Quick viewing(Text Mode)

SCOREBOARD Basketball

SCOREBOARD Basketball

20—MANCHESTER HERALD, Tuesday, April 2,1991 gets warm reception in MONTREALMONTREAL. (AP) — x TheyH a i / timatpiv nrv r l a f i a m o A ** tunately no defense,” said J ^ - game, ending the second weekend WEDNESDAY booed the Canadian anthem, cheered “Pfeople like American football," and dropped the Machine to 1-1. reach out and grab i t ” Pierre Dumont, 26, of Montreal, one of the new league, it was Frankfurt Bjorn Nittmo and gave American of 53,238 spectators — the largest said Dumont. “That’s what works Galaxy 10, Riders 3: Pro football The Galaxy scored the winning A here. football a hero’s welcome when the crowd in the WLAF’s two-week ex­ returned to San Antonio, but the touchdown early in the second half Montreal Machine played its first istence — who jammed Olympic WLAF Roundup “I went to two or three Canadian Riders’ fans are still waiting for that on a 36-yard pass from Mike Rsrez home game to a full house. Stadium for the Machiiie’s inaugural football games, but I’ll be at all the first victory. to Cedric Gordon. LOCAL NEWS INSIDE home match. games here.” The Montreal entry in the new 10, San Antonio 3,. Frankfurt used a late goal-line A total of 18,432 fans poured into The Montreal crowd that greeted Barcelona, showing no signs of stand to hold off Undra Johnson and Alamo Stadium, which has a World League of American Football It was the first official game of ■ Committee to investigate complaints. only failed to please on the the Machine with a long standing weariness of an 18-hour trip to the Riders to win 10-3. capacity of 22,500. The last time the professional football in the city ovation as it took the American­ Montreal and unfazed by a noisy “l^fe’re so close,” said Riders city had a pro football team was in A scoreboard, where the visiting Bar­ since the Alouettes of the Canadian celona Dragons won Monday sized lOO-by-50-yard field — 10 crowd, spotted the Montreal defensive end Donnie Gardner, who the early 1980s, when the ■ Library funding approval postponed. Football League folded from lack of yards shorter and IS yards narrower Machine a 10-0 lead, then scored 34 recovered a fumble that led to a cru­ Gunslingers of the now-defunct night’s game 34-10. fan interest in 1987. “We have a good team, but unfor­ than a Canadian field -— was loud consecutive points. The triumph cial San Antonio drive. “It’s on the United States Football League In Monday night’s rf>nly other and enthusiastic. boosted Barcelona’s record to 2-0 tip of our tongues, but we just can’t played in the same stadium. ■ Ex-official enjoys military role. What'S ■ Students learn about diseases News SCOREBOARD Local/Regional Section, Page 7. April 3, 1991 Detroit 72 7202 100.0 Taxpayers Dallas 70 6975 99.6 Minnesota 70 6936 99.1 hold meeting Sacramento 70 6674 95.3 Transactions iofinptoi ^ Manchester's Award-Winning Newspaper The Taxpayers Association of NBA standings Connecticut, headed by E. Steve Pis Avg EASTERN CONFERENCE Detroit 6943 96.4 American League Pearl of Manchester, will hold a Atlantic Division L.A. Lakers 7135 99.1 BOSTON RED SOX—Traded Rob Murphy, public meeting at 7 p.m. today W L. Pet. GB Utah 7014 100.2 pitcher, to the for Mike Gar­ y-Boston 52 20 .722 Chicago 7170 101.0 diner, pitcher. Optioned Mike Gardiner and in Rockville to oppose Gov. x-Philadelphia 40 32 .556 12 San Antonio 7165 1024 Daryl Inrine, pitchers, and Phil Planner, out­ Lowell Weicker’s plans for a Now Y ork 35 37 .486 17 Sacramento 7211 103.0 fielder, to Pawtucket of the International Gov. Weicker now surrounded by jeers state income tax. Washington 26 15 .366 25t/z Houston 7316 103.0 League. Sent Mo Vaughn, first baseman; Mike Now Jorsoy 23 49 .319 29 New 'ibrk 7428 103.2 Brumley, infielder-outfielder; Tony Fossas, The meeting will be held at Miami 22 50 .306 30 Dellas 7240 103.4 pitcher; and Todd Pratt, catcher, to PawtuckeL By JUDD EVERHART the Florence Mill Apartments at Cantral Division Milwaukee 7493 104.1 Waived Josias Manzanillo, pitcher. But there’s no in taking the anger out on those of us who x-Chicago how it will fare with the General Assembly and the public. 53 18 .746 — Minnesota 7312 104.5 —Placed Charlie The Associated Press 221 W. Main St. Speakers in­ x-Dotroit are standing up and telling the truth.” 45 27 .625 8'/z Cleveland 7434 104.7 Hough, pitcher, on the 15-day disabled list Connecticut has a deficit approaching $800 million and a clude state Reps. Richard Foley, x-Milwaukoe 43 29 .597 10t/2 Boston 7582 10S3 retroaedve to March 29. Several hours later, 1,200 state workers rallied outside x-Atlanta cumulative shortfall for the two years ending June 30, 1992, of Alan Schlesinger, and Brian 38 34 .528 151/2 Seattle 7488 105.5 -Placad Stan Jeffer­ HARTFORD — The cheers that independent Lowell P. Indiana Weicker’s Capitol office, chanting “Lowell’s got to go!” and 36 36 .500 171/2 Philadelphia 7603 105.6 son and Ron Kittle, outfielderE, on waivers for $2.5 billion. It’s a crisis Weicker says is the most severe in the Flatherty. Cleveland Weicker Jr. won from voters just a few months ago when he carrying anti-Weicker signs. 25 46 .352 28 L.A. Clippers 7644 106.2 the purpose of granting them their unconditional nation. Charlotte 22 50 .306 311/2 Portland was elected governor have been replaced by jeers from state 7555 106.4 releases. Since taking office in January, the former Republican U.S. Last week, thousands of parochial schoolchildren jeered Two sentenced New Jersey 7689 106.8 —Sent Tim McIn­ workers and schoolchildren. Midwest Division Washington 7604 107.1 senator has been making decisions that rankle one group at the Weicker when he arrived at work. They were angry over his tosh, catcher, and Brian Fisher and Jeff Kaiser, On 'Riesday, a day after announcing he would lay off more w L Pc i. GB Phoenix 7635 107.5 pitchers, to their minor-league camp for reas- expense of another as he tries to rein in the state’s burgeoning proposal to cut state aid for parochial and private school buses for party death xSan Antonio 47 23 .671 Miami 7762 107.8 than 2,600 state workers if unions don’t agree to wage and x-Utah signmenL Reieased Rick Wrona, catcher, and budget deficit. and nurses. 46 24 .657 1 Charlotte 7825 108.7 Mike Campbell, pitcher. HARTFORD (AP) —• Two X'Houslon benefit concessions, Weicker met with some initial hostility 46 25 .648 Atlanta 7870 109.3 NEW YORK YANKEES—Placed PBsqual It started with his radical plan to overhaul the tax system, Orlando Throw the bum out!” one shouted as he got out of his car. Manchester men have been 26 44 .371 21 Orlando 7697 110.0 Perez, pitcher, on 15-day disabled llsL VWived when he addressed the Connecticut AFL-CIO. replacing a structure based on sales tax to one based on in­ Dallas Three weeks ago, Weicker was roundly booed when intro­ 25 45 .357 22 Indiana 8027 111.5 Steve BalbonI, Infielder, for the purpose of Everybody is mad,” said Weicker, who always enjoyed come tax. Until Weicker came along, no Connecticut governor given suspended prison senten­ Minnesota 22 48 .314 25 Golden SL 8318 115.5 granting him his unconditional release. duced at a Hartford Whalers hockey game. Denver strong labor support during his election campaigns. “I don’t ces and three years probation in 19 52 .268 28<'z Denver 9292 130.9 OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Sent Reggie Harris, dared propose an income tax. Pacific Division Johnny Guzman and Joe Slusarski, pitchers; know anybody in the state of Connecticut who isn’t furious. the fatal wounding of a man x-PortlarxJ _ Business and labor like the plan. But it remains to be seen S3 18 .746 Troy Alenir, catcher; Doug Jennings, outfielder, Please see WOES, page 6. with a homemade cannon at an x LA Lakers NCAA Championship 51 21 .708 2 '(2 and Dann Howitt, infielder, to their minor-league x-Phoenix outdoor beer party. 49 22 .690 4 camp lor reassignmonL Golden State 37 35 .514 16'/z Duke 72, Kansas 65 The two men, Raul F,. Mor- Seattle SEATTLE MARINERS-PIaced Ken Griffey 34 37 .479 19 KANSAS (65) Sr., outfielder, on the 15-day disabled lisL LA Clippers 28 44 risette, 25, and John F. Hawkins, .389 25'/z Jamison 1-10 0-0 2, Maddox 2-4 0-0 4. Ften- TEXAS RANGERS—Sent Jim Poole, pitcher, Sacramento 19 51 .271 33 '^ dall 7-9 3-6 18, Brown 6-15 0-0 16, Jordan 4-6 to their minor-league camp for reassignmonL 24, were sentenced Diesday in 1-2 11, Waodberry 1-4 0-0 2, Scott 3-9 0-0 6, National Leagua Rebels push the death of 21-year-old Greg y-clinchod division title Tunstall 1-5 0-0 2, Wagner 1-1 0-0 2, Johanning —Acquired Ot's Nixon, Saturday's Games Lukas, also of Manchester. 1-1 0-0 2, Richey 0-1 0-0 0, Totals 27-65 4-8 outfielder, and Boi Ftodriguez, third baseman, Orlando 114, Houston 82 65, from the for Jimmy Kremers, The two men, who were ar­ New York 130, New Jersey 117 DUKE (72) catcher, and a player to be named later. Raced San Antonio 130, Denver 116 rested two weeks after an early Koubek 2-4 0-0 5. G.Hill 4-6 2-8 10, Laettner BASKETBALL CHAMPS — BCI took the ’A’ League men’s basketball championship this Andros Thomas, shortstop, on waivers for the Milwaukee 104, Atlanta 96 3-8 12-12 18, Hurley 3-5 4-4 12, T,Hill 1-5 0-0 purpose of giving him his unconditional release. Oct. 14 explosion in a wooded Portland 121, Minnesota 91 3, Davis 4-5 0-2 8, Palmer 0-0 0-0 0, Lang OO past winter. Team members, from left, frpnt row: Gary Grodzicki, Mike Farley, Bernie Vogel for U.S. help area of Manchester, pleaded no Seattle 115, Dallas 102 Optioned Tony Castillo, pitcher, and Andy Tom- 0-0 0, McCaffrey 6-8 2-2 16, Totals 23-41 20-28 tw lin, outfielder, to Flichmond of the Interna­ Sunday's Games 72 Paul Withee. Back row: David Lewis, Carver Glezen, Kim Bushey, Dan Sullivan Bob contest to charges in the death. tional Leagua. Sent Jerry Willard, catcher, to Boston 135, Chicago 132. 20T Halftime—Duke 42, Kansas 34. 3-point Maroney. Missing: Mike Jones. their minor-league camp lor reassignmonL They were charged with first- Philade'ohia 110, Cleveland 101 goals—Kansas 7-18 (Brown 4-11, Jordan 2-2, CHICAGO CUBS—Placed Hector Villanueva, Charlotte 102, Washington 92 degree manslaughter, manufac­ Randall 1-1, Richey 0-1, Tunstall 0-1, Jamison catcher, on the 15-day disabled lisL Indiana 127, Golden State 120, OT turing bombs and first-degree 0-2), Duke 6-10 (McCaffrey 2-3, Hurley 2-4, 1942 — , Stantord CINCINNATI REDS—Relumed Gus Ftolidor, in Iraq fight Houston 123, Miami 103 T.Hill 1-1, Koubek 1-2), Fouled out—None. 1941 — , Wisconsin Friday, May 3 infielder, to their minor league camp, reckless endangerment. LA Lakers 115, Sacramento 87 Sunday, May 5 Flebounds—Kansas 32 (Ftendall 10), Duke 31 1940 — Manrin Huffman, Indiana NEW YORK METS—Argeed to terms with Monday's Games Hockey Tuesday, May 7 In addition to the suspended (Laettner 10), Assists—Kansas 16 (Jamison 5), 1939 — None selected Dwight Gooden, pitcher, on a ttvee-year con­ No games scheduled Thursday. May 9 Duke 14 (Hurley 9). Total fouls—JCansas 21, x-MVP award vacated by action of the NCAA tract extension through 1994. Placed Terry By BARRY SCHWEID Kurdish rights within the borders of sentences, the men were ordered Tuesday's Games Duke 14. A—47,100. subsequent to the tournament Saturday, May 11 Puhl, outfielder, on waivers for the txjrpose of Iraq,” s^id Najmaldin Karim, a Detroit at Charlotte, 7:30 p.m, The Associated Press to pay for the victim’s $8,450 NHL playoff glance Monday. May 13 granting him his unconditional release. Boston at Now Jersey, 7:30 p.m. NCAA Championship resuiis Washington neurosurgeon. “That’s funeral. NCAA Tournament Campbell Conference PITTSBURGH PIRATES—Optioned Jeff Milwaukee at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m. All H m M Eastern 1991 Duke 72, Kansas 65 (Norris Division winner va. Smyths Division Richardson, infielder, and Cecil Espy, out­ what we want. The fear that Iraq is Lukas was at the late-night Cleveland at WasNngton, 7:30 p.m. DIVISION SEMIFINALS winner) WASHINGTON — Iraqi rebels 1990 UNLV103, Duke 73 conference records fielder, to Buffalo of the American Association, Portland at Minnesota, 8 p.m, (Bsst-ol-7) Thursday. May 2 hope to persuade the Bush ad­ going to disintegrate is just un­ beer party with about 12 friends 1989 Michigan 80, Seton Hall 79, OT SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS—Optioned Mark LA Lakers at San Antonio, 8 p.m The records of each conference in the 1991 Wsdnasday, April 3 Saturday, May 4 founded.” 1988 Kansas 83, Oklahoma 79 Dewey, pitcher, and Craig ColberL infieldor, to ministration to change its hands-off when he was killed by the can­ Orlando at Chicago, 8:30 p.m. NCAA men's basketball tournament through Hartford at Boston, 735 p.m. Monday, May 6 1987 Indiana 74, Syracuse 73 Phoenix of the Pacific Coast League. non. Denver at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Saturday's games with the number of teams Buffalo at Montreal, 7:35 p.m. Wednesday, May 8 policy on their struggle against Karim will represent both the 1986 Louisville 72, Duke 69 BASKETBALL Utah at Phoenix. 9:30 p m. from each conference in parentheses: New Jersey al Pittsburgh, 735 p.m. Friday, May 10 The device was made from a 1985 Villanova 66, Georgetown 64 National Basketball Association President Saddam Hussein’s forces. Kurdistan Front and the Kurdish Na­ Miami at Sacramento. 10:30 p rr. W L .Pci \Atashington at N.Y. Rangers, 8:35 p.m. Sunday, May 12 1984 Georgetown 84, Houston 75 CHICAGO BULLS—Suspended Stacey King, A Kurdish representative said in fire extinguisher that had been Wednesday's Games 1983 Atlantic Coast (6) 13 5 .722 Thursday, April 4 Tuesday, May 14 tional Congress of North America in North Carolina State 54, Houston 52 Minnesota at Chicago, 835 p.m. forward, one game without pay for missing cut on both ends. Wimess told New York at Clevelar-d, 7:30 p.m 1982 Big Eight (3) 7 3 .700 an interview Tuesday that U.S. talks with Assistant Secretary of North Carolina 63, Georgetown 62 Detroit al SL Louis, 8:35 p.m. practice. Philadelphia at Indiana, 7:30 p .m 1981 Big West (2) 4 2 .667 STANLEY CUP FINAL police it had been fired twice Indiana 63, North Carolina 50 Edmonton at Calgary, 9:35 p.ra FOOTBALL policy may be based on such “un­ State John H. Kelly and other U.S. Dallas at Houston, 8:30 p.m. 1980 Southwest (2) 4 2 .667 Friday, May 17 Louisville 59, UCLA 54 Vancouver at Los Arigelos. 1035 p.m. earlier that night before it mal­ LA Clippers at Utah, 9:30 p.m, 1979 Mid-American (1) 2 1 .667 Sunday, May 19 founded fears” that the Kurds seek officials later in the week. Michigan State 75, Indiana State 64 Friday, April 5 ATLANTA FALCONS—Signed Naz Wbrthen, Sacramento at Seatllo, 10 p.m. 1978 Big East (7) 11 7 .611 Tuesday, May 21 £ 1 to set up an independent state or that functioned the third time it was Kentucky 94, Duke 88 Hartford at Boston, 7:35 p.ra Mike Williams and Jason Phillips, wide A cross-section of Shiite and Miami at Golden Stale, 10:30 p.m. 1977 Atlantic 10 (3) 4 3 .571 Thursday, May 23 Marquette 67, North Caroline 59 Buffalo at Montreal, 7:35 p.m. receivors; Jeff Donaldson and Tracey Eatoa ■ lo-vmw . Th# Associated Press Iranian-backed Shiite Muslims ignited with shrapnel striking 1976 Big Tan (5) 6 5 .545 Saturday, May 25 Sunni Muslims opposed to Sad­ Indiana 86, MIcNgan 68 New Jersey at Pittsburgh, 735 p.m. safeties; Harper Le Bel, tighi end; Benji Roland, BLUSTERY WIN — Mayor Richard M. Daley is greeted by well-wishers at Chicago’s Conrad Lukas. NBA leaders 1975 UCLA 92, Kentucky 85 WAC (3) 3 3 .500 Monday. May 27 would take control of the country if dam’s rule were expected to make a Colonial (1) 1 1 .500 Washington at N.Y. Rangers, 8:35 p.m. Thursday, May 30 defensivo lineman; Rich Kariis, kicker; and Pat NEW YORK (AP) — The NBA individual scor­ 1974 North Carolina State 76, Marquette Chaffey, running back. Hilton Hotel after winning Tuesday's mayoral election. Daley defeated Republican George Saddam were toppled. 64 MW Collegiate (1) 1 1 .500 Saturday, April 6 similar case at the State Department ing. percentage, rebounding and as­ Edmonton at Calgary, 8:05 p.m. CLEVELAND BROWNS-Signed Joe Morris Hostage news 1973 Mo. Valley (1) 1 1 .500 (NOTE; Stanley Cup final series may begin Gottlieb and Harold Washington Party candidate F. Eugene Pincham. “All we want is democracy and sist leaders through March 31: UCLA 87, Memphis State 66 Minnesota at Chicago, 8:35 p.m. and Lee Rouson, running backs; Ed Cunnin­ 1972 Pac-10(4) 3 4 .429 earlier). territorial integrity and respect for BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Scoring — UCLA 81. Florida State 76 Detroit at SL Louis, 8:35 p.m. gham, offensive tackle; Fulton Jenson, wide Please see REBELS, page 6. 1971 Metro (2) 1 2 .333 G FG FT Pts Avq — UCLA 68, Vrilanova 62 Vancouver at Los Angelos, 1035 p m. receiver; Billy Smith, Brian Hanson, and Ralph The foreign minister of Switzer­ 1970 Southeastern (5) 2 5 .286 Final NHL statistics Jordan, Chi. 71 847 475 2195 30.9 — UCLA 80. Jacksonville 69 Sunday, April 7 Stephens, punters; David Brandon, linebacker; 1969 Big Sky (1) 0 1 .000 land, the intermediary between K.Malone, Utah 70 718 576 2014 28.8 — UCLA 02, Purdue 72 Montreal al Buffalo, 7:05 p.m. NEW YORK (AP) — Final regular season Mike Lansford, kicker; and Todd Philcox, 1968 Big South (1) 0 1 .000 King, Wash. 64 713 383 1817 28.4 — UCLA 78, North Caroline 55 Boston at Hartford, 7:35 p.m. NHL scoring and goaltending leaders through Iran and Washington, has arrived 1967 East Coast (1) 0 1 .000 quarterback. Released Bryan Wagner, punter, Barkley, Phil. 64 647 471 1808 28.3 — UCLA 79. Dayton 64 N.Y. Ftangers at Washington, 7:05 p.m. games of Sunday, March 31: 1966 Independents (1) 0 1 .000 and Jerry Kauric, kicker. in Tehran amid continued Ewing, N.Y. 71 745 399 1889 26.6 — Texas Western 72. Kentucky 65 Pittsburgh at New Jersey, 7:45 p.m. SCORING Treasurer’s reorganization hammered out 1965 — UCLA 91, Michigan 80 lvy(1) 0 1 .000 GM G t Pts Pirn DENVER BRONCOS-Signed Robert Per­ speculation that Western Wilkins, Atl. 71 683 425 1869 Metro Atlantic (1) 0 1 Monday, April 8 ryman, fullback. 26.3 1964 — UCLA 98. Duke 83 .000 Gretzky, LA 78 41 ! 163 16 Mullin, G.S. 72 687 457 1870 26.0 SL Louis al DotrolL 7:35 p.m. By RICK SANTOS hostages held by pro-Iranian 1963 — Loyola, III. 60, Cincinnati 58, OT North Atlantic (1) 0 1 .000 Hull, StL 78 86 i 131 22 HOUSTON OILERS-Traded Jason budget, has been signed by Democratic and Republican Adams, Dan. 56 468 386 1453 Chicago at Minnesota, 8:05 p.m. “She’s been contemplating retirement lor some time. Her 25.9 1962 — Cincinnati 71, Ohio State 59 Northeast (1) 0 1 .000 Oates, SIL 61 25 I 115 29 Grimsley, linebacker, to Miami for a third-round Manchester Herald groups in Lebanon could be Robinson, S.A. 70 651 491 1794 25.6 Ohio Valley (1) Calgary at Edmonton, 9:35 p.m. draft choice. leaders of the Board of Directors and is expected to be adopted 1961 — Cincinnati 70, Ohio Stats 65, OT 0 1 .000 Recchl, Pgh 78 40 I 113 48 resignation was the catalyst for this agreement.” freed. Richmond, G.S. 67 614 365 1628 24.3 Los Angeles at Vancouver, 1035 p.m. at Ihesday’s meeting. I960-— Ohio State 75. California 55 Southern (1) 0 1 .000 Cullen, Hart 78 39 110 101 INDIANAPOLIS COLTS—Signed Travis Referring to dismissed charges about Staum’s alleged im­ Hardaway, G.S. 72 665 270 1689 TVasday, April 9 The Beirut newspaper Ad- 23.5 1959 — California 71, West Virginia 70 Southland (1) 0 1 .000 Sakic, Qua 80 48 109 24 Davis, nose tackle, and Cedric Figaro, lineback­ MANCHESTER — The resignation of the controversial Besides being endorsed by Republican Deputy Mayor Miller, Irxi. 72 518 498 1628 226 Montreal at Buffalo, 7:35 p.m. er. proprieties, he said, “She reads the papers too... I think the 1958-— Kentucky 84, Seattle 72 Sun Belt(1) 0 1 .000 Yzerman, Det 80 51 ' 108 34 Assistant Town Treasurer Ruth N. Staum has provided the Diyar claimed today that Wtorthy, LAL 68 644 192 1502 221 Boston at Hartford, 7:35 p.m. Ronald Osella and Democratic minority leader Stephen T. 1957-— North Carolina 54, Kansas 53, 30T Trans America (1) 0 1 ,000 Fleury, Cal 79 51 104 136 LOS ANGELES RAIDERS-Signed Roger last 6 months have taken their toll on her.’ Hawkins, Phil. 71 521 421 1562 22.0 N.Y. Rangers at Washington, 7:35 p.m. Craig, running back. town with a means of reorganizing the treasurer’s office, Washington has reached an 1956-— San Francisco 83, Iowa 71 West Coast (1) 0 1 .000 Macinnis, Cal 78 28 i 103 90 C^sano, the pact was signed TUesday by General Manager K.Johnson, Phoe. 71 545 462 1561 22.0 Pittsburgh al New Jersey, 7:45 pm. Staum, who is 67, was cleared of fraud charges after an in­ agreement with Iran on the 1955-— San Francisco 77, La Salle 63 Atiterican South (2) 0 2 .000 Larmer, Chi 80 44 ’ 101 79 MIAMI DOLPHINS—Acquired John Grimsley reducing its functions and displacing the office’s two clerks. Drexler. Port 71 571 361 1553 21.9 Wadnaaday, April 10 Richard J. Sartor and Treasurer Roger M. Negro. vestigation by the Manchester Police Department. 1954-— La Salle 92. Bradley 76 Mid-Continent (2) 0 2 .000 Ftoenick, CN 79 41 I 94 .80 linebacker, irom the Houston Oilers for a 1991 release of the hostages before Daugherty. Clev. 69 549 391 1489 21.6 SL Louis at DetrolL 7:35 p.m. The proposed reorganization agreement, which would leave 1953-— Indiana 69. Kansas 68 Bourque, Bos 76 21 I 94 75 third-round draft pick. Signed Louis Cooper Despite suspicion that Assistant Treasurer Staum’s resigna­ Campbell, Minn. 65 541 300 1397 21.5 Chicago at Minnesota, 8:05 p.m. April 15. The newspaper has 1952-— Kansas 80, S t John's 63 NCAA Championship Coffey, Pgh 76 24 93 128 linebacker, and Charles Henry, tight end the office with only a treasurer with a significantly reduced tion, which is effective May 1, was coerced, Cassano said. Pierce, Sea. 67 506 374 1433 21.4 Calgary at Edmonton, 9:35 p.m. 1951 — ■ Kentucky 68, Kansas Stale 58 Janney, Bos 77 26 I 92 8 NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Signed Hugh Please see OFFICE, page 6. been inaccurate on hostage Chambers, Phoe. 68 518 351 1407 20.7 Los Angeles at Vancouver, 1035 p.m. Millen, quarterback, and Ivory Joe Hunter and 1950-— CCNY 71. Bradley 68 coaches records Thursday, April 11 Neely, Bos 69 51 I 91 98 reports in the past. 1949- Flobitaille, LA Victor Jones, running backs. Field Goal Percentage — Kentucky 46, Oklahoma Stale 36 Mika KrzyzawskI Hartford at Boston, 7:35 p.m., if necessary 76 45 I 91 68 1948-— Kentucky 58, Baylor 42 Saixlstrom, LA 68 45 89 106 DIEGO CHARGERS— Signed Chris FG FGA Pet W L PcL Buffalo at Montreal, 7:35 p.m., if necessary 1947 — Holy Cross 58, Oklahoma 47 Hawerchuk, Buf 80 31 I 89 32 Pike, defensive end, and Harry Swayne. offen­ Parish, Bos. 431 712 .605 75-76 Army 11 14 .440 New Jersey at Pittsburgh, 7:35 p.m., if neces­ sive tackle. Questions remain Trucker handed 1946 Leetch, NYR Williams, Port. 311 519 — Oklahoma A&M 43, North Carolina 76-77 Army 20 8 .714 sary 80 16 ! 88 42 Sippers, .599 40 Francis, Pgh 81 23 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS—Signed Todd Gamble, Bos. 470 791 .594 77-78 Army 19 9 .678 Washington at N.Y. Rangers, 7:35 p.m., if 1 87 72 1945 — Oklahoma ASM 49, NYU 45 Stevens, Pgh 80 40 86 133 Bowles, safely; and Chris Washington, one-year term Divac, LAL 317 554 .572 78-79 Army 14 11 .560 necessary linebacker. " 1944 — Utah 42, Dartmouth 40, OT Nieuwendyk, Cal 79 45 Barkley, Phil. 647 1136 .570 79-80 Army 9 17 .346 Friday, April 12 I 85 36 1943 — Wyoming 46, Georgetown 34 Lafontaine, NYI 75 41 85 42 SEATTLE SEAHAWKS—Signed Marcus Cot- MILFORD (AP) — A truck Thorpe. Hou. 493 879 .561 60-81 Duke 17 13 .567 Minnesota at Chicago, 8:35 p.tTL, if neces­ over grants 1942 Verbeek, Hart 80 43 ton, linobackdr, and Kevin Thompson safety Paxson, Chi. 278 — Stanford 53. Dartmouth 38 81-82 Duke 10 17 .370 sary 82 246 guzzlers driver who plowed his rig into 502 .554 HOCKEY 1941 — Wisconsin 39, Washington State 34 82-83 Duke Gagner, Min 73 40 82 114 McHale, Bos. 431 779 .553 11 17 .393 Detroit at SL Louis, 8:35 p.m., if necessary an Interstate 95 construction site Robinson, S.A. 1940 — Indiana 60, Kansas 42 83-84 Duka 24 10 .706 Edmonton at Calgary, 9:35 p.m.. If necessary Gilmour, Cal 78 20 81 142 651 1177 .553 NEW YORK RANGERS-Sent Jeff Bloem- 1939 — Oregon 46. Ohio State 34 84-85 Duka By BRIAN M. TROTTA last summer, killing three Grant. Chi. 351 641 .548 23 8 .742 VarKouver at Los Angeles, 1035 pm ., if terg, defenseman, to Binghamton of the receive $435,000 under the Com­ 85-86 Duke 37 3 .925 necessary Amencan Hockey League Manchester Herald munity Development Block Grant workers, was sentenced to one Rebounding NCAA tourney MVP’s 66-87 Duke 24 9 .727 Saturday, April 13 ranked Baseball WINNIPEG JETS-Fired Bob Murdock year in prison. G Off Det Tot Avg 1991 — , Duke 87-88 Duke 28 7 .800 Montreal at Buffalo. 7:35 p.m., if necessary coach. ' Program. Robinson, S.A. 86-89 Duke 28 8 70 287 611 898 12.8 1990 — Anderson HunL UNLV .778 Boston at Hartford, 7:35 p.m., if necessary COLLEGE MANCHESTER — Town Attor­ The program provides funds to WASHINGTON (AP) — Gas-sip- Superior Court Judge Robert Rodman, Det. 72 316 586 902 125 1989 — Glen Rico, Michigan 89-90 Duke 29 6 .763 N.Y. Rangers at Washington. 7:35 p.m., if Exhibition resuits ney Maureen Chmielecki has ruled communities to improve the quality pers such as the Geo Metro produce A. Fuller on Tuesday also fined K.Malone, Utah 70 214 629 843 120 1988 — , Kansas 90-91 Duke 32 7 .821 necessary c o a c h ^ ^ ° ^ ^ ^ ~ ^ * ™ * ^ Craig Cason football Oakley, N.Y. 71 282 573 855 120 1987 — Iridiana Totals 336 167 .668 Pittsburgh at New Jersey, 7:45 pm., if neces­ that the town may apply for a of existing housing and develop new only one-fifth as much carbon Frank Delcorpo, 36, of sary \bnkees 3, Twins 2 Ewing, N.Y. 71 175 629 804 11.3 1986 — , Louisville federal grant program that voters affordable housing. The money can dioxide as some cars manufactured Livingston, NJ., $1,600. Roy Wllllama Daugherty, Clev. 69 158 588 746 10,8 1985 — . Villanova Sunday, April 14 (11 innings) have refused to back several times also be used for several other by luxury automakers such as Delcorpo was driving on 1-95 Parish. Bos. 71 233 524 757 10.7 1984 — , Georgetown W L PcL SL Louis at OetroiL 9:05 p.m., if necessary 86-89 Kansas Calendar Thorpe, Hou. 71 257 483 740 10.4 1983 — Akoom Olajuwon, Houston 19 12 .613 CNcago at Minnesota, 8:05 p.rrL, if neces­ Minnesota 200 000 000 00—2 9 0 in recent years. Rolls-Royce and Aston Martin, a on July 23 when he veered from 89- 90 Kansas Coleman, N.J. 65 235 437 672 10.3 1982 — J ^ e s Worthy. North Carolina 30 5 .857 sary NewVfark(A) 002 000 000 01—3 6 1 This year, the town is eligible to consumer advocacy group says. the center lane, across the high­ 1 90- 91 Kansas Please see GRANTS, page 6. fV Barkley, Phil. 64 254 406 660 10.3 1981 — , Indiana 27 8 .771 Calgary at Edmonton, 8:05 p.m.. If necessary Erickson, MIrabella (7), Leach (^ , ^ y n e (9), Thursday Totals way and onto the right shoulder, 1980 — , Louisville 76 25 .752 Los Angeles at Vancouver, 1035 pm., if Drummond (11) and Ortiz, Webster (7); Sander­ Baseball P^iblic Citizen, founded by Ralph Assists 1979 — Eanrin Johnson, Michigan State necessary son. Plunk (7). Mills (8), Cadaret (9), Mon- ^ t h Catholic at East Catholic, 3:30 Nader, on Tuesday released rankings where his truck smashed a G No. Avg. 1978 — . Kentucky Monday, April IS teieone (10) and Leyritz, Ramos (8). W—Mon- Cheney Tech at East Hampton, 330 Coventry al Rocky Hill. 330 of more than 900 cars, vans and bridge abutment, two construc­ Stockton, Utah 70 1004 14.3 1977 — Butch Loo, Marquette Hartford at Boston, 7:35 p.m., if necessary teleone, 1-0. L—Drummond, 0-2. RHAM at Bolton, 3:30 Johnson. LAL 69 880 12.8 1976 — , Indiana Buffalo at Montreal, 7:35 p.m.. If necessary light umcks from the current model tion vehicles and the three Adams. Den. Astros 8, Red Sox 0 56 610 10.9 1975 — Richard Vteshington, UCLA Vfeshington at N.Y. Flangers, 7:35 p.m., if r- ^ . Softball Anchors under wave; year for fuel efficiency and carbon workers, state police said. K.Johnson, Phoe. 71 723 10.2 1974 necessary Houston 003 030 101—8 11 0 Rockville, 3:30 — David Thompson, North Carolina HHAM at Bolton, 3;30 Delcorpo in February pleaded Hardaway. G.S. 72 704 9.8 State Now Jersey at Pittsburgh, 7:35 pm., if neces­ Boston 000 000 000—0 6 1 dioxide output. Coventry at Rocky Hill, 330 Thomas, Del 39 357 9.2 1973 - Bill Vtelton, UCLA sary Doshaiee, Osuna (7). Thurmond (9) and Big- Carbon dioxide, a product of no contest to three counts of Richardson, Minn. 70 635 9.1 1972 - Bill Wblton. UCLA Tuesday, April 16 gk), K.Scott (9); Darwin, Lamp (6), Hesketh (8), c . .. Columbus’ ships near VUA negligent homicide with a motor Grant, LAC 65 579 8.9 1971 Minnesota at Chicago. 8:35 p.m., if neces­ burning fossil fuels, is the chief - Howard Ftorter, Villanova-X; Bowling Guante (9) and Marzano. W—Deshaies, 1-0. (giris)!3:M Central Douglas. Mia. 64 554 8.7 1970- - , UCLA sary L—Danvin, 4-1. culprit in what many scientists vehicle. Bogues, Char. 71 599 8.4 1969 - Low Alcindor, UCLA Detroit at SL Louis, 8:35 p.rrL, if necessary , BoyaTsnnls ST, ANN’S BAY, Jamaica (AP) 29, 1504, at the end of his ill-fated believe is the warming of the globe. 1968- - Lew Alcindor, UCLA Edrmnton at C a lg ^ , 9:35 p.m., if necessary Braves 5, Mets 2 Xavier at Manchester, 330 Team Offense 1967- Eastern Business Vancouver at Los Anoeles, 1035 pm .. If .. . SIfla Tennis — Archeologists believe they may fourth voyage. He died in Spain A gallon of gasoline generates al­ - Low Alcindor, UCLA Atlanta 100 310 000—5 9 0 1966- necessary Manchester al Mercy, 3:30 - . Utah Ron Joiner 154-153-426, Mark Holmes 141 New York (N) 000 000 020—2 12 1 soon find the 500-ycar-old remains two years later. most 20 pounds of carbon dioxide Denver 71 6519 East Catholic al Berlin, 330 9 120.0 1965- - Al Bonini 141, Bryce Hunt 159, Emile Roux 148 LeibrandL Sisk (8), Berenguer (9) and Heath, Golden St. 72 8400 DIVISION FINALS of two ships Christopher Colum­ The Capitana and the Santiago when burned. 116.7 1964- - Vbit Hazzard, UCLA John Malorca Sr. 147, John Malorca Jr. 144] Cabrera (6); Cone, Simons (7), Pena (9) and Inside Today. Ftortland 71 8148 114,8 1963- Wale* Conference Friday “Average fuel efficiency of new - Art Hoyman, Duke Tom Martin 149, Jim SiriannI 143-147, Mark Corone W—LeibrandL 1-1. L—Cone, 2-1 bus and his crew lived on for more de Palos are thought to be buried Phoenix 71 8123 114.4 1962- Wednesday, April 17 . Baseball - , Cincinnati Roux 140, John Latlanzio 146, Tom Fusco 146 Sv—Berenguer (1). HRs—Adanla, Heath (1) cars on the road could have been Boston 72 8095 1124 1961 - Friday, April 19 than a year while marooned on under water, mud and sand at St. - , ONo Stale Tim Vttelsh 188, Tom Fahey 144, Ted Kowzuri Gfg99(1)-______330 (Moriarty Field), 33.4 miles per gallon in 1991 — Indiana 72 8015 111.3 1960- - Jerry Lucas, Ohio Slate 152, Butch Ryan 404, Kevin Martin Sunday. April 21 Jamaica. Ann’s Bay on Jamaica’s northern Chicago 71 7862 110.7 1959- - West Virginia 161-162-448, Ed Mockus 169-434. Bill Herzog Tuesday, April 23 Cheney Tech at Farmington 3 30 The caravels, the Capitana and coast about 45 miles northwest of nearly 20 percent higher than the 20 pages, 4 sections Atlanta 72 7917 110.0 1958- - , Seattle 142-146, Joel Robert 170-161-470, John Kunz Thursday. April 25 Lyman Memorial at Bolton, 330 average of 28.2 mpg for all 1991 Houston 71 7615 107.3 1957- Saturday. A ^ l 27 tlic Santiago dc Palos, were the last Kingston. Attempts to find the - , Kansas 145, Bill Munroe 145, Ray Jerry 170-448, Fred Radio, TV Fn«tro«. , Softball B u s in e s s 5 Seattia 71 7561 106.5 1956- - , Temple Maura 147, Jeff Bell 156-154428, Joe Melzen Monday, April 29 ships Columbus commanded and ships began in the 1930s. cars — if consumers had chosen C la s s ifie d 14-16 San Antonio 70 7450 106.4 1955- - . S ^ Francisco 164. Can^bell Conference would be the first recovered. Now, with sonar and probing e- only the most efficient models in L.A. Lakers 72 7650 106.3 1954- - . La Salle Thursday, April 18 Today C o m ic s 10 Milwaukee 72 7641 106.1 1953- - B.H. Bom, Kansas Elks Saturday, A ^ l 20 Columbus abandoned the ves­ quipment and research of historical Narda Couley/Spoclal to the Herald each si'zc class,” Public Citizen said. F o o d 11 Orlando 70 7419 1952- Monday, April 22 7:30 p.m. — Celtics al Nets, Channel 18 106.0 - , Kansas Ralph Doyer Sr. 142-398, Joe Dworak sels fastened side-by-side on a documents, nautical archaeologists SPRING STEP — Matt Wilmes of East Hartford gets off a Most cars on the group’s list of Fextus 12 Philadelphia 1951 - Wednesday, April 24 WDRC (1360-AM) 72 7612 105.7 - None selected 141-396, Bill Tomkiel 154-405. Pete Slaum the 30 biggest air polluters were L o ca l 7-9 Utah 70 19 50- - Irwin DambroL CCNY Friday, April 26 7:30 p.m. — Hockey: Sweden vs. Soviet beach when he :uid his crew of 115 jumpshot despite the defense of Kevin Pisanti of Manchester 7252 103.6 139-139-388. Bernie Welch 138-147-400, Max Lo ttery New Y)rk 1 9 4 9 - Sunday, April 28 Union (taped), NESN were rescued from Jamaica on July described as expensive specialty 9 72 7441 103.3 - , Kentucky Welch 157-385, Joe Cataldi 141-370, Carl Bolin Please see SHIPS, page 6. during a pickup game at Charter Oak Park. Warmer weather Charlotte 72 7404 1028 1 9 4 8 - - Alex Groza, Kentucky Tuesday, April 30 7:30 p.m. — AHL: Binghamton at Springfield Nation/Warld 2.3 9 183-422, Ralph Doyer Jr. 158-378. Al Klein L.A. Clippers (taped), SportsChannei O b itu a rie s 72 7400 1028 1 9 4 7 - , Holy Cross 143-144-418, Steve Disipio 150-389, Paul Ford starting today likely will spring more outdoor sport. 9 New Jersey CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS Please .see SIPPERS, page 6. 72 7393 1027 1 9 4 6 - . Oklahoma ASM 160-400, Mark Pinkham 149-372, Jim Wbod- 7:30 p.m. — Red Sox vs. Rods, Channel 38 Saturday R e c » rd 9 Miami IMilas Confarenoe 72 7336 101.9 1 9 4 5 - Bob Kurland, Oklahoma A&M cock 382, Ernie Pepin 169-153-162-484, Duane 7:30 p.m. — Phillies vs. Blue Jays, ESPN O p in io n 4 Washington 71 7208 101.5 1944 — Arrxjld Ferrin, Utah (PMrick DIvlaon winner v& Adame Division 8 p.m. — Lakers at Spurs, ‘('NT Krause 135-161-430, Ed Fenton 138-399, Joe winner) S p o rts 17-20 Clavelarxl 71 7204 101.5 1943 — , Wyoming Desimone 351, Chet Stanek 137-388. 11:30 p.rtL — Tennis; Light 'n Lively Doubles VWdnes((^, May 1 Championship (taped), ESPN r- Sohball Serving The Manchester Area For Over 110 Years ~ Call Today for Home Delivery 647-9946 S ta te B Coventry at Tolland, l i a m. T e le v is io n 12 1 * 4

2— MANCHESTER HERALD, Wednesday, April 3, 1991

MANCHESTER HERALD, Wednesday, April 3, 1991__3 NATION/WORLD 80,000 may A Peace in Middle East unlikely carry AIDS By ERIC FIDLER women of child-bearing age in the A By JIM ABRAMS TTie triumph of America’s high- more moderate. telligence inadequacies may have The Associated Press United States, up to 80,(XX) women The Associated Press tech weapons “can’t help but whet These changes are “extraordinari­ led to serious misjudging of Iraq’s could be infected, Gwinn said Tues­ day. the appetites” of nations seeking to ly unlikely to take place,” Cordes­ military capabilities. CHICAGO — Up to 80,000 WASHINGTON — Ingrained bolster their military firepower, she man added. women of child-bearing age may Previous studies have shown that animosities and entrenched said, and arms control advocates are “Virtually every Arab nation is Epstein said that while “myths carry the AIDS vims, and about about 30 percent of the babies borne autocracies will thwart U.S. at­ saddled with the “key Achilles heel” standing n ^ ed before its people,” were shattered” about the ability of 2,0(X) babies each year will develop by infected mothers eventually tempts to bring stability to the post­ that limiting sales will be futile as said Judith Kipper, a Middle East air power to win a war, “the Air the disease, according to a study develop AIDS. 'Therefore, resear­ war Persian Gulf, private analysts long as there is rising demand for specialist at Brookings. Govern­ Force ran the war oblivious to the published today. chers calculated that 1,824 babies say. new weapons. ments are not accountable to their political pressures that were mount­ Principal author Dr. Marta Gwinn bom in 1989 would develop the dis­ ease. “We are not on the edge of a new Ms. Nolan said international ac­ people, she said, and “we can’t ex­ ing.” of the Centers for Disease Control world order" where U.S.-led inter­ cords on restricting chemical and pect this decade to be quiet and and colleagues from several govern­ Gwinn estimated that between 1,5(X) to 2,100 babies a year could national initiatives can be a catalyst biological weapons and some mis­ without instability.” Air strikes should have been con­ ment agencies studied blood tests for change, Anthony H. Cordesman, siles might be feasible, although the Washington should sustain its in­ centrated on Iraqi ground forces from more than 1.8 million infants develop AIDS. a national security analyst for ABC U.S. military will be eager to market itiative for Israeli-Arab peace, but when Scud attacks on Israel could bom from 1988 to 1990 in 38 states Most of the infected women were News, said TUesday at a seminar on the Scud-killing fttriot missile to with the understanding that the have precipitated a ground war and Washington, D.C. poor and lived in urban areas, lessons of the Gulf War. southern Persian Gulf states. politics of hope can become the against still-intact Iraqi troops, They found that 2,382 babies Gwinn said. Cordesman said it would be “mis­ Cordesman said real stability in politics of illusion, Cordesman said. Epstein said. He said U.S. intel­ tested positive for AIDS antibodies, “Clearly, right now IV dmg abuse leading” to believe that the U.S. the Middle East would require enor­ He said that while it’s “tempting ligence was weak both in picking up meaning their mothers, but not is what is driving the epidemic in military victory in Iraq has given mous changes. Among them: Iran to talk about intervening” to aid Iraq’s inability to mount a chemical necessarily the babies, carried the women and, therefore, children,” Washington greater power to shape and Iraq would need pteaceful, repre­ Iraqi insurgents in overthrowing attack and the poor morale of its vims. Blood tests do not accurately she said. the political future of the Middle sentative governments; the southern Saddam Hussein, that could turn troops. indicate AIDS in babies because in­ TTie highest rales of infected East. There is little the United States gulf states would have to become into a repeat of America’s disastrous fants carry their mothers’ antibodies women were in New York, with 5.8 can do beyond preserving oil sup­ Cordesman said Iraq’s vaunted more open and fair in distributing Marine involvement in Lebanon in for months. per 1,0(X); the District of Columbia, plies from friendly Arab states and Soviet-made T-72 tanks were “basi­ their wealth and solutions would 1983. “With luck we might get out 5.5 per 1,0(X); New Jersey, 4.9 per contributing to the security of Israel, have to be found to the Palestinian cally garbage,” poorly manufactured Because the length of the survey 1,(X)0; and Florida, 4.5 per 1,000. he said. without being shot at by the group Tho Associated Press question. and maintained. varied from region to region, resear­ Montana and New Hampshire each Th» Assoclalod Press we support.” KENNEDY COMPOUND — This recent photo shows the “Everything else is peripheral.” In addition, Cordesman said, arms woman alleges a sexual assault took place over the Easter chers adjusted the statistics to reported zero cases per 1,000 HAPPY ASTRONAUTS — Mission Specialists Linda God­ Any U.S. attempt to slow the traf­ Cordesman said the most likely Former CIA Director William Kennedy estate in the town of Palm Beach, Fla., where a weekend. No charges have been filed in the incident. produce an annual figure and ad­ control reinforced by the U.N. and next trouble spot in the Middle East Colby, replying from the audience, women. win, left, and Jay Apt share a laugh Tuesday at Kennedy fic of arms to the Middle East will the Western powers is crucial, the justed the figures again to account 'The CIX; reported a total of is the southern Soviet Union, with said critics of U.S. intelligence­ for all 50 states. Space Center in Florida before preparing for Friday’s blast off also have limited success, said Jarme Soviet Union must avoid ethnic un­ 167,803 AIDS cases through E. Nolan, an arms control specialist ethnic unrest degenerating into gathering should distinguish be­ They calculated that 6,079 babies in the space shuttle Atlantis, which will carry the Gamma-Ray rest in its southern republics and serious conflict. tween good and bad surprises. “In February 1991, including 16,330 Observatory into space. at the Brookings Institution, which such governments as Libya, Af­ were bom to mothers with the virus among women. Of the total, 106,361 sponsored the seminar. He and Joshua M. Epstein, a this case, there were some good Neighbors gossip about rape in 1989 — or 1.5 of every 1,(X)0 ghanistan and Sudan must become senior fellow at Brookings, said in- surprises,” he said. have died. women who gave birth that year 'The results were published in By SANDRA WALEWSKI that happens to them,” said Ruth Bech lounge Au Bar, as saying Ken­ nedy’s older sister Jean Kennedy nationwide. today’s Journal of the American The Associated Press Kane, visiting from nearby Boca nedy, son Patrick and nephew Wil­ Smith and the late Stephen Smith. If the same rate held true for all Medical Association. Saddam’s front Raton. “I find them fascinating — liam Kennedy Smith were at the Police Chief Joe 'Tcrliz/.esc said not always admirable.” PALM BEACH, Fla. — Palm nightspot Friday night. he was not satisfied that inves­ Free money given out in Kuwait A spokesman for U.S. Sen. Ed­ Beach is abuzz over a woman’s al­ Patrick Kennedy, a 24-year-old tigators have been able to question legations that she was raped at the ward Kennedy issued a statement Rhode Island suite represenuilive, Rescuers try to all members of tbe Kennedy family firms are elusive KUWAIT CITY (AP) — How Monday saying the Massachusetts Kuwaitis waiting for free money. Kennedy family compound. said he knew nothing about the inci­ who might have information on the rich are Kuwaitis? So rich that helped give us our country back.” timated 250,0(X). LONDON (AP) — The British “I came to get some dollars so I Democrat spent the Easier weekend dent and was asleep at the time of case. Department of the Treasury says when the emir offers free money, With hemendous oil wealth and Foreigners, who accounted for “I think it’s kind of unfair, all of government said Thesday it planned can go on vacation outside with his family at the Palm Beach the alleged rape. The woman, identified as a 30- have helped build Iraq’s war some of them just shrug. fewer than 600,000 citizens, 73 percent of Kuwait’s population this innuendo, without any facts as “n no new action against the 33 Kuwait,” Abdul Hamecd Jasem estate, but was not involved in the “The girl is not someone 1 know. ycar-old resident of Palm Beach save spelunker machine. Kuwait’s ruler. Sheik Jaber al- Kuwait was one of the world’s and 86 percent of its work force lo what happened,” George Preston, O Z] British-based companies listed by said at the Commercial Bank of incident. She was not a guest of mine. 1 as­ County, said she was raped about 4 A British trade official said the Ahmed al-Sabah, is giving 5(X) richest countries before Iraq in­ before the invasion, are excluded. who lives down the street from the J 3 I - the United States as fronts for Iraqi Kuwait. “I don’t need the (emir’s) “We haven’t made public any par­ sume she was a guest of one of my a.m. Saturday. She contacted police sending food and painkillers to Treasury mainly intended the list as dinars ($1,700) to all Kuwaitis vaded on Aug. 2. Its annual per walled Kennedy estate, said Tlies- By SUZANNE GAMBOA President Saddam Hussein to get money.” ticular name as ruled out or in,” said cousins,” he said. about 2 p.m. Mobley, and a doctor was among a guidance for American companies, who stayed in the oil-rich emirate capita income was nearly Many eligible Kuwaitis went to day. “We don’t even know that this The Associated Press arms or hide stolen oil profits. Daluil Ali, who runs a school police spokesman Craig Gunkel. Smith, 30, a student at Geor­ Investigators sent to the estate several people with her. so they’ll know which firms the during the seven-month Iraqi oc­ $20,(X)0, though the devastation banks Saturday, saying they is true.” Most of the British-based com­ bookstore, said he collected his “It’s a delicate case when you talk getown University School of ueasury believes trade with Iraq. cupation. inflicted by the Iraqis will reduce needed the money rfter being Police have filed no charges and that afternoon-found that the man CARLSBAD, N.M. — Exfx:rts “She told us everything was going panies were not listed in the 500 dinars and was giving it to about sexual battery — you don’t Medicine, could not immediately be well,” Denny said. “She told us to living standards for years to come. without work and salaries for have refused to say whether anyone accused had left town, Tcrli/.zcsc trying to free an explorer who broke telephone directory, had telephone Some say they don’t need it. Egyptians, Sudanese and other want to release something that coulo reached for comment. He suiyed said. be cool on top.” “This is not a document the Others say it’s not enough. A few The government has enough eight months. The cash is par­ associated with the Kennedy family her leg inside the nation’s deepest numbers no longer in use or did not foreigners living in his neigh­ hinder your investigation.” with friends Tuesday night, the Tcrli/.zcsc said the woman told in­ 'The rescue, which probably won’t United States is expecting us to do think the emir should keep his money left to provide free ticularly welcome during is a suspect in the alleged rape known cave organized a bucket return calls seeking comment. borhood who had assisted Gunkel said alcohol was in­ landlord at his Washington, D.C., vestigators she met tJic senator and be completed before 'Thursday or anything about. ... We’ve taken cash and offer democracy instead. gasoline, water and other neces­ Ramadan, the Muslim holy Saturday. brigade of rescuers lo carry her Spokesmen for those that did Kuwaitis during the occupation. volved, but he would not elaborate. carriage house told tlic Palm Beach his party for drinks and later went to Friday, has drawn top cave experts what action we can,” a spokesman at The longest lines "Riesday in sities. month, when the devout fast “It’s deja vu for the family. I’m today through a treacherous passage denied wrongdoing and said they “The money is of no impor­ Local newspapers quoted Stuart Post. have “a couple of cocktails” at the from all over the United States. the Department of Trade and In­ recently reopened banks were The emir’s offer took effect on during the day but often hold enthralled with them and everything known as 'The Rift. were shocked at being included on tance to me,” Ali said. “I want to Lichtenstein, manager of the Palm Smith is the son of Ted Ken­ estate. The giant step Tuesday placed her dustry said, speaking on condition Saturday and applies to all large feasts and entertain friends people buying U.S. dollars, not use it to thank the people who Emily Davis Mobley, who was the list of 89 companies the U.S. of anonymity. Kuwaitis who stayed put — an es­ at night. nearly halfway to open air, or I'M pan of a mapping expedition into miles from the cave cnU'ancc, which Lcchiiguilla Cave, was injured Sun­ has been rigged with ropes and pul­ day about two miles inside the cave. leys to hoist her. She was 7(X) feet Crash Soviet price cuts are beneficial On Tuesday, with her leg in a down, compared to about 1,0(X) feel splint, she was hoisted on a stretcher when she was injured. Bradley demands The problem, of course, is that By DIANE DUSTON U.S. Agriculture Department. work, live in an apartment sup­ up the 250-foot Great White Way, a David Modiscile and other res­ you really can’t relate the Soviet The Associated Press Soviets earn an average 270 rock wall with a scries of ledges, cuers today planned to use boulders system to any American counter­ plied free of charge by his rubles a month, and they spend said park Ranger Jeff Denny. wedged into the rift as stepping victims part because our system has never employer and have no-cost child Gates’ resignation WASHINGTON — Imagine about 50 percent of their income care. Rescuers talked to her by stones while inching Mobley been quite as distorted, said going to your local grocery store on food, compared to about 17 telephone after stringing a line into through the L-shaped fracture by Joseph Peizman, George And though wages may seem and finding that ground beef went percent for the average American. the cave, and she asked for a pizza passing her on a stretcher from one By HOWARD S. GANTMAN Gates also questioned Bradley’s low by American standards, they from $1.59 a pound to $5.56 over­ Washington University professor There are about 27.6 rubles to the and a hairbrush. Rescuers have been person lo the next. named Copley News Service timing in making the announcement have risen under President night, that bread which was $1.09 of Soviet economics. dollar. one day after the mayor named a Mikhail Gorbachev, while the BELIZE CITY, Belize (AP) — a loaf yesterday suddenly jumped And experts say the Soviets But the Soviets also have a LOS ANGELES — Mayor Tom blue-ribbon panel to review the, will benefit. cost of gotxls, including fixid, has The U.S. Embassy has released the to $4.36. much more developed social wel­ stayed the same or ri.sen slightly, n ^ es of the seven Americans who Bradley called 'Riesday for Police LAPD and then “undermine” them “What the Soviets have had to fare system, Liefert said. They Chief Daryl Gates’ resignation but by calling for his resignation. Now you have an idea of the do is gel rid of their domestic sub­ Liefert .said. This has led to hoard­ died in the crash of a light plane en have low rent and free health care, ing and shortages in the stores. the chief refused, setting off a power In recent weeks. Bradley had degree to which Soviet shoppers sidies,” Peizman said Tuesday. route to Ambergris Cay in the and everyone either has a job or is “Imagine if tbe price of gotxls Caribbean. struggle that could further divide n repeaiedly suggested that Gates saw store prices increase this The Soviet government has receiving some kind of income week as their government at­ here were cut in half,” he .said. The Cessna 402 of the Belize city already rocked by the police should siep down lo speed the heal­ kept food prices at about the same from the government. beating of Rodney King tempted to move toward a free “People would buy heavily be­ City-based Tropic Air was on a 30- ing process m ihe wake of the level for 30 years, said Bill Peizman said it’s not unusual “Chief Gates, now is the time for market system. cause prices would no longer be mile flight Monday from Belize City videotaped King beating, but he Liefert, Soviet specialist at the for a Soviet to get free meals at you to do the right thing — for your restraining their buying behavior.” to the resort island when it crashed refused 10 call outright for the in shallow water a mile east of the officers, for your department- for the chiefs resignation. air strip, civil aviation authorities public you serve,” Bradley s-nid in said. an address broadcast live on icvcr^l local television and radio station^ Passengers have tentatively been High-fiber helps identified as Paul Anderson, 45, of “When the public begins to lose confidence in the chief, and in the Fonda shutdown San Francisco; Richard Davie WASHINGTON — Eating high dietary fiber may function as an an- Schmitt, 47, of Glendale, Calif.; LAPD, the chief has only one fiber foods may help protect against tipromoling agent in human breast LOS ANGELES — They’ll O.scars for the 1971 film “Klute” Anne Francis Morris, 58, Tulsa, choice. He must step aside.” Bradley breast cancer, researchers say. cancer.” have to go for the bum someplace and in 1978 for “Coming Home,” said. “He must allow the wind' of There have been many studies else. also wants to concentrate on her Okla.; Barbara Penn, 42, Dallas,' In a study published today in the change to blow across the LAPD to Jane Fonda’s Workout, the core busincs.ses, which include a TK a Aftftn^lAlaH Pm sit Texas; Harvell Smith, 57,’ Journal of the National Cancer In­ that suggest fiber in the diet can help refresh his officers and restore the prevent colon cancer but none to see Beverly Hills aerobics .studio that string of fitness videos, books and TO THE RESCUE — Caver David Modisette, of Denver, Evergreen, Colo.; Judith Merrill, 49,’ stitute, researchers report that Evergreen, Colo.; Jack Alnut Talbot,’ department’s vigor and reputation ” if a high-fiber diet would have any launched her fime.ss empire, has audiouipes, die sfxikesman said. Tuesday participates in efforts to rescue a woman who has But Gates, a 42-year police veteran laboratory rats fed high-fiber diets Uiken a pennanent breather. 86, Tulsa, Okla., an embassy com­ H t r ia l d e l a y e d — Lyle Menendez, left and his brother Erik, suspects in the developed many fewer breast effect on breast cancer. been trapped in Lechuguilla Cave, Carlsbad, N.M., with a munique said. who has been chief for 13 years The studio closed Tuesday, un­ IxHida, 53, o[K'iied the studio in death of their parents, won another delay Tuesday in the Beverly Hills, Calif., trial while they tumors than rats who received little Numerous studies have indicated Also killed was the pilot, Kam said he had no intention of stepping that high-fat diets, such as those of able lo compete with health clubs 1979 to raise money for the Cam­ broken leg since Sunday. seek a state Supreme Court opinion on whether an alleged murder confession is protected bv down while the LAPD is in a crisis. or no fiber. dial offered services ranging from Das Amy Muralidaran of Sri Lanka. doctor-patient privilege. ' many Americans, tend to promote paign for Economic Democracy, a “I keep saying over and over TTie researchers’ report said the breast cancer. juice bars to racquetball, a spokes­ now-defunct liberal group again that this is a great depart­ way fiber might work against breast The journal tliat printed the study man said in today’s Los Angeles founded by the actress and then- 26 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE ment, Gates said. “Eighty-three cancer seemed different between is published by die National Cancer Times. husband Tom Hayden, a state as­ FBI is considering action against itself hundred men and women of this rats and humans, but they still said Institute, one of the National In­ Fonda, who won best-actress semblyman. Tessier's Nursery department, I think, arc depending the new findings “suggest that stitutes of Health. By PETE YOST on me to slay and to provide some recommended changes in bureau August, agreeing to full salary and added. The Associated Press leadership out of this situation. & Landscapers, Inc. operations so “this unfortunate case” pension benefits in a deal that could “I believe I can provide that isn’t repeated, the FBI said in a let­ be worth more than $1 million. Each pool a work of art... WE STAND ALONE Based on the task force’s find­ leadership and I will do that. 1 don’t Seat belt law urged WASHINGTON — Eleven FBI ter Tuesday to Rochon’s attorney. It RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL The task force referred five ings, “the FBI will consider the ac­ custom designed... 1 supervisors and agents face possible believe that 8,300 police officers didn’t elaborate on the changes. separate matters to FBI Director WASHINGTON — The National “However, the safety board also PROFESSIONAL DESIGN & CONSULTATION disciplinary action in the racial tions of 11 employees to determine will follow the mayor anywhere.” professionally installed... Rochon said white colleagues William Sessions for possible dis­ t o m Transportation Safety Board is ur­ believes it is essential that all states harassment of a black agent who is if discipline is warranted,” the BRADLEY to complement your home threatened and intimidated him ciplinary action, the bureau said in ging the 12 states that have yet to enact legislation requiring the use of demanding that the bureau release bureau said in a statement. and your surroundings. when he worked in the bureau’s the letter to Rochon’s lawyer, David pass laws requiring use of lap and shoulder belts by occupants its internal report of the embarrass­ Chicago office in the 1980s and that automobile seat belts to do so quick­ 'Our yard is full of Kairys. Those under scrutiny include of all passenger automobiles, light ing episode. bureau supervisors covered up the Gunitc construction One instance was referred to the agents and bureau supervisors, said ly- vans and trucks ...,” the letter said. A special task force that looked evidence. In a letter 'Riesday to the gover­ Nursery Stock for Justice Department, which declined an FBI source who spoke on condi­ SPRING FIX-UP The board said research has ■ into allegations by Donald Rochon He sued the FBI and settled last criminal prosecution, the letter tion of anonymity. nors of those states, the safety board shown that mandatory laws substan­ Lifetime written guarantee early planting" said a two-year study it conducted tially increase the u.sc rate of .scat ■ found that lap and shoulder bells of­ belts. We have changed our name FREtl»gffEcK fered substantial protection to those FREE in-home consultation and design June's Accessories With purchase of using them in a wide variety of auto ■ Jackson & Perkins cra.shes. Residential and commercial 9 from DiRosa Cleaners to.... Roses are in! for a Great Selection in LUBE, OIL & FILTER The board noted government es­ ■ timates that seal bells saved 19,361 Landscaping & Pansies ★ CLEANERS ★ \Hair Accessories & Fine Costume Pieces SPEC IA L a. lives between 1984 and 1989 with ■ 14,191 of those accidents occurring W e have a large selection of flowers & "*2.00 off T free"box T I 3.00 off 1 in stales with mandatory scat belt A full service company hanging baskets & plants 324 Broad Street laws. DONT MISS THE BOAT • Lilies • Crocus any cleaning . STORAGE j over $10 of Box I Manchester Parkade 'The slates without mandatory scat Evaryihlna yov aNmiy* wanted (o 40 West Street foww about taUng a cruiaa * (Marshalls Mall Entrance) belt laws arc Alabama, Delaware, Rte. 85 Bolton - Tulips ' Daffodils I Quality Service * ^'®3ning I Niicnal ImlMt hi but awra abaW to aalu. ,A \D \l\R K ■ cu to n w /o n . p « ordw. C Oisoount I you book your cn4s8 HOURS: OPEN 7 DAYS, 9 AM - 6 PM senger vehicles. ______“April 3“ 1 4—MANCHESTER TORALD, Wednesday, April 3, 1991 MANCHESTER HERALD, Wedhesday, April 3,1991—5 OPINION BUSINESS ______A Open Forum Stormin’ wromSiSMj/ Anti-smoke group wants Marlboro man out A Ignorance costly By LARRY NEUMEISTER Norman In an article last week in the New England Journal of The Associated Press they estimated costs about $240,000 — when the tobacco tobacw advertising from sports facilities could take the Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine Dr. Alan Blum company’s contract expires at the end of the season. • decision out of the Mels hands, he said. To the Editor: said cigarette makers’ sponsorship of auto racing gives I was encouraged by the position taken by Kwen Daragan, spokeswoman for Philip Morris, said We kind of have to wait.” Ross said. “We want to be XX seasons, the them “millions of dollars in low-cost national exposure.” Ae billboards are aimed at adult smokers and anti-smok­ a good citizen.” Manchester’s Town Manager as reported in a recent arrives ^ l t » r o Man has taken his position in the outfield at “The whole idea of tobacco Sponsoring sporting events ing activists were overreacting. Mark Green, city commissioner of consumer affairs, Manchester Herald article, which quotes Mr. Sartor as Shea Stadium as a toger-than-life figure on a billboard, suggests that tobacco use is compatible with physical fit­ “Any 'TV coverage is incidental. When the camera said 13 major league ballparks have Marlboro billboards, saying: “I am convinced that additional reductimis to /yiti-smoking activists want him dropped from the ness and athletic performance when we know that the op­ (the) budget would directly affect basic education By JACK ANDERSON lineup. pans to the outfield, the rest of us are watching to see and eight other stadiums have signs for Winston cigaret­ posite is the case,” said Dr. Ronald Davis, director of the whether the outfielder’s going to catch the ball or not,” tes, manufactured by R J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. programming and the overall quality of education in and DALE VAN ATTA______Health advocates say the ad gets on television when Office on Smoking and Health for the U.S. Centers for Manchester’s public schools.” Mr. Sartor, as well as the earner^ point that way, enabling Philip Morris USA to she said. New York already has taken several steps to further Disease Control. Jim Ross, Mets vice president of marketing, would not Manchester Board of Education, are to ^ highly com­ WASHINGTON — The hero of skirt a ban on cigarette commercials on TV. anti-smoking efforts. An anti-smoking group called Smokefree Educational say how much the company pays for the billboard. mended for their responsible approach to maintaining the Operation Desert Storm, Gen. H. Nor­ The protest is the latest in a string against tobacco Services has organized an opening day protest at the Mayor David Dinkins banned most cigarette vending Ross said the team would not decide whether to renew machines, outlawed free cigarette samples and recom­ level of our educational system which benefits all the man Schwarzkopf, is expected, as his companies sponsorship of sporting events. US Heath stadium next week to get the h^Iboro Man benched. Philip Morris’s 10-year contract before July or August, mended tobacco billboards be removed from Shea and residents of Manchester. You may ask. Mayor next conquest, to take America by storm. and H um ^ Sen/ices Secretary Louis W. Sullivan has Joseph Chemer, the group’s president, said other ac­ called such sponsorships “blood money.” and maybe not until the end of the season. from Yankee Stadium, where the Marlboro contract Werkhoven, “How does this proposed budget which He will be coming home soon to a tivists have offered to buy the billboard space — which defies the arbitrary 6 percent guideline imposed by the tumultuous welcome. Before then, pending city and state legislation to ban doesn’t expire until 1996. Board of Elirectors serve the best interests of all of Already, polls acclaim him to be the Manchester’s citizens?” Perhaps you and the Board most popular American — a notch above should consider why a number of Manchester residents President Bush himself. That has un­ Financier fined, sentenced decided to move here. I am certain I am not alone in my decision to move to Manchester based on the high nerved some White House politicos who quality of the education jwograms in this town. Ah. you are privately apprehensive about this My, just another self-serving parent of children enrolled burly, blunt-talking military hero with for fraud at southwest S&L in the Manchester schools. Coiisider, however, the per­ the no-nonsense manner and outreaching sonal benefits you may someday derive from helping to humor. Schwarzkopf’s party affiliation is ' independeht, but there is talk in DALLAS (AP) — Donald R. Dixon was sentenced “However I do not think he should be punished for the provide a high quality education for my children. These ■«W Tuesday to five years in prison and ordered to repay children will one day, in the not too distant future, be- Washington that he leans toward the failure of Vernon Savings & Loan.” Democrats. $577,000 for using money from his Vernon Savings & wme productive members of our society. They will have Fish sentenced Dixon to three concurrent five-year Loan Association to fund a lavish lifestyle and pay for terms. He also ordered five years’ probation and 500 jobs and pay social security taxes, in addition to the local Americans are just getting acquainted prostitutes. taxes. I imagine you are begiiming to see some personal with Schwarzkopf, who may continue to hours of community service during the first two years Dixon, convicted of 23 counts of bank fraud, faced up after Dixon’s release. benefit to having my children become well-educated, play a role in their lives. They need a to 120 years in prison and a $5.75 million fine, but U.S. ivc^uctive members of society, not to mention the pos­ closer look at the human face behind the Dixon was ordered to report to a federal prison April District Judge Joe Fish said he should not be punished 23. He could be eligible for parole in 20 months. No sibility that someday one of these children may be serv­ warrior’s mask. So Zebra Books asked for Vernon’s $1.3 billion failure. ing Manchester in a capacity similar to your own. I us to dig into his background and present prison was designated. Conservatives isolated Dixon, 52, Vernon’s former owner, was convicted in Dixon’s attorney, William Ravkind, said a decision would hope that when their time comes they would be his life story in a paperback book. December of illegally using depositors’ money to pay for broad minded and farsighted enough to look at the needs whether to appeal had not been made. A new split in the conservative move­ the Senate handed Wilson’s policy a to make the United States a signatory of For two intensive weeks, our staff has a California beach house and prostitutes. Dixon said he thought the sentence was fair. “I was of the whole community and its future. This is the way it ment is attracting the attention of both stunning defeat when it refused to the North Atlantic Treaty and hence of engaged in the journalistic equivalent of Attorney General Dick Thornburgh called Dixon the not tried and convicted for the collapse of Vernon has been fw generations. Mr. Werkhoven, for our those who wish it well and those who authorize American participation in the the NATO military alliance, isolationist the two-minute drill. We interviewed “highest of the high fliers among the savings and loan Savings and should not be sentenced for it,” he said. children and our future. As you continue to consider ad­ don’t. League of Nations. Nearly 20 years fur­ more than 100 of his family members, crooks,” and his trial had come to symbolize the ditional cuts in the Town’s budget please consider the sentiment surfaced again. Senate “I’m glad it’s over. It’s been a nightmare.” Although it’s fair to call the split ther on, the country was almost evenly friends, co-workers and critics. President fraudulent excesses in the troubled thrift industry. Dixon was convicted of illegally spending about ■Jie* r% au A Associated Press following gem of wisdom from a bumper sticker: “If you “new,” because it has not previously ex­ Republican leader Robert Taft opposed MIS OWN DAY — Actor Paul Newman of Westport digs into a cake in honor of the first split between “isolationists” and “inter­ Bush even contributed a couple of anec­ But Fish said the six-week trial did not prove Dixon $577,0(X) from the thrift primarily to pay for a house at think the i^ce of education is expensive, u-y ignorance.” isted in the 40-year history of the modem U.S. membership in NATO, warning caused the thrift’s 1987 collapse, the largest at the time. decade of Newman’s Own Inc. during celebrations at the Russian Tea Room in New York ventionists” when France fell and Britain against “entangling alliances.” But the dotes. Solana Beach, near San Diego. He also was convicted of That Mys it all. If additional cuts must be made to the conservative movement, the roots of the was left to fight on alone against Hitler. “I think Mr. Dixon is deserving of punishment for the City. The non-profit food wholesaler, which donates profits to charities, also introduced four Town s overall budget, I urge you to look somewhere beaty was ratified anyway, and soon America is in need of a hero and has using thrift money to pay for prostitutes during parties at disagreement go back much flulher than Only the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor crime of which he was convicted,” the judge said. the house. new products. else. that. They are embedded, in fact, in isolationist sentiment was smothered in found one. In Vietnam, Schwarzkopf ended the battle — in favor of the inter­ the unanimous determination of the new was a muddy-boots commander whose Carolyn J. Gimbrone America’s very history as a nation. ventionists. 174 Henry St It was, after all, George Washington conservative movement to resist interna­ first priority was the welfare of his When the Second World War ended, tional communism. troops. Once, he stepped gingerly across Manch^ter who, in his Farewell Address as presi­ however, it seemed inevitable that the In Brief .. . dent, warned his countrymen against It is only now, with the Cold War a minefield to rescue a screaming, flail­ Newman’s Own reaches 10 “entangling alliances.” It was good ad­ over, that such notable conservative ing private who had been mangled by a NEW YORK (AP) — Newman’s Own, the food com­ The company has contributed to organizations includ­ vice. Europe, he pointed out, had a series commentators as Pat Buchanan and Joe land mine. ■ Japan’s industry is much Analysts said the 0.5 percent drop years, but in the end they dug deeper Don’t step back pany started by Paul Newman that gives its profits to ing Newman’s Ashford summer camp for children with of longstanding internal controversies Sobran have called for a retreat from smaller than America’s but it is in­ was another sign that the manufac­ in their pockets for more rubles. Another time, Schwarzkopf dashed charity, celebrated the start of its 10th year Hiesday with cancer; AIDS research groups; the Cystic Fibrosis Foun­ that were none of our affair. The United global concerns and responsibilities. It creasing production a lot faster, ac­ turing sector remained in a reces­ Price increases ranging from 250 W ILLIAM A . through enemy territory to rescue some the introduction of salsa and ranch salad dressing to add dation; Big Brothers-Big Sisters; Meals on Wheels; To The Editor: Slates — 13 newly liberated ex-colonies was on that basis that they opposed the injured soldiers who had been separated cording to new figures from the In­ sion. percent to 1,000 percent went into RUSHER U.S.-led war against Iraq. “This Gulf to its already popular spaghetti sauce, olive oil salad Literacy Volunteers of America and several hospitals. On Hiesday, March 19, 1991, the Common Sense far away on the eastern coast of the from his unit. He repeatedly ternational Monetary Fund. The Commerce Department 'fiies- effect nationwide Hiesday on about dressing and popcorn. Coalition sponsored a public meeting for the citizens of war,” Buchanan predicted, “will be the Since 1985, Japan’s increase has day said orders for durable and Newman said when he started Newman’s Own with North American continent, bound demonstrated a remarkable physical half the food and consumer products “We always thought the people that would be on the Bolton. The meeting was advertised as an opportunity to last hurrah of the interventionists.” been 26 percent, including a 6 per­ non-durable goods fell to $233.2 bil­ his olive oil salad dressing — a homemade recipe he together in a new federal republic — courage. During one firefight, he was sold in state-run stores. other end of the checks would be the beneficiaries,” meet the petitioning candidates and to gain insight into Hardly! But is it, perhaps, the last hur­ lion after shrinking 1.6 percent a would give to friends at Christmas — he never dreamed should avoid involvement in them. For a wounded, yet refused to take cover or be cent boost last year. The U.S. in­ Newman told a crowd of about 200 food distributers at their campaign platform. Those in attendance did in fact rah of the isolationists? crease has been 14 percent, but for month earlier. Factory orders have sales would reach $55 million after 10 years. century, with negligible exceptions, United States would henceforth play a medically evacuated until his mission ■ After 10 years of stopping Fido an anniversary party at the Russian Tea Room, a posh find out what these individuals truly stand for. These America followed Washington’s advice. Recent soundings indicate there is still 1990, the increase accounted for not risen since peaking at $255 bil­ at the edge of the yard, the Invisible But today, with a list of 16 products that are sold major role — probably the leading role was accomplished. Manhattan restaurant. “But we were very wrong. We’re worldwide, Newman said he no longer considers himself TNT candidates again took the oppiortunity to emphasize When, however, after defeating Spain considerable supjiort, in some conserva­ only 1 percent. Total U.S. produc­ lion last October. Fence Co. is taking its radio-con­ the fact they are against providing the children of Bolton — in world affairs. It was, as it has just tive circles, for America pulling in its Despite Schwarzkopf’s battlefield the beneficiaries.” simply an actor. in a war over European meddling in this now again become, indisputably the tion is about three times Japan’s. trolled collars indoors to keep the 'The company, based in Newman’s hometown of with a quality education at an affordable price. This is hemisphere, the United States took over horns. Conservatives who want to bash heroics, he never lost his humanity, or ■ Soviet shoppers complained, pooch off that expensive carpet. not new information, this is the same old TNT. greatest power on earth. Planes and Bush at all costs can hardly, after all, his humility. He is a general who hates Westport, has given away nearly $40 million since it was “I’m beginning to think of myself more of an inventor the Philippines in pursuance of what ■ Orders for factory goods fell in cursed and even cried after the OffLimits, the new system, uses founded in 1982 by Newman and his friend, A.E. What was most interesting about this meeting was the electronic communications had shrunk praise his foreign policy enthusiastically. war and is repulsed by those who glory than I am an actor,” said Newman, who himself President McKinley called our “manifest the globe drastically, and seemed to February for the fourth straight government increased prices on hidden wires to mark parts of the Hotchner. Newman’s Own received more than 800 re­ obvious lack of any credible proposal or plan for improv­ But most conservatives are ready to in it. He encountered generals in Viet­ many goods for the first time in 30 house forbidden to a pet. developed some of the product recipes. “I’m just having destiny,” it was clear that America’s con­ make the very concept of “isolationism” month, the government said. quests for donations last year, Newman said. fun with these things.” ing the town of Bolton. If one were to strip away the cept of its role was expanding. And when acknowledge that the Iraq war was a tri­ nam whom he described as “war lovers.” slander and rhetoric that was offered by each candidate, obsolete. There was little domestic resis­ umph for Bush, and even that his “new Woodrow Wilson led the country into the tance when the United States helped to “They scared the living hell out of what you would find is very little in the way of new ideas' First World War, and then dominated a world order,” especially if it amounts to me,” he told us. By his standards, they’re or creative thinking. found, and then joined, the United Na­ a fbx Americana, may (with apologies to peace conference that drastically redrew tions. “not very good generals.” Measuring the echo? In all fairness, a few proposals for change were men­ the map of Europe, he was signaling that McKinley) be America’s manifest des­ Wang sets strategy tioned. For instance, A1 Ahem, the Coalition leader who But when the Cold War broke out bet­ tiny. Schwarzkopf kept a well-thumbed, we had left our 19th century isolationism ween the United States and the Soviet camouflage-covered Bible beside his bed is miming for First Selectman, thinks that our elected of­ far behind. Will the conservative isolationists sit By JOHN CUNNIFF many people are without Jobs. What Union (both possessing nuclear still for that? If not, the current conserva­ in Saudi Arabia. Yet, according to his The Associated Press ficials are functioning far too much like a team. If he Not without a fight, though. In fact. will they spend? to fight paperwork were elected, he would discourage cooperation between weapons), and President Truman sought tive split may become permanent. family, he is not a Sunday-go-to-meeting While they try to settle the dis­ Christian. His sister, Sally Schwarzkopf, the various Boards. NEW YORK — A physicist pute among themselves, a lot of LOWELL, Mass. (AP) — Wang sional services industries. Miller ^ Board of Education candidate llvi Cannon has a said she wouldn’t call him religious. “I might liken it to a critic^ atomic Americans have made up their own Laboratories Inc. has a new would call him spiritual.” A. said in a statement. secret proposal for solving the overcrowded conditions mass that keeps making more of it­ mind. They point to the latest read­ strategy for reducing paperwork by “These are the customers Wang and the accreditation problems that currently plague our At the dawn of Desert Storm, Gen. self. A psychologist might liken it to ing of the index of leading economic n harm s using electronic imaging systems. knows best,” he said. schools. A plan which she claims will cost less than $5 Schwarzkopf assembled his full staff in a self-fulfilling prophecy. But indicators, a so-called leading In a letter to 3,100 customers, The “Office 2000” concept, million. When pressed for details, llvi Cannon suggested KINGMAN, Ariz. — Although tional, medical, environmental, correc­ the war room in Riyadh and asked the economists don’t know what to forecaster of trends. Wang Chairman and Chief Execu­ then embraced a more measured ap­ which will include new products, that a public meeting was neither the time or place. In Arizona enjoyed a boom matched by few tional and other programs of unprece­ chief chaplain. Col. David Peterson, to make of it. For the first time in seven months, tive Officer Richard Miller an­ proach: When the state Legislature met ties in with Wang’s recently other states during the 1980s, its dented scope. pray for the protection of his troops. “It” is the phenomenon of the February index rose, and sharp­ nounced this week the creation of light of the fact tlmt Board of Education has been work­ in a special session early this year, it im­ formed Professional Services economy now has turned sour — and “In 1980, Medicaid spending ac­ Then Schwarzkopf ordered the playing Americans declaring the recession “Office 2000,” a new approach to ing on the upcoming referendum for over two years one posed reductions of at least 3 percent in ly. After calculating results of 11 Group. The new group will offer nowhere is that reversal more ^ p ^ n t counted for 9 percent of a (typical) of one of his favorite songs, Lee Green­ will be short and shallow, and paper-intensive businesses. has to wonder when llvi will think that time is right to than in the budget of the state govern­ the budgets of almost all state depart­ component measurements, including consulting services to help cus­ come forward with her grand scheme. wood’s “God Bless the USA.” believing it so thoroughly that it The troubled computer-maker ment. ments and agencies. construction spending and money tomers redesign computer systems Michael Plocharczyk and Ronald Beaudoin, both of Elsewhere, however, public officials begins to produce its own proof. supply, a 1.1 percent rise was an­ will no longer compete for large In a development matched virtually “War is an intensely personal, emo­ . w- As usual, economists are split to meet their individual needs. whom are running for the Board of Fmance, each offered are turning to the ultimate remedy — tional experience for everyone that is in­ nounced. company-wide computer networks, everywhere in the nation, the recession about the significance. Electronic imaging systems in­ up ideas ’borrowed’ from their common place of ROBERT new or increased income, payroll, sales volved in it,” Schwarzkopf has said. but instead will focus on systems that began last summer and has not yet Some tend to feel that confidence volve machines that store a copy employment, Pratt & Whitney. These costs cutting or excise taxes. The governors of Con­ “And you know you have to draw your TTiat might not seem like a lot, , for departments and small work abated led to a severe contraction in con- WALTERS itself can pull off the trick of bring­ but it is. In the previous six months groups. Wang plans to target finan­ of entire documents, similar to a programs are both proprictai^ and therefore 1 would sug­ surncr spending. That, in turn, necticut and Tennessee have proposed strength from whatever sources you draw gest that the legal implications be investigated prior to ing the economy out of recession. the index came in negative. Not only cial services and legal and profes­ photocopy, in a computer. diminished lax revenues available to the enactment of income taxes — never your strength from.” even considering implementation. I wonder if Mr Confident people are more inclined did the February gain break the bad stale government before imposed in those states. Plocharczyk and Mr. Beaudoin had to flip a coin to Those who know Schwarzkopf expect to spend, they say. habit, but it was the largest increase At the same time, state agencies and 'Throughout the country, state execu­ determine who was to relay which program. The remain- him to throw his great weight into a Some of their brethren agree that since June 1988. departments came under increased pres­ state’s budget,” says NGA. “In 1990, it tiv e are calling for new or additional ing candidates retorted their disdain for the current levies on alcoholic beverages, motor cause, but they don’t think that cause confidence is a big factor in spx:nd- The news generated enthusiasm sure to provide expanded social services accounted for nearly 14 percent of all will be politics. He dropped this small ing at the retail level, but they ask — already high from the good news elected officials for trying to resolve the tough issues — ranging from unemployment compen­ state spending.” fuels, tobacco products, soft drinks, tires, currently facing Bolton. Again no new ideas, just the hint: One of his historical heroes is Chief what consumers will spend. Cash about a short war — among those sation to welfare assistance — to the Many states already have adopted food, clothing, over-the-counter drugs same old TNT rhetoric. and various other products — as well as Joseph, of the Nez Pcrcc Indian tribe. Fbr isn’t plentiful, they point put, and looking for an end to the recession. newly jobless and others adversely af­ austerity budgets that call for furloughs years. Chief Joseph outfought and out- Anyone who believes that destroying our education fected by the recession. or layoffs of public employees, hiring or some services. system will make Bolton a better place to live, should maneuvered superior federal forces. He That combination of circumstances travel freezes, spending cuts or deferrals Th* Ascoclatsd Press TWENTY-NINTH ANNUAL vote for the petitioning candidates at the bottorn of the Just as the federal government has never surrendered. Then one day, he produced a projected budget shortfall and other economy measures. ballot. The Common Sense Coalition/TNT is promising shifty to the states the responsibility for simply quit and declared with finality: “I BEEF EXPORT — This week marked the first time beef and M during the current fiscal year of more Closing hospitals for retarded children change. However, I do not believe that a step back in funding many programs, the slates have will fight no more forever.” orange imports were liberalized in Japan. Two American beef MANCHESTER than $95 million — an intolerable situa­ and similarly drastic measures have been sought to transfer financial obligations to 1 t^ime to the feuding, short-sighted, penny-wise and pound Footnote: Although Schwarzkopf industry workers offered steak to shoppers at a major Tokyo LAWNS UNLIMITED tion because Arizona’s constitution re­ proposed in some states. In others, the cities — with distressingly predic­ foolish leadership of the past is what the citizens of Bol­ hates the nickname, we’ve titled our ton are looking for. quires that all annual budgets be spending is being slashed on schools, table results. supermarket as part of a special sales campaign. book “Stormin’ Norman,” because ANTIQUES SHOW balanced. libraries, parks, police, health care, high­ The U.S. Conference of Mayors MAINTENANCE-DESIGN-CONSTRUCTION William R. Pike Americans use it as a term of endear­ Dozens of other states — including way maintenance and countless other recently reported that of 50 city govern­ Second Congregational Church 31 Plymouth Lane ment. He prefers the nickname “Bear,” •TOTAL LAWN MAINTENANCE the vast majority situated east of the Mis­ functions. ments it surveyed wi fiscal measures Now at Bolton which matches his hulking size and his 385 North Main St., Manchester, CT (1-84, Exit 62) •LAWN INSTALLATION & RENOVATION sissippi River — face similar fiscal Here in Arizona, some desperate stale they were required to initiate during the crises this year. Moreover, jx'ospects for officios initially considered major reduc­ 1980s, 36 h il increased taxes, 34 had personality — he can be as fierce as a MANCHESTER DRUG & Food Bar On Premises •RAILROAD TIES Letters policy recovery without drastic action — notab­ tions in the funding of public education reduced their work force and 24 had cut grizzly but as soft as a teddy. In his Friday, April 5-11 am-8pm •SPRING AND FALL CLEAN-UPS ly increases in existing taxes or imposi­ from kindergarten through high school. services. quarters in Riyadh, he keeps a grizzly SURGICAL SUPPLY tion of new levies — have become bear toy that emits a growl and shakes its Saturday, April 6 — 10am-5pm •LIGHT EXCAVATION AND HAULING The Herald welcomes letters from its readers. Letters furry head. should be no more than two double-spaced typewritten bleaker with each passing week and 717 Main Street This Ad Permits 1 or 2 Persons to Purchase •TOP SOIL-STONE-BARK MULCH month. $2.50 Tickets for $2.00 Each. pages. The Herald reserves the right to edit letters for any Mini-Editorial every Thursday between the hours of •FOUNDATION PLANTINGS reason, including length, taste and style. The Herald tries At ^ e end of last year, the National 9 Secretai7 of H ejU lu^d Human Ser­ •TREE REMOVAL AND STUMP to publish all letters, but the decision of the editor is Association of Stale Budget Officers and TAXING 10:30AM and 1:00PM vices Louis Sullivan has Ofeen bcadng the final. Writers may be limited to one letter per month. All the National Governors’ Association J V GRINDING drum for personal responsibility. If a Beltone Hearing Aid Specialist will be on letters must be signed, and writers must include their ad­ conducted a countrywide survey that Pptotun ^air found 28 states were projecting an ag­ TIMES America is going to overcome its social dress and a telephone number for verification. Mail Ict- hand to service any make and model hear­ gregate of just under $10 billion in Effective federal tax rates ills, he says, people must take better care 645-8172 • Mon.-Fri. 9-8, Sat. 9-6 • ters to Open Forum, Box 591, Manchester 06040. of themselves and make wiser decisions 117 East Center St. ■ 2nd floor ■ Manchester, CT budget deficiu in 1991. on selected families. ing aid at no charge. (Uxaied e comer ol E. Center t Hunlinglon. Convenient parking In rear) A FULL SERVICE In late January — only one month about their health, their jobs, their educa­ later — a similar survey conducted by 1980 1985 tion and their families. The advice makes LANDSCAPE COMPANY Manchester Herald 1990 1991 sense. But the best thing about it is that Free in-home hearing tests can also be ar­ stale officials in New York identified 40 POOREST 20% states that were estimating collective 8.4% 10.6% 9.5% 8.5% it s free. Unfortunately, Americans have ranged at your convenience. 10% OFF 20% OFF Founded Oct. 1,1881 as a weekly. budget deficits of $33 billion in 1992. become too dependent on their govern­ SENIOR MIDDLE 20% 20.0% 19.3% 20.2% ment solving their problems for them PERMS Daily publication since OcL 1,1914. Describing most state budgets as 20.7% FR0ST1NGS& CITIZENS 9 and rescuing them from their bad “caught in the viselike grip of shrinking RICHEST 20% 27.3% OTHER SERVICES ANY DAY Managing Edior revenues and increasing demands for 24.0% 26.0% 26.8% decisions. Sullivan’s advice is not , Peter Downs enough. People caught in a cycle of City Edior_____ .Alex Girolli more spending,” NGA notes that the TOP 1% NewaEdtor____ 31.8% 24.9% 27.5% 28.9% poverty often need a hand from the out­ cfif»*Ariwc . Andrew C Spitzler federal government has shifted to the TMl SOUNDS OF t I f t OFFERS END APRIL 6,1991 RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAU SOURCE: Congressional Budget Office side — from Uncle Sam — to reach in •Walk-lne Welcome • Visa. Mastercard, Personal Chock accepted ^ states the responsibility to finance educa- NEA Graphic and pull them out. J ______646-5231 1 6—MANCHESTER HERALD, Wednesday, April 3, 1991 Woes Office maiifliratrr Hrrali'i From Page 1 From Page 1 A Section 2, Page 7 It was cheers that greeted Weicker Grasso dismissed 500 state workers. fices dealing with public health and Once she is gone, her duties, back in November, when he won a The legislature is expected to tribution of vendor checks and without benefits would save the Wednesday, April 3,1991 safety aren’t included. which are to act as treasurer in payroll checks. town $59,460 in next year’s budget. LOCAL/RECIONAL three-way race for the governorship debate some variation of Weicker’s Weicker’s plan mirrors those of with 40 percent of the vote. Weick­ plan, along with a more convention­ Negro^ absence, will be handled by General Manager Sartor said, The reorganization plan appears other northeastern governors the finance director, according to the er, often described as a liberal al non-income tax plan for balancing “We believe this reorganization will to be a pox on the Democrats as pinched by the recession: In New terms of the agreement. maverick, bolted the Republican the governor’s proposed $7.48 bil­ be in the bpst interests of the town Treasurer Negro, a party member, Serving Manchester ■ Coventry ■ Andover ■ Bolton ■ Hebron York, there are plans for as many as It says also that the accounting and ensure the proper management has been managing the office for A Pbrty and created the Connecticut lion budget. 7,000 layoffs; the goal in Mas­ functions currently performed by the IVty for his gubernatorial bid. While Weicker’s budget cuts have of the town’s assets.” several years as an elected official. sachusetts is 2,000; and in Rhode Is­ treasurer’s office would be done by The plan also would act to However, Cassano says he is satis­ Previously, the 59-year-old mil­ provoked strong public outcry, he land, 570 state workers have been lionaire from Greenwich spent three said Tuesday it is the proposed tax the accounting division of the provide the treasurer with more time fied because the pact meets the laid off. Finance Department. Group to probe terms in the Senate and one term in changes that have lawmakers to develop applications for the new recommendations of the auditor, Library Weicker’s budget is 2 percent less the House, starting in 1969. stymied. Those duties include: processing financial computer software and ex­ streamlines the office, appropriately than this year’s. The budget includes of retirees’ payroll, processing Weicker’s independent attitude “They’re afraid because they’re ploring the most efficient ways of reduces the budget, and maintains 938 fewer workers than on the cur­ health insurance premiums and cash management. Sartor said. the system of checks an balances on was evident in 1973-74 while serv­ waiting for some poll to tell them rent payroll. Weicker also ing on the Senate Watergate Com­ premium payments for retirees, cal­ The full-time and part-time clerks the appointed officials. development that people are going to vote for approval eliminated cost-of-living increases culating potential pension benefits that work in the office will be For the Republicans, who have mittee. He was among President more taxes, or they’re going to vote for welfare recipients. Nixon’s most outspoken critics. for tax reform,” Weicker said. for perspective retirees, performing moved to the Finance Department, been criticizing the treasurer’s office bank reconciliations, generating Later, he also was arrested outside “Well, I’ve got news for you: “The cuts were horrible,” Weicker according to the tentative agree­ for about a year, the agreement revenue reports, maintaining cash ment. The elimination of Staum’s would appear to be a significant vic- delayed the South African Embassy in they’re not. It’s going to be an act of complaints said. “How do you tliink it feels for books, securing financial advisers position and the reduction of toiy. Washington during an anti-ap)artheid courage, an act of faith to do the somebody like myself whose entire for bond and note sales, miscel­ Treasurer Negro’s salary from Deputy Mayor Osella said the protest. right thing.” career in the United States Senate By BRIAN M. TROTTA for all information about the laneous record keeping, and dis­ $20,100 plus benefits to $19,000 negotiations were amicable. By RICK SANTOS That independence was evidenced His latest cost-cutting plan in­ was based on health, the disabled, Manchester Herald problem, he said. in Weicker’s layoff plan, the first cludes the closing of many state Manchester Herald the retarded, the poor and the “We’re not just looking for a legal proposed by a Cormecticut governor agencies for two days a month minorities, to have to make those MANCHESTER — A bipartisan opinion, but an overall opinion,” MANCHESTER — Members of since 1975, when Democrat Ella T. during the 1991-92 budget year. Of- cuts in the budget?” Sippers subcommittee of the Board of Direc­ Ryan said. the Board of Directors on TUesday tors will investigate the complaints The residents claim that in the postponed approval of a $300,000 of the residents of Windsor Street agreement the town promised to project to renovate Whiton From Page 1 who claim the town is violating a provide earth berms as a visual bar­ Memorial Library, demanding that 1977 agreement in which they say rier to development on Pleasant Val­ library officials get more recent es­ Grants the town promised to shield them cars or luxury cars. tons of carbon dioxide over its producers were several Rolls-Royce ley Road. In return for the promise, timates for the cost of the project But they are not the source of lifetime. and Bentley models, all getting 10 from commercial development on residents dropped their opposition to and prioritize the components of the From Page 1 Pleasant Valley Road. most vehicle emissions of carbon The Diablo also was the least mpg-13 mpg and generating 91.6 the Buckland Industrial Park, which project. Democrat Thomas Ryan asked dioxide because they comprise only fuel-efficient car sold in the United tons of carbon dioxide; the Ferrari includes the J.C. Penney warehouse The directors agreed to have the the Board of Directors to form the programs including infrastructure grant program for them. That case 1979 referendum in which voters a small fraction of cars on the road, States, averaging 9 miles per gallon Testarossa, 10 mpg-15 mpg and 86.9 distribution center. library officials come back next improvements within areas that said that the advisory questions were approved an ordinance baring the the re{X)rt said. It said bigger cars in the city and 14 mpg on the high­ tons; two Aston Martin Virage committee Tliesday in response to “I think you’ll find that there is a week with revised estimates for the meet certain demographic require­ no longer a valid method of decid­ town from applying for the grants are not necessarily the worst pol­ way. Saloons at 11 mpg-15 mpg and 81.8 the residents who have retained preponderance of evidence that there part of the project to remove asbes­ ments. ing public policy because they were until Jan. 1, 1981. Another vote luters or the least fuel-efficient. Rated as the smallest {xtlluter was tons and 12 mpg-17 mpg and 73.9 council to enforce the agreement. was an agreement,” said Republican tos, so that part could be approved. Ryan, Republican Wally Irish and But Democratic Director Stephen non-binding. against the grants was a 1984 ad­ Robert Lockhart, a Public Citizen the Geo Metro XFI, a five-speed, tons and the Ferrari F40, also 12 Director Ron Osella. “This commit­ Richard Dyer, a Manchester attorney and former Board of Education chairman, signs an New estimates for the remainder of Cassano said Tuesday that even “It’s been said many times that visory opinion question in which energy analyst and the report’s three-cylinder subcompact, with es­ mpg-17 mpg and 73.9 tons. Town Attorney Maureen Chmielecki tee should go on and look at pos­ the project and the prioritized list of will serve on the committee. though the town needs the money, we’re elected to make decisions,” residents voted against applying for primary author, acknowledged that timated lifetime carbon dioxide Automakers often cite the Metro sible solutions.” autograph for a fan at the Westover Air Force Base in Chicopee, Mass., recently. Dyer was the different areas of work are to be he wasn’t sure if the Republican Cassano said. “This decision is the grants. larger cars are popular. But he said emissions of 18.5 tons — one-fifth and other Geo models when arguing Chmielecki has already been But Republican Wally Irish call^ back into duty by the reserves in August and he has been serving as the base’s public provided to the directors in May. majority would vote for the going to lie right here in the lap of In the 1984 ballot, no duration automakers could boost sales of the Diablo’s. that cleaner-burning, more fuel-effi­ asked by the directors to issue an warned that the committee should affairs officer. ^ The request for the prioritization program. the directors. was put on the opinion. Since then, low-pollution cars by offering gas- The Meuo XFI averages 53 mpg cient cars are available but relatively opinion on whether the alleged not take any action without having came from Democratic Director “I don’t know if the board has the In previous ballots, voters have the Board of Directors has voted sipper rebates. Congress should in the city and 58 mpg on the high­ few people buy them. agreement does, in fact, exist and Chmielecki’s opinion in hand. “I Stephen T. Cassano, who questioned courage to go back into the rejected the grants because of fears each year not to apply for the grants. boost taxes on gas guzzlers, he said. way, making it the most fuel-effi­ “It does a marvelous job at get­ whether it is still binding on the would like to give the administration whether the entire project needs to program,” he said. that the program would force the Last month. General Manager The biggest polluter was the Lam­ cient car available in the United ting good gas mileage, but it won’t town. Chmielecki said TUesday that some room before we become ad­ be done immediately. Cassano said that because of a town to provide low-income and af­ Richard Sartor asked the directors if borghini DB132-Diablo, a 12- States, according to the annual tests do a marvelous job of carrying a she expects to have the opinion judicators,” he said. Dyer is back in uniform “My goal would be to preserve 1987 state supreme court ruling the fordable housing. they would reconsider the town’s cylinder, extremely high-perfor­ conducted by the Environmental decent-sized family to church,” said ready by next week’s meeting of the “There’s certainly no harm in the trust fund as you’ve been trying directors can no longer rely on the The first vote was an April 17, opposition to the grants. mance car, the report said. It es­ Protection Agency. David Hudgens, spokesman for the Boaid of Directors. having a committee appointed to to do for some time,” he told Mary tover there is a good relationship with the local news or­ voters to make a decision on the timated that the car would emit 95.3 Other top carbon dioxide Chevrolet division. study the attorney’s and [General By JACQUELINE BENNETT Le Due, the Library Board of Direc­ Ryan said he asked for the com­ Manager Richard] Sartor’s recom­ Manchester Herald ganizations. As a matter of fact. Dyer credits Channel tors’ member who has been working mittee in addition to the town attor­ mendation,” said Republican Geof­ 20, with helping to raise much-need^ funds to continue most closely with the project plan­ ney’s opinion because he thought frey Naab. “Our main concern is Chicopee, MA — Some moments live in the memory, the welcoming home parties for the troops at the base. ners. other moments live in the heart. there was more to the problem than that this board do the right thing “When the shooting war began Jan. 15 we set two The work would be funded from Ships Such is the sight of United States servicemen and just the legal issue. Thus, the com­ with regard to the people of limits — one, officials here would not comment on na­ the 'Whiton Library Trust Fund, mittee could act as a clearing house Windsor Street.” women touching American soil for the first time at Wes­ tional policy and two, not getting specific on exactly From Page 1 tover Air Fbrce Base since leaving the Persian Gulf; which has a balance of about where the troops were going and the cargo we were car- $750,(KX). Although the money is troops greeted by young and old, flanking a red carpet rying — our concern was terrorism attacks,” Dyer said. lined with flags from each of the 50 states, and the not generated by taxes, the town have narrowed the search to a rela­ He noted there was one exception, a highly publicized directors oversee disbursements tively small portion of the bay. resounding lyrics of Lee Greenwood’s “I’m proud to be transport of some Pho-iot missiles from Westover. Students receive an American.” from the fund, and Cassano’s con­ They hope to recover at least Dealing with protesters was also a part of Dyer’s job. It is the resolve of officers at Westover AFB, which cern about its level was echoed by some the ships’ remains by next “As an individual I have no problem with these other directors. has been run by the Air Force Reserve since 1974, that year, the 500th anniversary of people exercising their First Amendment rights,” Dyer “I support the efforts of the Columbus’ first voyage. every returning soldier will receive a hero’s welcome, said. “One of the reasons we wear this uniform is to disease info according to Manchester’s Richard Dyer. Library Board, but I have great Project director James Parrent of protect that right.” Dyer, is a major in the reserves acting as a public af­ reservations about spending 40 per­ die Insiiiuie of Nautical Archaeol­ But he adds, “What I had a real problem with is cent of the oust fund in one fell fairs officer stationed at Westover, called to active duty ogy at Texas A&M University rates can be fought before causing serious protesters that engaged in civU disobedience like block­ By SCOTT B. BREDE in August. A local attorney. Dyer recently retired as swoop,” said Republican Wally his chances, “on a scale of one to damage, Cavaliere added. ing the (base) enhance, impeding operation.” Irish. Manchester Herald chairman of the Manchester Board of Education after 10, an eight.” Never anticipating he would be called to active duty, By approving the appropriation, ftrrent believes the chances are “STDs by their nature are someth­ nine years of service. MANCHESTER -- Kathy Dyer retired from the Board of Education, citing a desire the directors would gouge the trust good of finding well-preserved hull ing teen-agers don’t feel comfort­ Bom in Manchester, Dyer, 41, is a graduate of East Hartnett grimaced along with her 20 to put more time into his family and work. fund, thereby reducing the amount remains because the caravels ran able talking about with their Catholic High School, Holy Cross College in Worcester, or so classmates as another slide ap­ “I haven’t practiced law since August,” Dyer said. “I of interest it generates. aground in soft sediment and shal­ parents,” she said. She cited or­ Mass., and the University of Connecticut law school. He peared on the screen in front of her never expected to be on active duty, to go to a combat Democrat Thomas M. Ryan low water. ganizations such as Planned Paren­ and his wife, Kathleen, have three children, Meghan, 13, zone or to be leaving my practice.” depicting the effects of sexually raised a concern about the ages of St. Ann’s Bay is sheltered by a thood on West Middle Turnpike Brian, 9 and Michael, 5. transmitted diseases. Dyer credits his family and law partners for their the estimates for the project. coral reef, but the beach has been al­ where students could take their According to Dyer, who commutes six days a week tremendous support. “I thought the slides were pretty Ryan questioned whether the the tered over the centuries by hur­ questions. from Manchester to Westover, 32,000 troops have gone The family did face one difficulty. When Dyer was repulsive,” Hartnett said after the two-year-old estimates are accurate ricanes, earthquakes, erosion and Cavaliere said that other than through the base. “It was a major stage going over and it sent to the Gulf, he said his children fully comprehended 111,. workshop on STDs was over. and asked how soon could revised deposits of sand and sediment. abstinence, the use of condoms is is coming back,” he said. the possible consequences. “My youngest son, Michael, Venereal disease was one of 15 estimates be obtained. On a recent visit to the site, the most effective way of preventing Dyer himself knows the joy of coming home from the wrote me a letter asking me not to go,” Dyer said. different topics covered at Library officials said they could Ywone Edwards of the Jamaica Na­ the spread of STDs. Gulf, having flown a reporting mission to the island of With the uncertainty in the region, despite the end of Manchester High School Tbesday as begin attempting to get the estimates tional Heritage Trust, a partner in SAVE *100 “Ftople seem to have this innate Bahrain, about 180 miles south of Kuwait Feb. 10 to 13. the war. Dyer notes the United Suites will likely main­ part of “Sophomore Awareness as soon as today and may be able to the project, said the Columbus ships prejudice against using condoms ... The assignment was a story on “A Day in the Life of an tain a military presence in the Gulf for a while but SUPER DELUXE Day.” Aircrew.” get them within a week. And Le could be a boon to tourism on the is­ Remember, condoms may save your prefers not to speculate on if he will have to go back. Due said she wanted to emphasize The goal of the conference, which “Was I scared?” Dyer shakes his head, trying to land. X-LARGE CAPACITY life,” she said. Although concern has been raised that some reser­ that the asbestos removal had to be was organized by high school offi­ remember. “No, what was on my mind was ’getting the Not only would the remains be vists, facing the reality of active duty may leave the done before any of the other work. cials and the Sophomore ftircnts’ AIDS is another disease that story’, doing the job. Plus we had complete control of the first recovered from a Columbus * 3 9 9 reserves. Dyer said for him it’s not an issue. The renovations, which include Washer Advisory Committee, was to raise Cavaliere told the students to be the airspace at that time." ship, they would be the first from a “1 joined ROTC as a sophomore at Holy Cross and replacement of lighting, wiring, the • Superior heavy duty model, 18 lb. cap. lOth-graders’ consciousness to is­ concerned with. Dyer has a background in journalism, having written known caravel, f^ e n t said. • Full featured 8 cycle action was called to active duty once before during Vietnam,” heating system, and adding a 18 LB. sues they might be confronted with for both his high school and college newspapers, and The sailing vessel, noted for its • Mini-basket, bieach dispenser later on in high school. “You’d had better believe that this Dyer said, a very different experience from this one, he sprinkler system, are needed as soon speed and maneuverability, disease is here, in Connecticut, in even a stint as a sports stringer for the Manchester adds. as possible, Le Due said. HEAVY DUTY S cS sS Sue Cavaliere, a nurse Herald in his East Catholic days. propelled much Spanish and Por­ “ ndrtWnei Manchester, and it is in women,” “It was like night and day. In the public’s mind there About the original estimate of epidemiologist at Manchester The heros from Westover, Dyer is quick to point out, tuguese exploration in the 15th and she said, attempting to dispel the was a lack of definition of what we were fighting for, a $300,0(X), she said the library does Washer Memorial Hospital who presented are the air crews that deliver supplies and equipment to 16th centuries, but little is known the discussion on STDs, said she belief that only homosexual men lack of support for fighting men and women and a lot of not intend to spend any more than about how they were built. durtr'9 the Gulf. constraints placed on the military,” Dyer said. had to be blunt with the students in and IV drug users conu-act acquired the amount needed for the work. Dyer’s primary role is supplying information internal­ Has this experience changed him? No architectural plans of the SELF CLEANING >000 BTU Carry Kool order to make them realize that immune deficiency syndrome. The number was an estimate, not a caravel have been found. Parrent *279 ly and to the press and public. “It has made me appreciate my freedoms ... This is a bid or quote. venereal disease is something they hopes to learn much about the ves­ DELUXE HEAVY DUTY Cavaliere told the students to Asked about criticism of military control of informa­ great time to wear a uniform,” said Dyer, who adds he Range need to be concerned with. However, Irish recommended the sel s design and technical Air Conditioner think of AIDS more in terms of the tion on the war by the national media. Dyer said at Wes- believes the U.S. did the right thing. 18 LB. CAPACITY “Kids think that they arc immor­ HIV virus. FDr every one of the libray get bids and Cassano sug­ capabilities, possibly settling some SAVE gested they get quotes. of the scholarly debate about its role Dryer tal,” Cavaliere said. 167,000 Americans with full-blown in Europe’s expansion. *379 *50 *249 Many people who are infected by AIDS, there are 50 to 100 people Artifacts could also provide new 18 LB. an STD do not realize it because carrying the HIV virus, she said. insights into shipboard life in the they have never seen what the ef­ Illing tunes into space program HEAVY DUTY fects of such diseases look like, she Hartnett said the lecture taught early 16th century and the ways of By SCOTT B. BREDE Drainage the Arawak Indians who traded with Dryer *299 said. her more about methods to prevent program is aired, said Nelson experiments to be conducted by End-ol-cycie signal, auto dry the uansmission of STDs. Manchester Herald Youngerman, a seventh-grade schoolteacher Christa McAuliffe Columbus, the archaeologist said. Features Perma-Press cycle By showing the class slides of Columbus’ fourth voyage began science teacher who brought his on the Challenger’s mission Multi temperature people infected with syphilis, gonor­ Joanne Hachey, one of the parents MANCHESTER — With a extension from Spain on April 3, 1502, with class to the library TUesday to get through satellite transmissions, he rhea or herpes, the students would who helped organize the event, said large radio telescope mounted on four caravels and a crew of 140. M99 an update of the flight’s schedule. said. MANCHESTER — A proposed 1 be able to tell if they had the disease she thought the day was a success. top the school, Illing Junior High In fact, Youngerman was In recent launchings, no such 750-foot extension of tlie White or not, Cavaliere said. Hachey attended the discussion School students can tap into a watching the NASA station with a plans to allow students to take Brook storm drainage project has on date rape. NASA space satellite floating “Any two people who engage in class when the Challenger ex­ part in experiments have been the support of the leaders of the 23,000 miles above the Earth. ploded on Jan. 28, 1986. scheduled, Youngerman said. Republicans and Democrats on the Rebels sexual activity can uansmit disease “It gave me a whole different The telescope allows the stu­ “The kids really didn’t know “The explosion kind of ended Board of Directors and is expected to each other,” she said. “It’s not perspective about it,” she said. “I dents to see accounts of space what had happened,” Youngerman it,” he said. to be approved Tliesday. From Page 1 just you who are at risk, it’s your never thought of the boy as the vic­ shuttle operations not usually said. At the time, his class was Many Illing teachers center in­ The project, which has been a 1 8 C u . Ft. sexual partners and your future tim before.” aired on regular television. w children as well.” watching the same account of the struction around the transmis­ concern of neighborhood residents today. Talks will be held with a QUALITY Frost Free FT. Part of the presentation included a As the countdown for Friday’s disaster that was being played on sions, said Illing Principal for. several years, is intended to al­ FROST FREE 24 CU. HOTPOINT launching of the Atlantis ticks wide range of Iraqi dissidents over “If you think you have an STD, it video on date rape. The boy in the the regular television networks, he Richard Lindgren. Youngerman leviate drainage problems on three days. down, students have been gather­ Dishwasher Refrigerator Ice/Water Refrigerator Cube Refrigerator is very important to seek medical video was just acting on values in­ added. said the NASA accounts help stu­ Woodbridge Street. Microwave Oven ing around the television set in the The likelihood of a shift in U.S. care right away,” she told the stu­ stilled in him by his father, Hachey Before the disaster, the school dents taking physical science The extension of the storm drain policy appears to be remote, SAVE dents. If caught early, many STDs explained. school’s library where the had been scheduled to take part in C om pact Touch Pod learn about such topics as gravity. would bring it to the intersection of however. *200 Storage 9 M odel Woodbridge and Lydall streets. “The fact that we will be meeting *449 *1199 • Multi power Public Works Director Peter P. with an increased number of such Lozis Jr. told the board he recom­ individuals will, in part, be an oc­ In Brief . . . mended that the extension be ap­ casion to reiterate our consistent Mon„ Thurs., Fri. ’til 8 p.m, 90 DAYS proved as soon as possible because policy regarding Iraq,” the State the contractor provided a low es­ lues . Wed ,’til 6 • Sot 'til 5 • Sun. 12 to 5 Department said in a statement SAME AS CASH' ■ The old pedestrian bridge at North School Street, follows the timate, $52,000, for the additional upstream to the footbridge, across Street bridge sidewalk and then Tuesday. across the Hockanum River just bridge adjacent to the now-closed work. pond shoreline north to the now- the bridge to the northwest side of return to the river on the Old Mill There have been a few un­ north of the Deming Su^eet bridge at closed footbridge, across the bridge footbridge which was removed Republican Director Geoffrey The Extended Warranty Always the river and then along the river to property at 260 Tolland 'Rirnpike publicized meetings with Iraqi dissi­ the north end of Oakland Street has and then south past the old mill and during the reconstruction of the Naab said, “I think it would be "A/o payment or Court House Plus in Talcottville and which is also Deming Street at this dents at U.S. embassies, and Costs Vou Less At Al Sleffert's, t been closed temporarily to await down along the west side of Union Oakland Street-Tolland TUrnpike in­ foolhardy for us not to take this op­ SUPER linance charges to back to the starting point on the spot. Dr. Douglas Smith of the Richard Schifter, the assistant STORES gnalitied buyers repairs by the State Department of tersection and redesign of the Inter­ portunity to solve that longstanding Pond to Union Place, Union StreeL same trail. Hockanum River Linear IVk Com­ secretary of state for human rights, Transportation. Kerry Street and North Street back state-84 interchange at this spot in problem in that part of town." 9 Now with the footbridge closed mittee said the detour is not very met with two Kurdish representa­ This bridge is an integral part of to the Pond and the park on North the early 1980s. The State-owned Nabb’s colleagues. Republicans there is a detour to follow. To cross scenic and he hopes will be in effect tives in February. WIUIMANTIC 1329 Main St. Al s Other Place — Warehouse Outlet two Hockanum River hiking trails School Street. footbridge was preserved at the re­ Mayor Terry Werkhoven and MANCHESTER 445 Hartford Rd, the river as part of either river trail only for a few months. The meetings beginning today are NEXT TO SUPER STOP & SHOP TEL 450-0405 316 Hartford Rd., Manchester • 643-8303 so detours for the U-ails have been The second hiking trail involved hikers must follow the sidewalk in quest of the Hockanum River Linear Deputy Mayor Ronald Osella, bound to attract far more attention. Saturday Only 10-5 KEENEY ST. EXIT OFF I-384 TEL 647-9997 worked out. starts at Cadkey, Inc. at 440 Oak­ I^ k Committee for hiking trail use. agreed with him. And so did front of Cadkey north to Deming Historically, there was an old The Union Pond trail which sutrts land St., follows the Hockanum Street, cross the river on the Deming It is estimated to be at least 50 to 60 Democrat Stephen T. Cassano, the concrete Tolland Turnpike vehicle years old. board’s minority leader. 1 8—MANCHESTER HERALD. Wednesday, April 3. 1991

MANCHES’TER HERALD, Wednesday, April 3, 1991—9 STATE r e c o r d A Tnlks resume following layoff orders Bergin ByRi/ PPETER P X P R v/llVILES I—R m emember m h e r o f of ih/* the M#»n/ New England UAni*u Health Care r? Employees t ¥? Union • About Town Deaths The Associated Press District 1199. Weicker’s negotiators last week rejected a union proposal Death Notices “I feel he just sold us down the road,” said Tim Cronin, that labor leaders said would save more than $200 million verdict A HARTFORD — With at least 2,616 state jobs hanging in another 1199 member who said he volunteered on Weicker’s through a deferred wage increase, a streamlined health care AFS students speak claims system, and changes in pension funding. This tewm listing of dssths Is offsrad frss of ehsrgs by ths the balance, negotiators for the Wcicker administration and campaign for governor. Manehsstsr Hsrald Psid announesmsnu of dsath and In state employee unions arc headed back to the bargaining table As the governor defended his plan and appealed to the Weicker, meanwhile, defended his plan during a 15-minute at ’a S ' S ’iT r ™ “ 1:30 p.m. Msmoriams appsar undsrtha Dsath Nollcss hsading. Shirley (Elkerton) Kelly Frances (Hayde) Gordon speech to labor leaders Tbesday that was by turns angry; m me center Congregational Church. Mrs Georee in hopes of a settlement that will avoid the layoffs. unions for concessions, labor leaders for the 45,000 unionized expected Shirley (Elkerton) Kelly, 74, of 54 North Main St., Frances (Hayde) Gordon, of Glastonbury, died Saturday defensive and emotional. He repeatedly asked for Support for But in the meantime, layoff notices arc going out, and state employees said they hoped for a breakthrough when Manchester Marlborough, formerly of Manchester, widow of Walter (Marc|i 30, 1991) at her home. She was the wife of the his entire budget, and said concessions from state employees patience is wearing thin. negouauons over possible concessions resume today. A. Kelly Sr., died Monday, April 1, 1991, at Middlesex late Jack M. Gordon. Bom in Lakeville, CT., daughter of are^crucial if the budget is to be perceived as fair. Shirley E. Kelly By LARRY ROSENTHAL Memorial Hospital, Middletown. Bom in Walpole, the late Frank and Katherine (Rodgers) Hayde. She About 1,200 angry state employees rallied at the state But those leaders said the talks appear stalled over Weick- If for one minute I was perceived as playing favorites, I 54 N. Main St. Mass., September 1, 1916, she lived in Manchester most graduated from Salisbury High School, and received a Capitol Tbesday, chanting “Lowell’s got to go,” and accusing th i^ the whole budget falls,” Weicker told about 250 labor The Associated Press Anna M. Rice of her life, moving to Marlborough three years ago. She Bachelor of Science degree in guidance counseling from Gov. Lowell P. Weicker Jr. of breaking a campaign promise hidth S e f i S concessions affecting wages and leaders affiliated with the Connecticut AFL-CIO. “This is the An evening of jazz was a member of the Women of the Moose, Hillyer College. She taught in Lakeville before serving by forcing them to choose between concessions and layoffs. watershed. This is decision time. And I’m frank to admit. I do WATERBURY — ’Three years Dr. John Peter Braat Wednesday or Thursday to see if he is An of will be performed by the Bennet Marlborough. Mrs. Kelly is survived by three sons, Wil­ as guidance counselor at East Hartford High School for need your help. I want your help.” after former Democratic Mayor Ed­ Jimor High School Jazz Band in the Cone Gym of the 265 Ludlow Road he will be.” said Dominic Badolato. liam J. Kelly of Willimantic, Walter “Mike” Kelly of 35 years. She was a member of the Connecticut Educa­ Workers carried signs that read “You Liar,” and “Broken The AH^-CIO leaders gave Weicker a somewhat urTriendly ward D. Bergin Jr. was arrested in school on Friday at 7:30 pan. This annual concert fea­ Marlborough, and Edward Kelly of Storrs; two execuuve director of the Amencan Federation of State. Coun­ this city’s pay-to-tow scandal, a tion Association and the National Education Association. Campaign Promises,” referring to Weickcr’s frequent promise ty, and Municipal Employees union, representing 15,000 state welcome, greeting him with a mixture of applause, boos and ture the award-winning Bennet Advanced Jazz Band as daughters, Jacquelyne Kelly of Sarasota, FL., and during the campaign that he would not balance the budget on hisses. judge is about to decide whether the Mrs. Gordon is survived by a son. Jack M. Gordon of workers. well as the Intermediate Jazz Ensemble. Admission is Phtricia Ogren of Marlborough; 12 grandchildren; 4 great Manchester; a daughter, Helen Scotte Gordon of the backs of state employees. Even before Weicker showed up to address the group, the buck stopped with the mayor or his free and all are mvited. “1 think we can come up with a plan that will give him the Obituaries grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews. She was Providence, R.I.; a brother, Charles J. Hayde of “Our union backed him, and they got kicked in the face by labor leaders unanimously passed a resolution asking Weicker top aide. predece^ed by a daughter, Sheila M. McGinnis and two this guy,” said Brian St. Onge, a state health care worker and a money he’s looking for,” Badolato said. “Whether that plan Lakeville; three sisters, Katherine H. Chester of Glaston­ will be to his liking, only time will tell.” to rescind his precipitous and unconstructive plan for massive Superior Court Judge Jerrold H. grandchildren, David E. Murphy and Deborah Ann ^ siaiestate employee employee layoffs. layoffs.” Art exhibits bury, Gloria H. Kane of Thomaston, and Helen H. Silta Barnett was scheduled to issue his Bernard Fensterwald Ogren. Funeral service will be Friday, 9:15 A.M. at the of Lakeville; two grand-daughters, Kelly A. Gordon of verdict today in Bergin’s trial on tiern^S^? campuses of Central Connec- ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) — Bernard Fensterwald, a Holmes Funeral Home, 400 Main St., Manchester, with a Manchester and Hannah Gordon Woodberry of charges of bribe receiving and ac­ Umversity will exhibit works that include lawyer who directed some heavily spotlighted Senate in­ Mass of Christian Burial at 10:00 A.M. at St. James Providence, R.I. Funeral services will be held ’Thursday Wife of radio exec died of gunshot wound cepting an illegal campaign con- S e n Photography, April 7 to 28 at the vestigations and later represented Watergate burglar Church, 896 Main St., Manchester. Burial will be in St. at 10:00 a.m. at the Watkins Funeral Home, 142 East Uibution. In umversity’s New Britain campus James McCord, died ’Riesday after a heart attack. He was Bernard’s Cemetery, Rockville. Friends may call at the Center St., Manchester, with a Mass of Christian Burial HARTFORD (AP) — As friends ^ openmg recepuon is scheduled for Sunday fnm 2To funeral home Thursday, 7:00 to 9:00 P.M. Billups, who helped state police and The former five-term mayor is ac­ 69. at 10:30 a.m. at St. James Church. Burial will be in the and relatives of Richard and Ursula emergency workers remove the northwestern New York state where cused of taking a $3,(X)0 bribe, in pu"bS. ^ and'o^; m Ae Besides McCord, security chief of President Nixon’s East Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home on Korsen gather for a memorial ser­ bodies Monday, said there was no the couple had a weekend retreat. the form of a campaign contribution, 1972 campaign, Fensterwald’s clients included James Cordelia A. Coleman Thursday from 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. In lieu of flowers, vice here, authorities are trying to gun found at the scene. State police Sgt. Bruce McCaffer- from a city towing contractor. Ex­ Earl Ray, the assassin of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. memorial may be made to the Food Bank, c/o unravel the mystery of a plane crash “There was no reason to suspect ty said earlier that the plane ap­ ecutive Auto Sales, in 1985. Little shop of horrors Fensterwald joined the State Deparunent in 1950. He Cordelia A. Coleman, 97, died Tuesday (April 2, 1991) Manchester Area Council of Churches, P.O. Box #773, that has turned into a homicide in­ foul play,” he said. joined the staff of Sen. Estes Kefauver, D-Tenn., in 1956. at her home in Ansonia on 11 Nichols St. She was the parently clipped the tops of oak His fonner top aide, ’Thomas F. The Stage East Players of East Catholic High School Manchester 06040. vestigation. trees as it went down. Gahan, then and now the As a Senate staffer from 1959 to 1968, he directed in- widow of Thomas Coleman. She was bom on December The state medical examiner’s of­ The state police Major Crime will present a production of the play. Little Shop of Hor­ vMtigations of price fixing, the drug indusmy and alleged 6, 1893 in Newport News, VA. She was the daughter of There was evidence that a small Democratic town chairman, testified rors, on Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 7:30 pan. fice on Tbesday said 50-ycar-old Ur­ Squad on TUesday sealed off the fire had been lit near the wreckage that he received the contribution on wiretapping of Teamsters boss James R. Hoffa. the late William and Carrie Jennings. She lived in An­ sula Korsen of West Simsbury died crash site in Tunxis State Forest near Tickets are $3 for students and seniors, and $5 for addts He also became a student of the assassinations of John sonia since 1938. She was a member of the St. James in a rough, rock fireplace that ap>- June 14, 1985, and forwarded it to For more information, call 649-5336. Public Meetings of a gunshot wound to the head, not Barkhamsted Reservoir, less than 10 peared to have been in place for the mayor at some later date. Bergin F. Kennedy and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. He was a critic Episcopal Church in Derby. She is survived by a son, from injuries suffered when her hus­ miles from the Simsbury airport some time. The fireplace was about was in Alaska at the time of the of the Warren Commission conclusion that no conspiracy Odis P. Coleman of Manchester; two brothers, Wendeli band’s two-seater Cessna crashed on where the 1940s vintage plane took 1(X) feet from the plane and on the transaction. Guys and dolls was at work when President Kennedy was assassinated in Jennings of Bridgeport and Kenneth Jennings of Pit­ Manchester a densely wooded hilltop in off March 21. Korsen, executive opposite side from where Richard TTie towing company said the ’The Bolton High School Drama Club will present the 1963. tsburgh, PA; several nieces and nephews. The funeral ser­ Barkhamsted. vice president and general manager Thursday Korsen’s body was found. money was offered as a political musical “Guys & Dolls” on Friday and Saturday at the vices will be held Friday at 11:00 A.M. from the The office did not release a cause of Bloomfield radio station Carlos Montalban Charter Revision, Lincoln Center hearing room, 7:30 Although ashes were found from Bolton Elementary School All-Pur^se Room. Curtain is Jenkins-King Funeral Home, 12 Franklin St., Ansonia. of death for Richard Korsen. WDRC-FM, was a respected pilot contribution with the intent of secur­ p.m. what appeared to be a fire of twigs, ing towing rights for another two 8 pan. "Hekets are $5 for adults and $3 for seniors and NEW YORK (AP) — Carlos Montalban, an actor best Burial in Pine Grove Cemetery, Ansonia. Friends may Chauncey Twine, an investigator who owned three planes. known to Americans for his Savarin coffee commercials, call Thursday evening from 7-9 P.M. In lieu of flowers there were no matches found on years if Bergin won re-election. students. To reserve tickets call 643-2768. Bolton with the National Transportation Billups said Richard Korsen was •Korsen’s body, Billups said. It was died ’Thursday of heart failure at age 87. contributions may be made to the St. James Episcopal Towing operators testified the city Thursday Safety Board, was at the crash site found lying on his back near the unclear when the fire had been lit. The brother of actor Ricardo Montalban, he appeared Church of Derby through the funeral director. plane. had a long-standing pay-to-tow Tuesday afternoon and couldn’t im­ Richard Buckley, owner of Vance lecture at CCSU in Savarin ’TV commercials in the 1960s and ’70s as El Conservation Committee, Community Hall, 7:30 p.m. mediately be reached for comment. policy. But there was no testimony “It looked like he lay down and WDRC and president of Buckley from any of them that Bergin was Dr. Jeane J. Kirkpatrick, former United States Repre­ Exigente. His likeness still appears on Savarin coffee In Memoriam State police .said they could not cans. Coventry went to sleep,” Billups said. “There Broadcasting, had known Richard directly involved in the scheme. sentative to the United Nations and Medal of Freedom In sad and loving memory of James release additional details. Korsen for 35 years, since before recipient, is this year’s Robert C. Vance Distinguished Montalban played a Latin American dictator in Woody Thursday was no sign of physical trauma. He Bergin, a Democrat, was defeated R Sarles, Sr., who passed away on Searchers discovered the wreck­ Korsen began working at the station Lecture speaker at Central Connecticut State University. Allen’s 1971 film “Bananas” and a boxing manager in Superintendant Evaluation (closed meeting), Coventry was on his back with his hands at in 1985 by Republican Joseph San- April 3,1984. age of the plane on a densely in 1969. The public is invited to the event on Thursday at 8 pan. the 1956 movie “TTie Harder ’They Fall.” High School, 7:30 p.m. his side.” topieun, who remains mayor of May his soul rest in peace. wooded hilltop in Barkhamsted on “(Monday) was a tragedy. Today, in Welte Hall, Wells St. Free admission is by tickets only. Spjecial Town Council budget. Town Office Building, He said he did not believe URSULA AND RICHARD KORSEN Waterbury. Santopietro is entangled Sunday, 10 days after the Korsens I’m shocked, just shocked,” said For more information, call 827-7385. Sadly missed by 7:30 p.m. Richard Korsen could have died of in a new corruption investigation in Graham Greene Wife, Children and took off from nearby Simsbur>’ air­ Buckley. “This is like a real bad port. h>’pothermia, extreme loss of body and money, including several large this city. Federal agents searched his PARIS (AP) — Graham Greene, whose novels of in­ Grandchildren those suffered in a head-on car col­ story. I don’t know what else to Hebron heat, because he was wearing a bills, Billups said. home and office last month. trigue, suspense and mystery captivated readers for a Mrs. Korsen’s body was found in lision, he said. say.” Thursday flight jacket that was open and not Capt. Charles Pcrrault, a spokes­ The defense accused Gahan of half-century, died today at La Providence Hospital in the wreckage of the small silver- “We’re as shocked as anybody.” In B rie f. snug against his body as it would man for the Civil Air Patrol in Con­ “He enjoyed flying, that was his being a shakedown anist who kept Switzerland at age 86. ’The cause of death was not im­ Board of Selectmen, Town Hall, 7:30 p.m. and-red plane. The body of her hus­ he said. passion,” said Buckley, who have been if he was trying to ward necticut, said Tuesday the searchers towing company payoffs or himself. mediately known. lice Roundup Economic Development, Town Hall, 7:30 p.m. band, 55, was found on the ground The plane apparently crashed described Korsen as meticulous off cold. at the crash site did not realize Mrs. On the same day he received the Greene wrote such acclaimed novels as T h e Hiwer beneath a twisted wing of the plane, minutes after leaving Simsbury air­ about the airplane he had restored. Maps and other items usually Korsen had been shot. Victims of $3,000 contribution from Executive Paulo Muwanga and the Glory,” T h e Third Man” and “The Quiet a cut on his right arm. port about 9 a.m. March 21. It was Services for the couple were found in a plane were in the wreck­ small plane crashes usually suffer Auto, Gahan headed off for Atlantic American.” Cocaine arrest; $50g bond Barkhamsted Constable Clinton heading west for Eagle Ridge Air­ scheduled for 11 ajn. today at KAMPALA, Uganda (AP) — Former Vice President age along with luggage, credit cards uaumatic head injuries similar to He mmed many of his stories into successful movie port in Burdett, a town in Weinstein Mortuary in Hartford. City, where he lost $4,800 gambling Paulo Muwanga, freed in October after four years in jail MANCHESTER — A suspected Hartford gang mem­ Thoughts over two days. on charges of kidnapping with intent to murder, died scripts. ber has been arrested on dmg and other charges after Monday at age 70. Greene traveled widely and many of his most success­ Manchester police broke up an attempted drug sale. 'The cause of death was not immediately known. ful novels had a political thrust Critics said his novels Police arrested Roberto Lopez, 17. of 187 Chandler Yesterday we wrote of the first two categories that Bill addresses sought to convey a sense of morality and hope to man, Muwanga was de facto president in 1980 as chairman St., Hartford, after an informant said Lopez would be cause human suffering and pain, which we designated of a military commission that ruled this African nation whom he saw as plagued by frustration and despair. selling a quantity of cocaine at the Dairy Mart on Spen­ “The Thom in the Flesh” and “The Hunger." Today, let after dictator Idi Amin’s ouster in 1979. cer Street. us look at a third category: cordless phones He was later jailed on charges of kidnapping two truck At about 8:(X) p.m. Tuesday, ptolice observed a tan The Catapult: The catapult is the symbol of the drivers in 1981 while serving as vice president and Buick Regal enter the parking lot at the convenience traumatic encounter with the shock of evil injustice defense minister in the government of President Milton College Notes store and watched as another man got into the car. At that which sooner or later beset and affect us all. The momen­ H.ARTFORD (AP) — State law­ Profile ’91 Obote. Obote was ousted in a 1985 military coup. point, police moved in to break up the deal. Green said all it would do is bar tum of injustice, whether intentional or impersonal, en­ makers are considering legislation law enforcement officers from The charges were dropped for lack of evidence. MCC honors When Lopez saw police coming for him he jumped gulfs individuals and communities in both chronic and that would make eavesdropping on monitoring a suspected criminal’s out of his car and attempted to run away. During the acute dcpiersonalization and destruction. cordless telephone conversations a cordless telephone conversation to Volunteer of year The following Manchester residents, who are full-time chase, police said they observed Lopiez throwing a plastic These first three causes of suffering arc not willed, in­ crime in Coiuiecticut. gamer information for a search or Family Life smdents at Manchester Community College, have been bag with suspected cocaine to the ground. tended, or caused by God. It is a dangerous yet persistent The House is scheduled to vote arrest warrant. ’The Retired Senior Volunteer Program will hold a named to the dean’s list for the fall semester: Lopez was captured a short time later when he ttipped. heresy that God ever sends the fragmenting, deper­ today on a proposal that would ex­ ’^ e bottom line is that it affects second annual RSVP Volunteer of the Year Award Thomas August, 88 Avondale Road; Anita Bennett, The bag was also recovered and was found to contain sonalizing pain that tears down, humiliates, deprives and tend to cordless telephone conversa­ police departments,” Green said. Luncheon on Wednesday, April 24, at the Ramada Inn in 126 Avondale Road; Jon Bourret, 23 Fleming Road; 11.91 grams of cocaine with a street value of $3,600. destroys. We are not told why we live in a universe tions the same legal protections now "Basically, it affects nobody else.” Meriden. Each of nine {xojects will nominate two volun­ Meryle Borden, 125 Briarwood Drive; Shelly Boswell, Lopez is charged with possession of cocaine, ptosses- where these things can happen. I believe that God’s gift in force for cellular ones. teers and the winners name will be drawn in lottery 47 Chesmut St.; Tami Carter, 40 Hoffrnan Road; Mat­ sion of cocaine with intent to sell, destruction of of freedom to all creation and God’s refusal to use force The bill, sponsored bv Rep. Green’s deparunent is currently fashion. The RSVP Volunteer of the Year will represent thew Chmielecki, 151 Keeney St; Brian Curry, 46 evidence, interfering with piolice, opieraiing an un­ to change our choices is involved with the mystery of Michael P. Lawlor, D-East'Haven, involved in a case that would test Manchester Herald the 10,0(X) RSVP volunteers throughout C onn^cuL Doane St; Francene Diana, 140 Benton St.; Jennie Dil- registered motor vehicle, misuse of a registration, op>crat- these forms of pain. But something that is allowed by the legality of such evidence. would make it a violation of the The nominees from RSVP of the Capitol Repon are worth, 151 Walnut St; Terrence Donnelly, 60 Jarvis ing without insurance, operating without a license and God does not mean that God has willed it. Not once in state s wiretap statutes to eavesdrop In Febru:^' 1990 the department Leola Traver. of Vernon and Elizabeth Moriarty of Road; Nancy Flaherty, 345 Buckland Hills Drive; and weapxtns in a motor vehicle. the Gospels does Jesus refuse to try to heal someone be­ on those conversations. received a tip from a man in a con­ Hartford. Moriarty has been a Group Leader for a large Debra E. Frecfcleton, 15 Ann St. He is being held on $50,0(X) bond piending an April 8 cause it is “God’s will" that they suffer! Indeed, If the bill becomes law, dominium complex that his neigh­ Mail Team since 1975. Traver has been active with the Also: Kurt J. Gamer, 203 Valley View Road; Carol apptearance in Manchester Supterior Court. throughout the Gospels we are told that God works with eavc.sdropping on a cordless phone bor was selling drugs. The man Annual Profile Edition Salvation Army, American Red Cross, Tri-Town Shelter Graboski, 146 Hollister St: Neil Hartzog, 84 Hack­ Police said that Lopjez is believed to be a member of a far more longing than we do that the thorn be removed, convcr,saiion would be a Class D btised his suspicions on a cordless and Hockanum Valley Community Council. She has matack St; Anne Hickey, 92 Butternut Road; Geraldine the Hartford gang T h e Park Street Posse.” He also has the hunger be fed, the catapult be deflected. felony punishable by as much as telephone conversation he overheard been a member of RSVT for 11 years. Hodge, 72 Maple St; Douglas Von Hollen, 142 several cases, iiKluding a shooting in January, against Dr. Frederick L. \hrger, Senior Pistor involving his neighbor. five years in prison, a S5.(KX) fine, Wynedingfrill Road; Cheryl James, 838 Hillstown him. South United Methodist Church or both. l\)Iice sat in a cruiser outside the "Focus on Family Life Road; Anita Kabir, 33 Wilfred Road; Nanci Drysiak, Law enforcement officials, who susfvct’s condominium, set their 65 Green Road; Tina Lessard, 15 Thistle Road; have eavesdropped on cordless scanner to the same frequency, and Lotteiy Maureen Lescoe, 50 Joan Circle, Alien Livermore, 242 telephone conversations to build monitored the conversations for Hilliard St.; Jeffrey Longo, 118 Briarwood Drive. Current Quotes criminal cases, are lobbying against eight days. They arrested William Also: Dougin Marshall, 189 Shallowbrook Lane; Manchester Herald the proposal. It would force them to McVeigh on March 2, 1990. after he Here are W'ednesday’s lottery results from around New in our Community" Syed Muddassir, 131 Downey Drive; Barbara Noel, T h e l a i ^ team is back in the saddle again. get a judge’s permission to carry out left the condominium for what England: 123 Wells St; Alexandra O’Brien, 36 Barry Road; Everybody is very hapjpy to be getting ready to launch Founded OcL 1,1881 as a weekly. such activities legally. [xilice suspected was a drug deal. Connecticut Linda Owens, 177 Summit .^t.; Thomas Payne Jr., 117 after about a four-month hiatus.” — NASA test director Daily publication since OcL 1,1914. Daily: 7-4-9. Play Four: 5-7-6-1. Lotto: Cromwell F^ricc' Chief Michael Mice seized more than 20 gi-ams Sycamore Lane; Nycole Palmer, 12 Centerfield St.; A1 Sofge OT the year’s first shuttle flight scheduled for Green, who also heads the legisla­ Publish Date: Thursday April 18,1991 02-09-12-21-41^. Matthew E. Phelps, 149 Branford St; Christine D. rnday. of cocaine in McVeigh’s van, two Massachusetts USPS 327-500 VOL CX, No. 157 tive committee tor the Connecticut shotguns from the condominium and Reeser, 193 Deer Rtm Trail; Deborah Robinson, 54 Ox­ E>aily: 1-3-7-6. Mass Millions: 5-8-13-15-33-35. Chiefs of Police .Asseviation, said a Rmasonic cordless telephone, now ford St; Robert Sass, 98 Lamplighter Drive. T h e major threat to science is not terrorism, not radi­ Acting Pubfeher the law would be virtually unenfor­ JEANNS a FROMERTH in evidence. They also arrested Bonus number: 24 Also: Donald F, Sauer, 29 Lydall St; Kim Swetz, cal ^ o n s , b u t... a more subtle effort to influence think- ceable with respect to the average Northern New England 320 Wetherell St; Linda Thiel, 360 Oakland St.; My x McVeigh’s wife. 'Mary, on drug raS; Dr. Daniel H. Johnsai Jr., vice spteaker of the Managing Edior citizen. Pick Three: 5-1-4. Pick Four 9-8-9-9. Tran, 32 Westerly St; Carta-Maria Trovato, 26 VV^lker charges. ^licy-making House of Delegates of the American PETER DOWNS 1 Rhode Island St; Janice $^lvick, 281 Center St; Anna Werfel, 178 Medical Association which is accusing animal rights r Daily: 8-5-0-8. Lol-O-Bucks: 3-13-17-18-23. New State Road; and Julie Winslow, 53 Hamlin S t groups of undermining scieiKe education. City E d to r______Ala* Gtrtii Nm m E d io r . Andrew C Spitziar MEiABOLiSM: THE KEY P M lu rM E cA oT _ Dianna M. Talbot Sgorti Edior __ .Lan Auaiar TO WEIGHT CONTROL Photo Ediof .Raginaid Pmio If you are trying to lose weight you should take advantage of Weather Adreniaing Managar. Buainaaa Managar L ■iaanna O _____ Diminishing Dimensions free offerl A metabolic check utilizing bio- Ciroulaaon Managar ____Qarinda CoUoi REGIONAL Weather Production D iraclorL ____Shaldon Cohan electrical impedence. Ifs a quick and accurate method of determin­ Sunny and warm Preaaroom Managar _ Hobart H Hubbwd A iM « 4 ing how many calories your body burr« every day. It will also tell you Tonight’s weather in the greater Main Tataphoita Numbar !tV“ M3-2711 your body fat percentage: that is, how many pounds of you is fat, how 5 ^ Manchester area: dear. Low 30 to CkowiaMon Tataphona Numbar 9 is muscle, water, etc., and what your ideal weight should be. 35. Southwest wind to 10 mph. M 7 -M 4 S Thursday, sunny and wanner. High All theinformation will be thoroughly explained to you by a Regis­ in the middle 60s. Friday outlook, PiA>iahad daiy axcept Sunday and oanain hoidaya by tfw Manchaaiar Pubiatang Co . 16 Branard Aaoa. te r^ Dietitian. Take advantage of fais special offer - It will make becoming cloudy. High in the mid :' CoML 06040. sooond daaa r~**gr | losing weight easier for you. 60s. 9 ------Conn. Poatmaaiar 8wid addreaa dt High ptressure over Pennsylvania to 610 Uanrhaalar Hartod. P.O. Bo* S«1. Mwid r i H c ^ n E 3 will track slowly southeastward the Conn. 06040. FREE METABOLIC CHEClT ^ Don't miss the opportunity to advertise in this Tha Manchaaiar Harald it a mambar o( Tha Aaaociatod with this coupon at next couple of days bringing Praaa, tw Audi Buraau of Caoutabon, tw Now Englvid generally .fair and wanner weather Praaa Aaaociaban and Pw Naw England Nawapagar Aa- to the area. a o ca io n . award winning keepsake edition! Guaramaad dd hrery. If you donl reoawa your HarMd DIMINISHING DIMENSIONS ' by B pjD. areafcdaya or 7:30 a.m. Saiurdiya. ptoMa 224 Hartford Tpke., Vernon Weather summary for Tuesday, NNphona vour camar. H you va unabia to read) your April 2, 1991; Temperature: high cvnv, cal aubaenbar aarvioa 647-OB46 by p jn 9 Call your advertising representative at m 6 871-7697 of 49, low of 31, mean of 40. The ■wakdaya lor dativary in Manchaator. ^ • Mon.-Fri, 11-7 Donnal is 44. ^uWWNd carhv raiaa are $1.80 waaWy, $7.70 lor 4 12/91 00a monP). $23 10 lo r tira a m onta. $46 20 tar tax 643-2711 for more information yyyi Precipitation: .05 inches for the montto and $02.40 tar ona y a v . Nawattartd prioa* 36 day. .06 inches for the month, 8.81 Today’s weather picture was drawn by Joshua Evans, a E 3 M C D E S 3 E 3 ^ oantaaoopy. m tmmr inchfcs for the year. second-grader at the Nathan Hale School in Manchester. 1 10- MANCHESTER HERALD, Wednesday, April 3, 1991

THE NEW BREED BLONDIE by D«an Young & Stan Draka -

HERB SAID THAT. C r o s s w o r d WHO TOOTSIE TOOTSIE IMAGINE HER TELLING A DON AND SUSAN TOLD TOLD HERB?/ HBanrliestn Mpralfi ARE SETTINS HERB ? HUSBAND SOAAETHINS A DIVORCE LIKE t h a t . . ACROSS 52 Engraved design Answer lo Previous Puiile 1 Marchers' 55 Pacific □□aa oiaQa □□□ word Island □QDa □taoD □□Q A 4 Forest 5B Depots clearing 57 Sand lizard □ □ □ Section 3, Page 11 9 Barbarian 58 Fragrant FOOD Wednesday, April 3,1991 10 Impractical 59 — Moines □ n a n C 3 a a philosophy □□a Dcaiia □□□□ 13 Llteless DOWN 14 Provoke QDaQcia □□□□□□ 15 Actor — 1 Israeli round □□□ODD □□□□[ID Mlneo dance □□□□ □naia □□□ A 16 Hasten 2 Public □ □ □ □ □ □ □ 17 Beverages services □ □□□DEIQ □□□[!□ PRAKg 4 18 Deblor's 3 College deg. aao □□□□□□!□□□ ARLO AND JANIS by Jimmy Johnson note 4 Neighbor of O Q Q a a s g □ □ □ Q j 20 Desert In Fr. □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ Asia 5 Medieval MYFeBrmsomy^ YOU SHOULD H6AR HOW 23 Hunting dog poem water Hagen W U if WHAT DID I DO 26 Lecture 6 Star In 24 Author 42 Defeat (2 SILLY YOU 60UI0D.' TO DeseRve The truth?.' 30 Legal paper Aquila Gardner wds., si.) 31 Solo 7 Clock lace 25 Political 44 American 33 Spoon bend­ 8 This (Sp.) meeting soldiers er — Geller 9 Type of fuel 27 Great 45 Preposition 34 Rubber tree to 3, Roman number 46 And others 4-3 35 Adhesive 11 Residue 28 Baseballer (2 wds.) Steve Brackett 36 Oozed 12 Intermediate 46 Romalna 37 Mexican (prel.) Hershlser 50 Large liquor 16 Shade 29 Nest of amount Security guard Bob Johnson discovers the 39 Slight sound 19 Baseball pheasants 51 Medical maximum number of keys he can add to his 41 Freshwater player Mel 32 Symbol of suffli tortoise ruthenium 53 Farm device key chain. \ 43 Mai — 21 Basket 35 Whale group 54 Destiny (cocktail) willow 36 Youth org. 55 Roam about SNAFU by Bnico Boattle 44 Patron 22 Actress — 36 Waxy Idly 47 Oxalls plant Arthur ointment 49 Pair 23 Moved in 40 Actress SPIDER-MAN by Stan Lm IT r r - r - 7 ^ I n o t ONLy KNOCKeC? m M our, BUT M \ m j IT'S BRiNaiNO h im b a c k tc? n o r m a l A9 m u . ! 14

15 17 w □

w , The true test of any comer deli is its cold cut sandwich. Sandwiches that feature crusty bread, sharp w a B Q 33 mustard, a no-nonsense dill pickle and freshly sliced, delicious meat — sliced thin and piled high. ■VWCCWACTBO Now you can make premium, deli-style sandwiches at home with Oscar Mayer® Thin Sliced Cold Cuts. [ OUROTHBRUm$!Tm'LL You won’t have to stand in line for these sandwiches; simply pick a package off the supieimarket display BeiHBpeANYSBCONP/ ‘ peg and bring it home. Keep a variety of meats on hand; the unused slices stay fresh in resealable packages. ITT 143 EEK AND MEEK by Howls Schnsidsr If you’ve confined your sandwich ideas to white bread, mayo and meat then it’s time to be a little more 4 T PP creative. Let your imagination go! K M J r MOJ GET TTC F££UjUG W A T m a d e 61(3 H ar-5ft)T SOMcriMES THAT THE EISfTTfES S P E H J D Q S OF ■ Choose rye bread flecked with caraway seeds, pumpernickel studded with raisins, onion rolls, bagels, 57 lUERe A COMSRRACV.. pita pockets, or any whole grain bread. Mix and match thin sliced meats and breads with a variety of B(T-VOUAIUDM£?r------"After completing steps 1 through 25, step 26 is toppings. Serve them hot or cold. Now you’ve made a sandwich worthy of any comer deli. rsT 59 to send $20 tor the rest of the repair manual." ‘ fX).. J ■ ~y—

stumped? Get answers to clues by calling "Dial-a-Word" THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME MIX AND MATCH DELICATESSEN SANDWICHES « by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee at 1-900-454-3535 and entering access code number’184 r Use your imagination to build a sandwich worth sinking your teeth into. _____ 95c per minute: Touch-Tone or rotary phones._____ Unscramble Ihese lour Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form And. if elected. I These sandwiches are loaded with flavor yet each is under 300 calories. four ordinary words. HAWAIIAN ISLAND 0 0 NIN I He'll go WINTHROP by Dick Cavain POCKET WITH A PUNCH far Spread 1 tablespoon cream cheese on bottom half Cut pita pocket in half. Spread inside with 1 I U1KETOR6AD DEAR A S eiE : HOWAAUCH CAN of bagel. Top with lettuce, 1 pineapple ring and teaspoon horseradish sauce. Fill pocket with 4 THE "ADVICE" ANeWER; NOT MUCH., CELEBRITY CIPHER 1 CET POR AN AUTHENTIC AAOer HORSES CAn T- 4 slices Oscar Mayer Thin Sliced Boiled or slices Oscar Mayer Thin Sliced Roast Beef, leaf Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous COLUMN. HORSE-DRAWN CARRIA.QE? people past and present Each letter in the cipher stands lor GANGI DRAW VEF2Y WELL Honey Ham. Cover with remaining bagel half. lettuce and 1 thinly sliced radish. another Today's clue E oQuats P Makes I sandwich. Makes I sandwich. _ c ' S i ) 'L'P RNW WSBIB Nutritional Information: Nutritional Information: 290 Calories, 16 g Protein, 38 g Carbohydrates, 215 Calories, 14 g I*rotein, 24 g Carbohydrates, WN BRWBIWTLR IMLYRG W H A T A f=s POLITICIAN HAS TO 8 g Fat, 50 mg Cholesterol and 870 mg Sodium 7 g Fat, 30 mg Cholesterol and 810 mg Sodium EBNEVB. OB'IB 6E /N OROER TO HAVE A SUCCESSFUL TURKEY GOBBLER WSBIB WN ZN CAREER, ON-THE-LIGHTER-SIDE DIS PUT 4-4 wrL Pick Spread 1 tablespoon cranberry-orange sauce on Toast 2 slices of whole grain bread. Spread 1 slice cJvAu-l JNPBWSLRC Now arrange the circled letters lo 1 slice rye bread. Top with lettuce, 2 orange slices with 2 tablespoons cottage cheese. Top with s ,/ 1□ form the surprise answer, as sug­ ERNIE by Bud Grace gested by the above cartoon. and 4 slices Oscar Mayer Thin Sliced Roast lettuce, 2 tablespoons chopoed red or green bell WNCBWSBI.' — RBLV I f IS AW ilNP/SPy-TEP " tr IS ALSO TRUE THATI WH ARE Answer here: ■ Y ■V' Y Y Y Y fACT, MR.SfSUlp.'THAT at'ERvoWE HAS A • I OBVIOUSLY M Y Turkey Breast or Chicken Breast. Cover with pepper, 4 cucumber slices and 4 slices Oscar INVEKTEBRATC rtOULUSta RECURRiMfe AilSKTWZe... 2 L T P N R 2 . CAMNEmtER WAL<, ReSURR/WC 1 slice rye bread. Mayer Thin Sliced Turkey Breast or Chicken (Answers tomorrow) eew t aa*ked /n fubuc...I WlfeHTHARE-, PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "There are two literary maladies t a l k , w o r f l a v Breast. Cover with remaining toast slice. JumWes: SIXTY WHOSE ISUkND MUSKET FafxerriNic. t d take Makes I sandwich. — writer's cramp and swelled head." — Coulson Yesterday's siwKijnM y..- Kernahan. Answer On a date it's seldom amiss - - - Makes I sandwich. TO KISS A MISS Nutritional Information: 225 Calories, 14 g Protein, 36 g Carbohydrates, Nutritional Information: Now back in stock, Jumbta Book No. 4« is avattabta for S2.40, which incluBss postsaa 205 Calories, 17 g Protein, 26 g Carbohydrates, and hondHng, from Jumbla, c/o this nawspapar, P.O. B oi 436*. Ortando. FL 326Q2-43A . 3 g Fat, 20 mg Cholesterol and 965 mg Sodium Inchida your nama, addrass and tip coda arid maka chack payabla to Nawspaparbooks. 5 g Fat, 25 mg Cholesterol and 1,025 mg Sodium

THE PHANTOM by Lee Falk S Sy Bany

PULLEP TO ONE I CRESCENT ROLL BITES fiOW THEY MOYE IN GREAT (not pictured) ZmA JU 5T M !^5 THE VILLAGE,,. I C ^CtRCLEG,.. 4-3 MM:\ THE BORN LOSER by Ail Sanaom Don't limit your sandwich ideas to the old standards. Thin sliced cold cuts and whocah Ci ^AN! ‘WAl'^'HHfU'ibupoUfT CORRecr, AMD WHO^ mArt-WHEO refrigerated bread dough bake into delicious hot sandwich bites. /Hi. DgFlUE CAMDEFlIOe' p i DOH'T Separate 1 package (8 oz.) refrigerated crescent SPINWHEEL BITES OIRIOSITY AMD WATJTA FIND OUT lewOPAN^lEi,. 'l^HOWTHe dinner rolls into 4 rectangles; firmly press Mix 1 package (10 oz.) chopped spinach, thawed AW^Wfe'PAHD perforations to seal. Fill with one of the following and well-drained with 2 tablespoons mayonnaise 6C M E6C C Y mixtures. Roll each rectangle lengthwise and and 2 thinly sliced green onions. Divide and FIMC^ place seam side down on cutting surface. Cut each spread mixture evenly among 4 rectangles. Top c m roll into 5 pieces. Place on ungreased baking each rectangle with 3 slices Oscar Mayer Thin y f TbMORROW-.FVNAr, sheet. Bake in 375° F oven 8-10 minutes or until Sliced Roast Chicken or Turkey Breast, folding golden brown. meat to fit rectangle. HAGAR THE HORRIBLE by Dik Browne Makes 20 pieces. Nutritional Information per piece: IA/H5N ARB Y aJ THE GRIZWELLS by Bill Schorr c o u u p M't W e w w e w A f Z B 60 Calories, 2 g Protein, 5 g Carbohydrates. 4 g Fat,

MANCHESTER HERALD, Wednesday, April 3, 1991—13 FOCUS Menus The following lunches will be A gravy, whipped potato, wax beans: cheeseburger on roll, French fries, sticks, chilled fruit. served the week of April 8-12; Turkey sandwich, fruit, milk. fruit, milk. Tue.sday: Bowl of chili, com Mayfair & Westhill Thursday: Pot roast with gravy, 'Hiesday: Hot dog on roll, baked bread, tossed salad, as.sbrtcd fruit. Dear Abby baked potato, cauliflower: Chicken beans, sauerkraut, fruit, milk. Wednesday: Whipped potato, salad sandwich, fruit, milk. Dr. Gott Gardens Wednesday: Baked chicken, garden peas, school-baked roll, PEOPLE Friday: Baked white fish with mashed potato, peas, roll, fruit, brownie. Turkey at Hale and Gram­ Abigail Van Buren Monday: Pineapple juice, Salis­ Newburg sauce, boiled potato, milk. A mar and chicken at Robertson. Peter Gott, M.D. bury steak with gravy, oven roasted spinach: Tuna salad sandwich, fruit, ■ Actor Nick Nolte and his wife, Rebecca, are Thursday: Pizza, tossed salad, Thursday: Meatball grinder, com splitting up after seven years of marriage. potatoes. Harvard beets, bread, cin­ milk. fruit, milk^ dessert. namon applesauce. nibicts, chilled fruit. . “Nick Nolte and his wife have stressed the Friday: Cook’s choice, "niesday: Tomato rice soup, cold Manchester secon­ Friday: School-baked pizza, divorce is amicable and they will have joint custody vegetable, fruit, milk. tossed salad, as.sortcd fmit. Declaring AIDS of their son,” f^aul Bloch, the couple’s spokesman, turkey with cheese, lettuce and dary schools said in a statement 'Ihesday. The Noltes’ son is 4. Use caution tomato, salad dressing, hamburger Coventry High Bolton Elementary- on roll, peach crisp. The marriage was the third for Nolte and the first The deli bar and salad bar are al­ in an obituary for his wife, a former model. Wednesday: Orange juice, ternate choices daily at Manchester School Center Nolte, whose films include “48 HRS.” and with treatment Yankee pot roast, vegetable gravy[ High School. At the junior high Monday:' Tomato soup, grilled Monday: Juice, turkey sandwich, M anchctSter C ountry C lub Down and Out in Beverly Hills,” recently finished mashed potatoes, zucchini and schools the deli bar is offered as an chcc.se sandwich, vegetable sticks, lettuce, French fries, milk, pudding DEAR ABBY; Is there any reason why an obituary 305 So Main Street 646-0103 ^ Manchester, CT two movies set for release in the fall: “Prince of tomatoes, roll, fruit. alternate on Mondays and Fridays assorted fruit. with topping. must state that a person has d i^ of AIDS? I notice that it tnjoy a leisurely lunch overlooking our beautifully landscaped golf Tides” with Barbra Streisand and “Cape Fear” with DEAR DR. GOTT: Fbr over two years I’ve been on Thursday: Cran-apple juice. and the salad, bar, the other three Tue.sday: Super taco with meat, Tue.sday: Spaghetti with meat is never stated that a person has died of steroids, yet days. course... offering daily luncheon specials Robert De Niro. medication for high blood pressure. Currently I’m on Mandarin chicken, carnival rice[ cheese, lettuce, tomato, com nibicts, steroids attack the system in a similar manner by destroy­ sauce, garlic bread, com, cookie and Tuesday 10% Senior Discount H Rail! Newman’s food company is adding salsa Vasotec, HyU-in, Clonidine patches and Maxzide for (Oriental vegetables, wheat bread! Monday: Baconburger on roll, assorted fruit. appic.saucc, milk. ing the immune system. French fries, fruit, milk. Wednesday Complimentary Glass of Wine and ranch dressing to its line of products. water retention. I’ve been researching the benefits of pineapple cream pudding. Wednesday: Salad bar with as­ Wednesday & Thursday: Early Due to ignorance, many people think AIDS is a taking cayenne pepper for its apparent ability to lower Friday; Grape juice, baked "niesday: Fbollong hot dog on Thursday lOWc Non-Senior Discount venereal disease — which it is not. Please consider the Newman’s Own, which gives its profits to sorted meats and cheeses, fruits and dismissal, bring own lunch. charity, already makes spaghetti sauce, olive oil blood pressure and have been able to cut my medication macaroni and cheese, green beans roll, baked beans, sauerkraut, fruit, vegetables, school-baked rolls, as­ Serving Lunch Tuesday Through Friday aguish that loved ones must endure when this kind of milk. Friday: Pepperoni pizza, tossed salad dressing and popcorn among 16 products sold in half and lower the pressure as well. \ ^ a t is your with pimientoes, wheat bread, tropi­ sorted garnishes. salad, choice of dressing, fruited 11:30 AM to 2 PM information appears in the obituary. I can remember worldwide. opinion of cayenne pepper capsules for hypertension? cal fruit. Wednesday: Baked chicken, ______Reservations Suggested when people were just as afraid of cancer. They wouldn’t Thursday: Hot pocket sandwich gelatin with topping, milk. “We always thought the people that would be on DEAR READER: I have no experience with cayenne mashed potatoes, peas, roll, fruit, with cheese and pepperoni, choice go into the home of one so infected, lest they, too, be­ pepper for hypertension. As a general rule, natural sub­ milk. come infected. the other end of the checks would be the Meals on Wheels of vegetable, assorted fruit. Andover-Hebron stances, such as cayenne and garlic, are inappropriate Thursday: Pizza, tossed salad, By the way, I do not have AIDS nor am I HIV posi­ beneficiaries,” the actor told 200 food distributors The hot noon meal is listed first Friday: School-baked pizza, substitutes for prescription drugs. Although some fruit, milk. tossed salad, fruit. schools tive. Thanks, Abby, for letting me have my say. in New York Tuesday. “But we were very wrong. and the cool evening meal second: We’re the beneficiaries.” patients with high blood pressure can lower their read­ Monday; Chicken quarter with Friday: Cook’s choice, Monday: Lasagna, peas and car­ — HELEN IN K.C. vegetable, fruit, milk. The company, based in Newman’s hometown of ings by a few points, moderate/severe hypertension is gravy, plain rice, carrots: Chicken rots, pears, rolls. I DEAR HELEN: When the cause of death is AIDS, usually not affected by vitamins or natural food supple­ Coventry elemen­ Tuesday: Grinders, chips, salad, and that fact appears in the obituary, it is very often the Westport, Conn., has donated nearly $40 million sandwich, fruit, milk. yoTrofteA^ since its founding in 1982 by Newman and author ments. I advise you to proceed carefully, under your doc­ Manchester elemen­ fruit. Restaurant, Lounge & Banquet Facilities wish of the deceased. (It is nothing to be ashamed of; we Tuesday: Lasagana, zucchini: tary schools A.E. Hotchner. tor’s supervision, and be ready to modify or eliminate Wedne.sday: Cheese pizza, green . . TIS Boston Tpke. (Rl 6) Bolton • 645-7996 have lost some of our finest people to AIDS.) However, Egg salad sandwich, fruit, milk. tary schools Monday: Tomato .soup, grilled “I’m begirming to think of myself more of an in­ your cayenne treatment as indicated. beans, juice bars. Mon. & Wed. 4:30-9, Thurs,, Fri. & SaL 4:30-10. Sun. 11-8, closed Tues. if the family of the deceased chooses to omit (or dis­ Th* Asaoclatcd Prass Wednesday: Boneless pork loin, Monday: Beefburger or ventor than I am an actor,” said Newman, who Having said this, I want to emphasize that many hy­ cheese sandwich, celery and carrot Thursday: Tacos, lettuce and guise) the cause of death, the family will have the last FREE AGAIN — Pete Rose is eligible to word. Literally. developed some of the recipes. pertensives can achieve enormous benefit (without tomatoes, potato puffs, mixed fruit. Mon., Wed. & Thuts. ■ Police impounded cars owned by Sylvester leave a Cincinnati halfway house Friday, diugs) by modifying their lifestyles and adopting prudent Friday: Chicken pattic, mashed Early Bird Special 4:30-6 pm DEAR ABBY: My husband calls telephone sex num­ diets. For example, exercise, meditation, weight loss, potatoes, com, com bread, chocolate bers when I m not around. I never know how many calls Stallone and a photographer to find out who but will have to finish a 1,000-hour com­ rammed whom. avoidance of salt, calcium supplements and stress coun­ cake. Take $2 Off Any Entree! he’s made until our telephone bill comes. Every month, munity service sentence for violating Myrtle Allen's cooking seling are valuable non-drug therapies for hypertension; these calls are more numerous, and they are running into The clash took place before dawn in Beverly federal tax laws. Hills Thursday. No one was hurt. in many instances, these alternative treatments may Sunday Special Yeal Parmigiana S^95 a lot of money. He knows how much it hiuls and upsets enable hypertensive patients to achieve normal blood me, but he continues to do it. Free-lance photographer E.L. Woody blames pressures without prescription medicine. As with any Abby, I am a good-looking woman, and he tells me I Stallone and filed an assault complaint. Stallone, Come Have Dinner For Two however, said the photographer stalked his car and chronic disease with serious consequences, hypertension at ''Ballymaloe House’ am great in bed, but if he doesn’t quit making these sex rammed it three times after the actor and his city schools. should be monitored by medical personnel who can ad­ MANCHESTER PACKING CO. In April calls, I am going to leave him. Please tell me how to just therapy to each patient’s needs. 349 Welherell Street handle this new habit of his. bodyguard left a nightspot. “I was sitting in the school office my first day Manchester, CT (Next to MCC) Receive 2 for 1 Coupon For Your Next Visit and wives came to help run the Food Stamps “It was like an excerpt out of the ‘French Con­ during a break and I told them, ‘I’ll answer the By CAROL DEEGAN '/2 cu p less 1 Uiblespoon quick­ _____ — NOT GOOD ENOUGH To give you more information, I am sending you a free house, the farm, and new satellite Accepted nection,”’ Stallone said. phone if you wish,”’ said Rose, 49. “I’ll do anyth- The Associated Press cooking oats or regular oats (not in­ 646-5000 - DEAR NOT GOOD ENOUGH: You are not respon­ copy of my Health Report “Hypertension.” Other readers businesses. Grandchildren help as stant) sible for what turns your husband on. This “habit” has Stallone’s Mercedes and Woody’s Honda Civic ing. April 1-April 16,1991 were impounded. who would like a copy should send $1.25 with their NEW YORK — “Myrtle Allen’s well, sometimes,” Allen says. About 2'/2 cups buttermilk or sour nothing to do with you — unless he’s spending more Baseball’s all-time hits leader was sentenced in names and addresses to P.O. Box 91369, Cleveland, OH Cooking at Ballymaloe House” is a The recipes featured in the 158- milk time on the telephone than he spends with you. You and “We are trying to determine which car hit the July to five months in prison. He was then released other,” Lt. Frtmk Salcido said Tuesday. 44101-3369. Be sure to mention the title. charming cookbook filled with 100 page cookbook (Stewart, Tabori and COOKING GOOD GRADE A J your husband need to talk this out together with a mar­ to a halfway house. Sift the Hours, .salt and baking No charges have been filed. recipes, including Uaditional Irish Chang, $24.95) have been selected riage counselor. If he refuses to go, go alone. You are not soda into a large bowl. Stir in the Chicken Leg AC ■ Director Oliver Stone will be allowed to film DEAR DR. GOTT: Would you please discuss tinea dishes such as Irish Stew, Dingle Pie and adapted for the American home oats. Make a well in the center, pour the only wife who feels she is not “good enough” bc- ■ Pete Rose completes his three-month stay at a kitchen. Quarters ■‘ t w ib. Cincinnati halfway house Friday, but it could be “JFK” from the sixth floor of the old Texas School versicolor? and Irish Apple Cake. in the buttermilk, and stir with a to lb. Avg. Bag cause her husband discovered telephone sex. Book Depository after all. Tliere is a wide selection of fruit midsummer before the former ballplayer finishes Allen, the mother of six children, wooden spoon until the mixture 40 lb. Box...... 391b. Strada and vegetable dishes (Lettuce and By popular request, Abby shares more of her favorite The Dallas County Commission reversed itself DEAR READER: Tinea versicolor is a skin infection was bom in County Cork, Ireland. comes together to form a soft, moist ■"‘X his sentence of 1,000 hours of community service Mint Soup, Red Cabbage and Ap­ LEAN WESTERN a Weekend of 4-5-91 prize-winning, ^y-to-prepare recipes. To order, send a Tuesday and let Stone use the landmark, now oc­ ^used by the ubiquitous fungus called Pityrosporum. She and her husband Ivan have lived for cheating on his taxes. ples, Rhubarb Almond Tart); fish dough. If die dough seems too dry, Friday and Saturday Specials long, business-size, self-addressed envelope, plus check cupied by an exhibit on President Kennedy’s assas­ The multiple, scattered, whitish brown lesions cause no at Ballymaloe, a 400-acre farm in Spare ib 1 The former Cincinnati Reds star said in today’s and shellfish dishes (Potted Crab, add a few more tablespoons butter­ 3 Chicken or money order for $3.95 ($4.50 in Canada) to: More sination. symptoms or health problems. Treatment with selenium southern Ireland, since 1947. milk. The Cincinnati Enquirer that he enjoys his court-or­ Batter-Fried Fish Fillets, Hot But­ Ribs Stuffed with Broccoli and Rice Favonte Recipes by Dear Abby, P.O. Box 447, Mount Stone can use the window perch from which Lee sulfide shampoo, applied at bedtime (and washed ofQ for In 1964, they opened part of the Turn the dough out onto a lightly dered work as a gym teacher’s assistant at inner- Harvey Oswald fired on Nov. 22, 1963. tered Oysters); and beef dishes USDA CHOICE ^ Moms, HI. 61054. (Postage is included.) four days, is ordinarily effective. The disorder tends to house as a restaurant. Eventually, floured surface and form it into a Veal Scallopini (Spiced Beef, Lamb Roast with rccu^j^^pite therapy. rooms were opened for overnight large, rounded disk, about 8 inches Sirloin with Peppers and Mushrooms Rosemary and Garlic, Beef with 059 stays, and “this soon became one of in diameter, and with a sharp knife Stout). The cookbook also includes Kabobs ^ ib the main lines in our farming busi­ cut a deep cross through the dough, Cannelloni Stuffed recipes for pates, cheese and eggs, with Ground Beef and Sausage WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3, 1991— PRIME TIME ness,” Allen writes in the introduc­ cutting the disk almost into quarters. USDA CHOICE desserts, breads and drinks. tion. Tbcre are now two restaurants On a buttered baking sheet bake “The recipes come from many Top Sirloin Q99 Baked or Broiled Scallops $9.25 c h a n n e l 6:00 eiso Tioo tIso sioo siio iioo and 20 chefs working in the kitchen. the bread in the middle of a 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 12:30 1:00 different sources: from old, hand­ Fresh Baked Scrod t h e a i r c h a n n e l s 1:30 2:00 2:30 “Our children with their husbands Steaks ib . $8.75 written, family cookery books; from preheated 425-dcgrcc F oven for 15 News g CBS News Inside minutes, then reduce the oven Veal Francais Entertain­ Salute to the Troops An all-star musical special to friends; and from books, magazines, BOGNER FRESH ^ C C $9.50 NETWORKCBS (In Stereo) g Edition Anti­ WlOU (In Stereo) g Newsg ment welcome American troops home from the Persian Gull Arsenio Hall Actor Henry Party temperature to 350 degrees F. Bake depressant Instant Love Boat News (R) g and manujils,” Allen says. “A gem Tonight (In Stereo) g Winkler; music group Machine Recall Monday-Saturday 5:30AM-10PM Sundays 'til 9:00 WFSB Q drug 20 to 25 minutes more, or until the Hsmburo loi^ 00 Jacqueline Mighty Clouds of Joy; With Nia Clam can just as easily turn up in a cheap 471 Hartford Road, Manchester lawsuits, g bread is crusty and richly browned. Bisset. actor Woody Harrelson. (R) Peeples (In little book of local ladies’ home- News g (In Stereo) ~ Patties ABC News Wheel of Jeopardy! Wonder [ S t e r e o ) ______Let cool on a rack. Makes 1 large 643-6165 Doogie American Comedy Awards From the Shrine cooking secrets collected for charity NETWORKABC Q Fortune g g Years The Howser, News g Nightline g loaf. Exposition Center in Los Angeles, the fifth annual Movie: “Snatched” (1973. Mystery) Paid BOGNER ALL BEEF i99 TV boys get Home Shopping Spree as in the works of the great and WTNH O M.D. Doogie awards ceremony honors the top comedic performers Howard Duff, Leslie Nielsen. The wives Program Note: To sour 2’/2 cups milk, in a separate deliveis a in American entertainment. (In Stereo) g of three wealthy executives are sauce famous writers and chefs.” The fol­ bowl combine 1 tablespoon fresh rooms. [ baby, g ____ kidnapped with $3 million ransom Frankfurters I INDEPENDENT lowing is a sample recipe: TONIGHT WWOR O Cosby Who's the Who’s the Comedy demanded. lemon juice or vinegar with die milk 3 or 5 Ib. Box 531 Center St. Show g Boss? g Boss? g Wheel IRISH BROWN SODA BREAD and let stand for 10 to 15 minutes, or 645-0303 INDEPENDENT Joe Paid Paid 21 Jump Street Growing Hogan LAND 0 LAKES Manchester WPIX gp Movie: "Appointment With Death" (1988, Mystery) Franklin Program [Program 3’/4 cups whole-wheat flour until thickened and curdled. "Swallowed Alive" □ Pains Family Cheers g Honey- Peter Ustinov, Lauren Bacall. ’ Odd Couple I Jeffersons News (R) surprise (preferably stone-ground) INDEPENDENT Rockford Files "Love Is mooners Movie: "Prehistoric (Recipe from: “Myrtle Allen’s Sliced White . ASK DICK KLEINER Baretta "Walk Like You Colombo Lt. Colombo investigates the murder of a Is. [LOMBARDI’S WHCT Bn the Word" Talk’ Hawthorne Synchronal Women” (1967, Fantasy) l'/4 cups all-purpose flour Cooking at Ballymaloe Hou.se” by senatorial candidate's campaion manaoer. ______Paid Research Many have enjoyed the subtle 2 teaspoons salt American , 1 Cosby Growing Cosby m Myrtle Allen. Stewart, Tabori and 55 M'A'S'H Movie: "fframer vs. Kramer” (1979, Drama) Dustin INDEPENDENT Show"Man Pains "Feet Show "Cliff M*A*S‘ H A Mama’s ALF "We flavor of linguine served with a l '/2 tca.spoons baking .soda Margaret Hoffman, Meryl Streep. A divorced couple battles for Jeffersons Hawthorne (Off Air) Chang. $24.95) Talk" Theo's of Clay" Ben big time war Family Are Family" Cheese p*jp over your cnuce. An antipasto is dcnovtu Volleyball: World Beach HERMITS & BROWNIES 4d») Movie: "Looker” (1981. Science Fiction) ______Iter Cup ’92 ISaflno 1^ lUJlde the jSpotlsCen- A. That was a memorable scene, Movie: "Weekend at Bmnie’s” (1989, Comedy) Championships. (R Movie: Albert Finney. James Coburn. A plastic Dne Night Movie: “Spring Fever USA” (1989) IPGA Tour [ter another nice touch with this meal. 9 GOO BLESS in a memorable movie (which you ’Doctor Andrew McCarthy, Jonathan Silverman, A dead man Stand Movie: “Season ol Fear" J989, TO OUR TROOPS OVERSEAS HBO surgeon investigates the mysterious nrcit/irioc turn nf hie fnrmar ...... :___ Darrel Guilbeau. Two students pel caught Movie: "Survival Quest” (1989 Linguine with Zesty Clam Sauce iuist0mnk:> Dolittle” provides two of his former employees with a unique set Higgins Boys Suspense) Michael Bowen, fay Wise. A forgot) called “Five Easy Pieces.” deaths of his patients. (In Stereo) "PG" up with mobsters and bathing beauties AAenture) U nce Henriksen. The Rocky (1967) ol problems. (In Stereo) 'PG-13' (Adult language adult & Gruber. (In young salesman becomes involved in a 2 cans (6 1/2 oz. ca.) minced Q. As a kid, I remember watch­ (Adult language, nudity, violence) on a whirlwind lour of the country's Mountains beornie a rugged battlefield Vernon, CT situations) q Stere o )q mur^rous affair when he goes to meet hottest Spring Break watering holes. "R" his long-lost father. "R" * 9^0“ P o’ wilderness enthusiasts clams, undrained ing a western, “The Range Rider,” Lifetime S '? .* '™ |E/R(Par11 I Duet "Fatal LA. Law "Lie Down and Movie; “Bridge to Silence” (1989, Drama) Lee and their evil counterparts. "R" g 1/2 cup Wish-Bone Classic Olive 1-84 Exit 04 Turn Right on 83 continue for 1/2 mil* • 871-1819 • Planty of Parking kat Sweep Ip o II______lot 2)______|Distraction" Deliver' Tracey Molly Dodd E.N.G "Dirty Trick" who had a partner, Dick West [Remick, Martee Matlin. UNnuui Paid C U T ALO N G D O H E D U N E ' — I ■un-Thur* 11-1 AM, FrI 0 8M li-a AM • RaMKvatJoiw auggMtad on wraokands • Sorving dinnar until 11 PM Movie: ’’High Road to China” (1983, Adventure) Tom Paid [Paid Paid Oil Italian Dressing What year was that on, who Movie: “The ’Burbi” (1989, Comedy) Tom Hanks, 30-Minuta 30-Minuta „ ^ ------ggn iProoram im S? ^'''''Strong. A flapper hires a former Bruce Dern. A suburbanite's plans for a vacation at Movie: “Portrrt of a Love Affair” (1989, Drama) 1 large tomato, chopped tariy Bird Specials A Movie: Movie; Movie: “Penitentiary” (1979 Dramal starred as the Range Rider, and Showtime World War I ace to help find her father. "PG" (Adult Spiropoulos. An eccentric artist Movie; MARC BAKERY DOUGH language, violence) home are ruined when a strange new family moves into "Open "Hearts of 1/2 cup sliced pitted ripe olives ______Mon-Frl4-6PM______) who played Dick West? — BJ.R., Isaac Kennedy, Thommy Pollard A “Stealing GIFT CERTIFICATE the neighborhood, (In Stereo) "PG" (Adult language, mild Window" Stone" m S s s "n S"*^.. - ' “j. . . * rrro ®°h9wl I hhdQMU his1113 violence) (Adun language, adult situations, nudity. ® he didn't Heaven’* 1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese C Sp«claHh§ of lh» Hous* Pay To The Bearer Batesville, Ark. violeiice) commit, turns to boxing to help him Movie: "Heart Condition” (1990, Comedy) Bob (1988) Derek Movie: “Crash and Bum” (1990, survive prison life ’R" ™ 1/4 cup chopped parsley ______SIX DOLLARSn 516 00______A. That was a syndicated show Hoskins, Denzel Washington. A racist police detective Movie: “Pretty Woman” (1990, Comedy) Richard r de Uni, "R Science Fiction) Paul Ganus, Megan Movie: “C.H.U.D. II: Bud the Chud” ivara Mta that first aired in ’51 and ’52. Jock TMC undergMs a change after receiving a heart transplant Gere, Julia Roberts. A business executive attempts to lorganized 8 ounces linguine, cooked and ------Toward Dinner For Two______Ward. Futuristic rebels find themselves at (1988, Comedy) Brian Robbins, Bill B?rMen'Fmd^!!I,nn*^ "3®®' Co^hody) Corbin FIM ItalM ■ En p I«M. Praadun*. Bl*cli«w4 SaliM* frorn a black lawyer. (In Stereo) "R® (Adult language. transform a vulgar streetwalker Into a sophisticated the mercy of a killer robot in a remote Calvert. Two unsuspecting teen-agers twrnsen, Fred Gwynne, Four would-be criminals drained We welcome you to join us Mahoney starred, with Dick Jones adult situations, violence) ’ female companion. (In Stereo) "R" (Adult language adult Cm M m M Wi m BvlUt $«»» Vm I Cm * Nw i outpost. (In Stereo) "R" situations) accidentally revive a Cannibalistic In large skillet, bring minced at Casa Nova for line dining playing his sidekick, Dick West. Gilligan’s Humanoid Underground Dweller R" towrh^k'"(i5sSS?“( Stereo) R (Adult language, violence) Q IMu! Sccayl - WMi UtiguW Vh I MadtecriiwM 9 Bugs Bunny A Pals TNT Movie: “The Mountain Road” (1960, Drama) James clams and classic olive oil Italian Pr!$*nt Thii CcilHIcal! On Any Sunday Through Thundav (Send your questions to: Ask Island 1 ^ : "Screaming Eagles” (1956, Drama) Tom Stewart, Lisa Lu.______Movie: OFF Not Appllcablo On Holiday! ______ITryon, Jan Merlin. dressing to a boil, then boil 1 Dick Kleiner, do Newspaper Cartoon Express missionai 1.00 All abov* dinners Includt choica of two: Not To Apply To Any Olh*r Sfteclala USA MacGyver "Unfinished Murder, She Wrote (Part IMovie: "The Return of the Musketeers” (1991 EaXfMSIMI Enterprise Association, 200 Park [Business" Miami Vice "Freefall" (In minute. Remove from heat and stir :OUPON MUST BE PRESENTED AT TIME OF PURCHASE/ 1 of Z lAdventure) Michael York, Richard Chamberlain M - e r "Trial by pnme m e Potato, Salad, Paata or Vagetabts of th# day. Ave., New York, N.Y. I0I66. [Stereo) (Part 2 ol 2) in tomato, olives, cheese and ______..(Minimum Bakery Purchase $4.00) i|_. , 218 Talcottvitia Road parsley. To.ss hot linguine with clam ^ iCTTlgi'^-rpr-^^ FULL LIQUOR LICENSE Vernon, CT I______871-1819 MH sauce. LaUUU I ILL 4/17/9 1 Can only De usea on regularly pnoed bakery gooes MASTERCAnD-VISADINERS CLUB-AMERICAN EXPRESS 1 14— MANCHESTER HERALD, Wednesday, April 3, 1991 MANCHESTER HERALD, Wednesday, April 3, 1991—15 CLASSfflED ADVERTISING 643-2711 A

NOTICES Spcdal Wishes 13 BUSINESS OPPOR- 21 HOMES FOR SALE 21 HOMES FOR SALE 2 1 HOMES FOR SALE 2 1 HOMES F O R S A L E 21 HOMES POP «Af .ii>. As a condition precedent 'Why Send A Card? TUNITIES to the placement of any Makeyouroum perjorui wishes NEW-3 Bedroom THE-Place to be!!! YOUH-Money couldn’t advertising in the lothat^■cidperson in yourlife HOT NEW VENDING $48,900 - Ibedroom, cotkIo end unit with view and fireplace In Ranches and Capes, $129,900. Tender buy more. 4 Bedroom Manchester Herald, Ad­ on special days, such as birthdays, BUSINESS-$500- te in n n n n 9f«at for commuters. FHA or VA-NO Money loving care throughout attached Cape on Lock- $2000 per week vertiser hereby agrees weddings, anmoersaries, birth an- $100 ,0 0 0 - Business opportunity in ftUncheeter, Pizza reslau- Down. Vinyl siding, nb- this 7 room Cape with wood St. Large back A possible. Routes es­ to protect, indemnify ttouncements,etc.lthe^acardi e i is n n n ®9ulpment included. Owner win train. w a x floors, full new thermopane win­ yard, new roof and oil and hold harmless the tablished for you! Part ^Iio ,u u u -S p a cio u s 2 bedroom contemporary condo basements. Coventry dows that tilt out for burner. Buyer warranty. With the Herald's new column, townhouse, BuUt In 88 with formal dining, Ml partially Manchester Herald, its or full time. Investment a n d area towns. easy spring cleaning! A lo t o f room at an officers and employees you win not only save money, but required. Call 7 days/24 OK ftinn D on® garage and central air. $109,875-up. Phil amazing price, $1 2 d ,II0 0 - Build your dream home on this exceptional country lot Family room, formal agairist any ana all thinkoflw unitfutan hours. 1-800-626-6750. Blazawski. Philips Real dining room and gas $110,000. "We’re Sell­ REMAX EAST OF THE RIVER (203) 647-1419 ‘ opportunity this isl *■1 oo K/in S?" course., in new subdivision. ing Houses!" Blanchard liability, loss or ex­ MANCHESTER-Available $1 JZ,DOQ -Usneheefertownhomo at Nonhfield Green. 1600 sq. Estate, 742-1450. heat tool Convenient to 297 east center St., manchester, ct 06040 (800) 544-4932 O pense including immediately. 1200 F______Rte. 3841 Anne Miller & Rossetto, 646-2482. Special Limited f t . , 3 bedrooms, 2 full and 21/2 baths, finished rec rm, attorneys’ fees, arising Square feet. Cbmmer- forthal dining, front porch, central air, carport Great NEW-Listing, Manchester Real Estate, 647-8000. from clairris of unfair buy. F ______Introductory Rate cial/lndustrial. 3 Phase Cape. 4 Bedrooms, 22 CONDOMDnUMS Real Estate NEW LISTING!!! trade practices, infring- electric. Sprinkler $134,900 -3 b^roqrri cape with first floor family rm, formal dining, dining room, family VERNON-New listing. 6 CHFA is on the way, so don't miss this expandable 5+ ment of trademarks, a line! FOR SALE system. $550 Per oat in kitchen, 1 1/2 traths, 2 porches, arid one car room, spacious yard. Room plus, raised room CAPE COD on Brewer St. In E Hartford! 3 NO PHOTO trade names or patents, fo r an extra cost o f50^ you may oarage, in Manchecter. Month. 646-5477. Asking $139,000. Call ranch. Cathedral ceiling bedrooms PLUS extra unfinished room on 2nd fir, HW violation of rights of $195 ,0 0 0 -Tolland Georgian Colonial 2,000 sq. ft. with 4 bed- COLONIAL-Manor. also put your choice a birthday Ron, 649-3087. RE/ living room, kitchen with 647-8400 firs, economical gas heat & one car garage. Super starter AVAILABLE privacy and infringe­ TOms, 2 baths, front to back fireplaced living room, Manchester, $96,500. cake, heart, star, smiley face, MAX East of the River, 168 .Main Street, Manehehter home affordably priced at $116,500! wrn^dlning, 2 car garage, finished rec room, tear separate family room CHFA/FHA Approved 2 ment of copyright and candles, numbers far the age & PHARMACEUTICAL 647-1419. dock 20x40 inground pool and cabana, on one acre lot area. Unique sun room bedroom Townhouse, proprietary rights, unfair manyothersll F______DISTRIBUTION $199,900 kTvestmont duplex with 3 bedrooms, eat In kitchen, full with hot tub. 3 e n d unit. Fully ap­ Sparkling Interior compatition and libel J- Deadline for ads - 12KX) noon basomOTt,11/2baths,8oparateutilitiosoach8ido,ju8t NEW LISTING-Have a Bedrooms, 2 baths, plianced kitchen with New to the Market Light bright, spacious, 3 BRs, 2 Charming Cape and slander, which may 2 days prior to the day you Nationally Adver­ c o iQ o n n f®‘luced$M,000. private morning dip. Im­ partial lower level. oak cabinets, sliders to 3 BR on dead end street Charming fireplaces. Built in 1087. Asking 3 BRs, 2 fireplaces. Great layout Ab­ result from the publica­ $239 ,9 0 0 -1900 sq. ft Contemporary to be built on your lot or maculate 4 bedroom, 2 Priced realistically at private patio. D.W. Fish & immaculate. Asking $134,000. $ 1 9 2 ,0 0 0 . solute wonderful. tion of any advertise­ would like your ad to appear. tised Brand Name oure, brkfst nook, wrap kitoien, fireplaced family room bath home with 2 com­ $182,000. U&R Realty, Real Estate, 643-1591 ment in the Manchester 643-2692. Herald by advertiser, in­ Call Classified Today Product. No Sell­ onn 5.™^ i''*'!? ®fched entry. plete kitchens. LL or 871-1400. - Captivating contemporary in Coventry with grand kitchen perfect for F______F cluding advertisements 643-2711 foyer, firefjac^ family room, custom kitchen, 3 bed­ in any free distribution ing ~ Established entertaining or in-law. BRAND-New listing!!! MALLARD VIEW-New andaskforPaulaorllze rooms, Including dynasty styled master suite with 4 In-ground pool, accent publications published Vending Route. person jacuzzi, overiooking 2 gorgeous acres of coun- CHFA is on the way, so Ranch and Colonial by the Manchester lighting and canopied don’t miss this expan­ homes. Change your Herald. Minimum Invest­ $359 ,9 0 0 - trxxedible 2700 sq. ft contemporary colonial in Man- patio. Located on cul- dable 5-plus room lifestyle to 1-floor living. W ish in g c h ^ e r with vaulted family room, master suite with de-sac. $190’s. "We’re Cape Coo on Brewer 2 Bedroom, 2 bath Manchester $240'a ment $7,000. tetting room, arxf private batti suite, bayed dining, wrap Selling Houses!" St. in East Hartford! 3 Ranches. Also 3 ARE YOU GETTING READY... EVER WISH UPON A STAR??? New Listing Motivated Sellers Blanchard & Rossetto Stately 0 room brick Ranch off Fbner will not sell kitchen, breakfaist nook, 4 bedrooms, and tonus Bedrooms plus extra bedroom, 1-1/2 bath This elegant 7 Rm. CONTEMPORARY on Volpi Rd. in Manchester Cape. 4 bedrooms, New Listing for the warm weather? This terrific 6 room full Street Now kitchen, new roof, furnace. A 3 ANNOUNCEMEN'TS Call room. Watch out J.R.I There’s morel Real Estate, 646-2482. dining room, family room, spacious Oversized Cape on 3/4 acre. 3 bedrooms unfinished room on 2nd Colonials. Attached dormered CAPE COD on Green Hill St. in Manchester Bolton will make all your dreams come true! 3 Bdrms beauaful in-ground pool and much more. F comes complete with above-ground pooL delightful 2.5 baths, fully applianced kitchen, c-entral vac, Fplce,' yard. Asking $139,000. Call Ron i lBMg{nesCOMPANY 6 4 3 - 2 6 9 2 HOUSE OF LLOYD- Bedrooms, 2-/12 baths, Colonial with newer car­ complain of discrimi­ ticut General Statutes. Notice of these decisions has been filed I I MacLean, Pupil and Anne Miller Real with the Town Clerk. Decor & More is hiring family room, country peting and remodeled Estate, 647-8000. nation call: 220 HARTFORD TPJCE. • VERNON 243 MAIN STREET • MANCHESTER .^ /R o b e r t D. Murdock, Realtor Staff Support Services, supervisors to hire and kilchen. Walk-out from 071-14UU _____ 643-1591 78 Ripley Hill Rd, kilchen! $189,900. Call HUD toll-free at: Edward Coltman, Secretary train demonstrators. Linda Brown. RE/MAX rec room to patb and ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS Coventry, CT 06238, Weekly pay checks. pool. 3 Zone heat. 1-800-424-8590 003-04 742-8913. East of the River, 647- Free trips (Hawaii). 1419. Asking, $225,000. Free training. Free F Strano Real Estate, 11 HELP WANTED $300 kit. Call Georgia. 647-7653. 871-9273. NEW-To the market. 3 CLERICAL-Flexible hours. bedroom on dead end Bridge SECRETARIAL ASSIS- street. Charming and 30 Hours a week. BRICK RANCH-2 Car at­ TANT-Needed for office immaculate. Asking, Answer phones, typing, tached garage, etc. 645-1180.______duties. Includes $134,900. RE/MAX If not knowledgeable about the sur­ COLONIAL MANOR VERNON -V -. . .,;, ., , NEW LISTlNr* fireplace, living room, Saturdays. Call Tony. East of the River, 647- NORTH 4- 3-91 Variation MANCHESTER $96,500 extra large kitchen, 3 rounding play. East would switch to 6 room plus Raised Ranch. Cathedral ceilinged living ktehen CLERICAL-Sales clas­ 645-6470. 1419. ♦ A 9 CHFA/FHA approv^ two bedroom Townhouse, end unit Fully ap­ bedrooms, 2 baths. Lot the seven of spades. But that gives de­ Great two bedroom starter or retirement home with a front porch «h ssparate lamfc ,ootn aroa. unique sun roor?nm hot Sb S sified 100’s of jobs-19 F Y J 10 9 7 plianced kitchen with oak cabinets, sliders to private patio. TEACHERS-Telephone 90 X 156. $180,000. on a theme clarer a chance. He plays low from and featuring a spacious kitchen with pantry and built-in comer categories 1 900-226- ♦ J 10 6 5 classified 100’s of jobs- SPACIOUSNESS-And hand and West has to put up the king. cupboard. Lots of potential. 2645 $3/Min 24 Hrs. Marion E. Robertson, ♦ K Q.I By Phillip Alder 19 categories 1-900- value. Bolton, Realtor. 643-5953. The jack of spades is safe from attack, 226-264^5 $3/Min 24 and three no-trump will be made. CLERICAL-Telephone $231,900. Great family WEST EAST Hrs. Yesterday we looked at the basic TT classified lOO's Of jobs- oriented Colonial on GREAT-Value large yard ♦ K 4 .3 ♦ Q 10 8 7 2 Now look what happens if East Y S 4 2 surrounding play. A defender holding 19 categories 1-900- TELEPHONE-Sales. Part quiet cul-de-sac with surrounds this 5 room, ▼ 8 6 3 switches to the 10 of spades. Declarer ♦ K 7 3 K-J-9 of hearts and seeing the 10-8-7 in 226-2645 $3/Min 24 time out of your home. 2600 sq u a re feet of 2 bedroom ranch. 1-Car ♦ 4 2 will probably win with dummy’s ace ♦ 9 8 7 4 ♦ A 10 5 the dummy on his right, led the jack. Hrs. Earn up to $10 plus per living space including attached garage, stone and try the diamond finesse, but it hour. 528-0358. 1st floor family room fireplace, dining room. This collected three tricks when de­ loses and the defenders run the spade DAYWAITRESS/WAITER SOllTII clarer held Q-5-4 and his partner A-6- •...... plus lower lever rec Just a short walk to ♦ J 6 5 suit for two down. NEEDED-Ask for Bob room. Huge deck over­ private beach 3-2, Note that the defender must lead Declarer does better to duck the GOOD SIZED COLONIAL at Andover Pizza. 742- NEVER PLACED a want ▼ A K Q MANCHESTER $129,900 SMCtOUS AND VALUE ' .-.„MI„| ------^ looks wooded, fenced Coventry, $119,90o’. the jack, not the king or nine, to guar­ first spade and win the second, be­ 3663. ad? There’s nothing to If ♦ A Q 9 8 Completely fenced yard and a NEW deck enhance tiie e x t ^ BOLTON $231,900 MANCHESTER roar yard. Lots of extras antee collecting three tricks. Today's ... lust dial 643-2711 Marcia McCarthy ♦ 6 3 2 cause it puts pressure on West. But while original oak woodwork and a large kitchen with pantry are Great family oriented Colomal on quiet cul4e-sac with 2600 sq. ft buyer. Lovely 6 room Ranch for easy living! in this 5 year old home. P h ilip s Real Estate', deal is a variation on this theme. West should know that East has the of living space induding 1st floor family room plus lower level rec Vulnerable: East-West features of tiie interior of this channing older home. Plus walk-up Mam floor cathedral ceilinged family room, deluxe kitchen forrral D.W. Fisn Real Estate, 742-1450. West leads the nine of clubs, and queen of spades. When making a sur­ room. Huge deck overiooks wooded, fenced rear yard. Lots of ex­ Dealer: South attic for possible expansion. lO PART TIME HELP 643-1591 or 871-1400. East wins with the ace. Seeing no fu­ tras in this five year old home. $259,000"’ * ^ 2 baths, and much more 10 PART TIME HELP rounding play. East guarantees hold­ WANTED WANTED South West North East ture in that suit, East looks around for ing a higher, non-touching honor. So, 1 NT Pass 2 ♦ Pass something better. Naturally his eyes on the second round of spades. West alight on spades, a logical choice since SPARKLING-Interior. NOW'S THE 2 ♦ Pas.s 3 NT All pass must unblock his king. Once more de­ Light, bright and South's two-diamond response to Stay- clarer will be forced to take the dia­ spacious. 3 Bedrooms. Opening lead: ♦ 9 man means he holds no more than mond finesse for his contract, and he is NEW HOMES CONSTRUCTION NEWS Built in 1987. Asking three spades. doomed to defeat. n $192,000. RE/MAX 1 East of the River, 647- COMPANY 1419. •••••••• CORRESPONDENT A strograph MALLARD VIEW NEW RANCH THE-Country lifelll BROOKSIDE ESTATES KATHLEEN McQUEENEY AND COLONUtL HOMESI We currently have an opening $149,900. Newer 7-8 success today lies in your ability to ad­ It you request that something be done a OXFORD ESTATES ERA Blanchard 8 Rostatto It pleased to Change your lifestyle to 1 Hr living. 2 BR TIME TO vance your own interests, as well as the MANCHESTER room bi-level on over 1/ certain way, compliance is likely. SOUTH WINDSOR announce that Kr.thy has joined their 2 bath Ranches. Alto 3 BR ii/s bath interests of people with whom you are winning team. She h a t worked locafly for a news correspondent to 2 acre with cathedral CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Some­ Colonials. An. garage. From $143,900. % u r directly involved. Parity is the magic for Manchester Community College and ceiling with sky light, thing that you've been trying to lie down North Main Street to Union Street to ingredient. United Technologiea os a technical Rosseno Drive. cover Coventry events. This is a sliders out to patio, 3 ‘B ir t h d a y looks like it will be finalized to your sat­ B im CANCER (June 21-July 22) Try not to writer . She Is a long time resident o( ■Vte’re Setting H o u setr bedrooms, 2-car isfaction with relative ease today. Tim­ Manchester. Call Kathy for your buying limit your career objectives today, be­ ing makes all the difterence. or selling needs. part-time position which in­ garage under. Lovely tireplaced family room. April 4, 1991 cause. even it you fall short, you can still AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Your make substantial strides. Laundry room tool Eager buyers read | words carry considerable worth today, cludes covering town govern­ There could be a dpfinile market in the LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your natural Anne Miller. Real and matters that you discuss with the Classified | year ahead tor special knovvieqge or ex­ ability to organize is your greatest asset friends will not be readily forgotten. 9 Estate, 647-8000. ment meetings and feature writ­ columns | pertise you've acquired through experi­ today. You'M handle something relative­ Fortunately, you'll have a knack lor say­ ence. Don't sell yourself short when it ly small or quite large with equal ing the right things. a p lo m b Exciting new 9 room Contemporary. Deluxe balcony type foyer with ing. every day! ■ comes to what you have to offer. PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) Occasion­ A Colonial home with a contemporary flair. 4 large bedrooms, VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) An important ARIES (March 21-April 19) \Alisdom ally, It doesn't hurt to toot our own horn. cathedral ceiling. Sunny family room with floor to ceiling fireplace change might transpire today, and al­ first floor family room, large living room, separate office room, 2 ONE O F THE you may acquire today through a per­ This is a good day to call to your superi­ V th o u g h It could be more subtle than ob­ Oversized dining room with built-in china cabinet Master bedroom 1/2 baths, central air. Asking $320,000. YOUR MONEY Please apply In writing to: sonal experience could prove to be of or's attention the fine job you've been NEW USTINQ vious, it may bring you substantial suite with Jacuzzi whirlpool; and much more! $330,000. COULDNT BUY MORE NICEST THINGS immense value. After you've studied doing In turn, your boss may even 4 BR anached Cape on Lockwood SL Hava a private morning dip. knmac 4 benefits later and assimilated its worth, you'll find a agree it's worth additional Large backyard, new rto l and oil burner. BR, 2 BA home with 2 eompl. kit., U . kit ABOUT WANT LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) You have a perfect lor enter, or In-law. IG pool ac­ way to use it in your affairs. Trying to remuneration. Buyer Warranty. A lot of room at an M anchester Herald marvelous faculty today tor letting amazing price. $110,000. cent lighting and canoplad patio Lo­ patch up a broken romance? The Astro- ‘ ADSISTHEIR those you're involved with think your cated on cuTde-tac. $igo's. Graph Matchmaker can help you under­ bright ideas are actually their creations. For your personal horoscope, P.O. Box 591 LOW COST. stand what to do to make the relation­ You shouldn't have any trouble making REALTY CO., INC. 1st In Service ship work Mall $2 to Matchmaker, c/o lovescope, lucky numbers ANOTHER IS THEIR allies. ROBERT D. MURDOCK, Realtor MANCHESTER I this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleve­ and future forecast, call Manchester, CT 06040 SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Now. 22) Financial 9 land. OH 44101-3428. QUICK ACTION. conditions look encouraging lor you at Astro*Tone (95$ each minute; Blanchard/Rossetto TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Your great­ 643-9551 OR 643-2692 this time. A sudden windfall might be • OWAi ilOWiH Or call 643-2711 TRY A WANT AD HERALD i est benefits today could come from a Touch-Tone phones only). generated by an extraordinary FREE joint venture, one where another has classified ads | development. Dial 1-900-963-3000 and 99 E. CENTER STREET • MANCHESTER, CT REAL ESTATE fi646-2482 MARKET ANALYSIS after 12:00 noofT. TODAYI initiated the endeavor and found a way SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You for you to play a supporting role. enter your access code ^ phone 643-2711 have a command(ng aura today that will J GEMINI (May 21-June 20) The key to number, which is *|84 elicit respect without offending others. 1 16—MANCHESTER HERALD, Wednesday, April 3, 1991

KIT 'N' CARLYLE by Larry Wright 8 8 TAG SALES 91 CARS FOR SALE ANTIQUE SHOW-2ND ANoTHgP- C tl/eT H A T A t i w MAV^^ yoOP.Bo^^> fBaiirliffilrr l^lrralft " Congregational Church, Schaller FEEL- IT W/^ Pt NOT To \\\^ E ^ SpeclQ ns§>D “Hopefully our power play is a lot ior dlizen discounts. Yards, Gutters, Etc. better this year,” Johnston said. The Whalers are depending on ciplined and not making mistakes 643-0304 Whalers coach Rick Ley, who players such as Kevin Dineen and that are going to cost us,” he said. Albert Zuccaro LIONEL COTE THq AssociAtod Prw88 Inexpensive Rates plans to use hard hitting to take the Rob Brown, both in scoring slumps, Game of the series is scheduled Waterproofing ROOFING & SIDING TUMBLING DOWN — Hartford’s Pat Verbeek (16) slams Boston’s Ron Hoover into the Let A SpecUllit 'Annual Percentage Rate Bruins out of their game, said it had to generate some offense. for Friday night in Boston. Games 3 Do It! ■30 Years Experience boards in their game Sunday at Boston Garden. The Whalers and Bruins begin their Stanley But Ley also is worried about the and 4 in the best-of-7 series are set 646-3361 ■Fully Insured 643-5133 O better be. Cup best-of-seven series tonight at Boston Garden. “We’ve got to kill penalties and scoring of the first line of John Cul­ for Hartford on Sunday and Thesday TREE SERVICE/ ■License # 506737 len, Pat Verbeek and Mark Hunter. nights. PRUNING 646-9564 ELDER CARE CAR CARE HAWKES TREE SERVICE NURSE'S-AIDE RICK BURNETT AUTO RNISH FADING? Thoughts Clemens appeal Bucket, truck & chipper. Years of experience Stump removal. Free ROOFING & SIDING Compound and wax wont 20 Care for Elderly estimates. Special 25 Years Experience cut it? Let me muster up that IN STOCK Aplenty consideration tor elderly and Excellent references Fully Insured luster! $29.95 at your home. goes to Vincent handicapped Call Call for free estimates Y ear L o a n s Including 647-7553 Please call Tom 2 Doors, 4 Doors, ______7 4 2 -6 4 0 2 646-6598 742-8902 and leave a message L e n A u s te r By RONALD BLUM Wagons The Associated Press New 1991 Cavaliers / & Z-24S NEW YORK — Roger Clemens was found guilty 31 ROOMS FOR RENT 61 MISC. SERVICES 6 1 MISC. SERVICES again by American League president Bobby Brown, so 82 RECREATIONAL now the two-time Cy Young Award winner takes his case LARGE-Counfry,private ______EQUIP.______Reds remain bath/entrance,fire­ FULLY to commissioner Fay Vincent. place.Non-smoking EXERCISE-Machine, In a three-page decision issued Tbesday, Brown male preferred. No ■ $75 OFF WITH THIS COUPON ■ rowing typo. Builds ^E Q U IP P E D upheld Clemens’ five-game suspension and $10,000 fine, pets.742-5861, ■ T.R. STANLEY 203-642-4448 ■ arms, back chest. $200 A u to m a tic , team to beat saying, “There is not a special set of rules or regulations value, selling for $50. for superstars or award winners.” 646-6794. Air Conditioning, MANCHESTER-Free ! Greater Connecticut ® Randy Hendricks, Clemens’ agent, said Brown’s week with security F AM/FM Stereo $100 I PA VEX ■ C assette, decision would be appealed to Vincent. The penalties, deposit. Clean, quiet in NL West which Brown originally imposed on Nov. 20, will be furnished. 646-8337. 8 7 MISC. FOR SALE Power Steering, I . Asphalt Services | stayed until Vincent renders a decision, AL spokes­ D e fo g g e r, opens its 1991 season on Mon­ woman Phyllis Mehrige said. J Commercial Residential I ANTIQUE-Childs school M u c h M ore. day and it could be an interesting season, indeed. The T o Cleon coffee stains desk, wrought iron legs. Since a hearing before Vincent is unlikely to be fro m Chino o r plastic, rub $45. Call 649-7375. # 5 4 8 0 mercenaries, Darryl Strawberry among many, have lined stain w ith bokino soda. ■ ALL WORK GUARANTEED ■ scheduled this week, Clemens is still likely to start open­ F extr a. their pockets with bundles of money and the owners — ■ Licensed Contractor Free Estimates B as always — are crying poverty. ing day at Toronto on Monday. One of these days, however, the well is going to run The incident occured in Game 4 of the playoffs, when 3 2 APARTMENTS FOR Ploclng on od In Clossifled Is easy. Just coll 643-27)1. Offer Ends April 7 dry and baseball will be deep trouble. The pockets are Clemens was ejected by umpire Terry Cooney, who said ______RENT______the pitcher uttered profanities at him. Clemens charged 32 APARTMENTS FOR 32 APARTMENTS FOR lined only so deep. How else do you explain the release RENT______Cooney and umpire Jim Evans after the ejection. BOLTON-2 Bedroom ______RENT ______E N D R O L L S of Bo Jackson by the Kansas City Royals. Even if there is just a glimmer of hope the two-sport star will play “This entire episode was unfortunate and deplorable,” apartment. Appliances MANCHESrER-2 Family. 27 1/2'w idth-*1.00 Brown wrote. “It detracted from the entire League included. $600 plus Newly updated. 2 MANSFIELD/WIL- again, don’t you think the Kansas City braintrust would utilities. 643-0926. LINGTON LINE-F^oute 13'width-50<= CARTER Championship Series and caused an inordinate delay Bedroom in quiet want to assure his services. 44. 2 Bedroom Aluminum Sheets 4/*5.00 during Game Four. Clemens unquestionably made physi­ FURNISHED-3 Room neighborhood. Close to Newsprint end rolls con bo picked But Ae economic conditions forced Kansas City into apartment. Adults up at the Mcnchester Herald cal contact of a significant degree with umpire Evans, ■ in n/%n nn a nn n Th« Assoclatod Pr»«« apartment, 2nd floor. town center and ONLY before 11 a m . Monda/ taking its action. And it’s economics in some cases that’s UP FOR GRABS — Bostons Robert Parish attempts to grab a loose ball between New Jer­ Heat. Private busline. $595/Month preferred. Country through Thursdo/. 1 229 Main Street, Manchester delayed leaving the premises and threatened umpire privacy. No dogs. $460/ behind the release of some high-priced retread veteran in sey’s Sam Bowie, left, and Chris Morris in their game Tuesday night at the Meadowlands. The entrances. Adults. No plus Utilities. Dale. 529- Exit 3 off 1-384 ■ 646-6464 favor of a rookie, making the major league minimum Cooney with physical harm. The league simply cannot pets. Security. 8276. Month. 1-1/2 months ignore offenses of this nature.” Celtics beat the Nets, 94-77. References. 643-4860. security. 742-0569. 91 CARS FOR SALE Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 9-8; Fri. 9-6; Sat. 9-5 $100,000 — wouldn’t you like thaL too — who can do the job equally as well. Clemens and the Major League Baseball Players As­ 2pm to 7pm. MANCHESTER-Duplex, 3 sociation argued that Cooney ejected him from the game Anyway, the Cincinnati Reds are defending World MANCHESTER-2 bedrooms, carpeted, J5 STORE & OFFICE without cause. Cooney claimed Clemens uttered appliances. $690 Series champs, even if Dave Stewart of the Oakland A’s Bedroom, private ______SPACE______profanities before the ejection. Clemens attempted to Celtics ready for playoffs basement, parking, monthly. Heat not refuses to acknowledge that fact. While Cincinnati was large yard, stove. On included. Security and universally recognized as one of the most talented clubs prove with video and audio tapes that all profanities MANCHESTER-Store/ came after the ejection. busline. $595 Monthly. references required. No Commercial use. Main around a year ago, few are giving the Redlegs a ghost of 649-2871. pets. 643-7635. St. near Center St. 646- a chance of repeating. “In this particular case, what Clemens did to prompt MANCHESTER-2. 3, and 2426. Weekdays. 9-5. cAl/FS YOU CAyn!} There are those who arc putting the Los Angeles his ejection had little bearing on the discipline levied,” if you ask vanquished Nets Brown wrote. “His actions after being ejected were 6 Room apartments. MANCHESTER-2 SOUTH WINDSOR- Dodgers in the driver’s seat in the NL West. They point Security. 646-2426. Bedroom, clean. $650 a responsible for his suspension and fine. The player Office, 300 square feet. to the addition of Strawberry, Brett Butler, Bob Ojeda By TOM CANAVAN and 11 rebounds. “We have guys finished with 17 points. Weekdays, 9am-5pm. month plus utilities. No lease. $150/Month. BUICK remains accountable for his actions on the field at all and Kevin Gross as the reasons for optimistic in Tinsel­ The Associated Press who are starting to come back from “We’re not playing with playoff MANCHESTER-Like new Second floor. Pet 521-1744 or 644-0165. town. time, and the fact that he felt his ejection was not war­ allowed. 649-7998. 1991 BUICK injuries, but wc have to keep playing intensity,” said Reggie Lewis, who 3 bedroom duplex, 1991 BUICK 1990 BUICK 1990 BUICK ranted does not absolve him of his subsequent behavior.” EAST RUTHERFORD, N J. — large yard. Applianced, 1991 BUICK Strawberry can be an asset, but the track record says hard and getting belter. The playoffs led Boston with 22 points. “We had MANCHESTER-2 SKYLARK SED somewhere along the line he is going to be a debit. If Clemens could not immediately be contacted. Larry Bird may not think the Boston are altogether different. You have to carpeted. No pets. Bedroom. Security, 5 9 ELECTRICAL REGAL SEDAN REATTA CNVT. CENTURY SED LESABRt Hendricks, speaking from his Houston office, maintained it for a while tonight, but then we Lease, security. $785/ references. No pets. Manager Tommy Lasorda can keep the born-again Celtics are ready for the NBA play with intensity for 48 minutes. relaxed.” Month. 646-3938. ROMEX-Type NM 250', Snawberry in line for entire year...maybe. that Brown’s decision was in error and said the case playoffs, but don’t tell that to the You can’t turn it off and on.” Call after 4pm, 643- would be taken to Vincent. 1482. 14/2, 14/3, 12/2. $15, We’ll stay with Cincinnati followed by: 2) San New Jersey Nets. That’s what the Celtics did Wlren Boston relaxed, the Nets 1 MANCHESTER-6-1/2 $20, $28. 649-6201. Francsico, 3) Los Angeles, 4) San Diego, 5) Atlanta and “We’re not surprised, given the history of these mat­ The Celtics limited New Jersey to against New Jersey. They had an Room Duplex.Private MANCHESTER-2 F ters, that the president woiild uphold his previous made one last run, closing to within yard/parking.Near Bedroom, garage, yard, 6) Houston. just 32 percent shooting from the average opening quarter in taking a Auto, A/C, Rear Defogger, 4Dr., Auto, A /C , Cruise, D e­ decision,” Hendricks said. “We clearly think that we 80-71 on a tip-in by Sam Bowie 384.$750/Montn.Secur­ appliances. Near lay Wipers, PDL VVire W heel Company Vehicle, Auto, A/C, Cruise, Delay, TIIL The NL East belonged to Pittsburgh in 1990. ’91? For­ field and held it to its lowest point 26-22 lead and then slipped early in with 5:36 to go. New Jersey had 72 ANTIQUES AND Tilt, PS, PB, O nly $11,478, Cassette Rear Defroster, showed that umpire Cooney was the provocateur, not ity Deposit.649-6300. hospital. 872-0700. CMAC First Time Buyer - Covers, Stock #1854. Only Loaded, Auto, A/C, V6, Cruise, Cas­ get it. The Buccos inner turmoil is going to take a toll total of the season in posting a 94-77 the second as the Nets scored the chances to cut the marcin, but COLLECTIBLES Power Locks. Only 13,580 sette, Wire Wheel Covers Roger Clemens. S600 Allowance To Quali­ $15,597 CMAC First Time Stock #1475, CMAC First Time Buyer al­ like you wouldn’t ever imagine. Sid Bream is gone. RJ. decision over the Nets T\iesday first eight points to grab a 30-26 ad­ didn’t. fied Customer, Use Your Buyer -$600 Allowance to Was $36,641 and much more - $tock “We believe that our evidence from various videotapes 5 0 TAILOR & 5 0 TAILOR & 21 PIECE-Gold glaze tea lowance to qualified custom­ #1748 Reynolds is gone. Wally Backman is gone. Bobby Bonil­ night. vantage with 9:24 to play before in­ Trade As Down Payment. qualified customer. Use your A o W ONLY ers of $600.00 $tock #1433 was clear and convincing to any reasonable man to SEAMSTRESS SEAMSTRESS set dessert dishes, Subject to availability. trade as down payment. One Left la is going. And Barry Bonds wishes he was gone. The win was the Celtics’ third termission. ‘Turnovers killed us,” Nets coach ^ teapot. $100. 649-8956. NOW ONLY N O W ONLY Is this anyway to repeat? uphold Roger’s version and contradict the umpires’ straight and raised their record to The next 17 minutes belonged to Bill Fitch said. “What we thought reports.” The Chicago Cubs allegedly helped themselves by 53-20, their best mark since the Boston as it put together spurts of was bad shooting went from bad to Brown viewed and listened to the tapes during hear­ * 1 4 , 9 9 7 * signing George Bell, but he, loo, can wear out his wel­ 1986-87 campaign. 16-2 and later 15-2 to open 61-42 terrible.” Modestino Famigletti, Master Tailor' *10,878* * 1 2 , 9 8 0 * *16, ings in New York in February and Sarasota, Fla., in 74 FURNITURE come in a hurry, too. The Wrigley Field tenants were be “There are three weeks to the edge early in the third quarter. The , has joined March. Clemens’ lawyers argured that the umpires sub­ Lewis then scored six straight boosted by the return of former Cy Young Award winner playoffs and we still have a ways to lead would eventually reach 71-50 9 KITCHEN-Set, formica QUALITY USED CARS GUARANTEED TO SATISFY Celtics points in an 8-1 spurt to ice The V. Pensavalle Tailor Shop YOUR EVERY NEED! mitted false reports and lied to cover up their actions. go,” said Bird, who had 16 proints top, 4 chairs. Excellent 1982 Datsun 200 SX...... Rick Sutcliffe. But he was placed on the 15-day disabled on a layup by Brian Shaw, who the game. Master Tailor ...... $2,495 NEARLY NEW SPECIAL OF THE WEEK 1987 Buick Skylark...... condition, $75.00. 1982 Chevrolet Camaro...... list Monday. And Ryne Sandberg is brooding about his ' 521 East Middle Turnpike, Manchester, CT ^ Please call 649-4152...... $2,895 1988 Olds Ciera Brougham Cpe... conuaci. 646-3731 1983 Buick Electra Loaded 45K...... $4,850 1990 BUICK SKYLARK SEDAN ... $8,.iao 1988 Pontiac Bonneville...... The Mels added by subu-acting Darryl. And they still W e have nevv hours for your convenience 1986 Ford Bronco 4X4...... $8,495 Duke brings home NCAA championship trophy ...... $10,980 SOFA-6' Red plaid, $55. 2 1989 Chevy Celebrity...... >8,-.90 have some pitching. But losing Sid Fernandez, and never Monday 7am to 5pm Mahogany end tables 1986 Chevy Carnaro...... ’...... ■....$4,995 1989 Buick Skyhawk Cpe...... Tuesday-Friday 7am to 6pm 1986 Volkswagen Jetta GL...... -P' r;ii 'C /,::v; knowing when Frank Viola may blow out his arm leaves By F. ALAN BOYCE guys arc incredible.” $10 each. 643-1634 ...... $6,380 1989 Jeep Wrangler 4X4...... ing back tears while confronting the Duke faithful. Saturday 7am to 3pm 1987 Olds Delta 88 Brougham...... room for debate. And they still aren’t anything to right The Associated Press Buckley, during the team’s arrival at Raleigh-Durham ...... $7,280 1989 Jeep Cherokee 4x4...... “Excuse me, but I can’t stop smiling,” he told the Custom toilofing for men and women. 1987 Pontiac 6000 Sedan 31K...... 1 1 4 ,9 8 0 home about, defensively. ^ International Airport, said the victory over Kansas meant ...... $6,495 Automalx:, Air, Fuel Injectkxi, 1989 Buick Regal Coupe...... crowd. “It feels damn good, doesn’t it?” We will follow your favorite pattern. 1987 Buick Park Avenue Loaded..... DURHAM, N.C. — When Duke returned from the a lot to everyone, including the fans. 80 FARM SUPPLIES «t ...... $9,980 Low Miles, Many Extras 1989 Honda Accord LXI Loaded,. We’ll go with the overachieving Montreal Expos in the Fans roared their approval. 1988 Pontiac Firebird Must be seen'.... 5 /9 8 0 NL East. Manager Buck Rodgers has always been able to Final Four this time, there were no unspoken apologies “I know that they’ve been dealing with it the same as Our many services inciude: ______EQUIP.______and no held-back tears. But there was a trophy. Krzyzewski said the fans deserved a lot of credit for * Remodeling and Alterations get more from his club than anyone else. This year wc have,” he said. “They may have wanted this win as Duke’s streak of home victories. * Suede, Leather and Fur Alterations FOR SALE-Bale hay, Seniors Greg Koubek and Clay Buckley held it aloft much as we did.” •PRICES INCLUDE FACTOHY REBATES' shouldn’t be any different. Marquis Grissom and Delino 9 “As happy as wc arc about winning, this makes it * Professional Dry Cleaning mulch, straw. Also blue CARDINAL BUICK, INC. DcShiclds, two outstanding rookies a year ago, may be so 10,(X)0 fans in Cameron Indoor Stadium could see a And Koubek said it meant a lot to coach Mike * Custom Tailoring seal feeds. Open 7 4 9% A P fl f in a n c in g IS AVAILABLE prize they’d chased through nine Final Four appearances complete, sharing it with our sixth man,” he said. IN LIEU OF FACTORY REBATE' “A TOUCH ABOVE FIRST CLASS” ready to lead the Expos to the promised land. Krzyzewski, who engineered four suaight Final Four ap­ * Shirts Laundered days. Lyndale Farm, and 53 years. pearances. Krzyzewski reminisced about the contributions of each ______* Custom Service Weaving Rte 44, Bolton. 643- DELIVERY MUST BE ON OR BEFORE 4-7 81 Adams Street, Manchester c>io >11--, The NL East will be Montreal followed by 2) Chicago. member of the team, how guard brought “We did it!” Koubek shouted at Duke’s homecoming “No one deserves it more than Coach K,” he said. 5301. (Open Eves. Monday thru Thursday)______O ^ y - 4 5 7 1 them back from a five-point deficit against UNLV; how celebration TUesday. “Who believed we would win the The trophy all but eliminated the bitlcrsweei nature of Please sec PICKS, page 18 tournament? We believed it. And you believed it. You earlier homecomings, where Kr/yzewski recalled fight- Please see DUKE, page 18 1 18—MANCHESTER HERALD, Wednesday, April 3, 1991

^?r- HigK School Preview MANCHESTER HERALD, Wednesday, April 3,1991__19 nf.. Bolton set In B rie f. Despite Robinson, Lakers win A MHS tennis ii9 a ci to step in By The Associated Press 44 points, including the go-ahead basket on an alley-oop slam dunk with 1:12 The Los Angeles Lakers, caught in the may be facing By DAVE O’HARA remaining, as Chicago overcame a 100-97 middle of a three-team Pacific Division The Associated Press Quality Inn on Rte 83 The starting area near the deficit with 2:51 left. Jordan came back race, are making an impression on the with two free throws 12 seconds later, A close Midwest Division battle. uphill fight WINTER HAVEN, Fla. — If and when Roger then took a perfect pass from Scottie Pip- P to o i s M e The San Antonio Spurs, despite David pen for the go-ahead dunk. Clemens has to serve ailve-game suspension, left-hander Robinson’s 36 points and career-high 23 Tom Bolton is ready to fill any hole in the Boston Red Awards will be given the first three finishers in each of Scott Skiles, who scored 25 points, rebounds, couldn’t overcome Magic gave Orlando leads of 95-92 and 98-95 By JIM TIERNEY Sox’ starting rotation. the 12 open canoe and one kayak class " “ Johnson’s 30 points, 12 rebounds and 10 Manchester Herald Bolton, who became a 10-game wiimer after being with 3-pointers, the last one with 3:43 64?737l ' ‘‘’" information, call John Scoville at assists Tbesday night as the Lakers won / recalled from the minors last June, turned in another im­ remaining. 122-115 at Hemisfair Arena Bucks 121, 76ers 104: Fred Roberts MANCHESTER — It may be an uphill struggle for pressive performance Tbesday n i^ t as the Red Sox im­ The Lakers remained 2>/2 games be­ scored a career-high 32 points as Mil­ the Manchester High boys’ tennis team this season, con­ proved their record to 19-9 with a 5-3 victory over the DePriest, Pikielt slated to play hind Portland and H/Z ahead of Phoenix Cinciimati Reds before 6,506 fans in Plant City. waukee handed Philadelphia its worst sidering it lost its top three singles players and top in the Pacific Division. San Antonio, after home defeat of the season. doubles team from last year’s 8-8 squad. Bolton allowed just two singles and one run in five in­ nings as the Red Sox hit the 19-victory mark in spring Roberts connected on 14 of 18 shots as “As the season progresses, we’ll find out how good we the Bucks defeated the 76crs at home for are,” Indian coach Dave Maloney said. training for the first time in memory. Their previous best, NBA Roundup according to club records, was 18-8 in 1974. the first time since Dec. 13, 1988. Jack A group of six is vying for the top four singles slots. f " — “I’m ready for the start of the season and anything Sikma had i4 rebounds for Milwaukee, Seniors Jim Curry, Todd Erickson and Jorg Bauer (an ex­ they want me to do,” said Bolton, a disappointment in its first loss in 11 home games, is now a which ouircboundcd Philadelphia 52-39 change student from Germany), juniors Brian Blount and thrre major league trials before he came through to help game ahead of Houston and Utah in the and led by as many as 30 points in the Jeff Hille, and impressive freshman Kris Lindstrom com­ the Red Sox win the AL East title in 1990. Midwest. second half. prise that group. ^ e r e will be an autograph session at halftime. “Some people think that I should be upset over not “We played a division leader and came The 76crs, who played without Charles The doubles teams will be made up from seniors ® ^ available in town at Farr’s. Nassiff Camera out with a win,” Johnson said. "We ex­ Barkley because of a sprained ligament in being in the starting rotation, but I have a good memory,” Shop, the Pro taage at Buckland Mall. Sunnyside Res- Stuart Sherrell, Kevin Gueretle, Jason Dieterle, Scot Bolton, nearly 30, said. “Just a year ago I was beginning ecuted very well on the offen.sive end- lus left knee, were led by rookie Jayson Carlson and Joey Stephenson. f ' ^ ‘ivance tickets are $7 for aduUs Every possession was important to us." Williams season-high 17 points. another year in the minors. md W nnder 14. Tickets at the door are $8 “Especially due to the recent poor weather, it’s really “I’ve been more relaxed this spring than ever. I felt I Against the Lakers, the Spurs appeared Pistons 83. Hornets 78: Joe Diimars hard to say at this point how we’ll fare this spring,” had earned a job with this club, so it didn’t bother me at to miss Raul Pressey, who sat out with a had 24 points and Mark Aguirre scored Maloney added. all competing for the fifth spot in the starting rotation. UConn football names captains strained right calf. 17 of his 23 m the second half as Detroit “We like to use F^ul on Magic because TTie Indians open their season Thursday at home There’s no need for a fifth starter early in the season, so won at Charlotte for its fourth consecu­ STORRS — Defensive tackle Robert Belcuore, wide of his size,” Robinson said. "We had to tive victory. against Xavier of Middletown. I’ll be in the bullpen. That doesn’t bother me.” receiver M ^k Didio, linebacker Doug Harkins and of- Bolton credits catcher Tony Pena and new confidence use a smaller man on him and he took ad­ The Pi.stons are 19-1 this season when Schedule: April 4 Xavier H, 5 Bristol Eastern H, 8 rensive tackle L ^don Johnson have been named cap­ vantage of it.” for his maturing into a major league pitcher. holding the opposition under 90 points. Southington A, 10 Newington H, 12 Wethersfield A 22 tains of the 1991 University of Connecticut footb^l “They got great peneftation and they Windsor A, 26 Conard A. Flanagan among a group ‘Tony has shown confidence in me by calling for a team. Bullets 101, Cavaliers 82: At han­ breaking pitch even when I get behind the hitters and, executed down the stretch." Spurs coach dover, Md.. Washington held Cleveland May 1 Windham A, 3 South Windsor H, 6 Fermi H 8 UConn began its spring sessions on Monday and will Larry Brown said. “David kept us in the without a basket for the first 7:50 of the Rockville A, 10 Enfield A, 13 Windham H, 15 Hartford naturally. I’ve gained a lot of confidence by proving I conclude drills with its annual Blue-White scrimmage on can get hitters out,” he said. game, but nobody helped him on the fourth quarter while taking control with a Public A, 17 East Hartford H, East Catholic H 12:30 p.m. at Memorial Stadium boards. We needed to stop Mdgiu