Sears — This One for a $100,000 First Prize

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Sears — This One for a $100,000 First Prize •T ^ PAGE TWENTY - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. Manchester. Conn., Tues., Sept. 9,1975 CCLU watching MANCHESTER HOSPITAL NOTES The weather meditation in schools Sunny, highs around 70, clear tonight, low ABOUT TOWN Discharged Saturday:-'' Margaret Zagorski, East Wind­ St., Rockville; Read Hall, 50 dard, East Hartford; William in the mid 50s. Increasing cloudiness Discharged Friday: Louis Sanborn, 80 Davis Ave., Thursday, high in mid 70s. Mellow, 163 Benton St.; Margaret Gazdzicki, 172 Maple sor Hill; Susan Tatro, 14 Law- Pine St.; Barbara Hooker, East fcalb HARTFORD (UPI) - T^e ton Rd.; Jane Wright, 202 New Hartford; Diane Perleone, 189 Rockville; Alice Casey, Storrs. I Connecticut Civil Liberties Catherine Hudson, East Hart­ St.; Edgar Rldyard, RD 1, An­ dover; Francis FitzGerald, Bolton Rd., William Wilson, Irving St.; Edith Turkington, MANCHESTER, (SONN., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1975- VOL. XCIV, No. 290 Manchester—A City of Village Charm t w e n t y -e ig h t p a g e s - t w o s e c t io n s p r i c e : f if t e e n c e n t s The executive board of the Waramaug at New Preston, Union is watching to make sure ford; William Berry, 333 Also, TilUe Most, 426 W. Mid­ 239B N. Main St.; Raymond North River Rd., (Coventry. 36B St. James St.; Carl Manchester Junior Women’s Conn, on Wednesday. Buses will the line between church and Bidwell St.; Scott Richard, dle Tpke.; Alithia Jones, East Combs, East Hartford; . Also, Richard Warburton, Capitan, 79 Brooklyn St., Club will meet Wednesday at 8 leave the Senior Citizens Center state remains distinct during East Hartford; James Stafford, Jacqueline Monteiro, East East Hartford; Helen Roya, Rockville; Jane Small, 20 Oak Hartford; Jo-Anne Preuss, p.m. at the home of Mrs. Lloyd on Myrtle St. at 10 a.m. Those periods of silent meditation. Enfield; Nancy Schroll, East South Glastonbury; Stephen Hartford; Jeannette Violette,. Hartford; Esther Daley, 905 East Hartford; Karen Moore, "St., South Windsor; Brian Boutilier, 270 Autumn St. going should arrive at 9:30. DeBlois, 10 Partridge Lane, Bertrand, East Hartford; 428 Lake SL, Bolton; Thomas Foster St., South Windsor; 133E Hilliard St.; Paula Burke, Executive Director William 85 Waddell Rd.; Marsha Tolland. Shirley Richards, 183F E. Mid­ Olds said Monday a legal Freeburn, 47 Edgerton St.; Pamela Fries, 17N Garden Dr.; The Ladies Auxiliary of the Carolyn Morin, Broad Brook. Kaskela, Wales Rd., Andover; Discharged Sunday: Grace dle Tpke.; Patricia Assaf, En­ challenge of the law is exjMcted John Anderson, 31 Dougherty I News I VFW will meet tonight at 7:30. Also, Florence North, 73D Nancy 'Haggett, 427 Graham White, 21C Towers PI., field; Marie Gallo, East Hart­ State’s natural gas HARD HIT if teachers start adding a St. Officers will wear uniforms. Rd., South Windsor; Patricia Rockville; Ruth Annis, 34 ford; Brian Hall, 114 S. Adams LA PAZ (UPI) -- The recession religious connotation to the Also, John Downey, Old Charter Oak St:' Donald There will be a short luau Villeneuve, 78 Country Lane, Blomberg, 32 Jlichael Dr., Ver­ Bunce Dr.; Elsie Jackson, 193 St.; Doris Carpenter, 52 of the industrialized nations has voluntary meditation period. Colchester Rd., Hebron; Nancy Lakeside Dr., Andover; Sandra summary | meeting' following the business Vernon; Robert Dickson, 138 non; Pamela Robertson, 202 Summit St.; George Lewis, 12 plunged Bolivia, a landlocked Although the law does not go Layhue, 35 Main St., South Newberry, 33 Harvest Lane, meeting. nation that lives by the export of Windsor; Maia Magadini, 476 Wells St.; Leonard Belanger, Oak Grove St.; Nancy Qerke, Pearl St.; Cathy Moore, I into effect until Oct. 1, Olds 132 Laurel St., South Wihdsor. Ashford; Suzanne M ler, 59B Rocky Hill; Jefferey Wiggins, supply said adequate 64F Imperial Dr., Margaret minerals taken from its Andes said some districts already Gardner St.; Glenn Bartlett, 31 Preston Dr. Compiled from Wales, 91 Goodwin St.; Also, Arline Moore, 171 South Sycamore Lane; Bernard God­ Two bus loads of Manchester mountains, info an extreme have set up such periods. East Hartford. Untied Press International Senior Citizens will visit Lake ■crisis. HARTFORD (UPI) — State and federal Brooks said in the event of a serious The PUC invited repr^entativesepc^e from energy officials said today Connecticut shortage in Connecticut, consideration Connecticut’s gas companies, as well as I should have an adequate supply of natural should be given to providing gas to in­ state and federal officials, to put on record .V gas this winter despite nationwide shor­ dustry rather than to homes if serious un­ the prospects for natural gas supplies this State tages. employment is threatened. winter and the next five years. Connecticut energy chief Lynn Alan “Most people would prefer a job and its Expected to testify were the Connec­ Brooks told a State Public Utilities Com­ income than just a warm home,” Brooks ticut Natural Gas, ^uthern Connecticut HARTFORD — State Treasurer mission hearing that the foresightedness said. Gas and Pequot Gas companies and Henry E. Parker says President of the state’s natural gas distributors has He said that Connecticut supports long Northeast Utilities. A spokesman for Ford should bail out New York City assured sufficient supplies. range decontrol of the well-head price of Connecticut Natural Gas said its presi­ because its financial situation is Robert W. Mitchell, head of the New natural gas to bring it in line with other dent, Robert Willis, as well as represen­ hurUng government financing. .England office of the Federal Energy Ad­ energy sources. tatives from its suppliers, would speak. Connecticut, he says, had to pay ministration .in Boston, said he doesn't “We really feel we have an obligation to higher interest last week on a $100 expect Connecticut or New England to The state also supports immediate million bond issue because of New testing to determine gas deposits on the get to all the gas companies and get on the face a gas shortage to the extent expected record what supplies they expect to be York City-caused bond market in other areas of the natiorf. continental shelf and drilling as long as Connecticut derives some benefit to help available now through 1980, " King Quillen, jitters. - « In New England, Mitchell told the com­ offset the costs. spokeswoman for the commission, said. mission, Massachusetts and New “There has been so much conflicting in­ Hampshire can expect the most adverse Mitchell said Connecticut depends on formation from the locai up to the national BRIDGEPORT - Striking impact. natural gas for 9 per cent of its energy level that we want to be sure we have the University df Bridgeport teachers needs, and curtailment for the state is facts and how to prepare for it,” she said. voted Tuesday night to continue the The commission called the hearing to expected to be no more than 2 per cent, In­ determine whether the state has a suf­ “Should there ever be a problem of get­ walkout and sessions with state and dustrial customers using gas as a ting less gas than we need or expecf, we federal mediators were to resume ficient supply of natural gas for the com­ supplemental source would be cut-off ing winter and for the next five'J'ears. don’t want chaos,” she said. “It is our today. It is reported some students first, he said. duty to know where we stand.” have joined the teachers on the picket lines. I Town directors apprehensive Regional Ready to go to the fair BOSTON — Schools opened quiet­ about school bond referendum ly for the third straight day “Ckime to the fair,” is the message to ali Manchester residents from, ieft to Wednesday but an antlbusing leader right, Clarence Brown, Louise Cronin and Harry Reinhorn, as they get ready By SOL R. COHEN , The referendum question proposes a $2,- Kennedy’s backing, is recommending that said court-ordered busing,to achieve to make the trip in a 1925 Franklin. The fair they’re talking about is the third Herald Reporter 373,000 bond issue for renovations and ad­ the question remain on the voting classroom desegregation has turned ditions to Bentley and Washington Schools machines. It recommends, also, that the . annual Republican County Fair, Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Mt. In a brief discussion which lasted only Boston into “an armed camp.” Nebo. Brown and Reinhorn are GOP candidates for the Board of Directors and for replacing the West Side Rec with a proposed construction, if approved by the Police said nine persons were minutes, the Board of Directors indicated new building. voters, would be contingent upon state aumiG and Mrs. Cronin is the GOP candidate for town treasurer. The antique car, Tuesday night it is having second thoughts arrested overnight in busing-related V. The school administration had es­ reimbursement. incidents. along with a 1937 Rolls Royce, will be on exhibit. The fair will kick off the about a school bond issue referendum it timated the state would contribute about In other words, the school board wants I fall campaign for the Republicans. (Herald photo by Dunn) had authorized for November. $980,000 toward the cost. to go ahead with the vote and worry about NEWPORT, R.I. - Newport’s 350 Shortly after the board’s Aug. 5 action, what happens later. teachers voted today to start work, i authorizing the referendum, the state an­ The directors, Tuesday night, didn’t look ending a one-week strike. Other nounced it had reached its bonding ceiling favorably on the act-ndw-worry-later strikes continue in nine other towns Druckman foreclosure delayed for state grants going to the municipalities philosophy.
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