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Trial Iivaits Election trial iivaits election Both sides get time to study thousands of secret papers... page 10 >• i« 4k. .4 <1% ■ *pVt- .4f|> 14- Dr. Crane’s Quiz UConn prof Wetlands error costs town $200,000 By Andrew Yurkovsky says Sound Manchester Herald be raised. ' 1. The phrase “ 2 x 4” involves the worker who Weiss would not say-what damages most likely also employs a It’s going to cost Manchester were originally sought by Brunoli k BLOW TORCH HOD MITER BOX BEEN Sons, the contractor. Town officials is improving $200,000— not counting legal expenses r iH H L HAMMER — to settle its dispute with the U.S. had said previously, however, that the 2. Which "back” usually involves a bundle of Arm y Corps of Engineers over the stoppage would cost from $12,000 to GROTON (AP) - The Long greenbacks? construction on wetlands of an addi­ $15,000 per day. Calculated on the Island Sound has been troubled n !. ^ CANVASBACK RAZORBACK KICKBACK tion to the town’s sewage treatment basis'of 28 lost work days, those SWflirBACK this summer by heavy rains, hot plant. damages i^ould Have ranged between 3. Which one of these is least likely to lower a temperatures and industrial The town Board of Directors, $338,000 and $420,000. woman’s bustline? waste but a University of Connec­ ending a lengthy and freQuently angry Work stopped June 23, but the town JOGGING TENNIS SWIMMING ICE SKATING ticut professor predicted Friday dispute with federal officials, unanim­ ‘ had been alloWed by the U.S. attorney 4.Which one of these is most likely to lower a the summer could end without a ously approved an agreement Friday to resume work for a four-day period woman’s bustline? major fish kill if nothing serious that w ill allow the town to expand the at the end of June. JOGGING TENNIS SWIMMING ICESKA'HNG happens in the next three weeks. sewage treatment plant on the we­ Also under'Friday’s agreement, 5. Which Bibl« character sold his birthright for a “ At this point we do have a low tlands in exchange for a $300,000 fine, Brunoli k Sons would have to restore mess of pottage? oxygen level in the sound, lower half of which the town will pay. wetlands where an access road to the DAVID JONAH BOAZ ESAU than we’d like to have,” said The agreement in principle, which secondary fafcllity, o ff Love Lane, had 6. Match the Bible women with the entries at the Barbara Welsh, associate profes­ was finalized by the town administra­ been built by the contractor. right which pertain to them. " " sor of oceanography and re­ tion just before a special 5 p.m. The agreement puts a ceiling of (a) Rahab ..........................................(v) Forger searcher for the federally fi­ meeting of the board in the Lincoln $140,000 on any additional construc­ (b) Jezebel.......................................... (w) Judge nanced Long Isiand Sound Study. Center hearing room, calls for the tion expenses Bnmoli k Sons may (c) D orcas..................................... (x) Prostitute incur as a result of the delay. Work on “ But if we can hold for the next town to spUt the $300,000 fine with the (d) Deborah ............................. (y) Shepherdess three weeks without anything the $27 million etyiansion and upgrad­ (e) R a c h e l.....................................(Seamstress) consultant engineer, Metcalf & Eddy A P photo serious, I think we’ll have sur­ of Wakefield, Mass. ing of the;plant, begun last year, bad Answers in the Classified section. been scheduled to be com plete In vived the summer,” she said. The town would be allowed to pay August 1990. •• ONE OUT, ONE IN — Nicholas F. Brady listens as Recent rains, heat, pollution the fine to the U.S. Army'Corps of Werbner said that the state and Treasury Secretary James A. Baker II, right, announces and an extensive plankton bloom Engineers in three eQual payments federal funding for the project would Connecticut Weather his resignation Friday. President Reagan named Brady to led Welsh and others to suspect over a two-year period. remain (n place under the agreement. the Cabinet post after Baker’s resignation. that a massive fish and lobster The agreement also calls for the s.rm w i m kill might occur. contractor, Fred Bnmoli & Sons Inc. Manchester and vicinity; Saturday, hot ^nd THE PROJECT HAS BEEN FI­ of Avon, to receive $275,000 for M m ctltW H*r«ld humid with partly sunny skies. A 40 percent chance A reddish brown algae mass in NANCED through a state grant of damages caused by the delay in of late afternoon thunderstorms. High 90 to 95. the western end of the sound in TOURING PLANT — Lt. Col.^tahley J. Murphy, deputy division almost $T million, a federal grant of construction. Metcalf k Eddy would Saturday night and Sunday, humid with scattered T reasury secretary July 1987 was blamed for a low $10 mlllipn and a state loan of $14 pay $225,000 and the town would pay engineer for the Djlew England division of the Army Corps of showers and thunderstorms. Low 65 to 70. High 85 to dissolved-oxygen condition million. Federal officials had threa­ $50,000. Assistant Town Manager Engineers, and Robert J. Young, superintendent of the town% 90. Chance of showers 50 percent both Saturday called hypoxia that drove all the tened to seek to have thejundlng cut Steven R. Werbner said that the night and Sunday. fish and lobsters eastward to Water and Sewer Division, lead a July 12 tour of the construction off because of the wetlands violation. town’s share could be paid through the West coastal, east coastal: Saturday, fog lifting leaves to help Bush . avoid suffocation. site for an addition to the town’s sewage treatment plant. Negotiations betweeiTthe town, the ^ town’s insurance fund. early, then partly sunny. Very warm and humid. A enginee&and the contractor were the This would bring the total cost to the 30 percent chance of a late afternoon thunderstorm. Millions of dead menhaden take about two months to formalize agreement was probably in the town’C final hurdle in reaching^a settlement. WASHINGTON (AP) - Treas­ responsibilities, but said that town to $200,000, not including any High in the mid 80s to lower 90s. Saturday night and choked the state’s harbors and the agreement in a consent decree, best interests. Werbner said that those negotiations ury Secretary James A. Baker III “ once I get that nomination, my legal expenses, which were not Sunday, humid with scattered showers and hundreds of lobsters suffocated in which would be approved by the U.S. In a written statement he read to the were completed only at 4:30 p.m. , announced Friday he is resigning job is to run, run hard, all-out for estimated Friday. thunderstorms. Low around 70. High 85 to 90. traps. Welsh recently said she Friday, Just a half-hour before the the presidency.” Justice Department and a federal board. Mayor Peter P. DiRosa Jr. ' to take over George Bush’s expected to see a drop in board’s special session. A tentative For his part, Reagan seemed judge. said that although the town main­ presidential election campaign, dissolved oxygen soon after the THE BOARD’S A PPR O V A L of the settlement with the federal offlelals pleased for Bush, even though tained that Metcalf k Eddy was teliing President Reagan he plankton uses up the food supply, agreement lifts a cease-and-desist Barton described the fine as a large had been worked out on Tuesday. Baker’s departure marked the responsible for getting the wetlands Lotterv wanted to help “ensure the dies and falls to the bottom. order that had been issued in June by one by Corps standards. The Corps Assistant U.S. ^Attorney Frank survival of your legacy.” second Cabinet resignation in as permit, it had been detenQined that the Corps. Under the agreement, the originally proposed a $1.5 million fine, Santoro, who participated in negotiat­ many months. But on Friday, she said, “ We seeking damages Against the engi­ Reagan called Baker “ a friend town can resume work immediately. which would have exceeded a $540,000 ing sessions with the federal agencies, Connecticut dally Friday: W7. Play Four: 7558. “ You’ve been a secret of our did not get as low oxygen a^ in neer through court action would be whom I will miss” and announced The administration said it hoped that fine believed to be the Corps’ record said Friday afternoon, “ If tjiere has Connecticut “ Lotto” Friday: 6, 27, 28,35, 39,40. success. Now Jim, go do it for 1987 when we had the hypoxia. We costly. that he was nominating Wall the work could start again on Monday. fine nationwide. The town strongly been agreemept in principle, we are had a plankton bloom last week... Street investment banker Nicho­ George,” the president said. Work on the secondary part of the opposed the proposed fine. TOWN MANAGER ROBERT B. - very p l e a ^ . ” it was very thick and it looked a las F. Brady to he Baker’s Baker said he had enjoyed plant, where about 4 acres of wetlands The agreement brings to an end the WEISS said that the town’s share of At one point the Cons had proposed lot like the July 21 bloom of 1987, Index successor at Treasury. working for Reagan, but told the are located, has been halted since town’s seven-week dispute with the the fine would be paid for out of the that the town relocaie the secondary but it didn’t have as much effect Referring to months of specula­ president that “ it dQes seem to June 23.
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