in editing, should be double­ And he doesn’t know where she Shroeder said. He would not elaborate. gas chambers that killed 850,000 facing civil suits for lying about their financial offices, probably makes the ob­ the tattoo is the same type put on return to the Soviet Union, where people were guilty until proven spaced. Letters must be signed and her friends are from. people at the Treblinka death status in order to get federal aid. They overstated In another arms control development, NATO proposed a plan server excessively dubious about SS guards to signify their blood he feared prosecution as a innocent. When North or Poindex­ with name, address and daytime But somewhere out there, along camp in Nazi-occupied Poland. their needs in applications to several grant Monday for new negotiations aimed at overcoming problems that the May 1987 announcement that type in case of injury. deserter from the Red Army. ter could not rem em ber the telephone number (for with Biden and Bush, Gephardt programs and collected amounts ranging from have frustrated 14 years of talks on reducing conventional armed shuttle flights would be resumed Demjanjuk has argued he was Asked by Levine why he had “ The reason was to hide myself details of what was discussed at a verification). and Simon, Dukakis and Dole, $1,500 to $12,300. forces in Central Europe. The 16 NATO and seven Warsaw Pact ’no earlier than January 1988’. a victim of mistaken identity and removed the tattoo, Demjanjuk from repatriation to the Soviet 9:23 a.m. meeting two years ago, The Herald reserves the right to Babbit and Kemp, Jackson and said, “ because we (POWs) ... all Footnote: To their chagrin. Education countries have held exploratory talks in Vienna, Austria on the “ The editor found many who was never at Treblinka or Sobi- Union, to hide the fact I was in the he was accused of lying. (Not to edit letters in the interests of Gore, and all the rest, Ida is feasabilify of new all-European arms talks since Feb. 17. doubted whether there would be a bor, another Nazi death camp in knew it belonged to the SS and not Soviet army and the Vlasov ® 1987 by NEA Inc 7 - f Department investigators discovered that some o his face but in the press.) brevity, clarity and taste. running for president. Delegations headed by American Maynard Glitman and Soviet Poland. Instead, he said he spent the Russians ... not only myself Army,” an anti-Soviet unit organ­ the chiselers are close to home. They recently resumption before 1989 and even “What would you say if / told you that / was I believe the Congress is a Address ietters to: Open Fo­ Gen. Vladimir Medvedev were to meet today at the U.S. some in high places who thought most of the time in POW camps as but everyone removed it because ized by the Nazis from Soviet reflagging Kuwaiti tankers?" nabbed a secretary in the department’s we were not SS.” disgra(;e not only for this latest rum, Manchester Herald, P.O. Lawrence L. Knutson writes for diplomatic mission in Geneva. The talks fall under the heading of shuttle mission 26 might not occur a captured Russian soldier. POWs. Washington, D.C., headquarters who had been display but for its many failures intermediate-range nuclear forces^ or INF. before 1990.” “ I felt myself like I was in Levine argued with Demjanjuk Presiding Judge Dov Levine Box 591, Manchester, CT 06040. The Associated Press. at several points, telling him on doctoring her time cards for extra pay. She was The United States was expected to address proposais made last ’Tumill added, "NASA continues Sobibor or Treblinka when I was said the trial “ was turning to a one occasion, “ I see you are not ordered to repay about $2,000. week by the Soviet delegation for worldwide elimination of to be deflected from its painful and in the (POW) camps,” Demjan­ great extent” on a key piece of only not stupid but clever.” shorter and medium-range missiles, with a range of 300 to 3,000 apparently ineffective efforts at juk said in his second ddy of prosecution evidence, an SS iden­ Watch on waste Demjanjuk, who worked 30 miles. reorganization by political argu­ testimony in the trial that began tification card that states Dem­ A shabby performance by the admiral Rank has its privileges, particularly in the ments with Congress and (the) Feb. 16. years as a machine operator in a janjuk was in Sobibor. The Soviet I military — and it can cost the taxpayers a pretty Department of Defense.” Cleveland auto plant, was extra­ Union provided the card and Asked by presiding Judge Dov dited from the United States after penny. Consider the case of Maj. Gen. William Garrett challenged that assess­ Levine if he was “ Ivan the Demjanjuk claims it is a forgery. On his last day of testifying, the admiral told the being stripped of his citizenship “ I was never at Sobibor or Russians. History teaches us that the Iranians are Flynn, the new commander of the Army Tank White House knocks the press ment. “ We’re fixing the shuttle and Terrible,” Demjonjuk said, “ I ■ joint committee of Congress that had been are preparing to fly it again next for lying on application forms Treblinka. Why it’s written there quite aware of the dangers posed by invaders from Automotive Command Center in Warren, Mich. was never there. I am not ’Ivan suffering this beached naval bureaucrat that he WASHINGTON — The White House, accusing some members June. We’re beginning to develop a requesting entry in 1952. I don’t know,” Demjanjuk re­ the north coming into their country sniffling for Since the tank center has no quarters, the brass the Terrible.’ ” was departing with his head held high. Then of the press of being “ hungry to try to destroy the president,” space station to give us a perman­ Demjanjuk conceded under sponded heatedly, turning red in lives on Selfridge Air National Guard Base, Admiral John Poindexter and his pushy, berries, oil and naval bases on the Persian Gulf. says President Reagan was tiding to save lives when he sought to ent presence in space,” the NASA He also said he had never killed questioning from his attorney the (ace. Nicholas overlooking Lake St. Clair in nearby Mount reedy-voiced lawyer rose and walked out. But what Poindexter and his fellow national withhold details of the Iran-contra affair last November. spokesman said. Clemens — just as Detroit auto industry executive The unusually strong White House reaction by spokesman Men who behave with such arrogance should security retardates were intellectually incapable of Von Hoffman live in the Grosse Pointe lakeside suburbs. Marlin Fitzwater came after Reagan was spotted in earnest have more charm. In any event, we have cause to understanding was that Iranians have scarcely a better opinion of us. Exercising his one-star advantage over Brig. conversation with his spokesman as the president flew to be grateful an earlier generation of American Am erica is still smarting over having its Gen. Peter M cVey, Flynn bumped M cVey out o f hi Wisconsin on a speaking tour Monday. naval officers were bold and independent enough to Senate could delay recess for Bork quarters — a house that is closest to the tennis In three speeches in a span of three hours, Reagan twice told take action without an overly aggressive member diplomatic people held in durance vile for a year by the Iranians. The Iranians are smarting over 30 courts and lake. This means that the taxpayers wil crowds that he rejected the idea of “ a potted palm presidency.” of the bar at their side. Can you see Admiral David reliable or up-to-date information about what was He was using a phrase by Brendan Sullivan,, Lt. Col. Oliver WASHINGTON (AP) - Majority Joseph R. Biden Jr., D-Del., said appeals judge, on July 1 to replace Bork on the court temporarily. Dole years of American intervention in their internal have to pay not only for Flynn’s moving expenses, Leader Robert Byrd, responding to Republicans are trying “ to make Glasgow Farragut, at the head of his Union flotilla happening in the country. Indeed he seems not to North’s lawyer, who said he was being treated like such a retired Justice Lewis F. Powell. said Bork could remain on the affairs — what appears to them to be American but for McVey’s move to less prestigious quarters a suggestion that President Reagan political hay” by accusing Demo­ steaming into Mobile Bay, Confederate shot and houseplant in not being allowed to represent the former White But the Judiciary Committee bench for most of 1988 — during the have had the advice of anybody who could speak subversion of their religion and their way of life. Each general’s house is allotted $25,000 a year for could elevate Robert Bork to the crats of stalling. does not plan to begin confirmation congressional session — without shell filling air and water, as the naval hero calls House aide as aggressively as he wanted before the Farsi, the language of Iran. So here he was, You don’t have to read a word of Farsi to landscaping, utilities and maintenance, but there Supreme Court during the Senate’s “ I ’m a little perplexed as to why hearings until Sept. 19. The hear­ Senate approval. out, “ On advice of counsel it is safe to say — Damn congressional Iran-contra committees. knowing nothing about the culture, history, social, understand what English-speaking Iranian will be an additional $659 to gussy up M cVey’s end-of-the-year recess, said today some are dedding to play politics ings are expected to last about two There have been 15 recess the torpedos — full speed ahead! ” The implication of Reagan’s remark was that he would the chamber is moving so slowly on religious or political structure of the country, about diplomats have been saying for the past 10 years. house for Flynn — plus $2,240 to m ove M cVey’s with this now,” Biden said Monday. weeks, which means the full Senate appointments in the court’s history, It was altogether a shabby performance by continue to be an active president — pressing for his economic other business that it may have to “ I guess there’s a feeling that this is would not vote on confirmation in although only five took their seats to seek out the “ pragmatic” elemente, meaning, of Roughly it translates into thinking that for an belongings to his new house on the base. Admiral Poindexter, a new breed of naval hero policies as he was Monday, for instance — despite damage to his delay its planned O ctober something that people can make time for the Oct. 9 start of the on the court before actual Senate course, Iranians of whatever bona fldes who Iranian patriot-, an Iranian nationalist, the CIA is Art Volpe, spokesman for the Tank Command with his Ph.D. in physics and a convenient form of standing from the Iran-contra affair. adjournment. political hay over.” Supreme Court’s new term. confirmation. agreed with Poindexter. In his condition of absolute as big a danger to the country as the KGB. Center, told our reporter Gary Clouser that the aphasia which makes it impossible for him to “ We will be lucky to get out in He added that a temporary If Congress adjourned this fall The most recent recess appointee ignorance, he proposes to use the Israelis, our good moving costs are small compared to similar impart useful information to elected officials of the November, never mind the first of appointment to the court would without voting on the nomination, was Potter Stewart, named by friends and fellow very-small “ d” democrats in the expenditures for corporate executives. government he, normally at least, serves. O B JE C TIVE LY, that m ay not be the case, but New FA A chief warns airlines October,” Byrd told reporters. hamper chances Bork would be Reagan could use his so-called President Dwight D. Elsenhower in Middle East, but the Israelis are blantantly that’s how the Iranian government has repeatedly He criticized a suggestion Mon­ confirmed. Demotion by grade and quiet separation from the recess appointment powers to put 1999. pro-Iranian in their war with Iraq, because the indicated it feels about It. Thus, there were and are WASHINGTON — The new chief of the Federal Aviation day by his Republican counterpart. “ I hope it doesn’t happen, I think service is what is called for here, with the hope Iraqis are supported by their fellow Arabs and the a number of outstanding differences between Administration is warning that his agency will be watching the Minority Leader Bob Dole of it would be a mistake,” Biden said. there aren’t too many more like this lulu in the airline industry to see if it heeds passengers demanding better Israelis hate Arabs of whatever stripe or Washington and Tehran which could not be settled Kansas, that Reagan could use bis “ I think it would, quite frankly, hurt Pentagon’s filing cabinets. and safer service. fragrance. So he has made himself and the United by a back-door deal brokered by Ralph Slick, Sy fflaitrliPBlpr HrralJi recess-appointment powers to put Mr. Bork’s long-term chances of N e a r l y N u S h o p p e “ The executive management of every air carrier... is hereby the conservative jurist on the high serving on the court. States dependent on guides who will tell him Smarm and Henry Crook. The way to settle the 366 Main St., Manchester, CT 06040 ALTHOUGH M ANY a reasonable man would Founded In 1881 on notice,” T. Allan McArtor said Monday after being sworn In as court — at least temporarily. Calling Bork’s nomination “ the BetwHn Rm m I 8 Hsymi St. in PMbiick Agmcy Bldg. anything as long as the Iranians get military help. differences is serious discussions carried on by conclude the admiral was lying in his eye teeth They put him in touch with various merchants of PENNY M 8IEFFERT...... PuMMlW the agency’s administrator. “ They’re still trying to dreum- main event” in Congress this year. MS-MD Optn Mon. Thni Sst Hn. IM \: diplomats who at least can avail themselves of vent the Congress — the people’s Dole said the Constitution “ allows when he said that he was selling guns to the death, arms traders of suspect reputation and little DOUGLAS A. BEVINS...... Exacutiv* EdHor “ If you do not comply with your obligations to maintain your competent translation services. ADELE M. ANGLE...... Nawt Editor branch.” B yri added, “ the Senate the president to fill any vacancy on Iranians in order to effect a rapprochement with fleets and fulfill the obligations of your operating certificates, SUMMER honor. Instead, we are now in a state of near ALEXANDER GIRELLI...... Anoellt* Editor will do its duty on this nomination.” the Supreme Court while Congress “ moderate” or "pragmatic” elements there, let’s you will not operate in the national airspace,” M cArtor warned belligerency against Iran. The admiral, after airlines. Dole criticized plans by the is in recess and provides that the CLEARANCE: accept this assertion and examine how this little THAT IS THE PRELUDE to dispatching Bud DENISE A. ROBERTS...... Advortiting DIroctor Judidary 0>mmittee to begin person filling that vacancy shall having said the buck stops with him, is blaming MARK F ABRAITIS ...... B u tln m Managw McArtor, a former senior vice president of Federal Express, man was going to achieve his purposes. MacFarlane off to Tehran with the famous Q ib t, PUypeni, Highchairs Needed Congress, the media, anybody and anything but his SHELDON C O H E N ...... Compoilng Minagor also made it clear that airline employees’ performances would be hearings on the nomination Sept. 19 serve until the end of the congres­ He began, by his own estimation, with an birthday cake, a Christian bible and a goofy spiel own proud incompetency, his own misinformed, ROBERT H. HUBBARD...... PiMsroom Managw watched. and said the confirmation process sional session.” JEANNE G FROMERTH...... Circulation Managar (uoStr mwm ■■ingt— m) intelligence service that had no contacts and no about how America will help you against the I-know-best-I-see-farthest patriotism. should begin sooner. /’ Reagan aiyiouneed bis nomina­ The committee’s chairman. Sen. tion of Bork, a conservative federal f C- • - MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday, July 28, 1»«7

MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday. July 28.1987 ■ m ^ S 7 MENTAL IN^TR l/MENTAL" B/tc byBnicB.aHI« M ANUrt by CharlM M. SdNib U/rtV ELSE MOULO because ry£ BEEN IM 60IN6 HOME TOPAV, YOU UiERE A QUICK you 0£ roSTUttiNtr. O.D.'ING on t h ' MA'AM ..THANK YOU FOR LEARNER, SOPHIE... p ovrm e Jt 6ttlMAClN(r Boston Pops ano i'<« . BUSINESS Business In Brief THESUIIMMIN6 LESSONS «/M«iE Voo ••ptAV POS TURING-^ pouting ' GpiwacinE while ^ T5T 'Z THE "a i r S l/ITAI?’ I PLAVtue -McTIghe completes Friendly program 'Am oBoe"/fj John McTighe of Manchester recently completed a two-day managers’ orientation program conducted at the Friendly Ice Cream Corp. headquarters in Wllbraham, Mass. McTighe is the manager of the Friendly Restaurant on Tolland Turnpike in Manchester. ______The purpose of the program was to help ensure a smooth transition into maybe you Ythat‘5 restaurant management and to ac­ SHOOLPTAKe I A600P HERE I 60!! quaint new Friendly managers with ballet VIPEA..., the firm ’s facilities and the functions LESSONS.. of support departments. Training HAQAR THE HORRIBLe by DIk Brown* courses are given to management personnel to acquaint new managers with their roles. I Sfk^ULP htBy/BR ^^A\le WMe p e a p e MAeRlBPA LBO...LBOS our Friendly Restaurants is a division You <&oiiJo? of Hershey Foods Corp. in Hershey, A ^ B '^BfZY OUT&Oll^& “What do you expect when you take the Pa. cut-rate package tour?... Y t Boeing 767’s are Lerner elected THB ORIZZWELLS™ by Bill Schorr under construction at the company's vice president )tM'KE 6ETTIMuufc aajues.i Opportunity Personnel Services, a NOPOP/ P R E -S ^ UKE pill" defense against Tempnet affiliate. Tempnet is an TMATAWyMORE... takeover by corpo­ association of independent temporary employment firms that rate raider T- Boone serve more than 130 markets in the United States. AHP ABOtmtWl? BREATH„, Co-Opportunity Personnel Services has offices in Hartford, Pickens. .Farmington ...... andci.u ludiiviicsici. Manchester. Co-Op Bpecianzesspecializes min permanenipermanent and temporary placement of clerical and secretarial candidates. AP photo

CAPTAIN EASY -^by Crooka « Caaal* Existing home sales down sharply IN THE MOUMTAIKIG THE NEWS SPREAPS FA ST Boeing takes ‘pill’ to fight takeover WASHINGTON — Sales of existing homes, hurt by a Jump in mortgage rates this spring, fell 6.1 percent in June, the biggest decline in five months, a real estate trade group reported Company sets up defense against bid by corporate raider Monday. |C»W7 W*^ krc Worta npfi^BSi^ TanoKKoir: The National Association of Realtors said that existing THE tNTfiUO&i Bv.Georg* TIbbIts Boeing has about 155.37 million single-family homes were sold at a seasonally adjusted annual BLONIME by 0*Mi Young a Stan Drak* The Associated Press that flexibility, and it could behell to rate of 3.54 million units last month, following a 5.9 percent common shares outstanding with a pay in that industry.” market value of about $7.24 billion. increase in May. T O N G H T 1 S E T T O e^ATTLE — Boeing Co., the Pickens may be making “ a little It was the fourth decline in the last six months and the biggest REAP My SCARY I HEAR SOMETNINS rr \NAS PEFINITELY A 15 percent share would be worth investment here and may be trying CHAPTER POWNST7MRS TH E \NRONS TIM E nation's No. 1 maker of commercial nearly $1.09 billion. setback since a 14.3 percent drop in January. TAY T H A T 1 to stir the waters a little bit.” aircraft, erected a “ poison pill” Trading on the New York Stock Lloyd-Butler said. Housing officials attributed the May sales increase to a rush by defense against takeover after Exchange had ended when Boeing Harold Carr, Boeing vice presi­ potential buyers to close deals before rates went higher. While learning that corporate raider T. made the announcement and also dent for public relations, said mortgage rates have come down slightly since mid-May, they are I e IMf *T NCA Boone Pickens wants a chunk of the released a quarterly earnings re­ Boeing learned June 29 that Mesa still higher than in March and thus are having a dampening effect aerospace giant. ARLO AND JANIS » by Jimmy Johnson port showing a sharp dip in profits. had filed notice under antitrust law on sales, officials said. “ We believe that this plan pro­ Boeing stock fell 75 cents to $46,625 that it intended to acquire more than The fall in housing sales was accompanied by a slight rise in tects the interest of our stockholders GETUF:50M! VOO'VLfiOT THEM WEVE fiOTTOPULl on the New York exchange. $15 million worth of Boeing stock. prices with the median price of an existing home climbing 2.1 TO AMLKTHe COW AMOVED THOSE POUtDERSOurOF I don't KNOW HOW |n the event that they and Boeing are Officials at Pickens’ Mesa Li­ percent to $87,000 from the May level. The median, or mid-point, confronted with coercive or unfair Boeing believes that at theend of a THECHICKEM5/ the south forty- ^THE PIONEERS DID IT', mited Partnership in Amarillo, 30-day waiting period under law. price was 5.3 percent higher than a year ago, when it stood at takeover tactics,” Frank Shrontz, Texas, did not return telephone Mesa would be permitted to acquire $82,600. VOUN^, president and chief executive of­ calls. ficer, said Monday. up to 15percentof Boeing’seommon As a target, Boeing would be a stock, Shrontz said. ; Boeing, one of the biggest U.S. change for the 59-year-old Pickens. Last year, Boeing's board W HAT A eUY by Bin Haaif Yale, Chemex to develop skin drugs defense contractors, disclosed Mon­ Previously, his takeover bids adopted bylaw changes to help day that a group led by Pickens have been aimed-at oil companies, prevent hostile takeovers. Carrsaid NEW HAVEN — Yale University has entered into a five-year Ilians to acquire more than $15 including Gulf Corp., Phillips Petro­ deal with Giemex Pharmaceuticals of Denver to develop and piillion worth of Boeing common Monday’s actions were permitted “ m is s H0O5TON leum Co., Unocal Corp., and Cities by those changes. market drugs for treating skin ailments, the university has stock and may buy much more — up Service Co. He failed to take over announced. IS TAKING US to is percent of the company. Under the “ poison pill” defense, any, but made hundreds of millions Chemex will supply yearly financial support to the TO 5EE_50ME ; A "poison pill” defense is de­ of dollars when the companies each holder of common stock will Vis dermatology department at the Yale University School of S TA TU E S OF signed to make a takeover prohibi­ either were bought out by other get the the right to buy one one-hundredth of a share of newly- Medicine. In return, the company will receive the right of first FAMOUS PEOPLE. ALLEY OOP ‘ by Dave Graue tively expensive. Boeing’s plan, bidders or repurchased their own adopted by its directors, would give stock. issued preferred stock priced at$150 refusal to license and market inventions by the 23-member CAN I HAVE faculty, according to a news release issued Monday. a t t a g i r l , b u b b l e s ; stockholders the right to buy up Thomas Lloyd-Butler, an analyst a share. KEEP HER AWAY FROM CO M E o n , a ickens might want Boeing. of Boeing stock. an acquisition fight for use on He said a hostile takeover would Chemex would spend on the research. A Chemex spokesman was research and development, plant "One of the reasons we produce For its second quarter, Boeing not available for comment. ■Ho k I- require at least $12 billion, and aircraR cheaper and faster than and equipment costs and other had profits of $117 million or 75cents because Boeing is the dominant everyone else is the companies that expenses from a number of new a share per common stock on sales force in a major U.S. industry, the do it are extremely strong finan­ programs being launched ” is of of $3.48 billion. That compares with government might intervene if a cially,” Uoyd-Butler said.” You paramount importance,” Boeing' earnings of $1C9 million or $1.09 a takeover move threatened to could have a situation in which share on sales of $4.03 billion for the Clabir stops merger with Hl-Shear said. weaken the company seriously. someone could come in and remove year-ago period. GREENWICH — Clabir Corp. has ended its merger agreement with Hi-Shear Industries Inc., saying it was not in Clabir’s test interest to go through with the deal. High-level North, who opened one diamond, then Buy securities direct from Treasury Henry D. Clarke Jr., Clabir chairman of the board and chief NORTH 7-28-I7 doubled East’s four hearts. What THE BORN LOSER ^ by Art Santom executive officer, said Monday that a further review of tte deal BK762 bidding should South do? The answer is based showed that Hi-Shear "would not be able to satisfy all the upon North’s bidding tendencies at QUESTION: V--- SOIOWEYATEMBUqc-S,, IWA6FlKIH'T06eULTHlS your account. No engraved certifi­ matures. The difference between conditions to the merger.” ♦ AK J8S such high competitive levels. Suppose ../FORTDCAY only, I'LL From your co­ cates are issued, because your By James Jacoby muYA WHAT I'M 60MMA the two amounts is your interest, Clabir, based in Greenwich, intended to merge Hi-Shear with ♦ AJ82 North had the same high cards, but watch FDF:TWEW[Y-BVE LET YOU HAVE IT lumn, I know holdings are in "book-entry” form which you receive when the T bill with two or three little hearts replac­ that new issues its General Defense Corp. The deal, initially announced June 1, WEST EAST POLLMz FIFTEEN', — recorded on computers. matures. was valued at $140 million. ing some of his other cards. Would he Of 13-week and Semiannual interest payments on ♦ Q J 10 5 4 3 ♦ 9 Even expert players have difficulty HOWEVER.,. In vestors’ Hi-Shear manufactures aerospace fastners and other defense double? My answer is that he should 26-week U.S. your notes and bonds are sent QUESTION: I see price quota­ WA87 WKQJ 10 9543 bidding when the opponents interfere. products. Clabir, in addition to defense materials, also ♦ 74 ♦ 10 9 2 not. With a balanced hand, even with Treasury bills G uide electronically to your personal tions of Treasury bills, notes and Suppose you have opened the bidding. manufactures food products. 4K3 ♦ 4 extra values for his opening bid. North OrC sold every bank account. So are “ discount” bonds listed in newspaper tables. Your left-hand opponent overcalls at should pass and hope to make a small Monday, unless William A. Doyle SOUTH the one-level and the bidding is passed amounts when you buy T bills and Are those securities available for profit. What a double by North at this Monday is a hol­ the face amounts of matured bills, purchase? ♦ a 8 around to you. What does it mean if level should show is support for spades iday. In that you now double? Traditionally it notes and bonds. W62 or clubs, the unhid suits, as well as a case, they are Stanley to sell precast business ♦ Q63 means that you have a good hand but S' u o a ANSWER: Sure. You can buy sound opening bid. auctioned off on A Q 10 9 7 6 5 that you do not believe you can set T - C 8 QUES'nON: What is the smallest them through brokerage firms and NEW BRITAIN — The Stanley Works has agreed to sell its That was the bidding philosophy of Friday or Tuesday. amount I can invest in Treasury many banks. Those securities were Vulnerable: Neither your opponent without help from part­ South, and he believed that North precast concrete structures business, Stanley Structures Inc., to ner. You suggest to partner that your When does the U.S. Treasury your area. Your local bank can give bills, notes and bonds? previously issued by the U.S. Dealer: North shared that view, so he bid six clubs. Department offer new 52-week the Breeko Corp. of Tennessee, the companies announced. side can piay in one of the unhid suits FRANK AND ERNEST ®by Bob Thavea you the address of the correct Fed Treasury and now are available in “ The sale is expected to be completed in the company’s third His trust of partner was vindicated, bills, two-year notes and other bank or branch. Wnt North East Sonlh and that you may have extra values ANSWER: Treasury bills, which the marketplace. But you cannot quarter,” said Richard H. Ayers, Stanley president and cMef since the contract came rolling in with securities for sale? Also can they be Under the revised procedure for 1 ♦ 4V Pass for your opening, but you do not want have maturities of no more than 52 buy them directly from the executive officer. Ayers said Monday that he did not expect Pass Dbl. Pass an overtrick when the club finesse purchased directly, without going making dilrect purchases of new 6A to defend against a low-level doubled succeeded. weeks, come in a minimum $10,000 Treasury. Stanley’s earnings per share to be affected. Pass Pass Pass through a bank orbrokerage firms? Treasury bills, notes and bonds, denominations and multiples of contract unless your partner has pON’T YOU f?E>AP THB When you make a direct pur­ The sale of Stanley Structures, based in Denver, Colo., and the length and strength in the overcaller’s S you must open a “ Treasury Direct” $5,000 above that. chase, by submitting a tender to a Opening lead: V ANSWER: The Treasury auc­ sale of three steel businesses earlier this year are part of “ the I suit. The first two women generals in account before you buy. You can Treasury notes have maturities Federal Reserve bank or branch, tions off 52-week T bills every ongoing process of sharpening Stanley’s focus,” Ayers said. Suppose the bidding has zoomed to U.S. history were named by President obtain a “ New Account Request” of from two to 10 years. Treasury you buy a new issue of Treasury Stanley Works is concentrating on supplying tools and services the stratosphere, as in today’s deal. Richard Nixon on May 15,1970. fourth Thursday and two-year forvliterature explaining Treasury bond maturities are more than 10 securities. X W o^(ciN(0 notes about the 20th of each month. Direct and information about up­ years. Both are issued in $1,000, to do-it-yourselfers and construction professionals, Ayers said. Shies usually are held in March. coming sales from your Fed bank $5,000, $10,000, $100,000 and $1 William A. Doyle, a syndicated Breeko manufactures qnd distributes construction products w i t h in t h e ^r^TEM! : June, September and December for or branch. million denominations. But notes coinmnist, welcomes written qnes- including those made of precast concrete. Polly’s Pointers four-year notes and in January, After you have a Treasury Direct with maturities of less than four 4lotts, iMt he COB provide answers Jfily and October for flve-year account, you submit a ” tender” in years, usually come in $5,000 only throngh the coinmn. Write to ciiarnwA... Th AVS^ 7-28 notes and 15-year bonds. Notes with advance of the auction of the bill, minimums. Doyle In care of the Manchester maturities of from three to 10 years six years and have had success with note or bond issue in which you wish Herald, P.O. Box 5$1, Manchester Reader gives tips ed goat. If this is the case, a change in and longer-term bonds usually are to invest. You’re required to QUESTION: What makes Treas­ 06040. quickly cooled fresh milk, but after a diet or proper worming will remedy WINTHROP ®by Dick Cavalll day or so, it began to change flavor. I sold in February, May, August and include payment for the face ury notes and bonds different than this. November. BAG SALE about goat’s milk recently learned of an enzyme in For more information and a free account of the security with your Treasury bills? " ■RDV\ORROW CO ULD BE A " KEEP AWAY FROV\ TH R EE - ! Of course, you can make direct Flightloea Mrde Fill a large brown bag glut’s milk called capruic acid which catalog, write to Caprine Supply, P.O. THATfe EASIER SAID tender. By Polly Fisher DANSEROJS CAY RDR YOU. LBSSEDQIRAFFESWITH LONS purchases, thereby saving bank or With that accomplished, things ANSWER: Treasury bills are Flightless birds such as the moa, $300 will do this. Pasteurizing the milk will T H A N D O N E. with merchandise for only Box Y, 125 East Second St., DeSoto, brokerage fees. You do that by destroy this enzyme. KS 66018. They have been a great SREEN HAIR AND WEARING- become relatively simple. You get discount securities.” You buy a T kiwi and weka evolved in New DEAR READERS — Several (Jtwolry and housowsroa not Inaludad} warehouse of information. — KA­ PLlf?PLE JOGGING S H O E S ." T submitting a tender to the Federal statements, similar to a bank bill at a price below its face value Zealand because they had no weeks ago, I printed a question about To pasteurize, I simply strain the Reserve Bank or branch serving statements, showing the status of and receive face value when the bill predators to threaten them. fresh milk into canning jars and heat REN R. goat’s milk. Following Is a letter con­ Canning season is in full swing. For Wednesday A Thursday / July 20 & 30 in a hot-water bath using a floating taining some interesting information complete directions for boiling-wa­ - - v ”V v p^teurizing thermometer. When the far t h ^ who drink goars milk or who ter-bath canning, including Polly’s fa­ “'lujuiiojhv. are interested in raising dairy goats. I milk reaches 165 degrees throughout, vorite recipe for dilled green beans, EMERGENCY THE PENNY SAVER hope all you city folk will be patient the jars are removed and quickly Pennzoil withdraws Texaco plan cooled. The milk will keep for a week order her newsletter “Canning Fruits, Fire — Police — Medical ______^ Purnell Place • Manchester, C T while we devote a little more space to Tomatoes and Pickles.” Send |1 for and stay full-flavored. They may also , HOUSTON (AP) - Pennzoil Co. with the extension, although it was a sabject that is, perhaps, of greater each copy to POLLY’S POINTERS, in billion in damages to Pennzoil for be frozen for future use or made into • tWTWNCAkM. I has withdrawn an offer to settle its not as long as requested. D IA L 9t1 interest to readers in our more rnral care of this newspaper, P.O. ^ x wrongly interfering in Pemizoil’s cheese. If budget permits, a home $10.3 billion judgment against Tex­ Pennzoil after the ruling said that In Manchester areas. — POLLY 93863, Cleveland, OH 44101-5863. Be attempted merger with Getty Oil. aco Inc. for $4.1 billion, said its settlement offer no longer stands pasteurizer may hie purchased for sure to include the title. U.8. ACRES by Jim Oavla Texaco filed for Chapter 11 DEIAR POLLY — I was glad to about fl25. Pennzoil Chairman J. Hugh and that the extra time allowed HEALTH INSURANCE PoJJy. will send you a Polly Dollar protection from creditors April 12 read your column and see interest in In addition to the suggestions in Liedtke. Texaco reduced the possibility of a rather than post a potentially ($1) if she uses your favorite Pointer, WHAT HAPPENED] / PUNCHEP HOU WITH^" N9w, L o w r nt9»l goat’s milk. I’m sorry your reader got your column, other sources of poor TO V O U ? !, The offer was contained in a settlement. ruinous $12 billion security bond hold of some off-flavored milk. I’ve Peeve or Problem in her column. . ■ tasting fresh goat’s milk may come Write POLLY’S POINTERS in care o f reorganization plan filed by Pen- On Monday, Liedtke said that while it appeals the Judgment. The • Individual been raising French Alpine goats for 'T H E W ORM from the doe’s diet or a worm-infest­ this newspaper. rizoil last week in U.S. Bankruptcy despite “ good-faith efforts” by company has vowed to fight all the PUNCHED (^urt. Pennzoil last week had also Pennzoil to settle with Texaco, "we way to the U.S. Supreme Court. • Family ME IN , THE EVE filed papers opposing any extra have heard nothing meaningful out Liedtke said Monday that Pen- • Group time for Texaco to file its own of Texaco since the day it entered 'nzoil remains confident the Judg­ I .Oaaon65 rnMnum. Mm mNm ® •• OMfi. reorganization plan. bankruptcy." ment against Texaco will be Call or stop In to see us. ' On Friday, U.S. Bankruptcy , "Accordingly, all of our proposed upheld. 872-2140 Judge Howard Schwartzberg in compromises have now been with­ Under Chapter 11, Texaco bad the PEOPLE WHO KNOW New York granted Texaco a drawn,” he said. exclusive right until Aug. 10 to file a Oliver • Zuccardy Agency 120-day extension of the period in Texaco on Monday said it had no know there's a certain magic B ’ reorganization plan. That was 767 Main Street • Manchester about Classified Advertising. --— ♦rhich it has the exclusive right to commrat on the Pennzoil action. extended to Dec. 8. Texaco had W llS M 643-2711 Hie a plan. Texaco is appealing a Texas state sought an extension to March 81, JTW «Vf5 7za , ' Texaco officials were pleased court Jury's order that it pay $10.35 1988. OII.CO. 643-9S55 J5___ MANCHESTER HERALD, Tuesday. July 28. 1987 MANCHESTCR HERALD, Tuesday, July 28, 1987 — 11 Town and district TeenchargecE accord imperiied with abuse ContlnMd from page 1 A teen-ager was arrested early jurisdiction. Uiis morning followl.g incidents id Sarles said negotiators “ went which he physically and-verbally agreement because he is convinced through some heartache" in the it wili be turned down by district abused bis sister and mother, police months-long negotiation process. residents. He said there seems to be said. "Some of our trial balloons Michael J. Strasser, of 129B' a 80-50 split in district opinion about popped.” retaining the sewers, and to give up llidor Lane, was charged with Tripp and Longest contended that first-degree reckless endanger^, the sewers would be “ splitting our the negotiating team exceeded its support." ment, third-degree assault, threat-; authority and made concessions Addressing Landers, Joyner ening and two counts of disorderly beyond those contemplated by the conduct. said, “ You blindsided me Monday directors. Police said the incidents began (at the July 20 district meeting) LaBelle responded that when the when you announced you were not when Strasser’s sister picked him negotiating committee was set up, up Monday night from the Man­ in favor of this." it was clear that the negotiators had Joyner declared a recess during chester Police Department, where broad authority. He said Tripp he had been taken foilowing an '/ the meeting so that he could discuss wanted to limit that authority the matter privately with LaBelle arrest earlier in the evening for drastically, but the restrictions failure to answer an infraction. . and Sarles, the other negotiators were not imposed. present. Strasser became abusive, grab­ “ I recall saying that I would not bing his sister’s throat, and hitting Landers objected. “ Does that serve on any such committee (one require a motion?” he asked her in the head and face, neariy with limited negotiation power) ” causing an accident, poiice said. Joyner. LaBelle said. “ No, it does not. Look it up,” When he arrived home, Strasser “ I have made It clear what limits Joyner responded. started an argument with his I would like to see. and that point mother and began throwing things When the brief recess ended, was passed months ago.” Longest Sarles said it was obvious there is said. and using profanity, police said. no vote of confidence in the Police said Strasser’s sister Tripp said he felt strongly that slapped him, after which he iunged negotiating committee. "We’ve “ any negotiated agreement should yielded the best possible deal we at her. have come before the board (dis­ Strasser fled after his sister TOuld. We recommend that you (the trict directors) for actions or V' •4i: directors) go back and explain your called the police. A phone call from decisions before it was ever laid out him was later traced to an aunt’s position.” on the table.” -V Landers said that while he was AP photo house, where he was arrested “ I am doggone upset and mad,” Attorney General Edwin Meese Is sworn shortly after 1:30 a.m. this morn­ not prepared to make a formal Tripp said. appearance of Meese before the panel motion, which might be more before the Iran-contra committee this looking Into the Iran arms deal. ing, police said. LaBelle said it has been under­ Strqsser was held overnight and appropriate after the negotiating stood that any agreement reached morning on Capitol Hill. It was the first team has issued a written recom­ Is to appear in Manchester Superior would be subject to the approval of Court this morning. mendation to the directors, he felt the directors. the negotiators should go back to the table with instructions to reject Ultimately, it would also have to Meese says he told Reagan Teen injured any proposal under which the be approved by the district voters James Yankee points out telescope district would give up its sewers who retain district legislative authority. In Jeep accident and its sewer authority, and to parts during his program at Whiton reject any proposal to rescind Director Lorraine Boutin de­ A teen-ager was injured Sunday Memorial Library Wednesday night. Public Act 200. fended the work of the negotiators it was legal to withhold info afternoon when she fell out of the Negotiators for the town have and argued that there is no Continued from page 1 Jeep in which she was a passenger Harald photo by Pinto considered those provisions essen­ agreement until the team makes its Iran arms sales, conducted last report. he raised the question of congres­ during an accident on Hackmatack tial in exchange for the town-owned November, "appears to have been sional notification or the duration of Street, police said. "M y own counsel was that, while firehouse. Director Willard Marvin was not a remarkably casual inquiry with the initiative as the weapons sales The passenger, Cathy Comeau, very close, the benefits seemed to Public Act 200 is a state law that at the meeting. no sense of urgency." dragged on into late last year. 17, of 67 Ledgecrest Terrace, was outweigh the risks," he said. As for gives residents living in an area in Sen. George Mitchell, ‘b-Maine, riding in a Jeep driven by Joseph R This morning he said. “ I still not telling Congress right away, " I He said that because the opera­ the north end of town the right to said on NBC-TV’s “ Today” pro­ Casey, Jr., 18, of 93 Foster St. when have questions about the agree­ had the impression that a time tion was run on a “ need-to-know” petition the district for admission gram that he was disturbed by C^sey bacame distracted by Co­ ment and I would like to see It go to frame of 30 to 60 days was basis, " I was not even kept advised and gives the district the right to the voters. The voters should be the Meese's failure to take notes when meau, police said. contemplated and that the risks of the Iranian intiative after 1.^ include the petitioning area in its ones to decide.” interviewing Poindexter and Ca­ When Casey looked up. he noticed were, therefore, short-term." rendering advice in January of sey, and by the attorney general's he was heading straight for the He said he expected that the 1986.” failure to call in the FBI promptly. lawn of a house and he jerked the administration would notify ( i n ­ Meese said he was first informed wheel to the left to avoid going onto gress as soon as possible after the Republican Rep. Henry Hyde of of the plan by Lt. Col. Oliver North, Panel urges less Illinois, appearing with Mitchell, the lawn, causing Comeau to fall American hostages in Lebanon when the NSC aide came to Meese’s out onto the street, police said. Whiton patrons tour the stars were on board an airplane, out of defended Meese and said it was "a office in the Justice Department on Comeau suffered multiple abra­ the Middle East, and under the little too much to expect, imme­ Jan. 6, 1986. with a draft presiden­ sions, and was treated and released control of the United States. diately, a criminal tone to the housing near mall tial finding authorizing the secret at Manchester Memorial Hospital. Bv Anita AA. Caldwell invesUgation.” He also said Meese V_... "There was no desire to keep this arms sales to Iran. Casey and Comeau were both Herald Reporter matter from Congress," said did uncover “ the key document — the one indicating there was a Meese also defended his own charged with failure to wear a seat By Andrew Yurkovsky remaining 40 acres in that area Meese. “There was simply a belt. diversion of funds to the contras.” investigation, conducted last No­ If you think the summer heat Herald Reporter would be devoted to open space and recognition that this was a highly vember, of the Iran arms sales. He here is bad, think of what it commercial business. sensitive activity and that human Although Meese said that he f' The Conservation Commission emphasized in his prepared testim­ ^ ■ lives were at stake.” initially expected the arms-for- would be like on the planet recommended Monday night that a The Conservation Commission ony that at the start of the Man injured V i ' ' - However, a Democratic member hostages plan to be completed Venus, where it’s 900degrees. developer scale down his plans for did not recommend by how much weekend-long fact-finding inquiry, of the committees said today that quickly, nowhere in his 17 pages of Or. you could cool off on the high-rise housing east of the pro­ the housing development ought to “ our purpose was not to conduct a by car Saturday Meese’s own investigation of the prepared testimony did he say that planet Mars, where it’s rarely posed Mall at Buckland Hills. be reduced. Zoning regulations criminal investigation." above freezing. The commission also called for allow for a maxinjum of 20 units per A man was injured Saturday preserving all wetlands on that site acre for high-rise nousing. night after being struck by a car on Venus and Mars and other Broad Street. and on another site west of the mall, The motion for reducing the planets and stars were brought where the developer, 1-84 Asso­ extent of the residential develop­ Haig says he’s sympathetic Police said Charles E. Gilbert, 49, closer to earth Wednesday night ciates. plans to build office and ment was made by commission of 236 Hilliard St., attempted to at Whiton Memorial Library on cross the street at about 9 p.m. retail space. The two sites, measur­ member Thomas Fiorentino. North Main Street. James when walked into the lane of traffic ing a total of 140.4 acres, contain 33 The Conservation Commission Yankee, planetarium director at acres of wetlands. took action on two other projects in which James E. Purtle, 27, of to Shuitz’s embattied position Tolland, was traveling. Ferm i High School in Enfield, The recommendations, agreed Monday night. On one, an 18-lot Police said Purtle slammed on presented an absorbing demon­ upon unanimously by the commis­ subdivision off Keeney Street pro­ WASHINGTON (AP) — Former his brakes and turned his car to try stration of our solar system to sion. will be presented to the posed by Beaulieu Development Secretary of State Alexander M. “ I never knew who made them in to avoid hitting Gilbert, but skidded about 75 people who weathered Planning and Zoning Commission Co., the commission recommended Haig Jr. says he often did not know many instances ... major deci­ on the rain-slicked street and hit when it holds a public hearing on that the developer not encroach on who made the big decisions in the sions," Haig said. the uncomfortably warm night the development Aug. 3. any wetlands. The recommenda­ Elaborating on a story he told him with the left front fender of the with little relief from the few Reagan White House and he is car. The Conservation Commission tion, If followed by the PZC, could sympathetic with the frustrations shortly after the Iran-Contra affair fans purring in the room. Gilbert, who was issued a warn- recommended that the land made mean the elimination of seven of the his successor, George P. Shultz, blew up last November, Haig said Yankee’s talk combined ing for failure to yield right of way available through reduction of the lots on the 33.8-acre subdivision. revealed in congressional Israel approached him three times scientific information with to a vehicle when crossing outside a development be used for testimony. while he was Reagan’s secretary of humor, making the complicated On the other project, involving H state in 1981 and 1982 to approve crosswalk, was taken to Manches­ recreation. excavation by the Balf Co. on a site Haig also won’t second-guess topic simpler and more relevant. shipments of American-made arms ter Memorial Hospital. He was John Finguerra. a partner in 1-84 south of Tolland Turnpike, the Shultz’s decision not to resign, even For example, talking about the Associates, could not be reached for though Haig quit the Reagan to Iran. He said he turned down all treated for injuries to his hip, head, commission recommended that the and shoulder and released. sun. Yankee said, “ If the electric comment this morning. administration in 1982. three entreaties. developer be required to take all company wanted to send you a The plans by 1-84 Associates, a “ Shultz’s testimony was replete The Reagan administration’s safeguards to protect the town's bill for how much energy the sun New York development company, aquifer, which runs below the site. with anguish and nostalgia form e," shipment of arms to Iran in 1985, Father and son Hbivld pboto by Pinto uses, it would be $500 billion.” call for 1,000 units of high-rise It also recommended that wood­ Haig told a news conference with the help of the Israelis, was the Steven Zakowicz, 8, peers through the telescope looking for stars. A housing on a parcel east of the mall lands on the eastern part of the site Monday. first step in a scheme that included charged by police He said the heat of the sun is 27 measuring about 60 acres. The be left intact. “ Most of what he described is providing aid to the Nicaraguan million degrees. new experience for Steven was learning that “someday the sun might what caused me to resign,” added Contras during a congressonal ban Yankee, who has been at A father and son were arrested. Haig, now a candidate for the 1988 on U.S. assistance to the rebels. Horald photo by Pinto become freezing and put a thin layer of ice on earth.” Sunday following a fight at a Ferm i for 17 years, takes his Republican presidential nomina­ “ The issue of the provision of Clinton Street home, police said. program to about 13 libraries__^ tion. “ But I ’m not going to gainsay Kristan Blake, 8, says she likes the photographs of Wife iands piane arms by the government of Israel to Frederick Newman, 39, of 29 within Connecticut and Massa­ considerable science technology, should be, especially in this made and the direction that his decision in that regard because Iran was raised with me twice Main St., and Michael Newman, 19, the solar system that Yankee showed. Kristan chusetts, sometimes offering two he finds the general public high-tech area.” Yankee said. scientists are taking. I ’m not familiar with the subjective directly and once indirectly," Haig of 108 Clinton St., were each programs a day. unaware. What he offers is a way for One of the ways he makes the pressures that only he experienced. ALEXANDER HAIG JR. said. charged with third-degree assault. learned for the first time "the stuff about the sun ... I would not presume to do that Yankee believes in his mission. “ People aren’t as informed in people to grasp the magnitude of topic interesting is through after piiot stricken The first time was in the spring of Police said Michael’s grand­ and I wish some others wouldn’t.” . . . resigned in 1982 getting bigger.” In a region where there is science and technology as they space science; the discoveries colorful slides of the planets and 1981 in an Israeli hotel by a "very mother asked Frederick Newman Shultz last week told the special constellations taken by high- GROTON (AP) — A New York string of battles with the White high Israeli public official.” to come to her house, where Workers from the Pequonnock congressional committee investi­ House staff. Michael Newman lives, and tell hls- powered cameras. Another woman took a quick lesson in Bridge Fire Department and the gating the Iran-Contra affair that “ Where American-provided exciting feature of his program is piloting from an air traffic con­ The former Army general said arms and equipment are involved, son to leave. The father and son" airport’s crash, fire and rescue he offered to resign three times the confusion about decision­ began fighting when Frederick* getting a chance to look through troller to guide a single-engine station met the plane on the over disputes with other members that’s a matter of U.S. law and we making in the Reagan White House Newman arrived at the home, a telescope. To the delight of plane to a bumpy but safe landing runway, officials said. are not going to sanction such of the administration, but none was just as bad in the adminstra- police said. youngsters, Yankee brings his as her husband lay dying in the Diane Henry, a spokeswoman for were accepted. Haig resigned as secondary transfers,” Haig said he tion’s early years as Shultz des­ Michael Newman said his father audience outside to star-gaze. pilot’s seat. Lawrence & Memorial Hospital, told the official, whom he did not secretary of state in 1982 after a cribed in his testimony. pushed him and punched him in the Francis Mohr. _ about 66, of said Mrs. Mohr was treated for identify. Oh this evening, the rings of eye, according to police. Fredericit Baldwin, N.Y., was pronounced contusions and released from the Saturn could be seen through the dead on arrival at an emergency Newman injured his left shin in the: haze. Adults enjoyed the thrill of hospital’s Pequot Medical Outpa­ fight. medical center shortly after his tient Treatment Center in Groton. star-gazing as well. Yankee said Both men were to appear in' wife, Elizabeth, brought the PA-28 An autopsy was conducted to many adults have never looked Manchester Superior (3ourt on. Piper Cherokee to a halt Monday at determine the cause of Mr. Mohr’s through a telescope before. Groton-New London Airport, au­ Monday. death, Ms. Henry said. The results Elizabeth Berwick Manchester for many years. He also invites questions from thorities said. pike, Manchester 06040, or to the would not be available until Tues­ Elizabeth (Thomson) Berwick, Besides his wife and daughter, he Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn. The couple departed Groton the group. One 10-year-old asked day, she said. 94, wife of the late John O. Berwick is survived by two other daughters, Domestic dispute^ about 11:20 a.m. bound for Long when we might see Halley’s Sr., formerly of East Hartford, died Gail Bareisa and Holly Boisselle, Island in New York when “ about 10 Ms. Henry said Mohr was 66. Sherwood W. Humphries comet again. Pealer said the man was 65 and Saturday at an area convalescent both of Rockville; a brother, ends In an arrest minutes'out, she called the tower, \ Yankee said, “ When you’re'ss would have celebrated his 66th home. She was the mother of Horace Grant of Putnam; a sister, Sherwood W. Humphries, 75, of saying her husband was in distress! A Manchester man threatened to years old, you’ll be able to see it birthday on Tuesday. Thomas Berwick of Coventry. Jane Hibbeler in Texas; and nine 565 Vernon St., formerly of Garden having a heart attack, and she Besides her son, she is survived grandchildren. Street, died early Monday morning kill his wife Sunday night after A' again. It will be bright enough to Pealer said the Mohrs had flown couldn’t land a plane,” said Walter by another son, John O. Berwick Jr. Private funeral will be held at the at a local convalescent home. throwing a can of b ^ r at her and see from your rocking chair and Knof, facility manager for the to Groton from Farmingdale, N. Y., in Florida; 18 grandchildren; 12 Ladd Funeral Home, 19 Ellington He was bom in Manchester, May punching her in the face, police large enough if your eyesight is earlier Monday morning to have Federal Aviation Administration. great-grandchildren; and several Avenue, Rockville. Burial will be in 15, 1912, and had been a lifelong said. failing.” Controller Jerome Tremblay, breakfast in Connecticut and were nieces and nephews. Westfield Cemetery, Danielson. resident. Before retiring, he was Thomas D. Davis, 42, of 43 But Yankee had a serious who is a pilot instructor, got on the on their return flight when Mohr There are no calling hours. employed by Aetna Life Insurance Wilfred Road, was charged with was stricken. The funeral is Wednesday at message for his young audience radio and Instructed the woman, 62, 10:30 a.m. at the Newkirk & Memorial donations may be Co. for more than 45 years. He was a second-degree assault in connec­ how to turn the plane around, lined tion with the 8:30 p.m. incident as well. He encouraged his Whitney Funeral Home, 318 Bum- made to the Rockville General member of South United Methodist listeners to take care of our her up with the runway and guided side Ave., East Hartford, with the Hospital Intensive Care Unit. Church and was a veteran of World Police said the can of beer struck her landing, officials said. Judge reverses planet. Rev. William E. Flynn officiating. War II, serving in U.S. Army. Davis’ 28-year-old wife, Virginia, in “ The controller managed to give the nose and broke her glasses. "There is no other planet we Burial will be in Zion Hill Ceme­ He is survived by a daughter, confidence to the non-active pilot to damage award After leaving the home for a short tery, Hartford. Calling hours are M.A. Sulalman Marlkar Donna Wright of Manchester; a know of that has life. There’s no find her way around the cockpit and while, Davis returned and threw one hour before the service. son, Thomas F. Humphries of Los other place to go," he said. to the airport,” said Ted Crosby, a Virginia into a com er of the NEW HAVEN (AP) — A federal A memorial service for M.A. Angeles, Calif.; two brothers. El­ pilot who was at the airport and kitchen, grabbed her by the shirt judge overturned a jury’s $3.5 Sulaiman Marikar, M.D., 44, of more Humphries of Manchester heard Tremblay’s instructions to William P. Grant and said, “ I ’m going to kill you,” million award to a former supervi­ South Windsor, who died Saturday, and Richard Humphries of San Yankee shows 8-year- Mrs. Mohr over a scanner. “ That’s sor of an Amtrak rail-making plant William P. “Bill” Grant, 67, of will be held Friday at 2 p.m. in Diego, Calif. police said. a small miracle.” who was shot by another employee South United Methodist Church, Davis then held a chair over her olds, from left, Sharon Rockville died Monday at Rockville Private graveside services will xll Airport manager Richard Pealer in 1981. 1226 Main St., Manchester. Somers head but then put it down and left General Hospital. He was the be in the East Cemetery. There are Lerman, Rebecca Mok- said winds blew the plane off the the house, police said. The jury found in February that husband of Bernice (Jackson) Funeral Home has charge of no calling hours. Holmes Funeral \¥ runway as it landed, causing it to hit arrangements. An officer arriving at the scene riski and Steven Zakowicz Amtrak knew the attacker, Joseph Grant and father of Patrice Nie- Home, 400 Main St., has charge of ,two other parked aircraft. found Thomas Davis in a car at the Leonetti of New Haven, was dan­ winski of Bolton. Memorial donations may be the eyepiece of a arrangements. end of Wilfred Road. Davis was "There wa« minor damage to the gerous and that he should have been Bom in Manchester, he lived in made to the Marikar Children’s two nianes, but sne wrecked her Memorial donations may be held on $8,000 bond and was to telescope. dismissed before he shot '"•arles Rockville for 37 years and owned Schoalrship Fund, Connecticut Na­ own.” Peaic. made to a charity of the donor’s appear this morning in Manchester Smith, now of Philadelphia. aflu operated SAG Auto Service in tional Bank, 320 W. Middle'Turn­ choice. Superior Court. nVrBPwpnwfV Vy n iiw MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesdav. July 28, 1987 — U East Catholic posts honor roll East Catholic High School has yon, Koyin Travis, Laura. Vodoplvoc. Relschorl, Kristina RisCqssI, Je-Morle Early Coca-Cola trays are collectible announced its honor roll for the nrst Honors Rued, David Ruszyk, Donlollo Smith, Kothloon Bator, Modollno Bourclor, f fourth quarter of the 19M-87 school Holdl Brooden, RoMn Bucklov, Bryan year: usch, Nicholas Composoo, Thomas Here Is Carlson, Ooll Chleoino, Kathryn d i ­ **KSfhrvn3u5lnls, Oovld Walker. $50 was a dream-on anyway, Elaine, the Weekly told about the big promo­ •K A M 9 shorn, Jonnifsr Cook, Klmborly Cunoo, because it is listed at only $25 Auroon Cyr, Jonnifsr DoMorco, Jon- World War I tion by Coca-Cola USA and affil­ Nm^ wNb OMHicItoa unblemished in current books.) -CqWitfjng ■eelty, Kolll BwkIm'. Erie nllor DechoHy, Sarah Fallon, Jonnifsr GRADE n _ Girl, telling us iates to reissue the trays of 1912, Bertrond, Eomy Cnel, Barbara Choro- Froso, Jomos Oormon, Erin Hoooartv, Honors wttb DMIncNon The other tray purchased was the 1914 and 1916 — this with a slogan of Susanna Karon Kolly, Chrlstophor Koubo, Mo- Chrlstophor Brady, April Choslov, to eqjoy Coca- Cofleertors’ thow KrukoskI, Jodl-Lvn LoBrun, James Cnoma, Fronclno CImIno, Mi­ 1958 “ Picnic Basket” original, as painful punsterism and warning 1 O'wdlnl, Torato Cola - "deli­ MofKin McOurn, Lvnn McKalg. Kovin Lynch, Mark Mogllclc, Ellzoboth chelle Curtis, Glen Oaroskovlch, Jomes new, for $20 (Canadian money), words so people would know they t Mahou, Mark McConnoll, Fhvllls Pollen, Kurt Flleso. Corroon Orllll, cious and re­ Corner MIebala Morin, Kristin Show, William after a friendly haggle. Good, only were getting reproductions. The Ipnski, Karon violotto. McDovItt, Brian McOrath, Dorok Pos- Kristin Gunther, Kathryn LoFOntona, freshing." Note torlck, Suzonno Poraro, Losloy Porl- Joanns Larson, Elliaiwth (Madden, Russ MacKendrick they do blivit us with a lo percent EIrM Honors the glass: It is 1912 was a cameo girl with an Mjlsiw Josoph Burns, Ma- mon. Jamas Podann, Clolno Prico, Matthew Reiser, Sharon Rllov. Suson tax on everything but the air you incredibly wide-brimmed hat, the rvelhm CallMion, Cordlnolo, Ell- Oonlol Eovolloso, Scan Stozlor, Chris­ Trocclolo, Stephen Wlorbickl. vin ta ge 1900- breathe. Corrlora, Olono Cotlln, Lisa tian Svolk, JonnIfOr Tully, Scott Wall, Pirat Honors 1920. You can '14 was “ Betty ... a dream in pink Ctalow, <>orvl Constantino, Cbrlstlno Jason Weed, Joan Zlollnskl. Donna Bottollno, Rochol Bogin, Nila Trays advertising (!oke were and lace," and the '16 was our p A m ^ . Klnea Oocsv, Karon POhlino, Bollodv, Nora Bellows, Paul Bolduc, tell by the flar­ known to have been made way back Lvm Oontllcoro, Kollv Koono, Shoren *^MollndaMunlt, Eric Nltschko. Judith Burns, Damian Canny. ElTsaboth ing and by the Elaine, Just like this only on a large Corbonneou, Stophanlo Chbyor. Leri in 1896, but the earliest extant is an oblong tray that had room for a FSEST**!?' Kondrlek •B A D E II smooth rim. Later Coke glasses are Stophanlo McDormott. Honors with DMIncHon Clnclvo, Maryann Clatfoy, (Melissa whimsy by a Manchester resident 1898, 9>A-inch round “ Delicious bouquet of roses in the design. W . ^ .**«=W.omoo.Sara Moyors, Karon Amollo Boorso, Andrao Boorso, John Cote, Heather Cress, Scott D'Amoto, bellied and have a beaded edge. vacationing on Prince- EMward Kristopher DoRoohn, Heather Fronds, Refreshing” tin with Lillian Nor- All right — the slogan was “ We're Kristino Poauotto, Maroorot Bioko Jr., Bothony Butoou, Poos Tbls lO-by-13-inch tray with Bllov, Karon Schroodor, Jotfrov Christman, David Dubbs, Roy Englor, Noelle Gotoly, Eric Griffith, Anno Island. It was marked $8 and dlca (?) seated at a teatable. No Bringing Back the Good Ole Harkins, Barbara Haynes, Coral Jac­ Elaine’s picture in color is a 525)225' . ■•♦.'L SJtIvInpton, Cynthia Cothsrlno Foloy, Brian Gordon, Dou- dickered down to $6. Dealers on price seen for this one, but a 1901 Trays.” Troeerolo, Amy Wot- alas Hlcksv, Am y Musko, Robort Poole, obs, Justin Koldv, Michael Kaminski, reproduction as indicated on the S22l£i Wohr, Ann Woykovsky. Jill Sllvorstein, Barbara Wlocok, Luke ScoH Kendall, Andrew KlepfOr, Jill Anne-of-Green-Gables Island like glass change receiver with Hilda Get it? •acaiio tfonors Zahner. Knloht, Patricio Lamy, Soon Longon, lower edge, which also says "... to "talk.” Typically you go into a d a rk is listed at $1,500 — the Julio Lampson. First Honors Micnelle LoPloco, Stacey LoBrun, Printed in USA — Limited Cana­ Heather Matthews, J eseM McGuln- cavernous Quonset hut where highest figure noted. TONIGHT; Midsummer get- Thomas Aylward, II, Caryl Balskus,. dian Edition — 1076...” SBAOB IS Robort Bouchor, Melissa Carroll, De­ ness, Brenda Mozdzierz, Leri Nodler, heaven knows what memorabilia A 1906 change tray, a small oval, together for members and guests of Honors wltb Distinction John Nitschke, Craig Nowak, Colleen According to C!ecil Munsey’s book bra Dolesslo, Julie Dolesslo, Dawn and miscellany might be on the saying “ Coke Relieves Fatigue” — the Manchester Philatelic Society AP photo Jamss Cardinalo, DlStetono, Margo Enalehardt, David Pottdvlna, Kristen Petrued, Kathleen ("The Illustrated Guide to the Caring tor orphan Ellraboth Dickinson, Jotfroy Dill, Kolly Pravel, Kathleen Olllesple, Michael Plllon, Elly Price, Jennifer Piynskl, tables. You wander around, picking that happy caffeine kick — is shown at Center Congregational Church, FOhoy, Krlston KozIckI, Torosa Luot- Griswold, Carlo Kohler, Joseph Koubo, John Ryan, Jr., Kathleen Sornlk, Collectibles of Coca-Cola,” Haw­ up things and repladng them. lon, Korry Luoma, Maura MacDonald, at $300 to $325 in the Antique Trader 6; 30 to 9 p.m. pmothy KrukoskI, James Lacock, IV, Denise Saunders, Jlllmorle Sorlgnese, thorn, 1972), there were two origi­ Pretty soon the storekeeper will Pamela Stone, a research worker at porpoise beginning to respond to human Cpiloon M o d ^ , Karon Mozdziori, Colleen Lenegon, erin Lenehon, Su­ Elizabeth Steele, Nancy Sulick, Donna Price Guide. Nearer to our own Marine World/Africa USA in Vallejo, Maroorot Nolan, Krista WisnIswskI, zanne Linder, John Lund, Jeon Lynch, Thibodeou, Kristen Waldron, Kathryn nals with this same picture in 1917. appear and say, “ Anything you like time we see an 1931 “ Farm-Boy- care. The orphan porpoise was found last Jpromy Polmor, Christo Poullo, Mot- Nancy Martel, Robet McNomee, Amy Wuschner, Lawrence MIylana. III. One was a 4-by-6-inch oval change Second Honors — make me an offer.” With-Dog” by Norman Rockwell Russ MacKendrick is a Manches­ Calif., touches Miwok, a week-old f ''? '. '*.‘1“ ' Rusesvk, Holdl Mergendahl, Elisa Mis, Susan Murphy, or tip tray, now selling for around' week on a beach north of San Francisco. Sehowty, Lisa Shorldon, Tricia Skor- Elizabeth Musgrave, Susan O'Neill, Morgoret Balchon, Colloon Dochortv, There was a 1950 "Menu Girl” for $300 and for 1934 a Johnny ter resident who is an authority on a zynskl, Kolll Storons, Stophanlo Sulll- Llso Peorsall, Michael PetruccI, Karl Michael McGorry, Carol Vlloa. $85, and the other an 8>/t-by-l9 Coke tray with burn marks from Weissmuller-Maureen O’Sullivan wide range of collectibles. Write lb oblong listed at $250. "ELAINE" OF WORLD WAR 1 somebody’s wanton cigar. It was (Tarzan and Jane), at the same him in care of Collectors’ Corner, The tray In the photo here was one priced at $50; the offer was $10, and Advice . . . note the vintage Coke glass price. Manchester Herald, P.O. Box 501, Cheney Tech lists top students of three picked up in a whirl of the sale consummated at $15. (The A 1973 piece in the Antique Trader Manchester 06040.

Howell Cheney Regional Voca­ Robert*, Monica T. Torres. GRADB I t tional Technical School has an­ High Heiwrs Manchester Yesterdays GRADE II Do Christians wrongly omit nounced its final honor roll for the Jerry A. Armstrong Jr., Mark O. H M Henors Cusson, Todd E. Pierce, Carlo Rug­ 1986-87 school year. David S. Chappell, Terrence O. giero, Diane M. Sandberg. Donnelly, Henry B. KIslelewIcz, Tho­ GRADE » mas A. Loto. Moners Mormons from their ranks? High H onen Joseph J. Bochlochl Jr., Joseph W. Nathan Jay Paradis. Baldlnger, Edward L. Balon, Joseeb C. Case Mountain was kids’ playground Honors Larry W. Ash, Mark D. Aspinwall, Bezzina, Christopher J. Brown, Steven DEAR sus was neither married nor had Neill E. Brown, Frederick F. Bushev, Donovan G. Bergeron, Peter M. Cos- M. Camp, Peter J. Carinl, David P. ABBY: Bravo to Andrew P. Cavar, Sengphet Chontorak, tonguov, David J. Charron, Dean J. Combs, Thomas C. Dowd, Brian N. children. Jesus, in Mormon theol­ Coulombe, Todd M. Dovhan, James By H enry S .G ryk you for saying Bryra A. Davis, Jason P. Grivols, Clint Gaboury, Victoria Gorblch, Donna L. chopped onions. :! f’. u B b ogy, is the blood brother of Lucifer! E. Hayden, Michael W. Hodgkins, Paul Gochee, Kevin R. Harrington, Brian T. Gill, Craig B. Goldsnider, Jason J. that members of Matthew Kopll, Vincent James Klezos, Hendrickson, Paul A. Hunter, James M. Another pond we fished was located in the Christianity has never professed Krone, Robert A. Lamoureaux, David Granoto, Douglas W. Johnson.Steven the Church of such a notion. Oorald J. L ^ le r c , Dennis Roger M. Kamm, Robert B. Kent, Timothy M. When I was a teen-ager and lived on Wells woods off Fern Street that someone named Martin, Timothy P. Messenger, Chrls- A. Luduke, BUI Martin, Thomos J. Lorsen, William R. Letourneou, Daniel Jesus Christ of Dear Abby Mormino, MIchoel J. Nelson, Glenn A. Street, we kids used to explore the woods “ Red Gates.” One day my buddy, Lewis Abby, the differences (between topher John Masher, Ronald Edward J. Madden, Jonathan P. Mozzeo, Ken­ Latter-day JAott, Sarah L. Movnihan, Patrick Parent, Ba H. Pho, Ronald W. Pirtel, neth J. Melluzzo, Matthew S. MM- and fields around Case Mountain and called Jones, killed a 3-foot-long black snake on the Saints (Mor­ Abigail Van Buren C!hristianity and Mormonism) are Pascal Polok, Dean R. Poulin, Heidi A. Robert L. Rolfe II, David A. Rorrio, brandt, Steve T. Norman, Thomas A. Purvis, Steven W.B. Schick, Sonlyn A. Michael C. Schwrager, Michael R. Sills, it our playground. There were not too many bank of the pond. He cut it open to save the mons) are shocking and countless; The Mor­ Prebit, Mark RIslev, Todd J. Rossini, Seronl, Jonathon E. Snow, Jimmy Scott Michael J. St. Germain, Fitz G. Walker Dean M. St. Amand, Stephen E. restrictions or houses in that area then. skin, and found it full of baby snakes. In the Christians. mon Church has an excellent Wright. III, Christopher J. WItham, MIchoel P. Torosek, ScoHT. Washburn, Michael E. In those days, by the spring water However, I wili reputation, one that carefully pres­ Zougg. Wilson, Kevin C. Zorda. fall, we went squirrel-hunting in the woods GRADE IS location, there was a two-story community be very much ents the positive aspects of this Nigh Honors there. In the fall we picked hickory nutes surprised if you religion; good family values, no ^■^•vor N. Forbes, Christopher R. clubhouse. We played basketball there one from a grove of trees in a meadow back of drinking, smoking, etc. The fright­ Futtner, Rafael J. Meneses, Donald F. day on the second floor, and if you missed do not receive hundreds of letters DEAR ERMA JEAN; Your esti­ Sauer. Cases’ mill and off of Highland Street. telling you that you are wrong! ening part of this is that many of the Honors the left side of one of the backboards, the Before Christmas we’d pick Princess pine mate of the number of letters I members themselves do not know The experience of "L.D.S. in received telling me that I was BonOv M. Arrows- ball would go bouncing down a flight of and evergreen runners in the woods off of Ashland.” who was told by a bus all the religion's beliefs. The r -U Bldwell, Darren M. "w rong" to say that Mormons were religion has many levels of involve­ Cubit, qiln H. Grant, Gary M. Helm, stairs to the first floor. One day the building Spring Street and make Qiristmas wreaths. driver that she was not a C!hristian. Christians was conservative — to Steven Infante, Raymond N. Lorose, ment. Only one deeply entrenched >-. Manville, Troy D. Maxfield, caught fire and burned to the ground. In the winter after a hard freeze we went was not that unusual. I am amazed say the least. Read on; PLANNING YOUR in the faith would know all the Dovid P. McConnell, Phaksinh S. A bunch of us kids used to hang around ice skating on a pond in back of Rogers’ at the number of people who have Moundrotv, John R. Plefko, John L. been told by their ministers and beliefs and secrets of the Mormon evenings at Lewis’s grocery store on paper mill that we called "th e Deep.” Church. pastors that Mormons are not DEAR ABBY: Please rush this Charter Oak Street, and on two occasions, I After a heavy snow fall, several of us used Qirlstians. I am even more amazed into print before some Mormon dies recall, when the full moon was out. w e’d to go skiing down the trails and road paths You owe it to your readers to UConn cites when those misinformed people believing that he is a Christian! walk to the top of Case Motmtain (we called acknowledge this. VACATION on Case Mountain. The skis then had only a declare to those of us who are it the Lbokout) to look toward Hartford to Although Joseph Smith (the A TRUE CHRISTIAN town students leather strap attached where you stuck your members of the L.D.S. church what founder of Mormonism) did say, see the Travelers Tower lights. artic or boot in. and if you fell, the skis fell we do and do not believe about IN KANSAS “ We believe in God and Jesus In the summer, some of us would go off easy. Jesus Christ. (Christ." it is not the God and Jesus The following Manchester resi­ dents have been named to the fishing in Case Reservoir off the stone wall We sure enjoyed ourselves in those days. I count among my friends Pro­ (Christ Christians have believed in testants. Catholics, Jews, Baptists DEAR TRUE: I read your letter dean's list at the University of near the log cabin. In the fall, I trapped for And to most of these events we walked, 2 for 2,000 years. Let me explain; to two officials of the Mormon Connecticut in Storrs for the spring muskrats along the banks and received because none of us owned cars then. .-TOX* and evangelical Christians. I can­ Mormons believe that God was not imagine my ever presuming to Church in Salt Lake a ty , and they semester; about $1.75 a skin. /• once as we are now. with the body of acknowledged that much of what tell any of them what they believe. flesh and bones — not a spirit God College of Agriculture and Natural Henry Gryk skis at Highland Park in Henry S. Gryk lives at 59 Wetherell St. His you say is true. However, Mormons Resources: Arthur A. Fettig One day, a few of us went to locate the ”>1' • I had many misconceptions of the as the Bible teaches us. Mormons School of Allied Health; Cheryl J. this winter 1939 picture. last column for "Manchester Yesterdays" Roman Catholic Church, but they have never been taught that Jesus mysterious Copper Cave. We found it about believe that If men obey the Santoro was about bis days picking strawberries in wfere clarified for me by a good had many wives and children. College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; mandates of the Mormon Church, 500 yards downstream in back of Case mill. Street West and another place was off Villa friend who is a member of that Janet L. Bocker.Suson E. Baker, WII- Manchester and Bolton. they can become gods themselves Are Mormons Christians? Sa­ liS"? f - ?«''•*'' C. Boisvert, The entrance was Just off the stream bank Louisa Road near a swamp. church. I hope that if anyone wants Christine A. Brant, Cothleen M. CIrone, and rule over and populate other muel W. Taylor, noted Mormon and very small. We had to bend over to get Many times after a few days of rain during to know what someone of another planets. Patrick M. Comlns, Patricia A. Crow- Do you have a memory of Manchester author, addressed that question lev, Undo H. Emerson, Tonya J. in. It looked like a small tunnel and had the summer, my father took me to the woods 8 faith believes, that he or she will this way in American Weekly in Escovlch, Suzanne W. Flake, Kim M. you’d like to share with Herald readers? The Mormon Church used Chris­ water in it so we didn’t go in too far. off Spring Street and taught me how to ask a member of that faith. We may 1955; “ Yes, indeed — but neither Girard, Leonle F, Gloesner, Robert A. Write to: Manchester Yesterdays, m y ■ tian terminology, but they have Glenn, Peter I, Grosls, David C. In July, we picked tall bush blueberries at ail leam something very valuable Protestant nor Catholic. Mormons identify and pick the edible mushrooms. Manchester Herald, P.O. Box 591, their own definitions of these terms. Jeonnotto, Jeffrey W. Kennedy, Jen- V that way — tolerance, understand­ believe that there was a breaking Kennedv.CrIstopher A, Magon, two locations — one patch was off of Carter They tasted good fried in bacon fat and Manchester 06040. M ing and, more important, the truth. For example, the Moi^non Jesus away of the other churches from Michelle M. Malor, Christopher K. •r ERMA JEAN HANSON Marti, Andrea L. Mlkolowsky, Richard had at least three wives and many true Christianity and that their J. Owens, Fellcina G. Petlto, Paul E. KENT, WASH. children. The New Testament Je­ religion is the restored Gospel.” Potamlanos, William F. Prenetta, Mar- %,< tho G- Ramey, Llso A, Relmer, John W. Book probes ‘technowar’ in Vietnam J; Seoto, Charlene F. Sentelo, Nancy J. Sheldon, Sue SzempllnskI, Mary Ann Troy, l^son E. Weinberg, Kelly J. Wynn, Victoria L. Zenick By AAlchelle Locke practice,” writes Gibson, a sociolo­ Papers.d Gibson, 35, who had a Heating pads can be risky The Associated Press I School of Business Administration; gist at Southern Methodist Univer­ progressive eye disease, did not Kristen Henderson, LIzette Heritage, sity . Shoron A, Kelly, Brian C, Kuhl, Llso M. Don’t Forget To Plan serve in Vietnam. He spent more DALLAS — Vietnam was the D E A R D R . Romanchuck, Christina C. Roy, Kim­ Under ’’technowar,” the chief than seven years researching the with polycythemia vera (an over­ full-strength execution of “ tech­ GOTT: Heating berly A. Wright; School of Engineer­ objective is to cause the enemy to book, discovering the businesslike production of blood cells) are not ing: GLen D. Bolduc, Diana I, Flores, nowar,” a new style of fighting that ‘'y pads come with “ bankrupt” its manpower. Bomb­ aspect of the war while reading the permitted to donate whole blood for Kenneth S. Gagnon, David L. House, took a businesslike approach to ing targets • were evaluated in a warning not to transfusion purposes. However, James M. Memery, Angelo A. Morson, Pentagon Papers. Christopher D. Nelson, Patricia Wolno- How You Will Catch Up killing, according to a new book on economic terms of kill ratios, and use them if one blood components — such as rowskl; School of Fine Arts: Matthew "When I saw that they were has poor circu­ Dr. Gott the war in Southeast Asia. quarterly reports recorded the writing in terms of a productive certain cells and proteins — can be C. Rellev; School of Family Studies: William Gibson’s “ The Perfect lation. Why? Selena M, Croteau, Sharlene M. Cro­ body counts as debits and credits. system, then I thought, ‘Well, why used if the blood is fractionated and War: Technowar in Vietnam” U' Peter Gott. M.D. teau, Carol L. Denno, Dana P. Zackin The concept was responsible for don’t I try to reconstruct the war as the components separated. School of Phamocy: Pamela J. (Atlantic Monthly Press, $24.95), the United States never coming to DEAR Senkow. On ALL The N ew i a society? ’ Once I came up with that has been compared to the Academy Herald photo by Pinlo READER: Furthermore, not ail polycythe­ grips with its enemy, ignoring the model, I Just decided to see how far Award-winning “ Platoon” for its When heat is mia is of the primary type; some years of social struggle against I could pursue it,” he said. clear-sighted look at the question; applied to a part secondary forms are seen — in Crabgrass can take invaders in Vietnam and accepting However, there were drawbacks ” How could a nation of peasants on Baby face of the normal emphysema, for example. People inflated body counts in order to to fighting the war as a business. with secondary polycythemia can While You Are Away. bicycles defeat the United States?” achieve a better bottom line, big share of lawns H ie United States bombed stra­ body, it causes vasodilation — an nize that the heating pad is too hot. Alexis Amber Morlarty, 3, of Manchester, recently placed usually donate blood. Because The answer, according to Gib­ Gibson says. tegic roads and oil depots, overlook­ opening up of the blood vessels that Heating pads are best avoided by third in the Official America’s Little Mias Pageant photo patients with polycythemia have SOMERVILLE, N.J. (A P) — The son’s book, is that the U.S. military The corporate concept, with ing the fact that few people^n carry heat away and prevent tissue people with poor circulation; they two most prevalent weeds affecting blood that is too thick, phlebotomy machine viewed North Vietnam as enlisted men taking the guise of Vietnam owned cars and the contest in Pennsylvania. Alexis will be auditioning in the damage. If a person has poor cause more problems than they (removal of blood) benefits these American l^ n s are the dandelion a mirror image, albeit a poorer one, shift workers while officers sought military transported supplies in modeling category on Aug. 2 in Pennsylvania. She circulation, this vasodilation may solve. and the less noticeable but far more patients by reducing viscosity. operating under the same princi­ upward mobility, led to the break­ small, hard-to-spot trucks. not occur and heat from the pad will destructive crabgrass. graduated from the Hanover School of Modeling in West Therefore, although polycythemia Call ples and motivations. down of loyalty in the ranks. “ The American war managers therefore be focused on a specific DEAR DR. GOTT; I read in your ‘ ‘If left unchecked, crabgrass can patients may not be able to help “ There were no ‘mistakes’ made One wail of Gibson’s office at simply could not get outside their Hartford and enjoys acting, singing and dancing. area. This can cause bums or tissue column that someone with poly­ take over 80 to 90 percent of your others by visiting a blood bank, they Today And during the Vietnam War. Nor was SMU is lined with books about own assumptions about the nature damage. cythemia visited a blood bank. I lawn,” says Dr. Henry W. Indyk, an may be helping themselves. there a failure of will; the self- Vietnam, ranging from the gritty of power," Gibson said. In addition, patients with circula­ knew that bleeding was necessary extension specialist in turfgrass WILLIAM GIBSON Have imposed restraints were only on memoirs of foot soldiers to the Under the corporate approach to tory disorders may have lost the for this disease, but isn’t the blood . . sociologist-author management at C^ook College- official paper, not in Technowar technical prose of the Pentagon war, officers saw themselves as ability to sense heat in a particular tainted? Rutgers University. About Town portion of sMn. Under these cir­ DEAR DR. GOTT: My tongue The business managers and enlisted and throat swell up from paint “ A smart approach to controlling men were seen as a kind of migrant cumstances, they may not recog- ' crabgrass is to specifically target DEAR READER: Most peonle fumes. What future side effects labor force, according to Gibson’s the weed,” he says. "W ait until the Manchester children. could result from over-exposure to New Books book. Lutz hours change crabgrass starts coming up strong, these fumes? Incidents of “ fragging," officer usually in midsummer, and then Herald Winner goes to Hawaii assaults, occurred. Gibson cites The Lutz Children’s Museum on Tlioashte use a post-emergence product to Martin, V — A recent martyr Bloom ,ed.— Stephen Crane's rhered statistics showing 126 assaults on deal directly with the problem.” Saved In A New books at Manchester’s Martin, W The rising of the moon badge of courage South Main Street holds hours Ilene Kesten of Manchester has DEAR READER: The swelling officers in 1069 rising to 321 Indyk says post-emergence pro­ Whiton Memorial Library: Maxwell — Equinox Carter — Everything to gain Tuesday through Sunday from noon won the grand prize in the Ameri­ of your tongue and throat indicate Miller — Inventing the Abbott* and Chandler — Putting your money to incidents in 1971. to5p.m.; Thui^ay, noontoSp.m.; can Lung Association of Connecti­ extreme sensitivity to paint fumes. ducts are a good alternative for Vacation Pak other stories work Answers to childhood prayers within us the things for which we FICTION c lo s ^ Monday through August. cut’s Celebrity Waiters Luncheon. If you continue to be exposed to many bothersome weeds. Since Adams, H — Wlwfl rich m*n die Moss — Carnival of spies. Cheng — Life and death In Shanghai “ A callousness toward the well­ care, and the concerns to which we Nichols — American blood Coleman — The Impossible dream General admission is $1,75 cents for She won a trip fpr two to Waikiki, Earlier in our century Allenby these vapors, you run the risk of they target specific problems, they And Adorns, J — Seattle green being of the troops was simply too are later willing to give ourselves. Alexanders — The tycoon Niven — The smoke ring remembered senior citizens and SO cents for Honolulu, Hawaii. Bridge, built to span the Jordan experiencing a more profound often are less wasteful and more Auchinclos* — Skinny Islond Parker — Pole king* and princes Cooley — Eat smart for a healthy evident and was part of the Jesus said, “ If you remain in me Paretskv — Bitter medicine River, was named to honor Allenby reaction: swelling of the throat to economical than their pre­ Catch Up On Auster — In the country of lost things heart corporate mentality,” he said. and my words remain in you, ask Bayer — Pattern crime* Plaldv — The third Geerge Davis — This 'n that who helped in the miraculous the point where you cannot breathe. emergence counterparts. Plimpton — The curious case of Sidd Because of the importance of whatever you wish and it will be Bellow — More die of heartbreak DMIberto — Debutant* conquest of Jerusalem. Avoid paint fumes to which you are Berger — Beinginvisible Finch Flak* — Tarnished crown balance sheets, body counts were given to you.” — John 15.7. Pope — Convoy At a reception in London, Allenby allergic. Poet Dylan Thomas was bom in BroWleld — Pearl* Green* — Be true to your school all-important. Gibson quotes exten- Carter — On other day* while going Rend — The free Frenchman Hammer — The CBS murders told how as a little boy he knelt to We need to remain close to the the Wales in 1914. Ripley — New Orleans legacy sively from soldier memoirs that home Home Planners, ed. — 244 say his evening prayers. He was Lord. Then we will ask approp­ Coppel — Show me a hero Ross — The pllgrlm aM Houseplants detail the confusion and inflation riately and in accordance with All The News When You Return Coughlin — Her honor Sagan______— _A______reluctant n*lero Kennett— G. I.: The Americon soldier surrounding the body count Berard, ‘n ereta Victoria, daugh­ maternal grandparents are Mr. taught to pray after his mother, Sanders — The Timothy files Lo Bronche — A constellation for 7 Crichton — Sphere ter of Victor J. and Betty Akmentin end Mrs. Robert Helme of Vernon. "And, O Lord, we would not forget God's word. If we keep the Simmons — The belle* letters paper* quilters process. Denker — The choice Berard of 105 Brigham Road, Her paternal grandmother is Flos­ Thine ancient people, Israel; closeness we may well find in the The Idyll of the MIN Drummond — A captive freedom Svec — Spirit wolf Lopping — Apartheid: a history years to come that he has privi­ Dunnett — NIccolo rising Thomas — Stranger* Lekachman — VIsItlons and From that evolved the “ Mere (Coventry, was bom July 8 at sie Sfiridis of New Britain. hasten the day when Israel shall a mualcal faroa by Burton S Naaon Laavitt Thurm — Wolklna distance nightmares leged us to be part of the answer to Ely — Starlight ^ . Gook Rule; If it’s dead and it’s Manchester Memorial Hospital. again be Thy people and shall be Estleman — Lady yesterday Turow — Presumed Innoncent Levin — (UilgoH Adams m Sequel to The Frogs of Windham Updike — Trust me MacLeon — Caring for your parents Vietnamese it’s VC (V ietcon g)It Her maternal grandparents are restored to Thy favor and to their the prayers we have offered before GUI — Nursery crime* Conyers, Peter Thomas, son of ' Veryon — The tyrant Peck — The different drum was part of the relentless move to Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Akmentin of land." him. Gerdimer — A * o ^ of nature Ronald R. and Donna M. Brunoli July 29. 30,31 A August 1 Grafton — “ D " Is for dsodbeot Vldol — Empire Perlmutter — The Ilf* and times of improve "profits,” he writes. Glastonbury. Her paternal grand­ Allenby said, " I never knew then Train your children to take not Weldon — The Shrapnel Academy AAenachem Begin Conyers of 26 Coleman Road, waa Granger — The el murders Wilson — The red truck parents are Mr. and Mrs. Jean- that God would give me the Just small prayers, but the BIG 8 P.M. Hoymon — Death of a god P.M.L.i.e. — Memories of Hartford Gibson doesn’t believe “ tech­ bora July 10 at Manchester Memor­ CALL TODAY! Heolv — So like sleep Woods, Sara — Naked villainy Rosin — Stepfotherlng Pa\il Berard of West Hartford. She prayers also, before the Lord, and Woods, Stuart — Under the lake nowar” ends with the fall of Saigon, ial Hospital. His maternal grand­ privilege of helping to answer my Windham High Schaol TIekab Huggon — The Elizabeth stories Rule — Small sacrifice* has a sister, Felicia Marie, 3‘A. own childhood prayers." — watch God make them part of the SIM* — Beverly and cites (Antral America, where parents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Nasin Auditorium <6 — Adults Kaplan — Drogonflre NONPICTIOH Kennealv — Polo solo SIneno, ed. — The firefighter's the same anti-communist mecha­ (Chosen People, Signs of the Times, answer to their own prayers. *4 — Seniors 65 & Over Ambrose— Nixon cookbook Sflrldlo, SteRbauie Arlaaa, Brunoli Sr. of 30 Llynwood Drive, High Street, Willlmantic King — Misery Avture-Scheele — Origami In color nism is being set up with warnings Paul Lee Tan) Children under 12 L'Amour — The haunted mesa Spado — Grace daughter of George A. ajid Loretta Bolton. His paternal grandparenta Our childhood prayers become Berkow — The man who robbed the Stroud — Close pursuit that failure to intervene could set R. Helme Sfiridis of 42 Oak Forest are Mr. and Mrs. Roy Conyers of Rev. Norman E. Swensen 647-9946 Lawrence — Satisfaction Terry, ed.— Bloods, on oral history of Call 2W-9114, 423-7069 for tiekata (or at the door) Llnzee — Housebreaker vary important. Ilie y plant deeply THnlty Covenant Church ^'Bloom, ed. — Henry David Thoreou the Vietnam War off a domino effect north to the Drive, was bora July 10 at Man­ 106 Concord Road. He has a McCutchon — Halfhyde goes to war Bloom, ed. — Stephen Crone Texas-Mexico border. McDermott — That night Whipple — The Challenge chester Memorial Hospital. Her brother, Matthew, 2. i i ---- MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuegdav, July 28. 1967

MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday, July 28. 1967 — 15 Top-rated ‘60 Minutes’ never loses a lawsuit By M ary Campbell a Tradition” attended by Hewitt, Hewitt says it's difficult to do a The Atsoclotcd Press correspondents Mike Wallace, produceri, lays phone calli are 1946 and produced "The CBS story about someone who doesn’t made to check out lettera that sound Morley Safer, Ed Bradley, Diane want to be interviewed. "In a Evening News,” first with Douglas NEW YORK - CBS’s "60 Min­ promising. Then a producer travels Edwards, then for 17 years with Sawyer and Harry Reasoner, and newspaper, you can quote a lot of f r 'i utes” has finished in the top 10 in the to the area and does research. humorist-commentator Andy people about that person,” he says Walter Citonkite. He talks about "60 television ratings each of the last 10 Rooney. Finally, the correspondent goes out Minutes” with verve and enthusi­ “ But people watching T V want to •Vi? years. It also has been sued 37 " I would say almost a fourth of and conducts intoi^ews. asm, 20 years after he says he Leach lifts Jays past Bosox hear from that person. times, and never lost. “ You can almost smell the good “ Invented” the show. the story ideas now come from “ We did a story on a guy running There may be a correlation there. ones.” Hewitt says. "W egota letter viewers.” Hewitt says. ” I think a a phony cancer clinic and really “ I grew up a big fan of Life and By The Associated Press Don Hewitt, executive producer of from Oregon that a girl was killed Boston pitchers. The Red Sox lot of people threaten other people, taking people. Our cameraman Look magasines,” he says. " I “ There’s no question that I ’ve the Sunday evening news maga- and the kid who obviously should be finished with 10 hits. Barfield also hit a solo home run ‘If you don’t stop that. I’m going to went in as a rich recluse who figured it was tiifie for TV to have had some ups and downs this year,” slne, says “ 60 Minutes” gets more arrested was related to the sheriff. TORONTO — Like two hesvy- Musselman raiseci his record to for Toronto while Mike Greenwell write to “ 60 Minutes.’ ” We’ve sort happened to have a lot of canMras its own Life and Look. It worked said Leach, whose appearances mail than the rest of the network Nobody was arrested. It was a welght boxers, the Toronto Blue 8-4 w th an Inning of shutout relief in hit a three-run homer and Ellis of become America’s ombudsman. A producer went in as his secretary and if you ask us why, we’re not have been few and far between. “ It combined. It’s because of its sheriff wanting to blow the whistle Jays and the Boston Red Sox went the eighth. Tom Henke took over in Burks added a solo shot for Boston "Most of the mail is asking us to and a soundman as his chauffeur. really sure. We’ve been in the top 10 feels really good to get an opportun­ reputation for provocative, inves­ on another sheriff. Your news sense toe to toe until Toronto’s designated the ninth, retiring the Red Sox in in the second, when the Red Sox redress grievances. There’s a guy One day Mike Wallace showed up in ratings for the last 10 years. ity to play. This is the first time sent eight men to the plate and tigative TV Journalism. tells you, if he is any good, that’s a hitler Rick Uach finally delivered order for his league-leading 22nd on death row in Texas who probably and said, ‘Those people are a "60 " I say it works because our since I came here that I ’ve had an scored five times. In June, the Museum of Broad­ story. A producer called him and the knockout blow in the eighth save. is going to get off because of a story Minutes” crew.’ The guy talked.” reporters toll stories bettor than opportunity to ploy four games in a casting held a three-day seminar said, ‘This guy is terrific.’ We did inning. Harry did this year. You get Bradley, who does 20 to 26 stories anybody else.” Henke also has nine saves in July, row.” Lloyd Moseby, taking advantage series called "60 Minutes; Creating the story.” Leach, a role player making the a club record. inundated with mail after that.” a year and works with four or five Bradley, 46, thinks he was born a DON HEWITT Leach also walked three times in of a rundown between first and Hewitt began working at CBS in storyteller. ' most of his fourth consecutive start, The Jays, who were down 5-1 in . smell the good ones singled home pinch-runner Willie the game and scored twice. second involving Bell, raced home the second inning and 6-6 in the “ I pitched to him like he was . in the first inning to give Toronto a Upshaw for the tie-breaking score seventh, finally floored the Red Sox in a three-run rally Monday night Babe Ruth,” said Boston starter short-lived 1-0 lead. with four hits off Calvin Schiraldl, Jeff Sellers. Toronto starter Jim Clancy, Tuesday T V that carried the Blue Jays to a lo-8 5-5, in the eighth. 1 »• The Jays added an insurance run making his 300th career start, gave victory over the Red Sox. “ We are not winning, period,’’ , V.,' Leach’s shot to right field made a in the eighth when Barfield scored up eight runs on nine hits before •1^' said a despondent Boston first on catcher Rich Gedman’s error at exiting in the seventh. 5:00PM [D IS ] Mariposa Whan a fa­ winner of reliever Jeff Musselman baseman Dwight Evans after the mily is threatened with foreclosure, their d® Alfred Hitchcock Preeents the plate. Leach tripped between H O U S TO n and snapped Boston’s winning Red Sox slipped to 46-53, 13 games Sellars, meanwhile, walked neighbors come to their aid in this d® Dating Game string at three games. It also kept first and second on'an attempted drama that emphasizes the importance KNIGHTS [E S P N ] Splash Summer Edition out of first place. “ Our record is steal and Barfield took advantage seven and struck out five while of cross-cultural friendship. (60 min.) the Jaysa half-game behind Detroit atrocious. yielding four hits on four runs in Levon Lundy [U S A ] Edge of Night and one game behind the idle New of the confusion to race home, [E S P N ] Speedway America “ We are trying, it’s not like we’re scorin'’ when Gedman dropped the five innings. [M A X ] MOVIE: 'Jake Speed' (CC) A (Michael Beck, I.) 12:50AM [HBO] welcome Home En­ York Yankees in the American not. It’s not like we’re playing good core (CC) Highlights from the July 4. throw dt the plate. Boston Manager John McNam­ young woman seeks the help of a pulp and Joey La League East. and getting beat. We are playing hero to rescue her sister, who has been 1987, concert celebration honoring Kelly Gruber helped set the stage ara was ejected in the third inning riamma (Michael Vietnam vatarans. from Capital center in "It was a little bit of a slugfest,” bad and getting beat. That hurts.” kidnapped by an African white slave for the comeback with a solo homer after Red Sox designated hitter AP photo ring. Wayne Crawford. Karen Kopins, Pare) play mis­ Landover, Maryland. (90 min.) Part 2 of said Musselman, Toronto’s fourth Jesse Barfield’s RBI single, 2. (in Stereo) pitcher on the game. in the seventh to trim Boston’s lead Sam Horn flied out to Barfield. 'The John Hurt. 1986. Rated PG. (In Stereo) matched police­ following back-to-back singles by to 8-7. Boston Red Sox Manager John McNamara is ejected men forced Into Toronto Manager Jimy Williams Toronto right-fielder caught the [T M C ] MOVIE: 'Gremlins' (CC) When a 1:00AM ® Ropers George Bell and Fred McGriff, tied Boston had moved into an 8-6 lead from the game by first base umpire Drew Cobiefoiiowing teen-ager breaks the rules of caring for called It a "wild game.” ball and then dropped it. But the an uneasy partner­ ® Nightlife (R) (In Stereo) the score at 8-8 in the eighth and in the seventh when Marty Barrett his loveable one-of-a-kind creature, doz­ ship in "H ous­ Toronto, which used five pitchers umpires ruled the catch had been a queationabie outfieid catch by Jesse Barfieid of the ens of inalevolent creatures are r ® Joe Franklin paved the way for Leach's hit into scored on a wild pitch by Mark ton Knights.” CBS in all, collected 12 hits off four the right-field corner. made, prompting McNamara to Blue Jays Monday night in Toronto. The Blue Jays won, spawned. Zach Gatligan, Phoebe Cates, 3D Twilight Zone f'-tiz-orn to rr^ “ ♦tircc-riT’* rniiy. storm out of the dugout in protest. Hoyt Axton. 1984. Rated PG. (In Stereo) rebroadcasts d® Maude 10-8. 5:30PM [H B O ] MOVIE: Silverado' the two-hour pre­ [C N N ] Crossfire (CC) In the 1880's the paths of two drif­ miere episode [ES PN ] Surfer Magazine ters converge en route to their destiny in TUESDAY. JULY [U S A ] Search for Tomorrow a town called Silverado. Kevin Kline, 2 8 . Scott Glenn, Danny Glover. 1985. Rated 1:1 SAM ( ® MOVIE: 'Ebony, Ivory and Gaetti’s home run caps dramatic Twins’ kiiiing PG-13 (In Stereo) Jade' A former tennis bum. a race car CHECK IISTINGS driver and a Vietnam hero now manage 6:00PM ® ® dS) ® ®3) News r-iRii f(^ PYArr TikAP a nightclub act and double as private By The Associated Press " I had no hesitation sending Valle ® Three's Company eyes. Bert Convy, Debbie Allen, Claude The Mariners added two runs in the in the game long enough,” the on the play,” Mariners thii^ base Stanley followed with a double to ® Matt Houston Akins. 1979. (R) sixth on Jim Presley’s 16th home left-hander said. right center. gether platonically. Jack Lemmon. Caro­ In one action-packed inning the AL Roundap coach Ozzie Virgil said. “ The ball d j) Gimme a Break Nell begins treating @D Noticiero Univision 1:30AM C® Got Smart Minnesota Twins demonstrated run of the year, a two-run shot to Katie like a child when she discovers the lyn Lynley. Dean Jones. 1963. was hit hard, and Puckett needed a ( ® True Confessions right. truth about the man Katie .is currently Novela: Pobre Senorita Limantour dZ) W ar A Commentary by Gwynne why they are first in the American perfect threw to get him out.” Rangers 5, Brewers 4 Athletics 6, Angels 1 dating Dyer (CC) A film history of the nuclear 3D in n News League West. Tigers 4, White Sox 1 ® MOVIE: 'Little Big Man' A 121 -year- arms buildup since 1945 focusing on Minnesota starter Frank Viola. Seattle Manager Dick Williams Mike Stanley doubled in two runs Dave Stewart won his sixth (T8) Greatest American Hero old man reminisces about his life as a the western powers and the Warsaw d® Bizarre Seattle starter Mark Langston 11-6. allowed six hits and struck out said he considered sending in a Bill Madlock's eighth-inning sin­ with one out in the bottom of the straight game with a five-hitter as young pioneer. Dustin Hoffman, Faye d® Home Shopping Game took a two-hitter and a 3-0 lead into (?5) Angie Pact nations. (60 min.) (R) seven in eight innings before Jeff pinch runner for Valle. gle scored Tom Brookens with the ninth inning as host Texas beat Oakland beat visiting California. Dunaway. Martin Balsam. 1970. the top of the ninth inning Monday d9) Doctor Who [CNN] CNN News [C N N ] Newsnight Update Reardon came on to get his 21st “ It would have been Mike Kin- tie-breaking run and Frank Tanana Milwaukee to reach .500 for first Stewart, 13-7, struck out six and [C N N ] PrimeNews night against the Twins at the save. d l) Charlie's Angels 10:30PM 93) (® in n News [DIS] Zorm gery, and that would have made it scattered seven hits as Detroit beat time since the first week of the walked none in his third complete [D IS ] Golden Pennies After Lucy. Sean Kingdome. Quincy and Bojinda lead an adventurous rescue d® Odd Couple [ES P N ] Surfing: Pro Championships “ It's nice to get one of these once two steps closer, but Valle was out Chicago at Tiger Stadium and season. game of the season. “ Every win From Huntington Beach, Calif (60 min.) Greg Gagne led off with a single d D Reporter 41 of Jack and Clee from Lovejoy's gold @D Nueves Noches con Talina Fernan­ in a while.” Viola said. “ Webattled, by four steps,” Williams said. moved within a half game of New Stanley’s hit came off Brewers feels great. Each one sets a new (R) , dZ) MacNeil / Lehrer Newshour thieves, the Greenwoods and their dez and Dan Gladden followed with a didn’t give up, and got the win.” The victory kept the Twins two York in the A L East. relief ace Dan Please, 4-4. But career high for me,” the right­ friends go their separate ways as Marcel [T M C ] MOVIE: 'Sleepaway Camp' A shy dT) Fame (60 min ) © ) That's Hollywood walk. Steve Lombardozzi then tied The Mariners didn’t give up games head of second-place Oak­ With the score tied 1-1, Brookens Plesac walked two batters in the hander said. and Clee leave Jericho, and Bojinda re­ camper is the prime suspect for the odd the game with his fourth home run either. turns to his aboriginal tribe. (60 min ) [D IS ] Disney Channel Preview happenings going on at Camp Arawak. land and 4>A ahead of California. singled to lead off the eighth, Lou ninth, then gave up Stanley’s Stewart, in his seventh major AP photo [DIS] MOVIE: 'Johnny Tremain' (CC) In 1773, an apprentice silversmith spies Part 4 of 4. Mike Kellin, Felissa Rose. 1984. Rated of the season, a drive deep over the With two outs in the bottom of the Kansas City and Texas. Whitaker followed with a single and double. league season, had never won more 11:00PM ® ® (2® (1® ® News R for the freedom-loving Sons of Liberty [ES PN ] Pro Karate: U.S. Light Middlew­ center-field fence. ninth, catcher Dave Valle doubled Elsewhere, Detroit beat Chicago Madlock singled and took second on With Milwaukee leading 4-3, Pete than nine games before this year. Kirk Alyn, 77, who was the first person to portray and joins their defiant Boston Tea Party. C® dD Late Show (In Stereo) eight Title Michael Husbands (14-2) vs [U S A ] Hollywood Insider Edwin Nunez replaced Langston and Luis ()uinones followed with a 4-1, Texas edged Milwaukee 5-4 and the throw home. After an Inten­ Incaviglia walked to start the ninth, He was signed by Oakland as a free Hal Stalmaster. Luana Patten. Jeff York Daryl Croker (27-8), scheduled for seven ( ® Carol Burnett end Friends and got Kirby Puckett to fly out. “Superman” on fiim, poses recently in Studio City, 1957. 1:50AM [MAX] MOVIE: OMd and single to center, but Puckett made a Oakland defeated California 6-1 in tional walk to Kirk Gibson loaded but was thrown out at third trying to agent last year after being released rounds, from Lancaster. Pa (60 min ) 3D Odd Couple Gary Gaetti then gave the Twins a Calif. Alyn, a dancer, was 37 when he planed the Man (Taped) Buried' The sheriff of a sleepy coastal strong throw to nail Valle at the the only other games scheduled. the bases, reliever Bobby Thigpen advance on Larry Parrish’s shal­ by Philadelphia. [E S P N ] SportsLook 3® Abbott and Costello town tries to solve a series of macabre 4-3 victory when he hit his 20th plate and end the game. Harold Reynolds gave Seattle a came on and Alan Trammell hit a low single to left. Oakland had six hits, all singles, of Steel. [U S A ] Cartoons [H B O ] Philip Marlowe, Private Eye: l2® Barney Miller deaths. Jamas Farentino, Melody Ander­ home run of the season. Guns at Cyrano's (CC) Marlowe goes the son. Jack Albertson. 1981 Rated R. “ When he hit it, Valle froze,” 1-0 lead in the third inning with a two-run single. Curtis Wilkerson ran for Parrish, in a four-run second inning. Alfredo 6:30PM ® M*A*s*H l2® Man end the Animals This magazine- distance against a mobster and senator "H e’s (Nunez) a power pitcher, Puckett said. “ I came hard, and home run just over the left-field Tanana. 10-7, struck out nine and who took second on the throw that Griffin, Luis Polonia and Mark ® ® ABC News (CC) when a boxer s life is threatened (60 style show explores relationships be­ 2:00AM ( ® MOVIE: 'Crulae into Ter­ and came right at me,” Gaetti said. made a good throw right on a line to min.) (In Stereo) tween animals and humans. Host: Bruce ror* The discovery of an ancient sarco­ wall. It was the first homer of the walked one en route to his fourth nailed Incaviglia. Bob Brower McGwire had RBI singles, with CH) Jeffersons (CC) Weitz (""). phagus turns a Caribbean plaasura " I was expecting a fastball and got get Valle at home. I couldn’t believe season for Reynolds, who has hit complete game. “ We’ve been scor­ pinch hit for Oddibe McDowell, and McGwire raising his league­ First ‘Superman’ d@ Laverne & Shirley [U S A ] Riptide just that.” (2® Talas of the Unexpected cruise into a nightmare Ray Milland, they sent him." only two in 320 major league games. ing late, so I felt I had to just keep us walked as Wilkerson stole third and leading RBI total to 82. Hugh O'Brian, John Forsythe 1978. dD ® NBC News 8:30PM ® ® Growing Pains (CC) d® M*A*S*H d3) Nightly Business Report Jason and Mike help a woman deliver a ® MOVIE: ’Or. Strange’ A young psy­ baby in an airplane at 30,000 feet. (R) ®D PELICULA: 'Muleto' Evaristo Mar­ chiatrist is taught the mysteries of the d D Noticiero Univision quez, Mario Almada. Norma Lazareno. leaves retirement C® $1,000,000 Chance of a Lifetime black arts by an ancient sorcerer. Peter [C N N ] Showbiz Today ® S C T V Hooten. Jessica Walter. Eddie Benton 9:00PM ® Houston Knights After La 1976 Playoff to decide Open title [C N N ] Moneyline [E S P N ] Truck and Tractor Pull Fiamma's Chicago partner is gunned Celebration of Caring Saluting the 7:00PM ® CBS News down, he's transferred to Houston [D IS ] Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet 3D for anniversary where he's teamed up with Texas detec­ 50th Anniversary of Foster Parents Plan­ By Tom Canavan C5~) Cfl) News [H B O ] MOVIE: 'Running Scared' (CC) ning featuring hosts Oack Rambo and vored playoff. Sudden death was to round leader, and moved into tive Levon Lundy (2 hrs.) (R) Two Chicago cops are given 30 days to ® ) Wheel of Fortune (CC). Shirley Jones. The Associated Press follow if a champion wasn’t contention by sinking 6- and 8-foot ® ) @® Moonlighting (CC) Maddie and nab a cocaine-smuggling mobster. Gre­ By Jerry Buck C® $100,000 Pyramid David's involvement with a collection gory Hines. Billy Crystal, Steven Bauer. [DIS] MOVIE: Th e Young Visiters' A crowned after 18 holes. birdie putts on the first and fourth mainly in B pictures and such young writer weaves a tale of romance EDISON TOWNSHIP. N.J. — The Associated Press dS) Best of Saturday Night agency leads them into an international 1966. Rated R. (In Stereo) The 48-year-oId Carner is defi­ holes. serials as “Blackhawk," “G- escapade. (60 min.) (R) about a wealthy 19th-century English The 42nd U.S. Women’s Open d® M*A“S*H [U S A ] Friday! (R) gentleman and the young woman ho in­ nitely going to be the sentimental She earned a tie for lead with a Men vs. the Underworld,” (5D MOVIE, Rage’ Convicted of rape, a became the national championship LOS ANGELES — Superman, (H ) Wheel of Fortune 1 1 : 3 0 P M ® ® NigRtline (CC). troduces to society. Tracey Ullman. favorite with the crowd. She was 5-foot birdie putt at the par-3, 15th "Daughter of Don Q„” and young man is assigned to a program de­ Kenny Ireland. Alec McCowen. 1964. that didn’t want to come to an end. Monday. alias Clark Kent, alias Kirk d l) MacNeil / Lehrer Newshour ® Entertainment Tonight Actress Teri hole and grabbed the lead by “ Radar Patrol.” signed to reform offenders. David Soul. Rated NR. j Torrential rains on Sunday " I was going to go fishing Alyn, has retired from the Daily d l) Barney Milter Caroline McWilliams. James Whitmore Garr, shopping for luxury cars. (In making a 5-foot birdie at No. 17. “ 1 didn’t care what they 1980. Stereo) [U S A ] Wrestling stretched the fourth round into tomorrow on our boat down in Palm Planet and his efforts to save the were,” he said. “ They paid me dB) Dating Game Monday. Then twice Monday a Then came the fateful par-4, 3D (2® Honaymooners [H B O ] m o v ie : ’Welrd Sci- Beach (F la.),’’ said Carner, who world from the likes of Lothar d® Jeffersons (1® ^® MOVIE: 'Mafia Princess' (CC) A 2:20AM 350-yard 18th. Her drive was in the my salary and I did them and daughter struggles to find her identity in 3® Topper ence' (CC) Two high-school nerds acci­ champion seemed ready to be has not won a tournament in more and the Spider Woman and Hollywood Squares the desperate world of her father, a noto­ dentally create the woman of their crowned. fairway, but she pushed a 6-iron and forgot them.” d® d® Tonight Show (In Stereo) • - >' - \ than two years. moved to Sun City. But after “ Superman” he was dTj Novela: Victoria rious Chicago crime boss. Tony Curtis, dreams when an electrical storm short Ayako Okamoto of Japan was the ended up 25 feet from the cup on the Susan Lucci. Kathleen Widdoes. 1986. (2® Racing from Plainsfield circuits their home computer. Anthony The catch today could be a piece dZ) Nightly Business Report first apparent winner as she opened back fringe. Alyn. 77. first to portray the typecast. “ I couldn’t get (R) (In Stereo) • d® Hogan's Heroes Michael Hail, Kelly LeBrock, liar of history. If Carner wins her third d D Matt Houston a three-stroke lead through eight A mistake followed as Carner Man of Steel on film, occasion­ another film Job,” he said. "I d® dZ) South American Journey Profiles Mitchell-Smith. 1985. Rated PG-13. (h Open, she would become the oldest dZ) News Stereo) took her putter and hit the ball too ally ventures out of retirement. did play ‘Superman’ again and [C N N ] Moneyline of former champion boxer Antonio "Kid I holes, but fell victim to a balky player in history to win the [C N N ] Sports Tonight putter. firmly, knocking it six feet by the In 1978, he and Noel Neill, the 'Blackhawk,' another comic [E S P N ] SportsCenter Pambele" Cervantes and bullfighter tournament, surpassing Fay Jairo Antonio Castro, both from Colum­ [DIS] MOVIE: 'Oragonslayer' A naive LPGA Hall of Famer JoAnne hole, from where she could not save original Lois Lane, played the book character. Then I went [M A X ] MOVIE: 'Passions' The sudden sorcerer's apprentice is called upon to 2:30AM 3D Twilight zone u / 0 / . Crocker, who won in 1955 a month death of a man who has led a double life bia; and Brazilian soap-opera star Chris­ earner then emerged atop the par. parents of Lois Lane in "Super­ back to New York, where I had tina Mullins. (60 min.) (In Stereo) slay a fearsome flying dragon. Peter [C N N ] Sports Latonight (.SI#-- before her 41st birthday. for years causes trauma for both his wife MacNicol, Caitlin Clark, Ralph Richard­ leaderboard and took a one-stroke man; The Movie.” started. I did 10-12 Broadway and his mistress. Richard Crenna, @1) Novela: Esa Muchacha de Ojos Cafe [E S P N ] SportsCenter “ I never thought I was too old to “ All I was really trying to do was son. 1981. Rated PG. lead to the 18th hole. Three putts win the Open,’’ said the woman plays. I was in New York only Joanne Woodward, Lindsay Wagner [C N N ] Larry King Live 2:35AM c® Nlghtwatch just get it down in two,” said 1984, [E S P N ] SportsCenter from 25 feet meant a bogey and Now Alyn has come out for the two weeks when I got fny first [D IS ] Cinderella Lesley Ann Warren and known affectionately on the LPGA Carner, who has won 42 times in a 50th anniversary of “ Super­ [T M C ] MOVIE; This Is Elvis' Actual foo­ Stuart Damon portray Cinderella and [M A X ] MOVIE: 'Aliens' (CC) The only V*-. dropped her into a tie at 3-under-par Tour as "B ig Momma.” "Most pro career that began in 1970. “ I show, 'Angel in Paris,’ with survivor of the Nostromo's encounter m o v ie : viva Max’ A Mex- KY ■ tage and restaged scenes depict the life her prince in this Rodgers and Hammer- 3:00AM 93) 285 with Okamoto and British man” and the release of his first Ilona Massey. I also did about with a monstrous creature joins a task ican general and his men cross the women athletes don’t last that long just looked at the putt too long. and career of Elvis Presley. David Scott, stein musical. (90 min.) AP photo Women’s Open champion Laura movie serial on video cassette. 125 commercials.” Johnny Harra. 1981. Rated PG. force assigned the unpleasant job of er­ Alamo In disguise, Peter Ustinov, Jona­ and their careers are much shorter When I stood over it it looked real The IS chapters of the 1948 [E S P N ] Top Rank Boxing: Harold The adicating the species. Sigourney than Winters, John Astin, 1969, Davies after 72 holes. than the men. I ’m very happy to be dark because I was right against Alyn returned to Los Angeles [U S A ] Airwolf Shadow* Knight vs. Vernon 'Yogi' Buch­ Weaver, Michael Biehn, Paul Reiser. serial, the first live-action ap­ [C N N ] News Overnight Showing their disappointment after are (from loft): Laura Davies, Ayako And that meant the tournamwent in the position where I am right the grain. I made the mistake of not about a year and a half later and ( ® PM Magazine Ralph P. anan Harold 'The Shadow' Knight vs. 1986. Rated R. (In Stereo) pearance of “Superman" on 7:30PM Vernon 'Yogi* Buchanan for the USBA [E S P N ] Sports Special missing putts on the 18th green in the Okamoto, an(j JoAnne Garner. The was extended into a sixth day today now.” walking away and going to look at it immediately went back into Himmelsbach, the FBI agent who inves­ [U S A ] Feather and Father Gang at the Plainfield Country Club as film, is now on the market in two pictures. “ I did Westerns, musi­ tigated D.B. Cooper's hijacking of a Junior Lightweight title, scheduled for [T M C ] MOVIE: Thia la Elvia’ Actual foo­ U.S. Women’s Open at the Piainfieid three women are tied at three under par It could have been better. again.” 12 rounds, from Atlantic City. N.J. (2 1 1 : 3 5 P M C® Entertainment Tonight. tage and restaged scenes depict the life earner, Davies and Okamoto met Carner started the day three volumes. cals, whodunits, whatever,” he Portland-to-Seattle plane in 1971; Los hrs., 30 min.) (Live) The bogey gave her a course- Angeles lifeguards. Actress Teri Garr; shopping for luxury and career of Elvis Presley, David Scott Country Ciub in Edison, N.J., Monday and will have a playoff round today. in an 18-hoIe internationally fla­ shots behind Okamoto, the third- said. “ I did Sidney Toland’s last cars. (In Stereo) Johnny Harra, 1981, Rated PG, record-equalling 3-under-par 69. ® Currant Affair [H B O ] MOVIE: 'Wildcats' (CC) A feisty WARNER HOME VIDEO is Charlie Chan movie. I did a lot of girls' track coach is chosen to coach a ® d® Jeopardyl (CC). 1 2 : 0 0 A M ® WKRP in Cincinnati 3|30AM [D IS ] Cinderella Lesley Ann also releasing “ Superman and television. I was on 'The Donna rough and rowdy inner-city football Warren and Stuart Damon portray Cin­ ® Entertainment Tonight Actress Teri team. Goldie Hawn, James Keach, ® Tw o Years to Financial Freedom the Mole Men,” a 1951 theatrical Reed Show’ 12 to 14 times, derella and her prince in this Rodgers Garr; shopping for luxury cars. (In Swoosie Kurtz. 1986. Rated R. (In C® Cannon and Hammerstein musical. (90 min.) Rasmussen ignites Yankees Stubbs’ homer aids Dodgers movie starring George Reeves. ‘Highway Patrol’ six times. I Stereo) Stereo) 3D Star Trek [E S P N ] U.S. Olympic Festival Hockey Reeves, who also starred in 104 think ‘Battlestar Galactica’ was d D Major League Baseball: Kansas City [M A X ] MOVIE: 'In Cold Blood' Truman 3® Tales of the Unexpected A former finals, track and field finals, and closing COOPERSTOWN. N Y. (AP) on Monday in the 44th Hall of By The Associated Press “ Thank you for not giving up, runner in scoring position. He was 0 half-hour television episodes one of the last things I did before Royals at New York Yankees (2 hrs., 30 Capote's best-selling book inspired this ceremonies, from Raleigh-Durham N C guers called up by the teaftis for Army interpreter researches the history baby,” Stubbs told his manager for 5 on the night when he led off from 1951-57, committed suicide I retired.” min.) (Live) fact-based story of two ex-con drifters of the French Resistance. (2 hrs.) (R) — Dennis Rasmussen, recently Fame Game. the game, pitched the final two who terrorized and murdered a Kansas LOS ANGELES — Tom Lasorda in 1959. QB) d® Carson's Comedy Classics (2® Movie [M A X ] MOVIE: ’Fiona' A British sex sent to the minor leagues, threw Rasmussen, sent to Columbus innings for the save. after hitting a 12th-inning home run against reliever Scott Garrelts with Alyn has three grown children farm family. Robert Blake, Scott Wilson, was surrounded by a group of Monday night to give the Los his Nth homer of the season. In addition, the latest movie, d® Barney Miller John Forsythe. 1967. Rated R. (2® Consumer Discount Network symbol tells the story of her rise to noto­ shutout ball for seven innings of the International League and six grandchildren. "That’s riety end fame. Fiona Richmond. An­ reporters at his desk when a “ Superman IV; The Quest for d® d® Newlywed Game and Henry Cotto and Juan earlier in the month, allowed It was the first shutout in the Angeles Dodgers a 6-5 victory over the nice part,” he said. “ They [TM C] MOVIE: 'Out Of Africa' (CC) A d® Alfred Hitchcock Presents thony Steel. 1980. Rated R. familiar hand suddenly reached the San Francisco Giants. Peace,” starring Christopher d® Major League Baseball: Boston Red Danish writer's unhappy marriage to a Bonilla hit home runs, giving five hits, struck out five, walked annual contest since the Balti­ The loss, in the only National call me Grandpa Superman.” @® Ask Dr. Ruth (CC). (R) through the crowd and grabbed his. Reeve, opened last week in Sox at Toronto Blue Jays (3 hrs.) wealthy landowner is brightened when Simple’ the New York Yankees a 3-0 two and hit a batter. Al Letter, more Orioles beat the Cincin­ Stubbs had reason to be thankful. League game Monday, snapped a she falls in love with a dashing adven­ (SD Gene Scott (CC) A jealous husband hires a seedy The hand belonged to FTanklin He had failed in his previous two theaters across the country. dZ) Wild, Wild World of Animals victory over the Atlanta Braves another of several minor lea­ nati Reds 3-0 in 1967. four-game San Francisco winning WHY IS "SUPERMAN” sUll turer. Robert Redford, Meryl Streep. [C N N ] Newsnight private eye to murder his estranged wife Stubbs. times at-bat to deliver with a [C N N ] Crossfire Klaus Maria Brandauer. 1985. Rated and her lover. M. Emmet Walsh. Dan He- streak. (Warner Bros, is pushing the popular after 50 years? Alyn [E S P N ] SportsLook 50th anniversary a little. "Su­ [D IS ] Mouseterpiece Theater PG. (In Stereo) daya, John Getz. 1984. Rated R. thought for a moment, then [T M C ] MOVIE: 'Stoogemania' A young [E S P N ] Fishing; Best of Bill Dance [U S A ] Boxing (2 hrs.) perman,” created by Jerome man is obsessed with the Three 4:00AM ® MOVIE: ’Never Give a said, “ He was a do-gooder, he Sucker an Evan Break’ A promoter as­ Siegel and Joe Shuster, did not always got the bad guy.” 8:00PM ® ) National Geographic Spe­ 10:00PM ®) 3D (2® News Stooges. Josh Mostel, Melanie Chartoff, cial Sid Caesar. 1985. Rated PG. pires for either a wealthy woman’s hand appear in the D.C. (k>mics until ® @® Spenser: For Hire (CC) A federal or her daughter's. W.C, Fields, Gloria agent, who once was Rita's lover, assists McEnroe was the biggest attraction at Davis Cup 1938.) Jim Hambrick, who says he is ® MOVIE: 'Brass Targef Gen. George 1 2 : 0 5 A M ® T.J. Hookar Hooker Jean, Leon Errol. 1941. Spenser on a murder case. (60 min.) (R) Alyn, a former dancer, made the world’s largest collector of Panon vows to recover a $250,000 Ger­ calls out the SW AT team to rescue Stacy [C N N ] Larry King Overnight man gold shipment hijacked from the Al­ 3® Mission Impossible and Corrigan, who are being held cap­ While the United States couldn’t take the measure of expert on television, after seeing the fine crowds six pictures with producer Sam “ Superman” memorabilia, lied conquerors in 1945. Sophia Loren, [U S A ] Wrestling prevailed over youth in the annual Neipsic Tennis Club d® Star Trek tive by three murderers. (70 min.) (R) West Germany in the Davis Cup tie last weekend at the expressed that Hartford may be ripe again for an Katsman before “ Superman.” said; “ I think he represents George Kennedy. 1977. men’s championship tournament with Ray Easter- 1 2 : 3 0 A M C® Archie Bunker's Place 4:03AM ® Make Room for Daddy Hartford Civic Center, losing three matches to two, annual major pro tennis attraction. “ The Aetna World As a dancer he had worked out everything that’s good. Truth, CID @9) Who’s the Boss? (CC) Tony's ® Moyers: In Search of the Constitu­ brook walking off with top honors. The long-time Justice and the American way, (Tony Oanzs) iailbird father-in-law plans tion Bill Moyers talks with District of Col­ ® Ask Or. Ruth (R) 4:50AM [M AX] MOVIE; ’Low Blow' A there was no question as to whom was the biggest Cup was great and with Australia now coining up with seasoned tourney player turned back the challenge of regularly with weights to keep umbia U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Rob­ private detective is hired to lescua a as it says in the comic books. to write a book entitled 'Bllmpos Behind 3® PTL Club drawing attraction. Herald Angle some great players again it would be nice to see the University of Connecticut player Glen Horowitz in in shape. Bars’. (R) (In Stereo) ert H. Bork, a leading conservative wealthy man’s daughter from a religioui . John McEnroe had that distinction, hands down. There’s something in every one interpreter of the Constitution, and At­ d® d® Late Night with David Letterman cult. Leo Fong, Akosua Butia. 1986. series renewed,” he said. Collins, a long-time friend straight sets last Sunday, 0-4, 6-3. The former club "When he asked me if I d D News (In Stereo) 'H o athlete since the glory days enjoyed by former Earl Yost of us that relates to Superman.” torney General Edwin Meese. (60 min.) Rated R. and my doubles partner in several media events, still is president exhibited too much savvy for Horowitz, who wanted to play Superman I 9 9 MOVIE: Th e Thin Red Une' A young heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali has an Sports EcJItor Emeritus the top writer in .the sport for the Boston Globe and He accompanied Alyn to the was making bis debut in the finals. thought it was a publicity private is taunted by his sadistic ser­ American athlete captured the attention the fans as many tennis magazines. Two youngsters and one veteran playing out of the stunt,” Alyn recalled. “ I didn’t . interview. geant for stealing a pistol as he lands on Guadalcanal. Keir OuMea, Jack Warden, McEnroe. Like Ali, McEnroe has exceptional talents, a One man's opinion; The Aetna World Cup was more Manchester Country Club failed to make the cut after think you could ever put Super­ Alyn said; " I played him very Red Daley. 1964. Cinema flair for publicity and as controversial a tennis player exciting than the Davis Cup. The main reason being two rounds in the New England Amateur Golf man on film. They brought the serious, very close to the comic (29 MOVIE: 'Ssssssa' A demented scien­ as ever to raise a racquet. USA’s top players, Jimmy Connors and Arthur Ashe, Tournament at the Oak Hill Country Club in Fitchburg, people frtom D.C. Comics over books. We didn’t do it tongue-in- tist attempts to transform men into what HARTFORD m e ouaet tor peace The native of Wiesbaden, West Germany, proudly matched strokes with Australia’s best, Rod Laver, Mass. Lucas Sirois 76-78-140 — one over qualifying, and they said, ‘Hey, he looks he sees as the least destructive and most Cliiama City — Snow White and the (PG) 12:55, 2:55, 4:55, 7:10, 9:30.— MflLLIMAMTIC John Newcombe and Ken Rosewali, ail well-known and Gary Rencurrel 60-80-160 and Tom Prior 61-85-160 cheek. We didn’t want to disap­ vicious of creatures. Strother Martin. wearing the red, white and blue colors of the United This time in Hartford McEnroe was the biggest Just like Clark Kent.’ Seven Oworfe (G ) 1,3,7. — Advanturee Cop (R) 12:30, (p“6-l3)"i?ii"?r5725^^3r9^“i:: States, feels that his game is ’ ’now going in the right drawing card which helped lure 30,000 tennis buffs for "They said take off your shirt, P e ri onal Services (R ) 1 ;40,7; 10.9:40. — 2:30^:15,7:45,10:10. — Revenpe of the Superman IV: The Quest for '^ c e dihdetion.” the first Davis Cup play in New England in 87 years. Becker were the “ names” the Davis Cup offered up Tom Rodden and Gregg Horowitz, from the so I did and flexed my muscles. The producers took it so OS) S9) Matlock Matlock gets n second Wlthnoll and I (R ) 1:30, 6:50, 9:20. — Nerds II: Nerds in Paradise (PG-13) (P6).1:30, 3:30,5:20, T s E 9 :« . this time. Manchester Racquet Club and Neipsic Tennis Club, Spacebollt (P G ) 9:30. M ^al Jacket (R) 1,3:15,5:30,7;40,9*^' .After early disposing of Eric Jelen in straight sets Then the guy said, ‘Take off seriously they didn’t give Alyn chance to clear the name of a man who 12:45, 2:55, 5:M,7:fa, 10. - W ltel^ of Linesmen/women were the targets for whistles from were among the ball boys who worked the Davis Cup was unjustly jailed seven years ago. (60 — Droonet (R) s'?*}* ***• Dworfs Suiiiday after his record six-hour, 38-minute five-set your pants,’ and I said, ‘Wait a screen credit for playing Super­ min.) (R) (In Stereo) RAf T HARTFORD 12:15,4:45,7:20. (G) 1:20,3,5,7.— lnn9rspoce (PG) 9:15. los6 to Boris Becker on Friday, McEnroe felt his strong Yes and no spectators during the Davis Cup matches who Tournament. Both are outstanding young players. man. They felt the young RattwoMI Ft* 6 ClMflM — Beverly (PO-13) 1:10,3,5, disagreed with their findings, typical of any match. Fred Parlato, Al Pepin and John White have been minute!’ ” I was 37 when I S D @ Nova (CC) A look at how the Hint Cop II (R)7:30. points were “ discipline and patience.” He certainly Crowd noise was encouraged for Davis Cup play, MANCHR6TRR L’S J ' i ’iT" **5.'^**’9* Nerds II: However, in the McEnroe-Becker marathon, those played Superman. I picked up audience should be led to victims rf a former Argentinian govern­ _Feer Ridw m Fiift « CNi m m — showed plenty of both in Hartford showings with no except when a player was to serve, and it was (dted for five years of active membership in the ment's reign of terror are being Identi­ Btverlv Hllli Cop II (R) 7:30,9:30. S»?7:30,9?40:‘''** working the lines had to make nearly 600 calls on just that girl and ran up that flight of believe that Superman was II (R) 3, 4:30, 7:15, 9:35. — Benll the serious temper outbursts. interesting to note in the McEnroe-Jelem match it was Mancdiester Chapter of the Connecticut State Board of fied through the efforts of a forensic an­ Predator (R) serves. Baseball Umpires. stairs like it was nothing.” played by himself. Alyn did get thropologist and a geneticist. (60 min.) SkPWCOM ClPPIIMi 1-9 — T h t Un- the American who en

_ ^ MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday, Juiy 28. 19i87 — 17 Harper says baseball Is ‘heading to the garbage’ Louis Wrighfs retirement a blow to the Broncos ByAw HowardMammivH UlmanIIIhamr Sox, for whom he coached five newspaper interview that the Red The Associated Press who are wallowing in last place, years, is the same, Sox made p a i^ s to the local rap for something that happened managers without holding that Job ^uldn’t they have used Jack By The Associated Press Wright walked away from the signod a player. "Where is baseball heading? It’s segregated Elks’ Club available in years ago when they’re making the in the minors. ! Woodson returned from the U.S. BOSTON — The neighborhood Morris or couldn’t they have used final year of a contract that would heading to the garbage. That’s the team’s offlces. His previous improve. Harper said. “ Now that these civil righU| The Oilers agreed to contract Olympic Festival at Durham, N.C., baseball field is dry and ^ s ty . Tim Raines? You kidding me? So Cornerback Louis Wright has have paid him $500,000 this season. terms with linebacker Toby Caston, where it’s heading because nothing efforts to change that policy pri­ That’s the thing I have against the groups are putting pressure to his home of Fort Wayne, Ind., There is dirt where grass should be. when they decide, buddy, that Joined the growing list of dropouts Meanwhile, running back Der­ has changed,” he said, “ Since Al vately had failed, he said. Red Sox. They have a poor history” baseball, now baseball changes 0 3 wide receiver-kick returner Curtis rather than Pittsburgh’s camp. Much of the green that colors the you re out, it gets around.” in the Denver Broncos’ defense. rick Harmon annoumii^ his retire­ Campania, nothing has changed.” of hiring black personnel and rules,” Harper said. “ Now they Duncan, linebacker Al Smith, and Woodson, who hopes the Steelers neglected landscape is weeds. Last December, Harper’s formal Harper said he sent Job requests “ This is certainly a blow,” Coach ment from the San Francisco 49ers. Campania was Bred in early April haven’t made a commitment to saying, we’re looking for qualif defensive end-linebacker Robert will increase their four-year, $1.1 complainu against the team of to about a dozen teams without Dan Reeves said Monday after The four-year veteran had spent Tommy Harper, who lost his Job as vice president of the Los Angeles change that. blacks, experience. Where did r Banks. million offer of last week, said team with the Boston Red Sox after employment and racial discrimina­ success. Instead, he has done learning that the 12-year veteran much of last year injured and faced Dodgers after he said blacks lacked tion were settled out of court. He Since Campanis’ statement. Rose gain experience? Right onThif The Oilers also announced they failed to contact either his agent. speaking out against racism, is paperwork for an auto body shop had announced his retirement. tough competition at camp this the "necessities” for managerial Harper said he has heard a lot of Job.” r— have resigned place-kicker Florian Marvin Demoff, or his attorney, said he was satisfied with the and worked for United Parcel “ It’s a shock because it’s unex­ year. running a city-sponsored summer positions. agreements. rhetoric but seen little movement He said he hasn’t returnedSS Kempf and defensive end Jesse Eugene Parker, over the weekend. clinic for youngsters. Service. He is spending the summer pected. Throughout the off-season Baker. Harper’s contract as special But since he left the Red Sox, toward placing blacks in authorita­ Fenway Park since he left the WWI S ig n in g s No progress was reported, either, “ Vnien you get into habiU iike ® employee, running three all indications were that he would In the New York Jets’ camp, assistant to Boston General Man­ Harper hasn’t worked in profes­ tive positions. Sox but would like to return to Bw Jay Schroeder reported to the between the New York Jets and you’ re doing now, you’re never clinics a day, five days a week, and play.” offensive tackle Reggie McElroy ager Lou Gorman wasn’t renewed sional baseball. ” I don’t think that black ex­ sport despite his resentment o h m Washington Redskins’ camp on quarterback Ken O’Brien, who is going to improve,” Harper tells two one each Sunday. The 34-year-old Wright, a five­ and cornerback Jerry Holmes when it expired on Dec. 31,1985. The He said Boston told other teams athletes want any preferential Boston’s claim that he didn’t doffll Monday, a day after he signed a seeking renegotiation of his teen-agers playing catch on the “ Teaching is teaching,” he said time NFL Pro Bowler, left a letter agreed to terms. team said he didn’t do his Job not to hire him. Those teams treatment,” Harper said. “ They Job properly in 1985. contract. sun-drenched field. "A ll you’re ” I don’t worry about the level of with owner Pat Bowlen’s secretary three-year, $2.7-million contract. properly, but Harper, a Red Sox listened. Just as they did when Just want to be considered for the “ I don’t feel bitter because 0 5 The ' Colts an­ Meanwhile, Dallas Coach Tom doing is coming out and doing the play. I Just worry about instructing saying he was “ retiring from the Schroeder, wearing a coach from 1980 through 1984. owners allegedly agreed not to sign Job as part of the ‘best people passed for me,” he said. “ I IBQ nounced they had signed three-year Landry said first-round selection wrong thing over and over again.” the right way.” best organization in football.” cumbersome-looking brace to pro­ claimed he was fired because of other teams’ free agents last available.’ Make us a part of that. more disappointed that in the 1980s veteran LaMont Hunley, a 6foot-l, Danny Noonan of Nebraska may His message to major-league Now, he works for the city which He was the second starter in the tect an aching left knee, looked fine remarks he made. winter, he said. What they’re saying now is the best we still have to talk about race 240-pound linebacker out of have blown his chances of being a baseball, in which he played 15 had serious racial problems related Broncos’ secondary to retire in the during the tw’o-hour workout. An Arizona. In spring training at Winter “ I can’t prove it but I know they people available are white.” relations In baseball. J,': | 1987 starter with the Cowboys by years, and in particular to the Red to school busing in the mid-1970s. last four days. Free safety Steve arthroscopic examination in the Haven, Fla. in 1985 he said in a did it,” he said. "Ask these teams He noted that Pete Rose and Lou not showing up for training camp ” I hate to see the city get a bad “ It’s unfortunate, but that’s Hie Foley retired on Friday. spring revealed no damage, but it T ra d e s Piniella became major-league way it Is.” remains sore and often swells up. because of a contract dispute. In the last 12 months, the AFC Offensive lineman Darryl Haley “ It’s hard to pinpoint what it is, “ I don’t see how he could start champion Broncos have seen five of was traded to the Tampa Bay but I can’t afford to worry about it,” now,” Landry said. "That’s not in their defensive starters retire. The Buccaneers for an undisclosed 1988 he said. “ There’s nothing I can do rock but it would be difficult for him others were end Barney Chavous, draft choice. The selection depends about it, anyway.” now to come on.” nose tackle Rubin Carter and on how well Haley plays for Tampa Quarterback David Archer Buffalo Bills Coach Marv Levy linebacker Tom Jackson. Bay, which plans to use him at left agreed to terms with the Atlanta said he’s still worried about the Wright had been late reporting to guard. Patriots’ player develop­ SCOREBOARD Falcons on Monday in time to absence of unsigned linebacker training camp, but Reeves said he ment director Dick Steinberg said. participate in an afternoon prac­ Shane Conlan. had no indication during the off­ Haley was the last of New tice. Archer, the Falcons’ starter Conlan, Buffalo’s 1987 first-round season that Wright wouliln’t play in England’s three second-round draft much of the past two seasons, had draft choice from Penn State, 1987. choices in 1982. He became a Softball JCIort, St. U M , 29; EOavts, andnnotl, been seeking a salary almost three remained out while his agent, Brett BasebaD Povispn, Oilcaeo, 27; OMurphv/ Reeves, who said he hasn’t full-time starter at right tackle in Attan^ 26; HJohnson, New York, 23,' times the $137,000 he made in 1986. Senior, continued to negotiate with spoken with Wright since mini­ 1984, then missed all of the next **'■ Strawberry^ Terms of the contract were not the team. Talks with Bills General camp in May, said he would try to season with colitis. released. Manager Bill Polian were expected TONIOHrS OAMBS Afflirtcan Lngui ttindingi convince the cornerback to .to resume sometime this week. Coach's vs. MPM, 4 — Fitzgerald reconsider. ” We have an agreement,” Fal­ H o ld o u ts Cycle V*. Zembrowskl's, 7:30 — !iy'*'*>''Dew*on,Chlcoeo,85; Conlan is the Bills’ only unsigned Bowlen said he spoke with Wright cons chief financial officer Jim Hay First-round draft choice Mike Fitzgerald Bast Dtvislon W olloch, M n t r s o l, 80; E D o v Is, Cincinnati, .,L. AP photo rookie draftee. Trosh-Awov V*. WInIneer's, 4 — -P.J . M ^ ' .St^ Louis, 75; Schmidt, briefly and asked if there was any said. “ It’s a situation where David Junkin, a linebacker from Duke, Robertson W L Pet. M ^ “ He’s missed a lot,” Levy said. NSW York 59 40 J9 6 PhllodHphIo, M; Parker, Cincinnati, 67; chance of a change of heart. was anxious to be in (camp) and we and second-round pick Gregg Ra- Cummings y*. J.CPsnney, 7:30 — Detroit 57 39 iBTS-OftlHvO' Samuel,Phlladelphla,47. Phil Simms of the Super Bowfl champion New York were anxious to have him in.” Robertson .994 V» PRchbig (7 Oedslens) “ Louie said he had struggled with koczy, an offensive lineman from r' LeRoy Irvin, the Los Angeles Toronto 58 41 .996 1 Giants signs autographs outside the team’s training The Houston Oilers reached Postal vs. Nelson's, 4 — Nike Milwaukee 49 48 .905 9 rt!r!!22l' sutdifta, making the decision fora long time Miami, are absent from the Cleve- L Rams’ Pro Bowl cornerback, is J8iM vs. Allied, 7:30 — Niks Boston 44 S3 Fofech, St. Uuls,63, r camp on the campus of Pace Unitersity in Pleasantville, contract term agreements with Food vs. B.A.Club, 4 — Poganl .465 13 and felt good about it,” Bowlen land Browns, camp because they unhappy with his contract and has Baltimore 45 S4 .455 14 said. “ He Just wanted to get out of four more of their draft choices, haven’t signed contracts. Reed's vs. Keith, 7:30 — Pogonl Cleveland 34 64 .347 34W Lou^ W .727; Moerane, St. U uls?6Z N.Y., on the first day of priactice. decided not to report to training Ward's vs. ABN, 4 — Keeney W«tf MvltlMl PhModslohIo, I 6& .704; football.” signed a veteran player and re- First-round draft choice Ron camp. Main Pub vs. Homestead, 4— Charter (taoden. New York, 7-3, .700. Ook w L Pet. OB Minnesota 55 44 .545 (takland 53 47 .S2S 2 Womm’i Rm California 50 50 .soo 4'/i Kan SOI city 49 49 JOO 4^/2 p.W. Fish slipped by OeCormler Texas 49 49 .500 4^/7 NlMon, 63, Mondoy night at Charter Seattle 47 53 .475 7 G o lf Starling looking forward to his shot at Breland Oak. Amy Alperl and Marybeth Tomlin­ Oilcogo 39 57 .406 13V*i son led the winners with two hits apiece. Monday’s Oomes Karen OzledzInskI homered for wii viliwuvu I By Chris Dahl promoter Cedric Kushner. He said decided to double back and block is 18-0 with 12 knockouts after 100 stopped when Bumphus suffered a DeCormler. Toronto W, Boston 8 U.S. Woman’a Dpan The Associated Press Starling’s plan at the time was to Texas 5, Milwaukee 4 titles, was undisputed champion Breland’s attempt to avoid him. victories in 101 amateur bouts. cut in a controversial butting hopefully beat Ooklond 6, California 1 until he vacated the World Boxing “ They were very upset when we "This isn’t the amateurs, this is incident. W ttI side Minnesota 4, Seattle 3 EDISON TOWNSHIP, N.J. (AP) — HARTFORD — Fancy footwork first, then make one or two title Association title for political rea­ called them back and told them, the pros,” Bowers said at a ringside In February 1984, he lost a fight Cox Coble electrocuted Thrifty Pock- Only gomos scheduled (taoded score* and prize money outside the ring duped Mark defenses before fighting against the sons. Breland took over the WBA oge Store, 11-4, Mondoy night at Pagan! Tow dovs Games after regulation Mi In 1987______Breland into a WBA welterweight yes. we will take the fight,” Bowers news conference at Belvue Boys for the WBA welterweight cham­ Komos City (Gubicza 69) ot New York Women's Open, played at the t,a4-ya^ Olympic gold medal winner. crown in February by beating Field. Gary Perrelll and Don Parker tjtie defense match he was trying to said. “ I was asked at that point. ‘I Club in the north end of Hartford, pionship to Donald Curry, his only smacked three hits each while Bill (Rhoden 124), 7:30 p.m. par-77 RMnfleld Country Club (oderxite* Harold Volbrecht. thought you didn’t want it?’ and I Haughtallng, Fred McVeigh, and Pete . Botttmore (McGregor 67) at Cleveland omouter; x-d*notes competitors In I6H0IS avoid. ’s camp is ” I couldn't understand why they where Starling does much of his previous world title bout. Chlldree added two hits each. For the (Akersftid 61), 7:35 p.m. Moyofl Tuesday): crowing. called, asked if we were interested, He had nine months in which to said I changed my mind. training. “ The competition is different.” losers, Mark St. Jean, Steve Stratton, - Detroit (Robinson Uura Dovles-x 76767671—385 were told we were not and released defend his title against the No. 1 “ Breland hasn’t fought any legiti­ Starling said. "The last time I and Tom Kibble hod two sofetles 4-4), 7:35 p.m. Ayoko Okomot6 x 71-767672—285 "They really didn’t want Mark opiece. - (Gordner 65) ot Toronto (Stleb JoAnne Comer-x 76767649-385 .TDonald Bowers. Starling’s co­ that Starling was going to fight contender, according to WBA rules. mate world class professionals. fought for the title I fought won of 65), 7:35 p.m. Jody RosenthM 813,461 71-767673-49 manager, said Monday that he was Breland to fight Marlon Starling. I The title was handed to him,” the best power fighters in any Breland,” Bowers said. “ When Bowers theorized that Breland’s Mllwcwkee (Boslo62) otTexos (Guzman Betsy King 813461 76767671-4)89 taken by surprise when he heard think they backed themselves into a Bowers said. “ My sister can beat weight class and it was a close Paginl 69), 8:35 p.m. National Farm League co-champs DebMe ASossey 89,741 76467671—380 discussing it. we finally concluded backers thought that by publicly Deed** Robert* 89,741 76765674-390 K^ports earlier this month that that this was their way of getting corner.” Harold Volbrecht, they just 16round decision. I don’t think this Aide's Pizza won by forfeit, 7-0, over Oil!(Omla(Wltt124)otOakland(Andular announcing the fight they could 3-3), 10:35 p.m. Martha House 88J9D 76467676—391 Mtere would be a Starling-Breland around the WBA’s N o. 1 The 16round fight at the Town­ wouldn’t give my sister the fight.” guy is in the same league.” IMO at Poganl Field. Kathy Postlewalt 87,111 76767676-r392 satisfy their WBA obligation, se­ Minnesota (NIskro 67) at Seattle (Mor­ Moriarty Brothers shared top honors in match Aug. 22 in Columbia. S.C. contender.” ship Auditorium in Columbia. S.C., Starling has a 41-4 record with 26 But it will also be the 29-year- gan 7-11), 10:35 p.m. Lescoe, John Passmore, Duane Hunt, Solly Quinlan 87,111 7S-71-71-» t3r cure in the knowledge that Starling Rosie Jones 87,111 ^ 7S-71-71-7S-392 ‘ "Bowers said he had turned down will be telecast live on ABC’s Wide knockouts. His last loss was to old’s 46th professional fight and Rac WodMsday's Gomes the National Farm Little League this past Steve Ruggiero. Third row: Coach Joe Honeyghan, who holds the Inter­ didn’t want the fight. Kansas City at New York, 1 p.m. Dottle Mochrle 85,939 767677-71-4*1 such a match July 8 when,asked by World of Sports. It will also be the Johnny Bumphus in May 1986 in a many observers feel it may be his The Elks hung up Telephone Society, California at Oakland, 3:15 pjn. season. Team members (front row, from Ruggiero, Jason Culver (batboy), assist­ Marta Rguers-Ott 85,919 77-767673—393 national Boxing Federation and That’s when the Starling camp first title defense for Breland, who 164, at Nike Field. For the Elks, Dove Minnesota at Seattle, 4:35 p.m. left): John Helln, Justin Muir, Nicky Amy Alcott 85,939 7671-7674—393 match in Providence, R.I., that was last chance for a world title. Dovlak had four hits. Including a triple, Baltimore at Cleveland, 7:35 p.m. ant coach Amos Hilton, Stanley Lezon. Alice Rltzmon 85,254 76767671-3*4 while Lou Keroack homered and Chicago at Detroit, 7:35 p.m. Smith, Eric Daring, John Conklin. Missing: assistant coach Frank Napoli- Tommie Green 85,254 76767674—39* doubled. Bernie Hool added two sin­ Boston at Toronto, 7:35 p.m. Deb Richard 84,791 767676r ■“ gles. For Telephone Society, Stuart Milwaukee at Texas, 8:35 p.m. Second row: Shawn Sibley, Peter tano, Todd Napolltano, Eric Wilson. Sandra Palmer 84,791 71-76767: Sibley had three hits, Including a Michele Bertaetti 8435 76767671 Dombeck Is too much for Post 102 homer. Cindy Rartck 8435 767I-767S-396 Sports In Brief National Laaguaatandingi Potty Sheehan 8334 767677-73-397 TIgari 4, Whits Sox 1 run for a 2-1 victory over Manches­ Nika BlusJaystO,Rsil8ox8 National Lsagua rsiults Denise StreMg 83J44 76767672-397 ENFIELD — Jim Dombek was a the Zone. doubled, moved to third on a Joe Bast Olvisidn Sherri Turner 8334 77-767673-39l( thorn in the side of the Manchester ter in Zone Eight action. Post 102 Dombek struck out 12 and walked CHICAGO DETROIT Donna White 8)34 77-767674-3m 1988 GHO set for July 18-24 Casey groundout, and scored when JHC Construction nipped Brown's « . . W L Pet. OB abrhM BOSTON TORONTO 6 MlcMko Hatton 767671-75-397 Legion baseball Monday night. drops to 12-61 in the Zone and two. Pat Maguire went the first five Keith DiYeso reached on an error. Pockoge Store, 13-13, at Nike Field. Carl St. Louis 41 36 .429 — abrhM abrhM CROMWELL — The PGA Tour announced Monday that the AAontreal 55 43 .547 4 Redus dh 4 03 0 Whltokr 2b 3 110 abrhM Dodgsrs 0, Blanti 5 (12 Inningsl Nancy Lopez 8334 7671-77-76-397 19-17-1 overall. Manchester’s next innings before giving way to CHiris Carlson and Dona MIrcur ripped three Hill 3b 4 111 Burks cf 5 3 2 1 Femndz ss 5 12 1 Amy Benz 8334 76767676^-3n hits each while Burt Boskervllle and New York 53 45 641 t 'h Madickdh 3 0 3 1 Barrett 2b 5 111 - 1988 Canon-Sammy Davis Jr. Greater Hartford Open will be Dombek, the starting and win­ game is Wednesday night at 6 Helin in the sixth. Dombek’s Joe Leonard, who got the other hit Baines rf 4 0 0 0 Wlwndrpr 0 100 Mosebvcf 3 3 11 Lori (tarboa 83,291 77-7677-73-11^ Wayne Farr added two hits apiece with g> «W > .. 51 47 .520 W/i Caldem If Boggs 3b 50 2 1 Whitt c 4 0 11 SAN FRAN LOS ANOELS JeHIvn Brttz 83,291 7671-7673-396 --played at the Tournament Players Club of Connecticut in ning pitcher for Enfield Legion, against Windsor Locks in a Zone game-winning single came off off Dombek, also played well Forr clubbing a homer. For Brown's, Phllqdelphlo 49 48 .505 12 4 030 Gibson If 3 00 0 Rice If obrhM Hairstn lb 4 0 10 TrammI ss 4 0 12 4 110 Benlqzph 10 0 0 ObrhM Anne Marie Palll 83,291 767677-76-196 ^'.Cromwell July 18-24. hurled a two-hitter and aided his contest at Manchester Community Helin with two outs in the sixth. defensively at shortstop along with Collins Judd and Bob Corneau stroked Pittsburgh 45 53 .459 W'/i Hskc Horndh 3 100 CMoorec 0 0 0 0 Aldrete rf 5 12 0 Andesn ss 2 10 1 o-Kothleen McCarthy 76765677- " four hits each while Bob PIccIn had West Division 3 0 0 0 Nokesc 4 12 1 Baylor dh Wosngrpr 0 10 0 !7. This will be the fifth year for the GHO will be played in own cause by driving in the winning College. Enfield moves to 8-61 in Manchester led, 1-0, when Jon Roe Casey in left field. K Wilms cf 3 0 0 0 DaEvns 1b 4 00 0 1000 GBelllf 3 12 1 Undrxrf 3 110 Bonnie Lauer 83,291 56767677- three hits and Rick Bellevue chipped In ^ ^ W L Pet. OB IManrlg2b DwEvn 1b 4 111 MdSrIff 1b 4 0 2 0 JRobnsn p 0 0 0 0 TLndrmrf 2 000 AAarct Bozarfh 8238 767251-: Cromwell. The ’88 GHO will be held after the British Open and with two hits. Cincinnati 52 47 .525 — 3 0 10 Lemon cf 4 0 0 0 (ireenwirf YngMdph 10 11 Guillen 55 3 000 Sherldn rf 3 0 10 3 113 Upshaw pr 0 10 0 Holton p 0000 Beth Daniel 8238 76767676296 SonFrondsco 51 49 .510 V/i Bnzngr 1b 1000 Borfleld rf 5 2 2 3 (Sarrelts p 0 0 0 0 Trevino ph 1000 Nancy Ledbetter 8238 76767676-3*9 ^ before the Buick Open. H o u ^ 49 49 .500 2Vt Brokns3b 3 110 SOwenss Mlfchll 3b 5 12 1 Dusty Totals 111 7 1 Totals 11 494 40 10 Mullnks3b 3 0 0 0 Leoryp 0000 Hollis Stacy 8238 767675-76-1*9 ^ A ^ e s 44 55 .444 8 Romero pr 0 0 0 0 Gruber 3b 3 111 Leonard If 5 0 11 Guerrerlf 2 100 (tathy Morse 82538 7676767 76767675—2*8 _ Trappers’ streak is now history A tlo ^ 43 55 .439 8'/i Gedmonc 4 110 Leach dh 2 2 11 WCIark 1b 6 0 10 Stubbs 1b 4 111 Dorothy (tarmoln 82558 — Memorial Corner Store held off Main San Diego 36 43 .364 14 Chleoge 080 180 886-1 46767674-396 Cordero lucky Pub/MMH, 12-10, of Keeney Field. For Ootrolt 880 888 Ikl—4 lorg2b 3 0 0 0 Brenly c 5 0 10 MHtchr3b 5 12 2 Ok-Hee Ku 82558 767677-76-3*9 Red Sox recall Woodward Monday's Oomes Total* 38 818 7 Totals COavIs cf 6 12 0 Shelby cf 50 11 Jull Inkster 82578 BILLINGS. Mont. (AP) — Even Memorial, Ron Lowe and Rick Mollov Los Angeles & San FrandscoS winnings Game Winning RBI — Modlock (4). 151012 8 76767671- Salt Lake for six runs in their half of Reliever Quinn Marsh came on to NEW YORK (AP) - Maybe a - . 4 had two hits each while Glen Pelllerl- DP—Chicago 1, Detroit 2. LOB— RThpsn2b 4 0 10 Sdosclac 5 0 0 0 Missle McGeore* 82578 7676767. BOSTON — Right-hander Rob Woodward, who began the 1987 Boston Uribe ss 4 0 11 Sox 2b though he gave up two quick runs in the inning and rode the lead to a 7-5 get the final out, preserving the nelll homered. For the losers, Leo Only gome scheduled Chlcogo5,Detrolt4.2B—Hal rston.HR—Hill OSB 880 188— 8 5 110 Cathy Martno 82578 76767676 __ change of scenery again will Williamson hod four hits and Scott -A— - - . ™ ite—18 Downsp 0 0 0 0 Welch p 2 000 Carolyn Hill 82578 76767674- 306 season with the Boston Red Sox, was recalled Monday from the first inning against the team victory. two-run lead, and he shut down the THosdays Oomes (4), Nokes (22). SB—Gibson (19). Price p 2 0 0 0 help Jockey Angel Cordero Jr. Elliott added three. IP M R ER BB SO Game Winning RBI — Leach (4). Garner ph 10 10 o-Ondy Scholefleld 76767676- 3017 Pawtucket of the International League. with the longest winning streak in “ They picked me up with six big Trappers in the ninth for the save. Montreal (Sebra 610) at Oilcogo (Sut- _ E—Borrett, (Jruber, (Sedmon. LOB— Splimn ph 10 0 0 Crews p 0 0 0 0 get closer to reaching 6,000 dlffe 14-4), 2:20 p.m. Ghicopo (tale Eggellno 82,272 767677-76 ' ~ Woodward, 24, appeared in only three games for Boston before the history of professional baseball. ones,” said Jenkins, a second-year “ Jenkins did a super Job in the Nielsen L6-4 7 8 4 4 3 3 Boston 5, Toronto 11. 2B—Boggs 2. Lefferts p 0 0 0 0 Youngp 0 0 0 0 Kondl Kessler 82,272 76767676 victories. A E ist Son Diego (G ra n t 65) at Cincinnati 3B—Fernandez. HR—Greenwell ( 11), Milner cf 2 110 Heeprf Billings pitcher Mack Jenkins free agent out of the University of (Browning 68), 7:35 p.m. Thigpen 1 1 0 0 0 2 1000 Judy Dickinson 82,135 77-71-7676 -- he was sent to Pawtucket on May 2. He had a 9-7 record and a 3.71 clutch,” Salt Lake Manager Jim Cordero, two wins short of the Ootrolt Burks (15), Barfield (21), (Jruber (8). Totals 46 511 4 Totals 40 4 7 5 Dawn Coe 82,135 764677-76-3IB earned run average with the Triple-A club. wasn’t worried. Tampa. Brand Rex brushed off Gentle Touch Phllodeiphla (Rowley 165) ot Pitts­ SB—Moseby (23), Fernondez (31). S— Gilligan said. “ He threw some big mark reached by only three Cor Wash, 14-4, ot Robertson Park. John burgh (Reuschel 64), 7:35 p.m. Tancma W,167 9 7 1 1 1 9 o-Koy Cockerlll 7676766 "When I saw their cheap hits... I Despite the early four-run lead, Nielsen pitched to 4 batters In the 8th. lorg. SF—GBell. Son nrondsco 110 810 881 016-5 M.B. Zimmerman 81,943 767677-76 ~ He had a 1-0 record in five games in 1985 and a 2-3 mark in nine league pitches with two outs (and other Jockeys, was to ride in McAvoy led Brand with three hits while Houston(Scott11.4)atAtlanta(Smlth64), LMAngoMs 388 880 810 011—4 knew they weren’t world beaters.” Jenkins had far from an easy time Ron NIvIslon, Don Hamm, Mark Cam- 7:40 p.m. Umpires—Home, Phillips; Rrst, Clork; Janet Coles 81,963 767679.7! appearances in 1986 in previous trials with Boston. the bases loaded in the seventh). He three races at Monmouth Park IP H R ER BB SO None out when winning run scored. Marilyn Smith 81,963 76767675- 30 he said Monday night after ending pelll, and Don SItek each added two hits. New Y o ^ (Darting 67) ot St. Louis Second, Morrison; Third, Tschida. Boston (tame Winning RBI — Stubbs (5). Woodward, who replaces injured Al Nipperon Boston’s 24-man with the Trappers, who boast a really showed me something.” today, when Belmont Park is SItek homered. For Gentle Touch, Paul (AAogrone 62), 8:35 pjn. T—2:26. A—23,704. S.Benolocclnl 81,789 7677-7674-304 the Salt Lake Trappers’ winning Sellers 5 4 4 E -^ ltd ^ l, RThompson, (taerrero, M. Spencer-Devlln 81,789 77-767677-J “ ' -1 roster. team batting average of .347. Only The Trappers, a Pioneer League closet!. McCluskey had three hits while Mike Soil Frandsco (Hommoker 67) at Los Stanley 1^3 4 3 »elb v, WCIark. DP-Los Angeles 1. streak at 29 games. PrestI, Rich KralewskI, and Jon Dubois Angeles (Hershlser 169), 10:35 p.m. Solly Little 81517 7676867( once did he retire the side in order, team with no major league affil­ Somblto 1-3 0 0 Frandsco 10, U s Angeles 10. Lourl Peterson 81517 77-767677- Minutes after the Trappers and he gave up 11 hits before Cordero, whose last winner added two hits apiece. •• WoOesodoy* Oomo* Sctilraldl L.5-S 1 4 3 * 8 - 5 ? “'''*' Aldrete, Milner. HR— iate, started their march into Montreal at Chicago, 2:20 p.m. Betsy Barrett 81517 76767679-305 scored two unearned runs in the top came in the Delaware Park Toronto MHotcher (6), Stubbs (14). SB—Guerrero Tammy Frdrcksn 81512 767677-77- il- Triathlete killed during triathlon leaving with two outs in the eighth history June 25, when they beat Son Diego at Cincinnati, 7:35 p.m. Clancy 41-3 9 8 (5), Leonard (11), Mitchell (2). S— Joan PItcock 81512 of the first, the Mustangs powdered Handicap at Delaware Park on Northern Philadelphia ot Pittsburgh, 7:35 p.m. 7676*0-71 and the bases loaded. Pocatello 12-6 at home. Lovelle , . 1 0 . . 0 . 1 0 , Anderson, Heep. SF—Anderson. o-Dono Uflond 767677-71 SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. — A 15-year-old triathlete from Los Saturday, failed to win on six PM Construction cooled off Manches­ Houston at Atlanta, 7:40 p.m. Athlatlca6,Angala 1 Elchhorn 63 0 0 0 0 2 New York at St. Louis, 8:35 p.m. Debbie Skinner 81572 76767677— 307 mounts Monday, having two ter Oil Heot, 7-5, at Robertson Pork. For Musseimn W,8- IP H R ER BB SO Caroline Rerce 81,^^ 77-767677-307 ■;-Angeles was struck by a car and killed duri-’g the eighth annual the losers, Ken Ferry Jr., Greg Gunn, Son Francisco at U s Angeles, 10:35 4 1 0 0 0 0 1 Son Frandsco Susan Tonkin 81545 76767602-30 - San Luis Obispo Triathlon, a spokesman for the California seconds and two thirds. He was p.m. CALIFORNIA OAKLAND Henke S,22 1 0 0 0 0 1 Downs 1-3 3 Brian Pawers, Wally Jonsou, and Mark ObrhM 3 2 1 0 Debby Rhodes 81528 77-767682-3M North Carolina an appealing site? 6for-3 Sunday at Belmont Park. Tobin had two hits each. ObrhM Price 4 2-3 0 0 0 2 5 o-Lsslle Shannon ~ Highway Patrol said. McLmr3b 4 000 Polonlacf Sellerspltchedto1batterlnthe6th,Lavelle 76763230-31) 5 2 3 1 pitched to 2 bolters In the 7th. Lefferts 3 2 1 1 1 1 Lulong Rodler 81514 76723031-313 ;■ Casey Marie Stevenson was competin'g in the bicycle portion of ' Sunday was a bad day for R Jones rf 4 0 10 MDovIsrf 2 0 10 JRoblnson Amarlcan Laagua raaults OWhItecf WP—Elchhorn. 2 0 0 0 2 4 AAorgoret KIrsch 81514 76768132-413 RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Consi­ indicated that we are big time on meet, which until the festival had Cordero at Belmont in more A Control 4 0 3 0 Jovlerrf 1 000 . Umpires—Home, Kaiser; Rrst, CoMe; (tarrelts L,67 1 2 2 1 0 2 Jane Geddes 767674—^ 'the competition Sunday when she was struck and killed, Dwnnedh 3000 Conseco If 4 02 1 U s Angelos dered a hotbed only for college structure and crowd participa­ been the state’s only exposure to Nassiff's trounced Lothrop Insu­ JKHowl If Second, Scott; Third, Bremlgon. ■ according to Lt. Dick Sabath of the CHP. ways than one. While eating at a Rangara5,Brawara4 4 000 Mc<}wlr1b 5 0 11 T-3:18. A—35,425. WHch 7 9 3 3 3 4 basketball. North Carolina could tion,” said Dr. LeRoy Walker, also international athletics. rance, 19-3, at Fitzgerald Field. Joe DeCncs3b 4 0 0 0 Lonsfrd3b 2 0 10 Crews - The driver of the car, David Kaplan, 24, of San Luis Obispo, New York restaurant, he Chetelat hod flye hits. Including three Hndrcfc 1b 3 0 10 1 2-3 2 1 0 1 2 become the site of future world president of The Athletics Con­ ” ... We have taken the organiza­ RJcksndh 4 00 0 Young 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 sustained minor injuries. Kaplan was treated at San Luis Obispo choked on a baked clam. home runs, while Ken Boyler, Paul MILWAUKEE TEXAS Boonec 3 000 Bernzrd2b 10 10 Holton championships after the successful gress. track and field’s national tional structure and moved it into Frenette, and Marty Martinelll each Polldor 55 3 111 2 2 1 0 0 3 Transactions General Hospital and released. Cordero’s dinner companion, ObrhM ObrhM UIMstr2b 3 100 1 0 0 0 1 0 U.S. Olympic Festival, says the governing body. other sports areas,” Walker said. added three hits. Carl Ochino had two Felder If 5 110 Browne 2b 4 0 3 0 Steinbchc 4 3 2 1 Marjorie Clayton, saved him by hits In defeat. to 1 batter In ttie 12th. chairman of the local organizing Walker said the committee’s “ Most national governing bodies Yount cf 20 00 Flefchrss 3 110 (irlffin 4 12 1 Twina 4, Rtarinars 3 WP—(tawns. Young. applying the Heimlich Mlltor dh 5 0 11 Sierra rf 4 133 Totals nisi Totals 15 4115 BASEBALL committee. work proved North Carolina can do are influenced by the reactions of Frawumlng; Rrst, Maneuver. Chortof Ook Brock 1b 4 0 0 0 OBrtsnIb 4 0 10 CWIIIIams; Second, Quick; Third, Halllon. American LeogM “ The results of the festival more than host a track and field athletes to particular venues. Braggs rf 4 110 Incvglla If 3000 Celltanita SO* ow 888-1 MINNESOTA SEATTLE T-^:06. A—33,741. ...B 0 S T 0 9 I R E D SO X — Recalled RM t Reuschel NL player of the week Acadia Restaurant dumped MCC Riles 3b 3 100 Parish dh 403 0 (tahtand 048 118 88R—4 ObrhM ObrhM Pawtucket of Voft, 20-4, at Fitzgerald Field. Bill Surhoftc 4 14 3 Wllkrsnpr 0 100 g o w WInnIno RBI — (Srlffln (4). Gladden If 3 100 DNIxoncf 4 13 0 Major Laagua laadara the internottonM League. NEW YORK — Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Rick Reuschel, who Frattaroll smacked four hits for Aca­ Gontnr2b 4001 McDwolcf 3 110 DP—California 1. LOB—California 5, Lmbrdz 2b 4 113 PBradly If 4000 S ’ o il leads the league with a 2.19 earned run average, was named the dia, whilo Rocco Anselmo, Mike Beach, Sveumss 3000 Browsrph 0 100 Puckett cf 3 0 10 Presley 3b 4 112 Clarke. PtWwr, outright to Calgary of the John Lucas, and Jim Ellis chipped In MStanlvc 3 033 SB-OWhIte (22),Grlffln (taettl3b 4 111 AAothwsdh 4 0 10 Based on 18S al Bofs. KSTu R«»"9«I Dennis National League’s Player of the Week for the period ending BuochleSb (18). S—MDavIs. Brnnsky rf 4 0 10 Altavis 1b Powell, pitch y, frem Calgary. Oldest swim mark wHh thro* hits apiece. For the losers, 3 000 4 0 0 0 AMERICAN LEAGUE Sunday. Total* Dovltbn rf 0000 John Koarnov hod three hits while 11474 Total* 11 S11 5 CMHorata h r e r b b s o Valle c 4 0 10 O AB R H Pet. In his only game last week, Reuschel pitched a complete-game Kevin Kearney homered. Hrbek 1b 4 0 00 Qulnons ss 4 0 10 Boggs Bsn 98 378 77 141 .373 PITTSBUIwS4P1RATSI5)ptlao*d Botf MHwOllbee 088 Ml 110-4 McCOSklll L,63 3 63 9 5 5 4 5 Larkin dh 3000 Moses rf 3 0 0 0 (Mattingly NY 79 315 58 104 .337 Pl*<*'««'.*py£Si,’'ad 5 IS 'SSISf ... Also advancing was third-seeded West Germany, which got tosm Pharmacy hold off Nasslff Arms, Russell 1 2 1110 Pittsfield (Cubs) 44 38 .427 Soamo 81; Jower, Ullfomla, 79; DwEvans, Evans recorded a time of 8 inspiration for everyone/’ 1M0. MWIIIIamsW,63 1 63 0 0 0 1 2 Reading (Phillies) 54 45 554 ~ 7 'fi Uneston 8 4 3 3 2 7 Bosto^ T 7 ;C arttr, Cleveland, 75; Winfield, ' singles victories from Steffi Graf and Claudia Kohiie-Kilsch in minutes, 22.44 seconds in the For F80, Michelle Brown homered Vermont (Rods) The five-day meet is being held at BK—Wegmon. SO 50 .500 13 ENunez L,62 1 2 1 1 0 0 New York, 72; Canseco, Oakland, 70; ■getting past Hong Kong 3-0. 806meter freestyle Monday at the srhlle Amy Oliver slammed two home Umpires Homo, Coonov; Rrst, Ford; Horrlibura (Rrats) 49 51' .490 14 Ungston pitched to 3 batters In the 9th. Mattingly, New York, 49. School***'^ poo' at ao v is West High runs for Hour Olau. Nancy Wengerts- Second, Rolllv; Third, WWko. Albany (Yankees) 48 S3 475 15'/i Umpires—Home, Evans; First, Cousins; Pllchino (7 DeetHens) U.S. Swimming Long Course Na­ mon added a homer and a tripled for the T—2:51. A-16521. Now Brttan (Rd Sx) 44 52 .449 14 Second, Johnson; Third, Hendry. Henneman, Detroit, 60, 1.000; Schmidt, tional Championships to smash the loser*. For Village Cuts, Amy Slddons William *^ (Indns) 47 54 455 W h CWVMT* T—2:29. A—13,858. S?'!!?’'!?.' -JO’*' •«»<• (Soettermon, world mark of 8:24.K set by Tracey ripped four hits while Amy Yost hod Glons Falls (flgert)1 41 58 .414 21'A Sjtattl6 6Z .800; Boslo, MM waukee,6Z .790; Bruce Livingston, Ursnzo Lynch .(ad Listed world marks show that no three hits. Including a home run. Stacy fsOams* t U ^ , Toronto, 6Z .790; John, New Brace McCray, defsnslvebock*. ... Wickham of Australia on Aug. 5, men’s records date back to 1078. JeUogg tripled and singled twice while rark, 9Z .750; Mohorcic, Texas, 6Z .790; 1978 and the American record of Only one women’s record Is that old Andrea Relscher also gloved well. For Radio, T V (Xons Foil* 7, Reading 4, comp, of sus. Morris, Detroit, 164, .790; Soberhogen, tflelpsic nets another win Hour Gloss, Kerri Adam* slapped two gome Kansas City, 165, .790. 8:24.70 set by Kim Linehan in 1979. — a 4:06.28 by Wickham in the 400 Mngles srhlle Kerri Whitcomb pitched Ro(xflng3,(}lsnsFalls1 Monday’a homa runa “ She’s about a year ahead of meters on Aug. 24,1978. trelT. Kim Often ployed srell defensively Vsrmont 11, Harrisburg 1 "i>'>¥ileipsic Tennis Club upped its Sullluan-Andrta Goodman (N ) dot. Eoisd en 288 at Bats. on tht dkMK)t*rsport lift, Chatwt-N.PoslIllco 4-3; Dobblo Brov- schedule,” Evans’ coach. Bud “ I wasn’t thinking about the behind the plate. For Charter Oak, Plttsll*ld9,NowBrltaln2 NATIONAL LRAGUR Interclub record to 60 Monday with Devon Gorceou clubbed two home run* TONIGHT Tuesday's Gomos AMERICANLRAGUE Danlollo Smith (N ) dot. O'Bore- McAllister, said. “ Now, we’ll have world record,” said Evans, who P.m. — Rod Sox of Blue Jays, - O AB R H Pet. a 163 victory over the Town of Klowlckl 61; John Purvlonco-Darryl srhlle Allison Ferver added two hits. Albany at Now Britain Hill (4), White Sox; Nokes (22), Tlgors; Gwynn SO 96 355 72 129 .363 to reset the goals and make them stands. 6foot-3 and weighs 90 Karen Jurczok pitched srell. FOr Wes- C ^ n e l 38, WTIC Olon*FallsatHarrl*bura,3 Greenwell (11), Burks (15), Rod Sox; Glastonbury. Bortnson (N ) dot. Lamon-Ooreau M ; Raines Mon 74 287 44 *7 .338 Kevin Goyretta-Oovld MelMko (N) faster.” pounds. tosrn, LIv Dorgln hod three hits. p.m. — Royals of Yankees, PIttstteldotWIIIIomsporf Barfield (21), Gruber (8), Blue Jays; Sierra Guerrero LA M 34) 41 “'Helpsic’s next match Is Wednes­ Channel ii, WPOP Vermont at Rending 115 .335 d*f. Dlpn-R.giawdurv 63; McConnell- . Sean Killlon erased the American Including a triple, srhlle Jennifer Bu­ (18), Rorig*r*;Falldor (1), An ^ s; Stolnb- (talraga Mon 90 330 49 10* .327 day at Glenbrook. APphoto shev singled twice and Laurie Cartier - •iS . P-R- — Mot* at Cardinals, wodnssdoy* Game* och (9), Athletic*; Lombordozzl (4),(taoltl EOavis CIn 84 310 Nardl (G) dof. Kevin Purvlanct-Pgtar SportsChannol, WKHT *3 99 519 ••ttMults: John MeiMko (N ) (tat. Lammov 63; Kitwicfcl-Molloy (O) dtf. record in the men’s 800 freestyle Killlon, who said be had a poor tripled. For Nosslff, Corey Freeman Albany at Now Britain (20), Twins; Reynolds (1), Presley (14), Hatcher Htn 85 339 59 108 .319 with a clocking of 7:52.49, beating a hod three hits and Kristen Ssotosrskl w * — Boxino: Harold Knight v*. (Mn* FallsatHarrisbure AAarIners. Pnditn StL 96 368 running^; ErrMITucker,coriMrtadh Eostsrson 61; Alsxandsr d* Jorna (N) Nancy Broy-Lenara Olllnghom 67-3; college season at the University of VOflIJIuchonan, (JSBA lunlor light- 40 114 .310 CM McDonald 62; Andrsw Bodyk- Stws Lammov (N ) dof. Aloxandor 61; Fifteen yearld Janet Evans Is all smiles after breaking hod tsro hits. Katie O'Mare pitched srell RtfsfloMatWtlllamspart NATIONALLBAOUR Low (Mon 87 291 35 *9 .304 ond Antaony Hyiton, IlnetxidSgrSyHw mark set by John Mykanen In 1984 California, swam the second- srhlle Shannon Sibley doubled. MftlBht Championship, ESPN VormontotRsodlno Hatcher (4),Stubbs(14),Dodaers. iqian Johnson (N ) dot. Oull6B*ncfc* Johnson (N ) dof. (}azl 60: Gall the world record in the 800-meter freestyle with a time of McGee StL 92 371 48 113 505 68; PoMlIllco-Chawdurv (G) d«f. Colin Shofflold-Kovln Ouorrotta (1^) dof. by 5.75 seconds. Killlon was less fastest 800 meters In history, Walloch/Mon 91 398 58 108 .302 Kffsaasass? »s DUInoham-OavId Sonobrla 4-0; Collssn N.Posllllco-R.Chawdurv 69 than two second* off the world according to meet officials. 8:22.44. 18 - MANCHESTER HERALD. Tueiday. July M. 1M 7

MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday. July 28. 1987 — 18 KIT ‘N’ CARLYLE » by Larry W right

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 643-2711 AKVfeOCPAzy? This is a Boml CLASSIFIED ADS 643-2711 OF BpoaoLi/ I Notices Notices H E L P W A N T a ■'pUi 'AO to WAIT Butinett Property . Entertoinmenf...... Form Suppllet ond Eoulpment ... M HELP WANTED Lott/Pound...... Retort Property .. Bookkeepinp/lnconte Tox. Office/Retoll Eoulpment...... | | R A T lf: 1 to 6 do vt: 90 cents per line per dov. I HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED AHb Scare: HER. P trto n o lt...... M ortoooet...... Corpentry/Remodelinp. Recreotionol Eoulpment...... 63 7 to 19 d o vf: 70 cents per line per day. A t a condition procedont to AnnounctmanU... Wonted to B u y...... Polntlnp/Poperlnp__ STREET Swggpgr oporo- • •••••eooeeeoeeeg u h e n ^ o /as Boott ond Morine Equipment...... 63 U to 25 doyt: 40 cents per line per doy. tho ploctmont of any odvor- DRIVER Fuel oil. Class 11 Auctions...... Rooflnp/Sldlnp...... Mutlcol Itemt...... 64 H or more doyt: 50 cents per line per doy. tltlnp In tho MonchMtor Ho- tor. Full or port time. OIL Burner apprentice. SHIPPER/ Receiver. FInonclol...... R e n ta ls Ploorlnp...... license reoulred. De­ PA RT TIM E Small progrtstlvt win­ RECEPTIONIST/OtfIce ; Comerot and Photo Eoulpment... 65 MIfiimem chorpe: 4 lifiet. raid. Advortltor hortby Expgrlgncpd only need East of the River. Full A8sl8tont. Gl to n - ' ^ ^ Roemt fo r Rent...... Electrical ...... Pett and Suppllet...... 14 pendable fuel o il d e liv ­ S100-S300 w e e k ly . Use 08 Heotlnp/Plumblnp__ oortot to protoct, Indomnlfy apply. Coll Manchester time. Insurance and dow treatment com­ bury. Small friandly ; BinpiOVm G nt & EdUCOtion Aportmenttfor Rent.... MitceMoneout for S o le ...... 67 OSADLINI6: For clottifled odvertftements to ond hold hormlott the j«an- ery east of river. Expe­ your telephone, our benefits. 647-9137. pany seeking shlpper- CRT 6(0dD16 EAT' Condemlniumt for Rent MItcelloneous Servicet. Top Solet...... 66 be published Tuesday throuph Serturdoy, the Sweaplno. 646-7700. company saaks mo- t Help Wanted...... }\ Servicet Wonted__ chottor Horold, Itt o...^...ifttcort rienced only. Full time. customers and your /recelver general Hemet fo r Rent...... Wonted to Buy/Trode ...... 69 deodllne It noon on the dov before publlc^lon. PRESSING machine op­ Ca r p e n t e r - w in pay tura, rttponslbla Indl- ; Situotlon Wonted...... 12 Store/Office Space...... For odvertlsemenH to be published Mondoy, and omployoot ooalntt any Insurance and benef­ duties person. Some Butinett Opportunitiet...... 13 erator for retail clo­ own schedule. for experienced help. OPERATOR vlduol with pjao8ont • Retort Property...... Merchandise the deodllne It 2:30 p.m. on Pridoy. and all liability, lost or its. Coll 647-9137. light delivery with in ttru c tlo n ...... 14I ^ Induttrlol Property...... thing store. Pull or port Residential remodel­ paraonollty. w ill train ! Holldoy/Seotonol A u to m o tiv e oxponit. Including ottor- C o ll P o t 647-9170 company owned Iveco, ntBdad to handl# Employment Servicet...... 1$ ' Goropet ond Storope... noyt' foot, orltlng from time. Coll Bernard Ap- ing and window Instal­ on word proctssor. Ex- • N Roommotet Wonted..... Antlouet ond Collectibles. Cort for Sole...... RBAD YOUR AD. Clottifled odvertlsements ore 6 wheel Z-110 diesel von account malntananca. Wonted to Rent...... Clothinp...... Truckt/Vont fo r^ le ...... token by telephone o t o convenience. The cloimt of unfair trod# practi­ te r of 643-2478. ling. Call evenings 646- callant banafita. Cqll ; Real Estate Furniture...... Monchester Herald It responsible for only one ces, Infringement of trade­ OFFICE Assistant tor 5458. Is required. If you have 8 am - 4:30 pm, Compert/Trollert...... EXPERIENCED men's COOKS medical office. Very Ann R088 659-3511. Bus- Hornet for S o le ...... 21 TV/Stereo/Applloncet.. M otorcvclet/M opedt...... Incorrectlnsertlonandthenonlyfortheslzeof marks, trade names or pat­ shlpplng/recelvlng ln # 8 8 P a r a o n n A I ' Services Machinery and Tools .. Auto Services...... the orlplnol Insertion. Errors which do not ents. violation of rights of clothing salesman. SALES Person. Port time Monday-Friday. Call Condominiums for Sole...... 22 tow n ond Gordon ...... diversified general background, possess Auoclotaa. i Loti/Lond for Sole...... 23 Autos for Rent/Loose...... lessen the volue of the odvertlsenrient will not privacy and Infringement of Full time. Good salary DISHWASHERS evenings. 3 nights and Child Core...... Good Thlnpt to E ot...... be corrected by on odditlonol insertion. clerical duties Includ­ good organizational Investment Property ...... 24, Cleonlnp Servicet... MItcelloneous Automotive . copyright and proprietary and benefits. Coll Ber­ ing receptionist Saturday. Harvey's skills ortd have an ex­ Savings Bank 7-*/ Fuel Oll/Cool/Plrewood Wonted to Buy/Trode ...... rights, unfair competition nard A pter. 643-2478. WAITRESSES backup. Typing not re­ Dresses & Sports Wear. cellent driving record DENTAL Assistant. Port - and libel and slander, which quired. Flexible help­ 646-3100. apply In person or send tim e fo r specialty prat;-!,',' may result from the publica­ CASHIERS, full time, Full or part time. Of Manchester tice In M anchester. Re- - ■ tion of any odvertlsment In port time. Expanding ful nature Is required. COMPANION- resume to: Draco Cor­ Temporary or perma­ wording position foranU C 1087 by 96fA. tne the Manchester Herald by retail oeprotlons has Full time, flexible housekeeper for el­ poration, 441C Gover­ 646-1700 nent. Good wagea hours. Send resume to; n o r's H ighw ay , S. organlzod people or­ HELP WANTED advertiser. Including adver­ Immediate openings derly woman. Room 9am-12 noon, aak for PROPERTY tisements In any free distri­ Sports Medicine t, Or­ board and salary. 649- Windsor, Cl. 06074. At­ iented person, wuf , for all shifts. Fleixible and benefits. Apply In from . Coll 6464811. __ bution publications pub­ thopedics, 155 Main St., 4291. tention Personnel. Kay QIampa. EOE lished by the Manchester scheduling. Apply In person MEDICALSecretary- LEBANON. Amston lake, person: Amazing Manchester, Ct. 647- RN/LPN-We hove a full PART Time light housR-^ /Transcrlptlonlst for In Herald. Penny Sleffert, 1493. keeping at Ct. Motor seasonal 3 bedroom Publisher. Stores, Broad Street Howard Johnson’s time or port time posi­ CLERICAL. Small office, P u z z le s busy orthopedic office. Lodge. Flexible hours. -' cottage plus extra 2 Parkade, Manchester. 394 Tolland Tpke. FULL time openings for tion on 3-11, Mondoy- diveralflad duties ,ac- Diversified duties and EOE BULK DRIVER S6 per hour to start for bedroom cottage. 4 LOST Manchester, CT loving core givers for Frlday. No weekends. Responsible Drivers count8 receivable ,tale- responsibilities. Good season amenities. Infonf, toddlers and For more Information those qualified. Call ACROSS 46 Damons Answar to Pravioui Punla CARPENTERS and Car­ needed to deliver The phonas, record keep­ pay and benefits. Send $99,900. Beozley . 537- AND FOUND penters helpers. Own 649-6220 pre-school. Coll Ma­ please call Crestfleld 6 4 3 - 1 5 5 5 for. 49 Pipa fitting resume to; Sports ing and some typing. appointment. 1 MGdical □ □ □ n u in c i QiiEaE!] 3446. tools and transporta­ rilyn DImmock, Little Convolscent, 643-5151. Hertford Courant to All benefits. Call 647- pteturt unit Medicine 8, Orthoped­ LOST. 8 year old, block- 50 Author Gray QGO CIDIICI □□ □□ tion. Work In Manches­ People Unlim ited, BAYLOR Supervisor. We carriera, daalara and 9137. EXPERIENCED person (comp, wd.) □□El □□□□ ODDD ics of Manheester, 155 /rust Doberman. Fe­ ter. Pay according to FULL Time Tellers M arlborough. 295-8003 5 Articit 51 Oraak chatM needed. Connecticut have openings for a rural aubacrlbara In the needed for custorh'' 52 — GaNar □□□□□□□ □□□□□ Main St., or coll 647- male. Vicinity Hart­ experience. Imme­ o r 295-9415. PART Time Desk Clerk. B PGQAn god 1493. Bonk Si Trust, Man­ supervisors position early morning. An In- draperies. Full time.- 12 Ctfvgth unit 53 IcalarNlic aptc □ □ □ □ □ □ MORTGAGES ford Rd. 643-9486. diate work. Call 643- Flexible schedule. Reward. chester Parkade of- WAITERS, Waitresses every weekend. 7am- aurad vehicle and a CT Hours can be flexibid,;, laeiMkgold 54 Graak god of □ □ □ □ 6760. Pleasant working at­ lovt flce. 647-5500.______and Oriental Cuisine 7pm and 7pm-7am. For driver'a llcenae are Hourly rate S6 %. >• IdCorMl grtu □ □ □ □ □ D u n mosphere. Liberal 15 On tht briny 55 Avoirdupois □BD □□□□□ □□□ NO PAYMENTS cooks wanted. Even­ more Information coll pay. Coll for appoint­ Contact Phyllis ot 456- HOMES MEDICAL office, part or Director of Nurses. what'a needed. Alao, 3527. 16 Typo of tubor waight □□□ODGIB □□□□ Up to 3 yaars. Kiss your fi­ PHOTO FINISHING ings and weekend ment. Ct. Motor Lodge. WSwiMof 56 God (Sp.) FOR SALE full time bookkeeper. Monday - Friday 9am- atoraga apace for Sun­ QOB DDQ nancial dlfflculHas eoodbvt. I HELP WANTED Office background ex­ shifts. Full and port 643-1555. namM Avoid foraclosurt. Catch up Full time. Will train. time. Experience pre­ 3pm. Crestfleld Con- day advance aactlona. 16HM0 DOWN □□□GQ □□□□□□□ perience disired. 4 days All real estate advertized In on lot* paymmts such os Hrst DRIVER. Part time for Apply at Massif Ca­ ferred. 649-0090. volscent, 643-5151. Excallant pay and mi­ ORDER filling clerks. 20 Frtnry 1 Oactmbar □□□□ □□□□ □□□ per week. Coll 649-8074 21 Nogativos the Manchester Herald It or sacond morteop* or tvan Manchester Herald RN SUPERVISOR- 3-11. leage compenaatlona. Port time or full time. holiday □□DD DGDQ □□□ outstanding crodlt cord Mils. mera 639 Main St. or send resume to: All Monday through Fri­ 22 Hit lightly (abbr.) QOIZIQ □ [!□ □ CIGG zublect to the Fair HoutIne route. Coventry area. Shakibal M. D. , 953 Immediate opening Contact Kim, 849- 23 Sly animals 2 Bogin a day Act ot 1968, which makes If K««o your horn# fro* and Short hours. Good pay Manchester Monday-Frldoy. No day, flexible hours. 26 Small flat llleeat to advertize any pref­ cltor without Hans. Bod Main Street, Manches­ LEGAL 1405. Call Roberta at 649- 3 Fish sauca 20 Pool player 37 Sunflower Call 742-8867. 9-12am, 7 weekends. For more oakM Minnatota u m erence. limitation ordizcrim- crodlt or latt oaymant his­ STOCK Clerks. Full tim e, ter. 8648. DISHWASHER. 4Pinad S to lOpm.o______SECRETARY Information please call BABYSITTER wanted. 30 Angarad 5 Honks 38 Stout Inotlon based on race, color, tory Is not a oroMtm. Kindly 31 Ihfirmitiaa part time. Expanding CABINET makers. Expe­ Crestfleld Convals- 6 Boy ^out 22 Myth 40 WhMl rellelon, sex or national c a ll; REGIONAL Classified Take charge legal se­ After school care for 8 CASHIER & 32 Thraa (prof.) orlein, or an Intention to retail operations has rience helpful but not cent, 643-5151. year old In Bowers activity 23 Matches alignmont T h e S w iss ods reach nearly Immediate openings necessary. Apply cretary needed for Law 3 3___ Com­ 24 City in Utah (comp. wd.| make any such preference, schoool area. Call 229- SECRETARY mand manta 7 Guido's high Conservative Oroup 3,000,000 homes. One for all shifts. Flexible Zahner's Wood Work­ office w ith thriving real HOME health aide. Du­ HOSTESS nota 25 Strange 41 Band limitation or discrimination. 7316 days. 646-7086 ev­ 34Di«aipatBd man (comb, form) The Herald will not know­ 1-454-4404 er classified ad placed ties Include health Purchasing dapart- 8 IncraasB instrumont scheduling. Apply In in g ., 23 In d u s tr ia l estate and general 35 ____of 26 Play up 42 Htbrow ingly occept any advertise­ with the Manchester care, meal preparation enings. Full or Part Time. a b ru p tly 1-454-1334 person: Amazing Dis­ Drive, West, Tolland. practice. Manchester msHt, busy office re­ Wight 27 _ -biuy mMturo ment which Is In vtotatlon of Herald w ill be placed In light housekeeping for PART Time Soles. Retail 9 Fashion count Stores, Brood 875-6226.______office, WP, Dictaphone quires a secretary Hours to suit your 36 Uitng cigar 28 Author 43 Capoblo of (2 the low.______over 200 newspapers elderly couple. Coll positions available In 38?laca of nama Gardner Street Parkade, Man­ f u l l Time Secretary needs. Experienced wdi.l GOVe r n a AENT Homes ROOMS throughout New Eng­ and real estate know­ 643-8065. East Hartford office "^ith accurate typing ontranca 10 Eight (comb, 29 Fortunetallar 44 Roman tyront chester. EOE. Supervisor for small form) from $1 (U repair). land for one low price. ledge essential. Heavy DENTAL Assistant. Mon­ products store. Look­ or will train, wages 39 Littrary 31 Inner 45 Turkish judge FOR RENT Insurance office In El­ skills to type miacollany 11 Producer Hebrides 46 Inner (comb, Dallnauent tax prop­ Call Classified 643-2711 client contact. Excel­ day through Thursday. ing tor energetic de­ based on past 40 Maka brown Norman erty. Repossessions. ond ask for details.^ lington. Salary based pendable mature sales purchase orders and island form) ROOMS, Mole or Female. on experience. Excel­ lent salary. Send re­ 10-5. Experience pre­ experience. Apply 41 Lott and 34 Peel 47 Bodies of Call 805-687-6000 exten­ MANAGEMENT person. Homemakers 19 Dawn Centrally located. Kit­ RNS wanted for full and lent benefits and work­ sume to ferred. Reply to P. O. other related Items. 35 Charged water sion GH 9965. part time. 11-7 shift. Box 505, Manchester, hours/flexible shifts. 44 Signs goddess penicles 49 King ...... chen prlvlledges. Reas­ TRAINEE ing conditions. Call 875- Legal Secretary Coll 289-3437 to r furthe r Heavy phone con­ onable. Apply at 39 Apply ADN, Salmon 3333 between 9om and Ct. 06040. P. O. Box 288 Information. REIN’S 1 2 3 |e Cottage Street, be­ Brjok Convalescent Learn all phases of 4pm for oppointment. TRAVEL Agency man­ tact. Apply The 9 10 11 We Buy Home Salmon Brook Manchester, CT 06040 CARING, loving, expe­ ■ tween 9-4. our restaurant opera­ ager wanted. Phone Gerber Scientific In­ Ndw York Style 12 HOMES HOMES n n HOMES HOMES Drive, Glastonbury. CARPENTER'S Helper. rienced, Individuals Il4 Real Eatatel FEMALE preferred, kit­ tion. Permanent posi­ Entry level position. John 429-9313 m ornings strument Co., 83 Need a quick sale and clos­ FOR SALE Please ca ll 633-5244. PART Time. Pumping ot: University Travel. needed for child core Deli liJFO R SALE FOR SALE FOHSALE chen privileges, bus tion with advance­ Must be ambitious and gas, changing tires. In- positions In Hartford Gerber Rd., West, S. IS I17 ing lor relocation, divorce line. Evenings and PART Time store clerk. hove transportation. S6 Rt. 30, Vernon « SOUTHERN New Eng­ ment potential. Good eludes Saturdays. ESTABLISHED cleaning County. Call Nannies settlement, debt payments or REDWOOD. Catch the CIFFSIDE. Lots Of per­ LOCATED In o prestl- w eekends o n ly 647- Apply Salvation Army per hour to start. 649- Spruce Street Mobil. "R " Us Inc. 233-7457, Windsor. 18 an alternative Inveetmant? land clossltleld ads sonality!! Unique 5 gous area! This 7 room 9813. Thrift Store, 210 nPIne wages and benefits. 5400.______company seeks port reach nearly 800,000 Breeze! I A beautiful 649-3487. time help. Flexible ask to r Suzanne. We have the answar to your treed setting and a level condo at Forest C ontem porary home Is COVENTRY. Unfur­ Street, Manchester. Apply homes In Connecticut Ridge, 6 rooms, 3 bed­ BANK Tellers full time. If CASHIER In convenience hours. Excellent pay. problamsi Call Bob at gorgeous Florida room near completion. Time nished ground floor 646-4928. you ore Interested In a and Rhode Island. The rooms, 2V!i baths, 1 to select flooring, light store. Flexible hours, 643-8567. SCHOOL BUS ORIVERS 24 2S offer lots of warm room. Private e n ­ FULL time positions Howard Johnson’s position with a future price for a basic 25 carport, lots of storage fixtures and applian­ nights and weekends. for the town of Bolton. HOME HEALTH CARE AUNMO REALTY, MG w ord ad Is on ly 890 and weather comfort I Im­ trance and both. Secur­ available at Automo­ 394 Tolland Tpke. become o teller with maculate 7 plus room space, unique layout ces! I Some of the fea­ 633-4155. We will train. Idaal part 30’ 202 East Center Street will appear In 75 news­ ity deposit, references. tive Lube Center. Ex­ Manchester, CT the South Windsor PEDIATRIC full dormered Cape In ottering lots of versa- tures ore large living S250 per m onth. 742- time |ob (or homamak- Mancheater, CT papers. For more In­ tllltyl Private setting. perience helpful but Bank and Trust Co. We FLORAL Designer with Unique home care situation available caring for and 3S‘ Redwood Forms. 3 bed­ room, separate dining 6715. w ill train. Call 647-8997 649-6220 flower shop expe­ ers or retirees. formation call Classi­ Swimming plus tennis. offer on excellent stort­ PART Time. Earn extra rehabilitation of 8 year old boy. This Is a full Utne po-i rooms, fireplace, new room, nice size family or . apply In person at ing salary, benefltsond rience. Full or pari 6494)917 fied, 643-2711 and ask Reduced to $149,900. room with fireplace, money assisting our 537-5234 or 537-5786. 38' for detalls.o carpeting. Mint condi­ 315 Broad Street, a training program time. Apply In person: bookkeeper with post­ attlon. DuUas Include assentlal care and administra-; tio n ! $209,000. Jackson Jackson 8, Jackson cathedral ceilings, two APARTMENTS Manchester. PART Time office posi­ that wl11 get you off to o Krause Florist, 621 ing, filing and light U(xi of aggressive rehab program In conjunctiom; 8i Jackson Real Estate. Real Estate. 647-8400.O walk-ln closets In mas­ E3 FOR RENT PART Tim e. $6.25 hourly. tion In S. Windsor. good start. If youenloy Hartford Rd., typing. Also help with with R.N. and L.P.N. nursing and vary active family^ 647-8400.O OPEN House. Manches­ ter bedroom, lacuzzl National In-store mar­ Acccurate typist with working with people, Monchester. customer service by Involvmant. Experience working with brain injury' 41 42 43 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED ter. Sunday July 26. tub In master bedroom 4 ROOMS. Heated, stove. ore good with figures, CARPENTER DEER Run. Fits the area, workshop, keting company Is considerable phone co­ phone. Hours 8:30am- daairable. Salary commensurate with experience.; billII! The luxury ot 1;00-4:00pm. 115 Broe- References, lease, se­ tact for busy soles of­ and hove a profes­ 48. washer and dryer curity deposit. No pets. seeking Individuals to 12:30pm, Monday exparlancad In kitchen Reply to low maintenance and slde Crescent. Picture fice. Figure aptitude sional appearance through Friday. Appli­ hook-ups In basement. 1 car parking. 8510. distribute coupons and and bath remodeling. Box FF 1 the bonus ot owning book 8 room 2'/i year samples to consumers helpful, word process­ apply for this position ADULT cations now being ac­ 6,1 old Impeccable Colon­ Large oversized deck 649-3340. Manchester Herald P A R T T IM E your own land can be with slider off kitchen. In local supermarkets. ing and or computer between 9 and 5 cepted. Send to the Quality minded. Muat ial. Exquisite master MANCHESTER. 4 room found at Lvdall Woods Asking price Is $314,500. We provide training. skills a definite plus. Mondoy-Frlday at: CARRIER attention of Terri c/o have tools and trans­ s? - In Manchester. Immo- bedroom with walk-ln apartment. 1st floor. Excellent benefit pack­ 1033 John Fitch Blvd, the Manchester He­ CUSTOMER SERVICE Coll us for additional Reliable transporta­ Energetic adults portation. Top pay (or cuolte 1 year old Nan­ closet, eot-ln kitchen Adults preferred. No tion required. Call 1- age. Call 228-9478 or South Windsor or coll rald, 16 Brolnard We are looking for responsible service- with custom cabinets. Information and/or on pets, no appliances, 1 right Individual. Full tucket Cope. 2 bed­ oppolntmentlll Realty 233-7815, Monday send resume to Stordox Muriel Marks at 289- needed to deliver The Place. No phone colls minded individuals to handle customer Inquir­ $259,900. D ire c tio n s : cor. Security. 649-1265. 6061 for on appoint­ I THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME rooms, Vh baths, 1st W orld. 646-7709.O through Friday, 9am- Equipment, P. O. Box Hartford Courant early please! time year-round posi­ DIRECTOR OF STAFF DEVELOPMENT floor den, fully op- Keeney Street, right 204, Colum blo Ct. 06237. ment. 1^ by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee ies. The position requires enthusiasm, Inde­ 4 ROOM apartment, ap­ 4pm. mornings. Excellent tion. Position available fpr RN with BS or equivalent and pendent thinking, and organization. Good pllonced kitchen. onto Nutmeg left onto VERNON. 7 room antique pliances, heat, hot wa­ Unscramble these four Jumbles, Lamplighter, right Colonial totally rehabl- TODAY IS a good day to pay plus prizes; weekly INVITATION TO BID strong teaching and leadership skllla To be respon­ communication skills and a pleasant tele­ $146,500. Jackson & ter, garage. Lease. one letter to each square, to form OHIHOJIAT MOT8UO Jackson Real Estate. onto Saddlehlll, right lltloted. Has profes­ place on ad in classified to Sooltd bids will be received sible for orientation, N.A cartiflcatlon, and In-ser­ foifr ordinary words. phone manner are essential. S575. Adults preferred. mileage allowances 649-5400 ' / 647-8400.O onto Braeside. Century sional office use for 646-7268. sell those Idle Items In the (General Services' of­ vice programs. Salary commensurate with experi­ attorney, salesperson also included. Call fice, 41 Center St., Manches­ Two shifts are available: NEWER 3 bedroom cus­ 21 Epstein Real Estate. PRIVATE PARTY you've been storing. A RABEG 647-8895.0 etc. Great visibility on 3 ROOMS. P a rtly fu r­ quick call to 643-2711 will Kim, 649-1405. ter, CT until 11;00a.m. on the ence. Good beneflte including employer - paid tom energy efficient nished. Heat. Working dote shown below for the to- 8:30 AM — 12:30 PM Monday-Friday OPEN House. Manches­ 0 I'/i acre lot near put your od In print. lowing: Telemarketing Constitution Health Network health insurance and ranch. 2 baths, central highway. $269,900. A ll- single mole preferred. Merchandise Ads P a r t T im e ^ A > 7:00 AM — 10:00 AM Saturday air, Inground pool and ter. Sunday July 26. No pets. Lease. 643- AUGUST 1Z 1987 (1) pension. Apply or call during business hours at OR brio Realty, Inc. 649- ADVBRTISBMENT FOR BIDS FURNISH 8i INSTALL liOiddng for people who 2 car garage w ith stor­ 1:0l>-4:00pm. 129 Knol- 0917. 2880. Iwood Drive. New con­ ASBRSTOS REMOVAL PROJECT FOUR (4) OVERHEAD like to talk on the Rockville Msmorlal Nursing Home 3:30 — 7:30 PM Monday-Friday age loft. Dttered at STUDIO type. Portly fur­ DOORS — HIGHWAY TIMAY $229,000. Blanchard 8, struction. Spectacular, MANCHESTER. Call to POUR COVRNTRY PUBLIC SCHOOLS GARAGE phone; apeak with a 22 South St., Rockville, CT • 875-0771 7:00 AM — 10:00 AM Saturday open and airy 7 room, see this Forest Hills 8 nished. Working single {Peasant v(rice; who - Rossetto. Call tor ap­ mala prtferred. No (3) 3M REFLECTIVE pointment today. Blan­ 7'/2 both Colonial. L- room Raised Ranch The Coventry School Building Committee, the Awarding MATERIAL 8, can work from 4-9 p.m. Please call Jeanne at 647-9946 fo r more shaped master bed­ with a beautiful level pets. Lapse. 643-2880. Authority, will receive sealed bids for the removal of all ALUMIUNUM SION information. chard 8< Rossetto. "W e PER osbestos containing materials In the following four (4) BLANKS Monday through Guarantee Our room with sitting room yard! A lot ot home tor ACCEPTING a p p lic a ­ public schools. AUGUST IX 1987 (1) ONE Thursday. LOYMED Houses." 646-2482.0 and lacuzzl. 8255,01X1. the money I $229,900. tions tor quiat one bed­ DAY Copt. Nathan Hole School (1) USED VAN W E O F F E R : ATTENTION Directions: East Cen­ A llbrio Realty, Inc. 649- room apartment at ' ^ ■ 72 DEER Run T ro ll. Beau­ 0917. Center Park. No pets, * Minimum 4 Lines — 7 Days Coventry Grammar School The Town ot Manchester It Hourly wage; com- tiful Lydoll Woods. 2 ter St., left onto Ver­ Coventry High School on equal opportunity em­ Olsten Temporaries has WHAT THE BOSS NEWSPAPER CARRIERS NEEDED... non, right onto Knol- references, no utilities. * Additional Lines 50C Per Line, Per Day G. H. Robertson School ployer, and requires on affir­ mlsaiona; incentives; THOUGHT HE WAS. bedroom Salem Cope. COLCHESTER. Alumi­ Deposit. $350 month. MANCHESTER AREA Iwood. Century 21 num sided Raised Bidding procedures shall be In accordance with all Federal, mative action policy foroll of paid vacations; cour­ openings in East Hartford for Enloy the carefree li­ 649-9287. * Classifications 71 thru 87 Its'*• Contractors '■“ *— •----- andind Vendors ^ festyle In this end unit Epstein Real Estate. Ranch, 3 bedroom, 2 State and Municipal lows governing public bidding and tesy membership; GERUDD 647-8895.0 * Merchandise Under *250 award of contracts. os o condition of doing busi­ sales training. 20 Light Industrial workers. Now arrange the circled letters to Including skylight, cor garage. Beozley. MANCHESTER. Quality ness with the Town, at per form the surprise answer, as sug­ Mather St...... all OPEN House. Manches­ 537-3446. one bedroom, heat, hot * Ad must contain price! Sealed General Bid, will be received by the Awarding Federal Order 11346. If interested call Judy gested by the above cartoon. cathedral celling and 1 Authority until eleven (11:00) a.m. on August 17, 1987, at C jme in or call Marcy. Weatfleld St...... all edr garage. 140's. Blan­ ter. Sunday July 26. water and all applian­ You may cancel anytime, ^ NO refunds Md forms, plant and tpecl- 648-7096. ces Included. A ir condi­ which time all general bids wlllb e opened and publicly read tlcotlens ore available at the Easttleld St...... all chard 8, Rossetto. 646- 1:00-4;00pm. 76 Flor­ L0T8/LAND due to this low price... aloud at; General Services' office. Olsten Temporaries Answer here: C I I X J XXXX Centerfleld S t...... all 2482.0 ence Street. Sparkling, tioned. Quiet. On bus FOHSALE line. Ideal for middle- Office of Superintendent of Schools TOWN OF AAA Auto Club Northfleld St...... all spacious three bed­ (Answers tomorrow) MANCHESTER. $74,900. aged and senior citi­ OFFER ENDS AUGUST 31, 1987 Coventry Public Schools MANCHESTER, CT. 391 B ro ad St. 162 Spencer St. Enloy the pool, cobono room older style Co­ 78 Ripley HIM Rood ROBERT B. WEISS . Jumbles: DAILY APART PILLAR INDICT McGuire Dr...... all lonial with much up- MANCHESTER. $105,000. zens. 8540. 247-5030. Coventry, CT 06338 . Manchester, .su Yesterday's and exercise room New listing. Wooded GENERAL MANAGER Kq«al dppettahz im g Manchester. 647-1991 Answer; Sometimes people who don’t live by principle Caae Or...... all along with your two dotlng and cool MANCHESTER. 6 room General Bid shall be submitted only on forms furnished by 041.«7 . _ ... -4 .u;. DDlKinip^L acre lot In extremely 1 end up with plenty of this— PRINCIP tree-shaded yard. Ot­ CALL CLASSIFIED the Awarding Authority In a sealed envelope cleorly Houae D r...... all bedroom Condo In con­ duplex In two fmolly. tered at $127,900. D irec­ desirable area of Man­ V/2 baths and laundry. marked; NOTICB venient Manchester lo­ chester. Ideal for solar PUILIC HBARINO Now beck In aleck. Jumbla Cook No. SS Is evsUabIt for sl.tO. which Inelutfas peilsga RIdga...... all cation. Coll now for tions: East Center St., Security deposit and "GENERAL BID" ana hanBtlng, ttom Jumbla, e/e this nawspapa'. ^-0- Rex 4386, Otiantfe, FL S3I02-4388. oriented Contempor­ 6 4 3 - 2 7 1 1 NOW - BOARD OP DIRICTOR8 inetua# yeut nemt. pdditai and ifp coda and makt your shack psysbia to Nawapaparbookt. right onto Spruce St., references. Gas heat ASBESTOS REMOVAL FULL TIME W alnut...... 21-123 details. Sentry Real ary home. Sentry Real Pour Public Schools TOWN OP MANCHBSTBR, CONNRCTICUT A rch...... all Estate. 643-4060.O left onto Florence. and hot water. 8695plus Coventry, CT RETML ADVERTISING POSTING CLERK Century 21 Epstein Estate. 643-4060.O u tilitie s. Coll 646-3253. (NAME AND ADDRESS OF BIDDER) Notice It hereby given that the Board ot Directors, Town of Applications are now being accepted for the MANCHESTER. $136,900. Real Estate. 647-8895.0 TOWN OP M ANCHHTIR Manchester, Connecticut, will hold o Public Heoring of Ihe Park St...... 13-110 Charming Colonial In BOLTON-“ Moture per­ LBOAL NOTICI The sealed envelope containing the General Bid shall be In­ Lincoln Center Hearing Room, 4N Main Street, Manchester, position of retail advertising posting clerk. O tia...... EAST Hartford. Nice 7 son." for nice 4 rooms, serted Into a larger envelope, sealed and addressed to: ...... all convenient location. 3 I 2 5 JOU8INE88 Connecticut, on Tuesday, August 4,1987 at 8:00 P.M. to con­ CELEBRITY CIPHER Garden D r...... room Raised Ranch, 1 bedroom, newer cor- The Planning and Zoning Commission will hold o public sider and act on the following: Applicants should have bookkeeping and Colobrity CIphor cryptogroms aro crootod from quotation* by famous ...... all bedrooms spacious PHOFERTY Dr. Nothan Chester large living room for­ petlng.lV^ baths, nice hoorlng on Mondov, August 3,1987 at 7:00 P.M. In the Hear­ School Building Committee computer experience, as well as being able to peopfa. piest and praeent. Each lattar In the ctpfier stands for St. Jamea St...... all brick fireplace living ing Room, Lincoln Center, 494 Main Street, Manchester, CT Proposed appropriation to Education Special another. Today’t cfba.- D aquaM L. room, formal dining mal dining room, 3 EAST Hartford prime lo­ patio, stone wall and Coventry Public Schools Prolects - Fund 41 - MEA - Release Time 1907-00 type, answer phones and handle a variety of b e d ro o m s , 3 b a ­ to heor and consider the followlna petitions: 78 Ripley Hill Rood 814,613.00 Butternut Road ...... all room with built Ins. cation. B-3 zoned 4 ft 4 brook I Immediate oc­ MANCHBSTBR 1-84 AS80CIATR8 — ZONI CHANOI — Coventry, CT 06338 to be financed by o o payment from the Mon- office related functions. Benefits Include 'Z'S J SJPJWASAPX Eat-In kitchen, lower throoms, fireplace, two family. Perfect for cupancy 8475/month RURAL RBSIDRNCR TO COMPRRNRNSIVI URBAN OR- (jenerol Bids shall be accompanied by a Bid Deposit In on cheeter Education Association. company paid health plan, vacation, paid Dale Road...... all level den, decit, new large lower level fam­ ofices. Many Improve­ Includes heot. 449-4000. VRLOPMBNT — 190 SLATRR STRIRT (M-91) - Application amount which Is not less thon five percent (5%) of the Bid ily room, nice treed lot. to chongo thg lenlng district classification from Rural Rosl- Proposed appropriation to Education Special holidays and sick days. Please send resume or .QAVNTP. sc VTDA ZN Garth Road...... 125-138 both, storage shed, ments, Including down­ i Ao OMS, heat and hot Amount In the form of o Bid Bond or o C e rtlfl^ Check or a walk up attic. D. W. Asking $179,000. U & R donco to Comprthentivo Urban Development for o parcel of T r w u w 's or Cashier's Check Issued by o responsible bonk Prolects~ - "Fund ...... 41 • Adult Education 1907-SI...... S13439.00 Ludlow Road...... 25-107 stairs kitchen com­ water. 3rd floor. Rent land consisting of approximately .93 acres and Identified os to be financed by o State Grant. work experience along with salary Fish Real Estate. 643- Realty. 643-2692.0 and security deposit. or Trust Company having office In the State of Connecticut. XT MVAJXA JP pletely remodeled 2 194 Slater Street. Oieck /i newer blower on fur­ MANCHESTER. 5 room TBB STBBBTt (M-fS/M-94) - Application undor Article II, Speclftcotlons. The succeesful general bidder will be re- 06040, or call Mark Abraltis, 643-2711. baths, 2 fireplaces. nace and newer 100 Section S.10.83 for o C.U.D. preliminary dovelopment plan Proposed appropriation to General Fund - airy 3 bedrooom, 2 both apartment, new car­ oulred to furnish d performance bond and also o labor and Board of Directors' Budget - Hockanum BIZMI XIA XJDAPX Family room. Eat-In AMP service. Asking for o porctl of land consisting of opproxlmotoly 141 acres materials payment bond os set forth In the Speclflcolons, In Ranch. Living room peting, washer dryer and IdPiittfled os 3S1,3S3V and 3SSV Bucklond Street and 140, River Linear Pork Committee...... SI JM0.00 N orth Elm St...... 5-91 with cathedral celling kitchen, laundry room. 8199.000. Strono Real the amount of one hundred percent (100%) of the contract to be (I nonced from portion of PundBalonce re­ hook-ups, parking for 194k MOV and 390 Slater Street. sum. -JO SC QOJCAVN MJP Woodbridge St...... 18-230 and stone fireplace, Martin school area. Estote. 647-7653.0 2. A vailable August 1st. served for use of the Conservation Commle- Owner. 643-4462.______BBNBSIS CBNTBB, INC. — ZONB CHANOB — BBSI- Contrort Documents ore on file at the Office of the Superln- slon. . sliders from dining M n r c T T N T m r s m plus utilities. 443- DBNCB B TO BBSIOBNCB C — 97/99 M AIN 9TBBBT (0-44) - tondetrt of Schools, Coventry Public Schools, 78 Ripley HIM G. FOX DISTRIBUTION CENTER -O D T L V Z N I . ' — Q J X Eaat Middle Tpke. .294-373 area to covered deck VERNON. 2 family plus L a u n d ry a n d D ry 9644. Appllcallen to change the toning district closslflcatlon from CT 06338, and may be obtained uoondeposit Proposed appropriation to General Fund - and menter bedroom to Board of Directors' Budget - July 4th Cele­ NOW HIRING! Franklin St...... all In-law apartment. cleaning establishment 4 ROOMS, 111 aAo Ih Rosldonco B to Rtsldtnco Cforo porctl of land consisting of f'4e Bidder shall be refunded thedeposit deck and In-ground Country setting. opgroxlmotgly acres and Identified at 97/99 Main Stroot. **f' upon return of thedocuments Ingood con- bration ...... 130,500.00 ::V Z D A C . Parker St...... 104-242 with favorable lease Street. No pets. Secur­ to be financed by soles proceeds and denotlens MERCHANDISE PROCESSORS pool. Rec room and Priced to sell with a located In great area. PAIBWAV BSTATBS — ZONB CHANOB — BUBAL BBSI- Mtlpn within ten (10) days of recleot of bids. Deposit shall be -PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The fact is that nuclear ity and deposit. 444- DBNCB TO BBSIOBNCB AA — 447/449 KBBNBV'S 1 T_____ H lB T in fhe form of CERTIFIED CHECK, TREASURER'S CHECK received tor the 19S7 Celebration. Green Road.... .204-330 den-greot for enter­ psotive cosh flow . 8115.000. A llbrio 2426.9-5 weekdoys. S'” * CHECK payable fo the Coventry School Proposed appropriation to Oenerol Fund - G. Fox a New England tradition of satisfaction ^weapons exist and the knowledge of how to make them taining. D. W. Fish $1 89 ,9 00 . K ie rn o n fP>6ft - Application to chongo the toning dltlrlct elottlflco- --aannot be erased." — Margaret Thatcher. Henry St...... 201-315 R ealty, Inc. 44841917. COVENTRY. iemi refir- non from Rural Botldonc# to Retidonce AA for a porcol of Building Committee. Also, one complete set of Contract TRANSFER to Capital Improvement Reserve end national retail trend center has Immediate Princeton S t... Real Estate. 643-1991.0 Realty. 649-1147. land cgntM no of w ^ i^ lm a te lv 33 ocroe and Idgntiflod at Documents will be on file, and can be examined at F. w. Fund • - Community “ Y " asbestos rem oval...... t l9,S3S.OO .167-190. blshed loft studio 487and489Kggney Dodge, PIgn Room, 10 Tower Lone, Avon, CT 06001. to be finonced from Fund Balance. openings for merchandise processors at our' Tanner St...... 124-168 BOLTON. 8295,000. M ARLBO AbUG H. 2 bed- apartment. Country South Windsor Distribution Center. Job ras- Charming updoted 1879 room Colonial. Large THB BALP COMPANY — tP B C IA L BXCBPTION — BXCA- A pre-bid conference and site walk-through will be held on Proposed Ordinance - Conveyance ot premises from Wallaalay St...... all setting. Utilities In­ VATION OP BABTH MATBBIALS — I844B TOLLAND Monday, Aug. 3, 1987 at 11:00 o.m., at the Coventry High Somersville Corporation to the Town ot Manchester for ponslbilltlaa Include verifying orders, along '(CLASSIFIED ADS: 5 bedroom C o lon ia l lot. Very close fo lake. cluded. References and TURNPIKB (B-an - Application under Article IV, Section School, Coventry, CT at the Superintendent's Office. Atten­ highway purposes • Parker Street • tor no consideration. counting ticketing'and hanging merchandise Lawton Rd...... all centrally located near Only 20 m inutes to security. $400 per I IJS lSI of the Zonfng Begulotlont for a special excepNan for dance at the pre-bid conference Is required of oil bidders. Copy ot the Proposed Ordinonce may be seen In the Town EVERY Milford Rd...... alt Bolton Green with od- H a rtfo rd . 8125,000. COLUMBIA. Seasonal month. 742-4715. NM gaccwotlon of earth nsoferlols on o parcel of Iona conslst- The Coventry School Building Committeo reserves the right Clerk's Office during business hours. before it’s tent to our etoraa. Full and part time the ^ Carpenter Rd.. loccnt building rented Beozley 537-3446. cottage with 3 bedroom lag at aproxbnotalv 38.81 acres and Idgntiflsd os 1044R Tol- to relect any or oil bids of the General Bidder If It Is In Its In­ d a y ...... all terest to do so. All public meetings of th# Town of Manchester ore held at lo- day end evening schedulea ere available. We Sanford Rd...... all to the Montessorl MANCHESTER. Just at Columbia lake. Mo­ Ignd Tumplkg. AND t o r boot ollowed AlWilehdeilae Intargstgd parsons mdv be heard and written ProlecI to be completed by September 1,1988. cationstlor which ore accessible to handicapped citizens. In ad- offer competitive starting salary, generous wonder Hamilton Dr...... all school to greatly offset listed lovely 3 bedroom egtmttgalegWgni rgcgivod. Coplee of thato petitions oro on ditlon, handicapped Individuals reoulrlng on auxllloryald In employee discount and the opportunity to IN expenses. Home In­ Ranch In move-ln con­ 88SAOO. B m le y . 537- FMRENT file la Ihe Town Clerk's efflco end may bo Insgoctod during BY ORDER OF: order to toclllnite their partlclMtlon at meetings should cludes 16 X 21 liv in g contact the Town at 647-3131 one week prior to the scheduM earn e weekly Incentive bonus. Apply Monday Watharall St...... 8-262 dition. Quiet, conve­ narmal gffleg hours. School Building Committee meeting to that opproprlatg arrangomentt con b# m o ^ , ays McCann Dr..... room, spacious dining nient location. Alumi­ LiOANOfl. Sooson€lP2 CONDO 1 badreem loft. Town of Coventry, CT through Friday from 9-5 end Saturday from worker S ...... 4lll room, modern kitchen, PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSION 78 Ripley Hill Rood Bidwell 8t...... 279-333 num tiding, new both. bedroom cottage at Wall to wall corpatlng, STEPHEN T. CASSANO, SECRETARY 8em until 12 at Q. Fox DIetrlbutlon Center, 301 den, music room, iV t oppllancaa, carport, Log Kwosh, Sgcrgtory Coventry, CT 06338 BOARD OP DIRECTORS .-J M .a n Chester Herald and carpeting. Ottered Amaton lake. New * Mgnchgstgr, CT this 38th day of July, 1987 Qovernor’e Highway, South Windsor, Ct. baths, 2 cor garage and a t 8130,800. F rln d p le t vinyl aiding. Only lacuzzl, spiral ttolr- 0 DATE: July 7,1987 Doted at Moncheeter, Cenneeticul this 33rd day ot July, 1987. nn.nf 643-2711 CALL NOW 643-2711 / 647-9946 m uch m ore. D. W . Fish only. Flooag coll 449- 850,010. B aailev. 537- coat. Coll bttw aan 7om A b U tt . RedI Estate. 443-19»1.a •935. and 2pm. 447-5812.