24—MANCHESTER HERALD, Wednesday, March 27, 1991 SCOREBOARD THURSDAY

Mansoa Chi (slashing), 1435. Blazers 126, SonicsIlS Third Period—2 Toronto, Maguire 9 (Hannan, Basketball SEATTLE (113) Pant), 2:38. 3, Toronto, Ramage 10, 15:43. 4, Johnson 59 7-8 17, Kemp 512 56 15, Ben­ Chicago, Roenlck 41 (GouleL Brown), 18:28 jamin 7-9 3-3 17, Payton 1-2 0-0 2 Threatt 3-8 (pp). Penally—Richardson, Tor (crose-chock- LOCAL NEWS INSIDE 0-0 6, McKey 4-6 1-2 10, McMillan 5 5 2-2 9. ing). 1731. NBA standings Pierce 520 4-4 21, Cage 5 4 5 4 9, Dailey 2-4 Ovonimo—None. Panaltlaa—None. EASTERN CONFERENCE 2- 3 6. Barros 52 1-2 1. Totals 41-81 2534 113. Shots on goal—Chicago 17-10-11-4—42 ■ Local sidewalks set for repairs. Atlantic Ivlilon PORTLAND (126) Toronto 8-8-8-1—25. P et. GB Kersey 9-15 57 21, Williams 511 1-1 11. Power-play Qpportunitiea—Chicago 1 of 5; -Boston 50 19 .725 — Duckworth 511 2-2 12, Drexier 11-22 5 7 30, Toronto 0 of 3. PNIadelphia 38 31 .551 12 Porter 512 513 22 Robinson 510 3-4 13. Goalies—Chicago, Balfour, 42-18-7 (25 ■ Solution to foot patrol cuts. New VbfK 34 36 .486 16VS Aingb 59 54 15, Davis 1-4 50 2 Cooper 0-0 shots-23 saves). Toronto, Ing, 16-27-8 (42-40). W ashington 26 42 .382 231/ 0-0 0, Abdelnaby 5 0 0-0 0. Totals 47-94 26-38 New Jersey 23 47 .329 27*« 126. Bruins 7, Nordlques 4 Miami 21 49 .300 29'rz Seattle 21 26 33 33—113 ■ Opportunities for budget debate. What'S ■ w ■ Boston .1 3 3—7 Central Division Portland 28 36 35.27—126 Quebec 1 2 1— 4 51 — 3-Polnt goals—Seattle 3-6 (McKey 1-1, x-CNcago 17 .750 First Period—1, Boston, Hodge 28 (Jonnay), x-D etrolt 43 27 .614 9 McMillan 1-1, Pierce 1<-2 Johnson 51, Banos zasniraa 15:05 (pp). 2, Quebec, Sakic 48 (Nolaa Foigar- News x-Milwaukea 42 28 .600 10 51), FOrtland 6-10 (Drexier 2-3, Porter 23, ■ Union, town come to terms. ty). 15:59. Penallfee—Burridge, Bos (roughing), Atlanta 38 32 .543 14 Ainge 2-3, .Kersey 0-1). Fouled out—Pierce, 13:45; Twist Qua, double innor (roughing), Indiana 35 35 .500 17 Kersey. Rebounds—Seattle 49 (Cage 8), 13:45 March 28.1991 Cleveland 24 44 .353 27 Portlarid 56 (Kersey 11). Assists—Seattle 22 Second Period—3, Quebec, Morin 9 (Hough, harlotte 20 49 .290 3 1 '« (Threen, Pierce 4), Portland 20 (Porter 10). Sundin), 5:51. 4, Quebec, Pearson 10 (Raglan, WESTERN CONFERENCE Local/Regional Section, Page 4,5. Total fouls—Seattle 32 Portland 28 A—12884. McNeilO, 6:40. 5, Boston, Wiemer 3 (Baers, MIdwsst Division Hodge), 1211.6, Boston, Bourque 20 (Janney), W L P GB Suns 117, Timberwolves 95 1334. 7, Boston, Wiamer 4 (Janney, Bourque), Yale researcher x U ta 46 22 .676 — 18:41. Penaltiae—Quintal, ^ major (fightino), x-San Antonio 45 23 .662 1 MINNESOTA (95) 7:46; Twist Que, major (fighllng), 7:46; Nilan, blasts smoking x-Houston 44 24 .647 2 Corbin 519 57 15. Mitchell 516 53 19, Manchester’s Award-Winning Newspaper Bos (elbowing), 1236; Finn, Quo (roughing), Dallas 25 42 .373 20'AZ Spencer 2-5 0-0 4. Campbell 519 4-5 16, 1206. NEW HAVEN (A ^ — A Orlando 24 43 .358 211/2 Flicherdson 7-19 0-0 15, Breuer 2-6 0-5 4, Yale researcher, criticizing UJ5. innesota 22 46 .324 24 Brooks 3-7 5 0 6. D.Wsst 1-4 5 0 2 Murphy 2-3 Third Period—6, Boston, Hoover 4 (Markwart Christian), 6:54. 9, Quebec, Morin 10 (VeHs- Denver 18 51 .261 281/2 3- 5 7, Glass 1-3 0-0 2 Godhead 53 1-2 1, Cof­ tobacco conqianies for prtxnot- Pacifle Division fey 1-10-0 2 Totals 35105 1522 95. chek), 10:57. 10, Boston, Neely 49 (Bourque, Wesley), 1231 (pp). 11, Boston, Neely 50, ing their products in devel(>ing A xP ortla nd 50 18 .735 — PHOENIX (117) x-LA Lakers 50 20 .714 1 Chambers 4-9 56 13, McDaNel 11-21 0-0 19:57 (-en). Penalties—Nilart Bos, minor- countries, is calling on medical xP hoenix 48 22 .686 3 22 Lang 1-2 22 4, Homacek 511 1-1 12, major-mlscoriduct (charging, lighting), 3:27; institutions and health care Golden Stale 36 33 .522 141/2 Johnson 10-16 56 27, Majerle 514 0-0 10. Twist Quo, doubie minor-major-rNsconduct Gorbachev ignores parliament vote (high-sticking, instigator, fighting), 327; Paar- woiicers to divest themselves of Seattle 32 36 .471 18 Ceballos 1-4 2-2 4. Nealy 2-5 5 4 8 M.Wbst 6-8 0-2 12. Knight 0-1 2-4 2 Peny 0-0 3-4 3.Totals son, Que (high-slicking), 9:13; Lazaro, Bos tobacco investments. LA C lippers 26 44 .371 25 other parts of central Moscow, some unloading thousands of S32-to-286 vote with 93 abstentions a resolution rejecting as Sacramento 18 49 .269 311/2 4591 24-31 117. (slashing), 1530; Wiemer, Bos (high-aticking), ByALANCOOPERMAN Dr. Michele Barry, in an ar­ Minnesota is 27 31 19— 95 18:56; Wbsley, Bos (unsportsmanlike conduct), heimeted troops. unconstitutional the three-week ban on rallies in Moscow or­ x-clinchod playoff berth The Associated Press ticle in today's New England Tuesday's Games PhoeNx 33 39 22 23—117 19:25; Sundin, Que (unsportsmaNike corkfuct), Mikhail Bocharov, one of Yeltsin's top economic aides, dered by Gorbachev's Cabinet on Monday. Charfotte 97, Golden State 94 3-Point goals-^innesota 3-5 (&ooks 2-2, 1925; Boston bench, served by Nealy (delay of Journal of Mnlicine, also calls predicted that one million people would march on the Kremlin Indiana 123, Atlanta 113 Richardson 1-3), Phoenix 3-5 (Homacek 1-1, game), 19:57. MOSCOW — Mikhail S. Oorbachev ignored the Russian As it did, police outside enforced the order by dispersing on physicians and medical as­ Miami 104, Cleveland 98 Johnson 1-1, Nealy 1-1, Chambers 51, Majerle Shots on goal—Boston 12-14-9—35. Quebec come evening. dozens of pro-democracy activists, arresting about six. 0-1). Fouled out—None. Rebounds—Minnesota 6 -1 2 -6 -2 6 . parliament's objectitms to his ban oo rallies today and sent sociations to suppmt federal New Jersey 98, Philadelphia 95, OT He told an extraordinary session of the Russian parliament After the vote, a Yeltsin emissary hurried over to Gor­ San Antonio 129, Now York 119, OT 58 (Corbin 12). Phoenix 68 (M.Wast 13). As­ Power-play Opportunitias—Boston 2 of 3; troops and water cannons into city streets where pro- legislatitm requiring tlud tobacco sists—Minnesota 18 (Corbin. Richardson 4), Quebec 0 of 3. that he thought the march would be peaceful, and that law­ Phoenix 117, Minnesota 95 Ree Department photo democracy activists promised a huge demonstratimi. bachev's office to appeal to him to remove the thousands of exports be regulMed as those Portland 126, Seanle 113 Phoenix 31 (Johnson 10). Total fouls—Min­ Goalies—Boston, Lemelln, 16-10-3 (26 makers would inarch at its head. People have been told to run Soviet troops and police flooding into the city center in expec­ Wednesday's Games nesota 24. Phoenix 19. A—14.487. MIDGET CHAMPIONS — The Rockets took the midget basketball title at the Mahoney Rec shots-22 saves). Quebec, Tugnutt, 11-29-10 sold domestically. The events threatened to develc^ into the most serious om- if soldiers attack, Bocharov said. tation of the pro-Yeltsin demonstratioiL Indiana at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Center this past winter. Team members, from left, front row: Laurie Adams, Mashari Teal, (34-28). Barry said Wednesday that Orlando at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. frontation yet between reformers allied with Russian leader Yeltsin supporters t^jpeared in command at parliamentary NCAA Tournament glance The emissary, Ruslan Khasbulatov, said Gorbachev rejected U.S. tobacco companies have Utah at LA Clippers, 10:30 p.m. Jason Goldberg, Chris Duffy, Jeff Champagne, Mike Moriarty. Back row; Kashuane Teal, Devils 3, Rangers 3 Boris . T^tein and hard-line Cranmunist Party, military and session, w hi^ had been called by hard-liners seeking a vote of the appeal. Gcubachev has said repeatedly that laws and Portland vs. Seattle at Tacoma, 10:30 p.m. EAST REGIONAL turned to develcqiing countries to Thursday's Games First Round Jared McCary, Bradley McMillan, Bryan Gorman, Coach Gary Champagne. New Jersey 1 2 0 0—3 KGB officials lining behind Gorbachev. no confidence in Yeltsin. N.. Rangers 0 3 0 0—3 make up losses fiom the declin­ Philadelphia at Charlotte, 7:30 p.ra At Cole Fieldhouse Hundreds of militai^ vehicles suiroimded the Kremlin and The congress, meeting in a Kremlin hall, ^iproved by a Please see SGVIET, page 8. Washington at Cleveland, 7:30 p.ra College Park, Md. First Period—1, New Jersey, LaiNaux 30 ing domestic population of (Wsinrich, Albelln), 838 (pp). Penalties—Show, Boston at Miami, 7:30 p.ra Thursday, March 14 At Ths McKals Center (holding), 630; Conacher, (holding), smokers. CNcago at New Jersey, 7:30 p.m. Oklahoma Stale 67, New Mexico 54 TUcson, ArIz. 14:29; Leetdi, NY (hooking), 1621; Turootle, Houston at Atlanta, 8 p.m. North Carolina Stats 114, Southern Missis­ Sunday, March 17 These countries, for the most Golden Stale at New \brk, 8:30 p.m. sippi 65 Utah 85, Michigan State 84, 20T ECHO Hockey Hockey NY (rougNng), 1926. part, have no restrictions on Orlando at Sen Antonio, 8:30 p.m. Temple 80, Purdue 63 UNLV 62. Georgetown 54 Second Period—2 New Jersey, Driver 9 (Cigar, Wainrich), :48 (pp). 3, New Jersey, cigarette sales and the cigarettes Milwaukee at Phoenix, 9:30 p.ra Richmond 73. Syracuse 69 Regional Semifinals Shanahan 27 (Sundstrom, Fetisov), 130 (pp). Utah at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m. At The Carrier Dome At The Kingdoms Pee Wee B Kurds fear tend to have far more nicotine NHL standings 4. New York, Gartner 47 (Moller, RichteO, 532. Syracuse, N.Y. S e a ttle In the Avon Tournament, Hebron Wood 5, New Vbrk, Millen 2 (Btoernberg, Leetoh), and tar than those sold in this Friday, March 15 T h u rs d a y , M arch 21 WALES CONFERENCE Products defeated Avon, 5-1; walloped West 14:38 (pp). 6, New York, Gartner 48, 15:54. NBA results Eastern Michigan 76, Mississippi State 56 Seton Hall 81, Arizona 77 Patrick Ohrlalon country, said Barry, associate Haven. 9-3; and lost to Troy. N.Y., 4-2 Penalties—Moller, NY (high-sticking), :48; Penn Stale 74, UCLA 69 UNLV 83. Utah 66 W L. TPts GF OA Against Avon, Mike Dumont and Joey Hayes Kasatorxiv, NJ (hooking), 120; Shanahan, NJ, professor of medicine at the 'Vkle Hornets 97, \^rriors 94 North Carolina 101, Northeastern 66 Regional Championship x-Pitteburgh 40 32 5 85 328 291 scored two goals apiece (or HWP with Matt mlnor-rNsconduct (unsportsmaNike' conduct), School of Medicine. Villanova 50. Princeton 48 At The Kingdoms x-NY Rangers 35 30 13 83 286 256 GOLDEN STATE (94) Denis adding the other score. Nick Maiczyk, 6:26; Hardy, NY, mlnor-misconduci (un­ starvation; Second Round S e a ttle W ashington 35 35 7 77 248 253 Mullin 8-15 6-8 23, Petersen 2-5 2-2 6, Mar- Duke Mansell, Sean Wardwell and Chris Green­ sportsmanlike conduct), 6:26; Moller, NY At Cole Fieldhouse Saturday, March 23 New Jersey 31 31 15 77 266 254 ciulionis 5-7 1-2 11, Hardaway 5-17 1-2 13, land had assists. (rougNng), 8:16; VWInrich, NJ (Ngh-sticking), College Park, Md. UNLV 77, Seton Hall 65 PNIadelphia 33 36 9 75 248 260 China petitioned 2 Richmond 8-16 6-7 iz , Jepeen 0-0 0-0 0, Lister Against West Haven, Todd Hutton tallied S a tu rd a y, M arch 16 NY Islanders 23 44 10 56 215 282 10:37; Nicholls, NY (rougNng), 11:15; Doneyko, 1- 3 0-2 2, Higgins 4-7 0-0 8, Elie 3-5 1-1 7, three goals while Dumont added two goals. NJ, double minor (roughing), 14:15; MocLaon, BEUING (AP) — A groiqi of Temple 77, Richmond 64 THE FINAL FOUR Adams Dhrltlon Mokeski 1-1 0-2 2. Totals 37-76 1 7-26 94. Denis, Chris Chambers, Hayes and Greenland NJ (rougNng), 14:15; Albelln, NJ (unsportsmorv Oklahoma Stats 73, North Carolina Stats 64 At The Hoosisr Dome y-Boston 43 23 12 96 288 256 visiting U.S. congressmen ] CHARLOTTE (97) finished off the scoring. Trevor Frenette (3), x-M ontreal 38 29 11 87 268 242 Ilka corkfuct), 14:15; Malay, NJ, misconduct Newman 6-16 3-6 16, Reid 5-12 0-0 10, At The Carrier Dome Indianapolis Hayes (2), Wardwell (2) and Bruce Turgeon (2) riots spread presented a petition to Premier x-B ulfalo 30 30 17 77 278 267 14:15; Nicholls, NY (unsportsmanlike corkfuct),. 30 r- Gminski 3-7 0-0 6, Chapman 8-20 1-2 17, Gill Semifinals Syracuse, N.Y. had assists. x-H arttord 31 36 10 72 227 260 14:15; Malletta, NY, double minor (roughing), Li Peng today seeking the 4- 10 2-2 10, Keys 1-5 0-0 2, Gattison 5-10 6-9 Saturday, March 30 S ^ Sunday, March 17 Against Troy, Hutton and Dumont scored Quebec 15 49 13 43 225 345 14:15; CIrella, NY, misconduct 14:15. 16, Curry 5-13 3-3 13, Boguee 2-5 1-2 5, Leck- North Carolina (29-5) va. Kansas (26-7), 5:39 release of 77 people imprisoned North Carolina 84, Villanova 69 while Turgeon assisted. Keith Dumont was out­ CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Third Period—None. Penalties—Janssens, The report could not be con­ > m nar 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 40-102 16-24 97. Eastern Michigan 71, Penn Stats 68, OT p.m, By ALEX EFTY standing in goal all three games. Norria Division NY (hooking), :28; Shanahan, NJ (holding), or under house arrest because of Golden State 31 27 25 11—94 Regional Semifinals Duke (30-7) vs. UNLV (34-0), 30 minutes firmed. Rebels earlier said they had H o W L. TPts GF QA 434; ShonaNin, NJ (roughing), 7:47; King, NY The Associated Press their religious activities. Charlotto 24 29 17 27—97 At The Meadowlands Arena after comp, of first game pushed beyond Dohuk and were Squirt B x-CNcago 47 22 8 102 273 205 (rougNng), 7:47; Boschman, NJ (roughing), 3-Point goals—Golden Stats 3-13 (Hardaway East Rutherford, N,. Championship The petition was signed by O 00 NAMCO advanced to the semifinals of the x-SL Louis 44 22 11 99 300 247 832; Show, NY (rougNng), 832; M al^, NJ near n o rth ^ Iraq's largest city, 2- 8, Mullin 1-2, Higgins 0-3), Charlotte 1-7 Friday, March 22 Monday, A pril 1 ZAKHG, Iraq — Kurdish rebel Enfield Invitational. NAMCO lost to East Haven, x-D etroit 33 36 e 74 262 281 (rougNng), 9:59. 110 congressmen, including 2 C (Newman 1-1, Keys 0-1, Curry 0-2, Chapman North Carolina 93, A stern Michigan 67 Semifinal winners, 9:10 p.m. c i Mosul, 30 miles farther south. 4-3; beat Simsbury, 4-2:, beat Westflsld, 3-2; x-Minnesota 26 37 14 66 248 257 Overtime—None. Penalties—MacLeon, NJ leaders in iwrthem Iraq are pleading Temple 72 Oklahoma Stale 63. OT House MajtHity Leader Richard 0-3). Fouled out—Higgins, Newman. and lost to Yfest Hartford, 6-3. Toronto 23 44 I t 57 236 308 (interference), 4:45; Kasatonov, NJ (rougNng), The Kurdish rebels said Wednes­ H H Rebounds—Golden State 53 (Lister 7), Char­ Regional Championship for the U.S.-led allies to send food, Gephardt and Minority Leader Against East Haven, Mike McCarthy scored Smylhs Division 4:45; New Jwsey berKh, sanrsd by Lemieux lotte 65 (Gattison 12). Assists—Golden Slate Sunday, March 24 NIT glance day that the Iraqi army was massing m I twice while Kris Davis accounted (or the other x-Los Angeles 45 23 10 100 331 244 (too many man), 4:45; King, NY (rougNng), saying they are more worried about Robert Michel. The 77 people 22 (Hardaway 11), Charlotte 29 (Bogues 8). At The Meadowlands Arena fcxces to retake anothn city in their Quart arlinals score. McCarthy, Davis and Jon Schubert had x-Calgary 45 25 7 97 330 250 4:45; Richter, NY, served by Gartner (roughing), starvation than the government's of­ 0 m Total fouls—Golden State 27, Charlotts 24. East Rutherford, N.J. listed included Catholic bishops, Wednesday, March 20 assists while Greg Raymer played well In goal. x-Edm onton 35 37 5 75 256 260 4:45. possession, the oil center of Kirkuk, Technical—Marciulionis. A—23,901. North Carolina 75, Temple 72 Oklahoma 83. Prdviderxte 74 fensive against them. priests and participants in l o ^ Against Simsbury, Raymer scored three Vancouver 27 43 9 63 240 313 Shota on goal—Now Jersey 12-13-10-2—37. ISO miles north of Baghdad. T h u rs d a y , M arch 21 goals with Davis adding the other. Andy Mursko W inNpeg 26 41 11 63 255 279 New Vbrk 4-18-14-5-41. 1 SOUTHEAST REGIONAL “hou.se chur^." Pacers 123, Hawks 113 Massachusetts 82, Siena 80. OT and Matt Lappen assisted with Jeff King playing x-clinched playoff berth Power-play OpportuNtiae—New Jersey 3 of In an indication that offensive 'The insurgents also said they have First Round China allows worship only in ATLANTA (113) Stanford 78. Southern Illinois 68 well in net y-clinchad division tills 7; New Vbrk 1 of 6 At Freedom Hall could be meeting with some suc­ asked the allies to allow them to use O o Wilkins 13-26 8-9 34, W illis 7-15 7-8 21, Kon- Colorado 81. Arkansas State 75 Against Westfield, McCarthy scored three TUssday's Gamas Goalies—New Jersey, Tarrari, 24-20-7 (41 state-supervised chun±es and Louisville, Ky. cess, Iraq's official news agency en u red warplanes against the Sad­ cak 1-7 1-1 3, Rivers 7-16 1-1 15, Webb 5-12 goals while Raymer had three assists. King was New Jersey 3, N.Y. Rangers 3, 6s shots-38 saves). New Vbrk, Richtar. 20-12-7 bans contact with the Vatican or o 6-6 18, Malone 0-4 2-2 2, MoncrisI 3-5 0-0 8, Thursday, March 14 At Madison Square Garden excellent in goal. Against Yfest Hartford, McCar­ Pittsburgh 3, Philadelphia 1 (37-34). claimed t ^ y that government for­ dam Hussein's forces. The allies Pittsburgh 76, Georgia 68, OT Ferrell 1-5 2-2 4, Battle 2-9 4-4 8, McCormick New Ib r thy (2) and Lappen scored while both also drew Boston 7, Quebec 4 loyalty to the R>pe. O) Kansas 55, New Orleans 49 ces have recaptured Dr^uk, a city Itave ordered Iraqi warplanes to stay 0- 1 0-0 0. Totals 39-100 31-33 113. Semifinals assists. Mursko, Erik Blomstrann and Davis Chicago 2, Toronto 2 tie Flames 7, Canucks 2 Reps. Frank R. Wolf, R-Va., Florida State 75, Southern Califomia 72 Monday, March 25 25 miles southeast of this rebel-held out of the air and shot down two of m CD INDIANA (123) also had collected assists. Buffalo 4, Washington 2 Vancouver 1 1 o— 2 Person 9-16 5-7 24, Thompson 8-12 0-0 16, Indiana 79, Coastal Carolina 69 Stanford 73, Massachusetts 71 and Christopher H. Si^, R- Calgary 7, Vancouver 2 C alga7 2 3 2—7 town. them last week. Dreiling 0-0 1-2 1, Fleming 3-5 1-2 7, Miller 8-14 At The Omni Oklahoma 88, Colorado 78 Th« AssoclatMi Pr*M Mite A Los Angeles 2, Edmonton 0 First Period—1, Varkxruvar, Unden 33 (Kur- NJ., told that China could O 6-6 24, Sanders 4-8 0-0 8, Schrempf 5-9 6-9 A tla n ta ^ “Life has returr,ed to normal there Saddam loyalists are widely Elm/Lyder nipped Southeastern ConnecticuL Wsdnssday's Games vers, Lidstar), 638 (pp). 2 Calga^, Ralchal 17 PROTEST SADDAM — Shiite Musiim women in india marched on the United Nations office lose its most-favored nation 16, Smits 4-7 4-6 M.Williams 2-7 6-6 10, Friday, March 15 Vfsdnssday, March 27 4-3. Eric Lundberg (2), Kevin Bourn and Joey Pittsburgh at DetrolL 735 p.m. (MacLsIlan), 13:19. 3, Calgary, Roberts 22 after the symbols of ageiury, crime reported to have retaken southern McCloud 1-3 2-2 5, K.Williams 0-0 0-0 0. Totals Arkansas 117, Georgia Stale 76 Championship in New Deihi Wednesday, holding banners and placards and shouting “Hang Saddam,” to uade status if it doesn't improve Bojarski scored (or Elm while Jamie Carroll (3), Hartford at New Jersey, 7:45 p.m. (Johansson), 15:24. Penalties—Suter, Cal and treachery tried to rape it," said m > 44-81 31-40 123. Arizona State 79, Rutgers 76 Stanford (19-13) vs. Oklahoma (20-14), 9 m . Tom Lattanzio, Lundberg and Danielle Thursday's Games (holding), 525; MusU, Col (slosNng), 5:54; its human rights record. Atlanta 27 26 32 28—113 Alabama 89, Murray Stats 79 p.m. Quebec el Buffalo, 7:35 p.m. denounce the Iraqi military's attack on Shiite Muslims in southern Iraq. the agency, monitored in Cyprus. Please see KURDS, page 8. Wfake Forest 71. Louisiana Tech 65 Robenhymer had assists. Sutar, Cal (tripping), 829; Nordmork, Vtan (hokt- Indiana 29 29 31 34—123 Third Place Washington at Philadelphia, 735 p.m. Second Round ing), 13:47; Gllmour, Col (rougNng), 13:47. 3-Point goals—Atlanta 4-14 (Moncrief 2-3, Massachusetts (20-12) vs. Colorado (18-14), Tomnto at Chicago, 835 p.ra § ^ At Freedom Hall MiteC Second Period—4, Calgary, Floury 48 IBM streamlines Vitebb 2-4, Malone 0-1, Battle 0-1, Rivers 0-2, 6:45 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at SL Louis, 8:35 p.ra 33 > Louisville, Ky. (MacLsIlan, Macinnis), 2:01. 5, Vancouver, Wilkins 0-3), Indiana 4-9 (Miller 2-3, McCloud The Children's Place trounced Northern Con­ Edmonton at Calgary, 935 p.ra Saturday, March 16 RonNng 19 (Linden), 329.6, Colgwy, MocInNs NEW YORK (AP) — Interna­ 1- 2, Person 1-4). Fouled out—W illis. necticut, 10-1. Danny Colon (4), Josh Rogers Minnesota at Los A rinas, 10:35 p.ra 26 (Ralchal, Nieuwsndyk), 11:44 (pp). 7, Cal­ Rebounds—Atlanta 44 (Koncak 10), Indiana 65 Kansas 77, Pittsburgh 66 (3). Jake Ploski, Eric Hyrtdeman and Chris Winnipeg at VsrKxxiver, 1035 p.m. tional Business M arines Cotp. gary, Macinnis 27 (Gllmour, Suter), 18:16 (pp). (Schrempf 11). Assists—Atlanta 21 (Webb 7), Indiana 82, Florida State 60 Jenkins accounted for the goals lor ths winners. Layoff plans by state agencies delivered said today it plans to cut its At The Omni Jenkins (3). John Harrison (3), Matt k^e rn to tt Penalties—Kurvers, Van (tripping), 9:49; Mur­ Indiana 34 (Schrempf 12). Total fouls—Atlanta Transactions NHL results phy, Von (elbowing), 17:14. worldwide work foree by more 27, Indiana 28. Technical—Atlanta illegal A tla n ta (2), Colon, Ploski and Todd Augustus had as­ Sunday, March 17 TNrd Period—6, Calgary, Floury 49 (FWchaQ, defense. A—10,178. sists. Ryan Thomson was outstartding in goal. Sabres 4, Capitals 2 cial said the lists are a way of turn­ dered agencies to draft layoff plans Weicker would not say Wednes­ Management show positions, than 10,000 petqile this year. Alabama 96, Wake Forest 88 Danny Colon of the Mite C's was presented 733. 9, Calgary, Floury 50 (Kyts, Gllmour), By JUDD EVERHART B AS E B A Buffalo 1 0 3-^ ing up the heat on state employee in varying degree of severity, day whether layoff, notices would salaries and titles. While names are Fbur thousand jobs left the Heat 104, Cavaliers 98 Arkansas 97, Arizona Stats 90 American League wilh the Lar7 LaBarge Jr. Memorial Award for 18.32. Penalties—Murphy, VAn (roughing), The Associated Press Regional Semifinals the mite skater who best axem plifist the ECHO W ashington 1 0 1—2 138; Kyts, Col, double minor (roughing), 138; unions. Avice A. Meehan, Gov. depending on the outcome of the begin going out April 1, as be not shown, it's easy to figure out company Wednes^y with the CLEVELAND (98) BALTMORE ORIOLES-Optionsd Anthony First Period—1, WasNngton, Khrlstich 11 At The Charlotts Collssum Telford, pitcher, and Jeff Tackett catcher, to values of excellsnece, team play and Murphy, Vhn, major (fighting), 8:42 Kyts, Col, HARTFORD — State agencies Lowell P. Wcicker's press secretary union discussions. previously said would happen if which workers would actually lose sale of its laser-priiuer opera­ Bennett 2-5 5-6 9, Nance 4-9 3-4 11, Charlotte, N.C. sportsmanship. (Pivonka, Dnrce), 1725. 2 Buffalo, Andreychuk major (fighting), 8:42; Macinnis, Col (cross- Daugherty 4-9 8-12 16, ENo 5-16 1-2 12, Rochester of the Internationaf League. said no final decisions about layoffs The worst-case plan calls for the concessiems aren't achieved. Little their jobs. Thursday, March 21 Ryan Gavin of the Mite B's and Kevin Bourn 35 (Turgeon, Tanti), 19:36. Penalty—Haller, Buf ^ln ), 10:44; Stern, Cal (cross-checking), on Wednesday submitted to the tions. typewriter and office- Valentine 4-8 0-0 8. Morton 4-7 3-6 11, Williams Released Pete Stanicek, infieldar, from their (holding), 9:05. Arkansas 93. Alabama 70 of the Mite A's were the runners-up 15:15; Murzyn, Wm (roughing), 1933; Dirk, governor's budget office detailed have been made. laying off of 8,079 state workers, progress has been reported in the “lliere are real per^le and real products business. That sale was 2- 11 0-2 4, Ferry 4-10 2-2 10, Kerr 1-4 0-0 2, Second Period—None. Penalties—Haller, Buf Kansas 83, Indiana 65 mimr-leagus comp. Van, iNnor-misoonduct (roughing), 1933; Fan- James 6-12 2-2 15. Totals 36-91 24-36 96. (holding), 1:26: Pivonka, Was (tripping), 3:50; layoff plans to be implemented if The lists are needed because the roughly 15 percent of the slate's talks so far. faces behind these positions," closed Wednesday. Regional Championship CLEVELAND INDIANS-Placed Ever Mogol- ton, Col, doubts minor (intorfsranca, roughing), MIAMI (104) Tanti, ^ f (h'lgh-stcking), 18:40. At The Charlotts Coliseum lonas, Inflalder, on waivers for ths purpose of 1933; Hunter, Cot minar-misconduct fro u ^ negotiations over $400 million in administration has to be ready to 51,684 employees. Those would be William K. Seymour, spokesman Seymour said. “We want to do IBM employed about 373,(X)0 Bunon 6-15 7-8 19. Long 0-4 4-4 4. Seikaly Charlotte, N.C. ssTKling him to tie minor laoguaa. Opfonad Third P eriod-3, Buffalo, Tanti 7 Ing), 1933; Calgary bench, served by M m ta on top of the 1,100-1,800 layoffs al­ 2- 6 3-4 7, Coles 4-9 0-0 8. Rice 9-16 2-3 21. state employee salary and benefit move, she said, adding that “having for the Department of Administra­ everything possible to avoid layoffs. worldwide at the end of 1S190. Saturday, March 23 Kevin Wickander, pitcher, to Colorado Sprirtga Baseball (ArKfreychuk, Turgeon), :S9. 4, Buftak), Ladyord (unsportsmaNike conduct), 1933; Calgary Edwards 12-21 2-2 28. Davis 3-6 2-7 8. Kessler a plan is a far cry from executing it” tive Services said the plans sub­ The work force cuts, coming Kansas 93, Arkansas 81 of the n d ic Coast League. Sent Brian Johrv 7 (Krupp, Hawerchuk), 2:41 (pp). 5, bench, sanrsd by Wilson (unsportsmanllka con­ Concessions are fruitless. ready anticipated in Wcicker's 3- C 0-0 6, Thompson 1-3 1-1 3. Totals 40-85 aoa catcher, to their minor-league camp for Washington, Khrlstich 12, 1430. 6, Buffalo, duct), 1933. ' Although one administration offi­ Earlier this month, Wcicker or­ 1991-92 budget. mitted to the Office of Policy and Please see LAYGFFS, page 8. the week after IBM announced it 21-29 1 04. reossIgnmenL Andrey^uk 36 (Turgeon, Tanti), 1533. Penal­ Shots on goaf—VAikxruver 11-11-11—33. expected disappointing 1991 Cleveland 24 13 29 32— 98 KANSAS CITY ROVALS-neleaaad Greg Exhibition results ties—M y, Was (holding), 221; Sabourin, Waa Calgary 9-9-6—26. Miami 18 32 27 27—104 MIDWEST REGIONAL Mathews, pitchor. Sent Andy Allonson, catcher, (rougNng), 627; Roy, But (interterenca), 8:56. earnings, offers another example First Round Powor-piay OpportuNUas—Vancouver 1 of 7; 3-Point goals—Cleveland 2-4 (Jamas 1-1, and Archie Corbin, pitcher, to their minor leagua Mets 3, Twins 2 Shots on goal—Buffalo 8-6-8—24. Calgary 2 of 2 ENo 1-2, Kerr 0-1), Miami 3-9 (Edwards 2-5, At The MetrodorrM camp for raossignmenL of the ferocity of competition in Washington 11-7-6—24. Goaliss—Vancouver, Mason, 2-4-0 (26 Minneapolis the computer industry, which Rico 1-2, Burton 0-2). Fouled out—Williams, MMNESOTA TWINS-OpUoned Paul Abbott (10 innings) Power-play Opportunitias—Buffalo 1 of 3; shots-19 saves). Calgary, Wamsiey, 13-7-5 State official; Cheney safe Davis. Rebounds—Cleveland 61 (WUIIams 13), Thursday, March 14 and Rich Qarcss, pitchers; Jarvis Browm arxl Washington 0 of 4. NawY>rk(N) 010 010 000 1—3 12 1 (33-31). Freezer serves men has seen demand fall off as the Miami 59 (Burton 10). Assists—Clevelartd 18 Duke 102, Northeast Louisiana 73 J.T. Bnjott outMdsrs; Tarry Jorgensen, third Goalies—Buffalo, Puppa, 14-11-5 (24 A—20 ,132 (Bennett 4), Miami 22 (Edwards 7). Total Iowa 76, East Tennessee Stale 73 baseman; and Paul Sorrento, first baseman, to Minnesota 100 100 000 0—2 8 1 said Arthur Quimby, superintendent of the state's voca­ economy slumped. shots-22 saves). WasNngton, LiuL 13-16-3 Releres—Hon Hoggarih. Unesmen—Mike By SCOTT B. BREDE fouls—Cleveland 26. Miami 32. A—15,008. Connecticut 79, Louisiana Stats 62 Rtrtland of ths Rsdfic Coast League. Optioned WhItahursL Schourek (6), Innis (9) and (24-20). O'Brien, Sasser (7), Mercado (9); Anderson, Cvik, Swede Knox. tional-technical scbMls. Xavier, Ohio 89, Nebraska 84 Derek Parks, catcher, to Orfartdo of the A— 16,191. Manchester Herald Bedrosian (7), Aguilera (9), Wkyne (10) and Nets 98,76ers 95 At Dayton Arana Southern League. Referee—Dan Marouelll. Linesmen—Brian Quimby's message came at a meeting called Wednes­ Embassy fire Ortiz, Yfebster (7), Harper (10). W—Innis, 2-0. for north pole trek Dayton, Ohio National League Murphy, Ray Scapinello. Kings 2, Oilers 0 day to reassure guidance counselors fhxn area junior PHILADELPHIA (95) L—Wfeyno, 3-1. MANCHESTER — Despite the possibility of major MOSCGW (AP) — Fire en­ Barkley 14-23 3-7 32. Gilliam 3-5 0-0 6, Friday, March 15 LOS ANGELES DODGERS—Agreed to Edmonton 0 0 0 -0 h i^ and high schools that it is still all right to send stu- Mahorn 5-12 4-6 14, Green 1-5 04) 2, Hawkins SL John's 75, Northwn Illinois 68 terms with Gory Carter, catcher, on a one-year Penguins 3, Flyers 1 Los Angeles 1 0 1—2 ments set up by migrating Es­ budget cuu looming over the vocational-technical gulfed most of the U il. Embassy Texas 73, SL Peter's 65 conIracL Dsolgnatad Dave WWsh, for assign­ Red Sox 6, Reds 3 By MATT BIVENS denu to Chm y Ihch. 5- 19 3-4 15, Bol 1-3 0-0 2, Turner 6-14 2-2 14. Pittsburgh 2 1 0—3 Rrst Period—1, Los Angeles, Gretzky 39 kimos. sch(X)l8 across the state, a tr^ education official said today, forcing more than 4(X) Williams 0-1 0-0 0, Anderson 5-12 0-0 10, Ohio Slate 97, Towson State 86 m ent and p la c^ him on waivers. Boston too 003 020—6 11 1 (McSorlsy, RoNtaills), 823. Psnaltias-MuN, “If you don't read any further than the newsp^ier Cindmali 101 010 000—3 6 0 PNIadelphia l 0 0—1 The Associated Press Olivar 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 40-96 12-19 95 Georgia Tech 87, Def%ul 70 PHILADELPHIA PHUXIES-Optionad Andy E dit (tripping), 631; Baukeboom, Edm (hook­ Since the Earth's magnetic field Wednesday that Howell Cheney Regional Vocational diplomats and other employees Ybung, Lamp (6), Reardon (8), Fossas (9) First Period—1, Pittsburgh, Lomieux 17 headlines you might think that our school is ready to NEW JERSEY (98) Second Round Ashby, pitcher, to Scranton-Wllkee-Bana of ths ing), 1228; Granato, LA (tripping), 1736. to flee the 10-story building that kkemational League. and Pena; Rijo, Hammond (6), Layona (8), Dib- (LMurphy), 935 (pp). 2 Philadelphia, Bomba 7 fluctuates throughout the year, Technical School will be alive and well in the coming Morris 4-12 0-0 9. Coleman 8-22 7-10 23. At The Metrodoma Second Period—None. Penalliee-iBrown, LGNDGN — About a month close down," said Cheney Tech's Guidance Director Minneapolis SAN DIEGO PWRES—Oalmad Jose Mslsn- bla (9) and Oliver. W—Y>urtg, 1-1. L—Rijo, 1-2 (Acton, Kushner), 1022.3, Pittsburgh, Lamioux year. a congressional delegation once Haley 4-9 2-2 10. Blaylock 11-22 3-3 25, Thaus Edm, major (fighting), 6:10; Thomson, LA, magnetic north — the north a com­ dez, pitcher, on waivsrs from the Sealtia Sv—ftssa s (2). HRs—Boston, VAughn (1), Cln- 18, 12:15 (sh). PenalBaa-Chychrun, Phi (trip­ ago. Peter Praine ^>ent the night in Gerald Blanchard to the 12 feeder-sch(x>l guidance coun- 6- 18 3-3 15, Milts 4-9 0-2 8. Petrovic 4-5 0-0 8, Saturday, March 16 major (Ughting), 6:10; Murphy, Edm (roughing), pass needle poinu to — changes called a firetrap. 1 M o rin m . dnnali, Doran (2). ping), 9:11; Stevens, Pit (interterence), 11:15. Buechler 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 41-99 15-20 98. Duke 85. Iowa 70 1037; Graves, Edm (rougNriig), 1037; V«nsrs, the Arctic cold of a warehouse “Even in the worse-case scenario, all [of Cheney One Marine guard was treated Connecticut 66, )(avier, Ohio 50 b a s k e t b a l l SecoTKi Period—4, Pittsburgh, Lsmiaux 19 LA (roughing), 1037; Granato, LA (rougNng) slightly from day to day. The PNIadelphia 26 21 18 25 5-95 (L.Murphy, Coffey), 10:30 (pp). Penal­ freezer with two friends and 'ibeh's current] programs will still be offered next year,” Please see CHENEY, page 8. At Dayton Arana Notional Baskstball Aasoclollon \bnkees 9, Dodgers 6 1037; BsnNng, LA (holdino), 11:52; Edmontori for smedee inhalation, according New Jersey 25 28 22 15 8—98 ties—Bourque, Pit (mugNng), 233; Acton, PN geomagnetic pole is a somewhat Dayton, Ohio NBA—Fined Chuck Person, Indiorw forward, bench, double minor, served by Rrfhbergsr hundreds of fruit crates. 3-Point goals—Philadelphia 3-18 (Hawkins New Vbrk (A) 000 221 220—9 15 1 (rougNng), 233; Tocefi^ Fhl (tripping), 834; arbitrary point fixed every year by to embassy spokesman James Sunday, March 17 $2500 for twice kicking balls into Tie stands and Simpson (unsportsmoNIka conduct delw 2-9, Barkley 1-6, Arxlerson 0-1, Turner 0-2), Los Angeles 301 000 011—6 12 0 Jagr, Pit (high-sticking), 10:53; Cravea Phi More than a stunt, it was part of Ohio S ta ts 65, G e o rg s Tsch 61 alter being ojectad from a gams March 23; of game), 12:49; Granato. LA (roughing). 1737, scientisu, based on a year's worth Bullock. Several Soviet New Jersey 1-11 (Mortis 1-5, Coleman 0-1, Leary, Cadarat (6), Plunk (7), Howe (8) and (holding), 1132 Reochl, Pit (mughino), 1238; SL John's 84, Texas 76 James Yferthy, Los Angeles Lakers forward. Third Period—2, Los Angolas, Gretzky 40 a year and a half of preparations firefighters apparently also suf­ Blaylock 0-1, Thaus 0-4). Fouled out—Mahorn. Nokes, Leyritz (9); Neidllnger, Craws (6), TocchoL PN (roughing), 1238; L M u r^, Pit o f daily calculations, Regional Semifinals $1,500 lor initialirtg on inddant in a gams (Robinaon). 10:54 (on). Ponelties-Hrudey. LA. for a shot at becoming the first ex­ Rebounds—Philadelphia 56 (Barkley 17), New Hartley (8) and Scioscia, Carter (8). (hooking), 13:53; U.Samuatsson, Pit (slaM ng), Hempleman-Adaiiu said. Sparks fill district meeting fered respiratory problems. But M arch 24; and Sedale Thraatt, Seattle guard, Jersey 70 (Coleman 13). Assists—Philadelphia At The Silvsrdoma W—CadoraL 3-0. L—Craws, 0-2 HRs—Now served by Thomson (roughing). 3:56; Brown. $1,000 for retaliating against Worthy. 18:46. pedition to reach the north no other injuries were reported. 19 (Barkley, Turrtar 6), New Jersey 18 (Morris Pontiac, Mich. VbiK Lovullo (2), Balboni (1). Los Angsiac, Mur­ Edm (unsportsmaNike conduct). 7.34; Thom- The plan, as explained Wednes­ FOOTBALL Third Period—Nona. Penoltfes—Murphy, Pit 5). Total fouls-PNIadeIpNa 19, New Jersey 20. Friday, March 22 ray (2), Somual (3),'J.Gorizalaz (1). geomagnetic pole without help Some directors argued that with fire department staff to conunent, The cause of the fire has not SL John's 91, Ohio Stale 74 Notional Football Laague (high-sticking), 125; Sutter, PN (high-sticking), day at a newt conference, is for By SCGTT B. BREDE Technical—Barkley. Flagrant foul—Gilliam. 125; Barrasso, RL served by Stevens (trip­ from dogs or snowmobiles. the current economy, an extra saying the meeting was not a public been determined, officials said. A— 12136. Duke 81, Connecticut 67 CLEVELAND BROWNS—Signed John j— ux (tioiaing), 1023; Hmpleman-Adams and Sluiw to Manchester Herald Regional Championship Rianstrm. offensive guard. ping), 8:42; Young, PiL ma^ot'O^vna rNsconduct Lows, Edm (unsportsmanllka corkfuct) 1251- “We spent a lot of time walking $125,000 placed in next year's huiring. Director Thomas Ferguson (hi^Stlcking), 1433. cover about 10 miles a day skiing At The Silvardoma DETROIT LIONS—Signed Sean Wrthorsa, RoWtsllle. LA (unsportsmaNIka conduct). 12 '6 l’ around and around and around Spurs 129, Knlcks119 0T Football Shots on goal—Pittsburgh 7-9-5—21. budget would be too heavy a burden argued to allow the public to speak, Pontiac, Mich. com erbock. Beukoboom, Edm (tripping), 1430. with 80-pound packs. MANCHESTER — Eighth NEW YORK (119) MIAMI DOLPHINS-SIgnad Ned Bolcar, PNIadsIphia 20-13-16—49. with a pack on, to see how it felt, for taxpayers. since the board was “trying to put Sunday, March 24 Shots on goal—Edmonton 4-12-17—33 Los The three will fly from a base Utility District Directors became Oakley 2-4 0-0 4, Vandeweghe 8-11 2-2 19, Unabockar, to a two-year controcL Power-play Qpportunitisa—Rttsburgh 2 of 3; Angeles 17-10-14—41. walking around in that loit of Gthers said that by setting aside together a sensible budget" With Ewing 1537 7-8 37. Cheeks 57 2-2 13, Duke 78. SL John's 61 P N Iadelphia 0 o f 6. camp at Resolute Bay, Cmnwallis Inside Today. SAN DEGO CHARGERS—Sinted Golond WLAF standings Power-play OpportuNtias-Edmonton 0 o f 6- cold," Praine said Wednesday of embroiled in a tense debate as they funds for a fire engine now, the dis­ that suggestion, the directors voted G Wilkins 6-10 0-0 12 Starks 3-4 1-2 8, Ouln- Thoxton. linsbackar. Goolles-PIttsfaurgh, Borrosao, 27-18-2 (49 Los Angeiss 0 of 5 Island, to Eureka, Canada. sat down Wednesday night to make nett 57 2-2 12 Whlker 0-2 4-4 4. Tucker 511 WEST REGIONAL A l Timas EST shots-48 saves). Philadalphia, Pastors, 9-7-1 the freezer experience. trict, in the long luit would save 4-2 to allow public comment on the TAMRk BAY BUCCANEERS-SIgnod Jorde E uro pean Goaliss—Edmonton, Rartfonf, 26-27-3 (40 0-0 9. E.Wilkins 0-1 1-2 1. Totals 47-94 1522 First Round Lawson, futlbacK (21-18). Hempleman-Adams and Shaw will final changes in the fire depart­ At Ths Jon M, Huntsman Camar W L T Pet PF RA jJto^39 saves). Los Angelas. Hrudey. 26-1M Praine, 49, Ray Shaw, 43, and money, since it would not have to budget. 119. HOCKEY A— 17,382 (33*39). uavel acrou both Ellesmere Island S a H U k s C H y London 1 0 0 1.000 24 11 David Hempleman-Adams, 33, ment's proposed budget for the SAN ANTONIO (129) Notional Hockey Laague Referee—Tarry Qregaoa Unesmen—Gerard and frozen sea ice to the pole. pay interest rates on another bond­ The settlement was reached when Ellion 10-14 13-15 34, Cummings 4-11 2-2 Thursday, March 14 Barcelona 1 0 0 1.000 19 7 Gauthier, Mark Vines. will set out early next month from coming year. 28 pages, 4 sections Solon Hall 71, Pepperdins 51 NEW YORK RANGERS—Sent Jeff Bloem- F rankfurt 0 1 0 .000 11 24 ing project. At the same tiiiM, the Director Mary Jane Summa sug­ 10, Robinson 8-18 3-4 19, Stricklartd 6-12 510 berg, dalansaman, to Binghamton of the Praine will return to the base 21, Anderson 4-15 53 11, Green 9-17 1-2 19, Creighton 64, New Mexico Stale 56 North Amsrtcan East Blackhawks 2, Maple Leafs Cornwallis Island in Canada's The debate began after a question district could collect interest on the gested that the board only put Brigham Vbung 61, Virginia 48 American Hockey League. Montraol 1 0 0 1.000 20 5 and monitor their progress through B u sin e Wingate 2-3 1-2 5, Prassay 3-7 2-3 8, Johnson COLLEGE Radio, TV Northwest Territories on the first was raised whether to set aside $125,000 sitting in bank. $100,000 in the apparatus fund. The 0-1 0-0 0, Schintzius 5 0 0-0 0. Higgins 1-1 0-0 Arizona 93, SL Francis, Pa. 80 Oftondo 1 0 0 1.000 35 34 2 radio contact and electronic track­ C la ssite d _ AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL—Announced Fhlalgh-Durham 0 1 0 .000 3 9 leg of a 230-mile skiing expedition $125,000 to help pay for a fire en­ “How can we explain to taxpayers board voted 4-0 on Summa's 2.Totals 47-99 34-41 129. At The McKsla Cantor Chicago 0 1 1 0—2 ing devices from the camp. At the C o m ic s __ Tbeson, Ariz. ths resignation of Ed Shea, men's soccer N.Y.-NJ. 0 1 0 .000 7 19 NowVbrk 34 28 27 22 8—119 C O ftl. Toronto 0 0 2 0—2 to the north geomagnetic pole. gine or wait until the time of the that we are raising taxes, so we can proposal, with abstentions from Wil­ Friday, March 15 North American West Today end of their journey, Hempleman- D isco v e r _ San Antonio 27 31 24 29 1 8-129 ARIZONA STATE—Announced that David First Period—None. Penollae—Krushsinyski, The trip, on shoestring budget of purchase and borrow for it Michigan Stats 60, Wisconsin-Green Bay 58 Socramenlo 1 0 0 1.000 9 3 1 pm . — Red Sox vs. Rods, NESN make money off the interest?.” lard Marvin and Gordon Lassow. F o cu s____ .10 3-Poinl goals—Now Vbrk 513 (Tucker 3-7, Tlsdsl, Unabockar, hoe loft the football team. Tor (hooking), 11:14; Hudsoa Chi (inter- Utah 82. South Alabama 72 Birmingham 0 1 0 .000 5 20 $19,000, also is aimed at looking The outcome was that the direc­ asked Eighth District President With the $25,000 cut in the ap- L o c a l____ Starks 1-1, Cheeks 1-2, Vandeweghe 1-2 PnrSBURGH—Named Marty Galbraith ighi larencs), 14:55; Romogs, Tor (elbowing), 1736; 7 p.m. — NfT consolation: UMoss vs Georgetown 70, Vanderbilt 60 Son Antonio 0 1 0 .000 34 35 Colorado, WFAN (660-AM) Ewir>g 51). San Antonio 1-6 (Elliott 1-2 Robin­ ends and kickers coach. Larmer, Chi (tripping), 17.34. for signs of 4,000-year-old settle­ Please sec FREEZER,page 8. tors voted to keep only $100,000 in Samuel Longest. Lottery_____ UNLV 99, Montana 65 Monday's Gama 7:30 pm . — Expos vs. Mats, Chomel 9 son 51, Arxiarson 0-1, P ra s^ 51, Johnson ROBERT MORRIS-Nomad RenaW Costnar Second ^rlo d —1, Chicago, Larmer 44 Nation/Wirtd. Second Round Orlando 35, Son Antonio 34 the budget for the engine. Longest cut off atlempu by the Please sec FIRE, page 8. 0-1). Fouled out—Robinson. Rebounds—New woman's baskstball coach. (Crsighlon, Wilson), 5:58 (pp). Ponoltiaa—GiHis, At The Jon M. Huntsman Canter S a tu rd a y 's Q am sa net, WTIc"' ~ SP<»1*Chan- Obituaries__ Ybrk 45 (Ewing 9). San Antonio 64 (Cummings STONY BROOK—Nomad Mott Sank CN, trajor (fighing), 420; GUL Tor, minor-major SsH U ka CHy SocramenlD at Birminghairv 8 pm . 9 p.m. — NIT championsNp: Stanford vs oe O p in io n ____ 11). Assists—New Vbrk 34 (Cheeks 10), San h i l i b t l l coacK (instigator, fighting), 4:20; Vbwney, CN, minor- Saturday, March 16 Rololgh-Ourham at Onarxki. 8 pm . lahoms, ESPN. W FAN^-M) “ S p o r t s _____ Antonio 32 (Strickland 16). Total fouls—Mew WILLIAM $ MARY-Nomad Trina Thomas Sunday's Gamaa major (cross-checking, fighting), 6:37; \brk 32 San Antonio 25. T ^n ica l*—New York Arizona 76, Brigham Young 61 woman's basketball coach. Richardipn, Tor. rnnor-mMr (Insigator, IlgN- M idr^ht — Gyntossttes: lntarnatlor«l MIxad Television Now Ybrk-Nsw Jersey at London,.! pm. Pairs ChampionsNp (toped), ESPN Serving The Manchester Ai’ea For Over 110 Yeai^s ~ Call Today for Home Delivei'y G47-9946 coach MacLeod, G. Wilkins. A—15,908. Salon Hall 81, Creighton 69 ing), 6:37; Knjshalnyskl, Tor (tripptog), 1242; 2—MANCHESTER HERALD. Thursday, March 28,1991 MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, March 28,1991—3 NATION/WORLD BUSINESS Plan would bill Iraq for ecological damage Texas, insurance firms settle suit Justice approves AUSTIN (AP) — The state Wednesday settled million in the case. Morales said. would encourage competition and more effective By PETER JAMES SPIELMANN Council’s five permanent members to agree on a text cluded torching oil wells and dumping oil into the Per­ The Bush aiJministration said Wednesday that the a 3-yc^-old antitmst lawsuit against some of the David E. Ostwald, vice president of the in­ regulation. \ The Associated Press today. sian Gulf. U.N. plan should be imposed on Iraq even if Baghdad nation’s largest insurance companies, with Attor­ dustry-supported Insurance Services Office Inc., Morales said the agreement eliminates insurers plan for closings U.S. Ambassador Thomas R. Pickering said late Wed­ refuses to comply, though officials did not say how. ney General Dan Morales calling it a. major vic­ said the insurers adnutted no wrongdoing and from the decision-making process concerning UNITED NATIONS — The U24. resolution that nesday that the Big Rve — the United States, Britain, It would hold Iraq liable for all Ipsses and damages, tory. generd liability forms at ISO. It prevents large in­ Among the incentives for Baghdad to follow the decided to settle to avoid continuing court ex­ CINCINNATI (AP) — The remodel a Bloomingdale’s store in would establish a pennanent cease-fire in the Persian France, China aiid the Soviet Union — were “in agree­ “including environmental damage and the depletion of surers from deciding among themselves what will resolution are that a pennanent settlement would lead to “This is the most far-reaching antitrust litiga­ pense. Federated and Allied department Short Hills, N.J., and $11 million Gulf War calls for Iraq to include payments for environ­ ment on the principles and working very hard on the natural resources,” to Kuwut and other nations as a be the features included in standard insurance result of its invasion and occupation of the emirate. a withdrawal of UJS.-led forces from southern Iraq. tion in Texas since the breakup of the Standard Oil “Insurance Services Office has maintained from store chains, which are under on a Lazarus store in Louisville, M policies, he said. mental damage as part of war repa^ons. text” trust at the turn of the century,” Morales said. the beginning that our activities were legal and bankruptcy court protection, may Ky. The plan would also force I r ^ to allow U.N. experts The full council is expected to vote on the resolution Including environmental damages is a new concept in The United States would also end its policy of shoot­ “We have obtained major concessions from the proper, and the settlement agreement itself makes Under the settlement, the ISO staff will have spend $25.6 million to remodel Federated’s unsecured creditors destroy its chemical, biological and nuclear weapmis next week. international relations, reflecting spreading acceptance ing down any Iraqi warplanes that take to the sky. The insurance industry that will lead to broad reforms clear th at... all of the defendants believe that our their flagship Burdines store near objected to the three-year remodel­ and Baghdad would still face an arms embargo. Under the draft resolution, Iraq would be liable for the final decision-making'authority over develop­ A of the priorities of the “green movement” and world out­ would allow Baghdad to use the planes against Kurdish in the way the industry docs business in our state,” activities were legal and proper throughout in this Miami and close two stores, in­ ing of the Dadeland Burdines, Western diplomats said they expected the Security the havoc caused by its eco-warfare tactics, which in­ he said. ment of commercial general liability policy forms rage over Iraq’s actions. and Shiite Muslim insurgents. matter,” Ostwald said. filed in Texas. cluding one in Connecticut, a primarily because of the length of Morales said the settlement, combined with The lawsuit, filed in March 1988, had alleged judge says. timejequired to see a return on the “With this case behind us, the industry, con­ legal changes being proposed to the Legislature that several of the nation’s largest property- U.S. Banknqitcy Judge J. Vin­ investment by Gov. Aim Richards, would result in lower casualty insurance companies conspired to raise sumers and public policy mAers can move for­ cent Aug also agreed Wednesday Cory Lipoff, a bankruptcy ward and act to bolster confidence in the in­ Answering your Wider bailout prices and more competition in the Texas in­ prices and standardize and restrict coverage avail­ to let the retailing giants close two lawyer for Federated and Allied, surance business. able for commercial general liability insurance in surance system in Texas,” Ostwald said. Jordan Marsh stores, one in Dan­ said the remodeling is necessary Under the settlement, approved by state District Texas. bury and one in Florida. because the Burdines, the thiid Judge Pete Lowry, the state will collect $1.1 mil­ The suit alleged that insurers controlled and “The settlement does institute changes that will A benefit the insurance industry and policyholders in The Burdines project was one of most profitable of Federated’s Gulf questions lion to cover its legal costs and $3 million to es­ dictated the type of information that ISO, an in- three remodeling requests that Aug stores, is run down after 10 years looming ahead tablish new training programs for state insurance Texas,” he said. dusUy rating organization, provided to insurance approved totalling nearly $60 mil­ of mall traffic. WASHINGTON (AP) — One women and children, killed in the regulators. carriers and designed the policy forms that in­ The four defendants which settled earlier were: lion. “This is Burdines’ flagship mcHith after President B t ^ called a WASHINGTON (AP) — There Honest answers from the ad- fighting. There also are reports of Four defendants settled with the state earlier, surers used. Travelers Insurance Co., S t Raul Fire and Marine Aug also agreed to let Federated store, and it sets the standard for halt to the allied rout of Iraq’s army, could be a new miiltibillion-dollar mirustration and quick action by civilian deaths firmn starvation, dis­ paying $2.5 million. The remaining eight agreed Under the settlement, changes will be made in Insurance Co., USF&G Corp., and Fireman’s and Allied spend $18.3 million to the chain,” Lipoff said. the inospects for real peace — and bailout in the future for federal tax­ Congress would prevent “some ease and summary executiims. Wednesday, and the state received a total of $6.6 the operation of the ISO, which Morales said Fund Insurance Co. the complete withdrawal of A. Who’s winning? payers, says the chairman of the five-minutes-to-midnight call for American troops from the Persian Q. U.S. officials say Iraqi govern­ House Banldng Committee. emergency legislation when the Gulf area — seem as murky as ever. ment forces, using the tanks, artil­ The Federal Deposit Insurance bank insurance fund goes tn-oke,” Here are some questions and lery and combat aviation that es­ Corp., which guarantees bank Gonzalez said. B&S to abandon i n B r i e f • • Study says answers to help explain the continu­ caped from Kuwait a month ago, ap- deposits, is in obvious distress and The administration has proposed ing devastation in Iraq and the out­ pear to have gained the upper hand the Bush administration’s proposed that FDIC be allowed to borrow $25 look for a formal end to the Gulf solution is nothing more than “con­ billitm from the Federal Reserve ■ Corporate profits from current proposal that depends on many televised auto races feature of­ region out against the Shiites, but the situation ficials and cars emblazoned with War and a final U.S. pullout in the north is less clear. voluted and questionable borrowing system. Also, the FDIC’s $5 billitm tooling business production fell for a second straight shareholders removing NCR’s Q. Isn’t the war over? schemes,” Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez, credit line with the Treasury Depart­ year in 1990, marking the worst board. Marlboro, Camel and Winston BOSTON (AP) — Japanese in­ Q. Are American troops in­ logos. Blum, of Baylor College of vestors are still snapping up U.S. A. One is; the fight to restore volved? D-Texas, said Wednesday. ment would be redefined, allowing profit squeeze on American com­ NORTH KINGSTOWN, R.l. leave about 1,930 Brown & Sharpe panies in two decades, the govern­ ■ The spurt in jet fuel prices Medicine in Houston, said the ex­ real estate, but they want golf cour­ Kuwait But another is not the con­ A. No. at least not directly. The The American people, who al­ the banking agency to treat it as net (AP) — Brown & Sharpe Manufac­ employees worldwide. test fcH- internal control of Iraq. Even ready have had to pump $80 billion worth and use it to borrow an addi­ ment said. caused by the Persian Gulf War posure effectively gave tobacco ses and hotels, not office buildings Bush administration says U.S. for­ turing Co. said Wednesday it ex­ The. company lost $14.5 million — little help to New England’s stag­ the allied campaign against Iraq’s ces will stay out of the civil war, al­ into the rescue of failed savings and tional $45 billion. The Commerce Department added nearly $3 billion to U.S. air­ companies cheap low-cost television pects a substantial first-quarter loss in 1990. nant economy, according to a study. army of occupatitm in Kuwait is not though they continue to occupy a loans, “are begiiming to smell a new “One source of borrowed funds report Wednesday showed that cor­ line costs over six months, the in­ exposure although they can’t adver­ and plans to abandon the machine Richard J. Duncan, senior vice porate production profits dropped dustry’s leading trade group said. tise on TV. “Unfortunately, Japanese invest­ officially ended. Iraq hasn’t agreed large part of southern Iraq — a taxpayer bailout,” Gonzalez told would be backing for a second tool business that started the firm. president and chief financial officer, larger borrowing — a scheme that 3.8 percent in 1990 to $299.9 billion Robert J. Aaronson, president of ment in New England real estate to terms of a fmmal cease-fire. swath of territory equal to nearly reporters. If there is basis for that Browne & Sharpe has been bat­ said the layoffs are a result of the fear, he added, “it would be prudent w (^d get you tossed out the ft'ont after a 7.7 percent decline in 1989. the Air Transport Association, said peaked in 1988 and has p r^ c a lly Q. Who’s fighting inside Iraq? one-sixth of the country’s 168,000 tered by the recession and is still recession and a lack of orders. “The ■ Fed up with American Express of the admirustration to level with door of most banks." Otmzalez said. Wednesday that prices soared from disappeared since then,” said Peter A. In the north, it’s the Kurdish square miles. feeling effects.of a 10-ycar-old layoffs have already started and will Co. taking a big bite out of their in­ the people up front” Gonzalez, in criticizing the ad­ ■ Last-minute negotiations bet­ 60 cents a gallon immediately prior Capobianco, managing partner of rebels, an ethnic minority that has Q. What are the U.S. troops strike that became the nation’s continue until the end of the year,” come, some restaurateurs are uniting Gonzalez said he has called for ministration’s proposal to refinance ween NCR Corp. and AT&T failed to Iraq’s August 2 invasion of the Boston office of K e n ii^ Leven- battled for autonomy for decades, doing there? longest-running labor dispute. The he said. to drop the plastic altogether as a thal & Co., the accounting firm that against government forces. In more FDIC Chairman L. William Seid- the FDIC, re c ^ l^ that the public to produce a merger agreement Kuwait to $1.40 cents a gallon in A. Fbr many, very little beyond company said the loss was a result The Machinists Union struck the way for patrons to pay the bill. conducted the study. than a dozen cities in southern and man and Alan Greenspan, chairman and Congress had been a s s u ^ in ahead of a shareholder meeting mid-October. They have since fallen wondering what it will take to get of low orders in both its machine company iij 1981, and the some­ The study by Leventhal & Co. central Iraq, the government is fight­ of the Federal Reserve Board, to tes­ the late 1980s that any problems in today to consider ousting NCR’s sharply and are now near pre-in­ them back home. Some are manning tool and measurement device times violent dispute never has been In Boston, where a depressed showed that the Japanese poured ing Shiite Muslims aligned with tify befwe his committee on April the S&L industry would be paid for board to make way for an AT&T vasion levels, but many airlines say checkpoints along the demarcation divisions. settled. Brown & Sharpe hired re­ economy has hit the restaurant in­ $13 billion into U.S. real estate in Iran. Refugees reaching the U.S.- 11 and 19, respectively. by the industry itself. takeover. the financial damage inflicted on O H line separating them from Iraqi for­ Fred Stuber, president and chief placement workers. The union has dustry especially hard, 50 res­ 1990. That was 12 percent less than held area in southern Iraq tell of ces. Others are providing food and NCR late Wednesday made a them was severe. taurants said Wednesday they’ll no DO r - executive, said Browne & Sharpe lost its challenges in the courts and $110 counteroffer that was rejected the $14.77 billion invested in 1989, thousands of Iraqis, including medical help for Iraqi refugees. during the past 10 years has shifted at the National Labor Relations longer accept the charge card in said Jack Rodman, director of the S ^ by AT&T, which has offered $90 ■ Cigarette makers arc using protest, and are urging customers to > m its emphasis from machine tools to Board during the past two y e ^ . per share for the computer maker. sponsorship of automobile and firm’s Pacific Rim practice. Scarce use for measuring devices. Duncan said ^ e strike did not leave home without it H o The special shareholders’ meeting Still, “it remains an impressive TVm Assoclst#d PrsM motorcycle races to circumvent the Brown & Sharpe said it expected play a role in the decision to get out caps a nearly four-month $6.1 bil­ ban on television cigarette advertis­ American Express said it was re­ amount in light of the U.S. reces­ O CD S E A R C H C O N TIN U E S — Stockton, Calif, firefighter Joe Storms whipping to lay off 140 employees in the of the machine tool business. lion hostile takeover effort for NCR ing, a study says. evaluating the commission rates sion, the Persian Gulf crisis, the z •< Hawkins, in the water, searches for four missing children who ^training wage’ United States and 130 in its The company said it expected to by the American Telephone & In an article to appear Thursday charged the restaurants, which in doubling of Japanese interest rates fell into the Calaveras River Wednesday afternoon. Five European division when it stops gain about $15 million from dis­ Telegraph Co. The phone company in the New England Journal of some cases are double what Visa and their government’s restriction making machine tools. Thai will posal of its machine tool business. has also made a $100 per ^arc Medicine, Dr. Alan Blum said that and Mastercard require. on U.S. investing,” Rodman said. m I across the nation children fell into the river. One was saved and one body was WASHINGTON (AP) — Few wage will increase 27 cente per 0 m later recovered. companies pay the lower minimum hour, to $3.62, while the minimum (AP) — High winds and tor­ year-old Thorval T. Fosdal was “training wage” for teen-agers wage climbs 45 cents to $4.25. 1 nadoes twe off roofs, flattened bams killed by a falling tree. pushed by the White House, govern­ Many major employers of young o ^ and shattered windows in the na­ Gusts of more than 80 mph were ment records show, and some ex­ people, including McDonald’s and n O tion’s midsectimi. Ice and snow in reported in Milwaukee County and Long-awaited visit ecutives accuse Congress of Kentucky Firied Chicken, say they O the West kept Barbara Bush from two-inch hail was reported in Water­ hamstringing the program with red don’t use the training wage because visiting the Grand Canym today. loo. JERUSALEM (AP) — The and visits to holy sites, but also tape. it is too restrictive, requires too 2 CD Two people died in a snowstorm Tornadoes in Kansas were fol­ patriarch of the Russian Orthodox has a diplomatic side. “It’s an administrative much paperwork or is irrelevant be­ DRESS UP FOR. EASTER m CD in Nebraska, and a man in Wiscon­ lowed by a spring snowstorm that Church arrived Wednesday in the The patriarch is to meet with nightmare,” said Jedm Meritt, senior cause competitors are paying the full P O sin was killed by a falling tree Wed­ closed roads and schools. Holy Land in the first such visit in Prime Minister Yitzak Shamir on vice president of public affairs for minimuih wage or more. nesday. The tower at Chicago’s “Vbu know how March is, you the 74 years since the Russian Thursday, and is expected to dis­ Hardy’s restaurants, where none of Thousands of businesses are O’Hare International Airport was never know what it’s going to do Revolution. » cuss the legal status of church the chain’s 1,4(X) outlets use the eli^ble to pay the sub-miitimum m > evacuated for 25 minutes because of tomorrow,” said ftu l LaPorte, a Patriarch Alexi II was hailed by properties, in question since the naming wage. training wage to first-time workers high wind. trucker who waited out the stwm at hundreds as he walked the streets Russian Revolution. “There’s so much bureaucratic under age 20. COUPON SALE g M Tornadoes and high winds a Hays truck stop. “Yesterday it was of Jemsalem’s old walled city. Russian Orthodox leaders are registration and verification, you’d But only 10 companies have 33 3> destroyed homes and other buildings 86 degrees.” The five-day Easter trip, Alexi gaining acceptance by the Soviet have to add three more employees sought Labor Department authoriza­ in Wiscmisin, Missouri, Tennessee, II’s first outside the Soviet Union government Alexi II is said to be just to do the paperwork. No one In Missouri, winds toppled tion to use it for the full six months USE THESE COUPONS Alabama and West Virginia. since becoming patriarch last close to Soviet President Milthail wants to do a minuet with the allowed under the law, said Bob De “I saw the bam go,” said June knocked down trees, outbuildings, June, features ceremonial Masses Gorbachev. federal government,” Meritt said. TO SAVE 2 0 % O N u w billboards and traffic signals. Chur­ Vore of the agency’s wage and hour Anderson in Dunkirk. 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MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, March 28,1991—S 4—MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, March 28,1991 Weicker defends tax plan Adultery bill advances LOCAL/REGIONAL HARTFORD (AP) — Gov. — the first “negative growth” in a Lowell P. Weicker Jr; told state law­ B^ETER VILES The only openly gay member of the House, Rep. state budget plan in memory. Joseph Grabarz, D-Brldgeport, then stood and sm il^ makers he’s not wedded to the idea The governor said that, given the The Associated Press broadly and raised his hand, as if to say, “Not me.” of imposing an income tax despite anti-income tax sentiments ex­ Sidewalks set for repair No funds his c i l for one in his proposed pressed in recent polls, he had not HARTFORD — The House of Representatives has “I forgot about you, baby,” Migliaro said as the budget. done a good job of promoting his approved and sent to the Senate a bill that would House enqttcd in laughter. Weicker appeared Wednesday budget. He said 655,000 Connec­ HfyriminaliTe adultery in Cminecticut by repealing an The effort to repeal the law is a response to the By RICK SANTOS proposal start with a s^tion of Main Street, the east Manchester Herald before the General Assembly’s ticut families will pay the same or obscure law under which adultery is a misdemeanor. well-publicized arrests last summer of four side, from Delmont to Hollister streets. for foot Finance Crunmittee to defend his less in taxes than they do now; “I don’t think anybody realiz^ it was on the books southmtem Cormecticut residents on charges of adul­ until last year,” said Rep. Richard 'fiilisano, D-Rocky tery, which is a misdemeanor under a law that can be MANCHESTER — The East Hartford contractor The remainder of the list is as follows: proposed budget, which calls for a 6 170,000 will pay $153 a year more; percent tax on coiqtles’ income over and 600,000 families will pay 1 per­ HiU. t r a ^ back as far as 1642. who cuirently has the to repair town sidewalks has ■ Main Street, east side, from Hollister to The vote Wednesday to repeal the law was 87-61, patrols $25,000 a year coiqtled with reduc­ cent of income more. The law makes it illegal for a married man or submitted the lowest bid fw a contract to fix about 26 Washington. following a sometimes humorous debate centering on more walks. tions in the sales tax and business He said he knows “there’s a woman to engage in sexual intercourse with a person ■ Main Street, east side, from East Middle 'fiimpike whether the state should concern itself with marital in­ The $358,000 bid opened Wednesday was submitted to Delmont. taxes. mind-set” among Connecticut resi­ other than his or her spouse. Many committee members urged dents against an income tax and that fidelity. “Whether or not this Utw is enforced, it is part of the by S. Aleria & Sons htc., which has held the sidewalk ■ Oakland Street, west side, from Old North Main to but... “If you are unfaithful to your spouse, you have not contract for the past two years, according to official in North Main. the governor to consider their it would not be eliminated until they Judeo-Christian belief that adultery is immoral,” said V see the positive elements of his tax performed an act against the state, you’ve performed the General Services office. ■ Summit Street, east side, from East Middle proposals for a sliding-scale income Rq). Gleim Arthur, R-Ledyaid. “There is no good plan, wMch he said is designed to an act against your spouse,” said Rep. Andrew Norton, And becauM the bid is about $100,000 less than the Tlimpike to Delmont. tax. Weicker said he would consider reason to take this law off the books.” By BRIAN M. TROTTA any alternative, but said he still recharge the state’s faltering R-Colchester. “Therefore I don’t believe it is our af­ town had anticipated, the town may ask Aleria to do ■ Main Street, east side, from Grove to Pine Hill, Manchester Herald l\ilisano, the chief sponsor of the effort to repeal the thought his was the best economy and produce jobs. fair.” law, said it is only enforced sporadically now, usually some other sidewalk and curbing jobs not specified in ■ Harvard Road, north side, from Bowers to Prin­ Later, Rep. Eugene Migliaro, R-Wolcott, the He said that any budget and tax as a form of personal retribudon in marital disputes. the bid document, said Director of Engineering Services ceton. MANCHESTER — One of the Weicker also appeared to have House’s most outspoken conservative, asserted that William J. Camosci. plan passed by the General Assemb­ Under the measure passed Wednesday, adultery ■ Bowers Street, east side, from Henry to Tanner. programs that fell victim to the dropped any opposition he had to every member of the chamber had probably committed Camosci said the money for the work is to come from ly must have four elements to get his would still be listed as one of the grounds for divorce. ■ Bowers Street, west side, from Henry to Thmier. budget ax in General Manager GOV. LOWELL WEICKER statulmy controls mi state spending. adultery at one time or another. a $409,000 state grant plus another $100,000 remaining ■ Delmont Street, north side, from Bond to Summit. signature: an elimination of the Richard Sartor’s 1991-92 budget is He said he would accept a state law from this year’s grant program. ■ Delmont Street, south side, from Main to Summit. deficit, no gimmicks, no substantial He said the deficit for the current mandating a spending cap tied to A the downtown foot patrols by the The other bids for the sidewalk repairs came from ■ Henry Sueet, north side, from Summit to Harlan. additional borrowing, and substan­ budget year is approaching $800 economic growth. He said he Colossale Concrete Inc. of New Britain and Glenn Con­ ■ Tanner Street, south side, from Bowers to Prin­ police department. tial tax cuts for business. million. And, under the proposed remained opposed to putting such struction of Manchester. Colossale’s bid was slightly ceton. •There’s no income tax in there,” 1991-92 budget left by former Gov. controls in the state constitution. Term limitation bill pulled The department requested less than $460,000 and Glenn’s was about $572,000. he told the committee. ‘Those are William A. O’Neill, it would take ■ Tanner Street, north side, from Bowers to Prin­ $45,000 to continue the foot patrols Weicker said he took his case Camosci said Aleria is likely to begin the repair work ceton. the only four elements. Within that, another $13 billion to maintain cur­ even on the Republican side.” Thomas Scott, who now heads the on an overtime basis, but the money right to the committee because “the within two weeks and complete it by December when ■ Henry Street, south side, from Main to Summit. please, go ahead and adjust a read­ rent state services with the existing By PETER VILES Upson on Wednesday withdrew a Connecticut Taxpayers Committee, was not included in SarUv’s $80.6 times are unusual.” O’Neill rarely the concrete suppliers shut down. ■ Henry Street, south side, from Sununit to White. just any way that you can.” tax structure. The Associated Press bill, pending in the Legislative a group that favors term limitations. million recommended budget which testified before a committee. His The 26 sidewalks listed in the bid document are con­ ■ Henry Street, north side, from Main to Summit. He said that any opposition he With that kind of money needed, predecessor, Ella T. Grasso, was a Management Committee, that would “My gut tells me that if the public was unveiled Monday. HARTFORD — Efforts to limit sidered to be those in the greatest need of repair, with ■ Tanner Street, south side, Princeton to Wellesley. had to an income tax evaporated Weicker told the committee, he had more frequent committee wimess. have limited lawmakers to serving was h e ^ on this, their sentiment when facts of the state’s fiscal crisis no choice but to call for a radical the number of consecutive terms would be overwhelmingly anti­ consideration given to the amount of use, Camosci said. ■ Tanner Street, north side, Princeton to Wellesley. This will not, however, mean an nine consecutive two-year terms in sank in. reform of the state’s tax system, Liberal committee members, state lawmakers can serve are politician,” Scott said. “Thai’s the He added that there are other walks also in great need ■ American Legion Drive, north side. Main to Elro. office. end to the police presence in After that, proposing an income eliminating the sales tax-based sys­ who’ve been pushing an income tax probably doomed in the Legislature of repair, but those are not included in the project be­ ■ American Legion Drive, south side. Main to Elro. Another measure pending in a mood out there.” downtown. Sartor said. tax became “a no brainer,” the tem and replacing it with a system for years, heaped praise upon this year, a lawmaker said after he That was certainly the mood in cause they are on streets where roadway projects are ■ Delmont Street, north side. Main to Bond. Reginald PInto/Manchaatar Harald separate committee would limit law­ governor said in an extraordiiuiry relying on an income tax, coupled Weicker, calling him candid and gave up on one such effort and Stratford T\icsday, where voters planned. To repair sidewalks before abutting road work ■ Tanner Street, north side. Elm to Bowers. GONE FISHIN’— Deborah Ellis, left, and Johnny MeShane, The Main Street reconstruction makers to six consecutive terms, but 100-minute appearance before the with reductions in the sales and tough. withdrew it without a vote. overwhelmingly approved a referen­ is completed does not make sense because the walks are ■ Tanner Street, south side. North Elm to Bowers. project will require the contractor, UpstHi said it too will probably be both of Rockville, tried this morning to catch some fish for committee. Weicker gave a 10 More conservative members tried “There’s absolutely no interest in dum question linuting town council often tom apart during the road projects. ■ Henry Sueet, south side. White to North Elm. Della Construction Company of En­ business taxes. withdrawn or defeated. dinner at Union Pond, Manchester. minute opening statement and spent His proposed $7.48 billion budget with their questions to make points it,” said Sen. Thomas Upson, R- Those sidewalks that are included in the new contract ■ Henry Sheet, north side. White to North Elm. field, to hire at least two traffic con­ “It’s legislators looking out for members to three consecutive two- the rest of the time answering ques­ for the year beginning July 1 is 2.3 against his package, but none openly Waterbury. “I talked to everybody trol officers for the duration of the themselves,” said former state Sen. year terms in office. tions. No new ground was broken. percent less than this year’s budget criticized him during the hearing. and there were no votes there — not project. Those officers, who are paid Forums abound for town budget discussion for by the contractor, will actually double the police presence in By BRIAN M. TROTTA portunities to tell the Board of The meetings will be held April 2 scheduled to be at the first session, workshops where departmental downtown from «Mie officer to two. Activities o Manchester Herald Directors what it thinks of Sartor’s and 9 at 7:30 pun. in the Lincoln which will be held l\iesday, April 2 budgets will be reviewed. The meet­ Sartor said. j j proposal before it is voted on. The at 9 a.m. in the director’s office in From Page 4 m MANCHESTER — Now that Center Hearing Room. ings are open to the public, however The only thing that will change. main event will be a public hearing General Manager Richard Sartor has Residents can also attend one of Town Hall. Director Wally Irish will no comment is allowed. Sartor said, is the focus of the that is scheduled for 8 p.m. on Wed­ be at the second comment session Finally, the directors have tenta­ FOR SUMMER made his 1991-92 budget proposal the two public comment sessions patrols. Rather than concentrating Vineyard, June 27; Newport, July nesday, April 3 at Waddell School. scheduled before the final vote. scheduled for Thursday, April 18 at tively scheduled a meeting for Wed­ Fours. Programs are for children now on sale for tlic following Bos­ now on sale for the followig games public, there are still a number of on issuing tickets and providing a at Yankee Stadium: Saturday, July 13; Block Island, July 18; Nantuck­ Residents can also qieak on the There, taxpayers can sit down m Golf Basics — for the new and day, Oct. 5 vs. Milwaukee. All tick­ lantic City, June 30 to July 1 and construction season in November. experienced golfer. These classes ets are $26. 647-3089. aii ages! AND irS FUN! Z l ^ Easter egg hunt Upcoming Trips — Martha’s November 10 to II. Labor agreement reached Sartor said that there is enough were well received last year, so New York Mete — Tickets now O CO MANCHESTER — The place rain or shine because the fol­ money in the town’s contingency please register early! instmeted by on sale for the following Mete z weekend’s rain and sleet washed lowing day is Easter, said Brenda K. Chet Dunlop, he will guide you games at Shea Stadium: Saturday, MANCHESTER — One of the largest labor unions The union requested the agreement because mem­ fund to resume the patrols on an We have changed our name H H away a planned Easter Egg Hunt, Foley-Lynch, a coordinator of the July 20 vs. LA Dodgers and Satur­ 1 rewarding.------, of town employees has reached an agreement with bers believed that the three employees had been moved overtime basis if the Main Street through the lull swing, sort game, create spontaneous excitement and lasting memories. town contract negotiators regarding bumping into positions that were less likely to be affected by but kids will get a second crack at event. day, August 24 vs. Cinneinati Reds. m X project is completed in the an­ practice drills, strategy, and rules of from DiRosa Cleaners to.... o m procedures that follow layoffs, officials representing impending layoffs, said John Little, president of Local raiding the Easter Bunny’s stash. The hunt, which lasts about 15 the game. Teaching aids such as the All tickets are $26. ticipated time frame. OPEN 7 DAYS PER WEEK the union and the town said today. 991 of the American Federation of State, County, and The aimual. Easter Egg Hunt, minutes, is free, requires no registra­ Sybervisitm and Sports Enhance­ New York Yankees — Tickets The major portion of the settlement is a provisitm Municipal Employees. sponsored by the Manchester tion, and is open to all children. The foot patrols were instituted ment Learning Systems will be util­ ★ U.S. ★ ?L_EANER^S 8 am - Closing 00 Jaycees Inc. and Lynch Toyota-Pon- In the bunt, they will scramble up that three public works employees who were recently The settlement, which was signed 1\iesday, will last this summer in response to com­ ized. Proper technique will be tiac Inc., has been rescheduled for the sliding hill at the park, gathering promoted will be consider^ to occupy the positions until layoffs are determined after the adoption of next plaints from merchants and residents developed through the use of video t off T f r e e ' b o x y '*3.00 off ] they held before the promotions for the purpose of year’s budget and does not affect any other promotions 10 a.m. Saturday at Center Springs candy treats that are Imd iq>on it. COUNTRY MUSIC Junior & Senior who said that the downtown area taping replay, and analysis. Equip­ o ^ determining seniority when layoffs occur. previously authorized. Ru"k. Older children must search the at the American Legion I any cleaning *■ STORAGE | over $10 Of qBox/w 52 CO This time the egg hunt will take woods for their candy treats. was unsafe. ment will be provided for those who DISCOUNTS need it. Fee is $55 per person. 20 American Legion Dr., I of *8.00 or more Quality Service m c/3 Manchester, Conn. CotAxm mjit • proMnled one per ! j ! Session II: Sun^ys, Mar. 24 to cmlomer/one per orPet. Cannot nolb.Cflnt3awlw41holh*< May 5, 2:30-4 pjn. Center Springs The following are some of the Prize will be awarded for the largest year olds, 9-9:45 ajn.; 6-8 year olds, summer fun program for children Great Country Music for 299 West Middle Tpke. 777 Main Street 875-2583 programs, trips, and special events fish caught in the following age 10-11 ajn.; 9-11 year olds, 11-12 who will be entering Kindergarten Bark. Dancing and to Enjoy! Session IV: Saturdays, May 18 to ★ SOON OPENING A DRIVE THRU ic being offered by the Manchester groups: 7-9 years, 10-11 years, and noon. Golf: Golf isn’t just for adults in the Fall of ’91. The program will SPENDING MONEY!! For info call 644-6738 V June 8, 10-11:30 a.m. Center Parks and Recreation Department. 12-14 years. For more information, — you can learn too! Chet Dunlop, meet Monday to Friday, 9:30 ajn. to For more information on programs, call the Dept, at 647-3084 or PGA Professional, will get you 12:30 pjn. for six weekly sessions Newspaper routes available Springs Park recreation facilities, or paiks areas, 647-3166 after 3 pjn. A rec card is started during this three day clinic. beginning June 24. The fee is $50. Session V: 1\)csdays, June 11-25, please call the department at not required. Youth ages 7 and older are wel­ Terry Mounce will direct the in your area... 5:30-7 p.m. Center Springs Park REPLACE YOUR BASEMENT DOOR o New Session Added: Lunch Time 647-3084/3089. A Recreation Mem­ Kidsongs Comes To Mahoney comed. All equipment is provided, program. Call for an application! CD bership Card is required for all — April 19 — Amted with an so just bring yourself and a friend! Nike Tykes Recreational Earn money and prizes by Golf, Firidays, 12 noon to 1 pjn.. BEAT THE MAY PRICE INCREASE! programs unless stated otherwise. acoustic guitar, a bundle of energy, Ihesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, Programs for Preschoolers — delivering the May 17 to June 14. EASTER PLANTS April School Vacation — Look and a vast repertoire of irresistible April 16-18, 10:15-11:45 ajn. $40, Registration for the Spring Session Spring Program Registration What’s Happening songs and stories, Ellen Feldman & Center Springs Park. Soccer — Get of Nike Tykes will be held for the Manchester Herald Teen Night — The Parks and Co. perform Kidsongs. The program ready for summer soccer! Chris Sil­ following classes: Parent/Tot Registration is now in progress Our usual beautiful display of springtime^ for the Spring session of the follow­ Recreation Department in conjunc­ includes original material composed ver and his staff will introduce the Playtime, Wee Two, Big Two little in your neighborhood. ing programs: Walercise — Mon­ tion with the Manchester High by Ellen, as well as traditional and game of soccer to your child in a Ttmre. FHin lykes, and Fuitastic beauty. Large assortment of florist quality, days, May 6 to June 10, 7 pjn. $7. School will offer a “Teen Night” for contemporary folksongs. Come fun, learning environment. Clinic Free Estimates - Any size, width, length, height Senior high students at Manchester Call today to get more details ^^^ter Walking — Mondays and prepared for a foot-stomping, hand­ will meet at Mt. Nebo, April 15-18. Please see ACTIVITIES, page 5. STEEL FOUNDATION PLATES plants. High School on Friday, April 12. clapping, knee-slapping, finger- Fee is $25. 4-5 year olds, 6:30-7:30 Wednesdays, 4 or 4:45 p.m. or 'fties- ON ALL INSTALLATIONS TOITI Kl f Dy A Students in grades 10-12 from snapping concert with lots of oppor­ pjn.; 6-9 year olds, 7:30-8:30 p.m. days and Thursdays, 4:15 or 5 p.m., Te itrip pmvtnl agakut toundslkm notion emmd *jf tnom.nlntndunwtnitdInttcittndtoOtnlt. O f * All plants have foil and most have bows. Manchester High School, East tunities to join in the music. $3 per SuperStar Fun Camp — CAIjDWELL 647-9946 beginning April 23, $18. Ceramics Catholic, and Cheney Tech are in­ — Mondays or Thursdays, 6:30-9 family with a recreation member­ Registrations will be accept^ for Academy S t...... all Steephollow.. vited. The swimming pool, fimess OIL pjn. or Wednesdays, 12:30-3 pjn., ;« POTTED BULB PLANTS EASTER NOVELTIES ship card and $5 per family without our summer Superstar Fun Camp. A delaide...... all Squire Village ...... room, and gym will be open for the a rec card. Doors will open at 10:30 Camp will begin June 24 and run for $38 for 6 weeks. Gymnastics — Alpine...... all Union Pl/Homestead St Mmdays, 6 pjn. (4-5 yrs), 6:45 • Daffodils • Hyacinths Large assortment of Wooden students from 7-10:30 pjn. Music a.m. with performances beginning at eight weeks to August 16. Youth 649-8841 BidvyellSt...... all Union S t...... i j i pjn. (6-7 yrs), 7:30 pjn. (8 and will also be offered. Admission is 11 ajn. Tickets will be sold in ad­ ages 6-15 are eligible. Weekly fee is Clearview...... jiii VIbranoke...... aR • Grape Hyacinths Bunnies and many other little free. Far more information, please older), $19, beginning April 1. Anniversary 8 ^ : vance at the Mahoney Recreation $75 per child, with discounts for si­ D ale R d ...... a l Wstherell...... all I ornaments. Come in and see our call the Mahoney Recreation Center Center and the Ihtks and Recreation blings and early registtants. For East Center S t...... 2 5 -2 0 7 odd Trips ^Bulbs are in a 3 inch pot Trips do not require a Recreation Dept. 56 Bunnies. at 647-3166 after 3 pjn. Rec card Main office or at the door. more information or a brochure, call ^ . 9 3 » East Center S t ...... 156-202 even 'to be planted outdoors. M .9 8 Each not required. the department. East Center S t...... 342-402 even Membership (Tard and are open to Instructional Sports Clinic — C.O.D. EXTRA 12th Annual Children’s Fishing Tennis: Tennis is for everyone! For Kindercamp — New this sum­ 150 Gcilloii M inirm im Flem ing...... ^ | non-residents. Register at the ftrks VICTOR Derby — The Manchester Lion’s ages 4 to 11 years of age, adaptive mer is Kindercamn — a half day Priro ‘juUjPct to cti.iiigp Garth R d...... 89-138 and Recreation Office located in kri'i} G o lw a y S t...... all ANNALEE DOLLS EASTER 1 Club in conjunction with the Parks equipment make tennis fun and easy Center Springs ftrk. All trips depart CALCULATORS and Recreation Department will to learn. For youth ages 6 to 11, our Greenhill St...... all from the Mahoney Recreation A real nice way to say Happy Easter to hold its 12 Annual Hshing Derby on terrific staff glide students through Hilliard...... a ll Center, 110 Cedar Stteet. Horace St...... a l Saturday, April 13 from 7 ajn. to 12 the basic fundamentals of the game someone. We also have Limited Edition Jean R d ...... a l NYC On Your Own — Saturday, noon at Saulters Pond in and challenge the experienced 40% OFF Joyce L a...... all April 20. $20 for roundttip ttanspor- Manchester. The Derby is limited to player. Equipment and t-shirts Dolls and the new Desert Mouse and Head Kenwood S t...... a l talion only. 7:30 a.m. departure. Ad­ youth up to 14 years of age; those 8 provided. Michelle Morianos in­ and under must be accompanied by Lodge...... a l ditional date November 16. SWINTEC/ADLER Pins. structor, Monday to Friday, April 15 BOOKS'tS,tX)0 Hjrdi'ovors ~ IJHK) I’.ipi-rbacks Ludlow R d ...... all Ellis Island — Saturday, May 18. an adult. Fust, Second and Third to 19, Charter Oak Park, $25, 4-5 USI l) - most hdrdiDVors less ih.in SIO IX) - M a in ...... 2 85 -3 78 $29 per person and includes TYPEWRITERS most paperbacks less than S>1.00 Monroe S t...... a l ttansportation and admission to Ellis GREENVIEW SILK FLOWERS New State Rd...... a l OLT-OI -PRINT - recent best-sellers and Island plus ferry ticket for Staten Is­ Overland St...... a l Large selection of older liction & non-liction land also. 7:30 ajn. departure. Packard S t ...... all GREEN POWER ready made items. 2 VICTORIA ASHLEY & TARA ASHLEY UAKI- unusual books tor particular tastes Boston Red Sox — Tickets are Parker S t...... 2-83 O hr 20% OFF 20,000 Sq. Ft. Bag C O l.li t'TIBl.l- - first isJitions, fine leather P h y lis ...... all Also pots )|( are joining forces to better serve you. bindings, nostalgia, sfx'ual interest or llrra t^ > Rosetto Dr...... a l uaaUng )usi hard to find for the cemetery. 1 857 Main St. 643-8734 3 Server St...... a l ALL RIBBONS I’l ... * 1 9 . 9 9 HOURS: Mon, thru SaLJj^?Q-5:30. Thurs. til 7:00 Spruce S t...... 14- 1O8 - national search loranv recent or old IN STOCK OPEN 7 DAYS book only SI tIO BEST BUY LIMITED TIME ONLY (.iri n-KTincAirs CALL NO W Similar Savinas SUNDAY UNTIL % OIL CO. on Other Greenview Products, 5 0 Vernon, CT 4:00 EVERYTHING IN THE STORE AT Out specialty is putting the book you want in your hands. 647- 9946/ 643-2711 20% OFF 8 7 5 -0 8 7 6 (Minimum $10.00 Purchase) B o o k s & : B i r d s Please Call For iVITTNER'S GARDEN CENTER 789 Main St. ALLSTATE Mon.-Sat. 9-5 989 Main St. 2nd Floor 649-8181 519 L. Middle Tpke., Manchester, CT • (203 ) 649-3449 Current Pricing Manchester BUSINESS Closed Sunday Hours: lu i’s VWd U -1 *^1, Thurs. 11*8, Fri i t Sal II i § MACHINES 1 1TOLUND TURNPIKE • 649-2623 • MANCHESTER-VERNON TOWN UNE J NEW HOURS: Thurs.-Sat. 10:00-5:30 Diesel Fuel Also Available 643-6156 abm Plrasr ojII Sun if Mon >it»ufs iiaurl]fatpr 150 Galon Mmlmgm "H lit ftfili ua" Pitea iub)ea to change V olum ejgooun^ •Sato E ndt 3t3l/9l. Ctnna! b t u tn t iwrt any o ttm ortar. W£ BUY BOOKS; Quulity, doUections, ittates, Etc. MANCHESTER HERALD. Thursday. March 28.1991—7 6—MANCHESTER HERALD. Thursday. March 28.1991 OPINION Open Forum Arsenal mamtcumi Thinking aloud worked

To The Editor: As a -itizen of Bolton I have some questions for the in Gulf Comme i Sense Coalition candidates for the Board of M Educatl.m. I am concerned about quality education in Bolton s Public Schools, both professionally and per- By JACK ANDERSON sonall) I have two young children in Bolton Elementary and DALE VAN ATTA A School and intend to see them through Bolton High Presbyterian Church of School, and 1 have worked as a teacher in Bolton since WASHINGTON —- Almost everyth­ Manchester 1969. I am committed to both the town and the school ing in the Pentagon’s toy box worked system, not at any price, but at an affordable price. 43 Spruce Street surprisingly well in the Persian Gulf Manchester, CT To Mr. Mensing: The State of Connecticut has cited War. 'The “smart” bombs, the fighter jets Bolton for numerous building code violations in their and the Patriot missiles were expected to 643-0906 schools. Could you explain how. as an advocate for the perform brilliantly, and they did. But so Commuity Baptist Church Harvest Time school children of Bolton, you could state that you see no did most of the question marks. THURSDAY, MARCH 28 A problem in ignoring these violations in our facilities? 585 East Centef Street, Manchester Baptist Church The best news for the Pentagon is that 72 East Center Street Maundy Thursday You claim that other towns simply refuse to address their the equipment that routinely failed (Communion Service) violations and the state looks away and does nothing, Maundy Thursday 7:30 PM ~ The Lord's Supper (The Orange Hall) miserably during peacetime training 7:30P.M. could you be specific? Mr. Mensing, are you, as a Board came through with flying colors during Hours: Sunday School of Education member, prepared to risk slate funding and the war. Part of the credit goes to im­ Good Friday ~ 7:30 PM the possibility of a parental law suit in order to save 10:00A.M. SUNDAY, MARCH 31 mediate air supremacy. Allied planes Covenant Players Presents “Waves of Decision” Sunday Worship Hour money on the repair and updating of our school build­ look the heart out of the Iraqi army, so a Church Breakfast ings? 11:00A.M. long ground war, which could have Easter Breakfast ~ 8:00 AM Sunday Evening Service 8:30A.M. To Mrs. Wickersham; Arc you willing to invest time tested tanks and helicopters beyond their 6:00P.M. and energy into the carctaking and planning of our public Easter Worship 10:00 AM Easter Celebration ability to perform, was averted. Wednesday Prayer Meeting 10:30A.M. schools even though you choose to enroll your own But what may have proved most 7:00P.M. children in expensive private schools outside of Bolton? decisive is that the Pentagon did not Can the voters of Bolton trust you with the education of THE GHEIAP SHOT H EARD AROUND THE WORDD shortchange its people in the field when their children when your educational interests obviously Church of the Nazarene it came to spare parts. 'The cupboards 236 Main Street, Manchester, CT SOUTH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH lie elsewhere and most of these parents simply cannot af­ were emptied and shipped to the Gulf. ford your alternatives? Mrs. Wickersham, why do you 646-8599 1226 Main Street, Manchester, CT Operation Desert Storm also had the 647-9141 want to serve on the Board of Education? Who will serve best combat pit crews ever assembled. Reverend Philip Chatto, Pastor you? Not only were the military mechanics on Sunday Schedule: HOLY WEEK To Ms. Miller: What programs do you promote? What Young, black — forgotten site, but the Pentagon summoned techni­ 9:30 a.m. Sunday School; 10:40 a.m. Worship Service Children's arc your positive approaches to the problems which face cal aces from the companies that built Maundy Thursday, March 28: our children and our schools? If people vote for Jac­ the weapons systems. TTiey also had the Church and Nursery; 6 p.m. Evening Praise Service, Nursery Holy Communion at 7‘.30p.m. at South Church queline Miller what kind of Board of Mucalion member Reading about the Senate hearings on At this point, I am constrained to borhood?” In many cities, it’s standard advantage of five months in the desert Good Friday, March 29: will they get? the endangered status of young black recall the young black minister who was operating procedure for white cops to Mid-Week Bible Study: males in America, I realized that my son, fire-and-brimstoning. As he checked off harass young black males. with little to do but test their equipment. 7:00 p.m. Wednesday; 6:30 p.m. Wednesdays Youth Activities. 7;30p.m. Chancel Choir Concert and Tenebrae Service at South Church As a voter and a parent, I want the most positive and The grease monkeys kept aloft such qualified people possible for our town boards. One final Charlie, and I have beaten the odds each deadly sin, members of the con­ The pattern is legitimized by a racial Easter, March 31: twice. We haven’t been brutalized by a gregation counterpointed like a Greek mindset that is fostered by eminently re­ precarious weapons as the highly touted, Identical Worship Services at 9f)0 and 10:45a.m. with childcare. question: Is it possible for a group of candidates with no but injury-prone Apache helicopter. The interest in our schools, save their uix bill, to constructive­ police officer trained in the Daryl F. chorus: “Preach, Reverend, preach.” spectable opinion-molders such as Gates method. And we have had 'The young minister then looked dole­ George Will and Charles Krauthammer, average Apache worked 90 percent of Unitarian Universalist Society ~ East ly advocate for the children they will be honor bound to the time, compared to the peacetime tests Assumption Roman Catholic Church serve? The school children of Bolton represent 800 reasonably successful careers. fully out at his congregation and both of whom subconsciously lump all 153 Vernon Street West, Manchester, CT My father, Charles Sr., didn’t beat the thundered, “And now. I’m going to talk black males together and further ghet­ of the helicopter when it was usable only 285 West Center Street, Manchester, CT 643-2195 citizens who cannot vote, they deserve seven committed, 50 percent of the time. 646-5151 positive adults to look out for their educational oppor­ odds. The first black man to graduate about the affairs some of y’all been toize them. Thursday. March 38: Mass of the Lord's Supper - 7:00p.m. H with honors from Springfield College, he Last July, for example. Will indicted Apaches with the 101st Aviation O tunity. Brigade fired the first shots of the war Easter Worship Service 10:30 a.m. Good Friday, March 29: No morning mass. JJ r- J. Frederick Audette later became a successful business ex­ only black male rap singers in 2 Live ecutive before becoming a statistic em­ Crew and the accused rapists of the when they crossed the border in the early Sermon by The Reverend Connie Sternberg Passion of Our Lord and Communion 3:OOp.m S ^ 25 Bayberry Rd. Stations of the Cross 7:OOp.m. balmed in a perpetual alcoholic haze. Central I^rk jogger as the progenitors of hours of Jan. 17 and attacked Iraqi anti­ > r n Bolton H o Statistics can do wonders. Tliey alibi CHUCK what he called “America’s slide into the aircraft radar systems so the Air Fbrce "After The Stone Is Rolled Away" Holy Saturday, March 30: No morning mass. legislative impotence and provide a STONE sewer.” It doesn’t stretch credulity to jets could stream into Iraq. Special music by a Vocal Octet The notorious, gas-guzzling M-lAl Easter Vigil Mass 7:30p.m. O CD catharsis of satisfaction to senators. Lis­ suggest that it’s just this sort of “us vs. z -< Friend’s tribute ten to the litany of ills faced by males them” mindset that leads white cops to tank also performed better than its bill­ Bob Richardson - Musical Director Easter Sunday Masses, March 31: who are young, black and forgotten: abuse black citizens. ing. 'The Army didn’t lose a single tank 7:30a.m., 9:00a.m., 10:30a.m. and 12:OOnoon H - i To The Editor: Twice the unemployment rate of That same month, Krauthammer to enemy fire. m jz I lost a very dear friend today. Libby Hansen had so young white males. denounced an array of black heroes such The list of lessons learned the hard 0 m many fine qualities that I’d like this to be a tribute to her Triple the narcotics arrest rate for having with each other.” To which an as Malcolm X, the Rev. George Stallings way is short. Our associate Jim Lynch St. James Roman Catholic Church C e n t e r C ongregational C h u r c h life. I never wimessed such courage, strength, and peace white males'. elderly sister replied, “He done stopped Jr. and the Rev. Benjamin Hooks as has learned that the Army is considering 896 Main Street, Manchester, CT U n i t e d C h u r c h o f C h r i s t preachin’ and gone to meddlin’.” Center & Main Streets 1 as Libby exhibited during her nine month illness. Never Quadruple the chances of being mur­ “black rejectionists.” This wholesale nul­ upping the firepower of its Bradley 643-4129 once was there a complaint of any kind. After moving to F ittin g Vehicles. 'Their 25mm caimons Manchester • 647-9941 dered compared to white males. I am about to meddle. lification of black thinkers leaves young n O Maine in late “90 to be with family, Libby continued to were effective at blowing up trucks and “The crisis of black males has been It is easy to condemn the self-destruc­ black males with entertainers, sports o maintain her interest in the church she loved and was cars, but almost useless against armored HOLYTBKJRSDAY - Mass ofthe Lord's Supper one of the enduring facts in the history of tiveness of young black males or figures and dope dealers as their only equipment. The TOW missiles — 7:30P.M. 2 05 very involved in — Second Congregational Church of America,” Samuel L. Meyers, head of denounce the systematic violence of Los role models. Manchester. Many of us had telephone conversations modern-day bazookas — were difficult Easter S unday m 05 the University of Maryland’s Afro- Angeles’ white cops. But neither exists Yet, I do not despair. The same pas­ for soldiers to aim and often exploded on with her almost till the end. Dear Libby, your memory American Studies program, mournfully in a vacuum. Black men in this society sionate faith in America handed down by GOOD FRIDAY - 3:00P.M. O will remain amongst us and the Spirit you have shown informed the senators. “Why an Afro- grow up oppressed by the cumulative ef­ my father to me has been passed on to the ground before they reached their tar­ Solumn Celebration of the Lord's Passion & Death will live on in all of our hearts. God-speed as we think of gets. CELEBRATIONS American male summit now?” fects of racist insults and humiliations. my son. MiMrch29th-l:Z0PM. you and your beautiful reunion with your dear husband. “Now” because two circumstances I still suffer from one syndrome. It’s 'The Air Farce is likely to take some 8:30 and 10:30 a.m. fn ^ Cliff. collided to lay bare the crisis: the hor­ Most white people don’t believe this. the congenital hope for a reciprocity of heat for its decision to mothball the EASTEIR VIGIL - Stations of the Cross Service Evelyn Tomaszewski rible nationally televised beating by But in Beverly Hills, Washington, D.C., civility. And after 66 years, I am still SR-71 Blackbird spy planes. They might Saturday, March 30th ~ 7:30P.M. “ When Question Marks Become Exclamation Points” 16 South Rd. white cops of an uiuesisting black man, and my hometown, Hartford, I have been dedicated to convincing young black have given Desert Storm commanders 30 > Bolton up-to-date pictures of the battlefield that CHILD CARE PROVIDED DURING BOTH SERVICES and the murder in Detroit of a black stopped by white policemen and asked, males that their future can be as lovely as EASTER SUNDAY - March 3U t veteran of the Persian Gulf War. “^^^at are you doing in this neigh­ my past has been productive. the satellite cameras missed. Newell Curtis, Senior Pastor 'The lesson that the Pentagon failed to 7:30A.M., 9:00A.M., 10:30A.M. and 12:00PM. t CENTER CHURCH FAITH LINE— 649-HOPE t learn is the seriousness of letting am­ They worked hard munition reserves dip too low. 'The Air Force almost ran out of bombs. 'The war To The Editor: Where’s Joe Homeless? ended just in time to cancel an emergen­ Trinity Covenant Church Emanual Lutheran Church The Board of Selectmen of the Town of Bolton wish to cy order for more explosives. extend their gratitude and “thanks” to the following Predictably, now that the Pentagon has 302 Hackmatack Street 60 Church Street volunteers who worked so hard to make the March 17 proven the worth of the equipment it has, NEW YORK — I don’t know the much as heard of Joe Homeless nor saw Charles stuff something into his knit Manchester, CT rally to “Support Our Troops” such a memorable suc­ it will begin pressing Congress for more Manchester, CT man’s real name, but he calls himself Joe could they offer any ideas as to how to cap, and walk off. 1 thought quickly cess: residents Edith Clark, Esther Haloburdo, Arlene dream toys. 'The Army is forging ahead 649-2855 Homeless. He is reportedly a middle- track him down. about my camera. It was on the back 643-1193 Hardy, Brooke and Joe Nowak, Linda Richardson, with its request to develop yet another aged, formerly middle-class individual 'Then at noon, as the chilly weather floor of the car. How could I have been Thursday, March 28th Nancy and Ray Soma, Ray Ursin and all the volunteers. turned to rain, I got lucky. I thought. so dumb? “Hold it!” I cried out. “Dog­ tank and a $42-billion package of new HOLY WEEK SERVICES Also, thanks to community groups such as the Bolton who has taken to living door-to-door be­ Maundy Thursday cause of circumstances he believes could Several men lounging near the Port gone you,” or words to that effect. “Stop helicopters. Congress will likely tell the Women’s Club, the Democratic Town Committee, the Pentagon to perfect what it has and quit happen to anyone. He is also an author Authority phone booths overheard my thief!” 7:00P.M. (Communion Service) Republican Town Committee and the Bolton Lion’s Club asking for more. MAUNDY 'THURSDAY, MARCH 28TH ~ 12NOON and 7fX)P.M. who writes movingly about his vagabond calls, and one of them offered his ser­ 'There followed the requisite Dirty for their help and cooperation with the rally. Friday, March 29th vices. He said he had known Joe Home­ Harry chase. Charles raced through the 'The Senate Armed Services Commit­ The Board of Selectmen extends a .special “tip of the existence, and, at present, he is said to be attempting to publish a book. less for some months, and, if I would tee has already displayed some savvy in Good Friday Service hat” to Mrs. Sue Hein and Mrs. Pamela Sawyer for Port Authority to Ninth Avenue — he GOOD FRIDAY, MARCH 29TH - 7:00P.M. I learned about him from a Manhattan had good speed for a man wearing recognizing what the Pentagon needs and 7:00P.M. without their inspiration and leadership this event, honor­ doesn’t need. When the House sup­ ing our Desert Storm troops and their families, would friend, who called recently to say that he waders — and he continued down 41st had read an article the street person had Street, in and out of a filling station, over plemental bill to help fund the war came Sunday, March 31st EASTER SUNDAY, MARCH 31ST - 8:30A.M. and 11:00A.M. have never occurred. a trestle, under a trestle, along a dis­ to the Senate, the Armed Services Com­ Easter Service Helen M. Kemp written for The New York Times. The friend said the piece lacked polish, but TOM pirited series of warehouses, and around mittee spotted a big chunk of pork and Administrative office, threw it out. 'The House bill included 8:00A.M. and 11:00A.M. IN CHRISTS NAME, WELCOME. Bolton Board of Selectmen the point of view was utterly convincing, TIEDE to a parking lot. and he suggested I come to the city and I caught him in the paddng lot. I $11.2 million to buy 59,000 rounds of a find Joe Homeless for an interview. grabbed his greatcoat and we tumbled in type of ammunition that was not useful Good idea. 1 made arrangements to the rain, sliding into a red Chrysler. He in the Gulf. 'The ammo is manufactured St. Mary's Episcopal Church CONCORDIA LUTHERAN CHURCH stop during a motor trip to New England. was terrified. I was righteously is Scranton, Pa., the dishict of Rep. (ELCA) jpgs 1 meant to do some homework before ar­ disheveled. Surely, we looked like the Joseph McDade, R-Pa., who is a big 41 Park Street 1 Berry's World riving, to get particulars on the man, but spring for a sackful of donuts, he would fools we were. I took the knit cap, and let player on the House Defense Appropria­ 40 Pitkin Street, Manchester, C T’W time did not allow it. Therefore, I drove lead me to him. I got spudnuts and rub­ Charles go, and found that it was stuffed tions Subcommittee. 'The House didn’t Manchester, CT 649-5311 ber necks, and we drove to the Seventh bother to challenge him on the expense, into Manhattan on a Sunday a.m., with Washington and Philadelphia 649-4583 without any notion of where to find one Day Adventist shelter on 45th Street. newspapers. but the Senate did. It was the only am­ homeless fellow among 8 million resi­ The guide said his name was Charles, I soon discovered that my camera was munition item taken out of the bill. dents. but provided no further family details. still on the back floor of the automobile. Limited Distribution MAUNDY THURSDAY, March 28: He wore a large knit cap, different Charles had only stolen the papers. I Secretary of State James Baker is pull­ Thursday, March 28th 11 dO a.m. Holy Communion/12 00 Luncheon Sunday in New York. Those who think colored shoes, and what I took to be an couldn’t understand why — the camera ing diplomatic strings to keep high-tech 6:30P.M. (Holy Communion) 7:00 p.m. Holy Communion Army greatcoat. He ate the frosting only 5th Grade Rrsf Communion Gotham never closes have not been here has real value — until a cop said the weaponry out of the hands of another "The Lord's Supper” Stripping of the Altar during a chilly morning on the Sabbath. and threw the donuts away. street man may not have seen the Nikon, dictator like Saddam Hussein. During his No one parades on Fifth Avenue. Only or, perhaps: “He might have just thought latest Uavcls, Baker reminded world •Bring 2 dishes. Charles said he had been living on the G O O D FRIDAY, March 29: the pigeons give their regards to Broad­ it was OK to take the newspapers to leaders of how close Saddam came to (One goes to the Monchest^Shelter.) I I -.45 a.m. W ay of the C ro a (storting from Center Congregational) succts for most of five years. And he 700 p.m. G ood Friday Liturgv 9 way. I tried to contact usual sources for sell.” threatening world peace with nuclear, So We’re Going to Raise the Roof took some pride in thinking there was a 8:00P.M. Vigil lr>cluding Chorals from the "St John Passion" directions, but everything was shuttered, chemical and biological weapons. Sad­ by Johann Sebastian Bach uptown, downtown and all around town. logical reason. “I used to have an apart­ I left for New Hampshire after that. I dam was able to develop the arsenal ment in Chelsea,” he explained, “but, got out of town with a tom jacket, a thanks to the major powers who sold it to in CELEBRATION! Even the homeless shelters arc scaled Friday, March 29th you know, if you don’t have an apart­ croissant sandwich and a red face. And I him. Baker proposed a “multi-lateral” EASTER EVE. March 30; at Sunday breakfast. But there arc a few ment, you don’t have rent, and you don’t never found Joe Homeless, more’s the framework to control future military n :45A.M. The M AC C Walk Thru Town 700 p.m. Easter Vigil arwd First Eucharist of Easter "And then I wrote ‘THE WIT AND WISDOM exceptions. So 1 went to a West Side have to steal for the rent and go to jail.” pity. 1 would still like to interview him, sales. But he said it would succeed only 7:15P.M. Good Friday Uteragy OF SADDAM HUSSEIN. '” refuge, near the Port Authority bus ter­ and maybe tell him of Charles, a h u n ^ if the Soviet Union and China agree to minal, and whereas the man on duty did When we got to the Seventh Day Ad­ good Samaritan who might well be in­ participate. Baker has proposed a “sup­ Saturday, March 30th Church of the Living God THE RESURRECTION OF OUR LORO, March 31: not know Joe Homeless, he gave me a ventist shelter, Joe Homeless was not 6:30 a.m. Survise Eucharist cluded in any book about street people. pliers’ committee” of the major weapons 7:15P.M. Holy Baptism Come celebrate the life and love of God with us. 8.00 a.m. Foster Breokfost list of telephone numbers for some of the there. We then went to St. Peter’s Epis­ exporters to police themselves. 9:00 a.m. Family Eucharist Manchester Herald other groups that give assistance to street copal, and he wasn’t at that kitchen As for Charles himself, I should 10:30 a.m. Choral Eucharist people. either. We made two more stops, the lat­ apologize. Taking Saturday newspapers ini-Editorial Sunday, March 31st Currently meeting at Robertson School, Manchester Spreciol Music for this Holy Day includes "This Is A Day for 9 ter back at the Port Authority, where we on Sunday is not Murder One. I think I TJic success of the Persian Gulf War (at the Junction of Main and North Main) Rejoicing" by Robert Leaf. "That Easter Doy" by Dole Founded OcL 1.1881 as a weekly. Dwelling Place, for example. And the f Wood (sung by the Ecumenical Choir School); as well came up empty twice again — and, probably scared him into flight. He told VrSy yet be tainted by revelations of how 7:30A.M.. 9:30A.M. Sunday Worship Celebration at 9:00 a.m. and 10:45 a.m.. Daily publication since OcL 1,1914. Salvation Army. And Holy Apostles hymn arrangements and descants shrugging, Charles asked for a croissant' ^ me he would like to work in a shelter. I the Kuwaiti government tried to nanipu- David W. Mti/len. Pastor Church, Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, The Rev. Dr. KIm-ErIc Wllllamt, Pastor sandwich. think I could help him get work in a shel­ latc American public thought. 'There is a n d 11:15A.M. (Holy Communion) 647-7355. The Rev. Arrwid T. Wangerin, Assistant Pastor Managing Edior. Pater Downs and St. Francis of Assisi. I called a dozen no doubt that Kuwait suffered at the City Edtof_____| Alex Girds ter. But I don’t know where he is, and Allan B. Conway, OrganIst-ChoIr Dtrector Newt Edkx____ Andtew C SpHzler of the groups, from Harlem to tire He staved in the car while I made the r,m not going looking for homeless men hands of Iraq, but the Kuwaiti claims of Bowery, all to no avail. No one had so purchase from a vendor. Afterward, I anymore. atrocities may have been exaggerated. 8—MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday. March 28, 1991 iHaiirlifslpr HrralJi Cheney Kurds Section 2, Page 9 From Page 1 From Pago 1 Thursday, March 28,1991 sclors on hand. elude the school’s Pro Tech program for gifted students, DISCOVER Iraq’s major cities from Shiite Mus­ resisting Kurdish separatist move­ food siqrplies in. the Iraqi govern­ Although, Gov. Lowell P. Weicker Jr.’s proposed and the summer and after-school eiqtloratory programs lim rebels and are said to be moving ment is blocking any frxxn reaching budget calls for the closing of two satellite vocational ments. which allow students to sample the subjects offered at reinforcements nralhward to con­ Kurdish areas, the re ^ ls said. schools in Essex and Enfield, there are no plans in the No major fighting was reported Cheney before officially enrolling in the school. front Kurdish fighters. Wednesday in Kurdish-held Iraq, a “If 'liukey and Iran continue this state Legislature to shut down Cheney Tech. Quimby Although the meeting was scheduled to ease the People to see ■ places to go ■ things to do said. Helicopter gunships have been Ixoad swath across the northeastern policy, it means that they will take guidance counselors’ concerns, Charles Viani, Bennet responsibility for starving our Quimby did say that if Weicker’s budget, which calls credited with spurring their succes­ mountains that drops down to Junior High School’s guidance coordinator, said Quim- ses in the south and Kurdish rebel Kirkuk. people,” he said. for a IS-peicent reduction in vocational-technical school by’s talk made him all the more worried about the wel­ Ihat leaves only neighboring funds, were adopted as is by the State Legislature, many leaders say the gunships are a prime But a statement from the rebel fare of an “outstanding” program for Manchester stu­ concern. Kurdistan Democratic Puty said the Syria, a route the government troops Playing teacher layoffs at the school would result. State workers dents. Music ■ W ■ The rebels in Tslsho said Wednes­ Iraqi army was massing forces in were actively trying to block, shell­ Paris vs. the careful spender: throughout the state will be facing similar layoffs if- “I sensed that state officials are discouraged” about the day that Saddam’s government is Saddam’s hometown of Tikrit to ing the narrow banks west of Zakho Weicker’s proposed budget is passed, he said. possibility of budget cuts,” Viani said. re d in g to deliver UJSI. food stq>- launch an attack against Kirkuk 75 of the fast-flowing Tigris River, “Everywhere I go, people see you with a piece of at area He said that recent headlines about the welfare of tech­ plies to them and that liukey and miles to the northeast were supplies are ferried. paper and they think you know something,’’ he said. A match definitely worth traveling to see trivia nical schools has had some impact on students’ decision Iran were blocking shipments over The statement telexed to Nicosia, Talabani said the allies have also The numbn of layoffs would impact class sizes con­ to attend Cheney Tech, but that he did not know to what their borders. Cyprus, said more than 1,000 people been asked to allow the rebels to use David Lammey, a free-lance His eyes seemed fixed some­ siderably, Quimby said. On the Rue Jacob 1 found a A moment later she put a effect this would have on the future of Manchester stu­ They said the Iraqis were shelling were killed in the past week in air two Iraqi warplanes, a MiG-21 reporter for the Herald, recently where near my nose and the comers “Cmi you put 30 Idds in a classroom? Sure you can. dents enrolling in the school. threaters modest-looking boulangerie and sandwich with some meat in it on remaining siqiply routes from Syria. attacks (» the northern cities of fighter and a S u l^ i bomber, part of went to Europe for two weeks. He of his mouth lifted slightly. “Are went in. A peppy, friendly French the counter and I went up, fumbling tale But, if you have 30 Idds with some of them having spe­ Still, the troubled ectxiomy may have some positive “The food situation is very Kirkuk, Kefri, Dohuk, Kalar and the booty from the Khalid air base spent four days in Paris, attempting you trying to say, ‘Where is an inex­ woman took my order. Please, sit cial n e ^ , how much education is going to go on?,” he effects on the future of tech n i^ schools, Quimby said. with the change ... I put one, two serious. We will face starvatitm if TUz Khormatu. the rebels seized this week. all the while to stick to a "budget” pensive restaurant?”’ he said in down, she said, and started to said. With the slumping economy and it’s impact on the job By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS francs and then a ten-franc piece New wave music buffs know the we don’t receive supplies within one Kurdish and Shiite Muslim rebels Kurdish pilots who defected from of ISO francs (about 30 dollars) a English. His voice sounded as prepare my order. I had asked for a Some programs outside the school’s regular cur­ into her hand. “Encore!” she said, trivia tale behind brothers Stewart, market, “you’re going to see more and more people turn­ month,” said Jalal Ihlabani, who have accused the government of the Iraqi air force would fly them. day. He was not very succes^ul. though it had been recorded and cheese sandwich, which is a long riculum are already slated to be cut, he noted. Those in- ing to the programs we offer,” he said. “CLASS ACTION” (R) _ Gene her fingers motioning for more, as I Ian and Miles Copeland. Stewart heads the Popular Union of Kurdis­ using mustard gas and napalm in Iblabani says sut helicopter gun­ Hackman and Mary Elizabeth By DAVID LAMMEY play^ back at a slightly slower French bread stuffed with cheese was searching for the other ten-franc was the drummer for the Police. Ian tan rebel group. such attacks in a bid to stifle the in­ ships have also been c a p tu ^ . spe^. and perhaps lettuce and tomato and Mastrantonio star as father and Manchester Herald piece, and finally found it, took my ran the FBI: Frontier Booking Inter­ A Talabani said messages have been surrection by terrorizing the popula­ The U.S. Central Command in daughter on opposite sides of a “Yes,” I said, then corrected some meat, and a bottled water. sandwich and left. national. Miles founded IRS sent to the allied coalition that tion. Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, said today myself— “Oui.” But then I suddenly remembered class-action suit. G^ot yet reviewed.) PARIS — The surest, quickest I ate the sandwich walking back Records. Freezer forced Saddam’s forces from Ahmed Barmani, a Ihlabani aide, that it had no irrunediate information It looked as though he was going that I did not have much money left, method for wiping away the smile to the museum. It was a very good These amusing names were all a Kuwait, pleading that they allow said the food and medicine situation on the request but was checking into “GUILTY BY SUSPICION” to burst out laughing, but he main­ because the museum had required sandwich. I thought to myself that it way to pay homage to the boys’ late it on a Parisian clerk or shopowner’s From Page 1 allow siqiplies to reach the northern in the rebel-held Kurdish region is (PG-13) — Producer Irwin Winkler tained admirable conu-ol, staring at thirty francs ($6), mining my daily was probably impossible to have a father. Miles Copeland Jr. He was a Iraqi region that is part of the Kurd’s especially bad because of the UJJ. Military sources qieaking on con- face is to let slip the fact that you arc (“Raging Bull,” “GoodFellas”) a foreign traveler on a budget. bad meal in Paris. founder of the CIA. The real CIA. traditional homeland. embargo on trade with Iraq ordered dititxi of antmymity said it would makes his directorial and Adams and Shaw will be picked iq> photograph the terrain for geologists fr(Hn the Canadian government, as Per the French do not much ap­ Now, young Miles is starting by plane. The mountainous homeland ex­ by the United Natitxis over Sad- seem unlikely that such a request screenwriting debut with this drama A few days later, when it was back home. Hempleman-Adams teasingly preciate foreigners in their greatest time to leave, I needed money for a another company, IRS Books, to tell R r much of the journey, the two tends into Iran, TVukey and Syria, d m ’s seizure of Kuwait. would be approved. set in the early '50s Hollywood his dad’s story. “Tlie Game Player,” “The work is getting there and reminded a Canadian Embassy press D e^ite shooting down two Iraqi city, and they appreciate stingy Meuo ticket to get from the Left skiers will traverse frozen Qords and getting moving,” Praine said. “Then which have in the past joined Iraq in “Instead of punishing Saddam, "Red Menace” days, starring Robert Miles Jr.’s autobiography, wiU be officer at the news conference. planes that took to the skies last foreigners even less. Bank, which was where I was stay­ sounds. That is flatter and easier you’re committed.” the embargo is punishing the people De Niro. (Not yet reviewed.) published this summer. Also, expect The team wants the rifle in case fighting to overthrow him,” Barmani week and publicly advocating Sad­ This is not to say that a good, ing, to the Gare du Nord. That was than going over land, although the Until six or seven months ago, music-related books from the new they’re attacked by a polar bear. said. dam’s ouster, the Bush administra­ cheap meal or inexpensive room is all I needed, I would not to spend possibility of the ice breaking makes Praine was anything but conunitted. Hempleman-Adams, who has made not to be found. No matter how little it more dmgerous. Fire Although the U.N. Security tion says it does not wish to become any more in Paris. Metro tickets are He was afraid he wouldn’t be able to four polar expeditions, said he had you spend, you may never eat better about 3 francs (60 cents). ROCK ON While siding altmg the coastlines, Coimcil 1 ^ week decided to allow involv^ in fraq’s civil war. FILMS IN get away frexn the kitchen design to shoot a bear last time when it be­ in your life than in Paris, and inex­ I entered a bank. It was empty ex­ the two will be looking for aiKient company he’s run for 20 years. In came “amorous.” From Page 1 pensive rooms are there if you Eskimo settlements. The path FOCUS cept for two women who were busy fact, his picture and biography had There are other details — buying search hard enough. But don’t ex­ writing behind the counter. I went Hempleman-Adams and Shaw have to be carefully cut and pasted into srqjplies, studying geography, geol­ paratus fund allocation, along with a ifi) pect friendly conversation along the 'ETHLIE ANN chosen may have been used by up to one and she raised her head the team’s brochure. ogy, and cold-weather first-aid; $400 cut to the fire chiefs office ex­ way. wearily. Her eyes hardened as I VARE migrating Eskimos thousands of That brochure listed a team of six, trying even now to line up sponsors. pense account, the district directors I arrived in Paris on a late years ago. asked if she could exchange five but three have dropped out. “It’d be nice to have some contin­ approved a partial $466,801 fire Thursday afternoon, planning to stay dollars. The remaining explorers have gency money,” Praine admitted. department budget for the coming “IF LOOKS COULD KILL” in hostels but too tired to lug my “Non,” she said, shaking her This particular route has never persisted largely because of the op­ The team has raised about year. bags around the city searching for (PG-13) — Richard Grieco, star of head. It is too little. And she went publisher, including an illustrated been explored with an eye toward timism and insistence of $19,200, and Hempleman-Adams A decision on how much money one. Paris is a big city, and my MOZART TV’s “21 Jump Street,” drives this back to her work. I glanced at the collection of lyrics by Sting. Eskimo migration, Hempleman- Hempleman-Adams, Praine said. By says that’s enough — just barely. it will cost the district to pay fire shoulder bag was already burrowing star vehicle about a high school kid other one, who was looking at me There’s a fresh effort under way Adams said, so he and Adams will April 9, the three will have made Much of the cost has been as­ department salaries was put off be­ Requiem into my flesh a block away from the mistaken for a spy. Yikes! (Not yet from the comer of her eye, and she • to legislate the record industry, only be on the lookout fm signs such as their way to their first base camp at sumed by a long list of small spon­ cause a pay scale for district bus stop. I looked around and saw a L Debussy Barber reviewed.) ducked her head down too. The pens this time it has nothing to do with stone-ringed fireplaces, perhaps Resolute Bay. sors like Arkell’s Brewery in employees has yet to be set small, somewhat dingy-looking went on writing. dirty words. It has to do with even ancient igloos preserved by tte Hempleman-Adams’ hometown of “THE PERFECT WEAPON” hotel across the street. Summa, a member of the Job JOHN BELLS cardboard. frigid climate. “It’s nearly all there now,” Swindon, west of London. Description Review Committee OucA Ccnductor (R) — Jeff Speakman is the title A kindly manager greeted me in “Pardon,” I said, breaking the According to Californians O H They will also take frequent Hempleman-Adams said. “Just odd In return for financial support, responsible for coming up with a weapon; expect lots of flyin’ feet the narrow foyer, coming out from silence, and held up a ten dollar bill. Against Waste, disposable compact J3 r - measurements of the strength and little bits to s<»t out.” and some beer, the crew plans to s a l ^ scale plan, said the committee and crunchin’ bones. (Not yet behind his desk with his hand ex­ That would give me around 50 disc packaging — the so-cdled direction of the magnetic field, and Odd little bits like a rifle license plant Arkell’s flag at the pole. would have to meet one more time reviewed.) tended. We exchanged typical francs, far more than I needed, but I “longbox” — generated enough > m on the issue before the plan could uavelling pleasantries, I, using my figured I had no choice. come back before the board for a “HE SAID, SHE SAID” PG-13 waste paper last year to circle the e- z! CJ lugubrious but adequate French, and my nose. budget plan, and I had bought some The first woman locked up again quator twice. A number of artists — vote. She said the committee would — Elizabeth Perkins single-handed­ he obliging by speaking slowly O CD ly makes something of this gim­ He pointed down the sueet. “On postcards, and I had not yet gone to and dropped her pen. She fired some including Sting, Peter Gabriel, Don meet before Monday’s meeting. along with me. He told me he had a 2 -< Soviet micky relationship picture, the work this street. One door before you get a bank ... In a mild panic I stood up French at me, of which I only under­ Henley, REM and Midnight Oil — The partial budget represents a ISatorday. April 6 room with a shower for 260 francs of two directors, a male for the male to the comer, yes? Inexpensive res­ and asked how much the lunch stood “C’est trap peu!” (It is too lit­ are u-ying very hard to “Ban the 15.2 percent increase over current aM>ru Promotion funded in (just over $50). I asked him how ■ South Unlttd Mothodlat Church^ point of view, a female for the taurant, yes? Okay?” would cost. tle!) She brought her fingers Box.” m X From Page 1 fire department spending, minus an part by much for a room without a shower? Haitlbrd Rd. and UaiB St. female. Perkins and Kevin Bacon I mimicked his arm motions and Thirty-three francs came the together when she said this, shaking Now, there have been bills intro­ 0 m increases in salary costs. The direc­ The smile slid from his face, and nodded my head stupidly. “Mcrci,” I also rejected the central govern­ Manchester star as competing columnists on the reply, and now everyone was watch­ her hand. Then, when she was duced in the California and New dozen police officers rushed a crowd On Wjdnesday, police signaled tors also approved the fmal $34,735 keta a t the door - S7.00 he sat behind his desk. “Room said. “Thank you.” ment’s order that control of Mos­ Eeit of the River Baltimore Sun, she an earnest ing as I counted the change in my finished and I was hurriedly opening York state legislatures to prohibit the 1 of about 75 Yeltsin supporters who their determination to enforce the Are marshy's proposed budget. ISenlore - S4 Stsdeuta under 18 hue i JhmHm emd Ctmnutim Dttto without a shower is 160 francs He nodded and turned away, with cow’s police be transferred from the liberal, he a studly conservative pocket. Twenty-two francs. I help my wallet for more money, she sale of CDs in longboxes. n ^ had gathered between the Kremlin ban by sealing off Red Square, ($31),” he said in English. city’s democratically elected (both ill-defined in Brian Hohlfeld’s the same expression on his face, up the coins with a sheepish grin. picked up her pen and went back to Record retailers, who support R O and the Rossiya Hotel, where out- shooing all pedestrians away from 1 told him I’d take the room which looked as if someone was govemmern to the Interior Ministry. script). They fall in love despite “Vingt-deux seulement (Only 22 her work. I took out a $50 traveler’s longbox packaging because it’s o of-town d e le g i^ are staying. Manezh Square and breaking up a without a shower and paid. He tickling him under his clothes and The vote indicated the Russian their differences; their break-up francs),” I said weakly. check. Please. I said. I need some easier to guard as well as display, Chanting “'Vfeltsin, Yeltsin,” they small pro-Yeltsin demonstration out­ slapped the key on the counter. he didn’t want anyone to know. 2 CD republic’s leader could indeed sur­ causes both to reassess What Hap­ francs. can be expected to fight the held aloft the white, blue w d red side City Council headquarters. At the boulangerie, or delicates­ The peppy waitress' shoulders vive a no-c(mfldcnce vote. “Leave the key here when you collapsed and she barked something “S’est passe,” she said without measures. Music industry execu­ m c/3 flag of independent Russia as well The crackdown was reminiscent KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK pened, and “He Said, She Said” sen, an inverted pyramid of moist, If Yeltsin loses the no-confldence leave,” he said, and went back to out in rapid French which I could looking up. In other words, “You tives, who oppose legislation of P O as signs that read, “Yeluin is the of the treabnent of dissidents in delivers a slick, prettily shot bit of brown meat slowly turned in the vote, he still could run for the new His & Hers perspectives. But it’s whatever he was doing before 1 ar­ not understand. She slowed her blew it buddy, hit the road.” I picked their industry on principle, might hope of the Russian people” and {xe-Gorbachev years — the very rived. window. A swarthy gentleman was post of directly elected president of “Communists, stop ruining the MANCHESTER! shallow and dopey, and you’d never speech somewhat. What do you up my bags and left. not be gung-ho for it, either. repression Yeltsin backers say they gently hacking off bits of the meat the Russian republic. Establishment people’s lives.” know two separate directors had a The room was small but clean. I want then? she asked, her patience It should shape up to be an inter­ S I fear will return if they do not ;ake a washed up and left the hotel while and placing them on a pizza emst, or A post office around the comer of a such a post was ^proved by Police pushed them away from hand in it, since the screenplay is all escaping with each second, her esting battle. Not exactly 2 Liv&: stand. there was still daylight left, my what look like a pizza crust to me. I gladly took my five dollar bill and 77.7 percent of voters in a March 17 the Kremlin and detained about six. in the hands of one minimally cheerful pep suddenly transformed Crew vs. Tipper Gore, but interest-I stomach turning flips because I suppose there is another name for it. gave me just over 20 francs ($4) for referendum. Fears of a bloody confrontation talented male sensibility. Still, into a volatile belligerence. ing. ;: 33 > Twenty-four armored personnel During 1990 you, the residents of Manchester, recycled more hadn’t eaten since the day before. TTie man told me the inverted it. They were extremely polite and Yeltsin followers plamied to defy gripped Moscow, especially after Perkins enlivens scene after scene, I asked for the sandwich alone, Speaking of Tipper Gore and her carriers were at a military base in pyramid was lambmeat. I believed even friendly. It was nice to leave the ban on demonstrations and rally two dozen armored vehicles were than 26% of the residential waste stream. Your recycling efforts and if she ever gets the quirky Heading southwest toward the but that was 25 francs. I was looking anti-rock crusade, MCA metalheads Moscow’s Dobrininskaya region, him. It was 14 francs ($2.75) for the France on that note. on his behalf in Manezh Square, sighted at a military base three miles vehicle her quirky talent deserves, Champs d ’Elysees, I stopped a man around for a menu, usually posted Spread Eagle sent a personal invita­ about three miles south of the Krem­ saved precious space In the Manchester Sanitary landfill - and asked him where an inexpensive lambmeat pizza and a beer. I sat on which is adjacent the Kremlin. from the city center. lin. look out. (Fair) on the wall, but I couldn’t find one, And leaving the city on the bus, tion to Washington, D.C., asking However, authorities said space that will save disposal costs for you and your children. restaurant could be found. I spoke in a high stool and watched people and the woman was tapping the through the French countryside to passing in the cobbled street outside. Mrs. Gore to be an honored guest at thousands of police and Interior “LANDSCAPE IN THE MIST” French and I’m sure I used all the counter, and finally she threw up her Calais, I thought of how beautiful one of their gigs. Town of Manchester s Ministry troops, armed with rubber (NR) — An awfully strong little pic­ correct words, but my accent must It was my first meal in Paris and it hands and spurted out some rapid- the city had been. And how most of “It occurred to us,” says vocalist tnmeheons, would block the mar­ NOTICE Beginning April 1, 1991, Manchester's voluntary recycling ture from Greece. Director Theo An- have made it unintelligible. There would be the cheapest. fire French, which again I could not the people I had met had been Ray West, “that Tipper Gore and all was nothing I could do about that. The next day I spent the morning chers’ path. EAST, WEST AND BUCKLAND program becomes mandatory for housing units of 4 or less gelopoulos, a directorial hero abroad understand. But I sensed that she tolerant, if not friendly. They really the others are not r ^ l y in a position Outside the Kremlin, uniformed but little-known here, works in a The man shook his head, watching at the Musee d’Orsay, and by noon I was offering some food and ex­ are. As long as there’s something to pass judgment on bands like us. I troops and police used trucks to CEMETERIES families and for all Business/Commercial/Industrlal facilities. lulling, rhythmically assured style me carefully, and I repeated the felt quite tired and hungry. Impres­ pected an affirmative response so I jingling in your pocket, Paris is a mean, have they ever hung out with blodc access to Red Square and a that’s been com part to Tarkovsky question. sionism takes a lot out of you. nodded quickly and sat down. very friendly place. the bands? Ever gone to a show?” It is requested that cemetery lot owners remove any (“The Sacrifice’^ and further back, winter grave decorations that they wish to keep. Start­ The invitation was formally You must recycle the following items: to Ozu C*The Tokyo Story”). This declined without explanation. Bul ing Monday, April 8, 1991, weather permitting, the stark fairy talc follows a young then again, the show was in New Layoffs necessary spring clean-up of the grounds will begin in sister and brother who nm away Jersey__ preparation for mowing. 1. Newspapers, which shall also include all inserts within from home in search of their father. A whole slew of home musiq It’s very simple stuff, really, and From Page 1 REMINDER: Plastic flowers or decorations should not any newspaper, magazines, junk mail, and non-glossy videos is hitting the shelves: Video be used on grave sites between April 8 and October 31, cardboard containers. (Window envelopes are not ac­ sometimes the langorous approach Historical society dinner Awareness expo Music Inc. is releasing classic con­ 1991. — the long takes, the misty drabness Manchester Historical Society will hold its Annual Benefit Dinner on On Saturday, the Greater Hartford Jaycces will co-sponsor Hartford’s first cert videos by two British veterans, No one likes this idea of layoffs.” cepted unless the window Is removed.) of the landscapes — makes Floyd R. Totten Friday, April 12. A prime rib dinner will be followed by a concert perfor­ International Awareness Exposition. The Hartford Civic Center will open its Uriah Heep and Wishbone Ash, The lists submitted Wednesday “Landscape in the Mist" a mite mance of the Manchester Symphony Orchestra String (Quartet. Proceeds each at $19.95. Capitol has com­ Superintendent of 2. Corrugated cardboard. doors to the public from 2 to 8 p.m. A donation of $2 to benefit UI^CEF represent, he said, “one more self-conscious. (It suffers oc­ from the dinner will help fund activities of the society. Tickets can be ob­ and Plan International, USA, is suggested. pleted a documentary on the remak­ landmark on the road to layoffs. You Cemeteries 3. Glass jars and bottles. casionally from a good director’s in­ tained at the Fuat Fedei^ Savings on West Middle T\mipike, Connecticut ing of “Give Peace a Chance,” can’t help but notice it and soon it 4. Tin and aluminum cans. tention to summarize and encapsu­ National Bank on North Main Street, Anne Miller Real Estate on Main Spring fling featuring everyone from Adam Ant may become too late to turn back.” 5. Motor oil. late his major themes.) Still, the per­ Street, or by calling 647-9983. A “Spring Fling” for breast surgery patients will be held at Manchester to Dweezil Zappa. Unitm leaders and Vfcicker ad­ formances arc just right, An- Memorial Hospital on Saturday, April 13, from 1 to 4 pjn. For more infor­ Rhino Home Video announces ministration officials meet again Grown right here. 6. Automobile batteries. gclopoulos and cinematographer mation or to pre-register, call the Manchester-North Unit of the American “Memphis Blues,” a collection that Thursday to discuss givebacks. 7. Bulk metals including, but not limited to, refrigerators and Giorgos Arvanitis concoct some Square dance Cancer Society at 643-2168. includes 1974 performances by Another meeting is scheduled April Beautiful supple wonders of composition, and legends like Muddy Waters, Buddy 1 4. freezers with doors removed, stoves, washing machines the style is memorably in synch with Manchester Square Dance Club will sponsor a mainstream dance on 'Gatemouth’ to perform Guy and Junior Wells, and — on the the subjects. (Good) State managers, the mid-level dryers, air conditioners, tire rims with tires removed and ’ Saturday from 8 to 10:45 p.m. at Dling Junior High School, 229 East Middle Clarence Gatemouth” Brown & Gate’s Express will perform Friday at 9 other end of the spectrum — “Dead bureaucrats who run the day-to-day Easter Plants Tpke. A round dance woikshop will start at 7:30 pjn. Donations will be $8 Kennedys Live,” a 1984 perfor­ other similar items. “NEW JACK CITY” (R) — It pjn. and at midnight at the Municipal Cafe, 485 Main St., Hartford. Tickets operations of state agencies and who per couple. For more infonnation, call 643-9375 or 643-1005. are $10. For more informatirxi call 649-2543 or 527-5044. mance by the controversial punk are not represemed by unions, have means well, but'“New Jack City” band. already agreed to forego pay raises wants to be an issues film and an ac­ Warner Bros, announces clip col­ July 1 and will accept health in­ Lilies Recycling is easy in Manchester. Simply place your green recy­ tion movie, and flrst-time film direc­ lections from Neil Young, Ibnita surance benefit concessions agreed cling bin at the curb on the day of your regular refuse collection If tor Mario Van Peebles can’t stand Tikaram and the Bulletboys, as well to by the unions. Tulips the strain. The stoiV of a New York Teenage Turtles back on the screen as Prince’s feature film “Graffiti Lorraine M. Aronson, deputy you have morelore material______than^ your bin can hold, use paper bags for city crack gang and the mismatched Bridge.” And let’s not forget that commissioner of the governor’s Daffollls the excess. W ell do the rest!" policemen who try to bring it down By LINDA M. TROMBLEY of green ooze that mutated the Chau) and the Fbot, a gang of teen­ There is something about the master of merchandising. MC Ham­ budget office, said the layoff doesn’t glamorize the drugs or the Manchester Herald turtles and the rat 15 years ago into age thieves and a couple of surprise Teenage Mutant Ninja IXirtles that mer, who has yet another long-form preparations “take a terrible toll on Hyacinths wildly successful dealers, and for the wondrous creatures they now mutants, stand in their way. At the seems to grab the attention of every video on the market: “Here Comes everyone.” If you do not recycle, you can be fined up to $50.00 for mixlno that Peebles and screenwriters Take four walking, talking and are. The turtles — Donatello, end of the original movie, it was as­ child under age 10. lb parents, this the Hammer ’91,” which includes “This is horrible,” she said. “I am Azaleas etc. recyclables with your trash. We don't want to fine you, so please Thomati Lee Wright and Barry wisecracking turtles, add one four- Raphael, Leonardo and Michaelan- sumed that Shredder was dead, but it movie may seem conuived and music, dance and the usual self-con­ discouraged. I hold out hope that Michael Cooper should be duly con­ foot-tall talking rat, mix with a large gelo — and the rat. Splinter, are becomes obvious early on in the sometimes overly silly. But children gratulatory behind-the-scenes there won’t be any layoffs. But just It's time for Lime, fertilizer, participate in the program. Participation in recycling is good for the gratulated. Unfortunately for supply of pizza and you have now human in every way except for movie that notion is untrue. may view it as the “Bambi” of the footage and interviews. seeing the effect on our employees, Manchester Sanitary Landfill, the environment and you I everyone (audiences, too) “New ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja 'nmles Part their appearance. To top it off, they While the plot may sound out- nineties. who have worked long and hard for grass seed & crabgrass control. Jack City” is the least effective II: Secret of the Ooze,” a sequel to . rageous and unbelievable, the pup­ At last, there is quite a bit of the taxpayers of this state is a very when it drops its slick action- last year’s surprise hit, “The petry is well done and there are violence, which may make some tougji thing. If you need a recycling bin or you have any questions please call moving trappings in favor of grave Teenage Mutant Ninja 1\irtles.” Movie some imaginative fight scenes. A parents think twice about bringing “It’s an understatement to say that statements about drug addiction and According to promotions pasted couple of the turtles, namely very young children to the movie. the Sanitation division at 647-3248. on cinema walls and television com­ morale has been damaged by this," lA/oodland Cardens our slippery legal system. Com­ Michaelangelo and Rafael, have en­ But it may seem like a nice adven­ mercials, the turtles are “back by she said. mitted performances from rapper Review gaging pmonditics. While there is ture for the child who is old enough 168 Woodland St., Manchester bodacious demand.” From the look Still, “no decision is final until the WE'RE COUNTING ON YOU TO Ice-T as the renegade cop and the . quite a bit of violence, no one really to distinguish between fantasy and governor has made a final decision,” Open 8 am-6pin Daily sinister Wesley Snipes as the crack and sound of the children at the also are experts in the martial arts. gets hurt. For the most part, this reality. Aronson said. “If this has to happen baron help, as docs the biting rap- recent opening show of the movie, In the movie, the turtles try to movie uics to stress the importance •k-k-Ct 643-8474 KEEP MANCHESTER RECYCLING it’s safe to say that that is mie. ... we are all prepared to go forward and-soul soundtrack, which ends up find out exactly what happened to *\)f thinking before taking action Key: AsPoor, ★ ★ = Fair, The basic plot of “The Secret of on Monday. Agency heads are ready being more potent than the film it- them and how it happen^. Unfor­ which may be a good lesson for ★ ★ ★ =Good, ★ ★ ★ ★ =Very Good, Majestic Mayan rulna are among Open Easter Day the Ooze” involves some canisters •to go.” 'sclf. (Fair) tunately, the evij Shredder (Francois some children to learn. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ =Excellent, ik=Half star Mexico’s most spectacular alglila. 10—^MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, March 28 1991 MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, March 28, 1991—11 FOCUS RECORD

Dear Abby About Town PI >PLE Dr. Gott Today in History Abigail Van Buren Behavior discussed Gypsy, Tucker await homes Peter Gott, M.D. ■ Boxuig champion Mike l>son gave his name Today is Thursday, March 28, the 87th day of 1991. n m of Manchester will meet on Tbesday at 7-30 By BARBARA RICHMOND to Michael Tyson. Now he’s officially ack­ There are 278 days left in the year. p.m. at MTOcheste^emorial Hospital. “Managing^the Manchester Herald nowledged he’s the father of the S-mcmth-old girl, a .Behavior of an ADHD Child” will the t o S S S Today’s Highlight in History: lawyer says. On March 28, 1979, America’s worst commercial Gypsy, a female shepherd cross, Stepmom unsure Tte former heavywejght champ admitted in 2405. Kahaner M 6 4 6 - S nuclear accident occurred inside the Unit Two reactor at m m m is this week’s featured pet at the Family Court on Wednesday that he fathered little Avoid injury the Three Mile Island plant near Middletown, Pa., as a Manchester Dog Pound. Michael l y ^ , daughter of Kimberly Scarborough, Civil war discussion series of human and mechanical failures caused the cool­ Gypsy is about 2 years old, black of her role 23, according to Scarborough’s lawyer, Raoul ing system to malfunction, resulting in damage to the Felder. when fainting and t ^ and was found on Bidwell reactor’s core and leakage of radioactivity. Street on March 19. She’s a rather “Do you acknowledge paternity?” Felder quoted On this date: DELAR ABBY: I have a beautiful teen-aged step­ large dog, but very sweet'and gentle. a hearing examiner as asking Tyson, 24. DEAR DR. GOTT: Please provide informatiwi on .Ho P discussions are free and ooen to In 1797, Nathamel Briggs of New Hampshire patented daughter who lives with her mother and stepfather. Al­ The only new dog at the pound, “Tfes,” Tyson said, according to Felda. vasovagal syncope. I ’ve passed out four times in res­ a washing machine. though “Betty" loves her mother, she has never been able taurants. What makes my blood pressure drop so sudden­ library at 7 4 2 - ^ 4 T t o g r e S ’lib^^^ as of Tliesday, was an adorable male Felder said Tyson had a g r ^ to a settlement to Gypsy Tucker In 1834, the U.S, Senate voted to censure President to confide in her. She’s very reli^ous and fairly strict, so ly? Glucose tolerance tests are negative. terrier cross. He’s about 5 months Betty comes to me with everything. provide fw the child. He refused to disclose its Childhood conference Jackson for the removal of federal deposits from the terms. DEAR READER: The pulse rate is under partial cwi- old. is black and tan and was found Passcantell said he has someone Protectors of Animals Inc., a Glas­ Bank of the United States. Betty recently told me that she lost her virginity to a trol of the vagus nerves. Stimulation of t h ^ nerves Ntenchester is hosting this year’s Early Childhood on Hartford Road. His outstanding boy she had been forbidden to see. She needed someone “My lips are sealed, but everybody is h ^ y , ” the who is supposed to adopt her this tonbury-based volunteer organiza­ In 1930, the names of the 'Ibrkish cities of Constan­ causes the heart rate to slow; this, plus an associated ten­ C o n f e r ^ TO Wednesday from 4 to 8:30 pjn. at filing feature, besides being cute, is a very week. tinople and Angora were changed to Istanbul and to talk to — someone who wouldn’t put her down, and I lawyer said. “This child is well provided for. In this J ^ o r Schrol, The event is sponsored by the State tion whose members take in aban­ regard, Tyson was a gentleman." dency toward low blood pressure, can tenqrorarily discernible mustache. The dog pound is located off 01- doned or neglected animals. Ankara. was Aeie for her. She begged me not to tell her mother. ^ L of EducatiFi to bring together early childhood Dudley, the sweetest big dog at Robert Hnth, Tyson’s lawyer, was rrot im­ deprive the brain of circulation and oxygen, leading to cott Street near the town’s landfill. All of the cats and kittens put up In 1939, the Spanish Civil War ended as Madrid fell to A My heart aches for this girl, and my biggest fear is that TOucators, administrators, special services personnel, stu­ mediately available fw comment. fm ting (syncope). No one knows why smne people ex­ the pound, is still waiting to find a The dog warden is at the pound for adoption are neutered or spayed the forces of Francisco Fianco. she may become pregnant or contract a venereal disease. dents and parents from community and public school good home. He’s been at the pound Tyson has acknowledged that he fathered hibit accentuate responses to vagal stimulaticn, but the weekdays from noon to 1 p.m. and given their shots, unless too In 1941. 50 years ago, novelist and critic Virginia We discussed condoms and birth control pills, but she Fograms for children from birth to age eight. for several weeks and would like to D’Amato, a toddler named for his first boxing men­ phenomenon is real and can result in periodic loss of Someone is also at the pound from 6 young when taken. Woolf died in Lewes, England. can’t get the pill without parental consent. I’d like to get consciousness. be adopt^ before he has to be the pill for her, and I think I could if she were to go to tor, Cus D’Amato, by Natalie Riears, Fblder said. Kangaroo kids to 9 pjn., Monday through Friday. Aid to Helpless Animals Inc. is In 1942, during World War IL British naval forces Vasovagal syncope is often caused by intense physical euthanized. The phone number at the pound is raided the Nazi-occupied French port of St. Nazaire. : ( my doctor, but I wouldn’t feel right doing it behind her The ^ x e r denies he is the father of a son by Trena The Manchester YWCA. 78 North Main S t, is hous- another group of volunteers who mother’s back. Archie, a Los Angeles showgirl. or mental stimulation, such as pain, fr i^ t or the s i^ t of Last week’s featured dog, Kelly, a 643-6642. If there is no answer, call take in abused or abandoned In 1943, composer Sergei Rachmaninoff died in Th9 AMOctat#d Ptm# blood. In fact, patients who feel hotheaded or pass out mg the New I^garoo Kids developmoital movement female fox tenier cross, is also still the police department at 646-4555. animals. Beverly Hills, Calif. Her mother and I are very good friends and she trusts ■ Jose Canseco drives cars fast and fastballs far Fogram for children 6 months to 3 years old. The em­ NEW KID IN COURT — Donnie Wfeihl- during routine blood tests usually do so because of low waiting to be adopted. She’s about 8 There is a $5 fee to adopt a dog and The number to call for Protectors In 1953, athlete Jim Thorpe died in Lomita, Calif. me. If I get Betty the pill, will it make it easier for her to and apparently also likes high speed on water. phasis (m teaming through action, self-awareness and months old. But the motorized water scooters he moors at his berg of New Kids on the Block, a pop blood Fissure and the slow pulse that follow stimulation the new owner must have the dog of Animals is 633-8515 and the In 1969, the 34th president of the United States, continue having sex? She’s already told me that if she of the vagus neWes by the brain. play abounds. Classes begin Wednesday and run for 10 The black and tan female German got pregnant, she would come to me for help. dock in Coral Gables, Fla., drew the attention of licensed. Before being licensed, it numbers to call for Aid to Helpless ^ i g h t D. Eisenhower, died in Washington at the age of rock group, makes a court appearance in weeks. shepherd, found on Spencer Street Dade County environmental regulatws just for The fainting is almost always preceded by symptoms has to have its rabies shot. Animals are 232-8317 or 242-2156. . — BETTY’S CONFIDANTE Louisville, Ky., Wednesday. He is of nausea, weakness and sweating; therefore, patients on March 17, was still at the pound DEAR CONFIDANTE: Every teen-ager needs a ma­ standing still. CPR class IXicker, a declawed male TUxedo All of these numbers are toll-free In 1982, voters in El Salvador went to the polls for a with vasovagal ^ c o p e can leam to F^vent f a in tin g by on Tuesday. Dog Warden Thomas ture, non-judgmental friend to whom he or she can turn “Mr. Canseco’s dock is illegally installed and it’s charged with arson and was freed on cat, is this week’s featured pet of from the Manchester area. constituent ^sembly election that would result in victory lying down ot sitting with the head bowed between the A six hour crourse covering Adult and Pediatric Basic for the Christian Democrats, led by President Jose for sound advice and counsel. Ideally, that person is a damaging mangroves,” said Bob Karafel, an enfor­ $5,000 bail. Fire officials say Wahiberg Life Support will be offered Wednesdays, April 4 and 11, parent. But if that’s not possible — as in Betty’s case__ cement officer. knees. Also, these patients readily discover what kinds of Napoleon Duarte. poured a flammable liquid on the rug of a stimulation cause the syncope, so patients leam to avoid ^ m 6:30 to 9:30 pjn. at BenUey Memwial Ulxniy. Betty’s mother should be grateful that her daughter has Canseco’s dock is behind his $1.5 million, four- In 1987, Maria von Trapp, whose life inspired the hotel and started a fire. such situations. m-registration is required, with a payment of $30 at the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical “The Sound of someone like you in her daughter’s comer. bedroom house. On a lot next dow he wants to hbraiy. Since Betty has already lost her virginity, I doubt that build a gym, racquetball court and whirlpool room. I do not know why you experience symptoms in res­ Deaths Music,” died in Morrisville, Vl, at age 82. ment Wednesday. “TTiis is rqwesented in his wwk. taurants. I^ p le with hypoglycemia Oow blood sugar) Public Records she wiU stop now. Stress the fact that sex today can have Karafel said Canseco should first move the dock, Women’s health Ten years ago: Solidarity and the Polish government We recognized his cwistant contact with the may ex^rience lightheadedness and weakness a couple adjourned talks without a breakthrough on averting a ^ serious consequences; therefore, selectivity is vital, or the county may try to bar further construction. Austrian people.” of hours alter eating sugar and high-calorie foods. Evi­ A Healthy Lifestyle n ,” an all day women’s health This town listing of dssths Is offsrad frss of chsrgs by Ihs general strike planned by the labor movement Five w TOW know a sexually transmitted disease can be fatal. Canseco, the Oakland A’s slugger who has been Wilder, at one. time a journalist in Berlin and fan, will be held at Second Congregational Church Com­ Manehssisr HsfsM. PsM snnouncsnMiils el dsslh snd In Quit claim deeds rei^tedly cited for speeding in his car, was in dently, your gluTOse tests were normal. Therefrxe, you Msmorisms sppssr imdsr Ihs Dsslh Nolicss hssding. hijackers commandeered an Indonesian EXT-9 jetliner on So be sure she understands how to protect herself from Vienna, directed his first film, “Mauvaise Grain” in munity House. Route 44, Coventry, on Saturday, Af i I 6, Eugene Falcctta to Vera Falcetta, 133 Oak St., no con­ pregnancy or disease. Arizona on Wednesay at ^ring training. should^ be exanuned by a cardiologist or circulatory a domestic flight (The plane was ordered to Bangkok, 1933, He has directed or co-directed more than 25 veyance tax. “We have no comment regarding that,” Jeff Bor- specialist to determine the cause of your symFom. 742-6^1 ^ ^ P-*tt- For more information, call Bolton Thailand, the next day.) DEAR ABBY: My husband and daughter-in-law have others, among them “The Seven Year Itch,” “The James B. Grimes to Susan R. Grimes, 148 Birch Five years ago: Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi ris, a business spokesman for Canseco, said of the Apartment,” “Inna La Douce” and “The Lost a debate going. He says that a person can become ad­ environmental cwnplaint. George A. Hawkins Mountain Road, no conveyance tax. presided over a rally in which he proclaimed victory over Weekend.” Graduation dinner Victor Ficocelli and Annalisa Ficocelli to John G. dicted to caffeine from tea or coffee. My daughter-in-law ■ Austria awarded its highest honor to Vienna- the United States in a just-ended confrontation in the says “no way.” (She is a coffee lover.) I Rock n’ roll pioneer Brenda Lee says she A Spaghetti & Meatball Dinner will be held Friday, 28 Hebron Road TUnila, 76-78 Oak St., no conveyance tax. born Billy Wilder, who directed “Sunset Gulf of Sidra. (The demonstrators danced around, then stays up to date watching music videos. April 5, at 5 and 6:30 pjn. at the KnighU of Columbus Robert E. Standley Jr. and Maryanne Standlcy to Can a person become addicted to caffeine? Boulevard,” “Some Like It Hot” and “The Front Deaths elsewhere killed, a black-and-white ox with the name “Reagan” AN INTERESTED LISTENER Phge.” “Some of it I like,” said Lee, whose hit records in Hall, Snake Hill Rd., off Route 31 in Coventry. The din­ Robert F. Blanchard and Paul J. Rossetto, 99 Constance written on it.) the 1960s included “I’m Sony,” “All Alraie Am r ner is sponsored by Project Graduation. Coventry High Louise H. Bills Drive, conveyance tax, $139.05. O ZI DEAR LISTENER: According to George Marcelle, The Golden Order, First Class fw Meritorious One year ago: British customs officials announced J J r - and “Too Many Rivers.” School, Class of ‘91, to which all proceeds will go. Tick­ Port Charlotte, Fla. Paul E. Erickson to Evelyn Erickson, Alton StreeL no communications director of the U.S. Office of Substance Services Rendered to the Republic of Austria, was they had foiled an attemF to supply Iraq with 40 “Some of it borders on the extreme to me, but I ets are $4 adults, $330 seniors, $3 children under 12, and conveyance tax. Abuse Prevention, caffeine is a drug, and like every other Fesented to the 83-year-old Wilder in a private Edith S. Haas A m eri^-m ade devices for triggering nuclear weapons, drug, it is possible to become addict^ to it. guess they are allowed to make their statement,” will be sold at the door. To purchase tickets in advance, Harold F. Keith, trustee to Merritt N. Baldwin, > m ceremony recently at the Austrian consul’s home 1 Abrahms Bivd. following an 18-month investigation by U 3. and British here. she said in an interview Tuesday. call Nancy Wallace at 742-9383 or Donna Newtori Bramblcbush Farms, no conveyance tax. authorities. Z l “I’ve leam ^ what’s going wi in the music wwld 742-5324. If your daughter-in-law doesn’t believe you, ask her to “He’s still connected with his Austrian toots,” O CO quit drinking coffee cold turkey — for one week — and and who’s doing what. It’s been educatiwial in a lot consulate employee Gabriele Citek said in a state- Tag and bake sale z -< see how she fares. of ways.” In old England, the word *’child" Death Notices referred only to a girl. On Saturday from 9 ajn. to 2 pjn., a Thg and Bake Births H - I Sale will be held at in Coventry, Items from Manchester, m X Columbia and Andover will be (m sale at Coventry 0 m THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1991— PRIME TIME Orange on Route 44. Louise Hodge Bills Edith (Sass) Haas BUFFORD, Karen Elinor, daughter of 'Vesiey D. and Louise Hodge Bills. 75, wife of the Rev. Robert J. Bills, Poppy Knudson Bufford, of 211 Ferguson Road, 1 ^ Edith (Sass) Haas, of 1 Abrahms Bivd., West Hartford, n ^ 733 Haleybury St., Port Charolette, Florida, formerly of beloved wife of S. Dewey Haas, died March 27, 1991. Manchester, was bom Feb. 12, 1991 at Hartford Hospi­ O O OVER THE AIR CHANNELS Deming Street, South Windsor. She was bom in Fall She was bom in Providence, R.I., and had lived in Fall tal. Her maternal grandparents are Newell and Kay Knudson, Clovis, Calif. Her paternal grandparents are o N e w ig C B S N * w f Inside Entoftein - Current Quotes River, M ^s., in 1915 and lived in South Windsor for 25 River, before moving to West Hartford in 1948, and then Top Cops A iather-son Antagonists "Silent Beet Knots Landing "Upwardly o ^ NETWOnK-CBS (In Stereo) g E d itio n g m oni N a w s g Aisanio HaN Actor Steven P arty years until recently retiring to Florida. She was employed James and Mildred Bufford, Modesto, Calif. She has a detective team; a tense Prosecutor Kate is Mobile" A judge rebukes Instant H air C hib N aw s (R) g N igh tw alch had lived in Florida for 18 years, before moving back to 2 CD Seagal: singer Sheen; M achina ToniM hostage situation; a determined to convict Mack (or involvement with RacaH fo r Man by the town clerk’s office in Tiverton, R.I., and by the sister, Cheryl. WFSB Q Farran Easton. (In Slereo) g W n h N ia West Hartford. She was a retired employee of the former m CO woman held at gunpoint. Jack's old college Iriend ol Jason; Val accepts her Fawcett, g “I mean we had them in a rout and we could have con­ Firestone Company in Fall River and New York City. A (In Stereo) g ______murder. (In Slereo) g Kliiess. (In Slereo) g P ta p la s fin Anderson Uttle Stwe, HartfcHd. Besides her husband, Stereo) tinued to, you know, reap great destruction iqjon them. fine violinist, Louise was awarded a teaching fellowship O W heel of Je o p srd yl Connocticut Esitt Twin Poahs A mysterious fi'. she leaves a son. Dr. George Haas of Wfest Hartford; a t L. F o rtu n o g Primatima Lhro g N a w s g N ig h U in a g Htad of the NETWORK-ABC g 8|)ocial: W stchiilg Your woman catches Cooper's Into the Night Starring A m arican We could have completely closed the door and martr u in to study violin with Sir Granville Bantock at Trinity Col­ C la ss daughter. Mrs. Bernard (Susan) Apter of Manchester, I HOIIOH l S eye; Truman grieves over Rick Oats (In Stereo) T alk ih p p p in g fact a battle of annihilatitm.” — General H. Norman WTNH Science fair lege of Music in London, England, prior to World War n. sisters, Nfrs. Dorothy Gevurtz Mrs. AI (Arline) TV Jo sie 's death (In Stereo) Natw ork Schwarzkopf regarding the end of the war with Ir^ . sabotage, g Unable to attend because of the outbreak of the war in Zacks, both of Boca Raton, Ha.; and five grandchildren, 1939, she went to New York to study with David Mannes TONIGHT Ronald Apter, Beth AFer, Jeffrey Haas, James Haas and What difference does it make? What difference docs; 5 « Jo a P aid and to become part of the Mannes School of Music facul­ INDEPENDENT “T ^ e were no surj^ses at the physical exam. He Kimberly Haas. The funeral service will be Friday, 9 the resurrection of Jesus Christ really make for today? 33 > . w p ix CD ■'Hell G row ing Hogan Franklin Program ty. During World War n she play with Xavier Cugat and P a in s Fam ih N aw s(R ) remains an extraotdiruuily vigorous man who continues ajn., in the c h ^ l of the Weinstein Mortuary, 640 Fhr- One way Jesus’ resurrection affects us is in how we face Movia; "Haavan's Oata toured with the USO all female orchestra. Louise was a !1980) Kris Krislofferson to thrive cm a great de^ of [Aysical activity and a mington Ave. Interment, Lincoln Pttrk Cemeteiy. War­ death. Jesus said, “I am the resurrection and the life. He. ASK DICK KLEINER member of the Hartford Symphony Orchestra for 28 rigorous, demanding work sch^ule.” — President wick, R.I. The family suggiests memorial donations may who believes in me will live, even though he dies; and years until her retirement in 1989. Besides her husband George Bush’s personal physician. Dr. Burton Lee. be made to the Hebrew Home and Hospital. whoever lives and believes in me will never die” (Jn. she is survived by two daughters, Susan B. Leavitt of 11:25, 26). Through his resurrection Jesus conquered Ashford and Ivy Farinella of South Windsor; three CARD OF THANKS death, and all who believe in him share in his victory DICK grandchildren, Robert and Tara 'Dipper and Cory Rrinel- I would like to thank the third north over the grave. For those who put their trust in Jesus, KLEINER NETWORK-NBC N «w t N B C N b w i W h o o lo f C osby tNfforont C h o o n (ln W ings (In la. In lieu of flowers memorial donations may be mgrif to WWLP @ Foftuno g L A . Law "Mutinies on the Tonighi Show Host: Jay wing nurses at the Manchester death ceases to be an end and is, instead, a threshold. Fbr |q S h o w g Stereo) g S tere o)g Late Night With David (Off Air) Correction a. Banzi" (In Stereo) g Leno, (In Sterw ) The Hartford Symphony Orchestra, 208 Farmington PUBUC M otofW M k B in iiM t i MacNoil/Lohror Lattsrman (in Stereo) Memorial Hospital for their kindness the one who believes, the resurrection of Jesus means WEDH @9 Naturs "Black Bear ol the H ystiryt "Die Kinder (The T ravels (R) g (In Stereo) RBPort N o srsh o u rg North" (In Stereo) □ T h is O ld Hom otim o (Off Air) Avenue, Hartford, 06108 or Center Church, 11 Center shown to me during my stay there. I that at our own death we can say to those we leave be­ Children)" "Direct Action" H o u s a fR lg KnighI Rid«r "The Ice A-Toam "Members Only" Movie: "Support Your Local Gunffghlor" (1971, A non-alcoholic graduation party for Manchester High Street, Manchester, 06040. A memorial service will be would like to thank the food service hind, “See you later,” rather than a terrible and final, Bandits" Michael and KITT N ew s I Love Lucy IfvWIMrl M ary T ylo r INDEPENDENT Faceman uncovers a Comedy) James Gamer, Suzanne Pleshelle. A runaway D ick Van Oontia held at the Center Church in Manchester on Sunday. department for the delicious meals. Q. It makes roe feel bad and I embark on a search lor $3 "R.I.P O ff" Claude Rains, School seniors will be held on Mtmday, Jurw 17. A story "Goodbye.” Yes, the resurrection of Jesus makes all the counterfeiting scheme. bridegroom is mistaken lor a notorious gunfighter by a Oyka Bobble Stebbins. Barbara Bates. April 7, at 2 pjn. Many thanks to the visiting nurses wonder why “The Golden Girls” million In stolen jewels Dick finds published last week gave the wrxNig date. A snow day difference in the world. : WTWS m leud-ridden small town who showed me much kindness and plays in such bad taste. Estelle Harley Estin earlier this year has changed the date for graduatitm. David W. Mullen, Pastor " a jo b .g to the home care department. Getty uses such bad, vulgar lan­ N ew s N B C N ew s C iaro n t Hard Copy C osby DW oronl C h oo fs Sam Helen L A . Law "Mutinies on the Church of the Living God NETWORK-NBC Q A ffa ir g Show Q air Tonighi Show Host; Jay George A. Hawkins Thank you all very much. guage. The writers have such low, W oridK im returns to IS olfered a Banzi" Michael rebels Lata High! With David H r W ith ParsonaU- Fam ily IS beginning Leno. (In Slereo) LaltarmaB Bob Sariatte, Eileen Waterbury dirty minds. Are they so poor that WVIT CQ pledgesa the mound. job on the when Leland extends Bob C o tta s b a t Faud George A. Hawldiu, 93. of 28 Hebron Rd., Bolton, died menopause. sorority. (In (In Stereo) g mainland. (In Douglas' term as Catherine O'Hara. (In (In Stereo) they do it for money? — Mrs. (In Stereo) □ oil Stereo) Lotteiy Diesday (March 26, 1991) at his home. He was the INDEPENDENT Fam ily TIm A lF g widower of Elizabeth (Dorn) Hawkins. Bom in Brook- • R.W., Swansea, Mass. WSBK © Manchester Herald A. I totally agree with you that 2____ lyn, N.Y., he had lived for most of his life in Greenwich, O b i t 11A |*|piC NETWORK-ABC N b w « that show is a monument to bad WOOB CB Here are Wednesday’s lottery results from around New before moving to Bolton, in 1956. He was formerly England: employed as a dvil engineer for the City of Greenwich, a ------Founded OcL 1 .1881 as a weekly. taste. They think that being low PUBUC MacN«ll/LBhrpr class is being fumiy. It isn’t funny, WQBY © NBwahour c Connecticut former rtwmber of the Bolton Zoning Commission, and a Daily publication since O ct 1,1914. just low class. But don’t blame the FOX P e rfe ct Daily: 4-5-2. Play 4 :0-3-0-8. communicant of St. Maurice Church. Bolton. He is sur­ Aldo Ray WTIC vived by two grandsTOS, Thomas H. Alton of Bolttm. and USPS 327-SOO writers — blame the viewers who Massachusetts SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Aldo Ray. the burly, VOL. CX. No. 152 lUchard C. Alum of Riverside; a great-grandchild. Han­ encourage them by watching the Daily: 3-2-7-8. Mass Megabucks: 1-9-14-31-34-36. gravel-voiced actor who starred in a string of combat d s B. Alton; and two nieces. A graveside funeral service Acting Pubksher show and giving it high ratings. Of A&E Northern New England epics, died WedrKsday of throat cancer and pneumonia at JEAN NE Q. FROMERTH will be Monday, April 1, 10 a.rrt„ in Ihitnam Cemetery, course, the writers do it for money [bCnWSinQfff, Uar/4u Pick Three: 1-5-9. Pick 4: 5-2-5-0. Tri-State age 64. (5:30) Movia: "Tha Body ----- 0 " (1934. Drama) George M ovia: "D ay-Tim a W Ha" (1939, to Managing Edilor — writing is their profession. AMC Snafehor” (t945. Horror) flat! An aspmng young cale dancer Movie: "Heaven Can WaH" (1943) Don Ameche A Megabucks: 3-4-12-18-39-40. Greenwich. Thde are calling hours. Memorial con­ Comedy) Tyrone Power, Linda Darnell i" (1934, Drama) George M ovie: "D ay-Tim e W ile " (1939, Ray was best known as a combat-hardened soldier in Boris Karloff, Bela Luoosi. ruthlesaly daws tvs wav to the loo. fanciful yam about a rakish Casanova who requests Raft. An aspiring yburig cafe dancer Rhode Island tributions may be made to Boys Town. The John F. Tier­ PETER DOWNS Q. Please settle this dispute be­ adnvssion to Hades after leadina a carefree (He. Comedy) Tyrone Power, Linda Darnell. films like “Men in War” and “The Naked and the Dead.” (SffW) M ovia: "OaNipoN' Movio: "Worth Winning" (1989, Comedy) Mark rulhlesslv daws his wav to the tnn Daily: 2-0-1-4. Grandlot: 3-3-3. 0-6-1-1. 6-1-5-3-5. ney Rmeral Home, 219 West Center St., Manchester, has tween my friend and me. On the M ovie: “ Tho N aked O un" (1988. His last major role was in the Jdm Wayne Vietnam film Cky E ditor______AlaxQireili (1981, Drama) Mel Gibson Harmon, Madeleine Stowe. A handsome ladykiller Movie: "Road Ho u m " (1989, Drama) Patrick Swayze 1 TV show “Daniel Boone,” the In­ Two Australian friends Comedy) l^ske Nielsen. Capt. Frank Kelly Lynch.— K A . legendary------bouncer runsk k ilo stiff 8-9-4-9-8-3. charge of the arrangements. Nmva Editor . And«w C Spitzl«r Cinemax accepts a wager that he can get three women to Drebin continues his war on crime in this Micneiie Pteffler. A resUurateur gets caught between a “The Green Berets.” dian was played by Ed Ames. Is come face to face with the yxH pl his marriage proposal m three short months. (In opposition when he agrees to dean up. f a notorious gin lormw drug smuggler and his Welong buddy, a Los PMlurM Editor. _ Dianna M. Talbot brutality o l war. PG bio4)udgM tollow-up to the defunct mill, (In Stereo) 'R ' (AduH language, adul Stereo) PG-13' (Adult language,languat...... adult situations) g "Police Squad" TV aeries 'PG-13' g .ji.: '------H—W-. adult situationi Ahfleles narco^ agent. (In Stereo) f l' (Adult I Editor Lan Aualar he dead or alive? Was be a real In­ nudity, v io le fic e ig l)D on iE«Ster_ RaoinNd Pinto dian or was he Jewish? — L.H., CNN World Today language, adult aitualiona, b^ f nuditY. violence) g Jotw^ Galena, . |NawMigM Updata Weather ArNadaing Martagar. __ Laalay Radiut Movia: "Th# Frog Ptlnca" (1968, Movie: “Clath of lha TNana" (1981, Fantasy) A. Are those the only two alterna­ Fantasy) Ailoen Quinn, Clive R ^ . A Movfe: "tupH roiM " (1978, Fantasy) Christopher Reeve. Margot Bmlnaaa Managar _ JaannaQ. Fromanh Laurence Okvief, Harry Hamlin. &aek hero Pwseus ■ ^ ‘OhaManWhoKnawToo Disney younjj woman belriends an enchanted Kidder An inlam from the planel Krypton jourrieys to Earth w lw e he Movio: "Claaholth# Ciroulaiton Managar. ___ QariindsCoHalii tives? In fact, Ames was neither In­ faces mythological beasts and dark magic when he grows up to battle evil. PG' (Aduft lihguagTnikd v io l^ (1934, Suspense) Leske Banks, THana" (1981. Fantasy) REGIONAL V/eather Production O iraclor_ _ _ Shakten Cohan Irog in this musical version ol the classic embarks on a quest to vrin the hand ol Andromeda. (In Edna A British family vacaboriing ki dian or Jewish — and he is quite lairy tale. (In Stereo) "NR" Uurenee Okvief, Harry \ Praaaroom Managar. ITiobart H. Hubbard Stereo) PG (Brief nuditY. vktience)______Switzerland learns ot an assassination Hamkn, (In Stereo) PG R t d q r . l alive. plot from a dying secret agent. Cloudy, rain Tho- U p C to aa tp o rta C e n - SiffMrbouts: Ken Norton (Brief nudity, rioienoel ESPN O itat American Evanti. America's WMdemesa Main Talaphona Numbar Q. Maybe you can help. My tor______YS. Muhammad Ak IportaCen- |PBA Boarlhtg: Padtic Cal Bowl Senior ^ ul Bunyan______lOuldoof Lumber Jack Special. (R|______Oiory Days Tho- ll^ Can- #43-2711 ' Open. From Los Anoelei. (Live!______likely mother and I have a $20 bet (5ff)(^ M ovia: “ C h a n ca t Movia: “II Again’ (1988. Comedy) (Jeorgeeorm Bums, CIroulallon Talaphona Numbar Aft" (1989, Comedy) Cybill Charlie Schlatler. An innooenl birthday v S S i T i i i lU ! • " * » ” <'9®'' Lyrm Whiifiold, Movie: "Looee Camwiw" (1990 IKidtinlhe going. She says that the woman » brings R i^ Blades A biography ol the glarnoroos but controversial black •47-9M# HBO Shepherd. Robert Dowrwy unloraeen problems when a wealthy 8 1-year-old Comedy) Gene Hackman, Dan Aykroyd, H a l (R) (In rvL'jr’ Crams) Kavki okf entertainer who look 1920s Pans t^ storm. (In Stereo) g C^tner, Anthony Quinn. A (ormef Navy who plays Rachel on the sitcom Jr "PG (AduK language) switches bodies vrith his teen-age grandson A ixHionsense cop and his Starw) □ Ibnight’s weather in the greater P G ' (Aduli PW anteri into a dangerous < « H W * “Family Matters” is one of the language) g s^izophremc partner kiveslioate a series Manchuter area: partly doudy. Low PubKshad daly axoept Sunday and oatlain holidays by o l gruesome murders. (In Stereo) 'R ' g cokHtlooded kWar's seductive wile, (hi Itw Manchaatar Publishing Co., 16 Brainard Plaoa, Suparm ar- O ra a tT V E/R (Part 1 Dual "Satin Stereo) R' g Pointer Sisters. I say, no way, Ufotim* r "Captain Hurt" M ^ "Be« Kepi Secrela" (1984, Drama) Patty 35 tt) 40. Wind diminishing to light MaiMhaalar, Conn. 06040. Saoond daat postaga paid at k a ltw a a p ) Traeay DayaolD ayae [EJI.a 012 Doll" Duke Aatki, Fred^ Forrest. ' Md Mom!! — Unsigned, Duncan, k W lit l and variable. Friday, mostly doudy Manohaalar, Conn. Postmaaiar: Sand sodYast ohartgaa Movia: "Fraah H orM t" (1988, Drama) Molly Yakov Im im o ff In iFwflrH to lha Manohaalar Harald. P.O. Box 661, Manchaatof, Okla. Movie; "The Last Mairior” (1989. Movia: "FraHy Woman” (1990, Comedy) Richard K se ESC! with a 50 percent chance of rain. Ringwald Romance develops between an uneducated Meacow._ Idaho Soviet Adventure) Gary Graham. A lone Conn. 06040. country woman and a wealthy collage student enjoying Gere, Juka Roberta. A buakiaM exacutiva attampis to *«v»ntufi) Roy Showtime Union's best-known comic American soldier squares off with his Cooler with a high in the lower 50s. his final fkng as a bachelof. (In Stereo) PG-13' (AduH transform s vulpar streetwalkar Into a sophisticaied Schaldaf, Makxiim McOowall. Tha pilot ot a super- “ O N r Tha Mandhaslar Harald is a mambar ol Tha Associatod performs m Moscow. Japanese counterpart on a Padlic island ehopper uncovers a plot to turn his crimo-lightkio Outlook Saturday, a chance of rain. A. You are so right. Telma Hop­ language, adult situations, violence) Idaho (R) tamale companion. (In Stereo) 'R' (Adult language, adult (1969) At Praia, lha Audd Bureau ol Ciroulation, toa Naw England during ttie final days ol World War II. R' situations) Yankovic. High in the 40s. * Press Assodabon and tha Naw England Nawapapar Aa- kins was part of Dawn (of Tony Or­ ) Movie: ‘Arm ed Movio; "U tlon to Mo” (1969. Drama) Kirk Cameron. - 'H H lif l" (1989, Drama) Jan- PG-13' g aodabon. ------. — - I " (1986, •tovia:------“Tha Laal of the ,FtotaT aaawva |(1990, 1 9 9 V, LnOlllfllDrama) DflflBrian Intense low pressure is moving i lando and Dawn). But that’s not Jam! Gertz. Two coffege Ireshmeo get the chance to Michaol Vincent, Leo Rossi A heed killer »M |io" (1988, Drama) Eric Bogosian. Comedy) John Candy, PG- Oenoihy. JO0 Pantohano. Thfw undercover c o m go Guaranlaad daUvary. If you doni reoaiva your Harald TMC argue their comnetioni as members ol their school's makes a deaeffy error when he mistakes Ate^ktwin. A radio talk ihow host's kisulftng^ across the Great Lakes into Canada. quite the same as being a Pointer. 13 (Adult language, adult ootskta the law to get the drop on their partner's (R) by 6 p.m. waahdays or 7:30 a m. Saturdaya. plaaaa deltating team. (In Stereo) PG-13' (Adult language. causttc manner attracts i Itnaiicsl fo k o ^ to his situations)______another man (or his intended target. (In killers. (In Stereo) 'R'(‘'F (Aduft "------language, adult situalwns Its frontal systems will cross New lalephTOa your earner. If you are unabla to reach your (Send your questions to: Ask aduH situations) g Stereo) R ^ violence) g England today. Another low will be carriar, cal subscriber soivioa at 647-0046 by 6 p.m. Dick Kleiner, c/o Newspaper TNT amgtn't Buga Bunny A PMa Islartd Myma Loy: lo Nice to moving out of the Oulf states toward weekdays for delivery in Manchester. EnterFise Association. 200 I^k Oscar winner about the postwar readiuatmenls ol three veterans returmnq to ovilan life |C ^ Home To H o u m " "The Suggaatad cairiar rataa are $1.00 waeWy, $7.70 tor Cartoon Eaprttt |MacOyvor Gold Rush 11948, n W Cary Qrint. t the northeast late tonight and Friday. Ave., New York, N.Y. 10166. Due to USA BwboriM" ona month, $23.10 tor tvea montti. $46.20 tor aix "Spknters" the volume of ituiil. personal replies f c r "9®^' months and $02.40 for ona year. Nswsttand price; 36 tannot be Fovided.) Today’s weather picture was drawn by Joshua Knight, a four­ cants a copy. th-grader at the Martin Schooi in Manchester. 1 r

12— MANCHESTER HERALD. Thursday. March 28.1991

M ANCH ESTER H ERALD, Thursday, March 28. J 991— 13

32 APAR'TMENTS FOR 32 APAR'TMENTS FOR 35 STORE ft OFFICE CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 643-2711 HERE'S MY CARD... RENT RENT SPACE MANCHESTER-2 Family, £L^AS£TELL them yo u saw i t m THE MANCHESTER HERALD! MANCHESTER-4 Rooms. MANCHESTER-Store/ 5-Room.lovely Duplex. Yard, parking. No pets. Commercial use. Main 2 Bedrooms. Lbts of MlscallanaoustorSale...... $425 plus utilities. St, near Center St. 646- N o tic e s Lots/Land lor Sale...... (203)643-2711 cabinets and closets. Please call 872-9951. M e rch an d ise TagSalaa______M P.O. BOX 591 2426. Weekdays, 9-5. Loat/Found...... 01 Investment Property...... Nice yard. Heat/hot Personals...... Business Property...... Holiday Seasonal...... 71 ------on 02 SpcciolisSDcjt! | Antiques and CollecUbles...... 72 Computers...... — - ...... water included. $750 MANSFIELD-WIL- SOUTH WINDSOR- Announcements...... 03 Vacation Property...... Clothing ...... 73 Monthly. 684-4686. LINGTON LINE-Route Office, 300 square feet. Auctions...... „.04 Mortgages...... Flooring...... — p m S f i E h 44, 2 bedroom No lease. $150/Month. Financial...... 05 W anted to Buy...... Furniture...... 74 MANCHESTER-2 S e r v ic e s Electrical...... Nolicos..,...... 06 TV/Stereo/Appllances...... 7 5 ^ rf^EN &^ATFgJ Bedroom Garden Style apartment, adults 521-1744 or 644-0165. R e n ta ls Child C are...... Heating/Plumbing...... Machinery and T oo ls...... 7 6 Cleaning Services...... | C l I « w and Townhouse apart­ preferred. Country Rooms tor Rent...... Miscellaneous Services...... Gardening...... 77 Employment & Education Lawn Care...... iHanclieBter HientUi privacy. No dogs. ^ 6 0 / 61 MISC. SERVICES Apartments for Rent...... Services W anted...... Good Things to EaL 78 Automotive ments available. Only 1 Part Time Help Wanted...... „.10 Bookkeeping/Income Tax. Professional Kitchen & Bathroom Remodeling each remaining out of month. 1-1/2 Months Help Wanted...... 11 Condominiums tor Rent.. Landscaping...... Fuel Oll/Coal/Flrewood...... 7# Cars tor Sale...... — security. 742-0569. C o n c re te ...... Farm Supplies and Equipment...... AO Trucks/Vans for S a le ...... " 72. Quiet. On busline. CLEANING-Hauling. Situation Wanted...... 12 Homes lor Rent...... Visit our Showroom Office Retail Equipment...... 81 Campera/Trallers...... ~...... ~..-.-» carpentry, remodeling, Business Opportunities...... 13 Store/Office Space...... Snow Plowing...... Air conditioning, self MANSFIELD/WIL- Arts/Crafts...... Recreational Equipment...... -82 Motorcycles/Mopeds ...... « 254 Broad Street • Manchester, CT 06040 odd jobs, Rick’s Hand­ Instruction...... 14 Vacation Property...... cleaning oven, all ap­ LINGTON LINE-Roufe Boats and Marine Equipment------63 Auto Services------yman and Carpentry ■ w ■ Employment Services...... 15 Industrial Property...... 18 BRAINARD P U C E pliances included, 44. 2 Bedroom Garages/Storage & MIsc... Musical Items...... - ...... 84 Autos tor Rent/U ase.^ . ..------..-.86 Service. 646-1948. CALL TO PLACE YOUR CLASSIRED ADVERTISEMENT HERALD SQUARE GEORGE R. JAY (203) 649-5400 storage area, full apartment. Adults Real Estate Roommates Wanted...... Cameras and Photo Equipment..— 85 Miscellaneous ^om oUve ...... |7 basement. 1-1/2 baths preferred. Country Reasonably priced. Ful­ Pols and Supplies...... 86 Wanted to Buy/Trade...... FAX (203) 643-7496 MANCHESTER. CONN 06040 President FAX (203) 649-8265 Homes tor Sale...... 21 Wanted to Rent...... in townhousa. Heat and privacy. No dogs. $460/ ly insured. Condominiums for Sale...... 22 643-2711 Miscellaneous for Rent..... hot water included. 247- Month. 1-1/2 months 5030. security. 742-0569. 74 FURNITURE Classified advertisements are taken by tele- MANCHESTER-2 Family. RATES: 1 to 6 days: 95 cents per line per day. READ YOUR AD: 34 HOB&ES FOR RENT CRIB-$28.00. Crib Com­ DEADLINES: For classified advertisements to be hone as a convenience. The Manchester Nowlv unriatAri 0 published Tuesday through Satur­ * ''^'*'NG . TRANSCRIPTION Cunliffe Auto Body, inc. forter Set (Complete)- 7 to 19 days: 75 cents per line per day. Rerald Is responsible for only one Incorrect Bedroom in quiet day, the deadline Is noon on the day m a il in g l is t s . MULTIPLE LETTERS . IBM COMPATIBLE AVAILABLE-April 15. $20.00. Call 647-0913. 20 to 25 days: 60 cents per line per day. insertion and then only for tho elza of the neighborhood. Close to before publication. For advertisements PICK-UP & DELIVERY ARTCUNLIFFE Cozy house for 2 near 26 or more days: 55 cents per line per day. original Insertion. Errors which do not lessen town center and DRESSER-Oak veneer, to be published Monday, the dead­ Coventry Lake. $600/ Minlmunx charge: 4 lines. the valuo of the advertisement will not be Owner busline. $595/Month 46* tall. Good cond'rtion. line is 2:30 p.m. on Friday. month. 1 Month security corrected by an additional Insertion. Paperwork Assistance plus Utilities. Dale. 529- required. Utlities not 5 sets drawers. $100. 8276. included. Call 742-9543 Please call 647-0674. F SECRETARIAL AND WORD PROCESSING SERVICE after 5 pm. MANCHESTER-2 A NOTICES BOLTON-7 Room Cape, 10 PART TOIE HELP 10 PART TIME HELP 21 HOMES FOR SALE 23 Hartford TurnpSce Route 83 WATERBED-King, without Bedroom, private fireplace, 2 car garage. mattress. Colonial, 4 WANTED WANTED Talcottville, CT 06066 As a condition precedent FACTS ABOUT FAX CREAM PUFFI 3 basement, parking, $1000 a month. Ted- poster, rails, heater. to the placement of any Bedroom Cape, 2 M A N C H E ^ r , CT 06040-0504 ®” ARON L MASSE Phone (203) 643-0016 large yard, stove. On ford Real Estate, 647- $75, Please call 647- advertising in the fireplace, breezeway, Wine and D ine busline. $595 Monthly. 9914/423-8958. 0018. Manchester Herald, Ad­ walk-out rec room with 649-2871. F vertiser hereby agrees MANCHESTER-1 /2 fireplace. Treed lot. As­ MANCHESTER-2, 3, and to protect, indemnify NEWS Duplex. 6 Rooms, 3 Is advertising expensive? king $169,900. Call 6 Room apartments. and hold harmless the. bedrooms, 1-1/2 baths. You’ll be surprised now Barbara W. RE/MAX THE MAIN PUB Security. 646-2426. Manchester Herald, its DAVESCAPE LAWN MAINTENANCE Beautiful rec room. economical It Is to adver­ East of the River, 647- NETWORK Weekdays, 9am-5pm. $775. 643-7815. officers and empbyees CORRESPONDENT 1419. RESTAURANT & tise In Classified. 643-2711. against any ana all TAVERN LAWN CARE liability, loss or ex­ LOUNGE J. DAVID BRAZEL CUSTOM THROUGH & A Newspaper in Education Program pense including We currently have an opening Open 7 days a week FULL DINNER MENU landscaping Certified Public Accountant Sponsoredby attorneys’ fees, arising THROUGH II! $134,900. For your casual enjoyment •PRIME RIB A SPECIALTY THE QUIZ from claims of unfair for a news correspondent to A must see is this An- Daily Specials •PEZAPASTASANDWICHES The M ^ h e s te r Herald trade practices, infring- saldi built 6 room Cape Appetizers & Snacks ENTERTAINMENT TREE & SHRUB REMOVAL/TRIMMING with dining room, first ment of trademarks, cover Coventry events. This is a Char-broiled Burgers WED TO SAT n o pointf for each quettion trade names or patents, floor master bedroom, 1610 Ellington Road anMwertd cometly) Delicious Super Sandwiches MON-IBURS 11 AM-1 AM FRI COMMERCIAL SNOW REMOVAL WORLDSCOPE violation of rights of bay window, fireplaced South Windsor, CT 06074 part-time position which in­ Beer & Wine &SAT11AM-2AM (203) 644-7008 privacy and infringe­ living room, atrium SUNDAY 12 NOON-1 AM ment of copyright and Use your office fax machine to doors to heaven 622 M iddle Tpke. E DAVE ZAREMBA cludes covering town govern­ 647-1551 644-6052 proprietary rights, unfair place your ad. outdoorsi Full walkout competition and libel basement. Great for 646-9554 306 Main S t Manchester and slander, which may ment meetings and feature writ­ it's Fasti It's SImplel family room expansioni result from the publica­ Anne Miller Real BRING A FRIEND ing. Estate, 647-8000. CHOWDERTOWN Open 7 Days A Week tion of any advertise­ Our Fax number Is TO LUNCH ment in the Manchester F Owner/Operator 203- 643-7496 In our newly redecorated diner (Highly recommended by m eyebrows. Found MANCHESTER HERALD door openers. Truly ONE: erxjorse, oppose) the Idea ot a 'land tor p e a c e ' deal H o Cedar St. 643-4283. after 12:00 noon. move-in condition I Bet­ d in n er with the Palestinians. ter snap this one up! SILVER LANE PIZZA Closed Mondays O 03 LOST BLACK CAT-Taken $179,000. Jackson & RESTAURANT Look for our daily specials PHONE 64S-99S3 to Hum ane Society. 2) In th e re ce n t vo te o n th e future z - < 11 HELP WANTED Jackson Real Estate, Fresh Qatttc Rolls Marfa Dally BESIDENCE 643-8145 Swedish . Reflexology • Acupressure Found on McDivitt 94 Hartford Turnpike ot the Soviet Union, six of that na­ MATCHWORDS 647-8400. "OURDOUQH European Body Wrap H H 11 HELP WANTED 11 HELP WANTED Wishing tion's republics refused to par­ (2 point* for each correct match) Drive. TEACHERS-Telephone UADE FRESH DAILY" Route 83 classified 100's of jobs- tic ip a te . m I CLERICAL-Sales clas­ orders to got & S e n S a lt A 2 PERSONALS DAY WAITRESS/WAITER 19 categories 1-900- .will not sell CAST YOUR WORRIES ^ Vernon 875-2258 a-15 b-19 c-23 1— endorse a—opttmbtic o m sified 100’s of jobs-19 TAKE OUT OR DINE IN a ppr aiser s a n o liouioators NEEDED-Ask for Bob 226-2645 $3/Min 24 AWAYIII $134,900. 2 — participate b —a count categories 1 900-226- at Andover Pizza. 742- Pizza • Salads • Laaagna BUY AND SELL NEW OR USED 5 T3 A1 FUN TALK-Live girls Hrs. anything... Space abounds in this • SpasliettI • ShaHa • Llngulni • Z tl 2645 $3/Min 24 Hrs. PATIO RESTAURANT AND STORE FIXTURES MASSAGE THERAPY 3) Accordno to the 1990 census, 3— census c —ta ke p a rt In are waiting for your call. 3663. private 3 bedroom • Veal Parmiglana • Vaal Scalloppinl AUCTIONING SERVICES TELEPHONE-Sales. Part a low-cost ad in • Chl(Aan Parmiglaiw • Manicotti almost of>e In e v e r y A m e r ic a n s 24 Hours. 1-900-990- CLERICAL-Telephone Townhouse end unit RESTAURANT BAKERY FIXTURES Leonardo Parla • Diana Raphael 4— oust d—remove DENTAL SURGICAL AS- time out of your home. • Saalood has African. Aslan, Hispanic, or 5366 Ext. 375. $1.00 classified 10O's Of jobs- with formal dining room, Homestyle Cooking OFFICE FIXTURES 8 EQUIPMENT R o SISTANT-Busy Earn up to $10 plus per Classified will. Dally Speclala American IrKNan ancestry. 5— confident e—support MIN/14 MIN. Adults 19 categories 1-900- Manchester Oral sliders to oversized Tues-Sun 11am-9pm Open Tuesday-Sunday o hour. 528-0358. Why not place FELIX GREMMO Trager Practitioner a-tour b-slx c-elght only. 226-2645 $3/Min 24 Surgery Office seeking deck, and full 649-4804 ai9 EAST MIDDLE TPKE 130 Hilliard Street o ^ 250 Hartford Road FRANCIS GREMMO 2 CD Hrs. WORK FROM HOME-$60 basementi Enjoy the In the Shop.Rnt Plaza MANCHESTER. CONN. 06040 Yoga Instructor PEOPLE/SPORTS assistant to join team one today! Manchester, CT 06040 CD practice. Experience per 100, preparing mail. carefree feeling of 232 Spancar S trati, llancliaatar 6 45 -6 7 20 Water Purifiers (203) 646-4746 4) The videotape ot the beating ot fS point* for each correct aneiver) m P la cin g an ad preferred. Cali Mindy. Information: Send 643-2711 central air, central a black rrxsn by a group of white DAY CARE-Licenced only stamped envelope to vacuum, and fully ap- police officers In ..?.. has focused 1) W arner Bros, is o ffe rin g to reim ­ P o in Classified 649-7374. 8:30-2:00. Tasty Chick needed for 10 month K.S. Enterprises, P.O. plianced kitcheni Plus a rKitlonwIde attention on the Issue burse theater owners for extra se­ DRIVERS-Telephone Visit usattheIntersectionsotRte.83and Is easy. and 31 month girls. Full Box 5157-WGX, 2 car garage with Here's M y Card Is a special feature of the Manchester Herald and of polce brutalty. curity costs at showings of Its new time. Must have no classified 10O’s of jobs- Hillside, NJ 07205. openers unoerneathl Reagan Rd. Tuesday-Sunday 11 a.m.-9 m > 19 categories 1 900- 14 INSTRUCTION p.m. Closed Mondays. We offer a wide movie which has been Just cal other infants under 18 Anne Miller Real variety ot fresh seafood as wetl as trash plagued by violence at some months old in home 226-2645 $3/Min 24 Estate; 647-8000. runs every Thursday. If you are Interested In placing your business 5) U.S. officials reportedly expect 5 w Hrs. MATH TUTORING OF- fried chicken. We fry cholesterol free. Saddam Hussein to be ousted by showings. 643-2711 and currently. Call between FERED-all grades plus F______Dining Room and Take Outs. 3 ) > 7:30-8:00 AM, Monday- 13 BUSINESS OPPOR- the end ot tho year. But they are GENERAL-Labor 100's of some freshman college CHARM-Available here. 875-8480 card here please call Paula a t643-2 7 1 foryour special low rate. we do the rest! 1 loss confident that the ruling 2) The Directors Guild gave Kevin Friday. 728-3594. jobs-1 9 categories TUNITIES courses. 644-2617. Quality throughout. Cindy. Costner Its Best Director award lost Tele-phone classified 1 Large fireplaced living (CHOOSE ONE: Shite Muslim. Booth HOT NEW VENDING w eek, o n olm ost-sure sign h e 'll also 900 226 2645 $3/Min 21 HOMES FOR SALe" room. Den with sliders Socialist) party can be replaced. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ 24 Hrs. BUSINESS-$500- to porch, formal dining get the Oscar. The lost director to $2000 per week 21 HOMES FOR SALE 21 HOMES FOR SALE Krr ’N* CARLYLE by Larry Wright HAIRDRESSING-PosHion BRAND NEW LISTINGItl room. A beautyl Asking 23 CONDOMINIUMS 23 CONDOMINIUMS 32 APARTMENTS FOR win the DGA but not the Oscar was possible. Routes es­ available. Call’456- Exceptional 6 room, 3 $169,000. Call Barbara FOR SALE FOR SALE NEWSNAME tor 'The Color Purple.' tablished for you. Part MANCHESTER-lmmacu- SHELLEY LANE- RENT______FREE 2215 for a job bedroom Ranch on W. 648-1419. REA1AX late 9 room original Glastonbury. Immacu­ time or full time. Invest­ a s point* fbreorrtct antwtr or antwtr*) / description. Walbridge Hill Rd. in East of the River, 647- late 3 bedroom, 1-1/2 H o f iH Id L BROOKSIDE-South MALLARD VIEW-New MANCHESTER-6 Room. 3) Perhaps the best gome of the ment required. Call 7 owner Garrison Toliandl Features 1419. Colonial. Cozy den with bath. Split with much Windsor, $139,900. Ranch and Colonial 3 bedroom duplex. first holt of the NC/VA basketball CLASSIFIED days/24 hours. 1-800- Rl Or li homes. Change your Many people include: 1st floor family fireplace. Enclosed sun room and lots of Adorable 2 year old Applianced. Carpeted. say the recent to urna m en t was d e fe n d in g ch a m ­ 626-6750. room, dining area, over­ Condo. 2 Bedrooms lifestyle to 1 -fli^ Kving. No pets. $700 plus When you need to porch, 4 bedrooms, for­ storage area. All ap­ Soviet referen­ pion UNLV's victory over (CHOOSE MANCHESTER-Available sized 2 car attached with possible 3rd in loft. 2 Bedroom. 2 bath utilities. 645-7868. Mon­ LINE ADS advertise, nothing mal dining room and pliances to remain. Nice dum was realty ONE: Geofgetovm. UCLA) In the immediately. 1200 aaragiarage, 14x14 deck off private yard. $155,000. Central air, cathedral Ranches. Also 3 day-Friday. 8:00-5:00. works like ClasslfM living room, lower level West regional. Square feet. Commer- famMi,amily room, central family room with 2nd •We'Ye Selling Housesl” ceiling, skylight, bedroom, 1-1/2 bath a popularity ^ I N ^ Dial cial/lndustrial. 3 Phase vac, Andersen windows fireplace, 2-1/2 baths. A Blanchard & Rossetto, fireplace and a garage Colonials. Attached MANCHESTER-Like new vote tor M lthal electric. Sprinkler and low heat and water pleasure to showl U&R 646-2482 tool D.W. Fish Real arage. From 3 bedroom duplex, Gorbachev or 4) Two-sport starwho injured 143,900. North Main system. $550 Per e x p e n s e s . H om e is ^ Realty Co., 643-2692. Estate, 643-1591 or j large yard. Applianced, m e. W ho a m I? his hip In o football gom e tor the L. A. 643-2711 St. to Union St. to Ros­ ^ The ^ Month. 646-5477. very pleasant and pic­ 871-1400. carpeted. No pets. Raiders, may not be able to ploy PUBLISHER'S SMART BUYER’S GEMI- setto Dr. ”We’re Selling ture Mrfect inside and MANCHESTER-2 Family. F Lease, security. $785/ baseball tor the Kansas City Royals out! $147,500. Jackson Lake views, paddle housesl* Blanchard ft NOTICE: Asking $149,900. Great HIGH VALU E-^ Bargain Month. 6 4 6 -3 9 ^ . this season, doctors soy. Manchester Herald & Jackson Real Estate, fans, thermal glass. 2 Romtto. 648-2482. potential. Call Ron, pricel Lovely 2 YOUR SCORE: That's right, if you have merchandise to sell 647-8400. EQUAL Bedrooms. /Vn excellent F Let A Specialist Do It! 649-3087. RE/MAX value. Coventry, bedroom, 1-1/2 bath MANCHESTER-2 Fainily. V ito 100 pobrft - TOP SCOKI valued at $100 or less your ad is FREE! • I to VO poMa - acaiw rf. 5) Rick Swenson battled o blizzard HOUSING East of the River, 647- $99,500. Torw Zilora. condo with extra room MANCHESTER-$99,500. Newly updated. 2 71toMpotnti-6ood. to defeot Susan Butcher and cap­ We know how impor­ IN-LAW POSSIBILITIES- 1419. Dir: Rte 31 s R T on in lower level. Located Great 2 bedroom Bedroom in quiet ★ 12 WORDS - 3 DAYS FREE OPPORTUNITY «1to70poMt-F<*. ture his fifth win in Alaska's famed Bolton, $1 69,500. F Daley, LT on South, LT in Courtaide Tounhouse in sm all neighborhood. Close to tant your business is to you complex. Large eat-in O Knowledge Untimited, Inc. 3-25-91 ..?.. sled dog race. DM Large Raised Ranch All Real Estate adver­ on Lakeview. LT on Condominums, this unit town center and ★ PRICE MUST APPEAR AD TOP NOTCH-Manchester, kitchen, rec room, lOOMBINEO rrEM TOTAL tVOT TO EXCEED $100) and we'd like to help you get with in-law suite tised in this newspa­ $139,500. Nothing Hickory. Philips Real also has 2 decks, ap­ busline. $595/Month potential. One acre Estate, 742-" 2-1450. pliances and garage. washer/dryer hook-ups. plus UtilHies. Dale. 529- ★ PRIVATE PARTY ONLY the best results possible! per is subject to the compares in prioa and Call Caroline, 645- ANSWERS TO THE QUIZ rural lot yet convenient value to this 8 room 3 - if Owner moving out of 8276. (N O N ^nM VrESO Al. GARAGE SALES A PET ADS NOT INCLUDED to 1-384. Bring the Federal Fair Housing state. $124,900. Strano 6182, evenings. RE/ INIHEGFFEIU We can do that for you by Cape with many extra poJDiipi-9 :uos)|3Dr Ofl-p :uMO|eSioe9-c whole family and check NEW RANCHES AND ^ Real Estate, 647-7653. MAX East of the River, Act of 1968 which touches including MANCHESTER-3 offering a special advertising rate out this buyl D.W. Fish CAPES-FHA/VA-NO 647-1419. :fijeq|e| ueAe|$-z l.AnD 43Dr M eN,-l :si8 0 dS • T M 0 3 4 ★ USE THE COUPON BELOW - makes it illegal to ad­ hardw ood floo rs in • IN I ay NCA. Ine. Bedroom, 1-1/2 bath Real Estate, 643-1591 MONEY DOWN. Oak D-s qj-p :q-C 13-2 •-! :sa&0 /AH0 1VIN NO PHONE ORDERS kitchen, new mudroom ONE BEDROOM-Beacon duplex. $750 per in our "Let A Specialist Do It" or 871-1400. vertise “any prefer­ cabinets, no-wax floors, ui*«eA *poa :3IAIVN$MaN 1 and sliders to sun/faml- thermal windows, all to Hill unit, new carpeting, month. Security. Jack •k F 21 HOMES FOR SALE 21 HOMES FOR SALE 31 ROOMS FOR RENT l*no|30S Mioofl-s LIMIT ONE PER FAMILY PER MONTH . column. We offer a 1 inch ad that ence, limitation or dis­ ly room plus a 2 car wall carpeting. Ashford, great location, park like La^en Realty, 643- beieBuy toi-p :d -c :d -z :e«oddo-t :3dOO$OiaOM FOR OTHER ADS PLEASE CALL 643-2711 KNIGHTON STREET- crimination based on oversozed garagel 3.5 acres, Coventry, setting with pooll Inves­ runs for 24 days for a very low OPEN HOUSE- SPRING IS IN THE AIRIII LARGE-Country,private Spadous, 3 bedroom, D.W. Fish Real Estate, only $115,517. Betty tor Is almost giving it 8:30AM T05W PM MONDAY-FRIDAY race, color,. religion, COVENTRY-Prlce This immaculate 7 room bath/entrance,fire­ 1-1/2 bath Cape with 643-1591. Mora. Dir: 31S RT on awayl Must Seel Make price of $62.40 which is payable Drastically Reduced by Split Level on Hollister place.Non-smoking Y our Free ad m il start on the first available date. sunken family room off sex, handicap, family F______Daley, LT on South St, an offer. Asking $80,0001 A Georgian St. in Manchester with male preferred. No Publisher reserves the right to reject or accept ads. in advance. kitchen. Home well status, or national ori­ LT on Lakeview. Philips $59,000. Call Rich TWO FAMILY- Colonial on Old Tavern its terrific yard and sun pets.7«-5861. maintained with full rear Manchester, $154,900. Real Estate, 742.1450. Bums for details. RE/ B r id g e Offer may be witfmraon at any time. gin, or any intention to Lane, Coventry. porch invites you to Most of our subscribers are dormer plus 2 eye Lovely Victorian style MAX East of tha River, MANCHESTER-Free ■■■■■■!■ ■'■iBiaiH aiaiBiiiiH ii Directions: 84 East to plant and enloyl 3 dormers for extra m ake any such pre fe r­ two family attractively 647-1419. week with $100 security homeowners who at some point Rte 384 East to Rte 44 Bedrooms, 2 full baths, Please accept my FREE want ad as follows: spaciousness. Low ence, limitation or dis­ situated on a corner lot. deposit. Clean, quiet, East. Approximately 7.5 fireplaca, shiny Place one word in each box below in time need your service, but $130’s. ’W e ’re Selling Wrap-around porch. furnished. 646-8337. NORTH s-ih-tl Gain spade jack, you as declarer have your crimination." ONLY $129,90011! 7 Room miles on 44 East to hardwood floors, STEPPING OUT ft UPlII Housesl* Blanchard & Can be easily con­ ♦ 6 back against the wall. You must run don't even realize your business Ranch with large 1st Brigham Tavern Rd. aluminum siding, ample $118.900-$143,500. Rossetto, 646-2482. This newspaper will not verted on one family floor family roomi FQ7S Information the clubs to bring home three no- House 1/4 mile on left. closat space and taste- Lease/purchasa is pos­ 32 APARTMENTS FOR AQJ54 F knowingly accept any maintaining its charm. Modern kitchen with trump. But before you attempt to play exists. When you run an ad in our Saturday, March 30, fully dacoratedi sible on these 2-3 ______RENT______♦ K to 8 7 3 Excellent condition. By James Jacoby that suit, it is right to cash the heart MANCHESTER- advertising for Real Es­ oak cabinets. 1991, 1-4 p.m, 1-800- $153,900.00, Jackson bedroom Contemporary "Specialist" column, they will D.W. Fish Real ^ ta ta , WEST tricks. Play off the A-K of hearts and $335,000. For the dis­ Remodeled bath, new 312-5372 or 224-7270. & Jackson Real Estate, Townhouaes with FURNISHED-3 Room EAST tate which is in viola­ 643-1591 or 871-1400. vinyl siding, 2 car car­ ♦ Q 8 5 2 ♦ A J 10 V 7 4 P. Hal Sims, one of the greatest and then cross to dummy’s queen. Here know that you can be counted on criminating buyer, this 647-8400. fireplaced living rooms, apartment, 2nd floor. Qaasification______tion of the law. Our F port. Great lot, backs on V10V4 FJ82 most colorful players of the '30s and you learn that the suit is divided 3-3. striking new U&R 9 MANCHESTER-Great F with family rooms, Heat. Private Please complete for our files, you will not be billed. and you'll see results. Buckley School. 'We're ♦ K 7 ♦ ASS ’4te, always boasted that he had never Assuming the opening lead is a true room Contemporary at readers are hereby ULTIMATE CONTEM­ neighborhood. Solid 6 laundry rooms, and lots entrances. Adults. No Selling Housesl* ♦ Q652 ♦ 4 misguessed a two-way finesse. But one Name______Brookside Estates, with informed that all dwell­ PORARY-1.14 Acree, room brick Cape. of ciotet spacel Call for pets. Security. card, you also know that West started At this price, you can't beat Blanchard & Rossetto, START OUT SMARTI Ab- day, when faced with a. t.-w.f„ he features like a L- parquet floora, master $129,000. Morlconi your appointmantl Anne RefArencea. 6 4 3 ^ (8 ^ , SOUTH with four spades and East with six Address. .Phone ings advertised in this 646-248Z V solutely immaculate in­ it. It's a small price to pay for big shaped balcony stair­ suite with spa, formal Real Estate, 643-1823. Miller % a l Estate, 647- 2pm to 7pm. AKS thought for quite some time before ex­ This means you know seven of West’s . aty___ _Sule .Z ip ___ way this is open from newspaper are avail­ dining room, gourmet side and out, vinyl 8000. FAK 6 S claiming, 'Damn it — both of you cards and nine of East’s. That leaves Iam( )amnot( ) A Mandtester Herald Subscriber business. Try us! We think you'll floor to ceiling, a master kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2- NEW PRICE-$192,000- siding, energy efficiant. MANCHESTER-181 floor, 4 10 9 6 2 have the queen.* And he was right! six spaces in West’s hand for a possible able on an equal op­ Your lucky dayl 3 W alking distance to 4 rooms on busline. be pleased. bedroom suite with a 1/2 baths. Jenn-Air ♦ a J 9 Someone had doctored the deck just to club queen, whereas East has only MAIL OR DROP OFF COUPON TO: Jacuzzi bath, cathedral portunity basis. To Range, North Coventry, What Makes Want Bedroom home avail­ beach. 1 Year Buyer $560. Security and see how he would react to “misguess- four spaces. The percentage play is tc Ads Work? able at a discounted Protection Plan, references required. Vulnerable: East-West THE MANCHESTER HERALD ceilinged living room complain of discrimi­ $325,000. Marcia Dealer: South ing* a two-way finesse. cross to your ace of clubs, cash the price. Immaculate, 2 Coventry, only 643-1577.______16 Please call llze and family room and McCarthy. Din 1-84 exit People like you who Get the The secret to improving your odds 13th heart and run the club jack BRAINARD PLACE nation call; fireplaces, cathedral $115,517. Betty Mora. ( much more. Call us. 67 to 31S, right to read and use the Soalh Wral North with a two-way finesse is to delay tak­ through West. With the given layout ! P.O. BOX 591 HUD toll-free at: callings. Bright and airy. Dir: 31S RT on Daley, Whnt Ad habit. EUmI at 643-2711 ext. 41 U&R Realty Co., 643- Satarl. Philips Real MANCHESTER-2 1 NT Pass 3 NT All pass ing the finesse for as long as you can. that works beautifully and you brin{ MANCHESTER, CT 06040 Want Ads every day. Call Barbara W. RE/ LT on South St, LT on read w d u M the IHtleadft $650 2692. 1-800-424-6590 Estate, 7 4 2 -1 ^ 0 . Bedroom, clean. a Find out as much as possible about the home an overtrick. 6 4 3 -2 7 1 1 MAX East of the River. F Lakeview. Philips Real inQiasfiHiedregularty. month plus utilities. Opening lead: A 2 other suit distributions first. J*mea Jacoby's books 'Jacoby on B ridge' am 647-1419. Estate, 742-14 M . Second floor. 6 4 9 - ‘Jacoby on Card Games' (writ lea with bis father ' F 6 4 3 -2 711 7998. A fter West has led the spade two to East's ace and East has returned the the late Oswald Jacoby) are now available a boot dcres Both are published by Fharva

UbA. r

14—MANCHESTER HERALD. Thuisday, March 28, 1991 Astrograph iHanrliriitrr HrralJi

you've known for quite a while is much complish Isn't a given today, yet It Isn’t Advertising Supplement '^A Sp^iolisl it! fonder of you than you've had reason to quite as difficult as you’ve Imagined. If c fo u r believe. This Individual may personally you tackle it head on, success is likely. to the Manchester Herald i ^ B irth d a y supply the missing evidence. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You are Parade of Homes Spring '91 CANCER (June 21-July 22) Do not presently In a cycle where your past ef­ Thursday, March 28,1991 BOOKKEEPING/ L A W N CARE HEATING/ place too much sighificance on early forts are coming home to roost. In re­ CARPENTRY/ developments today, even though they gard to making money, it looks like the IN C O M E T A X PLUMBING REMODELING March 29,1991 appear to be commanding. You get hard work you’ve been putting in will LAWN-SCAPE luckier as the day wears on, and it Is the not be in vain. Joseph P. Demeo, Jr. Specializing in Installation and R«)lacement KmCHEN & BATH REMODELING It looks like you might enjoy greater happy end results that count. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) You could Certified Public Accountant ofOii,Gas&Electrfc Visit our beautiful showroom or call (or prestige and status in the year ahead in LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Someone with be in for an Interesting experience to­ LAWN MAINTENANCE your free estimate. Prolessional lax and accnunting Water Heaters areas where you weren't previously ac­ whom you're closely associated might day; having to deal with a similar matter Market hints at recovery HERITAGE knowledged. Career improvements are be required to make a hard decision to­ that caused you a problem in the past. Weekly Mowings Warm Air Furnaces seivices. All 1040 consultations held KITCHEN & BATH CENTER also likely. day that will have mutual reverbera­ This time, however, you’ll come out the Spring Cleanups •Boiers that now is not the time to drop prices, at the beginning in the privacy ol your home or ollice. 254 Broad Street tions. After the dust settles, its benefits victor. By Sylvia Porter buying, then reduce it just as demaild picks up. Instead, Wibon Oil Company Manchester ARIES (March 21-April 19) You're likely will be obvious. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) There are of the spring m ^ e t If a house hasn’t sold by 15, 643-9034 Bushes Trimmed Los Angeles Times Syndicate you should take extra care to make sure your home is at­ 645«B3 649-5400 to fare better by working through trust­ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) If you're both strong indications that you may resur­ you should consider reducing the asking price.) m m m Free edging of curbs and side­ ed and competent intermediaries than tractive to prospective buyers. Remember, if you haven’t prudent and practical in your financial rect an old enterprise which you once How docs this turnaround affect you? If you’re look­ walks with a summer contract. by handling a ticklish development on involvements, this could be a profitable approached with great enthusiasm. While everyone was looking elsewhere — chiefly had any serious offers by mid-April, you may want to ACCOUNTING ing to buy, the ramifications are obvious. A home of your NO JOB TOO SMALL CUSTOM QUALITY your own today. Use your resources. day for you. Use your head buying or You'll be glad you didn't toss it on the toward the Persian Gulf — the housing market in the lower your asking jmee so you don’t miss the spring MANAGEMENT SERVICES Free Estimates Instant Service/Free Estimates One stop improvements. Arles, get a jump on life by understand­ own m y now be within your reach. Y)u can be more •Tax Preparation* selling. scrap heap. U n it^ States began showing signs of a very nice and Fully Insured Bath/Kitchen Remodeling Framing to Painting. ing the influences which are governing m^keL You may be competing with homes on which the •Individual or Business* LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) An endeavor sustainable recovery. selective, in fai^ 'There’s a good chance that the home price already has been dropped more than once. •Electronic Filing* One Call Does It All Licensed & Insured. you in the year ahead. Send lor Arles' in which you are presently involved For your personal horoscope, you want is available, in the location you want, at a price •Days, Evenings & Weekends* 645-7887 30 Years Experience B.B.B. Member Astro-Graph predictions today by mail­ Brokers around the country, who for the last two years The changing fortunes of the home market affect you could be substantially advanced today you can afford to pay. The usual caveats apply; be wary •Reasonable Rates* M&M Plumbing & Heating Call Dave Adamick tor a free quote. ing $1.25 to Astro-Graph, c/o this — if you're prepared to take a calculat­ lovescopo, lucky numbora have beeii as lonely as the Maytag appliance repairman if you own with no intentioi of selling, too. For more newspaper, P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland, of buying in an area that in general faces an economic 644-8034 649-2871 64 5-65 23 ed risk. But, remember, a calculated and future forecast, call on television commercials, now say that nibbles are turn­ Uum a year now, some htmieowners have been shocked YARDMASTERS OH 44101-3428. Be sure to state your risk is not a wild gamble. downturn, avoid nice homes in otherwise depressed Astro*Tone (95$ each minuto; ing into bites— and they are reeling in the sales. to leam that they owe more money on their houses than Spring Clean-Up zodiac sign. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Go about neighboihoods, and make sure you have the home in­ JAMES C. FITZGERALD, C.P.A, TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Devote as Touch-Tone phones only). - “It’s a matter of pent-up demand," says a suburban the houses are w(»lh. ’That unhappy trend is slowing or Tax-AccoUnt{ng*AudH Lawns. Bushes, Trees Cut. CAPITOL ENG. CO. doing your good deeds quietly today, spected for structural soundness and the presence of much time as possible to what is your New York ^ estate broker. “People held off as long as stopping as values edge back up. Manogom«nt Advifory S«rvic« Yards, gutters, garages ErikOzols PAINTING/ without drawing attention to yourself. Dial 1-900-963-3000 and radon, termites and asbestos. Corporatk>ni-Partn»nhlps most meaningful objective today. You Word of what you've done will reach they could, then decided to go ahead and buy. cleaned. Lawn Fertilizing. Appli­ PAPERING While the market foY single homes is getting better, Indlviduak, Tnjiti A £$tat0t For all your might not have the luxury of establish­ others without you having to tell them. enter your access code If you’re trying to sell, your chances of success are in­ ances Flemoved. Carpentry, ing your own agenda tomorrow T It s a good time to buy, too. Mortgage rates have fal­ commercial real estate is not. There is more commercial EveninQ & W eekend Afi^:>ointrnenti plumbing & heafing needs. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) number, which .is 184 len. You can get a fixed-rate mortgage for 9 percent or creasing. But you should discard the normal rules of In-House Computers Hauling, Backhoe Work. WEIGLE'S PAINTING CO. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Someone Something you've been wanting to ac­ real estate in many places than there are businesses to use A reducing the price after several months. It makes no 646-S602 Senring Manchester for 25 Years Quality work at a even less. Coming out of a depressed markeL there are a iL For the foreseeable future, say experts in that field, 935 Main St. Courtyard. Manchester Any Job Considered. sense to have held firm on price when no one was 646-3120 reasonable price! LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE lot of bargains.” commercial real estate is no place to invest your money. Call 643-9996 Interior & Exterior In short, conditions are tight for those who want to THOMAS MACHUGA, Free Estimates buy a home. The selection is greaL the prices are low, Call Brian Weigle CPA, CLU FRENCH'S LAWN & TREE SERVICE ROOFING/ NOTICE hnd favorable financing is available. • Tax Return Preparation it r>ow accepting mowing aocountt 645-8912 PUBUC HEARING for thit lawn season. SIDING ; It’s too early for anyone to say that the depression in • Financial Planning • Lawn Cut A Trim FY 1991/92 RECOMMENDED BUDGET OF THE G EN ER A L M ANAGER the housing market is really pasL yet you can’t credit the • Personal and Business # Formal Hedge Trimming Times still allow for dreams WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3,1991 • Prompt, Prolessional Service • Trees A Shrubs Ranted LIONEL COTE VILUGE PAINTERS 8:00 P,M upturn to either the spring season or lower mortgage By BARBARA MAYER me, and I was able to buy lumber from him at a gOod • Pruning • Spot Soeding • Fertilizer rates, says another realtor. Ceil Baring-Gould, a broker rented during the construction period were sold before 645-6883 • Vegetable Gardens Roto-Tiled ROOFING A SIDING Interior/Exterior WADELL SCHOOL AUDITORIUM The Associated Press price. I also bought quite a bit of lumber when a local the new one was completed. tree Written Setlmatee FY 1991/92 Recommended Budget Summary with Hotdihan-Lawrence Realty Centers in Westchester Lower Ratee lorSeniort •30 Years Experience Free Estimafes yard went out of business.” Morris, editor of Home Mechanix magazine, is an ex­ 645-1312 County, just north of New York City. People are tired of Delays, extra expense and fractious woikers: That’s •Fully Insured Senior Citizen Discount Although they were disappointed not to move into the perienced carpenter. He wanted to manage the job him­ Expended Adopted Estimated Recommended waiting, she says. They are bored with the recession and the usual scenario when you’re involved in construction house by Dec. 18 — Karen’s birthday — progress has •License # 506737 FUND FY1989/90 FY1990/91 FY1990/91 FY1991/92 self, not only to save money but also as the fulfillment of MISCELLANEOUS Spring Cleanup, Dethatching, 872-7782 have concluded life has to go on. of a custom house. been swifter than the normal six months which a custom 646-9564 General Fund 73,548.436 a long-held desire to build his own house. Lawn Mowing, Edging, Hedge 76,641.929 78,090,565 60,659,115 The rejwrts of healthier markets come from all regions Bmlding in a down economy can change the script, ac­ house of this size usually takes. SERVICES Data Processing Trimming, Light Trucking, Etc. MARTY MAHSSON 404,188 484,312 474,633 636,846 of the nation. In some parts of the country, home prices cording to Michael and Karen Morris, whose new house “Ordinarily, contractors have several jobs going and “What made it possible is we weren’t building far Professional Equipment RICK BURNEH Water Fund 6,254,517 6,594,750 6,577,445 on their way back up have reached the level they attained Painting Interior/Exterior 6,409,246 in Ossining. N.Y., is nearing completion after three and a bounce their workers back and forth. I got people to away from our home base,” says Karen Morris, a teacher ODD JOBS Dependable ROOFING A SIDING Sewer Fund 2,622,681 3,839,950 3,712,681 4.087,251 in the mid-1980s, when it was commonly believed that half months of construction. Wallpapering come and stay until they finished,” says Morris. who works nearby and came to the site every day before Trucking, 25 Years Experience Town Fire Dist 5,495,135 5,920,333 5,905,963 6.390,041 buying a home was an investment certain to pay off. Morris, who acted as his own contractor for the He was able to negotiate better terms with the ex­ and after school. “As soon as the telephone pole went up, Ray Haidy 646-7973 30 Years ^perience Home Repairs. Fully Insured Parking Dist 153,002 128,990 128,990 132,420 “I had a house on the market since last fall,” said a 3,000-square-foot cedar contemporary of modified tim­ cavator and to hire skilled carpenters who traveled 100 we got a phone so we could call and the workmen could Call for tree estimates References, Insured New York broker. “There was no action on iL no interest Sanitation Fund 0 3,766,538 3,347,619 3,394,575 ber frame construction, summarizes some of the ways miles from a home base in eastern Long Island. reach us.” You name it ~ We do it. 649-4431 shown at all, for six months. On one recent Sunday, four 646-6598 ★ ★ ★ TOTALS*** 88,477.959 97,376,802 98,237,916 101,709,494 they saved money and time. The Morrises have three adolescent children, and a The Morrises got a contractor’s estimate of $360,(X)0 Free Estimates ELDER CARE families looked at i t” “When we were pouring the foundation in November, need for more space motivated them to move from their Many such stories are being told. A house, on the to build the house. Insured NURSE'S-AIDE G.L McHUGH PAINTING the price of concrete was $10 a yard less than it had been old house in Ossining, a Westchester County suburb of “I started working on the numbers, factoring in my Interior/Exterior Painting market for months, suddenly 'sells, as buyers conclude m August A guy from a lumber yard came to my site New York. Although the housing market in the county is Years of experience TOWN OF MANCHESTER, CONNECTICUT " The continuing cost increases associated with maintaining own efftHts and prices I knew I could geL and was able 643-0304 WATERPROOFING Wallpapering - Paper removal mortgage rates and values are attractive. (Brokers say with a price list and asked for an opportunity to sell to down severely, both their former house and one they Care for Elderly Ceilings repaired and replaced GENERAL MANAGER basic educational services. < to Iwing the cost down to $260,000,” says Morris. Excellent references WET BASEMENTS? Senring Home Owners East ot the TO: BO ARD O F DIRECTORS - An inflation rate for health benefits for employees and retirees Let A Specialist River Since 1975 FROM: Richard J. Sartor, General Manager more than four times greater than the overall cost of living Call Hatchways, foundation cracks, DATE: March 25,1991 Do Itl Call today for your estimate inflation rate. 2 742-6402 sump pumps, tile lines, gravity SUBJECT: Recommended Budget for Fiscal Year 1991/92 feeds, and dry wells. Also damp­ 643-9321 Each of these factors significantly Influenced this Budget, negating R £.\L ESTATE the opportunity for expanded or new seivices and generally TREE SERVICE/ ness proffing of concrete walls Attached is my Recommended Budget for all governmental funds 985 Mam Street O H for the Fiscal Year July 1, 1991 through June 30, 1992. This creating a fiscally conservative budget atmosphere. r - PRUNING MASONRY and floors. Chimney clean outs, Manchester. CT 06040 Budget is significantly impacted by the budget difficulties confront­ As you know, I have recommended that the Board of Education stone walls, and concrete repairs. S ^ ing the State of Connecticut as well as the economic downturn receive full funding as requested by the Board of Education COfilE TO THE IPEDPLG PLACE (203) 647-8000 HAWKES TREE SERVICE HELPING PEOPLE occurring in the New England area, which has numerous reper­ > m ROMAN SPIEWAK Over 40 years experienced. Sen­ subsequent to its $790,565 reduction to the Superintendent of Bucket, truck & chipper. cussions on the economic stability of this community. Revenue H o ior dtizen discounts. satisfy thdr needs Schools' budget proposal. I am convinced that additional reduc­ Stump removal. Free Mason Contractor projections from mostsources, both State and Local, are decreas­ tions to the school budget would affect basic education program­ estimates. Special and wants...that's ing while certain fixed expenditures, such as pension costs, health CO Brick-Stone-Block Albert Zuccaro ming and the overall quality of education In our schools. Moreover, O consideration (or elderly and what want ads are benefits, and contracturally mandated salaries are increasing at the uncertainty regarding continued State grant support (or man­ OPTIONS 6ALOREIII 2 < New-Repairs-Restoration Waterproofing levels well above the consumer price index. The recommended handicapped dated activities such as education to toe blind; health, welfare and $54,S00-$75,900 all about General Fund Budget for Fiscal Year 91/92 recognizes the difficult 647-7553 transportation services to private schools; and my inability to iBCBe/pLXchase, rent or buy Ihee© H H 646-4134 646-3361 economic times facing us all and limits the Budget Inaease to 5.24 Include any education related capital projects in toe proposed 1 or 2 bedroom Ranch or m I percent, or an increase of $4,017,186 over the current year Adopted'Budget. capital reserve contribution influenced my decision to recommend Townhouse units w/privgte en­ 0 m full fuRding for toe Board ot Education. It is my position that should trances. lovely co u rl^ A applF The Recommended Budget increase Is consistent with the Board toe school system need additional funds to continue mandated or onces & morel Convafiient to LEGAL NOTICES 76 MACHINERT Ac SB TA O aA LE S 91 CARS FOR SALE of Directors’ January 1991 Budget Policy Resolution, which di­ desired programs or to make capital Improvements, that such aHI 1 rected the General Manager to present a budget with expenditure funds should be redirected from within their adopted budget and o ^ ______TOOLS______increases not to exceed 6 percent over the current year, A& shown INVITATION TO BID FISHERMEN'S-Tag Sale. not be supplemented by mid-year appropriations from the General n O Variety of new and in the attached Expenditure Summary, the recommended in­ Fund or other revenue sources. LEASE/PURCHASE POSSIBLEIII The Manchester Public MACHINISTS-Tools. crease for all non-education related functions. Including fixed cost, o used fishing and marine BOB RILEY This same conservative budget philosophy has been employed in $59,900-$79,9(» Schools solicits bids for Mysatoyo 6* dial debt service, and capital Improvements, is minimal at$154,718 or equipment. Also some OLDSMOBILEA/OLKSWAGEN reviewing and recommending a Fire District Budget for fiscal year FULL BASEMENTS - Just one of the TYPEWRITERS AND BUSI­ calipers $30. ’ Last- .5 percent. The recommended Increase tor all education functions 2 CD Household, Sound and 91/92. The Recommended Budget of $6,390,041 is a 7.9 percent special features of these 1 or 2 NESS MACHINES SERVICE word dial indicator at­ 259 ADAMS ST., MANCHESTER is $3,862,468 or 8.39 percent, and represents 96 percent of the m CD tachments $30. 649- Photo Items. Saturday, increase over toe current year adopted budget. The primary bedroom units w/woll-to-wall for the 1991-1992 school entire recommended increase to the General Fund Budget, carpeting, appllanced eat-in year. Sealed bids will be 1794. March 30th, 9am-3pm. 649-1749 account generating this Increase is health benefits, with a 24 P O in order to comply with other aspects of the Board's January 1991 kitchens, private entrances. CaJ received until A pril 4, 1991, F 371 Middle Tpke. West, percent overall increase In self-insured and premium base medi­ Budget Resolution while maInNnIng current levels of service tor to d o y l 2:00 p.m., at which time they Manchester.______1985VWJetta. cal insurance cos! for employees and retirees. The mill rate Police and Fire, continuing data processing improvements, and required to support the Fire Budget Is 3.18 mills, while the tax levy will be publicly opened. The 8 6 PETS e SUPPLIES 61 CARS POR SALE $3,995 mS >f. right is reserved to reject any sidewalk and road repair programs, it has been necessary to required to support toe Budget Is $5,359,610 or 10.9 percent over OWNER IS ANXIOUSIII reduce or curtail certain services, eliminate requests from depart­ and all bids. Specifications the current year levy. As with toe General Fund Budget, the $59,900 DOBERMAN-10 Months 1979 OLDSMOBILE-Delta 1987 Olds Clera ments tor new service offerings, and to reduce staff by seven percentage Increase and the recommended tax levy exceeds the and bid forms may be secured old with papers. Good 86 Rcwale. Mint condi­ Make an offer on this 4 room at the Business Office, 45 $4,995 authorized positions and keep four positions vacant through fiscal increase in expenditures due to other revenues, notably State 3 3 > natured. Needs good year 1991/92. One area of the Budget which has been substan­ R cn ch c o t k Io in it wfth GARAGEI North School Street, tion. $2000/b*st offer. grants and the surplus fund balance (or reappropriation having home and companion- decreased. Wdl-to-wdI caqDeting, pool and Manchester, CT. Must seel 742-6188. 1987 Dodge Pickup tially impacted is the recommerxlation for transfer to Reserve to ship. $200. 649-6544. support capital improvement projects and the purchase of equip­ tennis nearbyl This is a unique 064-03 CHEVROLET-1986 $5,995 The Enterprise Fund Budgets-Water, Sower, and Sanitation, opportunity for those who dorel ment. The Budget recommends no appropriation from the General have all been provided to you and reviewed previous to delivery of FREE DOG-Sheltie-Collie, Celebrity. 4 Door. Fund, resulting in a decrease of $870,086 from the current year Close to tennis and restaurants INVITATION TO BID 8 years old needs a Loaded. Runs great. 1991 Olds Calais this Budget document Those Budgets, while not directly related to to o l budget. Any funds recommended to be used for capital Improve­ mill rate calculations and tax Impacts, were prepared with toe Sealed bids will be received in loving family. Please Asking $3350. 643- ment projects for the next fiscal year result from available grant $9,995 same strict guidelines that were applied to Budgets for tax sup­ the General Services' office, call 645-0070. 8744. funds or funds previously allocated to projects which have not KITE FLYING TIMEIII F ported Town services. As a result the Sanitation Fund and Water $72,900-$61,1(» 41 Center Street, Manchester. CORVETTE-1978. $5800/ Many Others required the full appropriation. It should be noted that with regard Fund Budgets have been reduced by 9.9 percent and 2.8 percent CT until 11:00 a.m. on the to staff reductions, both line and management positions have been Com esighottheselovely 1 or2 Best offer. Loaded. To Choose From respectively from the current y e » adopted budget, while the bedroom Ranch condos w/ date shown below for the fol­ 87 MISC. FOR SALE ' eliminated. Hopefully all such staff reductions will be aocom- Sewer Fund Is recommended for a 6.4 percent Increase due lowing: Clean interior. opplcnced kitchens, wo#-h>wal plished through retirements, reassignment of existing staff, antici­ entirely to toe assumption of additional debt service on the newly April 10,1991 Aluminum wheels. 646- carpeting, spacious and bright COOK-Booklets, advertis­ 7959. ,.______CARDINAL pated attrition, or maintenance of current vacancies. upgraded and expanded wastewater treatment plant. Caron Replacement Caps ing very old sets. From This recommended General Fund Budget requires a mill rate ol room s.pool.tennisi LeasSe/pur- April 16,1991 ^ $65 up. 649-4339. BUICK, INC. 23.38 based on a projected 98.5 percent tax collection rate and an The development of this Budget has required a comprehensive chase possiblel review of all existing programs and services presently offered by Automotive Parts Schaller 1982 Chevy CoiTKVO 12,895 increase in the value of a taxable mill from $900,422 to $2,376,115, 1982Datsun200SX 12,895 April 16,1991 Quality based upon the revaluation of all real property as of the Grand List toe Town. To present a General Fund Budget, excluding education LAWN-Mower, 20’ 3HP. 1983BulckElec1io K850 related costs, which has virtually no growth requires certain ONE FLOOR EASEIII Globe Turn-Out Gear & Ser­ 1986 Ford Bionco 4X4 110,980 dated October 1.1990. The property lax levy increase required to Pre-Owned Autos sacrifices In terms of service delh/ew as well as maintenance ot $134,900 ves Bunker Boots $50. Bicycle, 10 speed. l986ChevyCcxTXjfo 14,995 support this Budget is $5,713,986 or 11,34 percent over the (Fire Dept.) Both in good condition, Value Priced 1987 Chevy CelebttlySed 15A80 our capital equipment These reductions, while necessary during Make an appointment to see 1987 O ld i Delta 88 Brougham 17,280 current year levy. This percentage Increase is necessary due to $40. Call 649-8314. USED CAR BEST BUYS! the substantial loss ol non-tax revenues. As shown In the attached difficult economic times, can result In major expenditures to the frUs 3 bedroom Ranch hom e wfth The Town ol Manchester is an t987 Pontioc 6000 Sed 16495 Town In future years. Reductions in staff require remaining em­ flreplaced living room , country equal opportunity employer, F 19SSCIwv.Cwalw $3,995 l987Buicl(Ftark7Vvenue 110,286 Revenue Summevy, reductions In revenue Include $347,000 In 1987 Buck Skykxk 15,490 building fees, $1,359,172 in non-educafion related State grants, ployees to become more efficient in their delivery of existing kitchen, newer carpeting, full arid requires an affirmative ac­ TEDDY BEARS-A fine Auto, A/C, Uke New l9B8lk>ntlacFirebkdShatpl 17,980 services, but negates the ability to substantially expand upon tion policy for all of its Con­ 1988 Buick Skyhowk Sed 15,280 and $1,055,000 in fund balance available for reappropriation as an basement ready for fom ly room! collection. Some M Ford F-150 4x4 $7,800 those services which are currently offered. Difficult cholcos have tractors and Vendors as a 1988 Pontiac Bonnevde 18,495 alternative to taxation. These revenue reductions total jointed. About fifteen. 1988 Pontiac Troni Am 19,890 had to be made by me as well as department and division heads condition of doing business V6,4-spd,AMriiyi $2,761,172, which represents a substantial portion of the addi­ $3-$6 Each. 649-4783. 1989 Buick Skyhowk C p e 16,980 tional tax levy required In fiscal year 1091/92. in balancing toe distribution of scarce resources. The administra­ OWNERS ARE READY TO GOIII with the Town, as per Federal 1987 Plymouth Voyagor $8,900 1989 Jeep Wrangler 4X4 18,995 tion will over the course ot too next month bo presenting the details $144,500 order 11246. 1989 B iick Regal C p e 19,896 As stated previously, this Recommended Budget was influenced Auto, A/C, 7 Passenger 1989 Honda Acc o rd LXI 112,680 of this Budget during Budget Workshops. The full text of too A tcm ly affair in this South Wind­ by a number ol factors, which in combination, presented the B id forms, plans and 1987HottdaPraluda $8,700 1989 Chevy Celebrity 18,490 Budget is contained in the enclosed Budget document, which Is sor home with family room, 3 specifications are available at END ROLLS 1989 Buick Century Sed 19,380 challenge of maintaining municipal services at toe current level but available to toe public (or Inspection at the Ubrary Town Clerk's 5 Speed, A/C, Sunroof with fewer personnel and less non-tax revenues. Among toe bedrooms, flreplaced IvJng room, the General Services' office. 2 7 1/2‘ w idth- ‘ 1.00 81 Adams Street Office, and too General Manager's Office, cirrtost 1/2 acre oom erbf-ranced 1987 AcuraUgand Sad. $11,900 factors affecting this Budget are: Town of Manchester, 13‘ width-50f= Manchester The Public Hearing regarding toe General Manager's Recom­ M Newer vkiyfskJng, new Wtchen- Connecticut Aluminum Sheets 4/’ 5.00 V-6, Auto, Loaded, Sunroof - An uncertain economic climate affecting construction activities mended Budget Is scheduled tor April 3.1991 at Waddell School ftilyapplcrtcedl Newiprint endroli can b« picked Richard J. Sartor, up at the Manchefter HenJd 1987 Chevy CavalarZ-24 $9,995 649-4571 and real growth in the Grand List. It is presently scheduled (or the Board to adopt too Budget at a General Manager ONLY before Jl a/n. M ortdoY - Difficulties with toe State budge process with associated pro­ meeting to be held on May 1.1991.1 along with Town sfaff am through ThL/tdoy. V-6,5 Spaed, AAl, Red INGROUND POOU 067-03 93 CAMPERS St posed State grant revenue reductions for municipalities. available to work closely with the Board of Directors to answer any 1987 AcuraLagand Sad. $13,900 questions regarding the details of the Budget and to assist the $149,777 TRAILERS - The affects of toe revaluation and toe burden shift from com­ 1 V-6, Aulo, Suntool, Loaded Board In toe difficult Budget dollboraflons which they face In too This 7 room Cope was corrpletely mercial and personal property to residential property. month ahead. rem odeled in 1989 and offers LEGAL NOTICE 1987 Honda Accord Ua $8,900 TOWN OF BOLTON 1986-35’ Travel Trailer. - TheJcinuary 1991 Budget Resolution unanimously adopted by front to bock IMng room, coun­ Auto, A/C Full Power Rear bedroom, full Richard J. Sartor, At the March 21, 1991 meeting ol the Bolton Zoning Board of toe Board ol Directors which limited expenditure increases and try kitchen, family room, fiist floor 1987 Chav. Camaro LT $6,900 bath, fully sauippad required staff reductions. General Manager b e d ro o m a n d lo w e r le v e l d e n . Appeals, the following decision was rendered: wfth awnings. V8, Auto, T-Top, Loaded . Like newl 1, Approved application of Ann Wbish for the YW CA 1150 Hardly usedi $7900. ~ The continuing burden of State mandates on municipalities, Tolland Turnpite, Bolton, for a 9 s.f. sign to be plaw d no 1988 Chevy Cortiea Sad. $6,800 455-9781. many ol which must be met with no or reduced Stale financial support 050-03 THE COUNTRY UFEIII closer than 10 toet to the edge of the pavement, (or the Day V-6, Auto, A/C, Power Group $149,900 Care Center at St. George's Episcopal Church, 1150 Tolland N ew er 7-8 room ^ L e v e l o n over Turnpike, Bolton. 19U Honda Accord U l $9,900 9 S AUTO SERVICES Auto, A/C, Full Power 1 /2 acre with carhedral ceiling Dated at Bolton, Connecticut, this 22nd day ol March, 1991. FREE- EXPENDITURE SUM M ARY w/skylight, slidens out to patio, 2 19U Mercury Cougar $7,995 Adopted Recommended $ % Morris Silverstein, Acting Chairman JUNK CAR b ed ro o m s, 2 c o r g a ra g e under. V-6, Auto, Ful Power, AC 1990/91 1991/92 Increase Increaee Bolton Zoning Board of /Appeals REMOVAL Lovely flreplaced farnily room. 30,790,637 +164,718 070-03 1989 Acura Legend L8 $21,900 Call Parker St. Non-Education 30,625,919 +0.5% L o u n d y ro om to o l Coupe, 5 Speed, Airbag, Loaded Used Auto Paris Education 46,016,010 40,676,478 +3,862,466 +8.39% 649-3391 TOWN OF M ANCHESTER 1989 Honda Prelude SI $12,700 ★ * *TOTALS* * * 76,641,929 80,659,115 4,017,186 +5.24% LOOKING FOR SECLUSION??? LE G A L NOTICE 5 Speed, Loaded, Red JUNK CARS-Will pay $5 $174,900 The Planning and Zoning Commission will hold a public hear­ Com e see this private yet con­ 1989 Acura UgendLS $17,900 to tow your car. Cali ing on Monday, April 1, 1991 at 7:00 P.M. in the Hearing Joey. 528-1990. Need venient tollt-Level with 3 bed­ Room, Lincoln Center, 494 Main Street, Manchester, Connec­ Sedan, V-6, Auto, Air Bag, Leather title. G E N E R A L FUND REVENUE SUM M ARY rooms, 2 full baths, family room, ticut to hoar and consider the following petitions: 1990 Subaru LegMy Sdn. $11,900 Adopted Estimated . $ washer/dryer, new kltchwi, new % ro o f, n e w d riv e w a y . G a r a g e 8t TOWN O F M AN CH ESTER — INLAND W ETLANDS BOUND­ Auto, A/C, Loaded 08 WANTED TO BUT/ Source 1990/91 1991/92 Increase Increase AR Y AM ENDM ENT r - 263 O LCO TT STREET (T-148) — Ap­ capcxtl lJC^©V wooded yo d tool 1990 Acura Integra L8 . $1S;900 ______TRADE______Property Taxes 50,393,391 56,107,377 +5,713,986 +11.34% plication to amend the Inland wetlands boundaries as shown on the Town Inland Vtfetland and Watercourses map for the 5 Speed, A/C, Loaded Finos, Licenses, DEUCES ARE WIIDHI above address. We buy dean, late model used Services 6 Rents 2,080,734 1,716,545 -364,189 -17,5% $179,900 2,449,828 -1.359.172 At this hearing Interested persons may be heard and written SCHALLER cars and trucks. Top prices Non-Ed State 6 Fed 3,009.000 -35.68% Beautiful custom beW 7 ro a n h o m e communications received. A copy of this petition is in the Town paid. Other Revenue 1,629.770 1,476,100 -153,670 -9.42% with 6 panel doors throughout, 2 Clerk's office and may be inspected during business hours. ACURA Mr. Duff - Carter Chevrolet Education Related 17,674,034 18,909,265 +1,235,231 +6.99% fireplaces, 2 cor garage, 2 ouf- buidhos already w reckxi 2 oaesl Planning and Zoning Commission 345 CENTER STREET 1229 Main Street Use of Surplus 1.055.000 0 -1,055,000 .. Marion Taggart, Secretary Bring the hotsesl Security system In MANCHESTER Manchester, CT ★ ★ ★ TOTALS*** 76,641,929 80,659,115 4,017,186 +5.24% p lo c e l •049-03 6 4 7 -7 0 7 7 646-6464 i 1 16—MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, March 28,1991 MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, March 28,1991—^17 Report says banks serve Former bank regulator sets RE/MAX east of the river lower-income population consulting business course 297 East Center Street Howard B. Brown, former Con­ ter on June 14 through the 16. will establish a data base and WASHINGTON (AP) — New govcmmenl ratings of “We have demonstrable credit problems in low- and Manchester, CT 06040 banks’ willingness to lend to poor people indicate that necticut commissioner of the Friday, June 14, will be devoted to retrieval system which will be use­ moderate-income neighborhoods across the country. The ful to the financial institutions. nearly nine in 10 institutions do at least a satisfactory Banking Department, announced commercial properties and will at­ (203) 647-1419 job. study mdicates there are still great gaps in the enfevee- this week that he has establishing tract investors nationwide. On Brown said. This will help target ment” of the act, said Lewis, legislative directw of the markets of ready, willing, and able But community activists contend that the statistics, an organization whose purpose Saturday and Sunday, the banks Association of Community Organizations for Reform will be to address the mounting will display residential properties, buyers. compiled by a private economist from regulators’ Now. records, reveal more about examiners’ lax evaluation foreclosure and abandoned proper­ and a heavy turnout of first-time “I think the 8 percent in the outstanding category is the ties held by Connecticut and New home buyers is expected. “One of the problems,” Brown methods than about banks’ actual performance. most meaningful number,” said Allen Fishbein, general A little-known provision of the 1989 savings and loan England area banks. “I’m really excited about this said, “is that bankers do not have counsel of the Center for Community Change, a national Brown now is the managing venture,” Brown stated, “because real estate marketing expertise. bailout law required regutetors, starting last July, to make non-profit groiq) that advises community organizations. M partner of Bank Owned Real Es­ we can do some creative things in Banks make loans — they don’t banks’ community lending perframance public. Until “Outstanding means the institutions are tatring affirm­ then, the ratings of individual banks were considered a tate Expos, a compiany made up of the private sector which should traditionally sell properties. Their A t r f ative steps to invest in their community. It’s distressing Barbara Weinberg % % six general partners with ex­ brokers are already dealing with a Linda Brown r f l augment the governmental ap­ Rich Bums Diane Comollo private matter between the regulators and the institutions. that there aren’t more institutions getting higher ratings,” Rich Kohler Alex Elgner Terry Holland Pat Nr Debbie O m Caroline Stolgltit Baibera Brzezintkl A perience in both commercial and proach, which so far has not glut on the market and really don’t The provision amended the Community Reinvestment he said. residential properties, systems worked very well in moving the look forward to the banks adding Act of 1977, which was aimed at discouraging banks • Thomas, however, said the lack of banks rated in the management, banking, and properties. In essence, we can be to the saturation.” from red-lining — refusing to lend to — people and busi­ top category probably says more about the difficulty in nesses in low-income neighborhoods. finance. The other partners in the as flexible and creative as neces­ A well-planned exposition with completing the paperwork needed to satisfy examiners venture are Elsie G. Kelly, Peter C. sary in responding to the problems a buyer pre-qualification com­ f Community activists who backed the amendment, of­ rather than banks’ actual lending performance. fered by Democratic Reps. Henry B. Gonzalez of Texas Quinn, Ed T. Ross, Dawn Roberts, of the industry.” ponent will aid tremendously in b “Banks are doing a good job of meeting their com­ Stan Weinberg i t Rosalie Brunetd m and Joseph P. Kennedy of Massachusetts, said making and Kieran Quinn. The initial approach will be to relieving the mounting problem of Valerie Ctrase FeXx DuVerger Jimmy Van SIcklln Ron Fournier Sharon Miller Ellen N Noreen Reilly Jim Malloy Jene Hendricks munity needs, but they are not doing a good job of telling The group will hold its first ex­ bring together the banks, the inves­ real estate sitting on the books of the ratings public would encourage regulators to be their story,” he said. A position ^t the Hartford Civic Cen­ tors, and the public from which we our banks,“ Brown added. tougher. Banks that are rated poorly face no immediate sanc­ THE RE/MAX BALLOa I/CDAI/SAI Since the change, examiners hl^e evaluated around tions from regulators, but they sometimes run into 1,700 of the nation’s 12,800 banks. I^gures released trouble later getting permission when they seek approval W ArcHfVRDm Lsm uTm Gnm opBim .-.m om *1xw55CPjlSMe*":S*S*«':Wer;eeelV.5#1 ‘EnvEftfm m Afi Tuesday by Kenneth H. Thomas, a Miami-based consult­ WSiSm to open a new branch or merger with another bank. mETOLLANDUm CALL t)$A T$/S-m $i P O n r o n r A ? pC/f ant who helps banks improve their community lending It is difficult to determine from past compilations record, gave 89 percent of the banks a satisfactory or bet­ whether regulators are getting tougher. Under the old ter rating. system, examiners used five rating categories, rather than fy ■ Thomas’ report, based on statistics compiled by the four. Federal Reserve, Office of the Comptroller of the Cur­ From January 1988 through June 1989, the Office of rency and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., showed NEED A PLACE the Comptroller of the Currency, for instance, ranked 8.9 that 8 percent received a rating of “outstanding” and 80.7 percent of the banks examined in the bottom three percent were judged “satisfactory.” categories. In the latest ratings published by Thomas, the An additional 10.8 percent were categorized as “needs $159,900 office listed 16J jxjrcent as less than satisfactory. $59,900 $120,000 $129,900 Southbound owner sadly Brand new family rm.. 3 plus $179,900 $222,900 $289,900 $65,000 improvement” and only 0.5 percent were in “substantial The Federal Reserve, in the latest period, rated 9.8 per­ B ea co n Hills - now ca rp e t­ Lake Chaffee 55' water­ New kitchen, 3 BRs, fire­ leaves 4 BR Custom C a p e . Bris central location in Ver­ 2.300 sq. ft. Historic hom e in 4 Br. Coloolal Imrrxxulate Uke rmw, 4 BR. 2 1/2 both, 1-2 BR C o n d o clo se to 1-84. noncompliance.” cent of the banks as less than satisfactory, compared with ing, pool & morel front. Year round Ranch. place. kxge lot. garage. Large YardI non. Stons. 2 Car garage 1 1/2B. Inside. Treed lot. fljly tondMoped, krtmoc. Call Rich Burns Terry 228-9757 C a l Rosalie 228-1141 Ask tor VaL 647-1763 Jane 659-4472 C a l Vat 647-1763 “The high ratings indicate banks are doing a good job 9 percent in the first half of 1990. Val 647-1763 C al Barbara Weinberg C a l Undo 6!47-8691 in meeting the credit needs of their community,” said Activists complain that the agencies have adopted a Virginia Stafford of the American Bankers Association hodgepodge of procedures for releasing the data. of America. “Getting access to what Congress wanted to be public­ However, community activist Chris Lewis, said, “Ob­ ly available has been a problem. ... It’s not easy,” said ^ m in ] viously the regulators’ ratings nedd improvement.” Michelle Maier, an attorney with Consumer’s Union.

1122,700 $228,000 State’s home sales not yet climbing $62,000 $85,900 Storybook house with $134,900 $162,000 $184,900 Gtostonbury 2000 sq. ft., 4 $295,000 One bedroom unit with Buy or trad e, 2 BR, 1 1/2 d ream y totertor. S e e It 6i fax A g re at starter 3 Br. Ranch $149,900 Newer duplex with great Privacy In Cont. Cope on BR. 2 bath. 2 car, great Hb. C o l. on 6.4 a c . w/poTKi WATERBURY (AP) — The Februiuy over the previous month. CALL YOUR OWNA appliance*. both unit w/botement. In lovel LgeLRwIthFP Farm house. 5 BR rental Income. 4-f w oo ded a c e *. view . 8i tennis court reported. The increased sales were Ca» Rich KoNor 872-8509 C a l Pat657-8364 Jane oo9-es72 Barbara w. C o s Carom e 04t>8 IB2 c,'of ftosa«ez^a-f I4i Can Elen 4ZV-//8B ctm jrm 047-1419 residential real estate market in Con­ In the Northeast, home sales were attributed to the end of Persian Gulf C a l a en 429-7788 necticut is still in a slump, but up 8.7 percent in February over hostilities, relatively low mortgage Waterbury has shown a significant Jamiary, the national trade group rates and falling home prices. increase in home sales, figures show. o n According to the Connecticut What things cost then and now J3 r - Department of Revenue Services, 2,566 residences were sold Prices for housing and a new car in 1980 vs. a decade LET US HELP!! > m later in 1990. $168,000 $187,900 statewide in February, down 16 per­ $15,403 $63,500 $89,900 $297,000 $123,900 $149,900 New Listingl 4 BR, 1st Floor Large 3BR/2 Bath home. 1/ $236,700 z l Investor*-Save, save, tove. Two bedroom, great loca­ $135,000 cent from the 3,073 sold in February $97,000 East Hartford. Nice Cape 3 level living In South Wltxi- Family room, porch. Irr>- G P o o l 3 or 4 BR U&R Delight 2 FPS a Exciting custom Cope. 4 Package deal on two units. tion, Pool. Sellef* Motivated 3-4 Br. C a p e extra larg e lot. O CO 1990. Sales were also down 17 per­ Remodeled Inside & out. sor. 2 full baths, huge yard r r a c . C a l Deb Owens 646-2046 g reat view Bts. p ka D en 8i FP. Can Rich Kohler 872-8509 Rich Burns C d l Jim 647-1419 Terry 228-9757 C a l Vat 647-1763 C o f Barbara Weirbetg C a lStan z -< cent from the 3,116 sold in January. C

$67,500 VE1ESANSI $345,000 DO > Get in tune with the cycle $650 monthly buys a 2Br. $99,500 $124,500 $139,900 You rrxry quaRfy for a VA. $169,900 $192,000 $249,900 Spotfcllrrg contem porary C o n d o Townhouse, 2 BR. Rec Rm. Great buy 3/4 BO. Cape Manchester Cope 3 BR- m ortgage of up to Horse form w/new bam ■ 3 Br. Sparkler 2 Fps. fen ced Brick custom Ranch oft Colonial 9 pka roorre a NEW YORK (AP) — Some at the existing high prices, knowing medical bills may force them to sell C a l Deb O w ens 646-2046 W/D newly Painted. 2Ba, 1 Car Gar. Level yard $184/XX)I quaint remod. home yard Porter. I-G Pool beoutyl C a l Jimmy647-1419 C a l Blen 429-7788 C a l Barbara Weinberg C a l Sharon 6468566 people see it as a diatx>lical aspect that in the coming down-cycle they stock. Eves. Cal Carolne 6458162 C a l Pat 657-8364 C a l Jane 659-4472 C al Barbara W. will be able to buy similar assets for of the economy, but others see in it a These are unfortunate experien­ X benefactor of great blessings. much less. I ces, and to some extent they carmot It is the economic cycle, and if They have sufficient means to be anticipated. you choose to ignore its existence, take advantage .pf opportunities. as millions do, you may very well 'That is, they have funds in excess of But in millions of other cases, find yourself among those who con­ immediate needs. They do this by Americans who are sufficiently en­ sider it malevolent. living within their means when dowed with brain power and educa­ $154,900 AL. The simple fact is that the times are good. They’re in when op­ tion become victims rather than $101,900 $142,900 Just reducedi Views of $169,900 $195,000 $260,000 $349,000 2 BR. COndo with Garage New Utllngl Show* Ike new, Charming Cope 2FPS Lge. Prime location, comner- economic battle almost never is portunity knocks. beneficiaries. It happens to some of $66,900 $124,900 Htfd, gleaming oak floon. 2 Super duplex, recondi­ Glastonbury 3800 sq. ft. fought on level ground. Instead, the big names, as in real estate, and Mobile Home. High Manor & FP C a p e - M anchester exporrdable,' on l-r ocre. b ath. LR W FP.Im m aciJafo tioned. clo lB ld a . co n t. 5 BR. 3.S B a. 3 co r Terry 228-9757 Cf REALTORS and a prolesstonai If youVe been waiting tor tw light Wna to buy a home, now is certainly right 8tne Talk to a REALTOR cycles are risk-takers. They are in­ who subsoibes to this AssodaSon's strict Code of Ethics. helpyoullndm specialhoit».grealtaxb^atagioatpricea*ata^lntaB8^ $115,000 per a c re $129,900 dividualists; they are capable of $179,900 $64,900 Morrehester 5.61 Industrial U p d ated cu sto m 3 BR $159,900 $214,900 $289,900 $780,000 0 doing what the mass of people avoid Income producing newer Hfst floor end unit. CHFA/ land, g reat location. Will Ranch with tome owner- $149,900 6&6 Duplex - Manchester. Bolton: newly decorated, Brand Now In Cokjmbio Shoppkrg Center • Good doing. For a time, in fact, they might duplex. Cont. 3/4 Bd, 3 Ba. 2 cor. FHA approved. sub-dM de. flnanclngl 2Fdnrilly ALum Alded. 1.4 acre * & hvlaw opt. tovestment. even seem like fools. MANCHESTER BOARD OF REALTORS^ INC. C o f Deb Owens 646-2046 Jknmy 647-1419 C a l Rich Kohler 8728509 C a l Rosdle 228-1141 Jane 659-4472 Cal Ron 6498087 C a l Sharon MUer 646-5566 eve*. Noreen6460668 C a l Alex Elgner 6498159 They are far-sighted. At the tail 186 East Center Street • Manchester, Connecticut 06040 • (203)646-2450 • FAX 646-4343 ShtilSSTt end of an expansion cycle, for in- ' stance, they begin liquidating assets WE ARE WINNING AWARDS!! COME TO THE AWARD WINNERS FOR AWARD WINNING SERVICE!! 18—MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, March 28, 1991 MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, March 2§, 1991—19 Milestones NOBODY DOES Home sale tax becomes “In real estate, Sold IT BETTER agents for the numth. Chase placed second and Fbumier captur^ the 20 years of results 20th spot for January Production. seller’s rite of passage RE/MAX East of the River is one Manchester 643-4060 of 30 offices statewide, and ap- being IN SERVICEr WASHINGTON (AP) — The Internal Revenue Ser­ costs. proximately 1,800 offices and vice wants to know if you sold your home last year. Publication 523, free from the IRS, gives a complete 28,000 associates internationally. ™ H You must file a Form 2119 reporting the sale whether rundown on how to calculate and report the gain on the The company, whose name is begins with being East Hartford Enfield Manchester Vernon ■ Windsor you made a profit, took a loss or broke even. Depending sale of your home. Here, in condensed form, is how the derived from the phrase “real estate Plus 3800 Offices RELO Network on what you did with proceeds from the sale, you could process works: maximums,” is called by the most SERVICES face a hefty tax bite. You bought a home in 1984 for $85,(XX) and added a e s t a t e In general, any profit from the sale of your principal $5,(X)0 fireplace, resulting in an adjusted basis of recent issue of SUCCESS Magazine r e a l the company “poised to become the home is considei^ a capital gain and subject to taxation $90,000. You sold that home in June 19% for $125,(KX). a trusted friend.” like most other kinds of income. However, the law has number one real estate firm in Subtracting $8,000 of selling expenses nets a realization M America,” a spot it earned in Canada two big tax breaks for home-sellers, one blowing tax- of $117,000 on the sale. Subtracting the adjusted basis in 1987. free u-eatment of some of the profit if you are 55 or older, leaves a realized capital gain of $27,(XX). and the other offering some tax deferral for most other Go back to the $117,000 realization and subtract people. $1,(KX) for painting that qualified as fix-up costs. That Here are details: leaves an adjusted sales price of $116,(XX). A If you sold your home in 1990, tax on the entire profit must be deferred if you bought a new home costing at The new home you bought in July 1990 cost $108,000, f . least as much as what you sold the old one for. But you which is $8,(XX) less than the adjusted price of the old ^^^^^|||||| must buy and move into the new home within two years one. You owe tax on the smaller of the gain realized from — before or after — of the date you sold the old one. the old home ($27,000) or the amount by which the ad­ (Special rules benefit military personnel). justed price of the old home exceeds the cost of the new A IT. Did you pay less for the new home than you got for one ($8,000). Barbara Weinberg WHh the old one? Then you will have to pay tax now on part That means you report a $8,(XX) capital gain on Peggy Gregan of the gain. Schedule D. The $19,000 that is not taxed as 1990 in­ I If the sale of your home marked your first encounter come is subtracted from the $108,000 cost of your new I I Twelve associates of ERA Blanchard/Rossetto is ERA with capital gains, three definitions may be helpfiil: home, leaving an adjusted basis on that home of $89^00. I I Manchester’s RE/MAX East of the pleased to announce the appoitment Robert F. Blanchard, CELEBRATING BASIS: In general, this is the price you paid for the The process will be repeated when you sell the new CCIM old home. The figure can be adjusted over the years, home. River were touted in a recent of Peggy Gregan as sales manager BLANCHARD & ROSSEHO Connie Cbolnlere statewide awards ceremony at the of its Residential Division. Gregan OUR depending on what you do to the home. For example, ad­ If the price of the new home in the above example had Aqua TUrf in the Plantsville section assumes full responsibility for the ‘'e/t ding a room increases the basis. A tax-deductible unin­ been higher than the $116,0(X) adjusted sales price, taxa­ ^ of Southington. The Manchester of­ division, including agent recruit­ That's More Than Just A Slogan, sured casualty loss, such as a fire, lowers the basis. When tion on the entire capital gain would have been deferred. fice, established in 1988, is owned ment, training and marketing. She 20th YEAR you eventually sell your home, Ae higher the basis, the If you (or you spouse) were 55 or older on the date by Barbara Weinberg, Broker, and will continue her own listing and It's Our Way of Business! less taxable gain. you sold your old home, the first $125,0(X) of gain from Stanley Weinberg co-owner. sales duties. Peggy is a director of o f FIX-UP COSTS: Money spent for work done to make the sale is tax-free forever. However, this benefit is avail­ Mrs. Weinberg, active in local the Manchester Board of Realtors it easier to sell your home. The work must be done no able only once in your lifetime. And the property must real estate for 20 years, was awarded and t licensed Broker and appraiser. SOLID SERVICE more than 90 days before you sign a contact to sell and have been your principal home for at least three of the three limes during the evening for paid for within 30 days after the sale. These costs are last five years before the sale. 1990 production. Among 230 as­ Frank J.T. Strano CALL OR VISIT US AND considered when you calculate how much profit from the Taxation of the portion of any gain exceeding and sale is tax-deferred. $125,(X)0 may be deferred. sociates in RE/MAX of Connecticut, Denise Giansante, Sandra she finished in the top 10 for per­ Frank J.T. Strano, owner of ADJUSTED SALES PRICE: This is the price for These complexities should drive home one point: Wheaton, and Robin Fendley, all GETTHETYPEOF sonal production, qualifying for the Strano Real Estate in Manchester, SOLID RESULTS which you sell your old home, minus such expenses as Keep forever any records pertaining to the sale, expan­ Manchester residents, were three of o/t, prestigious ‘Top Ten” and “ 100 per­ was named Realtor of the Year by broker commissions and attorney fees, minus fix-up sion or purchase of a home. the 28 employees awarded the 1990 cent Club” awards — a feat that also the Manchester Board of Realtors. HELP YOU'D EXPECT Presidentid l^rformance Award at Paul J. Rossetto earns her recognition nationally as The award was presented by Thomas Cantone, president of the Fleet Bank. FROM A FRIEND... one of the highest producing sales Giansante, a graduate of New executives in North America. The Manchester Board, at a ceremony at W h a t ’ s in s to re Manchester Country Club. Hampshire College, has also at­ Weinbergs also received the coveted Here’s a quick lesson in what to a window. He is a director of the Manchester tended the University of New layers of glass. The airspaces are RE/MAX Golden C i^ Award for ask about when you shop for new Board of Realtors and of the Con­ Hampshire. She is president of Dling Air filtration: the lower the AF filled with argon gas to not only im­ recruiting the greatest number of ^ If fliT n - windows: number, the more efficient the win­ necticut Association of Realtors, and Junior High School Music Boosters. prove thermal insulation, but r^uce j sales executives during 1990. The R-value measures the insulat­ dow is at preventing air infiltration. was president of the Manchester Wheaton has attended North outside noise pencu-ation, too. Skip ing ability of the window. The I Other sales executives from the Board in 1986. He also is a past Texas State University. The National Wood Window and For more information on Super- office receiving awards for 1990 higher the R-value, the more it will Door Association notes three classes O I! chairman of the board’s Education Fendley is a graduate of the New MALLARD VIEW smart windows, call the company at keep warm air in your home. of windows: Class 20, 40 and 60. DO r- I production were Executive Club Committee and a member of the England School of Banking at Wil­ OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-4 1-800477-6808. Winner Caroline Stolgitis, and NEW RANCH and SALTBOX HOMESI U-values measure the overall heat Class 60 has the lower AF numbers. Personal and Fmance Committees. liams College. GLASTONBURY CONTEMPORARY Erijoy 1st floor living with the 2 BR, 2 bath BOLTON CAPE ! President’s Club Wirmers Linda Like new 4 BR. 2 1/2 bath hom e on se­ Uansfer through the window. The An alternative to the electric > m Strano is active in the Little The Presidential Performance Ranch home or3 BR. 11/2 bath living with Economically priced 3 BR. 1 1/2 bath Got all that? Weather Shield Inc. Brown, Valerie Chase, Diane cluded lot. Unique solarium adjoins gour­ the Soltbox. Att. Garoges from S143.900. hom e with new roof, septic an d water lower the U-value, the lower the blanket this winter is the Bed- H o League of Manchester, Men’s Slow Awards are given to employees who met kit. Too many amenities to namel Comollo, Anne Doremus, Felix Hurry - Only o tew left. North Main St. to pump. Private yard. 1 car garage. What flsoo heat transfer rate. of Medford, Wis., is now manufac­ warmer, a pad you place on top of Pitch Softball, the Manchester Elks, have distinguished themselves S300's. Union St. to Rossetto Drive. a pricell $154,900. turing a line of windows called Su- O CD DuVerger, Ronald Fournier, “We're Selling Houtetl" "Weie Seeing Houtetl" ■Were Seeing Houtetl" your mattress and sleep on. These and is a member of the Manchester through excellence in their profes­ Low-E glass: When sunlight persmart that keep your house z -< Sharon Miller, Pat Namerow, and sional performance. Employees iq) strikes ordinary glass, most of the units are more efficient than electric Historical Society. He appeared in warmer in the winter and cooler in blankets because they put all the Noreen Reilly. to the vice president level were r .7UJ-.V short wave energy passes through the Little Theatre of Manchester’s the summer. Why? Because they heat into the bed, rather than on top The Manchester office also got nominated, as were exempt and and is absorbed by the rugs, walls m I productions of 42nd Street and all have an AF so low it gets a Class 60 where it heads for the ceiling. 1 off to a running start for 1991 by non-exempt employees. Each win­ and furniture. This can cause fading 0 m the Way Home. In addition, he has rating. They are Low-E coated and The Bedwanner has a control box I capturing the number four spot in ner received a special President Per­ of fabrics. Low-E glass is coated served on the Manchester Transpor­ CALL THE PROFESSIONALS - FREE MARKETING EVALUATION have high R-valucs and low U- that lets you adjust the heat and it the RE/MAX of Connecticut Top 10 formance Award pm and a savings l w h with metal oxide and restricts the 1 tation and Fair Housing Commit­ JI values. comes in a variety of sizes. The for January. Of the state’s top 20 tees. bond. passage of heat energy in and out of Supersmart windows have three double-queen size is $55. n O O MATHER STREET o ^ GARRISON COLONIAL CHESTNUT STREET 5 RM Ranch with room tor expansion on 4 BR. 2 1/2 bath hom e on quiet cul-de- Over sized 4 BR C a p e with 24x14 LR, DR 2nd floor. Large Kitchen, updated utilities HOUSE sac. com pl. In law opt. with sep. enir. with hutch and large eat-ln kit. Priced to m CD and 2 car detached garage. Reasona­ Many updates. $200's. sellll $129,900. bly priced $118.000. P O r "Were Selling Houtetl" "We're Selling Houtetl" "We're Selling Houtetl" STRANO REAL ESTATE ZINSSER HUNTING? **Putting You 1st Is 2nd Nature To Us!” S I The Zinsser Agency Realty Co. i t n s ^ •**M*««>*t ^ 647-7653 AGENCY has what you are 395 North Main Straet Manchastar, Ct. 06040 33 > I ‘ y 299 Boston Turnpike 646-1511 looking for... Bolton, CT 06043 MARSHALL ROAD STATELY COLONIAL SPACIOUS RANCH FIVE BUILDING LOTS Lovely 3-4 BR home. HW floors through­ Gracious 10 RM. 6 BR Richard Road LEASE OPTION 646-5200 to be sold separately out, large 2 car garage. Possibility of I home. 31 /2 baths, HW floors, large 1 acre Lovely hom e In quiet Bolton oreo. 3 BR, 2 or as a package. nx>re BR on 2rxJ floor. Quiet family area. plus lot. Mutt be seeni Just reduced 1/2 both. 1st floor fomlly room, nice $13ffs. $300's. \wooded lot and much more. $ 180's. "We're Selling Houtetl" "We're Seeing Houtetl" "We're Seeiryg Houtetl" 1 acre - $88,500 3.2 acres $105,000 T1 \ 4 acres - $108,000 4 acres - $125,000 NEWLY PAINTED 5.1 acres $134,000 TOTAU.Y REMODEUDfirst floor.onebed- MSiOEaovn tDom. ranchstyleCondo.BeautllVjIhard- Energy efficient. 6 room, 4 bedroom Located on wexxt floors In IM ng Room and Bectoom C o p e on quiet, on e-w ay street. Newly Brand new Raised Ranch with 2 car garage awaits your Celings nevMty'refMshed. At neM eroppl- remodeled both, newercorpetlng.ond Inground pool comes with this charming 3 bedroom HEBRON ROAD orxes. LOVB.Y1I Askk^j $72/000. Wtchon floor. Fenced In yard. CHFA. color choices. Fireplaced living room, 2 1/2 baths, Split Level. Fireplaced living room, 2 full baths, rear In Bolton PRICE REDUCED T O $115,000 delightful kitchen and all this for only $175,900. deck and more. Priced to sell at $154,900. MANCHESTER EAST HARTFORD

HISTORIC COLONIAL SUPERB RANCH Chormlno 5 BR, 2 bath homo with em­ Totally redecorated hom e with sunken CLASSIC VICTORIAN bossed metal Wtehen ceUlng, 1st floor LR. large picture windows overlook park- Lome and lovely home with 3-4 BR, 2 laundry, large LR, semLclrcular drive vxtth like grounds, FP In LR and oak floors Baths, laige-lcirge lot plus 2 car oarage. A S126S) *^*^®** property. throughout. MustSelll $ 150's. very speclot home. $17Cs. "We're Selling Houtetl" "We're Setting Houtetl" "We're Setting Houtetl" p i III

EAST HARTFORD NEW • Multi-purpose bulding w/open NEW LISTING Bette Bogll span. 1 si floor area. Six offices. fK/e baths LOVELY UNIT with 2 sky-Ughts and 2 RIVER M id ESTATES Sandra Werkhoven would like to show you this outstand­ Pam Brophy may have listed the lowest priced new COVENTRY $159,900 HEBRON $167,000 & shower. Three gas furnaces. A/C decks. Central air with hutnidlfler. Two 201 New Stale Rood, Manchester ing, newer two family. Large family kitchen, 11/2 baths, M uch morell A skk^. $260,000. FOR bedroorrtt. with large, unfinished room LAST UNITI SPECIAL BUILDER FINANCING ranch in Manchester. This five room beauty with 3 sets Steven Cassano Here's a great opportunity to build W e invite you to co m e and visit this LEASE - 2.200 sq. ft. - 4 offices, large open AVAILABLEI Two bedroom, 1 1/2 both gas heat, 2 or 3 bedrooms each side. Price reduced to In lower level. Wolt-To-woll carpeting, 1 of sliders, fireplace, patio, vinyl siding and located at Janice Debate instant equity while assisting the impressive 4 bedroom Cope, just area. 2 baths, second floor - $ 1,100 per 1/2 bath*. Pun-down attic stairs, appll- Townhouse, fully opplianced. deck, $198,000. the end of a cul-de-sac is priced at only $121,900. month. 800 sq. ft. - 1st 6t 2nd floor. 2 anced. Garage. All this (or only goroge w/oper\er. sky light, cathedral Rudy Detuccio builder in the completion of this buitt on o w o o d e d one acre lot in office*, bath w/shower - $450 per $124,900. celling. Quality BuUtl SOLDI month. new 6 room Contemporary, Coll the Wellingtons W ay development. VERNON MANCHESTER $ 130's 1 Tom Ferguson today for details. A great value in todays market. ([ Vivian Ferguson NEW LISTING Maiy Gabbey Downtown Manchester

Peggy Gregan, MGR. Approximately 8900 sq. ft. Com- mercial/Office Building. Two floors Bill Leone of offices and stores. All details, Kathleen McQueeney price, experrses. etc. available in listing office.. Please colNI Come back to nature with this 9 room, 2,400 sq. fL Ray Negro Ask Ross Grant about the expandable 3 bedroom Cape Colonial set on 2 acres in Willington. Four bedrooms, Louise Panella t • Approved building lot (Wetland NEW LISTING with large living room, cheerful remodeled kitchen, IMPECCABLE.8room.4bedroorr«.l 1/2 2 1/2 baths, fireplaced family room, 2 car garage. Newly remodeled, six room, 3 bedroom. approval needed). Located In A J bath Colonial on 3/4 acre, nicely manl- wood deck, located in Vernon and asking $134,900. Priced below appraised value at $229,500. 2 full both ColonlaL Appllanced. Pos­ Vernon. On cul-de-sac. City wa­ cured lot. 2 cor goroge. Full, firdshed A k sible O w ner FkKincIng, Lovely home 9 ter a n d sower in street. AiSkIng basement with w ^-o u t to potto & In- located on one acre of properly. Low 1 ^ I N $60,000. (Plot plan listed In oT- ground pool. Must be seenI Move-In TaxesI condIHonI $225,00a MANCHESTER’S REAL ESTATE COLUMBIA $139,900 nce). service: EXPERTS FOR OVER 20 YEARS. MANCHESTER

(QUAl HOUSING OPPORTUNITY 646-2482 READY TO BUILD? BOLTON $389,900 Your Timing Couldn't Be Better. Carl Zinsser has just listed this lovely 5 room Ranch New Listing - Completely remodeled 2 bedroom Colo­ Handsome 4 bedroom Cope on located near Coventry Lake. Large living room, fire­ nial set on 1.3 acres in nearby Vernon. Vinyl siding, Fiono Builders offer a variety of home placed dining room, makes for the ideal starter or lovely kitchen, new furnace plus large shed. Price Birch Mountain. Features o beau­ styles with quality workmanship at our 9 retirement home. Price $124,900 $124,900. tiful 2 acre landscaped lot with o developments In Coventry and He­ Five room. 2 bedroom C ond o In Clnrxa- NEWUSTMG view and on inground pool, plus o bron. Prices start at $149,000. Coll and rrxjn Springs. All oppllorces and A/C to Lovely. 2 bedroom . Second Floor Coisdo Fol h k ve with the large beautiful kItcherV Blanchard & Rossetto remain. SvMmmIng pool, tennis and bas­ with 1 1/2 baths and all opplances to great room with haridetafted red oak Call the Zinsser Agency at 646-1511 4 room in-law home. A must to ask about our OWNER FINANCINGond ketball courts. Low. low heating costs. rerrxiln. hoot and hot water Included In coblrwts. Brand new 24x20 deck & park- SWEAT EQUITY programs. REDUCED FOR Q U C K SALEH C o tk Io tees. Centrally located. Asking ■reyoKl.ThliFtoomnanchhcanewheat- see! SOUTH WINDSOR ASKING $64,500 $65,900 bg system and oerdsd A/C, Lovely honrw to for all your real estate needs... 189 WEST CENTER COR. MCKEE ST. MANCHESTER showtAskbg $152,900 SOUtHWMOSOS b .11

-'A 20—MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday. March 28,1991 MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, March 28,1991__21 Building profession profiled For Your New Home This Spring Million-dollar homes sell despite recession Robert Sinclair and Lisa Monsam are the president can them cmne in and pay mtmies directly to us. So, that and vice president of Somers Log Homes in By ESLIE ZGANJAR has helped us out a lot. Many other building businesses sales of luxury homes. But real estate brokers maintain about $5 nullion, they can buy a more expensive home. If not, they can Marlborough. Sinclair has been in the construction in­ can’t do this at this point. CONSTRUCTION The Associated Press that consistent sales from year to year eliminate the need “In Beverly Hills, $1 million would only buy you a buy a lesser-priced home.” dustry for nearly 20 years under the Sinclair Builders Q: How much cash outlay does this cost you per for that. three-bedroom home with one bathroom — a ho hum names, building houses and specializing in historical house? Those of average means tqipear to have the least op­ COMPANY M E N A ^S , N.Y. — Developer Hugh Roberts stands The upper echelon of the housing market — like the house,” she said. tions. restoration-of 18th and 19th century structures. Monsam Monsam: We’re floating, generally on most p'ojects, on a stretch of ^ d overlooking the Hudson River in wealthy themselves — is impervious to swings in the In Coral Gables, Fla., luxury waterfront homes aret joined Sinclair in 1985 as a project growth coordinator “These people are concerned about their jobs. They’re up to $60,000 at a time. We’re paying all the subcontrac­ upstate New York, where his subdivision is under con­ economy, l\iccillo said. The main reason, he said, is be­ selling briskly. But area real estate brokers complain the frightened that if the price of their home goes down even and four years later aided him in researching the log Presents tors and the price of the kit up to the weather-tight shell. struction. cause the market is small and the participants are weal­ homes are not commanding the prices they did in a little they will be badly hurt,” Berger said. “The more home Industry and evaluating its growth potential. This way, the customer i^i with each increment of money the following areas He d ^ rib e s the exotic trees, formal gardens and thy. previous years. While researching the log home industry, Monsam affluent people are not that sensitive to economic to pay the subs. waterfalls that eventually will grace the private enclave “If Donald Trump isn’t going to buy an $8 million "There’s no decrease in luxury home sales. The cycles.” helped develop "what if' scenario planning based on What we do is complete a “direct assignment” form, of luXuiy hom». Many of them also will have wine cel­ home, someone else will,” he said. “There aren’t a lot of volume is there and that’s not going to change,” said So far, three homes have been built in developer current economic downturns in residential construction. which all the banks carry. It says the bank doesn’t have lars, in-home theaters, elevators and hidden wall panels $8 million homes on the market With luxury homes Lance Campbell of d’Adesky Realty in Miami. “What Roberts’ ritzy neighborhood — two are occupied and one When Sinclair purchased 17-year-old Somers Log to pay any monies out until the house is built to a containing reading rooms and bars. there’s a small supply, and a small demand.” has changed is the purchase price. Prices are less.” is for sale. Four homes ar? under construction and two Homes outright last February, he promoted the Monsam weather-ti^t shell. At that point, the bank isn’t risking The development, located near Albany, may seem like Martin Berger, a developer in the exclusive CampMl said, owners selling their million-dollar more are scheduled to be built in the spring. to vice president of the company to promote packages anything because if stxnething h^^iens to the customer, BROOKSIDE ESTATES Manchester off Carter Street. a, gamble m these recession-plagued days when housing Westchester County area near New York City fra 35 homes in his market are breaking even on their invest­ Roberts, owner of the Albany-based Roberts Real Es­ produced by Timber Log Homes Inc. of Colchester. they at least have a house that is weather-tight sales are down in the Northeast and nationwide. Maybe years, has Uqiped a loyal following in those who buy ment tate, is plarming for only 15 homes in the subdivision. The age of 25 might seem a bit young to some to be In fact, this arrangement is the only thing that has al­ Large wooded lots with city utilities. noL luxury homes. “They’re not getting the return they were getting The completed homes are valued at~up to $5 million promoted to vice president o f a company that sold nearly lowed us to get a lot of loans to go through. This way it Housing experts say the affluent aren’t affected by “Ptople who have the means will always buy, even in before,” he said. and are packed with extravagant amenities. Interiors are 30 home packages in 1990. But Monsam reveals in the woiks to everytme’s advantage. The cusunner and banks changes in the economy and can affoid — even today — this type of economic climate,” said Berger, president of Tbccillo said the value of luxury homes may have fashioned with wood from South America and Afiica and following interview she knows how to promote and are at ease, because they don’t have to do anything. They to buy million dollar-plus homes. Robert Martin Co., a real estate development firm in dropped in some areas of the country, which can translate BOULDER RIDGE III Vernon off Tunnel Rd. A marble from Italy. There are stereo listening rooms, manage a business better than many o f her older, male don’t have to give out a cent until that house is built to a “S^es of high-priced housing seem to perk right along Elmsford, New York. into a lot of money. counterparts. weather-tight shell. s t e ^ rooms and computerized management of utilities continuation of Popular Boulder Ridge I & II regar^ess of what’s happening in the economy,” said Monte Helme, a spokesman for Century 21 Real Es­ “You can see large dollar changes in value here,” he Question: Why did Sinclair purchase the log home and other household functions. Q: Obviously, this arrangement is a great selling tool John ^ccillo, chief economist for the National Associa- tate Crap, based in Irvine, Calif., agre^: “Even in said. “If the market is down 5 percent that’s a lot when business, because it was a good buy? for you to use, but how else are you bringing in the cus­ bon of Realtors in Washington. “That’s typical of the depressed housing markets like the Northeast, the high, you’re talking about a millirai-^llar home.” The houses also have castle-like revolving bookcases, Monsam: Actually, he had been working a lot in retail tomers? way this market works.” uiper end still has a market. Even during a recession, the The most volatile part of the housing market actually hidden staircases and hidden wall panels containing read­ management and sales at the time, but wanted to put his BIRCH BRIAR ESTATES! South Windsor off Foster A Monsam: One iromotion, for example, occurred after Real estate brokers nationwide say sales of homes $1 w ^ th y are still going to buy.” is a notch below the luxury market — homes that sell for ing rooms and bars. efforts back more into the construction business. He saw we had been hit with an eight percent kit price increase. million and higher are steady even th o u ^ sales of That’s certainly true in Southern California. around $500,(XX), Diccillo said. He said this market tends Roberts anticipates his subdivision will be completed a good thing going with the log home company. With the St. Our newest area of custom homes, with treed We told the prospects if they wanted to put down 10 per- lower-priced homes are down just about everywhere. “Our buyers are in the entertaimnent business. They to slack off first when there’s a downturn in the in the next year. original owner, the company really did not build any of ceiit of the kit price then, we’d hold that price for them Sales of existing homes plunged 5.5 percent in the seem to flourish in recessionary periods,” said Rosemary economy. “This type of investment doesn’t have to do with the homes. They sold the log home package and then got lots.______until January of 1992. That saved some of our prospects fmal quarter of last year to the lowest quarterly level in Lowe, a broker for Century 21 who works the Hol­ “M id^e and upper managers at corporations buy these economic cycles,” he said during a recent tour. “Fsople out. Robert saw there was a lot of profit to be made, anywhere from $3,000-$7,000 on the kits. OXFORD ESTATE^ South Windsor, Miller Road six years, according to the Realtors. lywood and Beverly Hills areas. houses. These guys have the option of moving up or planning to build million dollar-homes will continue to number one. Then, there was the opportunity to work Q: How else did you plan to get customers? The trade group does not keep separate figures on The average luxury home in Lowe’s market sells for down the spectrum,” he said. “If things are going well do so whether there are good economic times or bad.” closely with people again. Monsrwi: We’ve recently taken on the Welco kitchen and Abbee Road. Just 2 homes left in this prestigious Q: How do you run the business today? cabinet line. One of our goals is to be a distributor for Monsam: What we basically do is act as a general everything a person can need for their home. Regardless area. contractor. We can do a number of things. We can sell of whether a person cranes in, but decides to go with a people the package and spend hours training them how to Fed expected to hold interest rates stick-built home, we than could still play a role. We Question & Answers be their own general contractor and how to get their best c ^ d be their general contractor. We could sell them hit bottom and be on the verge of turning around price. MT. f a r m s Manchester off Gardner Street. We By MARTIN CRUTSINGER at least tentative signs of an economic revival, the stairways and exits. Where pas­ kitchen cabinets, we could sell them floraing, we could as consumer sentiment revives with the end of the By POPULAR MECHANICS The /Vssoclated Press Fed will ignore Brady’s pressures, especially sageways and corridors are not Or we’ll go in and we’ll build the entire project. In sell them carpeting at a lower price than they could buy. Gulf War and the lower interest rates. have only 1 home left in this most popular area. Price since the underlying inflation rate so far this year Q. — Can you tell me what part of an enclosed exit, the fact, almost all we’re doing right now is turnkey, which We want to be able to play a role in any type of home or However, they admit that so far the hard has been disturbing. flame-spread rating of the surprised us. We weren’t expecting to be doing that addition a person wants to build. reduced for a quick, sale. WASHINGTON — Despite renewed Bush ad­ evidence is tentative at best “Flame Spread 200 or less" ministration pressure on the Federal Reserve to “The Fed is between a rock and hard place,” much. We were figuring at most to be completing Q: So how are you advertising this? On the positive side, the National Association means? I saw it on a label on material should not exceed 75. weather-tight shells last year. cut interest rates and speed an end to the reces­ said Michael Penzer, an economist with the Bank the back of a 4 x 8 plywood Materials used for interior walls Monsam: We did the promotion for the kitchen of Realtors reported Monday that sales of existing of America in San Francisco. “The Fed is worried Q: How many people work directly for the log home sion, many economists believe rates will hold and ceilings generally have a cabinets along with the price freeze promotion. R>r homes jumped 7.9 percent in February, the first that we have inflation on the high side with the panel that had a decorative business? We can build from our design, your design or a right where they are for now. finish. flame-spread classification of anyone who wanted to put $20,000 down rat the kit, we increase since November. This followed news last economy in a recession.” Monsam: There’s just Bob and myself, and then we These economists believe that Federal Reserve froze the (xice until January of ’92 and gave them an al­ week that construction of new homes rose 16.5 The government reprated last week that con­ A. — Flame spread is the 200 or liess. This includes most have a sales manager, Bill Uhlan, who used to be the Schoiz Master Design, in one of these areas or on Chairman Alan Greenspan and his colleagues are lowance of $4,000 to custom design their kitchen, using percent in February. sumer (x-ices, excluding food and energy, shot up propagation of a flame over a untreated plywood or paneling. sales manager for our supplier. Timber Log Homes. content to watch how the economy performs the kitchen cabinets and countertops we offer. On the negative side, car sales for the first 20 0.7 percent in February. surface. The flame-spread rating Q. — We are considering Q: Can you fill us in on some of the programs and your own lot imder the stimulus of previous interest rate cuts Q: What medium do you advertise through? days in March have been down from sales levels Concerns about inflation have caught the atten­ classifies the fire-hazard poten­ laying our own esupeting and promotions you’ve conducted? and the end of the Persian Gulf War. Monsam: We only use direct mailing. We use our cus­ of a year ago. But the drop for the latest 10 days tion of financial markets in recent weeks, pushing tial of different building would appreciate any sugges­ Monsam: Sure. Right now, everyone is running tomer lists and just mail materials to them. We may send The recession and interest rates were uppermost was the smallest decline so far this year, giving long-term bond rates sharply higher as investors materials. It is based on tests tions you might have on working scared. With the programs we’re conducting, basically up to 900-1,000 letters, usually in increments of 250 at a Call us, we are available to discuss your on the agenda today as Greenspan convened a some economists hope that the 18-month slide in demanded more of a premium against inflation. performed by independent labs the stiff material into comers and what we’re trying to do is create our own economy. time. meeting of the Fed’s top policymi^ing group, the auto sales may be coming to an end. That in turn has reversed a downward trend in using procedures developed by around stair steps. We’re finding ways to bring people in here and assure Q: How many programs do you run in a year? housing needs at anytime. Federal Open Market Committee. Also on the negative side, initial claims for un­ mortgage rates. Underwriters Laboratories. Inor­ A. — Modem carpeting is them they don’t have to run scared from the banks and Monsam: I would have to say at the moment we do The FOMC, composed of Fed governors in employment benefits hit an eight-year high in The national average for 30-year, fixed ganic materials and untreated made of man-made fiber held O H the cost of consuiiction. three-to-four a year at most. Washington and six of the Fed’s 12 regional bank early March, indicating that layoffs in many in­ mortgages fell to a four-year low of 9.25 percent red oak provide the range together by a latex or foam 1“ Nobody wants to deal with the banks. They don’t want M yuiiO v«M « Q: Since you’re in the Northeast, what is your outlook presidents, meets eight times a year to survey the dustries were still continuing. in February but since then has climbed back to against which flame-spread backing (Kanga-back.) The car­ to wait six or seven weeks for an application to be on the building economy in that part of the country? \bu economy’s performance and plot the course of in­ Still, the Bush administration insists that the 9.59 percent. ratings are made. Inorganic pet is very stiff and hard to > m processed, only to be turned d ( ^ . So, we’ve come to terest rates. seem to be surviving it there nuher easily, true? current recession, the first since the severe But many economists believe the inflationary materials, which include con­ handle, but here are a few easy z! ^ the decision that if we want to sell homes, we have to act The results of today’s deliberations will not be 1981-82 downturn, will be mild and over some­ Monsam: I’d have to agree with you. But that’s be­ REALTY CO., INC. pressures will soon subside and that consumer crete, cement-asbestos board tips to help you add flexibility to O UJ as our own bank. We are floating most of these projects released until May' 17, but economists forecast time in the April-June quarter. prices will be better behaved than last year. Based cause we’re doing all we can to create our own economy. ROBERT D. MURDOCK, Realtor and metal, have a flame spread the carpet so it will fit easily into z -< — we’re paying for the balance of the kit, the construc­ We’ve put ourselves in the position where we’re not that the discussions will produce no immediate To buy insurance for that forecast. Treasury on that assumption, these analysts said mortgage rate cuts. . . of 0. Untreated red oak has a odd shapes and around stair tion costs and what-not up to a weather-tight shell. scared. We’re not loddng at all this “doom and gloom” 643-9551 OR 643-2692 Secretary hficholas Brady is keeping pressure on rates should start heading lower. flame spread of 100. steps. H H “They will hold off and see what the rest of the Fed to lower interest rates, a campaign he has Q: You have to have a lot of cash available to do that and taking it as other people are. We’re not going to run Analysts also don’t rule out another round of Building codes require If at all possible, lay the carpet m X Monsam: Yes, it takes a lot of cash, but fortunately we March looks like before easing again,” said I^ul waged for nine months. scared from it The economy will change for the better. 99 E. CENTER STREET • MANCHESTER, CT reductions in short-term interest rates by the Fed, materials that have a low flame- flat and unrolled, to let it ‘relax* 0 m have the cash flow at this point so it’s very easy for us to Getman, an economist with Region^ Financial “Infiatirai is not the worry; (a lack of) growth is So, what happens to your business now is the just result possibly by . late April, if inflation shows modera­ spread rating (0-25) be used in do this. At the point of the weather-tight shell, the bank of what you make for yourself. Associates of West Chester, Pa. the worry,” he said earlier this week. tion and the economy is not picking up as quickly and lose any wrinkles that 1 Many analysts believe the recession may have However, private economists believe that with as Greenspan hopes. fjre escape routes, such a s in resulted from rolling. R O o Vinton Village Ftte 31 CJ CO 3466 D Main St., Coventry D.W.FISH m c/3 ALEX MAHHEW HILIPS THE REALTY COMPANY I ■ ■ ■ I-and Gardens'* i Year Buyer Protection O REAL ESTATE Available REALTY ^ 220 Hartford Turnpike 243 Main Street Vernon Manchester s > 164 EAST CENTER STREET, MANCHESTER --- Phil BlazawskI 742-0466 Roy O sborn* 646-9818 871-1400 643-1591 g W 742-1450 647-8120 Dawn Sutherland 742-1544 Donald W. 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^MANCHESTER VAA, ®5EATOPPORTUNnY Pit HArTtn^ton Don Henry SKrIkyMasruU Daniel F. Reale, Inc. EAST HARTFORD MANCHESTER own this 5 BHB Four and four Duplex vrith two 9 Realtors Newer 5 and 5 aluminum-sided car garage on large lot, two W E WANT TO SEE YOU IN THIS HOME I - Thai's COUNTRY SQUIRE UFE - Colonial farm­ W O O D LA N D D R E A M - Elite streamside Country Two Family, fully appllanced new heating systems. Much why we lowered Iho price. Thafs why Society's house on country site. Needs finishing, 3 Contemporary/Cedar 3 story on 1.6 aaes, wKh tailoring mortgages to heipyouquallty lor and allord story on 3.83 acres. In ground pod, two car country charm. Cathedral cdlings, sl^llghts, deco- 176 Main street kitchen, wall-to-wall carpeting modernization, great family the home of your dreams. Call and see what this garage, stables, wrap around porch. ratd upgrades, Icrmal dining room. Immedialsly Manchester, CT 06040 thru-out. Separate utilities, large area, convenient to schools, Honey for the money. at/ailahUb lot. Great buy at $164,900. bus, shopping. $162,900. special deal looks like Irom the inside. 203-646-4525 COVENTRY $234,575 MANCHESTER $239,900 MARLBOROUGH $268,500 PHIL BLAZAWSKI BOY OSBORNE NEIL SimiONS

Hr 22 MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, March 28, 1991 iHaiifliratrr HrralJi

Section 4, Page 23 SPORTS Thursday, March 28,1991 j l r i L Whalers

EAST RUTHERFORD, N J. (AP) satisfying,” Brown said. “Hartford -15). — The New Jersey Devils closed in played well, they U x* it to us for a The win also moved New Jersey on a playoff berth, won their first long time tonight It was good that closer to nailing down a playoff overtime game of the season, ex­ we were able to pull it ou t” berth. The Devils’ magic number is tended an unbeaten streak to five, On the game-winner. Whalers one point. Any combination of one finally beat Hartford and helped goaltender Peter Sidorkiewicz left point for the Dievils in their final two mend a goaltender’s bruised ego. the crease to try and smother the games or a loss or tie by the All in a night’s work. puck behind the Hartford net. Philadelphia Flyers in their final two TIMBER LOG HOME5 New Jersey gained a 4-3 overtime Sidorkiewicz was trapped when will put New Jersey in the playoffs victory Wednesday night over the Brown knocked the puck out of his for the third time in the l^ t four "i f : r ' ' i Whalers when Doug Brown scored grasp and tucked it into the empty seasons. Wednesday night’s win his second goal of the night at 2:47 cage. of overtime. moved the Devils into third place in AND It was New Jersey’s first overtime the Ritrick Division, two points over A win in overtime is always win of the season in 17 contests (1-1 Washington. “We knew this was a must-win situation,” Brown said. “It seems A SOLID WOOD POST & BEAM HOMES thm every season it comes down to this. We have to fight for a playoff spot. We just kept working hard and were able to turn it around in the i*'* . • - . third.” '""‘5 Brown’s game-winner capped a see-saw game in which the Devils squandered a two-goal, first-period lead as the Whalers scored three

■ second-period goals. Brendan y?./ ° Shanahan tied it at 3 with a power- O^ v; V/ ; v yf. play goal at 9:32 of the third period. a I. ^ V The win put the Devils in the \i ‘ o. , -. />'■ iV* right frame of mind heading into the final weekend. They are now riding a five-game unbeaten streak (2-0-3). It was also New Jersey’s first win over Hartford in the last five meet­ ings. Of perhaps greater importance, Sean Burke turned in anothu strong Conacher, right, takes a flying leap a f le T t h r ^ d T a s ^ o r t in goal for the Devils. He was in goal for ties against the Oiicago Shaw (32) skates after it during their game Wednesday night at the Blackhawks and Montreal Meadowlands Arena. The Devils topped the Whalers in OT, 4-3. A Canadiens on New Jersey’s just completed road trip. “Far me, it was great to get in With Chris Terreri taking over as going into the playoffs. You need Zahq)ski notched a power-play at there and contribute. That’s what the the No. 1 goaltender, Burke has some momentuih going into the 12:49 to pull Hartford even and Ver­ game is all about — working hard been a forgotten figure this year for playoffs. We’re getting close right beek gave the Whalers the lead at and having some success.” the Devils. now. The guys are working hard. 15:04. Success is proving elusive for the O H It was Burke’s first vrin since Jan. We just have to eliminate those mis­ Hartford closes out the regular Whalers. The loss stretched their J3 r - 28 and improved his record to 2-5-5 takes that seem to be costing us.” seastMi with a pair o f weekend winless streak to five games (0-4-1) in his last 12 decisions. He made 24 Verbeek did his part, scoring two g ^ e s . It hosts Bufifalo Saturday and doomed them to fourth place in > m saves against the Whalers. goals in the second period as the night at the Civic Center and then the Adams Division. They will face H a “This is the type of hockey that is Whalers rallied for a 3-2 lead. closes out the season with a Stanley the Boston Bruins in the opening Kirk Muller scored at 4:50 and Ciq) preview as it visits the Boston Y^Sl New Jersey’s Brendan Shanahan celebrates after the most fun to play,” Burke said. round. O DO “As nerve-wracking as it is, it’s still Brown at 12:08 to give New Jersey Bruins Sunday night at Boston Gar­ z - < scoring the tying goal in the third period of Wednesday’s night “\\fe have to start getting some the most fun hockey. It’s down to the lead in the opening period. den. game against the Hartford Whalers. confidence," said Hartford’s Pat H H the wire and it means everything. At 6:19 of the second, Verbeek The playoffs begin Wednesday, Verbeek. “We have to start wiiming started the comeback. Zarley April 3, in Boston. m I 0 m Welcome to our selection of log and solid wood post and beam 1 homes including over 50 standard designs, from cozy lodges to spacious contemporaries or custom design your own dream home. Lady Huskies plan on leaving an impression R O As the log home industry has progressed from "cabins" to beautiful Defending champion Stanford By LEN AUSTER (1981-85) were spent in Virginia. what we’ve been doing,” Auriemma md two-time champ Ibimessee meet Auriemma said. defense and a patient offense, could 2 CD "contemporaries," primary and vacation homes. Timber Log Homes of Manchester Herald “I went there because Debbie says. “We have to play great ill the other semifinal,. The cham­ And Virginia? cause the Cav^iers some problenos. m CD Connecticut has become "The Consumer's Choice." Over 20 years of wanted a different approach to the defense, limit them to one shot and STORRS — Six years ago the pionship game is Sunday at 4 pjn. game. The time I spent there was so “Virginia offers a little bit of “We don’t have a team in our league O experience has made us the leader in log homes and solid wood post and shoot the lights out If we don’t do both. There are great similarities, University of Connecticut hired 31- All three games are being nationally good because I saw a different way play like the University of Connec­ beam manufacturing and construction. Whether you're building a mountain telecast on CBS. those three things, we’re dead. It’s and great contrasts, so I don’t know year-old Oeno Aurienuna to lead its of playing,” he said. ticut,” Ryan said. “Most of the that simple.” how to play them yet,” he said. retreat or a modem suburban home, the natural beauty of a Timber Log women’s basketball program. “My memories o f coaching with Aurienuna put his time at Vir­ teams in our league like to run." S > The Huskies beat Toledo for its IVhat’s the biggest axicern for Home will blend into any environment. WEHA^WHATMXJ Before his arrival on the Storrs Geno are all very good,” Ryan said ginia to good use. “I picked iqi a lot “We’re very thrilled and pleased first-ever NCAA Tournament vic­ during a conference call of coaches Ryan? “Kerry Bascom,” she to be in the same group with Thn- ? « Timber Log Homes uses only the finest materials. campus, his prior stop was in Char­ of what I do today from Tferry Hol­ tory. But UConn faced a mirror Thesday. “I think Geno challenged answered unhesitantly, referring to nessee and Stanford. I didn’t thinV it > At Timber Log Homes of CT, we believe that the enduring high lottesville, Va., home of the Univer­ land,” he said of the Cavaliers’ im ^ e of itself and that Auriemma me with a lot of ideas. We tried a lot Connecticut’s three-time Big East would be possible (to be a Final ^^^lNAW^NDOW sity of Virginia. men’s basketball coach at the rimy, insisted, created a bundle of quality of your home begins with the finest materials. All of our homes are of them. I feel I learned a lot from Player of the Yfear. “She’s a dynamic Andersen* Perm a-^eld* windows His immediate boss? “I wanted to emulate myself after Fbur team) at this stage of our headaches. The headaches were less player who also spends 70 percent made only from select Northern White Pine, prized for it's natural beauty, offer you: him. We had a lot of trust in him. A lot o f what we do here I development No matter what hiq>- Debbie Ryan. severe against N.C. State and Qem- of her time on the perimeter. She stability and strength. The cellular structure of White Pine makes it a other. I had no doubt his program picked iqi down there.” pens, this will be an eiqperienoe no I I • High-Performgi#%^lating glass. Auriemma and Ryan will be on where it would be today.” sosted comer at no additional charge. t»M 4 Timber Log Homes are designed and engineered to last. with schools in rift with Bosox Log Slylcs Available TOTAL MANCHESTER — Two couple of minpr leaguers from the limited By DAVE O'HARA Manchester High football players Classic I * ^ Claplx)ard The Associated Press New York Meu last July 28, ap- have signed letters-of-intent with parently doesn’t believe the Red Sox colleges to continue their gridiron time WINTER HAVEN, Fla. — Mike are uying to trade him. With a $1.1 careers, it was announced by Indian Come visit our fully furnished Model Home which is easily accessible - SAVINGS Marshall, an unhappy camper look­ million contract, Marshall has only a head coach Mike Masse. ing for steady work, was listed as bench role if he stays with Boston. from the Greater Hartford Area. Take Route 2 East, Exit 12. Go Ptfer Scott Marcantonio, a 1990 AWOL by the Boston Red Sox The signing of slugger Jack Clark straight and take a left on Austin Drive. Follow Austin Drive to the Manchester High graduate who today after walking out of training as a free agent to fill the DH role, end to our Model Home. prepped this past year at S l Thomas - V ; . camp in an apparent huff over the the re-signing of right-fielder Tbm Brunansky and the fight between 1 OVER $5,500 More in Colchester, has signed a let- club's failure to trade him. ter-of-intent with Division I-AA “He is absolutely AWOL," Carlos C^intana and rookie Mo Hofstra University. Marcantonio manager Joe Morgan said late Wfed- Vaughn for the first base job leaves ★ FREE BATH FIXTURES' ★ FREE SHIPPING ★ LOG PACKAGES AT 5'/, BELOW RETAIL l„rev.,mpU. .,S2S(ioo played linebacker and tight end this nesday night in confirming that Marshall expendable. But Gorman says other teams have shown little past season at St. Thomas More. Marshall had bolted camp. kit less 5V, S.1VCSyou $1,25(1. ★ OVER 50 MODELS TO CFIOOSE FROM AND 4 DIFFERENT LOG STYLES interest. John Rossetti, who c^tained the “He came to see me today (Wed­ Gorman said that the Red Sox ★ BATH ITEMS INCLUDE TUBS, SINK, TOILET, SHOWER STALL AND FAUCETS. ALL BRAND NAMES. 1990 Manchester High squad, is nesday) and said he was thinking about leaving camp," Morgan said. have training camp rules and Mar­ headed for Division II University of shall faces disciplinary action for (up to $2,000) up to Sl,(-)00 New Haven. Rossetti, a libebacker, “I told him not to do it, that if he did it would be insubordination.” walking out was an all-league selection and All- **rhe manager did not give him For further information, directions, or personal service, call or write: State honorable mention. Marshall, a first baseman-out­ fielder with a .270 average in nearly permission to leave,” Gorman said. “Scott and John were the first two r e a d y - - Ernest Grundy sweeps the newly installed floor at the fHoosSTDome nine major league seasons, walked “He chose to leave.” recipients of the Ted Martin Football Wednesday as preparations continue for the NCAA Final Four this weekend In Indianapolis. out less than 24 hours after going 4- After 7 1-2 years with the Los Timber Log Homes of CT Award,” Masse said. The Martin for-4 with a pair of doubles and Angeles Dodgers. Marshall wu award, dedicated in the name of the three runs scored in a game with traded to New Yoric and started as late faculty manager at the school, Kansas looking for some respect Cincinnati at Plant City. the Meu’ first baseman in 1990. P.O. Box 462, Austin Drive goes to a football scholar-athlete. He was not available for^bom- Then, after going on the disabled list for the seventh time in his career, he “It is really a positive step for the LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — As ment, but he apparently talked with My building plans are to build within sneaked into the NCAA tournament. respect thing. We think we can was traded despite an upper program. It shows we’re getting the Final Four’s official longshot, Morgan and thra took a hike before Marlborough, CT 06447 □ 60 days □ 120 days □ / yr. As Big Eight co-champions, they thrive on that a little, but we don’t gastrointestinal aihnem. L tim b e r some people moving on to the next Kansas is making good use of what drew the No. 3 seed in the Southeast the Red Sox’ 9-4 victory at home base e v e o ^ g on it because if you I own a building lot O Yes □ No level to play,” Masse said. “They’re one savvy senior calls “the lack of over the Reds on Wednesday. The Red Sox took Marshall with Regional. But in the opening-round start getting cauglit up on that, then 203-295-9780 (fax) 203-295-9520 two solid kids who’ll be successful respect thing.” “When he came to see me, he said his disability as iruurartce with games against New Orleans and Pit­ you’re not worrying about playing Please send me: The trick, says Mark Randall, lies he was one of the best nine players Brunansky planning to file for fine l O Q - l at whatever they do." tsburgh, they began to notice they basketball." I I HOMCS%riNC in not overdoing it. were getting little notice. on the club,” Morgan said. “I told agency at the end of the season. Planbook & Color Brochure ($8.) Manchester posted a 4-6 mark Even after beating Indiana 83-65 (in CT) l-800-292-L(DGS “Sure, they’re going to call us the “We talked about it when coach Marshall played just 30 games as Video & Planbook ($25.) during the ’90 football season in and outscoring Arkansas by 24 en him he was part of the chib, but I longshots. You can’t say we’re not came in and showed us the paper the Red Sox won the AL East title (After viewing, the tiideo may be Masse’s second season as head ^route to a 93-81 victory last was the manager and 1 would make going to pay attention to it. It’s and we only had two lines on our for the third time in five years. coach. The Indians were 3-7 the weekend in the regional finals, the the decisions.” Model home open 7 days a week. exchanged for any set of floor plans.) bothered us,” said the senior center. game,” Randall said. “We’ve been Marshall’s initial reaction on •year before. Oeneral manager Lou Gorman It’s not as if the Jayhawks using a little bit of the lack of reporting to training camp was, Please see KANSAS, page 24 said that Marshall, acquired for a “What am I doing here?” 24- -MANCHESTER HERALD. Thursday, March 28, 1991 MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, March 28,1991—^25 In Brief Stanford wins NIT; Tubbs ejected In B rie f. High School Previews Soccer Camp being offered By BILL BARNARD Then Oklahoma (20-15) scored the Graf into the quarterfinals MANCHESTER — The Summer Soccer Stars Camp The Associated Press final 13 points of the first half and the SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Germany’s Steffi Graf will be offered for two, one-week sessions (July 8-12 and fust basket of the second and went on to charged into the quarterfinals of the U.S. Women’s Determined Bolton nine July 15-19) at East Catholic High School. NEW YORK — Although Stanford take its biggest lead, 46-37, with 17:50 Hardcourt Champiimships with a 6-3, 6-1 victmy Wed­ The camp is for boys and girls who will be between won the National Invitation Tournament, left nesday night over Monique Javer. the ^ e s of 6 and 17. the Cardinal had to share center stage Stanford (20-13) outscored Oklahoma Also advancing to the quarterfinals was Manuela Directors will be Joe Erardi, head girls’ soccer coach with Oklahoma coach Billy Tibbs. 41-26 the rest of the way, including eight Maleeva-Fragniere, who defeated Isabelle Demongeot, Stanford, surviving a 15-0 Oklahoma of 12 free throws in the final 1:15 to stay - , - . looks for more victories at Manchester High, Bill McCarthy, head boys’ soccer 6 2 6 2 coach at Manchester H i ^ and Tom Malin, head boys’ run after Tibbs was ejected late in the in front Pam Shriver, on the comeback after shoulder surgery i w soccer coach at East Catholic. fust half Wednesday night, defeated the Ammann was 5-fw-lO firran 3-point last year, bowed out of in the second round with a 2-6, O’Neill said. “We have 31 kids and Sooners 78-72 behind senior Kermy Am- By LEN AUSTER Ray, senior Matt Simmons and One ftill week is $110 and half days is $60. Registra­ range, while Vlahov had 14 points and 11 7-6 (8-6) 6-3 loss to Eva Viglerva. all are serious about baseball. I feel mann’s 22 points, including five of the Manchester Herald sophomores Andy Lessard and Ibm tion for both weeks is $200. rebounds. Patrick scored 13 points and Graf has Thursday off and will play her quarterfinal this year we’ll be more determined Cardinal’s seven 3-pointers. Wright. m m m Anytme wishing to register should send a $30 dqposit Destum Wingate had 13 points and 13 match Friday against the winner of Thursday’s niatrh than ever. We don’t want to be toe Afterwards, Tibbs blasted the three BOLTON — A year ago Bolton The pitching, O’Neill hopes, will to: Summer Soccer Stars, 536 Birch Mountain Rd., rebounds. between No. 7-seeded Susan Sloane and unseeded Ann doormats anymore and I feel that at- come from Toce, Svalestad, Ray, I Manchester, 06040. Big East officials who handled the game, Henricksson. High reinstituted its varsity baseball Keefe, Stanford’s leading sctuer at 21.8 program iifter a two-year absence titude has eeked out over junior Bryan Levesque, junior Jeff Ibr further information, OHitact Erardi (649-2328) or sarcastically suggesting they should be re­ per game, was held to 12 points, only two Top^anked Monica Seles, the tournament’s top seed, everybody.” quired to take a drug test. due to lack of numbers, and futility Welch atto Lessard. Ray has been McCarthy (647-9504). in the final 29 minutes. But he was the plays her second-round match Thursday against un­ If there is one key to Bolton this toe surprise to date. “He’s shown a “This was one of the most disappoint­ on the field. tournament’s Most Valuable Player after seeded Claudia Parwik. season, O’Neill says it’ll be the play lot of control and has popped toe Meggett, Ingram slated to play ing things that’s ever happened to me,” Bolton had withdrawn from the ^ r in g 24 points against Massachusetts Bamng iqisets, Seles and Graf would meet in the of senire tri-captain Brian Neil be­ ball. He’s moving iq) toe depth Tibbs said of his two technicals that COC in May 1987 after it could MANCHESTER — Dynamite lack returner Dave in the semifinals. finals scheduled for Sunday for their first match this hind the plate. Neil missed ntost of chart,” O’Neill says. caused his ejection with 4:38 left in the only muster eight players for a game Meggett and wide receivers Mark Ingram and Stephen “We won this game and this tourna­ year, s(Mnething Graf is hoping for after losing her top with Bacon Academy. A 66-game toe ’90 campaign with an injury. “We still have a lot of young Baker are among members of the Siqier Bowl champion fust half. “I don’t think I deserved either ment because we came together as a ranking to Seles on March 11. losing streak dating back to May “If Brian can stay healthy, he can guys, but we also have some ex­ New Yrak Giants scheduled to play in a benefit exhibi­ one of the technicals. I didn’t use unit,” Keefe said. “Peq>le have said this 1983 precipitated toe demise. make a difference,” O’Neil says. perienced players. Last year I felt tion basketball game against former UConn players on profanity and I did not holler. I deserved a Iona names Welch hoop coach “He’s a very good leader and a lot better fate.” wasn’t much of a team and that we just But Bolton, after two years of a we played pretty consistently toe Hiesday, April 9, at 7:30 pjn. at Manchester High’s POTSDAM, N.Y. (AP) — Jetty Welch, a successful of toe younger kids look up to him. last seven games. I feel we’ll be a have one player. But the way the sctning junior varsity program, came back Tha Aaaoclatad P ra u Clarke Arena. Tibbs, upset over a no-call when he coach at Division m Potsdam State College, was named If he can stay healthy and play better team this year.” A was spread out proves that’s not true.” in 1990 with 23 players out for toe YUCK — Oakland’s Rickey Henderson reacts The event is sponsored by the Illing Junior High believed Stanford’s Adam Keefe was 15-16 games, we’ll be a better Schedule: April 4 RHAM H, 5 Uaveling, was whistled for one technical Brent Price scored 26 points and Bryan basketball coach at Iona College on Wednesday. team. The team p o st^ a 2-18 mark, School Athletic Association. team.” Lyman Memorial H, 9 Coventry A after striking out in the first inning of Wednes­ by referee Mickey Crowley, and the Sallier had 24 points and 10 rebounds for Welch replaces Gary Brokaw, who resigned this winning its ’90 finale against , Beasley Reece, Channel 30 ^ r t s director and former month after the Gaels finished with a winning reewd for The infield has senior tri-c^)tain 10 East Granby A 12 East Hampton day’s game against Milwaukee in Chandler, second a few seconds later by Pete Pivia. OklahtMna. But the rest of the team scored Cheney Tech. player in the NFL, will be joining the Giant squad. There M the first time in his five years. Chris. Anderson at first base, senior H, 16 Cromwell H 11 ajn., 17 Vinal Neither was available for comment on the only 22 points. That was a turnaround Ariz. Henderson doubled his next time up. will be an autograph session during halftime of the game. Bolton heads into the 1991 tri-c^tain Luke Morford at second Tech H 11 ajn., 19 Portland A 11 fust ejection of a coach in the NTT’s 53- from the Sooners’ semifinal victwy that “The history and background they have at Iona is a Tickets are available at Dtniato’s Drive-lh and Hit’s program with no problems, again, as base, sophomore Owen Svalestad at a.m., 22 Bacon Academy A 23 year history. saw Price score eight points and Sallier good one. It will be a challenge to toe get toe program Medical Pharmacy in East HartftHd and at Earr’s, Nassiff going toe way people there want it to go,” Welsh said. far as numbers. Coach Mark O’Neill shortstop and junior David Mot- Cheney Tech H, 24 Rocky Hill H. “The officials are becoming bigger none. Camera Shop and Illing in Manchester. The 55-year-old Welsh won Division III national reports 31 out for toe team. The timer at third base. 30 RHAM A. Mets resume than the game itself,” Tibbs said. “You Advarx% tickets are $7 for adulu and $5 for children “Sallier and Price were tmbelievable in championships at Potsdam in 1981 and 1986 and finished second-year Bulldog coach, who led Svalestad batted over .300 a year May 1 Coventry H, 3 East can conuol your players, but you have no under 14. Tickets at the door are $8 fix' adults and $6 for the first half with 17 points each and scor­ national runner-up two other years. toe junior varsity program as well, ago. Hampton H, 7 Cromwell A 8 Vinal students. control over what happens in the game.” ing 34 of their 39 points,” Stanford coach Iona Athletic Director Rich Petriccione said there was also sees some fire in his players’ The outfield, besides all-COC Tech A, 10 Portland H, 14 Cheney The score was tied 26-26 before Stan­ Mike Montgomery said. “But the fust no hesitation to dip into the Division m ranks for a new eyes. selection Dan Toce, who batted .400 Tech A 15 Rocky Hill A 17 Bacon contract talks Gwynn in Portsmouth tourney ford got nine points in nine seconds as a half was uncharacteristic of the way we’d “We won two games last year and last year, in centerfield is wide open. Academy H. '"mr head coach. STORRS — University of Connecticut senior guard result of Tibbs’ technicals. Andrew played in the toumamenL We played so we want to win more this year,” Among toe candidates are junior Jon Games not noted 3:30 p.m. John Gwyim has been selected to play in the 39th annaul Vlahov hit two free throws for the foul much better basketball in the NTT than in Tlw Assoolstsd Pfm s Elster to stay in Florida By The Associated Presj c^l ^ t stopped play just before Tibbs’ CHAMPS — Stanford’s Kenny Hicks, left, and Deshon Wingate (34) Portsmouth Invitational oumament to be held in the Vir­ January and February. PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. (AP) — It appears shortstop ejection, Jolui Patrick made the four tech­ celebrate after winning Wednesday night’s NIT championship at ginia city from April 3-6. “The 13-0 run at the end of the half Kevin Elster is headed for an extended sixing training Dwight Gooden and Frank Viola are talking contract Gwynn is one of 64 seniors selected to the event. The nicals and Ammann made it 35-26 with a was a confideime shaker, but I told them Madison Square Garden. Stanford won the title by beating Ok­ again with toe New York Mets. 3-pointer. when the New York Mets head north for opening day. Pitching the main concern Hillsaest Heights, Md., native averaged 12.5 points this at halftime not to get outhustled.” lahoma, 78-72. Manager Bud Harrelson said on Wednesday he is not Viola’s agent made a counterproposal on a contract past season to be the Huskies’ third-leading scorer. satisfied that Elster’s recovery from shoulder surgery is extension Wednesday, but the Mets turned it down and Calhoun to coach All-Star team to toe point where he could travel north with tlto club said negotiations would continue. when toe season begins. for Bolton High softball A Harazin, the team’s executive vice president, also STORRS — University of Cmmecticut head basket­ Trail Blazers, Magic “I have doubts right now th^ he’ll start toe season in spoke with Dwight Gooden’s agent Jim Neader. Harazin said he would like to meet with Neader this weekend to ball coach Jim Calhoun will coach the Divisicxi I t<»nm at New \brk,” Harrelson said. “If he is not ready to go By JIM TIERNEY discuss an extension for Gooden. the armual New England Basketball Coaches Association north, he has to stay here. I have to find out w hve he’s Manchester Herald “We both recognize we would like to get together,” All-Star Game on Monday, April 8, at 7:30 pjn. at a t lA ^ t I’ve seen is not good enough to go tKxih.” Alumni Hall on the campus of Providence College. on target for goals When apixoached about the issue Elster refused to BOLTON — Despite a 5-15 Participating in the game for the Division I squad will comment. z be Husky seniors John Gwynn and Lyman DePtiest. season last year, Joe Jankowski, as 13 in the final period before the Spring Training Hartfwd’s Ron Moye is also a member of the Division I By JOHN KREISER second-year Bolton High girls’ Blazers’ final surge. Grant to undergo surgery o n squad. The Division I starts will play the Division n-m The Associated Press softball coach, possesses a definite Clyde Drexler led Portland with 26 LOS ANGELES (AP) — Los Angeles Clippers guard Harazin said. “We’ve made some progress, not as much u r - All-Stars who will be coached by Pete Broaca of Western air of confidence and anticipation points, Jerome Kersey had 24 and Porter Gary OranL who hais missed his team’s last two games as I’d like, but we’re still talking.” New England College and Stan Spriou of New The Portland Trail Blazers want an for toe upcoming season. added 23. Drexler and Porter each had because of soreness and stiffness in his right knee, will Gooden has turned down an offer of $13.8 million > m Hampshire College. NBA title. The Orlando Magic would be As far ^ assessing toe impending two free throws in the fmal seconds to put undergo arthroscq;>ic surgery on the knee Thursday. over three years and Viola has rejected $123 million for The game be^fits the Basketball Hall of Fame in happy to finish its second season with a campaign, Jankowski looks no fur­ z! ^ modest 30 victories. the game away. A team spdeeswoman said Wednesday it won’t be ther than toe Bulldogs’ season three years. Both can become free agents after this Springfield. known how long Grant will be sidelined until toe opera­ O 03 Both took another step toward their Magic 97, Mavericks 85: Orlando and opener April 4 at home against season. z -< Bolton Road Race is set goals Wednesday night Dallas are tied with 25-43 records, but the tion is perforrn^. Grant has missed five games his RHAM, last year’s Class M runner- There was no news Wednesday in the contract talks month due to injuries. up. between outfielder Bobby Bonilla and toe Pittsburgh H H j| ^ BOLTON — The 14th annual Bolton Rve Mile Roj^ The Blazers, who lost to Detroit in the NBA finals last spring, overcame a 24- Grant has played in 65 games this season, all as a “We’ll find out right away if Pirates. m X Race, sponsored by the Bolton Lions Club, will be held NBA Roundup starter, and is averaging 8.9 points and 8.9 assists. Meanwhile, Milwaukee general manager Harry Dalton on Saturday, May 4, with the start and finish line in front point deficit early in the sectmd half to we’re going to do anything,” o m beat the Seattle SuperStmics 112-107. The Clippers also anitounced Wednesday that backup Jankowski surmised. said trade talk with toe Los Angeles Dodgers involving of Bolu» High School mi Brandy Street. Magic is a lot happier about its showing center Mike Smrek has been activated from the injured relief pitcher Dan Plesac axe “muted.” He characterized The race is to go off at 1 pjn. Pbrtland trailed 68-44 with 3:04 gone in Jankowski will rely on a pair of z the third quarter before rallying, and went after matching a club record with its list. Smrek, who sprained his lower back and missed reports on the potential trade as “overblown.” Enuy fee is $5, $6 the day of the race uptil 12:30 pjn. underclassmen to handle the pitch­ o ^ ahead to stay on Terry Porter’s three-point fourth straight win and sixth of the seastm eight games, has played in six games for the Clippers this ing duties. Sophomore Kelley Jor­ In the major injury news of toe day, Atlanta learned Trophies and merchandise prizes will be awarded and play with 42 seconds left. away from home. season, averaging 2.4 points and 2.1 rebounds. outfielder Lonnie Smith would be sidelined for 2-4 there are six age divisions each for men and women. dan, who came on strong at the end o Ifcrtland’s 51-18 record is the best in Reynolds finished with 20 points and Best, Marshall lead way of last season, and freshman Kristie weeks following arthroscopic knee surgery. General For applications, further infmmation, cmitact the Bol­ Scott Skiles added 18 fre Orlando, which manager John Schueiiiolz said that Smith’s injury im­ 52 CD ton Lions Club, do Bob Peterson. 400 West Street, Bol­ the West. The Trail Blazers lead the Los Sanford will split the mound duties. Angeles Lakers by l>/2 games in the has beaten Dallas four straight times. LANDOVER, Md. (AP) — Travis Best scored rtine of Senior tri-captain Jessica proves the chances of Deitxi Sanders, the Atlanta Falcons m CD ton, m call Petersmi at 649-7766. his IS points in the first seven minutes of toe second half Pacific Division and Western Conference Pistons 102, Fbcers 93: The Ughts Brahaney, who batted .464 a year defensive back trying to win a spot on the Braves’ roster. O races. went out in The Ffilace late in the third and Donyell Marshall scored 12 of his 18 points in toe ago, will be toe main reliever out­ “We told him we would give him this opportunity O’Neal to stay at LSU half as the U.S. All-Stars routed toe Capital All-Stars “We want to win the conference, and quarter due to a brief power failure. Den­ side of her regular spot at third base. when we signed him, but we fully expected to send him SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Shaquille O’Neal, who we know it’s in our hands,” Blazers coach nis Rodman then knocked out the I^cers 114-89 in toe Capital Classic high school all-star game. to Richmond,” Schuerholz said. “But toe guy has made could be the No. 1 pick in the 1991 NBA draft if he “It’s sort of an inititiation by s > Rick Adelman said. “We can either win it in the fourth quarter, scoring five points Best, headed to Georgia Ibch, is a S-foot-11 guard fire,” Jankowski explained. “What us take notice. No question about it.” decides to leave Louisiana State early, says he is *>etty from Central High in Springfield, Mass., and M arsl^l, a or give it away.” to start a decisive 15-0 run. we’re stressing (in our pitchers) is return to the Indians’ lineup by Monday. sure" he will remain in school at least another year, the y~" 6-7 forward who has yet to select a college, is from WWle Portland goes title-hunting, the Rodman, who finished with 19 points getting toe ball over toe plate, con­ In exhibition games: J3 > San Antonio Eiqiress-News rq;iorted Wednesday. Reading, Hi. Magic has set 30 wins as its goal. Orlan­ and 19 rebounds, tied the game with a trol, and let our infielders have a Red Sox 9, Reds 4: At Winter Haven, Fla., Jack Clark Underclassmen have until May 12 to declare their do got No. 25 by beating Dallas 97-85 as layup, was fouled and missed the free and Ellis Burks homered Cllppen 95, Jazz 89: Utah’s Karl program of one scholarship next year for rules infrac­ batted .385 last year, will be behind ON T H E H ILL — Bolton High’s Jessica Brahaney delivers a p a s s i n g t h r o u g h — Karl Malone (32) of the Utah Jazz tries to row, made their biggest comeback of the Malone hit 11 straight shots and finished toe plate. homer off Rob Murphy in the ninth. Right now. I’m leaning toward staying at LSU. I’m p e t­ tions. pitch during the 1990 season. Brahaney will be mainly Braves 2, Yankees 0: At West Palm Beach, Fla., Char­ ty sure about it.” throw a pass past Charles Smith (54) of the Los Angeles Clippers season. The SiqrerSonics. playing the with a season-high 41 points, but the “She’s one of the best catchers in second of three games at the Ihcoma The Cdmmittee on Infractions said it opted for milder anchored at third base during the '91 softball campaign. lie Leibrandt, Doug Sisk and Kent Mercker combined on O ’Neal, who at 7-foot-l, 280 pounds is being touted as during their game Wednesday night in Los Angeles. The Clippers, Clippers wcm their fourth straight game as penalties because of several mitigating factors, including the COC (Charter Oak Con­ Dome, let Portland get within three points Ron Harper had 29 poinu and Charles ference),” Jankowski said. “She a two-hitter, and Andres Thomas and Greg Olson hit basketball’s next great big man. led the nation in despite 41 points from Malone, won, 95*89. toe university’s own investigation and its efforts to cor­ run-scoring singles. in the third quarter, then led by as many Smith added 22. does all toe right things defensive­ player and leader." I’m hoping the pitching develops. If rebounding this season with 14.6 a game. He also rect toe jx'oblems on its own. Mets 6, Expos 1: At Part St. Lucie, Fla., David Cone averaged 27.7 points and five blocked shots a game. The limited sanctions follow a two-year investigation ly.” Whitfield and Jordan will be our pitching comes around, we’ll Junior Dawn Bedard, who was backups at third when Brahaney make a little noise. We’ll score our pitched two-hit ball for seven iimings and Hubie Brooks O ’Neal said the hairline fracture he sustained in his completed in mid-December, in w h i^ toe infractions hit a twosun homer in toe first iiming as toe Mets beat left fibula late in the season has mended. Bolton’s top hitter (.500) last pitches. runs. We have to keep them off toe Lemieux watches as Penguins committee found 17 violations. They involved former the Montreal Expos. Cone v/as shaky in the first iiming Graduation stats football coach Lou Holtz, fired administrator Luther Dar- seascxi, will be at first base. She also Senior tri-captain Suzanne bases. Our immediate goal is to do Paternity suit thrown out hit four home runs and drove in 26 Lorentzen (.300) will be in left field. better than 5-15.” when he walked the first two batters, but then settled ville, football coach John GutekunsL basketball coach down. He struck out six and made 90 pitches. ATLANTA (AP) — An Atlanta woman’s paternity suit Clem Haskins and wrestling coach J. Robinson. runs. with sophomore Leah Camposeo Schedule: April 4 RHAM H, 5 against former baseball player Steve Garvey has been under 40 percent clinch Patrick Division title “She led the team in most of the patrolling centerfield. Camposeo led Lyman Memorial H, 9 Coventty A thrown out by a Georgia qrpeals court, which ruled that Holtz won’t claim vindication offensive categories,” Jankowski toe team with 21 stolen bases and 21 10 Cromwell H, 12 East Hampton, judges in the state have no jurisdiction in the case. DETROIT (AP) — In a way, it it will be really special to be able to season over with and start the said. walks last season. Senior Liz 19 Portland A (11 a.m.), 22 WASHINGTON (AP) — Only 39 percent of col­ was fitting that the Pittsburgh Pen­ SOUTH BEND, Ind. ( i ^ — Notre Dame football Rebecka Mendenhall, an assignment editor for Cable know that we were a part of the playoffs, but you don’t want to be Sophotitore Chrissy Malota has Kitchin and freshmen Tina WestortxA A, 24 Rocky Hill H, 30 Davis surprise lege basketball players earn degrees within five years guins clinched the Patrick Division coach Lou Holtz didn’t claim victory or vindication after News Network, filed suit in Hiltmi County Stqierim Ueant. that put up the first banner in playing like this going into toe inside track at second base. Im- Lorentzen and Kristi Svalestad are RHAM A. of enrollment, according to a new survey, a rate that is title with Mario Lemieux looking on toe NCAA bought his story about rides violations in the Court in 1989, alleging that Garvey fathered her son, nttsburgh Gvic Areiu.” postseastm, and have to worry about (x-essive freshman Jermifer Whit­ vying for the rightfield spot. May 1 Coventry H, 3 East generating concern antong higher education leaders. in street clothes. Minnesota athletics program. bom the previous October, and backed out of an agree­ ^ o n g with the sentiment, the i t ” field will see action at one of the in­ Sophomore Alarui Serignese will H am i^n H, 6 Bacon Academy A, 7 “Graduation rates for athletes ought to be con­ The former Minnesota coach did use a news con­ for Tar Heels After alL the Penguins’ drive to division title has concrete value for field spots. ment to marry her. Red Wing coach Bryan Murray ference, though, to attack those who had attacked him. be a key reserve in toe outfield and Cromwell A, 10 Portland H, 13 East siderably higher,” Southern Methodist president Ken­ their first-ever division crown was Senior tri-captain Danielle Curylo Garvey maintained that since he lives in California and the Penguins. Hrst, it eliminates the was also concerned about his team’s “The past three years have been quite difficult for me, at first base. Granby H, 15 Rocky Hill A 17 the child was conceived there, the Atlanta court should neth Pye told USA Today after the survey ai^reared in accomplished with their best player possibility of a season-ending game (.379) is at shortstop. “Right now, the question mark is Bacon Academy H, 21 East Granby CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) — Hubert Davis proved play this late in the season. my family, our coaches, players and the University of North Carolina coach Dean Smith wrong, and Smith has not have jurisdiction. A Superim Court judge last year the March 27 edition of The Chronicle of Higher missing the first 52 games of the with the New \brk Rangers for the “She’s (Curylo) one of our big­ pitching,” Ja^owski said. “Our A 22 Somers A, 24 COC Tourna­ Education. At this point in the season, to Notre Dame,” Holtz said, “because I have been faced re n te d that argument, but the Court of Appeals agreed season with a back injury. duunpionship, and allows the Psn- gest strengths,” Jankowski said. strength is defense, especially in the ment A (site to be armounced). never been happier. The survey shows 56 percent of all athl^es Wednesday night, Lemieux was give iq> seven goals is very fiiistrat- with false accusations, iruiccurate reporting, irmuendoes Smith told Davis he didn't think he was good enough with Garvey in a decisimi this month. guins to rest key players before the ing and disappointing,” Murray said. “She was toe best fielding shortstop infield. I’ll put our third baseman Games not noted begin at 3:30 recruited by NCAA Division I schools in 1984 out as a result of a 14-stitch cut he playoff opener April 2. and half-truths.” I saw last year. She’s a terrific to play for toe Tar Heels, but Davis has been a clutch per­ 1 “We had the game tied (3-3), but Holtz, coach at Minnesota in 1984-85, gave $250 in and shortstop up against anyone. pan. Bowman, Armstrong are elected re iv e d degrees, compared with a 48 percent gradua­ suffered Tbesday night, but it didn’t “I am so glad this is over and we former who has helped lead North Carolina to its first then we gave them a bunch of chan­ cash to an unidentified athlete to pay the cost of a college tion rate for all students and 39 percent for haniffitball slow down the Penguins, who rolled can get some playen some time to Fmal R)ur since 1982. TORONTO (AP) — Scotty Bowman and Neil ces and we striped going to the course that allowed the athlete to remain eligible for players. over the Detroit Red Wings 7-4. get h ^ th y ,” Johnwn said. “I would “He has gotten a lot better. I suppose I was surprised Armstrong were elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame. net” competition, toe NCAA said Wednesday. He also was “Everybody would pretty much agree that we need It was the first championship of have hated to have to go into the after December of his freshman year," Smith said. “I’m Bowman, the NHL leader with 739 victories, was chosen Detroit finishes the season with a found to have given between $25 and $40 to Roselle Kansas in the Builders’ category. Armstrong, a linesman for 21 to focus on football and basketball, that’s where the any kind for the Penguins since they Garden and beat New \brk to win more happy with him now.” saliem problems are,” Richard McGuire, director of entered the NHL in 1967. Saturday home game with the Richardson, a prospective recruiU for toe loss of his wal­ Davis has hit 37 of his last 69 shots from 3-point dis­ seasrms, was elected in the officials’ category. this. They are almost impossible to Rangers and a Sunday trip to From Page 23 acadeinic advising fw athletes at the University of “It has been a long, long battle for beat at home.” let. tance. That tear has lifted his 3-point average to 48.8 per­ Bowman started with the St. Louis Blues in the Chicago. The Penguins are home to Holtz had already admitted both violations. 1967-68 season and led them to three consecutive Stan­ Virgmia, told The Chronicle. ‘The figures underscore this organization.” Penguins coach The win also gave the Penguins cent, a pace that would set a North Carolina record. that” Philadelphia and at the Rangers on “I have never said that 1 didn’t make a mistake, but I Jayhawks are still rated by odds- and No. 4-rated teams to get out of season. And when you’re in toe top ley Ciq> fmals. He then went to Montreal for eight Bob Johnson said. “I’m eqiecially home-ice advantage throughout the In the NCAA tournament, Davis has hit 11 of 19 3- Sunday in a suddenly meaningless have always contended that my actions were never in­ makers as toe least likely champion their regional. ' 20, you’ve always got a chance. We ' seasons, where his teams wtxi five Stanley Cups. In the survey, 262 of the 295 National Collegiate happy for guys like Bob Errey, Troy Patrick Division playoffs. game. pointers for 57.9 percent. Athletic Association Division I institutions were Loney and Mario Lemieux. who tended to gain a competitive advantage,” he said. among toe other Final R)ur teams of “I don’t know if I’d say that we’re played some good teams this year “I felt 1 could play like that, and a lot of people Armstrong made his debut in November 1957. On Oct “We have struggled on the road, “We don’t have to worry about studied. been here for seven or eight years but we are a great home team, so the UNLV, North Carolina and Duke. the hottest team because we’re toe and we beat some good teams.” didn’t,” Davis says. “Most of them thought I would come 16, 1973, he was honored for working his 1.314th game, the last two games, but it isn’t over,” Feutrier wins U.S. crown But, with a modesty refiecting the breaking the league recwd for most games officiated. He Among NCAA Division I-A colleges, without winning a thing.” home ice means a lot to us,” John­ only team that had that played the If Williams were a betting man — here and sit on the bench for four years. But that didn’t players had a 32 percent graduation rate, while 42 per­ Johnson said. “We want to be play­ STOWE, Vt. (AP) — Frenchman Alain Fbutricr joined their coach, they don’t claim to be No. 3 and No. 4-rankcd teams,” said which he assuredly is not — he discourage me at alt. never missed an assignment in 16 seasons, retiring in Even though he didn’t play, son said. “That gives us a big ad­ ing into May.” cent of football players graduated within five years. Lemieux tasted the pleasures of vic­ some elite company Wednesday when he won toe men’s toe best team in the United States, or Williams. “I think Las Vegas is the would not quarrel with the odds. “I hadn’t envisioned me being at the place where I am 1977-78. vantage.” Jaromir Ja y scored twice for Pit- The Chronicle of Higher Education reported. tory along with the champagne. U.S. Giant Slalom Championship at Stowe’s North even in toe Final Fbur. best team. But toe best team doesn’t “But I've got a vested interest right now. But I knew if I gave it a good shot and worked The win was Pittsburgh’s 41st of tsbuigh, Kevin Stevens wyipd a goal South Africa gets support For athletes in Divisitm I, and especially in “This is really a great feeling,” the season, a club record. Slope. “I don’t kttow if I can say we’re always win. I don’t think we’re 12 with a group of kids I've got a lot of hard, good things would happen to me.” and an assist and Mark Recchi feutrier led a European sweep of the first four places points better than Indiana and I Smith had seen Davis, the nephew of former Thr Heel JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — A delega­ Division I-AA schools, graduation rates were Lemieux said. “On the bench at the In sharp contrast to the joy in the toe best,” said forward Alonzo confidoice in,” Williams said. “If “skewed upward” because of high graduation rates in end, I finally found out what it is added three assisu. Shawn Burr had in a race that was toifted from Colorado to Vermont Jamison, who was named the don’t think we’re 18 better than star Walter Davis, at his sununer basketball camps. When tion from the International Olynqric C o ^ itte e said it visiting locker room was the somber a goal and an assist for Detroit we go up there and get blown out, it private schools, including Ivy League colleges. Those like to be on a team that has won more than a month ago. He became only toe second Southeast Regional’s most valuable Akansas.” will surprise me a heck of a lot more it came time to evaluate the talent. Smith gave the would siqiport South Africa’s return to Olympic com­ mood of the^Red Wings. They The game was tied 3-3 late in the attending private schools were found to be much more something.” returned from .a successful road trip Frenchman to win a U.S. National Giant SUdom title. player. “But I think we’re playing His players, however, are not as than it would if we go up there and younger Davis’ father the report: Send him to a mid-level petition if ^lartheid is abolished and other tough condi- second period when Detroit’s reticent as their coach. tioiumet. likely to graduate than were their counterparts at Goal tender Frank Pietrangelo. a week ago, only to low three The first was Jean Claude Killy, who won his U.S. na­ the best ball of the tournament right win toe thing.” Division 1 school. public schools. Shawn Burr took a boarding penal- tional tide in 1966 just before he went on to win three now. With decisive victories over “We think we're as good as “His dad told me after his eighth year in camp that he The six-member Commission on Apartheid and Olym­ who got the win in his first start in straight games. Detroit is assured of Williams enjoys drawing a paral­ gold medals in toe Olympics. Indiana and Ariuinsas, I think we anybody in toe country,” said for- wants to come,” Smith recalls. "1 told his dad I didn’t pism made its reconunendation after five days of meet­ “i^blic universities are going to have different ad­ 13 games, said the impact of the title third place in the Norris Division. lel between Kansas' situation this Pittsburgh took advantage of the Feutrier edged teammate Dave PretoL while Italy’s have the momentum going into the w ^ Mike Maddox, t ^ only cur­ think he was quite good enough at this level, but he ings with government, sports and black leaders. missions requirements and different missitms than won’t be felt for some time to come. “This really isn’t a do-or-die week and their surprise victory last power play, as Stevens put the Pen­ Luca Fesando was third and teamnuite Richard Pramot- next game.” rent Jayhawk who took part in 1988 should go to a mid-major. The delegation demanded the abolition of apartheid privates, and that will be reflected in the statistic of “Now we still have a couple situation for us, and that ft year in the prescason NIT when they guins ahead for good with his 39th ton was fourth. If they’re not toe best, they may when Kansas beat\)klahoma in the “He was playing in suburbia, and you really can’t tell. and unification of South African sports bodies into non­ graduation rates.” said Sara L, McNabb, registrar at %ames to go, and then we have to harder to play,” Detroit c^tain were unranked but beat highly Indiana Univer y. goal of the season, tipping a Hud The best the United States could do in its own national be the h o t^ t. None of toe other championship game. “We were His competition, 1 hate to say it. in northern Virginia, facial groups before IOC admission would be granted. worry about the playoffs,” Pietran­ Steve Yzerman said. “I think the regarded UNLV, LSU and St. Coffey slap shot past Tun Chevel- meet was a fifth place by Tuiii Standteiner. three had to beat the nation’s No. 3 ranked No. 12 at the end of toe lohn’s. wa.sn’t the best,” Smith said. gelo said. “But 10 years frotfl r»w. guys are just anxious to get the dae at 19:28. 26—MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, March 28, 1991 MANCHESTER HERALD, Thursday, March 28,1991—27

THE NEW BREED BLONOIE by Dean Voting B Stan Dralis

Crossword THE OHCKEN FRICASSEE DIO YOU SAY [ I SURE I WISH YOU'D HAVE KEPT SPECIAL IS FROM AM THIS IS FROM DIO IT IN TH E OLD FAMILY RECIPE AN OLD FAMILY W JAILY ^ SCOREBOARD RECIPE ? I NIT final glance MMOSS 46 1002, Answer lo Prevleue Puiile Basketball Firat Round Roman Wadnaaday, March 13 Hockey 1 Spins 48 PoHsfs' □Dll □□□□□ □□□ Providence 98. Jamea Madiaon 93. 20T 7 Psrtofrsil- squipmsnl aaa □(!□□□ □□□ rosdcsr 51 Fight Cincinnati 82, Ball State 55 □□!□ □□□□□ □□□ NBA standings 12 Rspsk 55 Volcsnic WIsconain 87, Bowling Green 79, OT NHL standings (slws) rock EASTERN CONFERENCE Colorado 71, Michigan 64 13 Church ssst 56 Written In 3QQQ □□□ □□□□ Atlantic DIvMon Southern lllinoia 75. Boiaa State 74 WALES CONFERENCE 14 Nsvsl pstty. old script □oiaaDaa □□□ W L Pci. OB Stanford 93, Houaton 86 Patrick Division officer 57 Qsnsrously [ ! □ □ □ □ □ □ x-Bostan SO 19 .725 _ Thuraday, March 14 W L TPIS OF QA 15 (Mhpitchsd 58 Vnt detsrl Siena 90, Fairlaigh (5ickinson 85 y-Pittsburgh 41 32 5 87 335 295 16 MDs'group □QiQQEiaa Philadelphia 38 31 .551 12 □□□ □□□□□□□ New Ybrk 34 36 .486 16'/S Fdrdham 76, South Florida 66 x-NY Rangers 35 30 13 63 286 256 17 BassI ol DOWN burden [!□□□ □□□ □□□□ Whshington 26 42 .382 23ifo Southweat Misaouti SL 57, Coppin State 47 New Jersey 32 31 IS 79 270 257 18 UK Urns □□□□Q □□□□□ New Jersey 23 47 .329 Memphia SL 82, Alabama-Bimiingham 76 Wfoshington 35 35 7 77 249 253 1 Twistsd 27'fo 75 248 260 2 1 ------of 2 T e a -- ARLO AND JA N » by Jimmy Johnaen Miami 21 49 .300 29nnecticut Florida Stats 96, App^achian Stats 57 Minneapolis 25 ( R o b ^ R eoM , 7:15. 4, Pfttsbur)^ Trot- w MILITARV STRATtGISr AT THE Rfl&S Chicago at Washington, 8 p.m 1987— Southern Mississippi Holy Cross 81, (Marylarxl 74 Saturday, March 16 tier 9 (Qllhen, Lonay), 10:12. Penal­ Sacramento at Denver, 9:30 p.m 1986-Ohio State Southwest Missouri State 94, Tennessee ties— Sarriualsaan, PH, mtrwr-major (elbowing, "I'm a failure. Last week, burglars stole LAST MIGHT Tech 64 s r w Minnesota at Seattle, 10 pm. 1985-UCLA Duke 85, Iowa 70 Exhibition standings fighting), 404; Fsdarov, Dot major ( I g h ^ , everything in the house but the throw rug I Dallas at LA Clippers, 10:30 p.m 1984-Michigan Vanderbilt 73, South Carolina 64 Connecticut 66, Xavier, Ohio 50 434; FYobert Dot (Intorfsranoe), 526; Marsh, Por5and at LA Lakers, 1030 pm. Second Round At Dayton Arena AMERICAN LEAGUE Dot (highfoticdking). 0:56; Tagfianett. PH (kitar- w 58 was sleeping on.” 1983— Fresno SL W r 1982— Bradley Saturday, (March 16 Dayton, Ohio fsrsnca), 1236. Tennessee 55, Southwest Missouri Stale 47 Sunday, March 17 New Ybrk 16 Second Pariod— 5, Detroit Croasmon 8 NBA results 1981— Tulsa Minnesota 1982- Virglnia Wtestem Kentucky 72, Florida State 69 IS (Fsderov, Fsdyig. 1S2. 6. Detroit Ysebeart 17 Sunday, (March 17 Ohio Stale 65. Georgia Tech 61 Boston 15 (FYobert), 1225 (pp). 7, Pittsburgh; Stovans 39 Pistons 102, Pacers 93 1979— Indiana Clavsiand 1978-Texas Varxlsrbilt 69, Purdue 63 St. John's 84. Texas 76 10 (Coffey, RacchO, 1928 (pp). I^ fia a -O e n - Stumped? Get answers to clues by calling “ Dial-a-Word" I THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME Seattle 10 INDIANA (83) 1977— SL Bonaventure Auburn 84, (Holy Cross 58 Regional Semifinals nkiga Pit (holding), 2:40; Probart Dat douUa by Henri Arnold and Bob Lea Baltimore 10 at 1-900-454-3S3S and entering access code number 184 Person 8-16 2-2 18, Thompson 2-3 0-0 4. 1976— Kentucky Regional Semifinals At The Sllverdome Cafifomie 9 Unscramble these four Jumblea Drolling 1-3 (M) 2 Miller 6-10 2 2 16, Fleming 1975— Princeton At Knoxville, Tenn. ffontlac, Mich. 9Sc per minute; Touch-Tone or rotary phones. 3-7 1-2 7, Schrempf 8-13 1-1 17. Smite 4-7 2-4 Thursday, March 21 Friday, March 22 Chicago 10 one latter to each squata to form ^ T 2 k 1974— Purdue Kansas City four ordinary worda o 10. M.Williams 2-5 5-7 9, McCloud 1-6 2-2 4. 1973— Virginia Tech Tennessee 68, Western Kentucky 61 8 Probert Dot (elbawing), 1952. Sanders 23 0-0 4, ICWiNiams 1-2 0-0 2. Totals Auburn 58, Vanderbilt 45 St. John's 91, Ohio State 74 Texas 8 Third Pariod— 8, Rttaburgh, Francis 23 1972— Maryland Toronto WMTHRQP by DIch CavaM 3275 1 5-20 93. 1971— Nortti Carolina R^lonal Championship Duke 81, Connecticut 67 7 (Stevena Samusisaon), 1:57. 0, Rttaburgh, O H Detroit 7 INBAR DETROfT(102) 1970— Marquette At Knoxville, Tenn. Regional Championship Jagr 26 (Jsnninga Loney), 2 2 1 .10, lYttsburgh, J 3 r - Rodman 212 24 19. Edwards 6-12 1-4 13. Saturday, (March 23 At The Sllverdome Oeklarxi 6 S.Ybung 17 (Jenriings), 8:53. 11, DetroH, Burr 1969— T e m ^ Milwaukae w h a t A p e YOU aO W ETH IN O R3R M V A TIE RACK? H NO, A DOORKNOB Lalmbeer 4-8 2-2 10, Henderson 3-8 20 7, 1968— Dayton Tennessee 69, Auburn 65 Pontiac, Mich. 6 20 (Ftadne, Yzacmen), 14:52 (pp). Ffonal- NATIONAL LEAGUE CELEBRITY CIPHER MAKIKie IN DAD T O H A N & H I© Dumars 1219 3-3 23, Johnson 4-11 2-4 10, 1967— Southern Illinois Sunday, March 24 ties— Taglianetfi, Rt (holding), 62% Probert Calebiity Cipher cryptograms ere created from quotations by famous > m W Salley 21 1-2 1, Aguirre 7-11 3-6 17, Bedford 1966-Brigham Tbung MIDWEST REGIONAL Dat (roughing), 622; C o f ^ .m (Ngh-^kkig), people, pest end present. Each letter In the cipher stands for SHOPClAe©'? NECKTIE© ON. SL Louis 12 21 0-0 0, Long 1-1 0-0 2Totals 43-84 1225 1965-SL John's First Round Duke 78. SL John's 61 021; Qilhsrt, PH, nfinor-major (higivaficking, another. Today’s du9: TequM/s J. Houston 11 MIRGE z! ^ 102. 1664-Bradley Wfodnesday, March 13 fighting), 0:51; RHvin, Dot minor-mcjor (rouglv Now Ybrk 13 Indiana 28 26 15 24— 93 1963— (Evidence Stephen F. Austin 73. Mississipi 62 WEST REGIONAL kig, fighting), 0:51; E ^ , Rt (charging), 12:54; O CD Detroit 24 20 26 32— 102 Oklahoma Stats 81. DePaul 80 Second Round Pittsburgh 11 Z - < 1962-Oayton San Diego Ptknaau, Det (kipping), 15:46. 3-Point goals— Indiana 2-12 (Miller 2-6, 1961— ^viderKe Northwestern 82, Wfoshington State 62 At The Jon M. Huntsman Center 10 Shots on goal--PHtsfaurgh 9-8-9— 26. Dekoit ' J ' P C Z K L K Z C S S Schrempf 21, McCloud 22, Person 0-3), Lamar 77, Texas 63 Chicago 12 1960— Bradley Salt LakeCHy AtlarXa 12-11-9-32. H H Detroit 1-3 (Henderson 1-2, Aguirre21). Fouled Second Round Saturday, March 16 10 1959— SL John's San Francisco Ffowar-play OpportonWaa— Rttaburgh 2 of 6; QUINUE 'T- . Lrf---,1^ out— None. Rebounds— Indiana 36 (Person 6), 1958— Xavier, Ohio Saturday, March 16 10 R Y K 8 R D R Y Y G M , POLLUTION -WAV BE Arizona 76, Brigham Young 61 Cirtoinnati DetroH2ol6. Detroit 57 (Rodman 19). Assists— Indiana 15 1957— Bradley Arkansas 102 Northwestern 68 7 PEFIWEP A© THE O m (Millar 5), Detroit 20 (Laimbeer, Dumars 6). Oklahoma Stale 96, Michigan Stale 94, 3 OT i Solon Hall 81, Croighton 69 PNIadelphia 6 Gooliee— Rttaburgh, Ratrangalo, 10-10-1 (32 □ c r 1956— Louisville At Tha McKale Center Montreal K M L J ’ P C C M T R N C L CONTAVtiHATION cwAuJ Total fouls— Indiana 25, Detroit 23. Techni­ 1955— Duquesne Sunday, March 17 6 shots-28 saves). DetroH, Cheveldaa, 29-26-5 cal— Indiana illegal defense. Flagrant Tucson, Ariz. Loa Angeles 7 (23-16), Hanlon (853 toird, 3-3). O F N A T U R E ------5 -O 1954— Holy Cross Virginia 74. Stephen F.Austin 72 e tIBIbytCA MX foul— Aguirre. A— ^21,454. Sunday, March 17 NOTE: Split-squad gamas count 1 A-19,760. S-2t 1953— Seton Hall Lamar 93, Louisiana State 73 CPCWN FJMGDC RY toft do not Rsforas— Rob Shick. Linesmen— Gord CATATH 1 9 5 2 -U Salle Regional Semifinals Now ananga tha circled lattars to Magic 97, Mavericks 85 At Austin, Texas Utah 85. Michigan State 84, 20T Wadnaaday'a Gamaa Brosekar, Jerry (Yatomoa — form tha surprise answer, as sug­ ERNgbyBudOraea 1951— Brigham M)ung UNLV 62. Georgetown 54 JD-' — CWWR8 ORLANDO (97) Thursday, March 21 Minnesota 10, Phlladsiphia 4 ____ gested by tha above cartoon. HH UVtE IS R A U y ( ^ MANY I 1950— CCNY Regional Semifinals Houston 2. SL Iquis 1 Deviis 4, Whaiers 3 OT uhaFTT n " Scott 2-10 2-6 6, Turner 4-9 2-4 10, Kite 3-7 1949— San Francisco Virginia 76, Oklahoma Stats 61 •nFFAMV. f»0LeaFFV.' jeONlEER. r U8CP PINTS T-f Lamar 91, Arkansas 75 At The KIngdome Atlanta 2, New Vbrk Ybnkeas 0 Y 8 N M M . VbGir \ 1-4 7. Sklles 211 6-6 18, Anderson 7-13 0-0 1948— SL Louis Seattle Hartford 0 3 0 0— 3 I rtEAM -nFFAMY. TO BE TiEFANV^, IN A , n SEVENTEEN 14, Acres 2-3 20 4, Reynolds 4-7 12-16 20, Regional Cliamplonship Boston 9, Cincinnati 4 NowJersey 2 0 1 1— 4 OPART? 2 CD 1947-Utah Thursday, March 21 Toronto 8, Detroit 7,13 innings .^Bvn rTTn n 'iiTTi NItOtC.r NICOLE IS Smitfi 210 3-5 13, Wiley 2-2 1-2 5, Ansley 22 1946— Kentucky At Austin, Texas First Pariod— 1, New Jersey, Mullar 19 THAT'S nV RBAL m CO Saturday, March 23 Baltimore 17, Los Angeles 9 PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Nobody knew what I looked (Answers tomorrow) m NAME- MY NAME IS) d-0 0. Totals 3274 27-43 97. 1945-DePaul Seton Hall 81, Arizoria 77 (Lamlaux, Cigar), 4:50. % New Jorsay, D.Brown [ 'JBfilMIflBR- _ DALLAS (85) Virginia 82 Lamar 70 Cleveland 5, Seatde 4 13 (Fatiaov), 1238. Panolles— Ladouoeur, Har like, because I never looked the same way twice.” — Jumblas: VENOM WAGER STRONG HOPPER Tlf=RNJY-NICajE. 1944— SL John's UNLV 83. Utah 66 Milwaukae 1, Oakland 0.6 innings, raki Ye. 'arday's P O McCray 2-6 2 4 7, WHIiame 213 2 2 18, 1943— SL John's (rougNng), 0:43; Wfokirich, NJ (roughing), 9:43; Bette Davis. Answer Many a man drinks In order to forget - - - WEST REGIONAL Regional Championship San Francisco vs. San Diego at Yuma, A rt. Cullan, Ite (a ib o v ^ , 1036. c a l l m e Donaldson 2-6 2-2 6, Harper 216 2 2 12, 1942— West Vrginia At The Kingdoms ocd„ rain WHEN TO STOP Blackman 7-18 27 20, While 2-6 1-1 5, Shasky First Round Second Parlod-3. Hartford, Vstbaek 42 (Cul­ W4FFV. 1941— Long Island U. Seattle Chicago Cubs 5. CoUlornia 3 21 2 0 0, English 1-2 1-2 3. Upshaw 24 OO 4, Wfodnasday, March 13 lan), 6:10. 4, Hartford, Zolopskl IS (Dkieen, S I 1940— Colorado Saturday, March 23 New Ybrk Mats 6, IMonksal 1 IBwW PGM Rt nOCR< (MRIRito ■OUR I80, R1 ■ RTVtoROSR fOr Rif RO, WfUCn RwRIOOR DORMOR Southern Cal 63, Utah 52 Hunter), 12:40 (pp). 5; Hartford, Vsrbaek 43 MS fmtmm. fnm Ms ^ 0. Pm Oie. OfUnd^ FL m S -M . Davis 28 20 lO.Totals 3282 12-20 85. 1939-Long Island U. Pittsburgh 10, Texas 4 Orlando 22 22 27 26— 97 1938-Temple Iowa 64, Montana 53 ^ (Hunter, Cullan), 1634. POnaltiee-RBrown. lAClueG your rmoSi eaersee enS sty ooSo one Rieko chocii peyoWo to N#RF8eeeoiboRli8> UNLV 70. Texas Tech 65 UNLV 77, Seton Hall 65 Thursday's Gamaa Har, minor-major (roughing, fighting), 2:47; Dallas 31 20 14 20— 65 Houston vs. Pittsburgh at Bradenton, F t , 3-Point goals— Orlando 24 (Skiles 21, Scott Fullerton SL 84, Louisiana Tech 80 Wfokirich NJ, major (fighfing), 2:47; New Jersey 3 3 > Second Round THE FINAL FOUR 105 p.m. bench, served by Huscnm (too many man), 0-3), Dallas 1-8 (Blackman 1-2, While 21. Har­ NIT championship At The Hoosler Dome - , Saturday, March 16 Detroit vs. Boston at Winter Haven, F t , 1.05 1 2 2 0 . THE PHANTOM by Lea Falk 8 By Barry fjbCC i t / C»RI5 IS A per 25). Fouled out— None. Rebounds— Orlan­ Indianapolis do 60 (Kite 16). Dallas 49 (Donaldson 10). As- Stanford 78, Okiahoma 72 Georgia 86. UNLV 62 p.m. Third Pariod— 6, New Jersey, Shanahan 28 U)ttsy UAR.'' Long Beach SL 83, Soutfiem Cal 58 Semifinals (Driver, MacLaon), 022 (pp). Panoltiaa-Cul- sists-Orlando 17 (Skiles 8), Dallas 20 (Black­ Saturday, March 30 Philadelphia vs. SL Louis at SL Petersburg, ^ZIIHA..ARe you TRy/N©jrHOPELe&S. K/MONE-TER ? > man 6). Total fouls— Orlando 23, Dallas 30. STANFORD (78) Wfoshington 70, Iowa 53 Fla., 105 p.m. lan. Her, double minor (rou^ng). 6:17; Vfor- WH4T04N yC»Nar©PE4K Vlahov 3-9, 212 14, Wingate 4-9 5-8 13. Rip OF TUB TO LBfiVB Ue S Technicals— Orlando coach Guokas, Whits, Up­ Stanford 91, Fullerton Slate 67 Baltimore vs. Monkaol at Wfost Rakn Beach, beak. Her, douUa rnkwr (roughing), 8:17; > HBPO < . evlLOFOUR THE BORN LOSER by Art Banaom Keefe 210 2-2 12. Ammarw 217 1-2 22. (regional SemHtnals North Carolina (29-5) vs. Kansas (26-7), 539 Donayfco, dU, douWe rpinor (rougNng), 6:17; H ie iG H T ,, shaw. A— 16,473. p.m. Fla., 105 p.m. WITH TH4T Y AtKBeiOR... j Patrick 2-5 7-8 13. Lollie 1-4 2-2 4. Garrett 20 AtLaa Vbgaa Adonln vs. New Wxk Yhnkees at Fort Lauder­ Malay, NJ double minor (rougNng), 6:17; zim (Sam 60m' FO^TWB pgCOKD,..»‘^ - 0-0 0. Williams 20 0-0 0. Totals 23-54 2234 Thursday, March 21 Duke (30-7) vs. UNLV (34-0), 30 minutes Parker, Her (holding), 8:48; Dinaan, Hto, doubla UP,,, /y^ON©TeR^>^------y \ Ciippers 95, Jazz 89 after comp, of first game dale, Fla., 105p.m. 72 Stanford 73, Wtesliington 47 minor (roughing), 1221; Cyr, Har, double minor ~(j97-iqe-IQ9-20Q-2OI... ' UTAH (89) Championship New \brk Mets va Cindnnai at Flont City, OKLAHOMA (72) (roug. fgnng). 12:31; Stovana Her (roughing).(ro u g ^ ), ((.Malone 1224 210 41, Bailey 215 4-5 16, Georgia 87, Long Beach SL 77 Moriday, April 1 F t, 105p.ra Holmes 1-10 1-23, Wtobstor 1-9 2-2 4, Sallier Toronto va Texas at Port Chortoue, F t , 1O0 1221; Mtonahon,------, .11,NJ, doubla doubla minorminor (rousting](roughing). V Eaton 2-3 1-1 5, Stockton 7-17 3-4 17, 1217 4-6 24, Harris 25 0-0 2 Price 212 6-6 Regional Championship 12:31; Albalin, NJ (roughing), 12:31, J. Malone 2-8 20 4. (Sriflith 1-5 0-0 3, Rudd 21 At Las Vegas Semifinal winners, 9:10 p.m. pjn. 26. Evans 1-11 1-3 3, Wars 1-3 2-2 4. Totals Kansas City vs. Los Angelaa at Varo Beach, Sundstrom, NJ (kitorforanca), 1221; RBrown, 0-0 0, T.Brtnvn 21 3-4 3, M.Brown 21 20 0. 2267 1218 7Z Saturday, (March 23 Stanford 75, Georgia 67 Fla., 1.35 p.m. Her (high-aticking), 1622; (Malay, NJ ( N ^ Totals 34-75 2224 89. Halftime— Oklahoma 39, Stanford 35. 3-point sticking), 1622; Huntor, Har (stosNng), 16:57; LACUPf>ERS(95) Milwaukae vs. Cleveland at Tucson; Ariz., goals— Stanford 7-17 (Ammann 210, Patrick 305 p.m. Vorbeek, Har, iNsconduct-goma mlaoonduct : Manning 4-8 2-3 10, Smith 1215 2-3 22, 2- 5, Vlahov 21, Lollis 0-1), Oklahoma 7-21 THE FINAL FOUR 16:57. At New Orleans Chicago Cubs vs. San Diego at Yuma, Ariz., Ftolynics 3-7 28 11, Harper 12-21 24 29, Gar­ (Price 4-7, Harris 2-3, Evans 1-9, Holmes 0-1, Ovenima— 7, New Jersey, D.Brown 14. 2:47. Semiflnals Transactions 305 pm. land 7-12 1-215, (Sarrick 1-2 0-2 2. Norman 2-8 Sallier 0-1). Fouled out— Lollie, Price. P it t a s — Hardord bench (gross misconduct). 2 0 4, ktertin 1-2 0-0 2.Totals 4275 1222 95. SMurdiv. March 30 SeaWe (ss) vs. Oakland at Phoenix, 305 Rebounds— Stanford 42 (Wfingats 13). Ok- p.ra Utah 24 22 22 21— 89 - lahoma 36 (Sallier 10). A^sts— Stanford 14 Connecticut (29-4) vs. Virginia (30-2), 12:35 BASEBALL p.m. Saottla (os) vs. San Francisco (ss) at Scot­ Shots on goal— Hartford 10-1S-2rk Mats vs. (Montreal at Wfost Ffolm Football Oklahoma Stats 73, North Carolina Stats 64 Hunter, outfialdar, outright to Tucson. Ralaosad ftorler 213 11-11 23, Robinson 0-4 4-6 4 tals 3272 16-20 91. At The Carrier Dome Beach, (Ta., 1:05 pm. COLORADO (98) Darnell Coles, outfiaider, from hie mn-rosler In- Texas vs. Kansas City at Haines City, F t , Ainge 4-9 0-0 9. Davis 0-1 20 0, Coopt' 22 Syracuse, N.Y. vitatioa 0-0 0. Totals 33-80 43-51 112. Guest 4-7 28 13, Hunter 26 26 11. Van­ Sunday, March 17 105 pm. WLAF standings SEATTLE (107) diver 12-18 10-12 34, Wise 28 3-5 15, Law 2-3 NEW YORK METS-AasIgned Blaine Beatty, Los Angelee vs. Detroit at Lakeland, F t , 12-14 17. RRobinson 1-1 OO 2, ^ le r s 2-4 pitcher, to their minor-league camp tor reos- 130 pm. AITImaaEST Johnson 7-19 2-2 16, Kerry) 212 4-4 10. North Carolina 84, Villanova 69 slgnmarx. Beniamin 4-10 7-8 15. Peyton 211 2-4 1i OO 4, Terrell 20 OO 0, Markham 1-1 OO 2. Eastern Michigan 71, Penn Stale 68, OT Chicago Wfhits Sox va Toronto at Dunedin, Europoan 1 ST. LOUIS CAROINALS-Announcad the Threett 6-11 20 12, McKey 2-4 4-5 2 Pieros Mann OO OO 0, Elmburg 20 OO 0. Totals Regional Semifinals F t, 135p.ia W L T Pet PF m ALLEY OOP by Dave Oraua resignation of Mark Sauer, axacutiva vice prasi- London 223 27 24. McMklan 1-5 0-0 2, Cage 3-5 2-4 3253 3245 98. At Tha Meadowlands Arana Mkwsujkaa va Chicago Cubs at (Maao, A rt, 1 0 0 1.000 24 11 FRANK A N O E R N O T by Bob Theuaa dant and chief operating officer. Named Stoart Baroelona 8, Barros 20 20 O.TolsIs 40-100 27-34 107. Halftime— Colorado 38. Masaachusetts 38 East Rutherford, N.J. 305 pm. 1 0 0 1.000 18 7 3- poin( goals-Massachusetts 215 ((lilea 4-11, Mayer axacutiva vice praeidant and chief Seottls vs. Son Frandaoo at Scottsdale, A rt, Frankfort 0 1 0 300 11 24 WHAT, f'lhlwwl 25 17 34 38— 112 Friday, March 22 operating ofllcor. mrrm fPlTO jgfAt- O f F t c B S P f C i P B p T O Seattle 27 34 23 23— 107 Brown 1-1, Fsrmin 0-1, Barbee 22), Oaiorado North Caroline 93. Astern Michigan 67 305 pm. North Amstlcaii Eaai BASKETS AU fitonksol 2Point goals— Pordand 3-9 (Porter 2-5 29 (Wise 2-3, Hunter 2-4, U w 1-1, Wfolters Templo 72. Oklahoma Stale 63, OT CIsvsIand vs. Colilsmia at Palm Springa 1 0 0 1.000 20 5 /Z.IM lNfATf TUB Ainge 1-2, Drexiar 22), Seattle 24 (Johreoti 0-1), Fouled out— Herndon, Brown. National Baskatball Aaaoclatlon Com., 405 p.m. Orlando 1 0 0 1.000 35 34 Regional Championship LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS-Placed Kan 21. Kemp 21. McKey 21. Pierce 21). Fouled Rebounds— (Massachusetts 32 (IMcCoy, Tate 6), Baltknora vs. New Ybrk Yfonkses at Fort Rolalgh-Ourham 0 1 0 .000 3 9 PIPPLB /y i a n ; Sunday, March 24 Barmistar, center, on thr k^rod list Acthralad out— Kemp, McMillan. Rebourtda— Porland 60 Colorado 34 (Quest 9). Assists— Mas- Lauderdale, F t , 735 pza N.Y.-NJ. At The Msadowlands Arena Mika SmralL canter. 0 1 0 .000 7 19 (Kersey 11). Seattle 62 (Kemp 10). As- sachusetto 29 (Brown 7), Colorado 18 (Hunter East Rutherford, N.J. Oakland vs. Son Diego at Yuma Ariz., 905 rwOTwi miMiwai wmm p w fuzuBB 0^ 5). Total touts— Massachusetts 28, Colorado FOOTBALL p.m. SNimmanto 1 0 0 1300 9 3 sUts— Portland 17 (Porter 7), Seattle 15 (Peyton National Football League Q. Total fouls— Portland 24, Ssatle 34. Techni- 18. North Carolina 75, Temple 72 “^Inoham 0 1 0 .000 5 20 cals— Portland illegal defense, Drexler LOS ANGELES RAMS-Signed Benjamin Exhibition results SanAntonlo 0 1 0 .000 34 35 Ihomos, Jr., dafensiva tackle; Michael Undsay, A— 18167 SOUTHEAST REGIONAL Uonday'Baama NCAA women’s tournament linebacker; and Darren GrudL oflenalva guard. Braves 2, \bnkees 0 Orlando 35, San Antonio 34 Second Round NEW YORK JETS— Sigrred Bobby Houston, o C 0 At Freedom Hall linebacker. New Ybrk (A) 000 000 000-0 2 0 Baturday’sQamsa AN Times E8T Louisville, Ky. Atlanta 000 000 20x— 2 6 1 Sacramento at BkminohanL 8 pm. 9 HOCKEY Radio, TV EAST REGIONAL Saturday, March 16 Sanderson, Guattsmian (6), MonIsIsons (8) Roieigh-Ourtiaffl at Orlando, 8 pm. National Hockay League Bunday'aaamaa 5 -2 8 Firat Round HARTFORD WHALERS— Signed Ed and Layritz; LoibrandL Sisk (7), Merckar (9) and Wfodnsaday, March 13 Kansas 77. Pitlsburgh 66 Johnston, general manager, to a three-yew Ofoon. W— Sisk, 2-1. L-^usttarmon, 1-1. NswYbrk-NyJa^‘oM n^ ' Today Georgs Wksliington 73, Richmond 62 Indiana 82, Florida Stale 60 contract axtanaion through May, 1992 Sv Merckar (1). ROBOTMAN by Jbn Maddleh , Providerica 88, Fakilsld 87 At The Omni Frankfort at San Antonto, 8 pm. PHIPPS by jQMph Finto BOCCER Borcalona at ttenkaol, 8 pm. 1250 p.rn — MaU va. Rada. WFAN (660- James Madison 70, Kentucky 62 Atlanta UnHsd States Soccer Fadaratllon Red Sox 9, Reds 4 AM) Toledo 83, Rutgers 65 Sunday, (March 17 U S. NATIONAL TEA M -N am ad Bora 1 p.m. — Rad Sox va. Tlgara, NESN Second Round andm al 100 101 001— 4 11 1 Miluinovic coach and agreed to terms on a Boston 100 202 0 4 x -« 12 1 3:30 p.m. — Hockay: NCAA Tournamant Saturday, March 18 Alabama 96, Wfoke Forest 88 conboct torough December 1994. Nomad John aamHinal: Maina va. NoMham Michigan, NESN James Madison 73, Pam Stats 71 Arkansas 97, Arizona Stale 90 Charlton. Brown (6), MinutaM (7). Myers (8) Kowalski, Interim coach. Interim assistant and .Rasd, Udolt (8); Haakat ManzonMo 4 p.nv — Goll: LPGA Dinah Shora Invitation­ Norto Carolina Stats 94. George Washington Regional Semifinals ooach. Bowling 83 (5), IrvIna (7),. Murplw (9) and Moaono. al, Irat round, ESPN At The Charfode Collssum COLLEGE 4 p.m. — Golf: Tha Playara Championahip, Clemson 103, Providence 91 W— MonzanMo.l-l. L— Brown, 0-1. HFIe— Cin- Charlotte, N.C. NCAA— Banned toe University of Minnesota ckvMdi, Oukiortas (2). Boston, Clark (3), Burlu t^ firat round, USA Cabla ConnectKut 81, Toledo 80 Thursday, March 21 football team from postseason play next (4). Home Engineers 7:30 p.m. — Cattica at HaaL SportaChannal, Regional Semifinals season, end stripped the men's basketball WDRC (1360-AM) At Philadelphia Arkansas 93, Alabama 70 Bette (fokalna 184-463, Ranee E is 199, squad of one scholarship neat year for mlea kv Mets 6, Expos 1 Theresa Derrana 178478, Jaarms Buccher^ 8 p.m. — Hockey: NCAA Tournament aemi- Thursday, March 21 Kansas 83. Indiana 65 fractions. 9 rinal:Clarkaonva. ^aton Univeraity, NESN Connecticul 82, North Carolina State } 1 Regional Championship (Montreal 000 000 001— 1 3 1 191-181-538, Roberta Shore 179-506. Audrey AMERCAN INTERNATIONAL— Named Ffon- NswVbrk(N) 204 000 0 0 x -« 10 0 WNIe 182-193-512, Nancy Wall 187-472, Gay 805 p.m. — Rocketa at Hawka, TBS Clemson 57, James Madison 55 At The Charlotte Coliseum dey Mercer men's lacrosss coach. 8:30 p.m. — Wbrriora at Knkka, WFAN (660- Regional Championship Charlotte, N.C. M.Gordnar, Sompen (3), Frm (8) and Hos- McDeyHt 193-489, (Mary Alfoa Tulkniari 186-505 AM) 0 EAST CAROLINA— Named Eddie Payne aay, Santovonia (7); Cono; Franco (8) and Am Kibbie 181-408, Pat kwin 193-233-572 At Phlladsiphia Saturday, March 23 men's baskatball coach. MkMghl — Bovding: Senior PBA Pacific Cal O'Brisn, Mercado (8). W— Cone, 2-0. Ceka Sampedro 476, Koran (Moore 460, DebM Saturday, March 23 IONA— Named Jerry Wfolsh man's boskatooll kftne'i' O'* Afk**''**** A1 L-M.aardner. 0-1. HR-MontreoL Qrlsaom (2L Enzor 479, IMariys Dvorak 458, Sharon SinXw 1