f ■ • ’*.' - ■ . ' -T r

2 » - MANCHESTgR HERALD, Mon., Nov. 22. 1982

Survival of MX plan Andoy/er revaluation iRacewatchers now up to Congress complaints average on your mark . . page 4 . . . page 7 . . . page T1

Much colder, Manchester, Conn. windy Wednesday Tuesday, Nov. 23, 1982 — See page 2 25 Cents [

. r , 82'inflation rate may be only 5%

WASHINGTON (UPI) - ,H |^ e r rent Labor Department said. But this decline grocery stores rising only 0.1 percent, ownership costs, based on a rental and home fuel costs push^ consumer was offset, largely by a 0.9 percent in­ following a 0.5 percent increase in equivalent concept, which is designed to Consum er prices up 0.5 percent in October, the crease in rents and sharp increases for September. correct this underor over-estimation of Labor Department said today, but an of­ home fuels and utilities, which as a Medical care rose 0.8 percent, slightly consumer inflation. Priceis ficial said inflation for 1982 probably group rose 1.5 percent. less than its average climb so far this A preliminary version of that system -300 would be the lowest in six years. Within the home fuel category, piped year. showed an inflation rate of 0.5 percent — ' The cimulative rate for the first 10 gas rose 3.6 percent, reflecting the con­ Analysts still M ieve there has been a an annual rate of about 6 percent — months of the year was 4.1 percent, a tinuing effects of natural gas decontrol, real and fundamental decline in inflation during September. figure that works out to a 4.9 percent and home fuel oil rose 1.9 percent. during the past two years, though they Sandra Shabor of Chase Econometrics, compound annual rate. The 0.5 percent October rise in the had reg ard ^ the very low fi;j’.ires of the an economic forecasting firm outside ■290 John Early, assistant commissioner overall CPI is a compound annual infla­ past two months ps unrealistically low. Philadelphia, believes the real, or for prices in the Labor Pepartment’s tion rate of 5.9 percent. That shows what These were pushed down largely by “underlying,” rate of inflation is 5 to 6 Bureau of Labor Statistics, said if trends inflation would be If this rate were con­ falling mortgage rates. percent and will stay in this range for the so far this year continue, the United tinued a full year. The CPI is constructed so the costs of next several years. -2 8 0 States would end up with a ^percent in­ That compares with inflation rates of home ownership are given undue weight Recent Chase estimates, to be upt- flation rate for the year, lowest since 4.8 13 percent in 1979,12 percent in 1980, and in calculating overall inflation. dated this week, show inflation of 6.2 per­ percent in 1976. 9.percent last year. This is the mirror image of what cent for 1982 as a whole; 5.2 percent in The October increase in the Consumer. The CPI for October stood at 294.1, happened during 1979 and much of 1980 1983 and 6.1 percent in 1984. -2 7 0 Price Index was larger than increases of which means that goods that cost $100 in when interest rates including mortgage This still is a big improvement over a 0.3 percent in August and 0.2 percent in 1967 now cost $294.1. rates were sharply rising. That couple of years ago, Mrs. Shabor notes, September and was the highest since a Transportation costs also contributed exaggerated the rise in the CPI during J>ecause the two big "shocks” to the IjFMAMJJ ASO 0.6 percent increase in July. to the overall October increase, rising those years, helping to push it to 13i>er- economy that pushed, inflation up then — O N D Many analysts had expected falling 0.6 percent. A 0.9 percent rise in gasoline cent in 1979 and 12 percent in 1980. food and fuel prjce rises — now have 1981 1982 mortgage interest rates to continue the prices and higher auto insurance con­ Starting with January. 1983 inflation abated. There now are abundant supplies very, low inflation levels of the past two tributed to the transportation increase. figures, to be reported in F eb t^ ry , the of grain, and' fuel consiervation and the CONSUMER PRICES UP 0.5% months, f Food and beverages increased a Labor Department will switoji.ito a recession have prodqCed a world oil sur­ Mortgage rates did fall 2.3 percent, the modest 0.2 percent, with prices at different way of figuring home plus. . . . inflation rate still low Andropov Police, town fail rising to ' Fact finder full povifer gets contract MOSCOW (UPI) - The Supreme Soviet unahimously elected Ck>m- By Raymond T. DeMeo dropped its demand for scheduling munist Party leader Yuri Andropov changes. to its presidium today, setting the Herald Reporter The town said it would boast stage for his likely appointment as Unable to reach accord on a new wages by 8V2 percent, the same in­ president in a rapid rise to full creases granted to the firefighters power. contract, the town and the police un­ ion have decided to bring their and public works employees’ unions. Andropov, The previous offer, with the by adding the differences to a state-appointed fact scheduling changes and other Related title of presi­ finder — a move both sides had sought to avoid. benefit improvements, included a editorial dent to that of 7V4 percent increase. general Town and police administration officials and representatives of Loal But Tighe says union members V secretary of on page 6 1495 of the American Federation of clearly indicated wb’en they rejected th e Com - the first agreement that they want a ' munlst Party, State, County and Municipal Employees will explain their new contract with better benefits, would complete a rise to the full not just better wages. status enjoyed by the late Leonid respective positions to labor fact­ finder Harry Purcell, in a meeting “It (the topic) came up at the Brezhnev. meeting. And we (old them (the Brezhnev, after becoming party scheduled for Dec. 21. Assistant Town Manager Steven members) if you want an 8V2 per­ leader, took 13 years to consolidate cent increase, you've got it, no his position, taking over the' R.. Werbner said today it will probably be another ’three months problem at all. But they said, ‘No presidency only in 1977. way, we want the benefits,” ’ Tighe Soviet officials said they expected before the two sides finish presen­ Herald photo by Fitts said. the 39-member presidium,, the ting their cases and Purcell hands down a . non-binding decision. If While not specific about the type ruling committee of the 1,500- of benefits being negotiated, Tighe MHS STUDENTSMN LENINGRAD either side decides to appeal that member Supreme Soviet said a better health insurance plan (parliament), would meet quickly to . . (From left) David Beauregard, Sue Marte, Alex Glenn and Lisa Gussak decision, the next step is binding ar­ bitration. and more vacation time are the kind name the 68-year-old party leader as of concessions the union is looking its chairman. "If we go that far, it could be for. The presidium serves as the sometime into the summer before collective presidency of the we have a new contract,” Werbner GOING TO fact-finding will cost legislature and its chairman is in said. $500 to $1,000, with the cost split fact president, a job that- carries Travelers to U.S.S.R. The town’s contract with the between the town and the union, ac­ with it the ceremonial duties of police union expired July 30. cording to Werbner. kings and figurehead presidents in ^In August, town and union of­ Werbner said he’s surprised that other countries. ficials reach^ tentative accord on a union negotiators didn’t accept the But combined with the post of new two-year contract. But union town's improved wage offer last general secretary of the Ck>mmunist share impressions members overwhelmingly rejected week, Party, the presidency would give the proposal, mainly hi^ause they “We thought at this point, with the 2 Andropov status of a national leader objected to a clause that would have economy the way it is, that money comparable to the president of the "It was just like James Bond,” improved patrol officer’s work would be the most important con­ United States. By Paul Hendfle sideration,” he said. The Soviet tour: she said. “He told us what he’d be schedules, but not those of other of­ The former KGB chief sat on a Herald Reporter wearing and that he’d be reading a ficers, police union president Werbner said the issue of whether dais in the Great Kremlin Palace book under the clock and we walked Edward 'Tighe said. a pay increase union would be with his hands clasped as the After nine days in the Soviet first In a series retroactive to Jfily 30, when the con­ Union, the 120 Friendship Force am­ up in the mist to his house. Nine Supreme Soviet deputies voted un­ — See page 11 years ago, he and his family were to IN A BARGAINING session last tract expired, is “negotiable.” animously to elevate him to the bassadors — many of them from “The longer the contract is drawn Manchester — were glad to be back emigrate. They had their visas and week, the town offered to give the presidium. out, the bigger the issue of retroac­ in Helsinki, Finland. They gathered were on the pJane, when they were union a better pay increase than A 10-second ovation greeted his taken off. Tne only thing they’re previously agreed upon if the union tive pay becomes,” he said. 3 MENTHOL. in the dining room of the President! victory, which seemed to come as "When I was at the Bolshoi Theater, living on now is that.they have a pen­ no surprise to ~:the parliament Hotel to share a feast and swap 1 couldn't get my coat out of the coat 2 0 CLASS A CIGARETTES stories. sion. He was an interpreter, but now members, a crosssectloh of party check because I only had American^ they can’t get jobs.” bosses, soldiers, p e a s a ^ and fac­ They'asked themselves what their money, no kopecks, and a man came ’ Friendship Force flight really had Dr. Manny Myerson of West Hart­ tory workers repre»entlng the and just laid the kopecks down, so I ford described a meeting he had Coventry proposal U.S.S.R.'s dozens of nationalities. accomplished. could get my coat.” "I had the honest to God feeling with a “refusenik,” somebody who Putting Andropovfs name in Teri Parrott of Manchester said had applied to emigrate, but had that I gave them some ideas,” she was at the ballet and wanted to Edward Stockton of Bloomfield, the been denied. Please turn to page 10 know where in the program — which "He told a Russian joke,” Myer­ former Connecticut commissioner was printed in Russian — the alters budget vote of economic development said of son recalled. “There were two peo­ production was. She was sitting next ple talking, one American and one discussions he had with Soviet to a Russian woman. propagandists at the "Friendship Russian. The Americah asked, ‘Do " COVENTRY — The Charter Revi­ to give the seven-member council inside today "I asked her )f she spoke English you have a good life?’ The R u s^ n sion Commission is proposing that *■ y House” in Moscow. "We are two the power to adopt the , annual and she said no,” said Mrs. Parrott. said, ’Oh yes, I have a good life.’ 'The the annual town budget not be budget.' 20 pages, 2 sections countries that are somehow going to "I asked her with hand signals have to live together." American asked, ‘Do you have a adopted at a town meeting but solely ...... IS where we were in the program. I radio?’ The Russian answered, ‘Oh by power of the Town Council. The proposal came out of Monday It seemed that each person had his gave her a Friendship Force card night’s meeting, where it was Area towns ...... 7 yes, how else would I know 1 have a ■ A provision in the commission’s own fa.vorlte story — some and she pulled out ol her pocket a passed by a vote of 5-3. Business...... 20 good life?’” proposal gives only a rescinding humorous, some touching — about q beautiful pen." Classified...... 1 ...... 18-19 personal, encounter with a Russian. Carol Adil of Wethersfield power to the townspeople in the Commissin Chairman Peter L...... 8 Later, Mrs. Parrott said the Rus­ described a visit to a Catholic form of a referendum. Com ics...... ; ...... These encounters seemed all the sian woman found her at the coat Halvorson today explained that the Entertainment...... 12 Church. Coventry’s annual budget had recommendation, which will likely 'more significant, because tourism check. Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined L ottery...... 2 in t|)e Soviet Union seems inten­ "When we wmt to church on Sun­ always been adopted by a town go to the town for approval at a later ...... 10 "She gave me this beautiful box of day, the priest said, ‘I knew meeting procedure. There has been ’ ’\ Obituaries ...... tionally deigned to keep visitors on candy and it was really touching,” date, came out' of the com- ...... 8 something was up when I came out recent controvery'about whether a That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. O pinion...... the official "Intourist" tour; and said Mrs. Parrott. ^iSs^ners’ perception of problems PMpletalk ...... 2 away from Informal contact With and saw the KGB there,”’ recalled referendum can take the place of a with the town meeting-referendum Ms. Adil. “He (the priest) can no town meeting. This controversy has o Philip Morrit Inc. 1962 ^ ■ 16 mg "tar" 1.1 mg nicotine av. per cigarette byFTCmithod...... 1W7 average citizens. ONE OF THE Americana talked process. He said the commission Television ...... 8 "Hie people are wonderful,” said of a meeting she had with a Russian sparked tw ojecent lawsuits. saw contradications within that Myron L. Baldwin of Wethersfield. Jew who wanted to emigrate. Please turn to page 10 This is the first concrete proposal scheme. I < /•

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MANCHESTER HEItALD, Tues., Nov. 23, 1982 :i 2 - MANCHEistER HERALD. Tues.. Nov. 23, 1982 NATIONAL WEATHCN SERVICE FORECAST to 7 AM EST 11-94-S? Zoners' vote fails news Briefing Bennet F a ir A / to answer question New Solidarity try eyed\^ V. Y~1 WARSAW, Poland (UPI) - Poland’s military on added parking leadership ordered army inspection teams into the ■ " J provinces today to size up the country, and Lech Walesa reportedly was holding meetings in hopes of reviving Solidarity. 50V The question of whether the town restaurant to provide added eyed can require businesses that expand parking, but the granting of the per­ Walesa held meetings with “Solidarity associates” a itHOwtm ^ fiok few days ago at his Gdansk apartment, shortly after his or intensify in existing buildings to mit has been challenged. release frdm 11 months of martial-law internment. The provide parking spaces was left un­ At last night’s hearing a number Should heating costs be Included New York Times reported. answered Monday night after the of commercial neighbors argued, The Times, quoting a Pole wlio attended the meetings, in the rents for apartments for the Zoning Board of Appeals failed to that the overflow of parking from said Walesa has been attempting to develop a new elderly proposed for a former overrule the zoning enforcement of­ the pub uses their parking lots and strategy for the outlawed union, making some con­ Weather Bennet ^hool building, or should ficer:' causes congestion in the area on cessions to the military government and avoiding tenants pay for heat themselves? The board voted 3 to 2 to overturn Main Street at 501 East, Middle Solidarity’s former "alliance with Polish dissident in­ ' That’s one question the Bennet a ruling by Thomas O’Marra, zoning Turnpike. non-profit corporation will try to tellectuals. enforcement officer, in a case in­ The board members who opposed answer tonight when it meets at 8 in. volving proposed expansion of a O'Marra’s view ffelt generally that Today’s forecast the Lincoln Center gold room. restaurant at 308 Main St. the parking problem was a business Hijacker faces charges ' The corporation also will discuss -a*. Today mostly cloudy and mild. Highs 55 to 60. Light Tt would have taken four votes to problem to he faced by Beaulieu and northedst winds. Tuesday night cloudy with a 40 percent the^roposed financing package and overule him, so the decision stands, an enforcement problem to be BERLIN (UPI) — A Polish militiaman faced air : ),v rent structure prepared by con­ lacking- majority support by the handled by the Police Department. piracy charges today for hijacking a domestic airliner Jf chance of showers late at night. Lows 45 to 50. Winds sultants and unveiled last Friday at ZRA. LaBelle cited a-number of to West Berlin and shooting his way to freedom in a gun shifting to northwest by morning. Wednesday a 30 per­ Herald photo by Thompson / cent chance of morning showers then clearing. Windy a press conference. Pro[ .Voting in favor of O’Marra’s view restaurants that have been allowed battle with security guards. including heat, would range were only two members, Kenneth to expand without a requirement for The militiaman, a security guard on the Polish state and much colder with temperatures falling into the 30s 1390 for a single-bedroom New members join board ' Tedford, board chairman, and parking. Some of them are in the Lot airlines, hijacked an Antonov 24 aircraft Monday on by late afternoon. Northwest winds 20 to 30 mph. • $460 for a two-bedroom unit with'a Edward Hachadpurlan. Voting downtown taxing district and thus a domestic flight with 31 passengers and four crew bath-and-a-half. Board of Education members Francis men were sworn In for terms ending In 1985. -U— against his View were Edward Colt- acquires right to the public parking 2 aboard to the Tempelhof U S. Air Force base, a police 1) They were elected last Novembpr In the Extended outlook If heat is not included, rents would ^affe jJr. (left) and David Dampler Jr. man, Harriet Haslett, and Harry' under the jurisdiction of the Parking spokesman said. y '. be $45 less across-the-board, accor- , It) join Joseph V. Camposeo (center) at municipal elections. Cam posed hits served Reinhorn. ' Authority. The spokesman said the militiaman, who leaped from Extended outlook for New England. Thursday through ding to Arthur N. Greenblatt of ^day’s meeting of the board. The three on the board since 1978. y I the aircraft seconds after touchdown Monday and fought UPI pho(o Saturday.: » e .-- Cummunity Development Corp. the AT THE CLOSE of the meeting a gun battle with security guards still aboard, was Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut: Fair consultant arran(^g the project Tedford expressed the hope that the wounded in the right foot during the shootout. " Thursday and Friday. Chance of showers Saturday. for the town. question would be adjudicated, but DOT gets Today in history Highs in the 30s to low 40s. Overnight lows in the 20s to Greenblatt said discussions with there was no assurance today that it /low 30s. j r .e private landlords have shown that would. ' • Cardinals meeting opens Vermont: Cold and dry Thursday and Friday. Lows 15 most landlords prefer that tenants isn't enough, Attorney John D. LaBelle Sr., variances 3 a boy who was among at least 100 people in On Nov. 23, 1980 a massive earthquake In to 25. Highs in the 30s. Chance of rain or snow Saturday. pay for heat. He said landlords said representing Glenh Beaulieu in the VATICAN CITY (UPI) - Pope John Paul II.today Balvano who died when the roof of the the Naples area of Italy left more than 3,000 Lows in the 20s. Highs 35 to 45. tenants use fuel more responsibly if appeal of O’Marra’s ruling, said The state Department of opened a meting of cardinals from all over the world, people dead or missing and 300,000 church collapsed during the quake while Maine, New Hampshire: Fair and colder M ay that since the decision, he has calling for administrative reform and thorough discus­ they pay for it themselves. Transportation was granted homeless. A fireman carries out the body of services were being conducted. Thanksgiving day but with a chance of flurries north. The non-profit corporation will not discussed with his client the sion of the Vatican's precarious finances. variances Monday night by the Fair Friday. Chance of cain Saturday. Highs mostly 20s make a recommendation to the town teacher says question of appeal to the Superior “The growing worry about the economic problem is Zoning Board of Appeals in connec­ north to 30s south Thursday. Highs 30s north and 40s Board of Directors. Court. tion with condemnation of land for the object of constant and vigilant attention,” John Beaulieu operates the Main Pub Paul, speaking in, Latin, told the 98 cardinals gathered in south Friday and Saturday. Lows in the teens north and The project would cost an es­ highway purposes. Spring widow wins suit More minorities jobless 20s south on Thursday and Friday. Lows in the 30s on timated $1.65 million. It would be Literacy Is not enou^'. ' Therefore, the sphools have started placed in all pediatricians’ offices in and plans to conduct a restaurant One of the condemnations wpuld the Vatican’s ultramodern Synod Hall. a program to bMst\books’ chances town, explaining the benefits of business with expansion into an The meeting was called to discuss church reform, ap­ WASHINGTON (UPI) - Blacks, Hispanics and Saturday. financed with the sale of revenue “Our goal is not only to turn out reduce the number of parking SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (UPI) —A $2.58 million award in the contest for children’s time. reading and how parents can en­ adjoining store space. prove a new code of cannon law and review the women are unemployed and underernployed in dis­ bonds and by selling tax breaks to students who can read, but who do spaces a t the Burr Corners Shopping to the widow of Earle N. Spring is a “signal” to nursing Investors through a process called courage it, she said. O’Marra took the view, as he has Vaticdn's finances, including a report on its involve­ proportionate numbers to white males," the U.S. Com­ read,” Carol Hill, the head of the THE FIRST STEP was to en­ Center fronj 1,001 to 964. The state homes everywhere that they must respect patients’ syndication. elementary schools’ reading depart­ A second part of the program was in similar cases, that Beaulieu must ment with the bankruptcy of the scandal-ridden Banco rights, even if they are hopelessly senile, an attorney mission on Civil rights said today. courage parents and teachers to had asked for a variance and at a National forecast The Bennet project has been the ment, told the Board of Education to develop a list of children’s classic provide the number of parking Ambrosiano. says. Members of the new commission, dominated by con­ read aloud to students. Mrs. Hill public hearing on it owners of the subject of considerable debate for Monday. tooks and make numbers of paper­ spaces required for restaurants John Paul stressed the main task of the conference Blanche Spring, 78. of Montague was awarded the sum servative Reagan administration appointees, did not said research shows that children land and buildings at the shopping By United Press, International more than a year now. Critics— who The ability to read does not back copies available so teachers even though the business is in an center challenged the state’s stan­ would be to reform the Curia, the church central Monday by a Hampden County Superior Court jury cite discrimination as the reason for the employment City ft Fcst Hi Lo Pep Los Angeles r ttl S5 who are read to make better readers could use them with classes. The existing building. Albuquerque pc 60 44 .... Louisville r 64 53 charge the rents are too high for automatically translate Into a desire ding before the commission. government," and make it efficient enough to deal with which ruled a Holyoke nursing home violated her gap but said suspicion of discrimination as a cause of Memphis r 7S 64 2.07 and are more interested In reading -LaBelle arg u ^ that O’Marra mis­ Anchorage cy 27 24 .... low-income elderly, so the town is to read, Mrs. Hill said. A few years books are not all “classics” in the They argued that the state had no Roman Catholicism's worldwide activities. husband's privacy when it interfred with his right-to-die minority job woes continues. j Asheville r 67 52 .03 Miami Beach c 78 70 on their own. sense that they are all old and have reads the regulations. He said the Milwaukee cy 46 SB 'ii8 providing housing to a segment of ago, teachers became aware that right to request the variance. Since Vatican-sources said the church’s budget is expected court case. “The suspicion ... remains that discrimination con­ Atlanta r Administrators made a special ef­ rules for parking apply only when it Billings c MinneaTOlis pc 33 10 the population that does not need it,, some of the students who excel In stood the test of tinre, Mrs. Hill then the town attorney has given the to show a $30 million deficit this year and the tiny city Spring died on Easter Sunday 1980 at the age of 78 tinues to have a major effect on blacks, Hispanics, and Birmingham r Nashville r 71 57 fort to tell teachers that reading said, but are all of recognized involves development of a lot, not New Orlens pc 79 64 '— tove urged that the building bp classroom work were not reading opinion that the state does have that state is facing increasing demands for higher pay from after a probate court judge gave his family permission women in their struggle to find jobs commensurate with Boston fy aloud is an Integral part of the literary merit. when it concerns a use in an existing Brwnsvll Tx.pc New York cy 62 85 sold for private development. outside of class, she said. right. its 3,000 lay employees. to end his life-supporting dialysis treatments. The fami­ their qualifications and experience,” the commission Oklahom Cty r 7B 34 .02 elementary school curriculum — not Mrs. Hill said the books were Buffalo r However, the rent projections an­ R e ^ r c h has shown that students building. The other variance permits reduc­ As the meeting got underway, the Vatican released a ly argued Spring would want to end his life, but was too said in a 104-page report. Chrlstn S.C. pc 72 57 Omaha pc 40 18 a frill or an extra, Mrs. Hill said. purchased in paperback because Philadelphia cy 65 82 nounced last Friday are con­ who read for reasons other than tion in the size of^a residential lot at letter from the pope to Cardinal Agostino Casaroli senile to make the decision himself. The state’s Unlike earlier reports issued under the chairmanship Charitt N.C. pc 40 Many teachers were reading to their “children seem to have an aversion IN ANOTHER case invovling Chicago cy 51 37 Phoenix cy 66 53 siderably lower than earlier es­ schoolwork do better on comprehen­ parking spaces for restaurants, an 117 Buckland St. In that case, the dealing with moves by employees to form a union-like Supreme Court upheld the decision. of Arthur S. Flemming, the new report, issued by Cleveland r 53 50 Pittsburgh s 53 51 '.(B classes, but others needed to know it to hard-cover books.” She said that 56 40 .07 timates, so it remains to be seen sive tests, Mrs. Hill added. state and owner apparently have association to press for higher pay. Reaganappointee Clarence M. Pendleton, Jr., made no Columbus r 53 51 PortlancT Me. r was all right to use school time that each time the books are used, a few appeal is before the Superior Court. Dallas cy Portland Ore. c 44 36 whether the strong criticism of the already reached accora on terms of recommendation for addressing the disparities it found. Providence cy 63 « But books have to compete with way, she said. In that case O’Marra granted a Denver cy project will persist. fail to come back — a good sign the condemnation. Des Moines pc Richmond pc 70 51 other attractions — television, video School officials also tried to reach since it means that the children zoning permit after requiring a Summit may be delayed Students sent home Detroit r St. Louis cy 54 « A public bearing is scheduled for games, sports — for students’ time parents to encourage them to read Duluth pc Salt Lake Cityc 42 30 liked the book enough to keep it, N next Tuesday night. .TRIPOLI, Libya (UPII — Libyan leader Moammar MIAMI (UPI) — School officials battling this year’s Ex-F^BI agent: No theft El Paso cy ^ n Antonio cy 80 69 outside of school, Mrs, Hill noted. to their children. Pamphlets were even though the books must be Hartford cy San Diego r 66 S3 Khadafy,' struggling to ensure his leadership of the worst outbreak of measles sent more than 10,000 Dade' Honolulu r San Francisc r 54 51 si Van Joans offered replaced, she said.- Organization of African Unity, worked today to resolve WASHINGTON (UPI) - A fired FBI supervisor and Indianapolis r San Juan pc 07 77 In addition, other activities such County students home from school because they did not Seattle c 46 33 Twa-family hause expert safecracker, indicted and sacked the same day, Jackson Miss, r HARTFORD (UPI) - State as bulletin boards and commercials a dispute that threatened to delay the opening of the have proof of immunization and warned parents, “This Jacksonville pc "79 53 .... Spokane cy 25 06 body's 19th summit. is no joke.” says he is innocent of federal charges of perjury, tax Kansas City c 47 28 JO Tampa c m 61 residents and employers will be able Head lice prablem for books announced over the The dispute —.between moderate African nations and “I didn’t think it would be quite that high,” said Dr. evasion and obstructing an investigation of stolen Las V ^ s cy 53 46 .02 Washington pc 67 82 to buy vanpool vans for ridesharing schools’ public address systems en­ Little Uock r 67 60 2.17 WichiU 8 49 27 '.ii radical states such as Libya — is over the seating of a Richard Morgan, director of the Dade County Health diamonds. use with interest-free federal loans courage children to read. appraved by ZBA H. Edward Ticket Jr., an expert in court-ordered under a new state program. delegation from Chad, whose pro-Western leader Department, of the large number of students turned IN A SEPARATE presentation to toppled a government supported by Libya five months away Monday. “We set up six special clinics, but they breakins and safecrackings, was indicted Monday on The state expects to turn over tapic af pragTam charges he tried to prevent a grand jury from dis­ about 15 vans to the first vanpool the Board of Education Monday, ago. were not attended as well as we had hoped;” John Allison, director of the Capitol By Alex GIrelll St, in the Cheney historic zone. Ac­ ■OAJJ. Deputy Secretary-General Peter Onu indicated About 3,500 students lined up for vaccination shots at covering he sold stolen jewels. groups next month, with a require­ tually no sales take place at the He also was ch arg ^ with stealing government ment that each van carry at least School officials are planning to lice twice this year. Region Education Council, Herald City Editor early today the start of the summit may be*‘delayed the clinics Monday, the last day scheduled for dispen­ described the services offered by building, which is used to house property, soliciting perjury and entering the FBI’s Lottery eight passengers in addition to the hold a community awareness night “ While it’s not m edically a limousines. The license is needed to because of the dispute. “We cannot tell now,” said Onu sing free shots to control the spread of the six-week-long CREC. A variance to pave the way for when asked whether the summit would start on time. ' measles outbreak, the nation’s worst. credit union bn April 16, 1980, with the intent to steal. driver. Gov."William O’Neill said. to educate parents about head lice. serious problem, it’s the amount of conversion of a single-family house permit Farley to sell vehicles work it takes, not only physically Two days ago the OA’I had declared confidently the But at least one of the clinics, and possibly more, will Hours after the indictments were disclosed, FBI Monday. Lynne Gustafson, the schools’ CREC programs range from the at 25 Hollister St. to a two-family wholesale at auction elsewhere. but emotionally,” Conti said. summit would go ahead as planned “with no changes" continue giving vaccinations today because of the large director William Webster fired Tickel, a 14-year FBI The vans will 'be sold through head nurse, said the event is ten­ “extremely mundane” to special house was granted by the Zoning The historic zone plan calls for of­ veteran whose father worked for the bureau for three Numbers drawn in New 9762. regional, non-profit ridership tatively scheduled for Dec. 7 at Mrs. Conti added, “Once it comes fice use of the building ultimately. The summit previously was postponed in August numbers of students without immunization, health of­ England Monday: Rhode Island daily: 5475. programs for gifted students and Board of Appeals Monday night because of another internal dispute. i. decades. brokerages at an estimated cost of Robertson School. The presentation into the home it spreads like wild­ special education programs, Allison after a hearing during which After it became apparent that V ficial^ said. Connecticut daily: 727. Vermont dialy: 500. about $11,000 each, O’Neill said, and will include a filmstrip and a talk by fire. If (kindergarten students’) board members were not swayed by Maine daily: 224. Massachusetts said. neighbors sought assurance that the passenger fares will cover costs of a pharmacist on the treatments heads had been checked immediate­ property would not be overused as a arguments it presented in favor a New Hampshire daily: daily: 8235. CREC includes 36 Boards of operating the vehicles. available, she said. ly, maybe we could have prevented rooming house. larger sign than normally allowed. A 25 percent downpayment will be Several cases of head lice have our preschoolers from getting it." Education in the central Connec­ The board declined to put any con­ Friendly Ice Cream Corp, withdrew requir^ and the b a ile e will be been reported in the schools in re­ ticut region, Allison said. The ditions on its approval beyond those its request Monday night. It will ap­ F eopletalk Mrs. Gustafson said she hopes, organization has a $7 million budget. financed by interest-free federal cent weeks, although Mrs. Gustaf­ through community education, to in the regulations for other two- parently return with a request for a loans with repayment periods of up son has said it is not an unusual oc­ Individual member school districts smaller sign. get parents to check their children’s pay about 20 cents per pupil, he said, family houses. Football “fantasy” Almanac to four years, he said in a statement. currence or an unusually large beads so that they find lice before it Members held that the authority It had asked for a 50-square foot ‘ ‘The state of Connecticut already number. with the rest of the money coming and responsibility to enforce sign at 199 Spencer St. instead of a Tom Reilly, the .new star of the NBC series spreads through the class. Now, from state and federal sources. is a national leader in this program, She noted that lice is not just a teachers are frequently the first regulations about roomers rests 25-square-foot sign. Indications "CHIPS, " is a former New Jersey all-state high with more vanpools per capita than problem for publip schools, but for with the zoning enforcement officer, were it will come hack with a school football player who passed up an offer to ones who notice. About half of the CREC programs Today is Tuesday, Nov. 23, the 327th day of 1982 with any other state,” O’Neill said. “This scout troops, sports teams and dan­ request for a 30-fooW$ign. play ball.in Canada in favor of becoming ah actor. “The key to keeping it under con­ are in the area of special ^ucation, Thomas O’Marra. 38 to follow. new program will add significantly cing schools where children are in Allison said, where schools can Regulations permit home owners Reilly never forgot his football days, however, trol is parent education,” Mrs. The moon is in its first quarter. to our leadership role in this impor­ contact with dne another. provide services more cost effec­ to have up to three T(x>mers in any and when .NBC's "Fantasy” series hit the air, he Gustafson siad. The morning stars are Saturn and Jupiter. tant'area of public transportation.” Philip and Joan donti urged the tively by combining programs. residential zone. They are not per­ asked to appear on the show to scrimmage with Los The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Mars. Board of Eklucation to support Mrs. She said posters will be put up mitted, however, on the third floor Angeles.Rams' quarterback Bert Jones. Those tom on this date are under the sign of Sagit­ Gustafson in her efforts to educate throughout the community to Allison noted that in general, of a single-family or two-family Conversion Tom got his fantasy and did go after a few of tarius. the community. They said their attempt to inform parents. In addi­ Manchester uses more support and Jones' bullet passes as Jones worked out with the house. Franklin Pierce, 14th president of the United States, Dem os meet daughter — a kindergarten student tion, pamphlets are avidlable In information services than direct The owners of the house at 31-33 Burbank, Calif., Pop Warner team. But Reilly was torn Nov. 23, 1804. at Waddell School — has had head pediatricians’ office, she ^id. services to stu4^nts. Hollister St., Janet Carpenter and found himself in the middle of the team's fantasy — bids nixed On this date in history: Christine Way, said they had no op­ to sack the star of "CHiPS./ He ended up on the on Viacancy position to the conversion, but bottom of a pile up more than once. In 1945, World War II rationing ended in the United Two proposals to convert two- States on all foods except sugar. argued that roomers had- been The show airs on NBC Nov, 24. The Democratic Town Committee family houses to four-family houses In 1954, the Chinese (jommunists said they had con­ Librarian retires at AAHS; allowed in a third-floor room in the met opposition from the 2toning victed 11 American airmen and two civilians of es­ will meet tonight at 7:30 in the Lin­ past and their complaints had not coln Center hearing room, and is Board of Appeals Monday night and Buffalo Bill pionage. been met satisfactorily by O’Marra. the board denied variances needed In 1977, 50 people died in earthquakes which shook the expected to endorse Zoning Board of The variance granted Carol Appeals Chairman Kenneth N. Ted­ for the conversions. 2 What Buffalo Bill Cody's North Platte ranch lower half of South America. hiring, pay hikes appraved Jackston, owner of the house at 25 The requests came from Frank needs is Buffalo Bill — a statue of the showman, In 1980, 84 people were killed and 700 injured in a fire ford to fill a vacancy on the Board of Hollister, permits her to have less J.T. Strano for a house at 395-397 N. scout and Pony Express rider on his horse, making Directors. than the required living area on the at Las Vegas’s MGM Grand Hotel. Also on this date in Main St. and George and Grace the deep bow that marked his farewell perfor­ 1980, a massive Italian earthquake in the Naples’ area Democratic Town Chairman first floor. Permission for the con­ Mildred M. Elarly, librarian at In other personnel action, the courses that deal with skills or other Boudreau for a house at 58-60 Pine mances. left more than 3,000 people dead or missing and 300,bOO Theodore R. Cummings said Mon­ version itself would have to coii^e Manchester High School since 1987, board hired David Morency as a non-academic subjects rather than St. The Friends of Buffalo Bill hope to raise $2(X),000 homeless. day that Tedford is the only personx social studies teacher at Illing ones which deal with the content of from the Planning and Zoning Com­ actively seeking to fill the position will resign Dec. 31 for health In both cases the applicants would for a statue on his Scouts' Rest Ranch, now a Junior High School, replacing John courses they teach. The administra­ mission,. that udll be vacated next month reasons. have needed variances to permit Nebraska state park. A thought for the day: English satirical poet Samuel Barry, who resigned. Morency has a tion would like to see more balance In other actions Monday night, the UPI photo when Director James R. The Board of lElducation Monday smaller lots than- required by the Nellie Snyder Yost, spokeswoman for the group Butler said, “Greatactions are not always true sons of bachelor’s degree from Central between the two types of courses, he ZBA- and author of a book- about Cody, who died ii 1917, McCavanagh steps down. accepted Mrs. Early’s resignation, regulations. And in both cases the 3 • Granted John Dewart permis-. great and mighty resolutions.” which Superintendent of Schools Connecticut College. A resident of said. board members felt the lots were saw him perform when she was 6. McCavanagh was elected to the Sion to sell live bait from a garage James P. Kennedy noted “with Ellington, he has taught at North Deakin also said that more too small to provide the parking He had what modern folks would call charisma, Graves pedals around Boston state House of Representatives. teachers are opting for a bachelor’s at 437V4 N. Main St. Cummings said the town com­ sorrow.” School in Torrington. necessary for the multiple-family she said, adding, "I heard a man say once years ago The job had been offered to degree, plus 30 credit hours, rather • Granted Dave Farley mittee also will bear reports from “While Mrs. Early came late to us dwellings. that'a 4-year-old child who saw Buffalo Bill would Massachusetts Institute of. Technology someone else, but she declined it to than obtaining a master’s degree. Limousine Service 'a variance for never forget him and I think that’s true. There was Actor Peter Graves pedals a strange- its candidates—both successful and in her career, she certainly has been Several neighbors of the looking bicycle through the Boston Public and Richard J. Forrestall of Wilmington, remain in her current job in private The two alternatives are now at the sale of used motor vehicles. Boudreaus, who live in the house just something about him that was so striking, he ilanrbPBtpr Hrrald unsuccessful — In the elections an outstanding librarian,” Kennedy • Granted William F. Mastrianna Garden Monday. The bicycle Is the Inven­ Mass. Graves Is In Boston filming a TV said. industry, apparently because the same level of the pay scale. Deakin they had planned to convert, was just so graceful. Just everything about him was Richard M. Diamond, Publisher learlier thii'monih. pay was much better, school of­ said the Board of Education might a special exception for an un­ dramatic.” tion of David Gordon Wilson of the special. "Discover; The World of^clence." objected to the application, largely Thomas J; Tfooper, General Manager ficials said.' want to consider making the pay derground storage tank lor kerosene on the ground that it would cause different for teachers at those two at 250 W. Middle Turnpike. parking congestion in tfie area. Dead letter USPS 327-500 VOL. Cll, No. 46, THE BOARD also approved levels to recognize those who hold • Granted Cox Cable G reater salary increases for several master’s degrees. Hartford a variance for an earth sta­ Gabe Gabor rims a business of sending messages Race to limit parking teachers who have earned enough tion antenna closer to the property PBS TV first Glimpses Publl*n*d dally axoapt Sunday SuggMtbd oarlMr ralM era Deakin also suggested that the ad­ to the dead. It's an outfit called Heavens Union, and oartain bolldaya by tha 91.20 wbbkiy, 96.1% lor obo additional college credits to ad­ line than regulations allow at 801 ministration become more involved Change suggested located — of course — in Los Angeles. Sada Thompson, Blair uruwii and Rue Edward Fox, who starred in “The Day of the Manobaatar PubNahlng Co., IS .monlb, t1B4S lor Hvoo months, vance on the salary scale. Parker St. Bralnard Plaoa, Manobaatar, 830.70 lor six months snd 961.40 They’D be thousands of rerotttedjsast end west on Hart­ with teachers in the early stages of HARTFORD (UPI) - The Gabor charges $40 for 50 words or $60 for 100 McClanahan-will star in Thornton Wilder’s comedy, Jackal” and played Eklward in the British TV • Granted Wendy Noodemdorp a Conn. 06040. Sacond olaaa lor onb yoor. Msll rslot Sro ninners, but no c a n on Main ford Road and Charter Oak A total of 25 teachers were moved getting their credits to help them territorial rating system that has words and, according to People magazine, uses “The Skin Of Our Teeth,” to be broadcast in a live series, “Edward and Mrs. Simpson,’’ will play 007’s poataga paid at Manobaatar, ovsHsMo on roquost variance for a solar collector closer Street between Center and Street. up the salary scale by the Board of choose courses that are as relevant “messengers”_whOj Gator says, “through an unfor­ performance at San Diego's Old Globe Theater.. boss, “M,” in “Never Say Never Again.’^the new Conn. POSTMASTER; Sand ad- to the sideline than permitted at 50 people living in some areas paying Charter Oak Streets Thursday. Bastbound traffic on Park Elducation, a smaller number than as possible to the classes they teach. tunate act of nature, will soon be joining those no It will be the first live telecast of a theatrical James Bond film starring Sean Connery ... draaa obangaa to tba Manobaatar To plabo s ohwsHM or dioploy Essex St. higher auto insurance rates than Harald. P.O. Box 891, odvortlsomont or lo report s Police will post no parUng Street will be rerouted north on last year, according to Wilson E. longer with us.” stage production on PBS and will open the second Blues, gospel, rock and country niusic will be • Granted Advanced Gas Com­ those living in others would be Manobaatar, Conn. 08040. nows Nsm, sMry or pM uro Mss, signs on that section of Main Church Street. Westbound traffic Deakin Jr., assistant superintendent ' “Those people who wish to pursue scrapped under legislation proposed Terminally III patients read the messages and season of American Playhouse on Jan. 18. featured on “Johnny Cash: A Merry Memphis osN 6432711. O llloo hours srs pany, Inc. a variance to erect a Street effective 6 a.m. Thursday, on Oak Street will be prohibited of schools for administration. things' that we do not want in the by a New Haven lavnnaker. promise to pass them along after they pass^i. “The Skin Of Our Teeth” originally opened ml Christmas,’’ with guests Rosanne Cash, Crystal To aubacrlba. or to raport a 9:90 s.m. to 6 p.m. Jylondsy school system perhaps could not be canopy over gas pumps closer to the dallvary proMam. oaS 047-9046. ThaiSbgiving Day, in prepara­ beyond Cottage and Birch Deakin attributed that to the Republican Rep. Rosalind Ber­ When the “ messenger” dies. Gator donates to Broadway in 1942 and starred F r e ^ c March, Gayle, Eddie Rabbltt and June Carter, to air on through FrMoy. acknowledged,” Deakin said. street than rule allow at 947 Center cancer research and notifies his customers/jf the Oftloa boura SM 6.-60 a.m. to 640 tion for the annual road race. Streets. relatively low number of new St. man said residents of urban areas Florence Eldridge, Tallulah Bankhead and CBS Dec. 7 ... pxn. Monday tbrouob Friday and Tfio Mshoboslsr HorsM Is s During the race, which starts "time and place of departure.” At 9:30 a.m. Tboraday, police teachers hired In recent years. The teachers’ credits were The variance to Farley for used such as Bridgeport, Hartford and M(mtgomery n ift. A revival starred Helen Shannon Tweed, 1962 Playmate of the Year and a 7 to 10 a.ni. Satunlay. Oailvaiy suhsonbsr to UnHsd Pisss bitsr- at 10 a.m., all eastbound traffic, / Gator Mys many of his customers want to con­ abouM ba mada by 8 p.m. Mon­ bsUonsI nows sscvloss snd Is s will reroute southbound traffic car sales will be for five years and New 'Haven were required to pay Hayes, Mary Martin and (jeorge Abbott. It was costar on CBS’s “ Falcon O est,” makes her film on Center and JSast Center DEAKIN NOTED some trends reviewed by a committee lohluding tact celebrities — particularly John Kenne'Jy, John revived again in 1975 starring Elizabeth Ashley, debut in the suspense film “Of Unknown Origin,” day tbrough Friday and by 740 msmbsr ct Ihs AudR Surodu 01 on Main Street east on Btssell Deakin, two other admlnfstrators limited to Farley. It will also forbid “significantly higiKr” auto in­ a.m.,SSb

0 10 ...... 1 r I------_J WYOMING Habib arrives in Syria; Begin meets Haig Miles aska By RIad KaJ ^ ’ ’ degree at Ben-Gurion University, sophisticated military hardware. helped carry out the attack. southern Lebanon.(dfter parading in that a mourner remain at home with - A > r ^ United Press International said he found Begin, 69, as clear In Beirut, Lebanese Foreign liie attack and the reports of a the capital. South Lebanon is under family and friends. thinking as ever, Israel radio said. Minister E lle,Salem summoned the Syrian m ilitary buildup in the Bekaa Israeli control. 'n Haig, ihvited to Israel by the Ben U.S. envoy Philip Habib met in State-run Damascus radio said Iranian ambassador for talks on aln Valley were expected to complicate Habib before leaving Lebanon, Gurion University of the Negev, Damascus today with Syrian Habib, who left Beirut after three attack, reportedly by Iranian Washington’s efforts to fr.ee held talks with representatives of said' in Beersheba Monday the Foreign Minister Abdel Halim days of talks on proposed Israeli, volunteers, at an army barracks in Lebanon from foreign occupation. warring factions in the strifetorn United States must live up to its Khaddam on -the withdrawal of Syrian and Palestinian troop Baalbeck in eastern Lebanon, state- Shouf mountains on achieving peace Lebanese President Amin newly enhanced status in the Middle foreign troops from Lebanon amid withdrawals from Lebanon, met mn Beim t radio said. there as a prelude to the withdrawal Gemayel celebrated the country’s East by “constructively influen­ ■Mtiy^sSii^"'"' 85; reports that Syria was sending more with Halim Khaddam to discuss of ail foreign troops from Lebanon. Two Lebanese soldiers were 39th independence day with a pledge cing" its friends in the region. ■^- ■ SAM-6 missiles into the war-tom na­ regional developments. wounded and three attackers died in to military officers that the war- In Jerusalem^ aides said Begin, tion. ^ e Israeli state-radlb said Habib Habib, an American citizen of an intense exchange of gunfire torn nation would be entirely under 69, would not retire because of the Lebanese extraction, hopes to Montana ' •■• ■-> ) ' will arrive in Jerusalem death of his wife of 43 years, Aliza, In Jerusalem, Israeli Prime during the attack Monday, a the Beirut government’s control mediate the withdrawal of some 40,- Wednesday. and in another three weeks, at the ' ; South ' Minister Menachem Begin met with military statement said. within a year. 000 Syrian troops, up to 10J)00 Warren AFB former Secretary of State The rightist Voice of Lebanon end of a full 30-day period of mour­ The Phalange radio said Iranian But the, state-run television Palestinian guerillas and another . Dakota Alexander Haig ending a weeklong radio said Syria had reinforced its ning, will resume his full work load. positions in the strategic Bekaa volunteers, part of a force of 2,000 charged Israeli forces blocked hun­ 30,000 Israeli soldiers, stationed in ■ < g ; - f o '/ ' ' A period of mourning for his wife. Valley in eastern Lebanon with Iranians allied with Syrian forces dreds of regular army troops from During the seven days after the ■ Lebanon in the aftermath of the Cheyenne WYOMING Haig, who received an honorary controlling northeastern Lebanon, returning to their barracks in funeral, Jewish tradition demands June 6 invasion by fhe Jewish state. klaho: SAM-6 missiles and other LA. t; < '>>v. Denotes M-X Missile (Nebraska Deployment Area, C h « y 4 ' y^w' Nixon ordered death * * ‘ ' ‘ ' * V s . '*'■ V ^ Main Operating Base Ulan tri I i .,^. •'>» and the Area Support Center ^SO*'- 10oLvi|■--’'''*^ct4 o ,«d o t™ *:«»4 fa of Allende— report 2

UPl photo UPl map BOSTON (UPl) - Former Presi­ 1970. CIA to stage a military coup if possi­ A R T I S T 'S CONCEPT.OF CLOSELY SPACED BASING FOR MX . MX FIELD NEAR WARREN AIR FORCE BASE IN WYOMING dent Richard Nixon “ specifically It “ discussed various ways of ble to prevent Allende's final elec­ ^.—r^ lO O missile* capsules are about 1,800 feet apart . . , MX missile now being called the "Peacekeeper” ordered the CIA to get rid of’’ doing it," Radford was quoted as tion. in October 1970, but also said it Chile’s Marxist president Salvador saying. "Either we have somebody could find no evid en ce o f an Allende in 1970 and Henry Kissinger in the country do it, or we do it American-backed assassination “ pressured” the agency into ourselves It stuck in my mind ,pl6t. Hersh said he also interviewed 3 carrying out the assassination because for the first time in m y life order, a published report says. I realized that my government ac­ CIA agents who played direct roles Congress, not 'dense pack/ The article in the current issue of tively was involved "in planning to in an intensive ahti-Allende cam­ Atlantic Monthly said an internal kill people.” paign in late 1970 and obtainied White House memo even discussed Helms told the Senate Intelligence highly classified CIA files not turned various ways of killing the newly Committee in 1975 that he did not over to the Senate Intelligence Com­ elected Chilean president and consider assassination to have been mittee. charged former CIA director included in Nixon’s order, but Hersh The article said Helms ordered will decide survival of MX Richard Helms later misled a said the former CIA director told a four veteran CIA agents into (^ile Senate investigation about U.S. in­ different story to a “ close between Sept. 15 and Oct. 24, W O , volvement in Chile. associate.” the day the Chinan Congress con­ by Reagan, is blocked by Capitol By Richard C. Gross Allende was killed in a milithry “ In a later conversation ... Helms firmed Allende’s election, ■ Hill. United Press International coup in 1973, but a Senate committee provided a much more credible The agents: known as As planned, the MX missiles “The right missile at the right time ..." concluded there was no apparent description of what took place on ■falseflaggers.” were to contact WASHINGTON - The Reagan ad­ would not be in place before 1986. President Reagan link to the CIA. Sept. 15: Nixon had specifically members of the Chilean military ministration touts "dense-pack" The production and research money The article, an' excerpt from ordered the CIA to get rid of known to be eager to stage a coup, has been authorized, but Congress basing for the MX missile as the Seymour M. Hersh’s forthcoming Allende,” Hersh wrote. "H elm s told the article said. held up the funds, directing Reagan most survivable method of "Will increase the risk of nuclear war ..." book, “ The Price of Power; the associate that there was no Col. Paul C. Wimert Jr., the U.S. to decide on a basing system by Dec, UPl photo depioying the weapon, but the factor Sen. Edward Kennedy Kissinger in Nixon’s White House,” doubt in his mind at the time what Army attache in Chile, told Hersh he most crucial to its survival today 1. said Nixon gave Helms a “ blank Nixon meant.” "figureq (the agents) had been sent rests with Congress. The new missile, in the ad­ SEN. EDWARD KENNEDY AND HIS WIFE, JOAN, IN 1980 , v - check to move agf^inst Allende Helms was “ pressured again on to Santiago to arrange for Allende’s President Reagan announced the ministration’s view, serves two pur­ . . . gossip columnist says they're headed for divorce without informing anyone.” the subject at least one tim e by death. Why else would they be .At $26 billion basing plan Monday, poses: to deter the Soviets from a first incoming missile will destroy the network is to be completed in there?" Hersh quoted Navy Yeoman Kissinger,” who then served as hailing the new geneTation 10- first strike by deploying it in a or deflect those that follow. 1989. The first Peacekeeper is to b«f Charles E. Radford, who handled Nixon’s national security adviser, He said Allende’s assassination warhead weapon as "the right mis­ highly survivable mode and to give The missile field thus would sur­ test fired early next year at documents in a National Security the article said. ’ was "always something everybody sile at the right tim e" to close the Moscow an incentive to negotiate vive for the launch of a retaliatory Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif, Council office, as having been The Intelligence Committee hoped would happen. It would have strike and, in theory, the 192,000- A feature of dense pack is the "window of vulnerability” opened weapons reductions instead of spen­ shocked to discover the paper in reported that Nixon authorized the been the ideal thing." by the perceived Soviet ability to ding money it does not have on pound Peacekeeper would become a ability to add options: a ballistic misnomer once hydraulic lifters Kennedy divorce likely wipe out America’s retaliatory countering Peacekeeper. missile defense system and the addi­ force in a first strike. After 20 months of trying to find a push it through the sands of tion of empty silos to confuse the N But in Congress, there was strong home for the missile, Reagan Wyoming and it is fired through the Soviets about the location of each case are expected to be imjwunded BOSTON (U P l) — A spokesman Attorneys for both parties have reaction against the basing plan. pro[)osed deploying 100 of the seven- debris. Peacekeeper. to keep them from the public. Federal judge t(irows out for Sen. EMward M. Kennedy, D- been working out details of a Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., said he story projectiles in a grid 14 miles The silos would be hardened to But Weinberger and other senior Joan Kennedy appeared at her Mass. refused to verify a published projected $4 million settlement for believes Congress will support his long and 1 mile wide on what is now withstand pressure of a ground defense officials said it would not be husband’s side frequently during his ^ p ort that he and his estranged the past three months, the amendment to kill $988 million ear­ privately owned land near Warren burst'of more than 5,000 pounds per necessary to deploy a companion failed 1980 attempt to get the w ife, Joan, who have been separated newspaper said. marked for initial missile produc­ Air Force Base, Wyo., within ar­ square inch and about 10,000 psi system until the 1990s, then only if Democratic Presidential nomina­ Louisiana's creationism low for nearly two years, will soon be The newspaper said Mrs. Kennedy tion. tillery range north of Cheyenne, the from an air burst. the Soviets devised a means of tion. Before that, it had been headed for divorce court. would be represented by a New Defense Secretary Caspar capital. Only a direct hit by a 25-megaton wiping out the Peacekeeper field. reported the two were living apart Brian Delaney, a Kennedy aide in York lawyer for her sister-in-law, NEW ORLEANS (UPl) “ Because it infringes on makers overstepped their will not w ork," Ms. Kegel Weinberger, chief salesman of the "The “ closely spaced basing” warhead could knock out a ' "Th e MX missile is a destabilizing and been dating others. the Boston office, said " i t ’s a per­ Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, wife of — A federal judge has BESE's constitutional 'authority by ordering equal said.. administration bid to "rearm method, or "dense pack,” crowds Peacekeeper, defense officials said. weapon whose deployment will in­ Mrs. Kennedy, who lives in sonal matter between the senator the late President John P. Kennedy. thrown out the nation's function of determining time in classrooms for the State Sen. Bill Keith, Am erica" with $1.6 trillion over the superhardened silos 1,800 feet apart It is equivalent to 25 million tons of crease the risk of nuclear w ar," said Boston, was graduated from Lesley and his wife and the office w ill not Delaney said Kennedy’s personal only creationism law in a. policy, the Balanced Treat­ creation theory. lead author of the next five years, said the Pentagon in a north-south grid so narrow it is TNT. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass. Oollege last year with a degree in' comment on it.” lawyer is Paul Kirk, who has offices ruling the American Civil ment Act violates the Louisiana was the only creationism law, said he does not have a fail-back position if theorized the radiation, blast, The first 10 missiles are to “ I .hope it will be rejected by music and media for children but A Boston Herald American gossip, in Boston and Washington. The Liberties Union says Louisiana Constitution,” state with a creation was “ devastated " by the the missiie. dubbed "Peacekeeper" fireball and debris created by the ' become operational in late 1986 and Congress." has not been working. column reported Monday the newspaper stated divorce proves to states “passing U.S. District ^ d g e Adrian science law. ruling. She has shown up at Boston social divprce could include a $4 million proceedings would take place either one of these ridiculous Duplantier w r^ e in his opi­ “ You’ve got a clear "I just couldn't believe events with Dr. Gerry Aronoff, a settlement. in Boston or MacLean, Va., where measures will not work.” nion. message being s.ent to any this judge would^rule that specialist at a Boston hospital pain ' "It should be any minute now,” Kennedy has a home. . Shocked state law­ BESE joined a suit by governmental entity that w ay," Keith said. " I t was V The repdrt also said records of the unit. the column said. makers who lost a power the ACLU challenging the toying with passing one of incredible to me that such Reagan defends struggle with the Board of law. claiming the law­ these ridiculous measures a thing would happen.” Elementary and Secondary Assassination 19 years ago Education over dictating curriculum said they would i appeal. A spokeswoman for the , arms proposals ACLU hailed the decision ' UPl photo Little is needed to spark Monday as “ a resounding victory,” I DEFENSE SECRETARY CASPER WEINBERGER By Norman D. Sandler Reagan portrayed his $180.5 United Press International - billion "strategic modernization “ Creationism has now . . . explaining the "dense ’pack" plan program," as crucial to maintaining died a double death,” said | WASHINGTON (UPl) - Presi­ a powerful nuclear force to deter a memories of JFK's death Louisiana ACLU executive dent Reagan is defending his arms Soviet first strike. He said-the MX director Martha Kegel, | Montan* buildup and plan for deploying the can help erase a defense gap he has referring to a federal South MX missile as the best prospect for called the “ window of BOSTON (UPl) - Elsie Healy Mrs; Healy, visiting her sister in marked the start of a decade judge's decision earlier | D ak o ta negotiating peace' through strength vulnerability.” dabbed her eyes with a handkerchief Worcester from County Kerry, wracked with racial and political this year declaring a PUMPKIN ICE CREAM turmoil. WYOMING with the Soviet Union. " I t is sadly ironic that in these as she watched a film of the nation’s Ireland, sat red-eyed with emotion similar law in Arkansas i S H A D Y G L E N Pumpkin Ice Cream is made with real pumpkin and all "W e had a great following of the Saying, "It still takes weapons to modem times it still takes weapons first Irish Catholic president parry Monday in the John F. Kennedy unconstitutional. ' the tasty spices that into old-fashioned Pumpkin Pie Custard with the Washington press corps 20 Kennedy regime at home,” Mrs. The law, passed by the . prevent war,” Reagan addressed to prevent war. I wish it did not,” Library on the 19th anniversary of Enjoy quality! Enjoy S H A D Y G L E N ! the nation from the .Oval Office ' Reagan said. years ago. the assassination in Dallas that Healy said in a lilting brogue. “ The Legislature in 1981, ' 1 Cheyenne display is beautifully put on. Monday^hight. He spoke in response “ We desire peace. But peace is a . required the teaching of “ There were pictures of Jack and EGG NOG to what he called “ misconceptions" goal, not a policy. Lasting peace is the biblical version of crea- I Main Area - Made by S H A D Y G L E N . A hearty drink rich enough to dilute. May be clouding public acceptance of his what we hope for at the end of our Jackie in every house,” she recalled tion in schools that taught Operallng ^ Support served as is or as a b a ^ ’for your favorite Brandy. Sold by the quart, arms policies. journey. It doesn’t describe the wistfully. the evolutionary version. i or in individual glasses. You can be sure you buy the best when Center With the speech behind him, steps we must take, nor the paths At the library, there were no Reagan planned to leave today for a we should follow to reach that special exhibits save for an unob­ you buy S H A D Y G L E N ! UPl photo trusive bunch of 19 roses beneath the 2 week at his California ranch before goal.” young president’s portrait in the Woman held; v ' a five-day Latin American trip next An administration Official said REAGAN DURING TELEVISION ADDRESS CRANBERRY SHERBET week. library foyer, A U.S. flag outside the Refreshing, tasty cranberries.made Reagan wanted to give a simple . . . asking OK for $26 billion plan son stabbed MX MISSILE The speech came within hours of explanation of the 20-year U.S. building — rippling from a stiff into a delicious fruit sherbet. Serve as *. •. / DEPLOYMENT the long-awaited announcement of nuclear strategy of deter'reffce while breeze off the bay near where CHICAGO (UPl) - A a topping for your fresh fruit cup, Reagan's strategy to base the con­ framing his defense requests with a Kennedy often sailed his yacht “ Vic- woman has been charged or as a light dessert. It's ideal -AREA troversial MX missile, designed to commitment to arms reductions. tura” — flew at half staff. with murder in the stab­ for holiday entertaining! a be the most powerful and accurate "The United States wants deep The yacht has been preserved arid bing of her son, an all-star sits pointing seaward outside the in the U.S. arsenal. cuts in the world’s arsenal of athlete who begged her to EGG NOG 3 Calling it "the right missile at the weapons,” he said. library. stop drinking and stay “ We don’t mark the assaMhuition ICE CREAM right time," Reagan recommended Reagan discussed progress on home, police said. A rich, tasty egg nog made placing, 100 of the 10-warhead mis­ negotiations in Euro|^ to reduce in any special way,” srfrainirary Victoria Smith was Director Daniel H. Fenn Jr. “ It’s into a smooth, creamy ice siles in closely spaced superhard nuclear and conventional forces. charged Monday in the silos at Warren Air Force Base In The position staked out by the not a happy time for us.” death of her son, Vincent, cream. Another luscious Wyoming at an estimated cost of $26 . Soviets at strategic arms reduction 13. He had been stabbed in S H A D Y G L E N taste treat! But the assassination that shocked billion. ' talks in Geneva "is a serious one,’’ the neck with a kitchen the world found its mark with some The plan, known as “ dense pack,'' Reagan said, "and.„even though it knife during an argument MINCE who pondered the remarkable must be approved by Congress. To doesn’t meet our objectives of deep Sunday. ICE CREAM increase the pressure on Congress, presidency amid the quietude of the reductions, there’s no question “ He called her an A lightly flavored mince, Reagan cast the M X as a bargaining Kennedy memorabilia. alcoholic, a lush,” said We’re heading in the right direc­ made by SHADY GLEN chip in arms negotiations. Detective Robert Elmore. tion.” “ Of course we decided to come for your holiday eating Reagan also announced be aent a *ODespite the conciliatory hint, of- Ms. Smith first told because of the anniversary," pleasure. If you like the letter to the new .jflxiet IfiadfiCSbiP.- iiciali laid neitber the timing nor police gang members burst Frances D. Frawley of New tantalizing flavor of proposing several measures to the wording of the speech was in­ into her North Side apart­ Hampshire said after she toured the mince pie, youll love enhance communication and fluenced by the Soviet leadership ment and stabbed her son, museum with her daughter. mince ice cream! Hand cooperation in order to prevent ac­ succession of 'Yuri Andropov who had earned many . packed at the counter cidental nuclear war. following the death of Leonid “ I campaigned for both Jack and trophies playing second The steps call for advance Brezhnev. Bobby. To me there’ll never be base for the Hamlin Park while you wait, o r sold in notification of missile tests and another.” Little League team and the economical half-gallons. rnilitary exercises, expanded infor­ dreamed of playing major Try a cone of mince ice Fenn said patronage Is usually up mation exchange on nuclear forces ’‘ league baseball. cream. It's delicious. on the assassination anniversary and improvement of the Ms. Smith, 31, later ad­ and the mood among visitors is Washington-Moscow Hotline to im­ mitted she stabbed Vincent IWO CONVENIENT LOCATX>NS IN MANCHESTER prove communication in times of somber. after he scolded her for her 840£.MlDDLETPK£.onRT.6 -OpanDitfyandSun.;P«kMWBranchop«nHon thru Sal crisis. drinking, her housekeeping sbhnC andBarnlotA Riag.Owrwn WHam J Hoch, Exacuttvc Manager “ The mOTe one side knows about and her reluctance to stay what the other side Is doing, the less home and cook bis meals, room there is for surprise and mis­ police said. calculation,’’ Reagan said. • ft - MANCHESTER HERALD, Tues., Nov. 23, 1982 MANCHESTER HERALD, Tues., Nov. 23. 1982 — 7 • ! ' Richard M. Diamond, Publisher Dan Fitts. Editor Spacesuit OPINION Alex Qlrelli, City Editor Area towiis tests due B olton / Jack Thursday Support for Israel is unwavering Anderson SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) Washington — Officials with the space agency \ LOS ANGELES — Outside the Merry-Qo-Roupd say they hope to know by Thursday massive fund-raising was a com­ freeze on Israeli settlements on to take what went wrong with the $1 million wnaventure Hotel here Nov. 13, mentary that while there may be the West Bank, but the idea was suits that forced cancellation of more than a thousand protesters Jack Xiermoiid unhappiness about aspects of . dropped. “When you engage in space waiks on the recently com­ shouted thei displeasure at the Begin’s conduct, bottom-line sup­ this kind of debate publicly,” he pleted shuttle mission. planned appearance of Israeli port for his government remains says, “it feeds the enemies of and A fan. failure in .astronaut Joe Prirtie Minister Menachefh ,, unshaken. Israel.” Begin at a huge .dinner of the Indians over Elm Water Ailen’s suit, coupled with a Jules Witcover Edward Sanders, the Los David Shuldiner of “the pro- Council of Jewish Federations. regulator malfunction in astronaut ' Syndicated columnists Angeles lawyer who was Presi­ Israel but anti-Begin New Jewish, Bili Lenoir’s suit, caused National As the demo;istrators were dent Jimmy C arter’s White Agenda says “progressive” Jews COVENTRY — The dilemma over sections of town, arid fsg,paying the the result of iron deposits located Aeronautics and Space‘Administra­ doing their thing, though. Begin House ^liaison with the Jewish like himself are beginning to targets of who should take over the company’s future bills. near the company’s well. tion officials to cancel a three-hour Wittenzellner has said the system learned at another hotel that his community, says;_“You have to question whether their money is floundering Elm Water Co. untjl it is The Department of Public Utility walk in space last week during the wife, Aliza, had died, and he . sold has been resolved, 'Town needs a $50,000 filtration system. space shuttle Columbia’s fifth mis- Jewish community. distinguish between support for teing spent for the good of Israel. Control in September ordered the McCarthy said he had been told by headed directly for home without . • have in his tragedy and, in the Israel and s u ^ r t for Begin.” He' says such dinners as the one Manager Charles F. McCarthy, told state attorney general’s office to ■ Sion. days ahead .will be what we've Justice the Town Council'Monday night. Assistant Attorney General Robert ever encountering them. But the IN A RKMARKABLE display Also, he says, “te i^ rc e n t of the here Sunday are aimed “at the petition Tolland County Superior done here.” When one purchaser, I,' McCarthy said John Wittenzellner Golden the town was no longer a NASA spokesman Dave Alter said protest, fleled in large part by of solidarity, more than 2,000 people are making 90 percent of Court to have the receiver ap­ 'after a series of $500,000 pledges, high Toilers” who are more con­ Sr., owner of Aqua Pump, a Stafford ’’proper” receiver because it has Monday officials in Windsor Locks, Israel’s invasion of Lebanon and Jews from around the world the noise. There is no doubt that WASHINGTON — The Justice pointed. In the decision, the depart­ taken legal action against sent up a pl^ge card for a lesser servative, less put off by military Springs-based water company, had ment indicated that the owner of the Conn,, where United Technologies the massacre that foHowe4, had gathered for what, officials said Begin has made it more difficult department will apparently go to Koppelman. The - town , is suing Hamilton Standard division is amount, Rothberg said: “Stand solutions and more greatly in­ agreed last Thursday to take over fi m, George M. Koppelman, is not achieved its purpose without was the largest sale of Israel for people who have been volved . financially, hence with any lengths to discredit the Elm as a receiver. As receiver Koppelman for about $35,000 in back .iocated, tested the fan assembly and up, Sam. Don't be ashamed of running the company properly. Begin, it got the word out that Bonds at a» single event. generally supportive of Israel to more to lose in a more accom­ American Indian Movement. Wittenzellner would be responsible property taxes. found nothing wrong with it. some Americans, including Purchases and pledges totaled • $145,000.” maintain their position. But modating Israeli policy toward Congressional investigations in for maintaining the water systern, Residents of the Coventry, Hills Wittenzellner said last week he The two events here — .the thinks his company will end up U “Now they are doing a detailed American Jews, were no longer more than $53 million as wealthy there is still unanimity on its Middle East neighbors, the mid-1970s revealed that Indian which services about 2()0 homes in area have complained for a decade electrical check and zeroing in on going down the line in support of individuals got up by the dozens protest and the outpouring of activists were among the targets of the Coventry Hills and Pilgrim Hills that their water is filled with rust. acquiring Koppelman’s firm. questions of security. The Nevertheless, what happened • “From the original meeting, we the motor itself,” Alter said. “The the present government of Israel,, and committed themselves to Jewish money — taken together searing experience ' of the the FBI’s illegal domestic spying have eliminated everything in front $100,000 to $500,000 on the spot. underscored that while there is here demonstrated one thing said we would, take over the water The following night at the Cen­ Holocaust continues.” campaign, COINTfiLPRO — for ■ system as receiver with the ul­ of and in back of the motor. Test tury Plaza Hotel, however, it was As each benefactor announced concern in this country over the emphatically. While the decibel counterintelligence progranq. And technicians and NASA team of­ level of protest may have been . timate goal that we would acquire different story at a second dinner , the amount, Sam Rothberg 6f recent events in the Middle East, SANDERS noted that at a re­ last Ailg I reported that government Coventry council it,” said Wittenzellner. “We are ficials concluded it may be in the at Which Begin also was to have, ‘ Peoria. 111., conducting the sale, such concern has not dented the cent meeting here of the raised by Begin’s abbreviated prosecutors used false affidavits to motor itself” visit, the ring of the cash register dofn^ the town a favor to take this spoken. There, overwhelming ^called for applause. "What you firm American financial as well executive committee of the extredite AIM leader Leonard thing. and handle it until it is Alter said only the malfunctioning for his regime by the moneyed evidence was presented that sup­ *^have given will give the prime as model backing for the cause of American Jewish Committee, Peltier from Canada; the woman resoived.” UPl photo parts of'the space suits were port of the Begin government minister a tremendous lift," he V Israel’s security. there was some discussion about American Jewish community who 'provided the contradictory to intervievs/ one Town Attorney Daniel K. Lament returned to the manufacturer. A remains formidable where it said at one point. "The greatest If the protest was a clear state­ whether to take a public position continues to be heard above it, sworn statements late recanted, last week said Koppelman has new fan and motor were instalied loud and clear. Columbia’s home counts — among the moneyed comfort and prime minister can ment of opposition to Begin, the on President Reagan's call for a saying she had been coerced by the that he should only bring whom he refused to sell the company unless this weekend in Allen’s suit “and COVENTRY - Only the top can­ the town forgets about his back tax now it works just fine. His suit is FBI. didate for the job of police chief, as considers to be the top candidate to The space shuttle Columbia, riding atop NASA’s 747, arrives at the council. bill. He said he would apply legal Kennedy Space Center, Fla., Monday and heads toward the ready to go again,” Alter spid. , determined by Town Manager pressure to get Koppelman to sell. Concerning the Peltier case and Charles F. McCarthy, will be inter­ "Mate-DeMate” device that will detach It from the 747. Colum- The fan ensures a flow of oxygen An editorial Republican Council member Wittenzellner said he has not been through the spacesuit. other prosecutions brought against viewed by the Town (Council, it was guaranteed “anything by anybody,” • bla will not be used for the next two shuttle missions, but will bo decided at a council meeting Mon­ Roberta F. Koontz has said "she op­ used again for STS9, slated for September 1983. The regulator in Lenoir’s suit, AIM leaders. Amnesty International posed the idea of interviewing'' three but thought that Koppelman would day night. sell the Elm Water Co. which controls the pressure of air concluded in a 1981 report that FBI Last w^ek, at least two members because it should hot be a “political ’’appears' willing to fabricate Koppelman wants to get out of r flowing into the suit, is also being of the council said they would like to decision.” Council Chairwoman BOLTON — Garbage pickup normally scheduled tested by Hamilton Standard'and in evidence against its ‘ta gets’ and Joan A. Lewis has said the decision - the water business,” he said. Garbage pickup The best approach: Interview the top three candidates McCarthy, said. Wittenzellner for Thursday will instead be held Friday because of the laboratories of manufacturer withhold information which, accor­ for the job before the final decision would not automatically become the Thanksgiving Day holiday. Carlton Controls, near Buffalo, ding to law, should have been dis' political in nature if the council could be in place as receiver by the on the appointment was made. end of January. reset' Friday Normal pickup will resume the following week. N.Y., ' watch and wait closed.” McCarthy opposed this idea, saying helped make the choice. Now there’s another questionable There has been plenty written States — seeking, for example, a case, arising from the murder last in the West about Yuro An­ slowing of the pace of the arm s July of Clarence Tollefson at Camp Andover revaluation dropov since he took over the race fiffd a withdrawal from Yellow Thunder, an 800-acre AIM helm of the Soviet Union a week Afghanistan — so that he can camp in the Black Hills of South and a- half ago. But nobody can concentrate on what has to be Dakota. An Indian named Collins say with assurance yet wbat the first priority for any con­ Catch-the-Bear has been indicted by complaints 'average' kind of leaderhe will be scientious Soviet leader, im­ a state grand jury for first-degree On the one hand, he seems to proving the domestic economy, murder; he has pleaded not guilty. have a flexible mind, one that is Andropov might well seek The state produced two key ANDOVER — Residents came out to Chmura said once the correction^ are open to new ideas. Commen­ more trade between the USSR witnesses at the preliminary complain about their new assessments in made, he’ll begin putting together the new grand list, due Jan. 30. tators have noted that unlike 'and th.e West while, hearing in September. Both charged average numbers, a worker with the now that camp members and their at­ winding-down revaiuation said Monday. Other Politburo members he simultaneously cracking down Homes in the lake area saw the largest torney were trying to cover up the About 175 real estate owners showed percentage increase in assessed value speaks English and has gone out on the black market and worker murder. up for hearings conducted into last week —three times for an average. Colonials of his way to hold discussions absenteeism within the Soviet by workers with United Appraisal, the followed. The increase, officials said, is with dissidents. Union. One witness, Sam Lone Wolf, also , company the town hired to do the attributed both to inflation and the fact But. on the other hand, he for In other words, his policy - told radio and television inter­ revaluation. that assessed value is now 70 percent of Morris Lanzi, job supervisor with many years ruled the dreaded might well be something viewers that AIM activists wer(> fair market value: It used to be 65 per­ UHt WE-Bt III fbR ANMIIHI IDIRIflC FlUIT TIH6 E V q ii® ^ ^ running guns into Camp Yellow United, said the turnout was ’’about an cent. KGB. During his tenure the resembling liberalism in foreign average amount,” adding that all of .the . Thunder and had received military The last revaluation was done in 1972. security police effectively affairs and increased repression problems raised were cleared up. There training in Cuba. Camp members State law requires that towns do them cracked down on dissent within on the domestic front are about 675 houses in Andover, but a lot deny this, noting that few of them ' of the people who complained owned lots every 10 years. V the Soviet Union, and grew in­ It is too much to expect. An­ even have passports. or undeveloped land and disagreed about United caught some flak in Coventry creasingly repressive towards dropov to renounce Marxist- Open forum / Readers' views Lone Wolf’s story was contradic­ land characteristics. Assessor Frederick where many mistakes were reported the end of Andropov’s tory in one important respect. At the , Chmura said Monday. after a 1981 revaluation. But Chmura, Leninist ideology and to remake Send letters to: The Manchester Herald, Herald Square, Manchester, CT 06040 who has been Andover’s assessor for 10 stewardship. theJSoviet Union Into a capitalist hearing,' he testified that Catch-the- Lanzi said United’s part in the revalua­ that never guits tion, which began this summer, will be years, said the revaluation here went On the one hand, Andropov society. He may be rhore Bear had rubbed dirt on the door without any major hitches. He indicated helped organize the violent sup­ handles of the victim’s car to finished in about a week. Workers are ■enlightened than the average ' stiil holding hearings on personal proper- he doesn’t anticipate problems similar to pression in 1956 of the Hungarian obscure fingenirints. But in earlier what Coventry experienced. member of the- Soviet : ty. revolution grand jury testimony. Lone Wolf leadership, but he didn’t' rise to Tlii^ conservative point of view identified another man as the one But. on the other hand, in later prominence within the Politburo because yoirve got years he also oversaw the who had rubbed dirt on the handles. on a platform of increased liberalization of the Hungarian To the Editor: Manchester police so well. effort to get rid of all the conser­ Confronted with this discrepancy Three admit human rights and supply side at the hearing. Lone Wolf said: “I Andover economy. Now, what we have creat^ in vatives on the Town Committee economics. The controversy over the new af­ Manchester is a preferred class of didn’t state that. . . I been over the rape, robbery What are we to make of these thereby creating a one-party town transcripts and there’s a lot of and other paradoxes in An­ So far, the Reagan administra­ firmative action guidelines in the people who will not have to meet PZC high academic standards but con­ (liberal). I guess the Republican things there that I did not state.” Eagfe24. dropov’s career? It is too soon to tion have taken the proper ap­ Police Department compelled me to of 16-year-old interject the conservative point of ceivably could be hired on the basis Party in th,: next local elections are' Lone Wolf’s background is bother­ tell. proach to Andropov. It has been approves view on the whole matter. of agility. Why pick on the Police going after the black vote. some, to the point where AIM ' One of the more likely cordial toward him,i showing a members suspect that he is a SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (UPI) — Three Number one, there are a lot of Department? Is this a carry over of Connecticut men pleaded guilty in You've go! banking a! the touch of Our fleet of total tellers is prospects is that Andropov will willingness to establish relations I have been at the numerous federal informer. At the hearing, for subdivision problems with affirmative action the 60s mentality of some of the Human Relations Commission Hampden County District Ckmrt Monday a button, night or day and all year rpady for you. try to calm relations betvveen quickly. But it has also been Human Relations Commission example, he said he had been in­ policies in general. The most impor­ meetings and have consistently ANDOVER — The Planning and to the June 12 rape, robbery and beating round — because now ypu ha've ac­ Chances are there s an Eagle 24 loca­ the Soviet Union and the United careful not to let its guard down. tant is that they are unconstitutional members? Why not extend this volved with the movement for eight of a 16-year-old girl in Agawam., cess to First Federal s fleet of total tion near where you live, w'ork'or shop voiced my concern about the years, and had marched in AIM’s Zoning Commission Monday night and un-American from a conser­ policy to the staff of Manchester approved a major three-lot subdivi­ The three also pleaded innocent to tellers. Eagle 24, That means that you can have the lowering of standards. America Trail of Broken Treaties march charges from an attack with a tire iron We've installed four brand new Eagle vative point of view. What makes Community College or educators in does not need its standards lowered sion of 27 acres on West Street. quick banking freedom you've always this new affirmative action policy in general, since some members of the “early last year.” on the people who came to the victim’s 24 tellers to give you the easy, quick and wanted, now that Eagle 24 is on the any more. We have seen the dis­ The land is owned by Victor J. confidential banking freedom your busy Manchester so unfair is that the ad­ Board of Directors who are very big AIM members say Lone Wolf ha Dubaldo, and the subdivision has rescue behind the Knights.pf Columbus scene Look for Eagle 24 signs and 2 astrous results of the past 20 years life requires. Now you ve got banking that s 2 Berry's World never been part of their organiza­ two rear lots and one front lot. Hall in Agawam. tellers at the following First Federal office locations ministration and the Police Depart­ on affirmative action' are teaching of social promotions and social equi­ Judge John Murphy will sentence them as simple as pressing a few buttons when at MCC. tion, and poirit out that the match in Commissioners voiced concern ment, playing by the rules, were un­ ty in the workplace, in the schools Dec. 17. ever you need cash or want to malje deposits, withdrawals, Silver Lane East Hartford able to meet the guidelines — that is Then, we could hire Jess-qualified question actually took place in 1972, Monday that developments on the payments or transfer funds between your accounts. and in the military. property may increase runoff, Pleading guilty Monday to charges of 842 Silver Lane. East Hartford 568-7137 to hire a numerical number of math teachers using alternative not last year. They also question his aggravated rape, armed robbery, un­ Now that you've got Eagle 24, you've got banking that never causing problems for neighbors Glastonbury minorities. Not content with playing experiences as a criteria. Maybe we Please, for the country’s sake, self-proclaimed credentials armed robbery, assault, and battery with quits. Ever! claiming to be of “Oglaia and Taos” downhill. 2510 Mam Street. Glastonbury 633-9423 by the rules, a coalition is formed could hire math teachers on the will somebody try to raise our stan­ The land lies in the Andover Lake a dangerous weapons and malicious Let us introduce you to Eagle 24. consisting of a few local black ac­ basis of agility? Why is it that our dards again and say “No” to affir­ descent, and identifying his tribe as watershed on the Columbia side of damage to personal property were Jean- Our autom atic tellers (ATM's) are installed and we re ready Tri-City Plaza — Vernon Circle tivists, your traditional liberal elected represei^atives are not part of the Navajo nation. AIM Lake Road. The property is also not J. Landry, 19, of East Hartford; to show you how easy — and fun — it is to bank with Eagle* ^ Tn-City Plaza. Vernon 871-2700 3 mative action. 24. Let us introduce you to banWng that never quds Anthony P. Sirois, 18, of Hartford and 3 Democrats and a mole Republican fighting this gross unfairness to the' members say the Oglalas are not located near Rose Lane. The land Manchester Parkade Stop in at any one of our 8 offices to apply for an Eagle 24 Police Department. Part of the part of the Navajo nation; they Miguel Rivera, 21,' of Hartford. 344 Middle Tnpk W. Manchester 646-8300 with an objective of destroying the John A. Tucct declines toward the lake, Card. Or visit any one of the four Eagle 24 locations listed claim Lone Wolf is Hispanic. ’^e y were ordered held without bail. high standards that have served the answer is the Republican Pai^y I’s 30 Castle-Road Building Official David Paine said for a demonstration. We ll be glad to introduce any­ Catch-the-Bear also faces federal A fourth man, Dexter E. Scott, 19, of hels aware of problems with runoff * Hartford, faces the same charges in one and everyone to Eagle 24 banking conven­ Now that you've got Eagle 24. you've got banking that charges for allegedly escaping from in the area, but indicated the court Wednesday. ience. But remember, you must have an activated 'never quits! Come in for a demonstration, and see how a halfway house in Rapid City. Lone development of the three lota would Prosecutor Henry Rlgall said he would Eagle 24 Card to have banking that never quits. easy, and convenient, it Is to bank with Eagle 24. For balanced budget amendment Wolf is a government witness in that not increase problems for homes seek 9-to 15-year prison terms for each case as well as and has been paid located downhill If the building is man. That would make them eligible for., witness fees. monitored carefully. parole In six years. To the Editor: The purpose of this letter is to an­ represents our state. If it does, why The commission approved the nounce the voting record of our Adding to the mystery of Lone Rlgall said one of the three won’t they show It? plan unanUnously. “samaritana” who came to the e^'l’s representatives on this issue. The Wolf is the information given to nay E.S, rescue — Evan Carrara, 18, of East Why was the Balanced Budget. “no” votes are against the amend­ Toper - , associate John Dillon by a Colora^ 72 Santina Drive karate, instructor and Indian rights Granby Conn. — suffered grave injuries, Amendment defeated in the U.S. ment; the “yes” votes are for it. requiring extensive plastic surgery. The House of Representatives? It’s ob­ activist, Ron Rosen. He said be other two were Robert Banning, 18, of vious that the people who voted DEMOCRATS: Geidenson, NO, knew Lone Wolf as Joseph Lee, who Andover school Enfield, Conn., and Tracy Connor, 18, of against it wish to continue the “s- Kennelly, NO, Moffett, NO. Letters policy had entered a karate tournament Windsor, Conn. pend and tax” policies of the past. REPUBUCANS: DeNardU, NO, organized by Rosen and paid the en­ acution Dec. 2 The Enyfe diNMQ bpnks* i McKinney, NO. The Manchester Herald try fee with a bad check. These policies have got to change welcomes letters to the editor. Rosen added that be bad heard and the Balanced Budget Amend­ &diy, our state gave no supports Letters should be brief and to from friends that Lone Wolf-Lee ” ANDOVER — The icbool will hold Its Fire Calls ment is a positive step in the right and the vote was very close. . . 238 the point. They should be typed was claiming to have been best man " holiday aucUon Dec. 2, at 7:30 p.m., at First Federal Savings QlttttTyNiA.lne direction.' Our government cannot for and 187 against. Tliat is 46 votes or neatly hand-written, and, for the Kbool. ease In Siting, should be double-, at Rqsen’s wedding and his karate ' Items for bid will include hand crafts, East Hartford, Glastonbury. South Glastonbury. Manchester. Vernon, Rockville and South Windsor continue to spem( money it hasn’t short of the two-thirds necessary to sparring partner - neither of which "How about a little prayer next Sunday about spaced. - bakad goods, ornaments, wreathes and Tolland County got and rely on future generations to pass a constitutional amendment. > The Herald reserves the right was true. Rosen believes Lee in­ - woodworking. the prime rate?" pay the bill. The time has come to to edit letters in the interests of voked bis supposed friendship as a - Proceeds will go to the school. Monday, 4:06 p.m. — Ambulance call, force the government to submit a It’s obvious that economic sanity brevity, clarity and taste. way of getting close to AIM ^ Donations of articles for bidding are Hickory Drive, Andover. (Andover) balanced budget every year. does not reside in the “leaders” that members. beiiig accepted. For more Information, T u e^ y ,: 12:35 a.m. — Bolton went call the acbool at 742-7339. mutual aid to Vernon. MANCHESTER HERALD. Tues,, Nov. 23, 1982 - 9 8 - MANCHESTER HERALD. Tues.. Nov. 23. I9M _ _ Tuesday TV Two more commissibners on way out

heireta to Idaiitify tha author of “ It's a question of we’re going to town bote meets hie toughest ( ® 9 9 ** Laveme 6i Bhlrtey (2® > 24 Horae 12:00 A.M. 2:30 A.M. stars appearing on HBO.' an incriminating lattar. Paul missals last w e^. to two other com­ new administration until the start of til the end of this four-year term as Mike, a Grasso appointee from try to find the right people for the 6:00 P.M. opponent in e woman stege- Conclusion. Laverne hopes for (3® - MOVIE: T h e Survivor* The C P - Quincy Nawman, Joanna Woodward, CB - CBS News NIghtwatoh By Mark A. Dupuis 3 ® . PBA Bowlers Tour missioners and two deputy com- next year. to why and whatever,” he said. " I Bristol who served as insurance right jobs,” he addet^ fjP - Ev«witn*M N«ws coach owner who force# hjm a pardon from the governor. sole survivor of s jet crash eats ,(£ 99 - Uat Word Tony Franciota. 1976. Ratad JIP United Press International Brunswick Memoriiil Open into Oxthowdown. Dean Martin, [Closed Captioned] stated there was a time to be here commissioner for eight years, said O'Neill also said he h3d-no^rrent out to find the reason behind PG. - 32) - ESPN SporuCwitar missloners, told reporters Monday ' O’Neill, through an aide, last CE) - Thr^e'i Company from Chicago. IL George Pepperd, Jean Sim­ the myiterlousiexplofion. Rob­ 3® - NCAA Football: and a tim e to go and in some in­ in a letter asking not to be con­ (2® - Amnlettia Waahington ,^at Waihingtbri 1:46 A.M. (23) - Croaaflro HARTFORD — Gov. William there may be more changes at the week informed Commissioner on plans to seek to replace Dem ocf atic ® ® ® - Newt (2 ^ ® - Alice mons. 1^67 ert PowSlI, Je^ny Agutter. Jo­ stances it was a time to go.” sidered for reappointment that he 9:00 P.M. seph Cottorr^981. Stata (22) - Twilight Zone O’Neill, preparing to assume office top of state goverment before he Aging Marin J. Shealy, Income State Chairman James M. ® - Buck Rogers (2D - Moneyline 3D - MOVIE: Th e Brktgo at 33) - MOVIE: T h a Formula' planned “ to pursue further career ■ ® - The Merv Show - Sporta Proba Th it film follows tha action dur­ in his own right, accepted begins'Fis first full term in January. Maintenance Commissioner Manning, a former human Fitzgerald of East Hartford. - Happy Days Again (22) - Newscenter Romagon' The U.S. Army moves (H ) - NtahtajK-^ (3® 3^0A.M . 33) to capture a strategic German ( S I - MOVIE: 'Erio' A terminally ing an intarnational aynthstic resignations from two more com­ “ There’s an indeterminate Edward H. Maher and Maher’s two resources administrator in New opportunities in the private sector.” ® - MOVIE: 'Country QoW* A - MOVIE: 'Code of Sootland (T2) - Future Sport (23) - Sneak Previews Co-hosts bridge before it it dynamited by TO30P.M. ill young adult is datermined to fual conspiracy. George C.‘ (B George W. Hannon Jr. of East country entertainer's pressure- Yard' A crook escapes from D e-' missioners to' bring to six the number at this tim e,’ ’ O’Neill said deputy commissioners they w ere on Haven, was named as state com­ O’Neill said he also accepted ** Bushmen of Kalahari This Neal Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons desperate Nazis. George Segal, live, life to the fullest. John Sav­ Scott Marlon Brando. Martha 33) filled life is eased by the friend­ CE) - NBA Beekotbell: New vM'a Island. Diana Dors, Oscar^' missioner of human resources effec­ Hartford, a close friend of O’Neill’s, documentary looks at an Afri­ take a look at whet's happening Robert Vaughn, Bpn Gazzara. age, Patricia Neal. 1976 Keller. 1980. Ratad R. number of top officials known to be when asked how many more the way out. resignations from members of his ship of a young woman - a Jersey at Ooldan Stata Homolka. 1948. has been mentioned' as a possible can tribe forced to alter its way at the movies. 1909 headed out of state government. resignations he would accept out of tive Jan. 1, 1979, by the late Gov. own staff, but would not elaborate. friendship that is ultimately be­ (3D - Matropolitan Raport 2:00 A.M. state chairman, O’Neill said of life. ^(2® - Ei Derecho de Naoer Te­ > NCAA Football: Rutgara at trayed. Loni Anderson, Earl Hol­ (S ) - Prima Nawa Human Services Commissioner the 134 pro-forma resignations he " I think there’s a time to come Ella Grasso. lenovela en la cual Maria Elena 32) - Alfred Hitchcock ^ - MOVfE; 'Mustang ' (X) - CBS News NIghtwatch Fitzgerald would stay in the job if he 33) - USA Cprtpon Express Pittsburgh liman,•'-inde Hamilton. 1981. (29 (2® - Qunamoka Ronald E. Manning joined four requested from political appointees and a time to go in public service,” Earlier this year, the Department O 'Neill said his goal in making del Hunco da a luz un hijo ilegi- Countr/ A retired rodeo cham­ C B - MOVIE: 'The Mad DootoK 3 9 - Festival of Faith ® 99 - Throe's Company S ® - Businaaa Raport 9® - MOVIE: Thraa Daya of tha. of Human Resources came under new appointments would be “ the so desired. timo. Su padre al entdrarsa d e ' 33) - MOVIE: The Howling' A pion sets out for the wilds of A paychiatriat with an unbal­ other top officials who requested after winning a full term. said O’Neill, .who first became young journaliat aeaking refuge Jack accidentally. proposes 92) - Snap/Tap/Razzmatazz/ northern Montana in search of a Condor* An unknown.«band of - Little House esto decide deshacerse del anced mind, marries wealthy reappointmentiiut were refused by " I t depends. W e’ll just see how governor when cancer forced the fire for problems in the winter most effective and the most ef­ nino pero 'Mama' Dolores, tu from the city finds terror at a marriage to Janet and Terri’s Jazz valuable renegade black jxme- killers close In on a CIA agent “ If Mr. Fitzgerald wants to stay S i) - Newswatch houseguest. [Closed Cap­ women and than gata^ rid of and tha woman who is raluc- - O’Neill, while Insurance Com­ they come in,’ ’ the Democratic late Ella Grasso to resign on Dec. energy assistant program, which ficient (commissioners) that we can negra criada, decide encar- California retreat. Dee Wallace, 0:45 P.M. tang. Joel McCrea, Robert them. Basil Rathbpna.' Elian he will stay, if he wants to leave he > Newscentff garse del bebe. Nadie conoce la Patrick Macnee, Dennis Dugan. tioned] Fuller, Patrick Wayne. 1976. tently hiding him. Robert Red-” missioner Joseph C. Mike was the governor said. He said he did not 31,1980. He won a full term on Nov. also was administered by Maher’s have, and certainly a group of com­ S5) - Reporter 41 Drew, John Howard.' 1941. ford, Faye Dunaway, Cliff shall leave, it's depending on him.” (3 ) - MOVIE; Th e Drowning historia hasta qua Albertico se 1981. Rated R. 3® - Specie! Edition NHL first top of Real who wanted out. expect to -complete actions on who Department of Income missioners that were appointed by -12:30 A.M. f8T) - Joe Franklin Show Robertson. 1976. 2. O’Neill said. Pool' A private investigator is convierte en doctor y se en- ( S - MOVIE: *Whlch Way U Hockey: Montrael at California 11:00 P.M. will stay on and who will join his Maintenance. . this''administration.” .summoned by a southern oil vuelve con su propia familia. CD - All In the Family 3 3 ) - MOVIE: 'Monkey Jungle' O’Neill, who sent word of dis­ "You can v^^cuHte from now un­ U p r An orange picker ecciden- 3® - AM Sarvice Revelation ( 3 ) - Eyawitnaaa News 3:30 A.M. heiress to identify the author of Veronica Castro, Socorro Ave- telly becomes a union hero and - Gavilan Gavitan plans ( D - Mieelon Impoaelble (2D - MOVIE: 'A Hatful of Rain' (32) - This Weak In tha NBA an incriminating letter. Paul lar, Humberto Zurita. leaves hit wife and family. Ri­ (22) (2® (5 ) _ WA-S*H A Korean war hero struggling Newman, Joanne ^Woodward. chard Pryor. Lonette McKee. an escape from Cuba after (3D - Star Trek 35) - Spoita Proba d ® - Entertainment Tonight being held captive.'(60 min.) .(5 ) C$) (3® 9® - News - with drug addiction affects tha Connecticut, New York to sue? Tony Francibsa 1975. Rated Margaret Avery. 1977. ( 3 ) - Spaolel Edition NHL * lives of those around him. Don (25 - MOVIE: Tha Baby MakaK ($7) - Busineee Roport - Myeteryl 'Father 3D - Entertsinment Tonight Hockey: Montreal at California PG (2D - Prime Ne^s (2® (S) Murray, ^va Maria Saint An­ A young woman accepts tha jo b ; 7:30 P.M. Brown.' Conclusion. Father 3® - ESPN SportsCenter - Moneyline Update thony Francioaa. 1957. of giving birth to a child by the ■ S3) - T.V. Communty College - F e ^r Murphy Con­ (2D (22) S® Brown visitsParis and becomes - Festival of Faith husband of a barren wife. - Reporter 41 ( D > P.M. Magezine clusion.. Will runt away after involved in a 'heady' problem to (3® 9® - Mademe's Piece (23) - Sporta Update (23) (2® - Twilight Zona (3® - M*A‘ S*H ® - All In the Family the birth of John and Mae's ton. test his powers of detection. (60 99 - Lata Night wlth^ David Action against token maker eyed (60 min.) [Closed Captioned] min.) [Closed Captioned] - Sports Tonight Lattarman David is joined by (17) - 3-2-1, Contact ( ® - You Asked For It (2D - MOVIE: Th* V.LP.'i' A John Sayles, Harry Anderson ( ® - Family Feud 9:30 P.M. (2® - Newscenter 6:30 P.M. cross-eection of travelers wait .^nd Grant Tinker. (60 min.) York he thought a change to prevent to operate video games at video- ( ® - Benny Hill Show ® @ - 9 to 5 Violet ends up (2® - Pelicula: 'Julietta Engana HARTFORD (UPI) - Connec­ Connecticut would consider legal ac­ ® - WKRP in Cincinnati overnight in a posh airport game arcades and pinball parlors. lounge for a fog-delayed flight. in a hot tub with Harry. a Romeo' 1:00 A.M. ticut officials will study the tion against the company that made use of the tokens was basically New 2 ■ (3D - News TV Channels A spot check by the Jour­ ® - CBS News Elizabeth Taylor. Richard Bur­ 3 ® - MOVIE: 'Foolin' Around' 9® - Mademe's Piece f p - Sanford end Son possibility of taking legal action the turnpike tokens, which went on York’s responsibility. a 32) - ESPN SportsCenter nal-Courier of New Haven found that 33) - Barney Miller- ton, Maggie Smith. 1963. ^n Oklahoma ranch hand en- (57) - Bueineee Report CP - MOVIE: 'McMillan, & against a company that sold the sale Oct. 18. The company also “ Well I expect the only thing he (2 ® -S p a p rolls-in college, but learns more Hartford, CT 3) 32) - ESPN's Sportsforum (2® - Nature 'Forest In the Wife: Death of e Monster... WFSB makes the New York subway (Koch) really can do is to change tokens had been used in some games about.,life outside the class­ .11:30 P.M.' Birth of a Legend' The McMil­ state turnpike tokens that can be ® d® - NBC News (2D - Sports Tonight Clouds ' This tour of the tropical WNEW New York, NY CE-. at arcades from Westport to Groton, room. 'Gary Busey, Annette C D - Hawaii Five-O lans' Scotland trip turns to tra­ used to Uike a bargain-rate trjp on tokens. the token boxes. 1 understand they rain forest in the Costa Rican Providence, Rl OD though most arcades checked said S3) - Untamed World (22) - M-A-S*H mountains captufes the inhabi­ O'Toole, Eddie Albert. 1980. CE) - Stareky and Hutch gedy when Mac's uncle Is found WLNE New York City’s subways. ' “ It’s certainly an area that we in­ can be adjusted,” O’Neill said. they used coins and thus didn't face (25) - Noticiero Nacional SIN (23) (SD - MacNeil-Lehrer tants of the forest floor. (60 Rated PG. dead. Rock^Hudson, Susan St. WTNH New Haven, CT (E Gov. William O’Neill urged state tend to explore,” Burns said of Burns, who discussed the tokens CD Benny HIM Show James, Roddy McDowall. Noticias nacionales con Guil- Report min.) (2® - Vanessa WOR New Y*k, NY ® problem with O’Neill, said it would the problem. lermd Restrepo ( £ ) 99 - Nlghtllne 1973. residents Monday not to use the possible. „IegaI action. “ I would (2® - Cheepirito Serie comica. (5® - MOVIE: 'On the Right .New York, NY (0 cost Connecticut 825,000 to coat the In one case, the improper use of ■ ® - MOVIE: 'Viva Las Vegas' Roberto Gomez Bolanos. Flor­ Track' A ten-year-old orphan's i 0:00 P.M. (3D - Saturday Night Live CSD - Madame's Place WPIX IV'/z-cent toll tokens to take a 75- assume that the Transit Authority in 'Sporta Network dJl tokens with nickel and New York tokens to operajje video games cost A sports car enthusiast.and his inda Meza, Rube^nAguirre. amazing abilities to pick win­ ® ) - News - MOVIE: T h e Wild Geese' Q ) - Mike Dougiaa People Now ESPN cent walk through the New York New York al^o would explore that.” 3 3® friend, the Italian champion, go ners at the race track attracts money to modifty turnstiles to the player money since the tokens d® - Madame't P?b5K^s<^ ® ) 9 ® -- Hart to Hart Jennifer A band of merceharies attempts Entertainment Tonight HBO Home Box Office (SI subway turnstiles and onto the city’s O’Neill urged state residents not to Las Vegas for the Grand Prix. attention from numerous city of­ an impossible task in Africa. Ri­ S2>- involved were the 75-cent pieces d® - Barney Miller and Jonathan are held hostage. USA USA Network a® subway trains. to use the tokens in the New York reject coated tokens. Elvis Presley, Ann-Margret. ficials. Gary Coleman. Maureen chard Burton, Roger Moore, Ri­ (25) - Despedida used by the New York subways. (3® > More Real People (60 min.) [Closed Captioned] di However, O’Neill rejected a subways, but stopped short of 1964 Stapleton. Norman Fell. 1981. chard Harris. 1676. (2® - MOVIE: 'Final Conflicf A WHCT hiartford, CT ® ) - Newark Roelity agreeing to other steps such as Burns said he did not think coating - Jeffersons , 8:00 P.M. (3® - MOVIE: Toral Toral ToraF - Night Gallery priest sets out to destroy the Sa­ WTXX .Waterbury, CT ", (S request from New York Mayor “ The New York tokens work great . (H ) - Independent Network (29 tanic mission of Damien, the An­ the tokens would be the most prac- 3® - ABC News ® - MOVIE: 'Funny Girl' This While Japan's surprise attack (2J) - Edward Koch to suspend use of the coating the tokens so they would not on Pearl Harbor is graphically Newt (2D - Croeafire tichrist. Sam Neill. Rossano CNN Cable Nawe Ntwrk ih our machines. We get about four ■ musical is based on the life of tical-or quickest way to resolve the ^7) - Over Easy - Tonight Show Johnny Brazzi, Lisa Harrow. 1981. (2Z> tokens on the Connecticut Turnpike be accepted by the New York sub­ comedienne Fanny Brice. Bar­ reproduced, the lives of people (2® - CNN News v (2® 9® WWLP Springfield, MA problem, noting the 3-million tokens or five of them a week,” William present at the beginning of is joined, by Lena Horne. (60 and said any changes to prevent way turnstiles. 7:00 P.M. bara Streisand. Omar Sharif, - Freeman Reports 9® - Film CINEMAX Cinamax (23 Gasker of the Twilight Zone arcade World War II is explored Jason (2D min.) their use on subways would be New “I don’t see where there’s any already sold were in circulation. ® - CBS New's Kay Medford. 1968. Robards. Martin Balsam, Jo­ @® - S t Elsewhere A bag 1:30 A.M. WEDH Hartford, CT (24 in Groton told the newspaper. “ But (22) (2® - MOVIE: 'Body and SOul' A York’s responsibility* # reason for Connecticut to do that,” M eanw hil^ there was word that ® d® - M-‘A-S*H ® - P.M. Magazine seph Cotton.'1970. lady and her boyfriend to'bch boxer, determined to be a win­ CD - Carter Country WXTV Patereon, NJ / (2® that is about 75 cents a game, so not the lives of Dr. Morrison and The Democratic goverbor said 3 O’Neill said, adding that while he the tokens •Slsb were being put to at CBI - Muppet Shoyv (® > - Bring 'Em Back Alive Buck ner, is helped by a reporter who C P - Hogan's Heroes as too many people u.se them.” offers to house a, lion act. (60 (H ) - Nova ‘The Cobalt Blues.' nurse Rosenthal. (60 min.) WVIT Hartford, CT / million tokens already had been sold T V a s willing to cooperate with New least one other unauthorized use — ® - ABC News lovds him. Leon Isaac Kennedy, min.) This episode examines U.S. de­ Muharnmed Ali. 1981. Rated R. 'CD - You Asked For It SPOTLIGHT Spotlight (33 pendence on foreign sources of (2® - MOVIE: 'Lipstick' A high- and it "would be ghaotic at.the toll i ® - Soap 'Tashion model is brutally raped ( ® 3 ® -Happy Days Fonzie.al­ strategic minerals vital to the SD - MOVIE: 'Raturn of th . 3D - Independent Network WSBK Boetdn, MA 93 stations on our turnpike” to suspend • (33) - Jeffersons lows an old girlfriend to spend by her younger sister's music Dragon* A country bumpkin News aerospace and steel industries. teacher. Margaux Hemingway, WQGB Springfield, MA & sales as requested by Koch. 32) - This Week In the NBA the night in his apartment. (60 min.) [Closed Captioned] from Hong Kong's rural territo­ 9® ® - NBC News Overnight [Closed Captioned] Anne Bancroft, Chris Saranddn. ries travels to Rome to fight big WQBY Springfield, MA & “ He said he did understand that, 10 face tokens charges (33) - HBO Magazine Starring 8:30 P.M. 1976. Rated R. ' (3 - MOVIE: The Drowning Dick Cavett This show presents ® - MOVIE: Rough Night in' city gangsters. Bruce Lee. Pool' A private investigator is but he hoped that we would be able an inside look at the shows and Jericho' An ex-lawman turned ® ) - Carol Burnett and Friends (2® - MacNeil-Lehrer Report Twilight Zone summoned by a southern oil 9®’- to continue to talk and discuss the Central Terminal. problem if it did continue to exist,” NEW YO R K (D P I) - Ten people, to discourage subway riders from WE CALL 5HA6HU eOOD? T UMMMMM . VJE CALL- BABA O’Neill told reporters after speaking most of them from Connecticut, using the tokens. Earlier in the day, Gov. William GHANOUBH. TKV. ASTRO* GRAPH The three million Connecticut BRIDGE with Koch by telephone. each face up to one year in jail and a O’Neill rejected a request to sus­ “ This is just one of those fluke 81,000 fine for trying to use 17.5-cent Turnpike tokens that were dis­ Bernice Bede Osol things that took place, certainly it turnpike tokens in the city’s 75-cenl tributed since Oct. 18 cost 17.5 cents pend the sale of the turnpike tokens and fit into subway turnstiles geared until New York City can find a way Count makes shaky slam UPI photo was not intentional when the tokens subway turnstiles. were printed,” O’Neill said. The suspects, who included two to the city's 75-cent token. to keep people from using them in GOV. O'NEILL (LEFT), COMMISSIONER BURNS State Transportation Com-, lawyers, were caught Monday in a The suspects were nabbed as they held. i^lib u r the "subway. . . . after discussing token problems with Koch missioner J. W illiam Bums said Transit Authority dragnet intended tried to enter the subway at Grand We aren’t going to com­ ^ B ir t h d a y NORTH 11-23-82 ment on the rest of the ♦ A J7 bidding. Suffice to say that N ♦ 82 Brian found himself in a Novwnbw 24,1962 ♦ K 1084 Father delicate slam Involvements this coming year ♦ K865 contract.. which are of an unselfish Caurt uphalds canvictian in attack Innocent pleas entered WEST EAST He made, it hy taking nature will turn out to do as 4 10 8642 4953 advantage of a random much good lor you as they will VlO .♦ Q J 9 7 4 count based on. West’s lor those you try to help the building and hiding, the court's opinion SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) HARTFORD (U PI) — The .state Supreme a nearby liquor store Where she called police, ♦ AQJ93 9 65 Michael's bid. for anti-nuke protesters LESSEE, NOW, GUZ SAID STRETCH'S ( YEP.' THERE ...AND WITH THE RIGHT EXERCISE- Matters relating to your materi­ court records said. , said. He stalled with three (k>urt today upheld the conviction of a man I CLASSES WERE IN A CLEARING V HE IS.' AND PROPER DIET, WE CAN ALL ♦ 7 3 . +394 al well-being should be listed at Harris was tried in New Haven Superiok Harris’ lawyer didn’t question the suf­ LOOK JUST LIKE OOOLA HERE.' rounds of spades to discard a found guilty of breaking into a former ALONG THIS TRAIL...: SOUTH the top of things to do today. Court and convicted of first-degree ficiency of the evidence to support the guilty NEW LONDON (UPI) - Seven and entered innodent pleas. o diamond- He came to' his neighbor’s New Haven apartment and ♦ K(} Conditions are ripe for you to attempted sexual assault, second-degree verdicts, but maintained th e . judge who anti-nuclear protesters have 'pleaded The prosecutor, Harold B. Dean, ♦ band with the ace of hearts achieve personal gain. New threatening to sexually assault the woman. AK6S3 criminal trespass and third^egree assault. presided at the trial erred in allowing the oral innocent in Superior Court to charges asked for contempt citations when the ♦ and led his remaining predictions for the year follow­ The high court unanimously rejected 72 statement as evidence at the trial. stemming from the Nov. 14 breakin at seven- tried to issue statements ♦ AQ102 diamond. West, took his ace ing your birthday are now - arguments that oral statements given to In appealing the conviction, the public Electric Boat shipyard where the Tri- justifying their actions at EB, a and continued with the ready. Send $1 to Astro-Graph. . police by Samuel Harris were taken in viola­ defehder representing; Harris claim ^ the “ Our examination of the record in this case Vulnerable: North-South dent submarine Georgia was General ■ Dynamics Corp. subsidiary queen. Dummy's king Box 489. Radio City Station. tion of his constitutional guarantee against defendant’s ‘'Miranda fights” to remain compels the conclusion that the trial court Dealer: South allowed a h eart. discard. N.Y. 10019. Be sure to spwify silent under the 5th Amendment to the U.S. damaged. in Groton. 1 self-incriminatlon. did not err in admitting the defendant’s Eiast bdd followed to three birth date. Send an additional Judge Sabino P. Tamborra entered W 3 West North Eail South Harris, identified as a former resident of Constitution had been violated during a police statements into evidence,” the court said in a Dean also opposed a request by the IT ^ d e s and two diambnds. $2 lor'the NEW Astro-Graph innocent pleas on behalf of the seven Matchmaker wheel and book the victim ’s apartment building, was accused interrogation. < ' decision written by Justice Ellen A. Peters. seven they be allowed to meet in jail. 2tr Dbl. - Pass 3 * Clearly, West had three after each tried to make a statement J let. Reveals r o m a r ^ combina­ of pushing his way into the woman’s apart­ In an oral statemeht to police, Harris said “ They just want to make things as , J ^ Pass Pass A* cards in hearts and clubs. Testimony during a hearing on whether to against nuclear weapons before Pass Pass Pass tions and cgmpatibilitles for all ment on Oct. 15, 1976, striking her and then he had visited the apartment building to visit difficult as possible,” he said. Brian decided that they, signs. a friend be would not name and was invited suppress the statements during the.police in­ answering the charges. . Pass would have to be two clulw tearing off her undergarments before $ SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dm . into a woman’s apartment for a drink. terrogation showed the defendant understood- “ I plead faithful to God’s laws,” and bneheart. / 21) All should go smoothly ’ threatening her with a knife. Tamborra ruled the seven, who are He also said in the statement'that after his rights and "expressly agreed to make an Marcia A. Timmel, 30, a meniber of He played the ace , of today In situations which you . When Harris left the woman a second time held in the Community Correction VOU'F?E PDOLI-SH TD LOOK AT ME r'AA WHATEVER T H A T S Opening lead: 4>4 some drinking his mind went blank and the oral, although not a written, statement,” the the Catholic Worker Community in PO MOU KNOW clubs, a club to dummy’s personally direct. Fend for and went to the kitchen of her apartment, she Center in Monlville and the Connec­ WOR(?V ABOUT LOSING UNCONCERINEP, • WILL BE, E A G E J SOMETHING 1 yourself. Try to delegate as lit­ next thing he could recall was running from Supreme Court said. Washington, D.C., said when a sk ^ to king and a heart back to hU put on a housecoat and fled the apartment to. ticut Correctional Institution, a VOUR JOB NUTCHELL ' UNRUFFLED. IM WILL BE FO R VOU CON'T KhKDW? king. West showed out anid tle as possible. respond to charges of first-dej^ee women’s prison in Niantic, can meet IN CONTROL T D 5 A E ’ By Oswald Jacoby Brian's speculative count CAPRICORN (Dm ;. 22-Jan. 19) criminal nilschief, conspiracy, third- The breaks could now begin to for several hours Dec. 9, the date of T \ r r v E'ET r r NOW.' and James Jacoby was now confirmed. He degree criminal trespass and second- ' COULP ruffed a heart, ruffed back tilt in your favor regarding degree reckless endangernient. their first pre-trial hearing. All seven something you've done, but lor C'7 ' LOSE Here is a hand played by to his hand with a diamond, Faad-stannp vaucher thefts alleged Tamborra ignored the comment chose to be tried by a jury. which you’ve never felt you MINE, Brian Glubok in a regional while East made a futile TOO' received ample reward. knockout finals. West’s two heart discard. Then he AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 19) :< said J. Kenneth Soucy, program supervisor at hearts was a Michael’s cue ruffed bis last heart with Make your needs known to HARTFORD (UPI) — Beverlee Lucas, a s:>feguards over the vouchers, officials said. bid of sorts. This one showed dummy’s last trump and F(^-stam p vouchers are sent monthly to the Main Street welfare office in Hartford. friends today It you think they state Departirtent of Income Maintenance specifically a spade-dia­ made the last two tricks can help careerwise. They may Ms. Lucas, who reviewed the eligibility of employee, has been arrested on charges she about 63,000 people who cash them at banks mond two-suiter and what with his queen and 10 of be able to do lor you what you Man faces life sentence stole more than 88,500 in food-stamp vouchers for food stamps, which they use to buy food at recipients of Aid to Families with Dependent might range from a really clubs in back of Ehufs jack- can't do for yourself. grocery stores. Children, is charged with obtaining the PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) from the Hartford welfare office. days before returning its decision Mon­ good band down to some­ nine. Welfare department officials said the ap­ vouchers either by taking them from the NEW LONDON (UPI) - Daniel Hill thing like West actually (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.) Your sense of timing pertaining Ms. Lucas, of Bloomfield, is charged with day afternoon. The panel received the cabinet or requesting them from the super­ Jr., 25, of New London Monday was con­ to your ambitious oblectives stealing the vouchers from the office where proximately 400 undelivered food-stamp case on Thursday but recessed for the visor in the name of her clients, welfare of­ victed by a Superior Court jury of arson- should be on target today. she worked and turning them over to ttyo ac­ vouchers returned by the [tost office to the weekend without reaching a verdict. ACROSS 2 Noel Answer to Previous Puzzle When you tael It’s appropriate murder and faces a mandatory sentence VCPY BMUGHTENep, complices who cashed them at local banks to welfare office each month were listed, then ficials said. 3 Uproot to take positive action, do so stored in an unlocked file cabinet overseen by She is accused of giving the stamps to Vi­ of life in prisdltN, In final arguments to the jury, 1 UnpIsysd golf 4 Feat aircraft boldly. get food stamps. lU T vian Hawkins and (Systal Mitchell, sisters Hill was accused of setting a Feb. 7 prosecutors and defense attorneys C U U M 5 T hoist (abbr.) ARIES (March 21-Aprll It) The alleged thefts were between April 1, a supervisor. who live in East Hartford to cash at local fire at a three-story apartment house stressed Hill’s fate rested with the jury’s 6 Honk 5 Volumes You have good Investigative 1981, and June 1, 1982, officials said, and ‘"There was no reason to think workers A*-t SET-OOr. that claimed the life of Pearl Green, 72, interpretation of testimony from Mary 9 Psthetic 6 Ireland Instincts today. You're not like­ prompted the department to strengthen Its would go in there and take cards from there.” banks. 12 Possessive 7 Room thtps ly to be deceived l)y exterior who was trapped in her third-floor unit Ann Hill, a sister-in-law of the defen­ pronoun 8 Extrasensory trappings. Probe for fa d ^ or and unable to escape the blaze. dant. 13 Lubricates 9 Battle lnft)rmatlon you now need. llnder Connecticut law, a conviction 14 Actors hint memento TAURUS (April 20-6lay 20) for the charge of arson-murder carries a She testified that on the night of the 15 City in Isrsal 10 Distinctive air Instead of waiting on others to Experts cautious ab^ut whale's recovery fire, sift saw Hill sprinkle gasoline in the 16 Psrit airport mandatory life sentence, which is 11 Hive to do □ make things happen today In a living room of a first-floor apartment, 17 Gtnut of with situation Important to you, take defined as 60 years, without eligibility of macaws □ for a whale to show some improvement then strike-a match, 19 Moray □ Q E I C I the Initiative. Let them catch up Although eating on its own after earlier parole. Hill will be formally sentenced 18 Coior MYSTIC (U PI) — A female pilot whale that Mrs. Hill and her husband, Wayne, 21 Ovtr jpostic) n o c i E i later. being force-fed through tubes, the 10-foot, before suffering a relapse. on Nov, 29, survived a beaching last week in 19 Pieca out 23 Of the (Sp.) GEMINI (May 21-Juns 20) 890-pound whale remained “ listless and hasn’t “ She’s about the same and no worse,” Ms. The jury of 10 women and two men Hill’s brother, were evicted from the 20 Orange^ed' 24 Having b o M 32 Birritter 46 Flippared You're likely to be the one Massachusetts has begun eating on its own at Quinn said. “ She’s still able to maintain her apartment the night of the fire. 22 Fateful time changed much,” said Julie Quinn, a deliberated about 10 hours over three 25 Relieve (abbr.) animal called upon to make the final the Mystic Marinelife Aquariin but officials for Caesar spokeswoman for the southeastern Connec­ own in the water. We try to get the divers out 26 Aid in diagnos- 35 decisions today In projects with remain cautious about Its recovery. 24 Pronoun Peicockore 46 gown (Fz.) ticut aquarium. of the water so she won’t get too used to ing (comp. 36 Longtime ^ co-workers. They’ll respect 25 Exceed your judgment. Aquarium officials gave the whale a slim humans. But she likes it better when people wd.| , 38 Body of water Verify The young, unnamed mammal ate whole ^W^»^TgP*APS,I'DSJ^30 Nats your bright Ideas Into 164 I. Canlsr a t MRe>. HUBBELL TOLC> M Y yAUMTAMSWAM 49 Flightlett bird ■ WHY DHIVE t o HARTFORD? Also featuring me luilowlng US A0OUTAWN PIP BETTER THAN QRAY-n?Ra? IN-ABOUr 60 Columnitt't datlrabla rasults. Uenoheeler.Ct II URRA (Sapl. 2S-Oe|. 2S) \m iDSE HAIRTURNEP THAT— TWBJTY MINUTES. entry ■ ■ We Ship: UPS, Air Freight, Motor Uiu’rler, 62 C o rn S4 Oatvota your thoughts and" General B ookkeM ing& T]f^ Thanksgiving Cash - n - Carry Specials WHITE CVERNI^Hr. 53 Conclude ■ ■ anargiaa today to llnanclally- Federal Express end UPS Blue Label. 54 Siamese 27 te nwaningful vanturaa or enter-' raryeur Centerpiece with Canclle>...... *6.51 'language ■ •• priaaa. Actlona awakan y o w your alternative to 65 Portent 40 *• InoanultylormNdngmonay. : Small Bushiest and Personal Needs Pdm Pons (a bunch)...... *4.79 56 Ptttry ■ ItNWiPAFtR BITP tPWaa AaSM.) . PARCEL POET __Mum Plants (foiled & bowed)...... *7.98 57 Skinny fish 42 41 m 47 46 Dallv a^ 68 Europtan . ■ ■ . I Olcott Street 48 •0 •2 M7-97S0 . cspitsi You can tell the Christ-: ^ * Manchester. ^Stop In At 36 Oak Street, Downtown CORMflS cm m A IO A N t LOWMM Lt^ 18 14 88 m ai season is beginning Jn ■* Evenlnge: DOWN Um itores; they’re offering: n » 646-6523 ^rcan 6 4 9 -1 4 4 3 IS •7 18 •sst year's gift wrap at haU ■* •46-7028 or 847-0887 1 Afriksner price. —— -CUF« M Yff- MANCHESTER H E R A LD , ‘Tues.. Nov. 23. 1 98 2- 11 10 - MANCHESTER HERALD. Tues.. Nov. 23, 1982

The Arts/Travel/Hobbies There's no progress on legal aid program TV'Novies/Comics ' ’N / Leisure Manchester clients each year. , FOCUS says it’s not exactly at the top of her The town had its own legal aid himself, to set up,the volunteer Raymond R. Norko, director of By Raymond T. DeMeo priority list. Manchester and East Hartford, next program until thteS* years ago. schedule necessary to serve clients the Hartford-based legal aid socie­ Herald Reporter Legal aid "is a subject that we to Hartford, are the towns where de­ Then, legal aid workers with systematically. ty, ' says it would be great if have not been working on too mand for legal aid is greatest in the A locally-based legal aid program volunteer lawyers and a clerk whose Manchester’s lawyers could diligently,” she says. Hartford area. for poor Manchester residents, in salary was paid with Community BUT JOSIAII Lessner, one of cooperate to offer free legal ser­ Marcus says legal aid is one friendship Force visits Russia the talking stag^ for.several years Development Block Grant money, the lawyers involved in the old legal vices to clients who wouldn’t Legal Aid, which laid off 40 of its of the town programs eligible for now, is still in the talking stages — When the town pulled out of CDBGi aid program and one of the few at­ - otherwise afford lawyers. 120 staff lawyers last year aftef it funding under the state’s when anybody talks about it at all. it lost the clerk and the program fell torneys who followed up on Penny’s Lessner says private lawyers lost government funding. Is in no Neighborhood Assistance Act. The apart. proposal, says plans for legal aid can’t be expected to pick up the en­ position to meet clients’ demands act allows busineisses tax credits for Meanwhile, the Legal Aid Society Talk about reviving legal aid has< haven’t budged an inch since May. tire cost of restoring legal aid. for service. “ ft’S simple. If you donating money to designated com­ of Hartford County, strapped for surfaced intermittently since then, The problem, says Lessner, is that “ Volunteerism is the great don’t have the staff, you just don’t munity programs. funds early this year, has improved most recently this May. Then, the town can’t get outside funding to American way, but sooner or later serve them (the clients),” Norko Our man in the U.S.S.R. reports Legal Aid’s Norko, meanwhile, its footing enough to hire four at­ Mayor Stephen T. Penny suggested pay the salary of a clerk for the you run ut of volunteer spirit,” he says. says he could “ put an office in torneys in its Hartford and Enfield that the town’s switchboard program. The town would also be says. Manchester and it would be. working Would a Manchester-based legal 1917 October Revolution — when offices — still not enough to handle operator might handle queries on expected to pick up the tab for The job of finding money for Iggal Editor’s note; this is the first o f a full time.” ., aid program ease Norko’s caseload? Lenin and his Bolsheviks seized the agency's staggering backlog of legal aid and refer them to business forms, stationery and other aid has been delegated to Hanna : series written by Paul Hendrie, Norko estimates that Legal Aid of “ Yes. But I’m not waiting for it,” he power and established the first ^ referrals, many of them from volunteer lawyers. clerical and bookkeeping costs, he Marcus, head of the town’s Human ^ Herald reporter, who went on the Hartford County serves about 150 says. government to call Itself Socialist— * < * Manchester, its director says. Penny left it to local lawyers, like says. Services department. Ms. Marcus . recent Friendship Force Flight to the Soviet Union. and by that Monday evening, the trappings of the holiday were still visible. fl By Paul Hendrie The group of Connecticut ^ Obituaries Herald Reporter residents,' traveling with the Tentative agreement Friendship Force, glued their eyes • , ; It was dark already, as our bus to the windows, fascinated by the ' Warrhh F. Johnson She is survived by a daughter, Hospital. He was born in Plainfield rolled into Moscow along the airport colorful posters, banners and flags • Warren F. Johnson, 58, of 80? ' Doris Carey of Windsor, and three and lived in Andover the last 36 road. The weekend before had which lit the city. Center St., died Monday at grandchildren, Ann, Jane and John,.' years. featured the 65th Anniversary o f the There were no advertising signs, Manchester Memorial Hospital. He Carey. He was a World War II Navy reached on seniority like those which greet tourists to 2 was born in Hartford and lived in Funeral services are' private. Veteran and a m ember of the Western cities; instead posters of Ip Manchester the last five years. There are no calling hours. John F. Connecticut Good Sam Lenin, sometimes more than 15 Tierney Funeral Home, 219 Roadrunners. He retired last year He was employed by the General employees from layoffs confined to wages and iKnefits while ignoring stories high, hung on high-rise Center St., has charge of from Norm’s Sheet Metal Co. of By Raymond T. DeMeo Service Co. of Manchester. He was a specific occupations. The union had the union’s demands for contract apartment complexes. Instead of arrangements. Vernon. Herald Reporter U.S. Army veteran of World War II. sought absolute plantwide seniority, language that would guarantee job Another flashing “ Coca-Cola,” the neon He is survived by two sons, He is survived by his wife, signs on the tops of buildings pic­ Leonard A. Miller The bargaining committee meaning senior employees would be security. Warren and Robert Johnson, and a Marjorie (Warner) Anderson; three tured red hammers, sickles and Leonard A. Miller, 56, of Baseline representing 17,(KX) hourly workers the last to be laid off regardless of “ What good are benefits if you’re I f brother, William L. Johnson of sons, Paul G. Anderson of stars. There were billboards Drive, Tempe, Ariz,, died Monday at Pratt & Whitney Aircraft reached where they worked. not working?” said Kiefer. Springfield, Mass. Marlborough, James. E. Anderson showing the smiling face of Soviet at the Samaritan Hospital in Mesa tentative agreement Monday with Union and management trip is 3 Funeral service will be and Eric E. Anderson Jr., both of KIEFER SAID management leader Leonid Brezhnev; who knew Ariz. after a short illness. He was a management negotiators on a plan negotiators have also failed to reach Wednesday at 10 a.m, in the chapel Andover; a daughter, Christine negotiators made concessions Mon­ then he just had one more day to former Manchester resident. He to revise seniority rffihts, a union . accord on provisions for arbitration of Rocky.Hill Veteran’s Hospital. MHler of Andover; three sisters, day on another contract provision, live? was the brother of Eleanor Mathew- spokesman said todayT of grievances. Burial with full military honors will Corinne Twarz o f Scotland, Esther governing the right of laid-off son of Manchester. Lou Kiefer, a spokesman for the 'The two sides’ negotiating teams planned T H E R ID E to the 25-story high, be in Col. Raym ond F. Gates Koehler of Stafford and Gertrude workers to be given first preference Funeral and burial is Wettoesday In te r n a tio n a l A s s o c ia tio n ^of are scheduled to meet every day this 3-year-old Cosmos Hotel Memorial Cemetery, Rocky Hjll, Brander of Bristol, and nine if new jobs become available. in Arizona. . • Machinists and Aerospace Workers week, including Thanksgiving, to followed a rather tense arrival from Calling hours are this evening from grandchildren. Another Friendship Force in­ Local 91, said United Technologies, u d e r t h e discuss new contract proposals. Helsinki, Finland, at the modem 7 to 9 at the Rose Hill Funeral Alan D. Maxwell Funeral service will be N present five-year terchange with the SoWet Union for P&W A’s parent company, agreed to At 1 p.m. Sunday, union Moscow airport. In Helsinki, the Home, 580 Elm St., Rocky Hill. Alan D. Maxwell, 55, of 57 jjudley Wednesday at 9 a.m. at Ladd contract, which expires at-midnight Connecticut residents is scheduled reduce the number of occupational ilegotiators will present the com­ Americans had learned that all 120 St., died Monday at Hartford- Funeral Home, 19 Ellington Ave., Sunday, laid-off workers have recall for next May 13-25, New England Rockville. Burial will be in R iver­ groups at P&WA from over 130 to rights for two years after they lose pany’s final contract offer to union would not fly together into the Leo P. Meny Hospital. He was the husband of Coordinator ^ r b a r a B. Weinberg of . 65. their jobs. The company agreed to members gathered at the Hartford Soviet Union on one Aeroflot flight, Leo P. Meny. 67, of West Hart­ Mildred (Scarlato) Maxwell. side Cemetery, Old Saybrook at 11 Ma-nchester said. There are no calling hours— But when negotiations resumed extend the period to a m'aximum of Civic Center. If the union turns as planned. ford, died Monday at his home. He He was born in G ilbertsville, a.m. 'That trip will Cost (1,395, which in­ IP today, Kiefer said, the company five years, for workers with 15 years down the company’s offer, a strike For M m e reason which nobody was th^brother of Kathryn Barry Mass’, Aug. 11, 1927, and he was Donatioqs may be made to the cludes the cost of the air flight, proposed a plan, unacceptable to the or more on the job. Workers with vote will follow irhmediately, Kiefer quite understood, the group had and Gertrude Pearson of employed as a rectifier for Heublein American Heart Assofciation. lodging, most meals and transporta­ union, to r^ u c e workers’ eligibility less seniority would have recall said. been split. Half were to fly early in Manchester. Inc., Hartford. He was a Navy tion within the Soviet Union. Sadie "Billie" Ross for cost of living increases. rights for between two and four the afternoon on Aeroflot, the Soviet •; Funeral will be Friday at 9:15 veteran of World War II. The Friendship Force also offers Sadie "B illie ” Ross, 94, 2308 Kiefer said the company didn’t years, K iefer said. Penalties sought national airlines, and the rest would ^ a.m. from the Richard W. Sheehan He is survived by his son, Glen interchanges, on a regular basis, 56th Street ^u th , Gulfport, Fla. died present specifics of its cost of living The union wanted a five-year leave that evening on Finnair. It Herald photo by Fitts Funeral Home, 1084 New Britain Maxwell of Manchester; a daughter, HARTFORD (UPI) - with other countries. In many, oun- Monday in Gulfport. She w’as the proposals this morning. But he said recall period for all employees, was the group’s first taste of the Ave., West Hartford, with a mass of Audp^Tomlinson of Columbia; two Unauthorized use of automatic trles, the Americans stay, in the LOUISE AND JEROME NATHAN OF MANCHESTER mother of Clarence Vibberts of their net effect would be “ to give us ^regardless of seniority, Kiefer said. Soviet habit of changing schedules Christian burial at 10 a.m. in Holy brotneijb, William A. Maxwell of teller-machines or tani^nng with homes of foreign guests, then Manchester. something less than we already Despite yesterday’s concessions, abruptly. . . . stand In front of the Winter Palace In Leningrad Spirit Church. Newington. Burial Chey^ne, Wyo., and John T. the cash dispensing machines used travelers from those countries She was born in Meriden and lived have.” Kiefer said company negotiators’ The trip’s leader, Manchester w ill be in Mount St. Benedict Maxwell of Vernon; and three by banks would c^rjr-atiffer return the visit by staying with in Manchester for many years. The seniority change would refusal to consider the union’s pro­ Deputy Mayor Barbara B. premonition of things to come when Cemetery. ‘ sisters, ^ertrude Wright, Eileen penalties if a legislative committee American hosts. traveler’s face. At least one person, carefully pored over Manchester keep tourists from changing their During the 1930s, she was employed protect the jobs of long-time posals for “ job and income preser­ chairman has Ms say. That is not now possible in the Weinberg, was scheduled for the se­ they were served a mostly inedible one of the high school students, was Community College student money on the prosperous' black Calling hours are Wednesday from UriswiM and Margaret Ellesworth, as a private detective in vation” is “a major stumbling Rep. R ich a ^ D. ‘Tulisano, D- Soviet Union, however, and the cond flight, so Manchester High meal. Just about everybody was taken to a back room and Theodore Cummings Jr.’s text­ market, for much better exchange 2 to'4 p,m. and 7 to 9 p.m.' Memorial all of (Coventry, and several nieces Manchester. block” to achieving a settlement by Rocky Hill, sail! Monday he’ would Friendship Force visitors stay in School teacher W illiam Brindamour nervous — all had heard horror questioned. Apparently the customs books, before deciding they were all rates. contributions-may be made to the and nephews. Besides her son, she is survived by Sunday. propose legislation to redefine the hotels. Soviet citizens have not been was appointed leader of the first stories about tough Soviet customs official was suspicious because this right. The Americans boarded the bus City of Hope Cancer ^nd, 208 W. The Rev. Lawrence Hill will con­ daughters Viola Woodruff of New He said the company has allowed to return the visits. group. Brindamour, who was in officials. student had no textbooks with him. Each traveler had to fill out a for the ride to the hotel only to dis­ N Eighth St., Los Angeles, Calif. 90014. duct private funeral services on larceny law cov^ing thefts frpin the Haven and Irene Scoville of Gulf­ charge of a group of MHS students Wednesday at the John F. Tierney DPUCOKs attempted to “ put money Issues machines and Mtablisb a new crime For more information on the May Thpse stories, for the most part, But for most of the Americans, customs declaration, stating how cover that Intourist — the official port, Fla.; eight grandchildren, 17 making the trip, was the logical first” in its contract negotiations, designed to deter tampering or theft trip to the Soviet Union, or for infor-, prov^ to be a false alarm. Some of clearing customs was a simple much money he was bringing into Soviet tourist service — had fouled Thareaa H. Qagliardone Funeral Home. 219 W. Center St, great-grandchildren, and five great- holding out promises of irtiproved mation about how to join the choice, because he had been' to the the Americans were unnerved by process. In most cases, just carry- the country. Th^tt declaration had to up and provided a French-speaking •Theresa H. (Ferrando), Gagliar- M emorial contributions may be great grandchildren. from the machines. Friendship Force, call Mrs: Soviet Union before. the tough stares they got from the on bags — not suitcases — were in­ be shown and , stamped each time guide for the ride. done, 85. formerly of 355 Oak St., made to the American Heart Funeral services will be area cable Weinherg at 647-1419, or write to her ’The flight on the Soviet-huilt air­ Soviet passport agents, who careful­ spect^. The first thing the customs money was changed and it had to be died Monday at a local convalescent Association, 310 Colling St., Hart­ Wednesday at 11 a m. at the First at 164 E. Cener St., Manchester, liner was comfortable enough, ly compared the photos on the agents asked to see was all turned in at the end of the trip. The home. She was the widow of Albert ford. Andropov rises rapidly , United Methodist Church in Gulf­ NEW BRITAIN -The state 06040. although the Americans got a passports and visas with each literature. One customs official purpose, obviously, was to try to Please turn to page 13 L. Gagliardone. port. Fla. Interment will be in .Department of Public Utilties . She was born in Italy on Oct. 7, Eric E. Anderson Sr. Memorial Park Cemetefy in St. Control today awarded the Gonlinui'd from Page One sing from other recent events in­ 1897, and lived in Glastonbury Eric E. Anderson Sr,, 66, of Petersburg, Fla. The Robert D. cable TV franchise that in­ cluding Brezhnev’s funeral and who before moving to Manchester 52 MerpHt-V^ey Road, Andover, died Easter Funeral Home of Gulfport cludes Bolton, Andover and nomination, Moscow party chief had been widely reported to be dead. years ago. Swraav^ atH lanchester Memorial has charge of arrangements. Vernon to United Cable Televi­ Viktor Grishin said the choice would Pelshe, chairman of the Party Manchester sion Corporation . of Eastern “ fortify the fraternal friendship of Control Commission, looked pale Connecticut. our multi-national country” and and tired but otherwise gave no This means Vernon will likely “ strengthen peace and international signs of ill health. The Bolsho’Cthe people ... receive cable TV within six security.” The parliament heard reports on months, with the outer towns to As he spoke,.other members of the plans for the Soviet economy next be wired afterwards. - Communist Party’s Politburo year, the third year of the current race watchers, V United was picked over listened from seats of honor behind five-year plan. visitors to Russia will recall Greater Connecticut Cable Vi- the speaker’s podium. Speaking at a meeting of the Com­ ^sion Inc. The decision sup- Among them were Geydar Aliyev, munist Party Central Comrnittee ' ' ported the recommendation by 59, a longtime KGB official and par­ Monday, Andropov said it was time instant camera, and turning the pic­ (Jontinupcl from page 1 tle woman came up and sat beside the hearing examiner and the ty leader of his native Azerbaijan, to move the Soviet economy out of on your mark tures over to his Russian subjects. us and began translating.” consumer counsel. who was named a voting member of its slump, suggesting the tim e has ” We did have a very positive longer contact his mother, because Susag said the Baptists told them -> The towns in the district at the Politburo Monday. come for loosening controls of cen­ experience in the G.U.M. store,” he if he does, she will lose her pen­ a completely new addition to the -present do not have cable Also present was Arvld Pelshe, 83, tral planning. said. ” We took a picture of some year that w e’ll need all the room we sion.” [.eningrad church was funded with access. the oldest member of the party’s “ You cannot gd't things moving by By Adele Angle young people and gave it to them can get,” he says. ’There are other Ms. Adil said the priest told tbe their own contributions. He said the . executive committee, who was mis­ slogans alone,’^he said. FoCus Editor Americans that the money donated Americans asked what happens to a and they were very happy. Then, good vantage points. a t mass is given to the Communist' Baptist who openly professes his about 45iminutes later, as we were You’ve been practicing for weeks. “ I’d say before the hill on Party, not the church, but that he is religion. They were told it could about to go out the door, they came You’ve got your best cheer down Highland Street. The enthusiasm is not allowed to tell the congregation have an adverse effect on a person’s running over and gave us candy just right; you have the appropriate still there — and you can see who the rabbits are.” says Pat Mistretta, that. career if he is a teacher or in the bars.” AAACC to provide record parka and iMots picked out, and your “ The nuns are persecuted more military, but that for most people Florence Bickerstaffe of mother-in-law has promised to director of athletics at Manchester than the priest, because they have there would be no problem. Brookline, Mass., the mother of watch the pumpkin pie. Community College. coptact with the children.’ ’ said Ms. "These people are trying to live Manchester Deputy Mayor Barbara Next problem. Dr. and Mrs. Alfred B. Sundquist Adil. She said when the Americans within the system and bring some Weinberg, took ill on the trip. She number of holiday baskets Where does a first time race of 50 Wyllys St. like to stand at the brought the priest a package of Christian witness to the system,” came down with a case of phlebitis. watcher go for the best view of the Highland Park Market. “ That's clothing and other goods, he said, said Susag.. 46th Manchester Road Race? where you see them coming up the Dr. Myerson talked about the dif­ “ That’s like snow from Heaven.” Nobody seemed to be able to The Manchester Area Conference of Churches will those games to help fill basxets. ■ Bear in mind there will be 30,000 long hill — you can s’eparate the men ficulty he had trying to treat her. Young people are discouraged explain why the Baptist Church, on provide Thanksgiving baskets to a record number of In addition, hot meals will be provided to some 30 others looking for a spot to stand, and the boys at this point,” says Dr. The ^ v ie ts wanted to bring her to from going to church, she said, the one hand, seemed to be officially clients this year. shut-ins through a cooperative arrangement with too. Sundquist. the hospital but Dr. Myerson wanted because they fear their grades will tolerated, while the Catholic According to Nancy P. Carr, MACC executive direc­ Manchester Memorial Hospital and the Meals oit Also bear in mind that the race Highland Park Market is probably to avoid that, since the Americans suffer at school, and education is es­ Church, on the other hand, apparent­ tor, area social workers and nurses have identified 207 Wheels program. Meal certificates will be made starts a half hour earlier this year. the most “ in” place to watch the were scheduled to leave the next day sential to achieve a good slot in ly was persecuted. families who need help during the Thanksgiving available to single, mobile persons ■ without cooking At 10 a.m. the gun goes off, and if race. It’s a neighborhood reunion — and didn’t want to leave anybody Soviet society. The priest has to holidays. An additional 20 families on a waiting list will facilities through the Manchester Department of Social Herald photo by Pinto you haven’t parked your car and it’ll be one of three points along 2 T IIK O IIO K K CUMM INGS JR. of behind. He said when he asked to work another job; he is not allowed receive assistance as donations become available. Services. somewhere by 9 a.m., you’ve got a the route where a pipe band will Manchester said he met an English- speak to the Soviet specialist, he to be a full-time priest, she said. Last year 176 families received food baskets. WHERE YOU STAND MAKES ALL THE DIFFERENCE walk ahead of you. play. w4td" refused, because the doctor Thanksgiving marks only the beginning of the holiday speaking Russian student in The annual Thanksgiving food sharing program coor­ . . . In Manchester 46th Road Race Also bear in niind that the start- The St. Patrick’s Pipe Band under Moscow’s huge G.U.M. department would. not talk unless the patient season and the Seasonal Sharing Appeal. ’The financial Bill Marceau will be playing at the BUT PHILIP .SUSAG of dinated hy MACC was still 24 baskets short on Monday finish line might seem like the most store. The'young man offered a was brought to the hospital. goal for this year’s appeal is set at (15,000. "rhe money Highland Park Market. Tlie Stewart Manchester described a visit of the 207 baskets scheduled for distribution to needy obvious place to head for. But it’s trade on the black market. w ill be used to purcha^ meat and fruit for baskets, pay Highlanders from the British several Americans paid to the Bap­ With the help of a Russian- elderly, handicapped and low income familes, Mrs. Can- likely to be the most crowded — and “ He told me the only way he for hot meals and meal certificates and honor vouchers Fine view of winners ll*A S T . American Club under Wendell tist' churches in Leningrad and speaking American student. Dr. said. , 5 T c e h ; you may spend much of the race would make the system work is to cashed at local stores. Jl___ \uL O’Dell will be standing at the green Moscow. Myerson managed to talk by Mrs. Carr said this morning that MACC received an bobbing up and down, trying to see do what he was doing, tradihg on the That experience was completely telephone, to specialists in Hartford, “ avalanche” of food Monday, mostly from schools in over the head of the person in front in' front of Lenox Pharrnacy. The black market,!’ said Cummings. ” I 3 different from others’ encounters who told him what medicine to get town, including Bennet Junior I ^ h , Manchester High of you. Sphinx Highlanders, led by Ken asked him if he had ever been to with Russian Jews and Catholics. and how to treat Mrs. Bickerstaffe. School and Buckley School. H ere’s what pur experts said; Jones, will be at the medical America. He just looked at me and May be too crowded Susag said he visited the national But he said he had great difficulty “ W e’re going to be able to take care of those baskets. Good viewing The start-finish line got high building at 116 E. Center St. (next to said, ‘Only in my dreams.’” - You Are; headquarters of the Evangelical getting the necessary medicine I ’m sure,” said Mrs. Carr . In fact, she said>there may marks — despite the congestion. the Essex M otel). William Brindamour of Baptist Church of the Soviet Union from the pharmacy, although he be enough food available to help people on a waiting list. “ ’There’s no doubt about it. That’s There will also be a regular Manchester, a teacher at Invited To on the day Leonid Brezhnev’s death eventually succeeded. iOD where the most excitement is,” says marching band — the Tail Cedars Manchester High School, cautioned M O ST O F the large families and older persons on was announced. While there, he Herb Stevenson, the town’s Band led by Bill Forbes — playing at the -Americans not to believe that P IIY L L L S BEKSON of Avon said ' special diets have been “ adopted” by local churches and WORSHIP spoke to the. bishop who leads the ' Democratic Registrar of Voters, the Arm y & Navy Club on Main their experiences with dissidents she was riding back to the hotel in individuals, who will fill their baskets, Mrs. Carr said. ^ p tis ts in Russia. and a longtime race volunteer. Street. * and refuseniks indicated the at- | Moscow on the subway, when she Those not yet adopted include three elderly single per­ At Start & "When 1 mentioned the passing of It takes a full minute and a half Another “ in” spot: that island titudes of most Soviets. made eye contact with a soldier. She sons, one elderly couple and five individuals with han­ Brezhnev, he said, ‘Yes, that was a before the racers at the end of the near the Lenox Pharmacy. “ I think most of us see what we said she handed the soldier a dicaps .or health problems. The remaining baskets are ST. BRIOOCT CHURCH 4* surprise, because when I was Finish pack cross the start line — and - It’s another neighborhood wanted to see,” said Brindamour. Friendship Force card, printed in designated for families with one to six children, Mrs. speaking with him (Brezhnev) the On Watch sweat watching this phenomenon is a un­ gathering, and those in the know ‘ T think you have to realize that Russian. Carr said. I other day, he sounded fine,” ’ ique tlirill. even bring their lawn chairs along to most of the people you have m et are Churches and groups who are providing Thanksgiving But you’ll miss out on the race if watch the runners as they complete recalled Susag. "H e read it and tried to hand it THAMKSOIVINO MORHIHC X dissident’s and, very much like the baskets include: Emanuel Lutheran, Concordia you just stand there. Susag said he was told the Baptist back, but I wouldn’t take it,” she their last two miles. Vietnam War protesters In America Lutheran. Center (Ijinsrsgatioiud. St. Marv’s Eniscopal, 8:30 A. M. “ Any place along Blast Center “ Anywhere along Porter Street” church is flourishing in tlie U.S.S.R., said.u’He looked at it again and put "4 in the 'SOa, they are on the outskirts Elast Catholic High School, St. James Roman Catholic, Street,” says Dr. Elamon Flanagan with 500,000 Baptists and about 20 it in his pocket.” is also recommended. of society, they are kind of rebels.” South Methodist, Community Baptist, Second The ‘In’ spot percent of them under 20. In Mass, Hoty Communion of Jean Road, a longtirtie race “ It’s a good wide str'eet. Runners Brindamour’s comments created Congregational, Assumption School, St, Bridget ^ h o ol. Moscow and Leningrad, services She said the soldier touched her on Scriptural Readings, Homily, volunteer who jokingly calls himself should "be running comfortably at a bit of a stir among the Americans, Trinity Covenant, North Methodist, Manchester Wate's are attended by'about 800 people, he the shoulder as she left'the train. Organ, Choir. Folk Qlroup the race’s “temperance officer.” this point — you • can say hello to but he explained that he was not the Eighth Utilities District Auxiliary. said. HiGULAr^ Flanagan, who nuis the race each your friends and they’ll probably defending the harsh treatment of “ I thought, oh my God, I ’ve picked Individuals and groups who are providing baskets or Congregational Singing. Too narrow Susag said when the Americans d T . year, says it’s his job to “keep respond,” says Mistretta. dissidents, only was poimiqg out up a Russian soldier!” said Mrs. sponsoring food collections include New England attended the Sunday service in checking op the bands to see they’re Mistretta has another uiot; that it would a mistake to con­ Bersbn. “ But he said, ’Cuba.’” Mechanical Services, Brownie ‘TroOps from Martin and Leningrad, they were taken to the Cash and Food Donations not drinking on the (iourse.” DON’T watch the race from the clude that the average Soviet citizen Keeney Street schools, nurseryiKhopl children from St. He’s urging watchers away from front of the church. She said after talking to him in Acoaotad Bv beginning of Charter Oak Street: was opposed to the system. M ary’s and the YW CA, and Pam and Jack Steton. .^the start-fiiUsh line. “ The start- “ The preaching — we could not Spanish, she discovered that he was HERE’S A WATeHen*8 MAPOF ROAD RACE HOT'SPOTS “ t f s too consested.” he says. St. Vinoent de Paul Sodaty . . . If you can. resist, avoid the start-finish line finish is so huge and so complex this Please turn to page ia understand the language, but before STOCKTON MADE lots of a .Cuban pilot training in the Soviet BINGO WINNERS at the Manchester Senior Citizens to help the needy of our area. about five minutes had passed, a lit­ friends by snapping photos with his Union. Center have been contributing the canned goods won in 12 - MANCHESTER HERALD, Tues., Nov. 23, 1982 1 MANCHESTER HERALD. Tues., Nov. 23, 1982— 13 Scott's World A dvice Hartman becoming TV's favorite interviewer

By Vernon Scott going to blind them with sen­ myself to avoid asking obvious them. How could I possibly be bored.” 5-year-old deserves truth DPI Hollywood Reporter sationseeking questions that might questions. So I read all the news clips, In the competition for ratings among HOLLYWOOD — David Hartman is humiliate the interviewee. biographies and anything else I can lay the early news and tqfofmation fast becoming television’s favorite in­ But neither are Hartman’s questions my hands on.” programs (7-9 a.m.), ABC’S|"Good Mor­ terlocutor, averaging four interviews a all puff and fluff. Some are probing and Hartman, who graduated from Duke ning America” has run its older, more about her birth and father day with pip>e-and-slippers smoothness hardedged. University with a degree in economics, established NBC competition, “Today,” “We’ve tried to pick the top people so says he is getting a post-graduate degree and CBS into the ground in the ratings, as daily host- of “Good Morning DEAR ABBYi America.” we can extend our interview from the in the humanities and being paid for it race. column with some advice •If; daughtep is 4 years o l d . ^ For the past seven years Hartmati has usual eight or nine minutes that we do while playing TV host. Much of the credit must go to Hart- (I’ll call her "Cindy, for my bullheaded hus­ drawn out scientists, educators, with one-time guests,” the tall (6-foot-5), In addition to show bi^siness mah', an ex-actor whose best was not married when Cin­ band. I need somebody to professionals, politicians and show well-tailored Hartman said, celebrities, he has interviewed scores of remembered roles were in the TV series uack me up. business personalities in 5-minute “The object is to present af^rofile of world leaders, including Richard Nixon. “The Bold Ones” and "Lucas Tanner.” dy was bom. (I’m still D ear Abby RIGHTHANDED MAMA not.) I would like her to sessions of give and take. ^ e celebrity, as they do in magazines. “Meeting the influential people of our He has achieved considerably more know the truth about what But more and more frequently Hart­ We try to explore their lives and get time has demonstrated to me that they renown as a communicator than as an DEAR MAMAi All my happened between her Abigail Van Buren' man has devoted seven or eight minutes comments from their families and are different from the rest of us,” he actor. consultants on child father and me, but I think a day for an entire week of interviews friends with a sort of "This Is Your Life’ said." “’The people who make things development conflrm your Indeed, so impressive is Hartman’s she’s too young to unders­ opinion and mine. Allow,; with the same celebrity, most recent of quality. happen have some interesting qualities sincerity and popularity that rumors which was Richard Burton earlier this “It’s a delightful way of bringing in common. tand and also too young to your child to use the hand* keep surfacing that the 47-year-old TV keep it to herself. She’s a month. guests to the show with moSe in mind “They are usually ambitious and she prefers. Forcing star is.seriously considering entering smart little girl, very children to be right-handed These in depth interviews have been than simply plugging their latest movies without exception have paid their dues politics. by working to make things happen. They talkative, and tells hand. when they are naturally in­ extraordinarily revealing, doubtless due or television shows. An embarrassed Hartman said, “I already toM her one lie and to Hartman’s workmanlike approach to “The secret Ijes in our choice of sub­ never sat back and let the world earn strangers all our business, don’t want to tell her When she tries to eat' clined to be lefthanded can_ them a living or allowed things to happen don’t know where all that comes from., It which should be kept at with her left hand, he gets cause stammering or seeking answers to complex, difficult jects. Everyone we’ve brought to the makes me qhuckle. It’s flattering, but another.. show for extended interviews has to them. ° home. How much should I tell mad and roughly pulls her emotional problems. Your and sometimes personal queries. I’m so. concentrated on this job I don’t Hartman has piayed host to James enjoyed a long and distinguished career. “They also have great respect tor their She keeps saying she her? And when? spoon out of her little fist husband is not only wrong, Cagney, James Stewart, Bette Davis, They also haven’t been overexposed own ability and capacity and have busted think about much else. wants her daddy. I have ON THE SPOT and shoves it in her right he’s cruel. Lucilie Ball, Kirk Douglas, Gene Kelly, when it comes to talking about their backsides and worked hard without “I’ve been offered some Interesting told her that her father band. ’Then he stands over 2 William Holden and Henry Fonda among themselves.” exception. All of them have taken risks. prime time opportunites, but I’m so busy does not live, with us and DEAR ONt Cindy’s her, threatening to spank CONFIDENTIAL tO others. Unlike many' a talk show host, Hart­ They’ve dared. with ‘Good Morning America’ I haven’t never will. She asks where question, “Were you and her if she tries to change “ETHLCAL PHYSICAL Herald photo by Richmond INTERLOCUTER DAVID HARTMAN Many, of the stars agree to appear with man is^a stickler for exhaustive “People ask me if I’m bored doing so had time to think about them. I have no her daddy is, and I tell her my daddy ever married?” back to her left hand. He T H E R (m ST IN OHIO": . . . stars feel safe with him Hartman safe in the knowledge he’s not research, saying, “I have to prime many interviews and I can’t believe desire to move on.” I don’t know, which I don’t. indicates that she is much has her crying and upset Sorry*you found the (He never knew I was wiser than you suspect. over this every time she headline on one of my Save the turkeys pregnant, which is the way Tell her the truth now, and eats. columns offensive, but I do I wanted it.) stress the Importance of He says all his brothers not write my own "heads.” Last week a friend keeping it in the family. If and sisters were naturally They are written by my Children In the kindergarten classes of Daryl Thanksgiving. Shown from lek are Michael We're not building a better mousetrap; we're importing it overheard Cindy tell she talks, she talks. It’s- left-handed, but his mother syndicate editor and sent StawskI and Gall Callahan at Nathan Hale Piela as Farmer Fred, Patricia Sullivan as 3 someone that she had a still the lesser of the evils. whipped them into using to all the newspapers that School, had fun putting on the play "The Time Turkey, and Robert Gray as Tom made in America are producing jugglers, but there’s just so long the I love America. 1 salute the flag Only -25 years ago, airlines Jones average doesn’t reflect it daddy but he didn’t live Children feel betrayed their right hands because run my column, where they Great Turkey Escape," In preparation for Turkey. and 1 go around saying: “We re the throughout the world were all flying cars they call “ A m erican” in money-manipulators can keep their from day to day. The engineers, the with us anymore. (Her when they learn they’ve “left-handed people are are often rewritten by a greatest! But I'd be lying if I said-I American-made Boeings, foreign countries. Even the cars that numbers in the air while the make chemists, the architects, the scien­ daddy never did live with been lied to. clumsy and stupid.” We copy editor at the local wasn t worried. Douglasses and Lockheeds. Now, Andy are actually assembled jn Detroit money off each exchange. Eventual­ tists, the designers ought to be us, which I’m sure she have' had some heated newspaper. The funny thing is. unlike my the more you travel on the smaller are often put together from pacts ly someone has to come up with the predominant in our society. If knew.) DEAR ABBYi I need arguments over this. Few Vermonters will carve government and some of my airlines both in the United States iR ooney made in Japan. They’re about as product, without which all the anyone’s going to get rich, it ought Out of the blue my child your advice as soon as I just let the baby use Problems? You’ll feel friends. I'm not worried about the and abroad, the more you see com­ American as chopsticks. statistics in the world mean nothing. to be them. The mechanics, the later asked, “Were you and possible. I have four small whichever hand she wants better if you get them off Russians. I'm a little worried about mercial planes jnade in other coun­ Syndicated Statistics show that for the first If it’s hard to do, we aren’t doing carpenters, the electricians, the my daddy ever married?” children. They are all (and it’s always her left your chest. Write to Abby, tries. time in our history, more people are it anymore. We buy it from someone construction experts, the plumbers . I was so shocked, I said the Chinese, I'll never get, oyer Columnist righthanded except the hand when her daddy isn’t P.O. Box, 38923, worrying about the Germans and Our computers, our television employed in service industries than else, double the price and sell it and the repair people and all the “ Yes!” baby, who is 22 months old. around), but I’m afraid Hollywood, Calif. 90038. turkeys grown in their state the Japanese make me nervous, but sets, our electronic games and much in production. Today 73 percent of back to ourselves at a profit. No other craftsmen who really know How do I handle this, Ab- She appears to be left- this is making a nervous For a personal reply, the people I'm most worried about of our office equipment is made in the work force deal in services. Only wonder we’re in trouble. In the last how to do something ought to be by? I love her so much and handed, but my husband is and confused child of her. please enclose a stamped, are ourselves. We aren't going it. Japan. It may have the name of 27 percent work in the production of three months alone, we spent $13 making it, too. don’t want her hurt. I've forcing her to use her right Please put this in your self-addressed jpnvelope. MONTPELIER, Vt. (UPI) - this year — Kneeshaw understands manufactured feed made of In 1950 we vVere making 75 percent some fine old American company on goods. In other words, more people billion more in foreign countries The only subject you read about or When Vermonters sit down to dinner .the difficulty of producing and vitamin-fortified grain which is es­ of all the cars driven anywhere in it, but don't iet them kid you; the are selling it than making if. “Ser­ buying their goods than they spent hear about is money. It’s as if the Thanksgiving, only a few will be selling turkeys. pecially high in protein — the the world Now .TO percent of all the chances are the component parts vice” may sound like a good word, here buying ours. Oil is something products on which all money is carving up turkeys grown in their “This is a high-risk business,” he “secret” of growing turkeys, cars sold just in this country alone come from Japan. we do. Did you ever think it would but a lot of what goes under that we can’t help, but machinery and based don’t make any difference at statd and even that number has said. “ I would say it’s worse than K*neeshaw said. are made somewhere else. They're Our .steel mills are running at happen? It’s cheaper, even for heading is duplicating order forms manufactured goods are things we alt. Why arc so many foreign goods Increase intake of calcium dropped by half since last year. the stock market.” During their first four weeks, the not only made somewhere else, about 37 percent capacity this week American companies, to buy foreign on Xerox machines, selling in­ ought to be able to produce better selling so well here? Usually it’s . About 10,000 turkeys were raised Kneeshaw started raising turkeys birds are fed a specially formulated they're made very well in Japan, and that's partly because of the steel and have it shipped here. surance and figuring out interest than anyone else in ^ e world. because those products are being on four comrnercial turkey farms in as a boy. “starter,” then for 12 weeks are Germany. France, and Sweden. I've economy, but even more because The same auto companies in rates on bank loans. The basis for everything is not made cheaper and better than com­ Verm ont in 1981, A griculture “You raise a few, then a few given “grower.” Finally, they are driven Russian cars and they're no other countries have better Detroit that have workers deman­ I recognize the need for bankers, money but hard work. Wall Street parable products made in America. to cut osteoporosis risk Department spokesman Gilbert more, then it grows into a fattened with a “finisher” during financial experts and figure threat. technology for making steel than ding that the rest of us buy cars doesn’t deal in that, and the Dow Why shouldn’t I be worried? products. Parker said Monday. business," he said. the last month of their lives. » DEAR DR. LAMB: You - But this year, he said, the state Turkey farming require^ a com- In mid-November, the turkeys are have mentioned DEAR DR. LAMB: My will produce fewer than 5,000 binafion of careful planning, hard killed. ' minimizing or preventing son gave me a tropical gobblers. work and luck, Kneeshaw said. "This year it’s an unreal situation, Cinema osteoporosis. I (Irink from bird, a cockatoo. I can’t And according to Parker, most of Each fall, the farmer must order because my competitors are not two to four glasses of skim tell you how sick I’ve been those are the work of Vermont’s his baby turkeys, called “poults.” raising them for some reason,” he N Texas tops Your Health Elmo^s milk a day. I’ve heard that this past month, two sole surviving major commercial They arrive in June and are kept said. “But there's enough room, for months after getting the turkey farm -- Shawnee Snores, for about a week in areas heated to all of us. I would like to see Ilartf<»rd 9:40. - E.T. The Extra- Heidi’s Song (G) 12, 1:55, RIVERSIDE RESTAURANT two glasses is enough and Lawrence Lamb, M.D. \tlien*‘iiiii Cinema — Terrestrial (PG) 7:10, 3:45 , 5:40 , 9:25. — Time you’ve said four glasses is bird. I have to sit up at Inc., of Panton, owned and operated 90 degrees Fahrenheit. Gradually, somebody raising turkeys. There's in turkeys Era Notte a Roma 7, 9:30. 9,25. Bandits (PG) 12:15, 2:30, and Captaln'9 Lounga better. Is bone meal all night and have a very bad by George Kneeshaw, a - 35-year the temperature is lowered until the certainly a market for it.” Cinema 4!ily —■ The ManeheHler 4:45, 7:15, 9:30. right? I’ve read bone respiratory cough. My hus­ veteran of the business. bird can survive normal' summer Parker, however, said other Ver­ Empire Strikes Back (PG) 11 \ , Theaters East — W'illinianlie .'powder is better. I’m con- band-got sick first. I Despite the success of Shawnee temperatures. mont growers have oulletl out of the WASHINGTON (UPIl - Texas has the most 7:15, 9:40. — Everything The Empire Strikes Back Jillsim Square Cinema ;cemed about this disease thought we might have the Shores — which will sell 3,000 birds The young poults a.‘e given business. place names containing the word "turkey," a You Always Wanted to (PG) 7:15, 9:30, - Time — Creepshow (R) 6:50, ElnroZaccardelll ^j)ecause I have it in both flu. I was very weak. government Thanksgiving computer search of Know About Sex (R) 7:05, Bandits (PG) 7:15, 9:20. - . sides of my family. I have given the bird to 9;15. — National Lam­ Your Ho»t should have increased or after meals on some place names showed Monday. Texas’ tally of 174 far 10:15 with Love and Death Heidi's Song (G) 7, 8:45, Enjoy A Traditional What about bran? I take my son to take to his house, poon’s Class Reunion (R) calcium in her diet. It does fruit or even breakfast food O n y o u r out-distanced Kentucky’s 94. iR) 8:40. — Heidi’s Song 10:.30. 7, 9:10. — First Blood (R) ;lt twice a day and find it to see if we are allergic to Store Report from U.S.S.R. Of seven words associated with the Thanksgiving •helpful. I have read that help decrease the chances as a snack. him. Would this be the type iGl 7, 9:20. — The Chosen Mansfiehl 7:10, 9:10. — Time Bandits of getting osteoporosis holiday used in the search by the U.S. Geological one should not take it of reaction we would get? I (Jontinued from page II m a r k (PGl 7:30 , 9:45. Trans-I.ux College 7, 9:15. Thanksgiving Dinner (dissolving bones). And there are other im­ Survey, a unit of the Department of Interior, f'.ine«,tudio — The 39 l uin — Monsignor 7, 9:15. ! before or during meals as hate getting rid of the bird. Winilsor ’The rule is to get more portant things you can do. THE COSMOS hotel was built for the 1980 geographers found turkey to be the most popular Steps 7:30 with Demon — The Marriage of Maria ;it keeps the. digestive Not getting too deficient in rapped Conlinurrf from page 1 1 Plaza — Superman II In a relaxed, congenial atmosphere with a panoramic than a gram of calcium a DEAR READER: Olympics and, with its m(xlernistic design and name. Other words checked included Thanksgiving, Pond 9 05 Braun 7 with Lili Marlene (PG)7:15. system from absorbing estrogens is Important. view of the Hartford skyline — Choose a Fine Turkey day and 1.5 grams Is better There is a good chance you flashing neon sign, it looked like it would be more in Main and Center streets. pilgrim, Mayflower, cranberry, pumpkin and Ca^t llarlforil 9:10. nutrients. That would Exercise is important. I’m That Is about the amount of h av e p s i tt a c o s is , a AUGUSTA, Maine (UPI) place in Las Vegas than in Moscow. It loverlooked The wall in front of Mary Plymouth. Ka- questiona of gneral Interest bountiful land, our great gift of work for an even better society. The Rev. Robert J. Burbank frequency hearing first only increaae her deter- I’m not happv In my Job Why not make a list of will be discussed in future freedom, we can identify wi^ the Thanksgiving is a time for giving St. James Roman Catholic notice that they no longer miaatloa to' road It. right now s m have, qiilte hour skills, achievements columns. ancient writer and praise and thank thanks for past blessings, but it is Church ------7 MANCHESTER HERALD. Tues., Nov. 23, 1982- 15 14- MANCHESTER HERALD. Tues.. Nov. 23, 1982 ^ Sugar Bowl AVKUI.U1 ‘ > great matchup ^^SkiiteterVehicle Regi^er l Old register lists 1915 c&rs pw*tU« ihim— ______* * ' . • \ ’ Page 16 r.,. ^ H. »7 n ft r( MLtSHISC ca . H 0r$ftr^ Ct»«. SPORTS GREAT BARRINGTON, Berkshire Inn... 68.6 LENOX, Suppose back in the late summer of 1915 you had seen • V - t itiA rMta» W Hotel Aspinwall. . . 75.2 PITTSFIELD: Return to 81.8 the number plate on a car: 20325. By whipping out this L e n o x . . . 88.l e a s t l e e , about six miles from here Han’t what maktt dw booklet you could have discovered that toe car was a Collectors' we go over ‘Jacob’s Ladder’ into 99.1 BONNYRIGG, 4 1912 Paige 22, serial 4747, belonging to Herbert McCor­ C o rn ers. . . 131.2 S P R IN G F IE L D . . . 158.1 mick of 41 W. Center St., Manchester. The tar Corner HARTFORD.” following, 27993, would be a 1913 Velie piloted by An­ Pressure on UGonn mounts J Among the Connecticut Pleasure Cars that might drew Raleigh of 515 S. Main St. have started out on this trip (not necessarily to finish), The truck carrying number 3917 you'd find to be a 1915 Russ MacKendrick and omitting toe fam iliar names like Ford, Bulck and HAOt M H im w . OMPUki.*.. Federal of 7000 pounds, in the service of G.E. Willis of Overland, we see listed; the Paterson, Simplex, 164 E. Center St. And if you were splashed by motorcy­ Amplex, Matoeson, Lozier, Elmore, Lancia, Flanders, cle 3551 going through a puddle you could plot revenge ■Tier Brush, Krit, CHittlng, Buffum, S.G.V, R.C.H., E.M .F., against.one J.P. McCann of 43 Clinton St. but players are havinlg fun Moyer, Dolson, Staver, Penn, and Metallurglgue. This 104-page publication (in the collection of Jiidd Caplovich of Vernon), Was the first supplemental issue scriptions to qualify for second-class mailing. Also: DeDion Bouton, Berliet, Stoddard Dayton, to the first complete Connecticut 'Motor Vehicle The editorial in the booklet refers to this “ first bi­ Goeth, Schact, Motorette,, Empire, King, Cameron, Pittsburgh just a sliade lower. Perno will start the regular v w MAann n itiH iL H H A By Earl Ypst Register. It contains a few more than 6,000 entries, monthly edition.” There is a note warning Middletown Palmer-Singer, Houpt-Rockwell, Willis Knight, Sibley Sixteen of toe 27 games will be season one week from tonight in tixu^Xi^jsatzssa. Sports Editor about a fifth of the total number of cars on toe Connec­ drivers to back their cars right up to toe curb when they Curtiss, Home Made, Self-Made, Briscoe, Welch, against Big East foes. The slate also New haven against Yale with a ticut roads in 1915. ' park. One of the road bulletins: “ The trunk line from Twombley, Tourralne, Orson, Hupp Yeats, Nyberg, “ There’s pressure in (University includes two tournaments. Fiesta record of 89 wins and 52 defeats. Somers to Stafford Springs over Bald Mountain is under Moline, Garfor^, Crow, Holsman, Langdon, Coey, o f) Connecticut basketluill, “ Dom Classic Dec. 3-4 in Tempe, Ariz., Thus, he’s a winning coach who can Although the cover reads “ Vol. I, No. 1 August, 1915,’ ’ ' construction. The detour around this job is over dirt Carhart and many others. Pemo, head coach, assessed before and the UConn Classic Dec. 28-29 at point to three 20 win campaigns. a call to the State Librarv disclosed that toere was a country road and is posted.” Ominous. The buyer had a wide choice in those days. a record assemblance of toe media the Hartford Civic Center. There is no basketball in the state, June publication with the same title but catiying toe on any level, that generates the in­ IfaitWtd Mm U m Soma ^ Iht There are many ads throughout for hotels and service at the annual pre-season luncheon “ It’s the toughest sch^ule any State Seal on the cover instead of the ads. That book is stations, auto insurance and a double-acting pump. Monday at the Storrs campus. Connecticut basketbair team has terest and excitement as does a »iiillalw« W a rnm^m * about half an inch thick; the 1926 edition (the last com­ There was to be a suggested tour in each issue, TONIGHT: Meeting of toe Manchester Philatelic Now starting his sixth season as ever undertaken,” Perno added and UConn home game, especially at the plete one) had to be in ,12 volumes! showing accumulated mileage. This one haS “ A T R IP Society at Mott’s Community Hall, 587 Middle Turnpike m head coach, Pem o knows all about no one could disagree. The UConns Hartford Civic Center where ci owds A loose sheet inside toe booklet indicates a plan to THROUGH THE BERKSHIRES... may be enjoyed any East, 6:30 to 9 p.m. Evaluation of last Sunday’s show, pressure, having been on toe hot are out of what was a weaker up to 15,000 can be accommodated. CONNECTICUT MOTOR VEHICLE REGISTER supply subscribers with six supplements a year. It asks Sunday. . . 0.0. Hartford, Main St. at City Hall; 9.4 the M AN PH IL, with ao eye to toe larger ^ e n t in April- seat in toe past because toe Huskies Yankee Conference in contrast to Seven appearances are listed in . . . listed cars on state roads in 1915. for a remittance of 50 cents because they need paid sub- AVON; 13.0 CANTON. . . 26.2 WINSTED. . . 55.2 manpex ’83. did not deliver the championships the tougher Big East Conference. Hartford. 2 longed for by toe faithful following “ This is a rebuilding year,” he Three freShmen hake won berth ■I and alumni. added, which too, was no secret with and “ will see a lot of playing tim e.” \\ Tonight toe Huskies will face the big three of a year ago. Corny The untried trio includes highly- Yankee Traveler Cibona of Yugoslavia in a preseason Thompson),-Mike McKay and Chuck touted Earl Kelley, Eddie Williams exhibition at 8 o’clock at the Aleksinkas no longer around. and Tim Coles. “ The three all have fleldhouse and unlike regular season “ We will be a more interesting shown maturity,” the mentor starts there will b f tickets available team to watch. I ’m sure you w ill be added. to the public at $5 a copy. excited at what you’ll see. Ogr “ 1 really enjoy what I am doing. Turkey only “ W e’ve had a great pre-seawn overall speed will be better,” he Few people can say that,” Perno 3 cautioned the group. said. (practices),’’ Pemo 'echoed. “ ’The BRUCE KUCZENSKI k O- .■ players are having fun. They unders­ Of the 12-man squad, nine are That’s what has kept the former tand that we have been ranked No. 8 . . . lone senior scholarships with the other three Huskie in the much-aligned field — or No. 9 in toe Big East. walk-ons. if you don’t win. “ The big difference this year has predicted in the tough Big East The only senior is 6-10 Bruce Perno has heard the wolves at the part of holiday been the enthusiasm shown by toe Conference.” Kuczenski, honored with the captan- , door before and he’ll hear them ,4 team. It’s something that I haven’t Three of the Big East members — cy. “ He deserved to be captain. I ’m again. ' seen in the past. Georgetown, Syracuse and pleased that he w ill be leading our. If the UConns can post a .500 Kclitor% nolr: Lnollit'r in u series forerunner of today's Thanksgiving “ It’s good to be in a position Villanova — have been ranked squad. He’s played in all Our 83 season it will be a major ac­ of weekly ft*aliires w rilten for I ‘PI celebration. The Thanksgiving UPl photo where you can grow,” he added, among the top 20 college teams in games the last three years,” Perno complishment for both the coach by llie XI. V Xnlo and Tra^fd 4Jiil> weekend is one of the last chances to referring to the lowly standing the country with new member said, r and the players. aimed at |iro\iding \ « ‘ w watch plantation residents bake and CHARGERS! JAMES BROOKS STOPPED _ Knglanders with fuel-eonserving,, prepare foods for the long, hard . . . short by Raiders' safety Mike Davis elost‘-lo-lloine itdsure trips. New England winter, A number of restaurants in the By Jon Zonderman » Plymouth area have ^anksgiving ALA Auto and Travel Club Toke^your pick in race Day dinners, and the plantation is ^Bowling Written for UPl open Thanksgiving Day. Call (617) 746-1622 for more information. Raiders boast ■ Take your pick, Greg M eyer or Eamonn Coghlan. WELLESLEY. Mass - 'T' Thanksgiving is a special time in Dancing is in order in Vermont / That’s toe pair rated the men to beat in the 46th New England For those who want th e weekend following edition of the Five Mile Road Race in Manchester EI.KS- Ralph Doyer 136-383, Herald more than just a football game and Thanksgiving. Friday night, NOv. 26, Thanksgiving morning. Bruce Fish 15()-173-457, Frank Char- Meyer, who set a record in winning a 10- dinner, the ALA Auto and Travel is the annual Mount Snow Snow- Angle tier .362, Dave Richards 361, Paul kilometer race in Chicago- last-Sunday, has in­ Club has some tips for Thanksgiving makers Ball at 9 p.m. The ball is free to those who wear costumes. Monday hex Ford 138-146-417, Dave LaChapelle dicated that he’ll try and run just fast enough to win Earl Yost, Day. The rest of the weekend can 161-411, Hank Hebert 164-152-449, also be fun and relaxing. Call (8021 464-33,33 for more infor­ without any record in mind. Sports Editor John Rieder 135-385, A1 Atkins 351, “ If the conditions are right, I m ay,try for a se­ Visitors to Old Sturridge Village. mation. pass to Todd Christensen to the Tom Ficaro 149-383, Gene Richard­ Sturbridge. Mass., are invited to a LOS ANGELES (UPl) - The cond but my biggest concern is to wlji,” the 27-year- N • A'n. Chargers’ 35. son 1,35-148-407, Ernie Pepin 145-139, candlelight service in the 1832 On Saturday. Nov. 27, Williston, Raiders spent millions of dollars old Wellesley, Mass., resident said. San Diego came right back, with ' ' ■Hal Waldron 357, Gary Moore 158 , Coghlan, 29, one of Ireland’s all-time greats, now Village Meetinghouse on the com­ Vt.. is the place to be for a Western I and more than two years battling Fonts directing a drive to the Los Ernie Pepin 398, Len Anderson 165-' residing in New York, ran away from the field last mon at 1:15 p.m or 3:45 p.m. style square dance at Central High the N F L in court over the right to University of Hartford. Last year the Bantams Angeles 18 with two minutes 1.38-402, Gary Moore 399, Jack Talley Thanksgiving Day. At the Village School, from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. For move from Oakland to Los Angeles. year and said he would return and would set sights .posted a 1,3-10 won-lost record ...WINF will carry remaining. But on second doxvn, his .' 162-388, Travis (Hook Jr. 356, Travis on fellow countryman John Treacy’s record of 21; 26 Tavern. Thanksgiving guests will information, call (802) 862-4764. They could have saved big bucks and the Five M ile Road Race TTiursday starting at 9:30 , pass under a heavy rush was in­ Cook Sr. 152-389, Tony DeSimone enjoy oyster bisque, turkey and all f v . I lots of tim e by holding the trial on a set in 1979. with George Ehrlich handling the announ­ SI NDXX AFTERNOON. Nov, tercepted by Vann M cE Ii% in the 373, Don Benoit 146-144-392, Joe De Now ranning for toe New York A.C., and coming the fixings, and pumpkin and mince Monday night. cing...Alicia Quinby, outstanding young 28, the Springfield, Mass. Mayor’s end zone. The Chargers got toe ball Simone 356, Jerry Ridel 141-395, off a leg injury that curtailed his competing for nine pies. Call i617l .347-3362 for informa­ You see, the Raiders are virtually Manchester tennis player, had a bird's eye view of Office of Cultural and Community back one more time and moved to Max Welch 135-396, AI Grabinsky months, Coghlan was just 11 seconds off Treacy’s tion about Sturbridge Village and M l unbeatable on Monday night. the exhibition match last Saturday night between Affairs will sponsor the Prince the Raiders’ 30, but Fonts’ despera­ 141-.374, Bemie Welch 143-149-403, AI record in his first run over toe paved Manchester reservations for Thanksgiving They’ve compiled a 19-2-1 record in John McEnroe and Guillermp Vilas at the'New Street Players for Children and tion . pass into the end zone was Coelho 156-363, Chuck Barrera 377, streets before a crowd of 30,000. Treacy set the dinner. the 12 years of post-Sunday football. Haven Veterans Coliseum. Quinby served as a ball their "Mother Goose Jamboree” in .'af- Victory Number 19 came Monday batted down as time expired. _ John LaChapelle 160-393, Ken record in his second try. girl for the pros...John Lusa, former East Catholic Springfield Symphony Hall at 1:30 C o w p e rw a ite 142-135-383, Ron XT MX S TIC SK X PO KT, Mystic, I f night against the San Diego “ I don’t know what it is about Coghlan copped the Metropolitan 10-K10 days ago high scorer, has joineddhe East Hartford Explorers p.m. and 3:30-p.rti. Conn , admission on Thanksgiving Chargers, a 28-24 thriller after they Monday night football, but w e’re Devaux 139-371, Doug Scmton 155- in New York, an indication that he’s in top form. and flipped in 28 points in a pre-season opener At 3 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 28, the Day includes the chance to watch' trailed 24-0 in their first regular-' very proud of our Monday night 382, M ic k e y F in n 368, R u d y Known for his tremendous finishing kick, Coghlan against Willimantic, The club opens the New Museum of Our National Heritage, the staff of Buckingham House season game before the new record,” said Raiders Coach Tom Quedesse 356, Tuffy Montineri 138- indicated on the weekend that he’s revised his England Basketball Assn, slate Dec.5 at Penney Lexington, Mass., sponsors a lec­ prepare a complete Thanksgiving ( I f hometown fans. Flores. “ Monday night football just 364. thinking about a record, as planned 12 months High against Bridgeport, ..Fred Lennon and Nick ture by Lee Lockwood, the inter­ least. At the Seaman s Inne, just And the Raiders learned brings out the best in us. ealier, but would run just fast enough to win and Peters will coach the Bennet varsity and jayvee outside the seapbrt's north gate, you nationally-known photojournalist, f/ something about their new fans. In ” ^ n Diego is a marvelous foot­ stay ahead of Meyer. basketball teams this season with Bill Wooldridge V about bis career .as (^ documentary can enjoy a dinner cooked almost Oakland, their fans turned out ball team and I ’m just very proud of While a two-man race is expected, current IC4A and Caroline Jennings handling the girls' varsity the same way. For reservations, photographer. Lockwood directed ■ despite floods, biting cold or the way we came back tonight. We Whalers cross country champion Brendan Quinn, a senior at and jayvee teams at the same school. call Seaman s Inne at (203 ) 536-9649- the current exhibit, "Th e Boston ! anything else Mother Nature could didn’t panic. We didn’t go for toe big Providence College, could upset toe applebart and F'or information about Mystic, call Photo-Documentary Project,” ; hurl at them. In Los Angeles, unless play. It was a very fine game. It was break toe tape first. The tall 22-year-old collegian is Notes off the cuff 12031 5,36-2631.' which provides over 100 photos of it’s 80 degrees and sunny, forget it. fine.” in great shape and sharp from a fall season of top- The modern-day Pilgrims at the development of the Fort Point People have a hot tub, a 45-inch Forgive San Diego (hach Don bring up grade competition. Barry Sheckley, former East Catholic and Trinity Herald photos by Pinto Plimoth Plantation, Plymouth. Channel and leather district of color TV and heaven kn’ows what ( Coryell for disagreeing. Quinn, second a year ago in a triple tie, can’t be College football player, is now on the faculty at the Mass., have already celebrated the ' Boston. The lecture is free,^ s is ad­ else to occupy them. “ It was a bitter pill to swallow,” overlooked. , University of Connecticut. Sheckley will be making harvest with the Harvest Home mission to the museum. Call (617) A CERAMIC NATIVITY SCENE FOR FESTIVAL SHARON LAJOIE CHECKS OUT HER ENTRY Monday night, for toe debut of he said. “ You have to give toe his 11th start in the F ive M ile Road Race Festival in October — the 861-6560 for more inforniation. . . . made by Lucille Glaeser . . . for Festival of Trees their new NFL team featuring toe Raiders a great deal of credit the Marshall Trinity assistants Thursday...Seventeen of UConn's 27 basketball triumphant return of a popular way they came back and played toe games wHl^ be offered on.teevee. Channel 20 in Heisman Trophy-winning ranning second half. y Preparing to start his second season as varsity Waterbury will carry six Monday night Big East back to the Coliseum where he HARTFORD (UPl) - The Hart­ basketball coach at Trinity College in Hartford, games and Channel 3 plans to move four Huskie played for four years, more than 12,- “ Now we’re going to find out just ford Whalers, searching for scoring Stan Ogrodnik will have two of his form er players games on the screen...Bill Detrick starts his 24th Wadsworth tree festival opens Dec. 3 000 ticket-holders stayed home. The what kind of people we have ... all of from left wing, have recalled Paul at East Catholic High as assistants, Frank Kinel year as Central Connecticut’s varsity hoop coach crowd of 42,000— drawn from a pop­ us, as a team, as indiviuals.” Marshall from their Binghamton, and Gary Carlson. Kinel played his college bail at tonight when the Blue Devils face Husson of Maine ulation of about 8 million people — Plunkett hit 18-of-25 passes for 163 N.Y., farm team in the ^ e r ic a n St. Peters in New Jersey and Carlson was at the at New Britain. Hockey League and sent down f Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford' display, including a 30-foot live fir donating. A puppet program called “The was toe fourto-smallest in toe 14 yards while Fonts completed 25-of- ^ ^ will be aglow with Christmas trees tree in the inner courtyard of the This year from the opening of toe Kids on the Block,” geared to im­ 42 for 357 yards as toe Chargers fell veteran George Lyle. < games played in the nation since toe festival to the end, the halls and The Whalers also announced Mon­ and Christmas decorations from museum. All but the live tree w ill be prove attitudes towards people with two-month strike ended. to 1-2. It was the 15th time Fonts had Dec. 3 through Dec. 12, during the on sale. The proceeds go to the com­ galleries of the Atheneum daily will disabilities, is scheduled. It must have been the heavy dew passed for more than 300 yards in a day that right winger Archie m ittee which in turn makes gifts.to he filled with the sounds of music ! game, tying Johnny Unitas on the Henderson was sent to Binghamton. ninth annual Holiday Festival of The opening of the refurbished on the ground and the forecast New charges made in NFL problems Trees. the Atheneum. coming from several local groups. I all-time list in that category. . Henderson, 25, formerly of the Huntington Gallery of 19th century calling for a 5 percent chance of •U The festival is organized by toe On the final day, Dec. 12, there w ill ' In addition to Allen’s TD runs of 3 Minnesota North Stars, was signed Lucille Glaeser of Broad Street, a French paintings is also set. mist. cusing the N F L P A of “ renegirtg on “ This is nothing but a d iver­ Women’s Committee of the be a carol sing in toe Courtyard, and 6 yards and Hawkins’ game­ by the Whalers as a free agent last NEW YO R K (U P l) — Savor those teacher a t. Bennet Junior High But the .Raiders ignored the sionary tactic.” said Donlan after Wadsworth Atheneum, with the help around the giant Christmas tree. The festival hours are 11 a.m. to 5 winning TD, toe Raiders s c o r ^ on a September. memories of this weekend’s NFL an agreement” and warned that School, is donating a ceramic nativi­ ' sparse crowd and turned in a typical learning the players' vote, originally of-clubs, schools, individuals and Three additional special events p.m. Tickets are 63 for adults, $1.50 1-yard pass from Plunkett to The player changes announced games ... they may have to last a ’ items within the proposal “ will ty scene she has made. She teaches ; thriller for the Monday night TV scheduled for today, would not take will take place during toe festival. for students and senior citizens and Christensen. The Chargers built a Monday marked the second tim e in while. come o ff the table” if toe rank-and- 2 businesses tHroughout the state. art at Bennet. : audience. place until later this week. More than 125 decorated trees and The Lions Gallery exhibition of toys 50 cents for children. General 24-0 lead on a 19-yard Benirschke two weeks the Whalers have The^ntative agreement reached file votes the offer down. After watching San Diego’s Dan Jack Donlan, the N F L ’s chief "Basically, we thought we had a other Christmas motifs, some made Sharon Lajoie of North Street and learning aids for handicapped museum admission is waived during Fonts tear their defense apart with field goal, a 29-yard pass from Fonts swapped left wingers with Bingham­ by JHe N F L Players Association and negotiator who participated in the deal." bv Manchester residents, will be on designed a miniature tree that she’s people 'vill .be on display. the tree festival. precision passing en route to toe 24-0 to Dwight Scales and TD runs of 1 ton. Mike McDougal replaced Bob Management Ciouncil last Tuesday Sullivan on Nov: 8. night appears much more tentative announcement of a tentative settle­ lead, the Raiders finally and 2 yards by Chuck Muncie. The player reps are scheduled to A left winger nas failed to score a following Monday’s developments. ment to end the 57day players’ remembered it was Monday night. The first half belonged to toe meet with Garvey in Washington goal for Hartford since Sullivan The union postponed its. strike, Monday charged toat Ed After- the second TD of toe' game Chargers. But toe game belonged to today to discuss the draft proposal. scored against Minnesota on Nov. 2. membership vote on whether to Garvey, the NFLPA’s executive Births by Marcus Allen — who romped on toe often-zany Raiders, who showed Garvey said he was not certain if the The last current Whalers’ left accept a new 5-year, $1.6 billion con­ director, is trying to confuse the MCC the same Ck>liseum for four years few negative effects from t^stiik e .contract would be accepted by the xvlnger to score is Greg Adams, who tract while the executive .director of l,50(hnember union about specific 3 for Southern Cal en route to toe layoff. players. tallied twice at Los Angeles on Oct. the Council reacted angrily, ac­ areas of the contract. Perkinn, Timothy of 14 Harvard Road, was Garrison, Scott Nancy Scheinost Farr of Heisman — pulled the Raiders “ A lot of our players were ap­ signup 23. M ichael, son of Robert H. bom Nov. 4 at Manchester Ronald, son of Ronald Lake Road, Andover, was within 24-21, the unbeaten Raiders, prehensive about coming back,” A series of injuries have kept and Susan Brown Perkins Memorial Hospital. Her Albert and Deborah Hill bom at home on Nov. 3. 3-0, began their winning scoring said Plunkett. “ Then again, some Lyle, 28, from regaining his 1976-77 UConns All-Yankee Conference choices of 180 Mountain Road, was maternal grandparents are Garrison of 22 West Street, Her maternal grand­ Is on drive after San Diego’.s Rolf guys on our team aren’t apprehen­ form when he was World Hockey bom Oct. 22 at Manchester Robert and Audrey Keeley was born Nov. 3 at parents are Pauline Chace Benirschke missed a 33-yard field sive about anything. But some of us Association rookie of toe year -with DURHAM, N.H. (UPl) - last year. There were no repeaters Running backs — Garry Pearson, Memorial Hospital. His of Sliort Hills, N.J. Her Manchester Memorial of Middletown and toe late Telephone registration will goal attempt. are, and maybe we felt a little guilty about not working out as much as we 39 goals. He had four goals and six (Quarterback Rich Labonte of Maine on defense. Massachusetts, senior; Paul Lewis, r ^ i u c maternal grandparents are patent^ grandparents are Hospital. His maternal William F. Scheinost. Her be accepted through Dec. 10 Jim Plunkett completed three should have. assists in 16 games this season, but and linebacker John Dorsey copped BU, sophomore. a I 0 C , i Alice and Alwin Brown of E lm er and Isobel Leonard grandparents are Mr. and paternal grandparents are for winter intersession, passes for 50 yards and wito5:54 left 1982 All Yankee Conferenre team “ I hadn’t been bit for a long time, his last goal came Oct. 16. Five days Player of the Year honors and Kicker — Jack Leone, Maine, 37 Campfieid Road. He has of Colchester. Mrs. Wesley B. Hill of Lee, B a r b a r a F a r r o f 42 scheduled for Dec. 27 through in toe game, running back Frank By United Press International but when someone rung m y bell In later he suffered a hyperextended Maine’s Ron Rogerson was a un­ sophomore. a brother, James, 6, and Williams, Timothy Mass. His paternal grand­ Westwood St., Manchester, Jan. 14 at Manchester Com­ Hawkins crashed into toe end zone (Listing position, placer, school and toe first half, I felt right at home.” knee. animous choice as Coach of toe I>efens€- two sisters, Sarah, 14, and M ichael, son of Mark F. father is Albert J. Garrison and the late John R. Farr. munity College. from two yards out. The winning TD class) Marshall, 22, had nine goals and Y ear in the Yankee Omference. Martha, 12. and Donna Sandall of South St., Coventry. He Her maternal great­ Twelve three-credit courses capped an 80-yard march, The Raiders, fickle fans and all, Linemen — Dennis Talbot, Rhode five assists in 16 games ith Rhode Island and;. Maine Ellis, Christopher II- Williams of 83 Bryan has a brother, Adam, 5, grandmother is Leontine will be offered, including hll^Iighted by Plunkett's 25-yard are indeed home. O ffense Island, senior; Dave Sanzaro, Binghamton after he was acquired dominated toe voting, which was Wide' receivers — Tom Mut, mand, son of Jeffrey Lee Drive,' w af bora Nov. 5 at ^and a qlster Rachel, 2. Scheinost of South Hadley, anthropology, biology, data Maine, junior; Tony DeLuca, Rhode Oct. 5 from Toronto for an eighth-or done by toe six conference coaches. Rhode Island, senior; Keith Huggar, and Bernadette Petraitis Manchester Memorial Steeves, Tanner Mass. She has two processing, microeconomics, Island; junior; Ray Sullivan, Maine, lOto-round pick in toe 1963 entry Maine had six firstteam selections Connecticut, senior. Ellis of 51 Fairfield St., Hospital. His maternal Kelsey, son of Stanley M. brothers, Rvlan. 5 and literature, geography, wines senior; Mike Pierro, BU, senior; Klarald p)iolo by Pinto draft, depending on how long and and Rhode Island five. U R I also had Tight end — Paul Gorham, New was born Nov. 6 at grandparents are Mr. and and Lynne Dennison Dustin, 2XL. of* 'Europe and America, Frank Kush speaks out Steve Michalewicz, Connecticut, how well he plays for Hartford. All toe only unanimous picks; wide Manchester Memorial Mrs. Robert J. Sandall Jr. Steeves of Old Farms calcuius,' music, religion, Hampshire, junior. senior. OWINGS M ILLS, Md. (UPl) — Baltimore Colts’ coach Frank Kush nine of his goals hake come in toe receiver Tom Mut, defensive end Hospital. His maternal of Manchester. His pater­ Road, West Willington, coaching, .and sociology. Tackles — Rich Feller, Rhode Linebackers — Vera Hargreaves, Latvian crafts says he doesn’t plan to “ sit around and pout” about his team ’s 37-4) last nine games. Dennis Talbot, and defensive tackle grandparents are Mr. and nal grandmother is was born Oct. 19 at Classes run Mondays through Island, senior; Ken Kaplan, New Connecticut, junior; John Dorsey, loss to toe New York Jets, even though he calls the defeat a “ disgrace Marshall skated at practice Mon­ Tony DeLuca. Mrs. Naren EIIls of 128 Dorothy A. Wiuiams oi Manchester Memorial Fridays. 'Hampshire, senior. Connecticut, junior • Elma Turkis, left, and Vllma Knislls, admire some hand made to football.” day on a line wth center Pierre V Flanker Bill Brooks of Boston Twin Hills Drive, Coven­ Manchester. His paternal Hospital. His maternal STRETCH YOUir Call 646-2137 .to register. Guards — Louis Ortiz, Maine, Backs — Jim Roberson, Rhode ornaments to be sold at the annual Christmas Bazaar spon­ “ We were in no way mentally prepared to play that game,” Kush Larouche and right winger Doug University was named Rookie of toe try. His paternal grand­ great-grandmother is grandmother U Mildred BURGER BUDGET by Walk-In registration may be -senior; Mike Mastrogiacomo, BU, Island, junior; Glenn Holden, Mass, said Monday, "Tliat includes toe coaches who did not get prepared ' Sulliman and Is expected to be in toe Year. sored by the Ladles’ Society of the American Latvian Lutheran father is George Peitrtiitis Clara Dufrane of Hartford. Dennison of Sycamore using one part soy extender made until Dec. 21 at toe com­ senior. sophomore; Arnold Garren, New properly.” lineup Wednesday when toe Whalers Church, corner of Winter and Garden streets. The fair Is set for of 263 Green Road. His maternal great­ Lane, Manchester. He has to four parts of meat. Your munity services office. Facul­ Mut, Keith Huggar Center — Paul Farren, BU, Hampshire; junior; John McGrath, J,' J i The coach said he felt toe 57-day N F L player’s strike put toe Colts are at home against Buffalo. of Coimecticut and running bt^k Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Featured Items will Include Leonard, Anne K eeley, grandmother is Mrs. a sister, Julia, 4. taste buds won't be able to ty East, on toe main«ampoa. senior. Maine, junior. “ back to where they where in the pre-season.” Hartford is in last place of toe Garry Pearson of Massachusetts traditional Latvian baked goods, handicrafts, tcaramlcs and daughter of John A. and Robert J. Sandall of Farr, Ashlyn Brooke, tell the difference, but your Free brochures are available. Quarterback — Rich LaBonte, Punter — Neil Gauvin, Connrc- NHL’s Adams Division. were toe repeaters on offense from , jewelry. The event Is open to the public. Marlon G. Keeley Leonard Nej^ington. daughter of David and budget w ill! I Maine, sophomore. ttout, junior. | i I 1 6 - MANCHESTER HERALD. Tues., Nov. 23, 1982 MANCHESTER HERALD. ’Tues.. Nov. 23, 1982- 17 Sugar Bowl looks sweet Indians reached teams on NCAA probation are in­ NEW YORK (UPI) - The Sugar Penn State, 9-1, received two first- up to No. 5. Tulsa, 10-1 hut without a bowl bid, Notre Dame, 6-3-1 after losing 30- eligible for Top 20 and national Bowl matchup looks awfully sweet place votes and 558 points, while Orange Bowl-bound Louisiana' advanc^ one position to No. 16, 17 to Air Force, and North Carolina, championship consideration by the following Monday's balloting by the Nebraska also moved up one posi­ State, 8-1-i after its 55-21 rout of followed by No. 17 Ohio State, Nof 18 a 23-17 loser to Duke, fell out of the UPI Board of Coaches. tion to No. 3 with the three Florida State, jumped seven spots to .Michigan, No. 19 Brigham Young Top 20. Ohio State and Brigham UPI Board. Teams on probation are Georgia, the nation's only un­ remaining first-place votes and 541 No. 6, followed by No. 7 Arkansas, and a tie for No. 20 between Young, which are set to meet in the Arizona SUte, Oregon, Southern final objective beaten and untied, major college points. No. 8 UCLA, No. 9 Oklahoma and Alabama, 7-3, and New Mexico, 10-1. Holiday Bowl, both returned to the California and Southern Mississippi. football team, solidified its grip on Cotton Bowl-bound Southern No. 10 Clemson, which was slapped With Penn State moving up to No. ratings for the first time since Sept. th6 No. 1 rating while its Sugar ^ w l Methodist, 10-0-1 after a 17-17 tie with a 2year NCAA probation Mon­ 2, the New Year’s Night contest 21. Clemson was placed on probation By Len Auster opponent, Penn State, bumped against Arkansas in its regular- day night. between the Nlttany Lions and The UPI JSoard consists of six for two years because of recruiting Herald Sportswriter ‘Next year will be a rebuilding year. / th in k it violations in its football program, Southern Methodist off the No. 2 season finale, fell two places to No. West Virginia,‘9-2 and headed to Bulldogs looms as a battle for the coaches from seven sections of the will take a lot of hard work to be in the top 10 spot. The Bulldogs, 10-0 and shooting 4 with 516 points. the Gator ^w;i; improved three national championship, provided country. Each week they select the NCAA announced Monday. Tlie ’There were some obstacles along for their second national cham­ Three teams in last week's Top 10 positions to No. 11, followed by No. both teams win their final regular- their top 15 teams' with points probation, handed down by the the way. but the final objective — in the s t a t e again. B u t / think it is possible.'* pionship in thred years, had the — Washington, Florida State and 12 Washington, which dipped seven “ season games. Georgia plays host to awarded on a 15-14-13, etc., basis on NCAA Committee on Infractions, capturing the state Double L cham­ Coach George Suitor week off but collected 37 first-place Michigan — lost on Saturday and fell places after losing to Washington Georgia Tech on Saturday and Penh votes from one through 15. prohibits the Tigers from par­ pionship — was met by the votes for 624 points from the 42 into the second 10 as Pittsburgh, State 24-20, No. 13 Texas, No. 14 ^tate is home against Pittsburgh on By agreement With the American ticipating in any bowl games Manchester High boys’ cross coun­ coaches on the Board. headed for the Cotton Bowl, moved Florida State and No. 15 Maryland. Friday. Football Coaches Association, following the 1982 and 1983 seasons. try team. "It was satisfying to see everyone work together to get the end result,” the Double L championship. We Bob Castagna and Paul Toland .. said Indian Coach George Suitor, received our best race possible figure prominently in the future. Recruiting violations who collected his third Class LL ti­ there. In the Open we went out hard, “ I .think we have a good tle in nine years at the helm. “We maybe too hard, but the adrenalirt sophomore crew, If they run all Martin holding up return had some injuries, sickness and .one wasn’t there like the Monday, year, they will progress into a good or two not in shape at the start of the .before.” team,” Suitor said. “There are, I • r .year. But they perservered through Suitor/Manchester loses five of its think, five kids at the junior highs NE\^ YORK (UPI) — Why are Billy Martin and - the tough times and helped us. Tliey top seven runners for ‘83. The list in­ who, if they train over the summer, Two-year probation put enough work into it in the season could help us,” he added. the Yankees taking this long to get together again? cludes Mike Rdy, third in the Class The answer lies with one man. Billy Martin. He's to get the good times.” L race and 10th. in the Open. The . “.Next year will be a bit of a 2 the one holding everything up. S p o r t s The good time was at the Double L latler finish earned him All-State rebuilding year,-’’ Suitor But, sometime within the next few weeks the championship where Manchester honors. Graduation also takes Gary acknowledges, “I think it will take a Yankees will call a news conference to announce P a r a d e ran away from the pack, besting Gates, Bob Dussault, Sean Sullivan lot of work to be in the top 10 in the that Martin will manage them for the third time tacked on Clemson Xavier by 37 points. ’The Silk and Doug Potter. state again. But I think it is possible. Towners had^the day’s best outing “The sophomores have potential next season. Milt Richman ■There is a base to work from in and were h ^ed to as a favorite in Tom Miller, a junior who was 30tb in but they need a couple of seasons of You can bet he has no written agreement to pilot members, television sets, war­ the Yankees yet and he isn't going to get anywhere CLEMSON, S.C. (UPI) - The game against Wake Forest. the State-Open. Class L. and sophomore Vinnie experience and they will have to NCAA’s announcement that it was An NCAA probe of the Tiger foot- drobes, medical care, phone ser­ There they placed fifth. Liscomb, 18th in Class Land 64th in work hard,” Suitor emphasizes. near the $500,000 a year reported. vice,-complimentary game tickets, He and George Steinbrenner have spoken only placing Clemson on < a two-year .ball program has been going on “The Open was anticlimactic,” the Open. Sophomores John The ‘82 season is in the books. meals and transportation. 3 probation for five years of football since January 1980,^ when two Photo by Savlate Suitor admits. “Our heart was into Comeau, Ed Lynch, John Odom, And it was a championship year. once since the season end^d and it wasn't about The accused ..assistant football Martin managing the Yankees. recruiting violations came as no sur­ Knoxville, Tenn., High school shall be reduced by the amount of salary he coaches were not named in the an­ The only hitch in Martin's getting back into receives from his new club. > prise to the "Jigers. players said the were given $1,500 in Yankee pinstripes is his existing contract with the The team, which leaves today for cash and promises of other gifts to nouncement, but the NCAA said Boys’ State Open champs There's another condition, too. The manager and they have been placed on probation Oakland A's. It has two more years to go and calls his new club are duty bound to bargain in good faith Japan to prepare for the Mirage sign with Clemson. Top row: Coach Jack Hull, John Rowe, Ron Along with barriiig the Tigers for three-year and two-year periods. East Catholic boys’ cross country team, after for $200,000 a year. regarding salary, and if the dismissing club Bowl against Wake Forest in Tokyo, coitflng so close In the past, finally broke Adams, Mike Hebert, Vinnie White. Bottom Martin wants to work out as good a deal for got the blow no later than last WMk. from bowl and television They also have been prohibited from believes that salary is not "fair and reasonable," it through as It secured the 1982 CIAC State row: Jim Kittredge, Steve Kittredge (co- himself with the A s as he possibly can before he The penalty, handed down by the appearances, the penalty also participating in the university’s can appeal to either the league president if the two captajn), Steve Matteo (co-captaIn), Jack signs a new contract with the Yankees. That's NCAA’s Committee on Infractions reduces Clemson’s grants-in-aid for summer football camps and from Open championship. The Eagles, runners- clubs are in the sarne league, or to the com­ receiving salary increases. simply good business on his part. missioner if the clubs are in different leagues. Monday night, prohibits the defen­ new football recruits from the nor­ up In Class L, were also Hartford County Fitzgerald. One thing you have to say for Billy, he has a head. ding national champion Tigers from mal limit of 30 to 20 for the 1983-83 The four athletic representatives Conference champs. Team members (l-r) Whatever the decision then is, it's binding. have been banned from recruiting Scoreboard for high finance and doesn't like being wh^t he con­ playing in postseason bowl games in and 1984-85 academic years. Now, you know why there's such a delay in Martin activities for at least two years. siders shortchanged. and the Yankees getting together. 1982'and 1 ^ and from appearing on Reducing the grants will "offset Martin is aiming for a five-year contract at any live football telecasts during the any recruiting advantage that was Atchley; who came to Clemson In It'll be worked out, though. Martin can always 1979, earlier promised there would somewhere around $250,000 a year from the rationalize he signed his contract with the A's in 1983 and 1984 seasons. gained improperly by the univer­ be no coverup and said he Would Yankees while trying to salvage as much as possi­ good faith. So did they with him. sity," infractions committee Chair­ ble of the $200,000 a year he can get from the A's Clemson President Dr. Bill man Charles Alan Wright said from take any measures — including They pulled the sheets on him, for whatever firing Clemson employees — to en­ Monday's Game over the next two years. He's properly entitled to reason, and are aware they have to pay him $200,000 Atchley was scheduled to hold a NCAA headquarters in Mission, Catholic booters (All Times EST) sure the Tigers follow the rules. Los Angeles A iders 28. San piego 24 that even if he decides to spend all his time fishing. a year through 1984 even if decides to do nothing. news conference at the school today Kan. After charges surfaced this fall Thursday’s Games And right there is the rub. But they also know they,^ve got something else to give a “formal and comprehen­ The NCAA charges that between New York GianU at Detroit. 12 noon The Cleveland Indians wanted Martin as their sive statement” on the charges. 1976 and 1981, a former Clemson that the NCAA was interested in the Football Cleveland at Ctellas, 3 p.m. going for them if Martin decides to carry his case to financing oP quarterback Homer Hockey Sunday, Nov. 28 manager before settling for Mike Ferraro but American League President Lee MacPhail. He announced last week that the assistant coach, two current assis­ Baltimore at Buifalo, 1 p.m. wouldn't give him a five-year contract. They were Tigers, 8-1-1 this year, would not be tant coaches and four athletic Jordan’s car, Atchley suspended the Oiicago at MinnesoU. 1 p m. According to that same non-duplication rule, standout signal-caller from playing St. Louis at AtlanU, 1 p.m willing to give him one for three years, which is MacPhail's determination has to be based upon a attending a postseason bowl game. representatives violated NCAA Green Bay at New York Jets, 1 p.m. in an Oct. 2 game. exceeded goals about as far as the Yankees will go, although Stein­ number of different criteria including Martin's "The 1982 season for us will end bylaws by offering student-athletes Houston at New England. 1 p.m. Atchley announced before the Los Angeles Raiders at Cintinnali. brenner undoubtedly would offer some post-" managerial experience, his past accomplishments with the Mirage -Bowl in Japan on money and gifts to play fo r the Uy united Pres9 International game possible “ technical NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE p.m. managing job. and his salary history. Martin realizes he has a Nov. 27,” Atchley said in a prepared school. / Wales Conference Philadelphia at Washington. 1 p.m. violations” of NCAA rules had been New Orleans at San Francisco. 4 p.m. Meanwhile, Martin's attorney and adviser, Eddie better chance of salvaging far more of his original statement. The NCAA said prospective By Len Auster Ahn, both seniors, going to th^ John Toomey and Bill Durocher are Patrick Division American Conference uncovered in the financing and W L T Pts. GF GA W L T Pet. PF PA Denver at San Diego, 4 p.m. Sapir of .New Orleans, is faced with baseball's non- '• contract dealing with the A's than if he goes to the The team and coaches were athletes were offered substantial Herald Sportswriter backline. They were eventually lost off the bench.' NY Islanders 14 8 2 30 93 72 Kansas City at , scheduled to board an airplane for purchase of Jordan’s 1982 Monte joined by sophomores Pat Lonergan Junior Bill Masse, slowed by a bad Pittsburgh ' 3 0 0 1.000 86 SB duplication rule covering managers in trying to league president's office. amounts of cash, scholarships and Philadelphia 12 9 1 25 86 73 Miami 3 0 0 1.000 78 56 p.m. N Pittsburgh at Seattle, 4 p.m. Tokyo today to prepare for that favors for friends and family Carlo. One game will not tarnish an and Brian Feshler. bapk at the end of the year, will NY Rangers 10 10 1 21 85 85 LA Raiders 3 0 0 1.000 89 56 "work out some kind of settlement for his client with As for Steinbrennner, it'S easy to see him giving Washington 7 8 4 18 67 72 Monday. Nov. 29 otherwise splendid 1982 soccer ‘"The year was above expectations return to one midfield slot along NY Jets 2 1 0 .667 96 52 Miami at Tampa Bay. 9 p.m. the A's. Martin as much as $250,(KX) a year. For three years, Pittsburgh 7 U 3 17 71 100 Cincinnati 2 1 0 .667 65 46 I The rule says a manager is entitled to full com­ anyway. Pure arithmetic shows why it wouldn't be season for East Catholic. mostly because of the uncertainty of with Lonergan and Feshler on the New Jersey 3 14 6 12 63 100 Cleveland 2 1 0 .667 52 38 Its accomplishments far exceeded the defense. We had to replace backline and junior goalie Jeff Adams Division Buffalo 2 1 0 .667 44 40 pensation from his dismissing club for the entire that bad a deal! for the Yankees. Montreal 14 4 3 31 101 60 San Diego 1 2 0 .500 S9 SO length of his contract if he's fired before it expires. any pre-season aspirations. jSine- everyone back there. It wasn’t just Riggs from among the regulars. Boston 12 7 3 27 78 66 Kansas City 1 2 0 .333 46 S3 Working it all out on their per-capita ticket price, Quebec 10 8 2 22 102 96 First downs 26 23 But there are some important conditions along with Pitt must year Coach Tom Malin was hoping one, it was all four,” Malin reflects. Malin sees a differed kind of Seattle 1 2 0 .333 45 54 Rushes-yards 23—72 37—181 Martin only would have to draw 32,250 fans by play its best Buffalo 9 8 4 22 88 72 New England 1 2 0 .033 38 54 somewhere in the neighborhood of a “What we did see was them come regrouping in ‘83. Hartford ^ 5 11 3 13 67 91 Passing yards 339 146 that hijp^elf over a full season to make up for hts salary. I^nVer 1 2 0 .333 37 61 Return yards 27 16 If a manager like Martin is hired by some other 10-6 campaign at the outset. together and he a pretty cohesive “It will be a much more difficult Campbell Conference Houston ■ 1 2 0 .333 39 72 Passes 25-42-2 18-25-2 One good run-ltrwith the boss, and he'll bring in that Norris Division ^ Itim o re 0 3 0 .000 33 86 What was envisioned turned out to unit.” task. This year we had lettermen W L T Pts. GF GA Punts 2—32.5 5—38.6 club, "his compensation from the dismissing club many on a single weekend. National Conference Fumbles-lost 2—2 3-0 be a 14-3-1 season with the Eagles, East faces a major rebuilding job returning. Next year we’ll be going Minnesota 14 7 1 29 91 72 W L T Pet. PF PA to knock off Penn State Chicago 12 3 5 29 88 66 Penalties-yards 8-60 7—98 suffering a bitter 1-0 loss in the state in 1983. How many seniors are being with a lot who haven’t had much Green Bay 3 0 0 1.000 88 49 . Time of possession 30:40 29:20 St. Louis 8 12 2 18 75 84 Washington 3 0 0 1.000 75 64 Class L quarterfinals , to Wilbur lost? “Many,” Malin answered with game experience,” he cites. Toronto 4 9 5 13 62 78 Dallas 2 1 0 .667 66 52 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Coach) Chuck Noll’s lines, but we’ve same in that we go out th ^ e and try Cross despite dominating play. Detroit 3 14 5 11 54 97 Detroit 2 1 0 .667 53 44 a smile. The losqps include premier Smythe Division RUSHING-San Diego-Muncie 18^, Pittsburgh Coach Foge Fazio and got to suck it up and stop them. We to win,” Sweeney said. “But there’s Junior Scott Dean, sophomore New Orleans 2 1 0 .667 44 38 Brooks 8*49. Los Angeles-Allen 18-87, King striker Ck>Iin Doran, a 25-goaI scorer Edmonton 9 9 5 23 108 100 AtlanU 2 1 0 .667 64 69 Ray second best quarterback Dan Marino say the have to do whatever is necessary. If the revenge factor, of course. ’Then Todd Karpy and freshmen Dan Gar­ Los Angeles 9 8 3 21 76 77 13^, Pruitt 1-13, Plunkett 1-6, lUwkins East, and Malin,.will not dwell on to set a school single-season mark. San Francisco 1 2 0 .333 69 67 2-3, Barnwell 1-14. Guy 1-minus 10. they’re on the one-yard line, we’ve there’s the intrastate rivalry. Winnipeg 9 6 2 20 77 65 Philadelphia 1 2 0 .333 72 76 Panthers can knock off No. 2 Penn the negative. Rather they should His career total is 50 to place him diner and Kevin Madden are varsity Vancouver 8 10 4 20 78 74 PASSIN(^San Diego-Fouts 26-42-367. got to stop them — even if we have Everybody’s hyped up. There are Minnesota 1 2 0 .333 46 50 Los Angeles-Plunkett 18-26-163. State Friday by thinking positively, recall the positive aspects of 1982. second on the all-time list behind reserves who’ll be counted on '83 ' Calgary 8 11 4 20 96 96 St. Louis 1 2 0 .333 48 62 to march 99 yards before we do it. going to be 11 fistfights on both (Top four in each division qualify for RECEIVING-San Diego-Winslow 8-106, by eliminating mental errors arid by “At the start of the year it was Terry McConville’s total of 51 goals. along with juniors Brian Harkins Chicago 1 2 0 .333 30 44 CJiandler 7-118, Muncie 6 ^ . Sievers 2-33, offense and defense, and whoever Stanley Cup playoffs.) .Tampa Bay 0 3 0 .000 32 44 V . We have to play letter perfect. We Sax latest Dodger playing keep-away football. time for regrouping. It was “Certainly he’ll be missed,” and Adam Ansaldi and sophomores f monday's Monday's Gamesr Scales 1-29," Joiner 1-22. Los Angeles- NY Giants 0 3 0 .000 . 50 70 Christensen 8-83. Allen 5-37, Branch 2-30. In short, each player must play have to tackle the right men. We wins all those fistfights is going to Herb Harvey and John Fury from ^ (No Games SchMuled) LA Rams 0 '3 0 .000 54 88 regrouping in a sense people were Malin said, recalling the same ^ Tuesday's Games-■ Hawkiiis 1-6. Barnwell 1-4, King 1-3. the best game of his career. can’t miss assignments.” win the game.” called upon to play different feeling with the departure of the jayvees to fill some of the voids. (Top eight teams in each conference Injuries are still a problem for (All Times EST) make playoffs.) TONIGHT That would be difficult, but it Marino said the team has “ to cut McConville and Kyle Ayer. “What we have going now is a Minnesota at N.Y. Islanders, 8:06 p.m. Sundays Results .positions,” Malin cites. ^ San Diego * to win rookie honor 7 - Bowling: W orld O pen, USA would not be impossible. down on mistakes, like penalties and Pitt, though Fazio hopes almost all Malin knew he had to r ^ a c e half ‘‘Hopefully someone out there will pretty good feeder system,” said Montreal at St. Louis, 9:06 p.m. New York Jets 37. Baltimore 0 10 14 0 0-24 turnovers. We learnt that last the sidelined starters will be able to Washington at Calgary. 9:35 p.m. Cincinnati 16. Philadelphia 14 LA Raiders 0 7 14 7-28 Gable Desire can accomplish a lot. And of his graduated defense, which in come forward and realize his poten­ *Malin, referring to a 14-game jayvee Quebec.,-8t Vancouver, 11:06 p.m. Virago 20. Detroit 17 SD-FG Benirschke l» year. . . play. SE>-Scales 29 pass from Fouts (Be­ games. He also excelled in the field, 7:31) - Gollege basketball: UHart- unsurprisingly, considering the 1981 allowed a miserly eight goals. tial and become valuable to the schedule and 16-game {reshman New Orleans 27. Kansas City 17 LOS ANGELES (UPI) - From “For us to win the ballgame, we Fazio said offensive linemen Bill Atlanta 34. Dos Angeles Rams 17 nirschke kick) ■ foril vs. Western Conn., WINF stakes of the game, the desire is But he didn’t count on designated program.” slate. “'“We had a lot of ybung kids SD-Muncie 2 run (Benirschke kick) Southern California, which brought • finishing second among league se­ have to control the football, and that Fralic (pinched shoulder nerve) and Miami 9. Buffalo f cond basemen in putouts (347) and H. - College Football: Rutgers vs. there. sweeper, senior Boh Madore, being Wingers Mike Stone and Tom playing. dreen Bay 26. MinnesoU 7 SD-Muncie 1 run (Benirschke kick) you the Nehru jacket, hot tubs, means keeping their offense off the Rob Fada (ankle) and defensive Cleveland 10, New England 7 LA-Christensen 1 pass from Plunkett third,in assists (452). I'itt, ESPN Fazio, Marino and offensive , injured in the summer and lost for Ayer, the latter an 8-goal scorer to ‘...With all the new kids we’ll (Bahr kick) skateboarding and Granola, comes lineman Jim Sweeney all Ulked field. When they’re on the field, they back and kickoff returner Tim Basketball Pittsburgh 24. Houston 10 another trend: National League “This is the happiest day of my 9 - NHL; Canadiens vs. Blues, the year. And he didn’t envision finish second best on the squad, shoot for a .500^eason. But, .you Dallas 14. Tampa Bay 9 LA-Allen 3 run (Bahr kick) USA Cable about that desire at Fazio’s weekly don’t make many mistakes. ’Riat’s Lewis probably won’t practice much ' senior captain Tim Skehan going out graduate along with Fish, Ahn, know, this is a funny- game. We Washington 27, 17 LA-Allen 6 run (Bahr kick) Rookie of the Year awards. life," Sax said at a Dodger Stadium San Francisco 31. St. Louis 20 LA-Hawkins 2 run (Bahr kick) news luncheon Monday. why they’re a good football team.” this week but will play Friday, light learned that in the tournament this A-42.162 This year it was thg turn of Steve news conference. "I thought when I 10:.30 - .NBA: Nets vs. Warriors, with an injury, as well. goalie Dave Callahan and mid­ Seattle 17. Denver 10 "We just have to go up there and Sweeney said the Panthers’ em­ end John Brown (knee) has started Sax, a hustling second baseman had the opportunity to come up to C bannel 9 That caused some shuffling with fielders Ed Ansaldi and hustling year. give it everything,” Fazio said. “We barrassing 48-14 loss at home last practicing without pads, and, Fazio some say is a Pete Rose clone. Sax the Dodgers late in 1981 that that midfielders Alan FisH and Mike Steve Dobieski. Angelo Morson, “We could (be a) surprise.” can’t play scared. We can’t worry year — due primarily to their said, “if he can do It (play), he’ll do continued the Los Angeles Dodgers' thrill would never be matched. But about whether Danny makes an in­ making seven turnovers after they it.” NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOC stranglehold on NL Rookie of the this surpasses even that. I want to Eastern Conference terception or whether we cough up a had taken a 14-0 lead — was Safety and punt returner Tom FINALS! thank the Dodgers for the opportuni­ Atlantic Division Year honors Monday by beating out providing extra incentive. Flynn (sprained foot) is still listed W L Pet. GB Pittsburgh's Johnny Ray for the 1982 ty they gave me to make it to the fumble. f t Basketball ■» “I hate to borrow any of (Steelers "We do treat every game the as doubtiful. Philadelphia 10 1 ,909. — award in voting by the Baseball club and for my teammates' sup­ ■u. Boston ■ 10 2 .833,. ^ New Jersey 6 7 .462 5 Writers Association of America. port. Washington 4 8 .333 The 22-year-old Sax received nine "There were so many good New ^ r k 3 9 .250 7^ Greyhound first-place votes, four seconds and rookies in the National League this Central Division Detroit 8 5 ,615 — Grand Prix six thirds for 63 points in balloting year I couldn't say what I thought ECHO hockey Milwaukee ’ 8 5 ,615 — conducted among 24 members of the my chances were of winning it. But I Chicago 6 6 iOO IMi Indiana 5 7 .417 2‘-4 BBWAA — two from each NL city. had hoped I'd make it." AtlanU 4 7 .364 3 WEDNESDAY, BUSINESSMEN Cleveland 1 10 .091 6 2 Ray, also a second baseman, Sax, who replaced longtime Allied Printing 101 (Rod Hartwlck Western Conference revived six first-place votes, seven Dodger second baseman Dave BANTAM A apiece with Vinnie Sica in goal for Regal’s, 7-2 for the season. Midwest Division NOVEMBER 24th seconds and six thirds for 57 points. Lopes, said he'll miss first baseman 36, Paul Powers 22, Doug Rice 17, Purdy Corp. split a pair of making 15 saves. t-r-ti W L Pet: GB ll;()(i|’M Mdtin-ri Jeff Kepper 11). Westown Phar­ Kansas City 5 3 Vt ^ Remarked the fourth year in a row Steve Garvey, whom the Dodgers weekend pffairs, bowing 1-0 to Circuits also had a. successful San Antonio 8 5 .615 — that a member of the Dodgers has gave up to free agency two weeks macy 77 (Dennis Downers 25, Mark EUisthampton, Mass., Saturday and weekend as it topped Elasthampton, SQUIRT A - Dallas S 6 .466 2 been named Rookie of the Year and ago. Demko 18, Craig Phillips 17). blanking Wallingford Sunday by an Mass., 4-1, Saturday and blanked Fogarty Bros, were on the short Denver 5 7 .417 2»4 UUh 3 7 JOO 3W the 11th time since the award was “I learned a lot this season from 8-0 count. Wallingford, 5-0, Sunday. end of a 7-6 score last ’Tuesday to Filloramo Construction 75 (Kim Houston 1 10 .091 6 first instituted in 1947. the older playefs on the club," Sax Goalie Steve (iavallo and Ronnie John Worden, Mezel, Skivlngton Hamden. Goalie Brendon Wheeler Pacific Division • Bushey 28, Kurt Carlson 12 .. Steve CONN. KJRNPIKI iHTl . S2| TO fXIT H7. PI AIN H I I.D Outfielder Willie McGee of the St. said. "They were great people who Smith played well in Saturday’s and Sartor each had a goal in the win was busy with 20 saves. Seattle 12 1 .923 - R a sc h e r 11, Ja c k H ull 10). I5*TH'-ETI(3: •BB fc, ATHLETia a t h l e t i c f Phoenix 10 3 .789 2 , 3 helped ease the pressure of the tran­ loss. Tim McElroy had three go.'’Is over the Bay State club. Worden had ix t l Los Angeles 9 3 .750 2V^ Louis Cardinals was third with 39 Sportsman Cafe 55 (Tim Mogan 21, The Oilers came back to split in A'TV'. VTH / ^ points followed by outfielder Chill sition from the minors. I have and Tim Martin, Mark Clehowskl, two goals and Sartor. Brian Grillo weekend play. They nippdd Portland * 7 6 .5# 5 Marc Schardt 11, Dick Bowman 10). Golden State ' 8 .333 T’A Davis of San Francisco (32), pitcher nothing but the utmost respect for Greg Mahoney, Rob Monaco and and Brian White one apiece against Easthampton, Mass., 3-1, Saturday San Diego 2 lo .187 9 ^ Luis DeLeon of San Diego (10), third Dave Lopes and I feel very honored Scott Wilcox one apiece in Sunday’s Wallingford. Sica bad a rocking before bowing to Wallingford, 6-2, Monday’s Games Manchester Police 109 (Manny (No Games Scheduled) baseman Ryne Sandberg of Chicago to have followed him at the position. Reis 35, Robert Charrboneau 25, win. Cavallo had 10 saves to earn the chair game with only four saves. Sunday. Tuesday's Games (9), and pitchers Steve Bedrosian of "Playing next to (shortstop) Bill Tony DeLucco 20). Lodge All-Stars shutout. Kevin Zbyk, Mark Larivlere and (All Times EST) Indiana at New York, 7:30 p.m. Atlanta (4), Dave LaPoint of St. Russell has boon a great help to me. 82 (Tom Foran 25, Gary Miller 18, PEE WEE B Jason Pelligatto tallied In Satur­ Portland at Philadelphia. 7;S p.m. Louis *(1) and Eric Show of San He's the leader in the infield and he Bill Moran 15). BANTAM B Regal Men’s Shop swept three day’s victory. Wheeler had 17 saves. Chicago at Atlanta, 7:36 p.m. Diego (1). taught me a lot. Reed Construction won one and weekend encounters. It blanked ^‘'AETltS UUh At CleveUdd, 8 p.m. Pelligatto and Scott Livingston had ^ V o t H ^ o a . Denver at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m. E^ch of the 24 BBWAA members "And I’m really going to miss Buffalo Water Tavern 79 (Jim lost one -in weekend play. Reed South Windsor, 5-0, and bested ’Tri- the goals in the loss to Wallingford. Detroit at Houston, 9:06 p.m. Grimes 17, Ray Sullivan 10). B.A. was asked to vote for three players Steve Garvey, not only b^ause he's topped .’Tri-City, 5-1, Saturday before City, Mass., 2-1, both Saturday, and Wheeler again had 17 stops. tT.ILir.'Ci ^TH’JET New Jersey at Golden SUte, 10.35 p.m. and points were distributed on a 5-3- one of the top players of our genera­ a u b 58 (Bill Bellock 26, Chuck bowing to Windsor Locks, 5-1, Sun­ Sunday turned back Suffleld, 10-1. 1 basis. McGee (5), Davis (3) and tion, but also because he’s a close Lankford 10). day. Jim Burke, John Dempsey, Jeff SQUIRTB Monday's ^ r u 'iransaciions kUf ITS AkMf JkralsifM TtitrOI Sandberg (1) also received first- friend and a good team player.” Fred Brunoli had three goals and Allen, Silvain Beaudoin and Mark Horst Engineering had a tough By United press International place votes. Steve Gallacher and Peter Gallasso Peterson each bad a goal in the win start to the weeliend before coining Baseball Montreal — Named Danny Menendez CAPITAL INSUUTION CO. Pitchers Rick Sutcliffe, Steve one apiece in Saturday’s Win. Goalie over South Windsor. Peterson added away with a victory. Horst feU to regional scout; signed a 3-year agree­ EBt.lStO Howe and Fernando Valenzuela won Evans singled out Brian Oatway bad 16 saves while two'hssists. Goalie Derrick Taylor South Windsor, M , and IW-Oty, ment with Memphis of toe Southern Rookie of the Year honors for the Scott Andrews and Alex Rodrigues League. BOSTON (UPI) - Outfielder had 10 stops with Derrick Pasterick Mass., 12-4, last Saturday before Ny MeU — Named Davey Jenson Dodgers over the last three years. Dwight Evans, who led the Boston played well defensively. Todd and Scott Andrews playing well comiM back Sunday for a 4-0 win. manager of Tidewater of the Intematiop- Sutcliffe is now a member of the Lprivlere had the goal against defensively. over Wallingford. al League. 563-9815 Red Sox in home runs and RBIs, has ^Bowling St. Louis — Named Jim Fregosi Cleveland Indians. been named the team’s Most Locks. Oatway was busy in goal Beaudoin and Peterson had the Jason Mlm and Stephan Blair Photo by Stvltto m anage oi Louisville of the A m eren T AVBRAaiTifiKiiw'AfRrW/Strt | An energetic player who has tried Valuable Player for the second with 32 saves with Roger LeBlanc goals to top Tri-City. Taylor had 22 each scored against South Windsor. Association. to emulate his hero. Rose, Sax was Basketball draight year by the Boston chapter 9 • and Andrews plaidng well defensive- stops with support from Alex Goalie Dave Dickenson had 23 stops. Girls’ stats Class L titllsts • Utah — Forward John Drew left the 124 X M (2 xlory) $ 1 p S W .O O } hanM the starting second base job. of the Ba^ball Wiitets Association ly. ' , Rodrigues. Peterson and Burke Ed Diaz, Victor Murtuk, Scott W l^ team to undergo rehabiliUtion for in ^ rin g training after the Dodgers "ptgDsonal problems." >f America. each had two goals and Allen, and Mike Rodrigues scored against College S l t l A . . traded veteran Oavey Lopes to Evans, who hit .292 with 32 PEEWEEA Rodrigues, Beaudoin, Mike Tri-City with D iu ta lly i^ twice and East Catholic girls' cross country team for Open. Team, members (]-r) Standing: Coach Duke — Announced It wduld not extend Oakland. responded to the ZODIAC- Leah Ray 204-463, Usa Multi Circuits last Tuesday Mamebach,'Dave Yamarik and Elric tha third year In a row captured the 1B62 Mark Skehan. Kneeling: Kathy Evans, Patty the contract of football coach Red lomers and 96 RBIs, will receive hig Jon Lange and Hurtuk one apiece in Wllfon. ^ Fully iMyraU challenge hy leading the club in runs award Jan. 27 at the association’s Harley 187, Sharon Borck 204-499, blanked Suffleld, 5-0. Scott Sartor Nohlgren one apiece in the rout over the win over Wallingford. Horst / CIAC state Class L championship. The Doyle, Cathy Cross, MIchelft Brown, Felicia George Washington — Named Steve sc o r^ (88), hits (180) and stolen annual dinner at the Sheraton- Eleanor Rodonis 477,' Judy had two goals and Bruce Skivlngton, Suffleld. Taylor had 11 stops with Eaglettes, as well, for a second successive < Falkowskl. Sitting; Carole Colllton, Sue BUaky athletic director. " OWENS CORNIHO nUR O LAS Mc^sker 460. , ' goalie Steve Chagnot made uva su m Tennessee Tech ^ Fired football coadiw,. bases (49) while batting .282 in 150 Boston hotel. Steve Mezei and Dan West one Dempsey playing well on defense to earn the shutout. . season took runner-up honors at the State Byrne, Julie CIszewakI, Teresa Kittredge. Don Wade. V QR TMERMO-PAC d A t t I CiLLUtOSE ’ ------V MANCHESTER HERALD. ’Tues., Nov. 23, 1982- 19 18 - MANCHESTER HERALD, Tueg- Nov. M. 1882

UVERTISIIIG HWElmSING Classified 643'2711 RATES LOOK FOR THE STARS... , * » 22—Condominiums Mlnimam Charge MOTICES EMPLOYMENT 23^Homes lor Sale 3$— Heating>Plumbmg 46— Sporting Goods SB— Miac for Rent 15 Words nooo m e day 2i—LotS'Land for Sale 36— Flooring 47— Garden Products 59^-Homet/Apt8. to Shife 12:00 37— Moving^Trucking-Storage46— Antiques Look ■for the Classified A ds with stars; stars help get you better results. 1— Lost and Found la^Help wanted l^ in v e s tm e n i Property before publication.' 26— Business Property 38— Services Wanted 49— Wanted to Buy AUTOMOTIVE PER^ORDPERDAY 2— PoftonaJs 14— Business Opportunities ^0—Prf^duce ' 3--Anr^ui3— -Anr^uncem«niB 15— Siluaiiorf Wanted — Resort Property Deadline lor Saturday is 26— Real Estate Wanted 1-2 DAYS..... 15e MISC. FOR SALE RENTALS 6 t— Autos for Sale 12 noon Frfday; Mon­ bT^AuCliOl 62— Trucks lor Safe 3-5 DAYS..... 14e EDUCATION 63- rHeavy Equipment for Sale * Put a star on Your ad and see what a difference it makes. ★ day's deadline IS 2:30 MISC. SERVICES 40— Household Goods 52— Pooma for Rant M^Motorcycies-Bicydes IB-Private Instructions 41— Articles for Sale 53— Aperlmenta tor Rent 6 DAYS..... 13e Friday FINANCIAL 65— Cempers-Traiiers-Mobtle 19— Scnooit'Ciasses 31— Services Ottered 42— Building Supplies 54— Homes tor Rent Ga y s ..... e 32— Painting-Papering 43— Pets-Birds-Dogs 55— Otticea>8torea for Rent Homes 26 12 . Phone 643-2711 8— Mortgage Loans 20— Instructions Wanted 66— Automotive Service 9— Parsonai Loans 33— Building.Coniractir)g 44— Musical Instruments • 56— Resort Property tor Rent ■HAPPY|ADS t? 00 PER INCH 34 — Rootmg-Siding * 57— Wanted to Rent 67— Autos for Ttent'teaae Telephone 643-2711, AApnddy-Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. 10— Insurance REAL ESTATE 45— Boats & Accessories I

•••••••••••••••••••••••• 4T6 •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••• Free Classified Ads •••••aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Help Wanted 13 Peinting-Pepering 32 Household Ooode 40 •••auaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa TOWn o f MANCHB8TER, CONNeCTtCUT Help WantMl 13 •••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••• ••aa•##•##•••••••••••*** Cempers-Trellers-Moblle •••••••••••••••••••••••• Booms lor Boat 52 Autos For Sale 51 NOTICE OF DISHWASHER,VA3K good con­ free Classified Ads Homss for Rent S4 HomosiApla. to ahoro 50 Homes 65 ADOPTION OF ORDINANCE LOOKING FOR a source of INTERTOp PAINTING, FOR SALE - Cheap! USED ••••••••••••••aeaeaaeaae ••••••aaaatoaaaaaaqaaaaa •••••••••••#••##•••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••• aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat* income? Come work at HAVE FUN PATMfl TOUR over ten years experience, Windows, Call 6494210. dition, General Electric. •••••••aaaasaaaaaaaaaaaa In accordance with the provisions of Chapter 3, Section 1 and 9 of the HOLIDAY M IU low rates and senior citizen $25.00. Phone 649-2320. 1970 FORD Fairlane, needs CENTRALLY Located - EAST HARTFORD - Large FEMALE ROOMMATE Town C3iarter, notice is hereby given of the adoption by the Board of your local newspaper. work, as is $99.00. nnecticut, on October 5,1982. Potential to earn above Sell Avon end earn good $$$, discount. 643-9980. 18” TORO Power handle 1014 after 6 p.m. Driven daily. As is, $400.00 adult park in Windham. snow blower. $75.00. 'r o c k in g c h a ir , ladder gentleman. Telephone,- Three bedrooms, fireplace, month. Telephone 646-0598. ORDINANCE average wages and help meet nice people, next to shower, parking. centrally located near or best offer. 1-429-2135, Excellent condition. 521- BE IT ORDAINED by the Board of Directors of the Town of out a local cause. For in­ INTERIOR-EXTERIOR Telephone 649-4234. back style, good condition. Coventry. $25.00. Call ^ 1 4 2 7 . FOUR Firestone allterrain 6494801. churches, schools and 1899. Manchester that the Town of Manchester purchase from John F. Shan­ formation, application, in­ CaHB2S-9401 PAINTING - Wallpapering tires, size 10-15. $75.00 MANCHESTER House, non. Judith E. Shannon, Mary B. Nolan, Nancy E. Walsh and Kathleen and Drywall Installation. busline: Pay own utilities. non-smoker, $60.00 weekly. terview call Mr. Kurowski or 270-2041 QUEEN SIZE BED, pine takes all. 6434187. MANCHESTER - Room on Security required. BANK Krause for the sum of 8140,000.00 the following described land for 'Your Community^-Newspaper" between 5-9 pm at 643-2711. Quality professional work. headboard and footboard. FOR SALE 1978 Hummel Center Street. $50.00 week­ All house and kitchen cemetery purposes: •' QUALITY CONTROL Reasonable prices. Free Good mattress. $275 or best hell, mint, in box. $75.00. Available August 1st. $600 privileges. Call 646-2747. REPOSSESSIONS INVITATION TO BID #M1 Those premises situated in the Towns of Manchester and East Hart­ BOYS Ten speed bike for ly plus security and monthly. 643-1845 or 643- INSTALLATION OF ford, County of Hartford and State of Connecticut bounded and described MEDICAL SECRETARY Inspector - With 5 years Estimates! Fiilly insured. I offer. 646-2516, Call 646-3716. ACOUSTICAL CeiLINOS sale, Columbia 26 inch, references. CaU 644-0019. 1773. •##•••••#••••••••••#•••• rossAU as follows; aeeeeaae# •eaaeeaeaeeeaeaaaeeeaeaa minimum experience for G.L. McHugh, 64S-9S2L AT VARIOUS SCHOOLS for doctors office. excellent condition. $45.00. •••••••••••••••••••••••a '1980 bodge Colt - 2 PARCEL 1 first piece layout and final PEERLESS SPACE The Board of Education, 110 Long Lost and Found 1 Help Wantad 13 Experienced in transcrip­ LIKE NEW - Heavy pine Call M34106 after 3 p.m. Apertmonts lor Boat 53 FOUR BEDROOM CAPE, □ AUTOMOTIVE d(.. H/B 88800. Situated in the Town of Manchester and described as tollows: tion and insurance forms. inspection on aircraft sheet INTERIOR AND traditional dining room set Heater, natural gas, 20,000 1979 Chevy Impale - 4 Hill Dr.. E. Hartford. CT will NORTHERLY: Bv land now or formerly of Martin and Mary PLEASE READ metal parts in an air con­ EXTERIOR Painting, BTU. $^.00. Evenings, 64^ only blocks from all receive sealed bids for Installation LOST - Black cat - Spruce WANTED: Call 649-1057. with two leafs. Extends tb REALISTIC Am/Fm MANCHESTER - Main schools. Treed lot. -dr. Sedan,$3,30C|^ Schaub; YOUR AD RESPONSIBLE person ditioned plant. Company paper hanging, carpentni 8 feet. Eight chairs in­ 6647. Auto Parts For Sale 60 of Acoustical Ceilings at Various EASTERLY: By land now or formerly of said Schaubs; Street area. Reward. Call stereo receiver STA-52 Street. 2-3 rooms. Heated. Available immediately. The above can be seen Schools. Bid information and 643-0456. with snow blower to keep ADVANCEMENT paid benefits and overtime. work. Fully msured. J.P. cluding two captains Hot water. Appliances. No SOUTHERLY: By land now or formerly of one Sedlacek; Interviewing 8 a.m. to 4 with quatravox four $600 monthly plus utilities. FOUR UNMOUNTED at the specifications are available at the EASTERLY; By land now or formerly of said Sedlacek; again Classified ads are taken sidewalks clean for the OPPORTUNITY Lewis and ^ n , 649-9658. chairs. $400. Phone 646- KENMORE WRINGER pets. Security. Parking. Business Office. Sealed bids will be p.m. Dynamics Metal Washer, used only a few channel synthesizer, can 643-5266 or ^ 9 6 2 . TUBELESS white-walled ' SnhgtiaG «f Mndnstir SOUTHERLY: Bv land jiQw or formerly of Pauline Komse; and over the phone as a con­ Entertainment 4 winter. 875-8659. "telephone sales. Olan Mills 5400. handle two tajM decks and 523-7047. received until 10:30 a.m., again Proiducts Co., Inc., 422 PAINTING & PA PER times. ^.00. or best offer. tires (1 set studded snow venience. The Herald Is has an entry level position turntable all at once! BOLTON - RANCH - four December 3, 1982, at which time WE.STERLY: By the East'Hartford-Manchester town line. GEM SOUND Presents the DONUT BAKER - leading to a management North Main Street, H a n g in g C e ilin g s Freo Classified Ads Phone 649-7814. tires) and 1 rim, all 14”, they will be publicly opened and responsible lor only one $99.00. 643-2831. FOUR ROOM apartment bedrooms, two baths, good condition, $125 or best Containing 23.4 acres more or less and being a portion of the intimate in D.J. Entertain­ Experienced only. Good position in local area. Com­ Manchester, 646-4048. repaired. References.•ences. Ful­ with heat included. dining room. References MUSTANG, 1986, three read aloud. 11)0 Board of Educa­ premises described in »deed from Terence Shannon to John F. and incorrect insertion and ment. usic from 40’s to wages. Apply: Donut Inn, pany benefits and training. ly'insured. Quality work! PIONEER PL-516 turn­ 1929 ANTIQUE McKormic reasonable offer. 649-9904 tion reserves the right to accept or Terrence E. Shannon dated June 18, 1959 and recorded in Volume 345, then only to the' size of WOMEN URGENTLY FOR SALE - ’Twelve inch Walking distance to Main and security required. $550 after 6 pm. speed, 6 cyl., runs good. reject any or all bids or the right to 80's. Best prices available. Meadowbrook Plaza, Call Jim at 646-5798. Martin Mattsson, evenings table, automatic return, Deering four cylinder as chain saw with spare Street. First floor with per month. Philbrick Agen­ For parts or restoration. Page 436 of the Manchester Land Records. the original insertion. Excellent sound and Route 44A, Coventry. 742- E.O.E. M/F. NEEDED to work as 649-4431. good condition. $65.00 or power plant, 100 percent waive tectjnical formalities if it is PARCEL 2 Homemakers in agency in ar. $35.00. 871-0201. private entrance. $450 per cy, 646-4200. Autos For Solo 51 $200.00. 647-1276 evenings. in the'best interest to do so. Situated in the Town of East Hartford and described as follows: Errors' which do not lighting. 647-3910. . 7722. Best offer. Phone 647-9404. complete. $75.00. Call 649-' f month. CaU 649-2947. Keep trying. Nancy J. Harris. RNS' NEEDED - 3 p.m. - serving nine towns East of FRED LEE PAINTING - ,6785 after dark, ask for lleing a strip of land running in an easterly-westerly direction from lessen the value ol the LARGE, white porcelain Oltleos-Storos Director/Business Services Rurnbrook Road to the westerljr line of the premises described in Parcel INSERTERS WANTED 1U.36 p.m. and 11 p.m. - the River. Make it possible Interior and exterior. TWO C78 X 14 white wall Bill. 1979 FORD GRANADA - 6 024*11 advertisement will not for the elderly, the sick and utility laundry tubs. 3Vk ROOM APARTMENT. for Boat 55 cyl., aut'omatic, air- I herein, being more particularly bounded and described as follows: be corrected by an ad □ EMPLOYMENT Part time. Must be 18 or 7:30 a.m., part time for Residential and commer­ tires, fair condition. $10.00 Wooden ceblnet to hold Private home. Heat, Trucks lor Safe 62 NORTHERLY by land designated as Lot 24 on a certain map en­ over. Call John between Alcoholism Detox Unit. the handicapped to stay at cial. Fully insured and each. Call Tony 649-8649 PLATE GLASS'23” x 38” conditioning, 27,000 miles. titled, "Forest-Acres Section No. 1 Property of T. Shannon A Sons Eiasl ditional insertion. home. Car essential. them. $50. 6434612. appliances. Working single NEWLY RENOVATED Superb car! Many extras!' » Help Wanted 13 8:30 and 11 a.m., 647-9946. Orient now and begin after dependable. 646-1653. after 5 p.m. or on rounded corners, beveled adult only. No 1968 FORD 'h Ton pickup, Hartford Connecticut Scale 1” equals 50' Sept. 1951 C ^ll W. Brooks, the holidays. We need 2 Miieage reimbursement. edges, suitable for desk or 310 square feet office $4495. 644-2942. ADventnres Regi5tcr(?d Land Surveyor," which map is on file in the Town Clerk's of- weekends. BOYS THREE speed 26 pets/chlldren. Telephone availaole. Main Street very good condition, many \ HAIRDRESSER • wanted special nurses to work with Good fringes. Daytime Building Contracting 33 Ubie top. $8.00. 643-7153. . 643-2880. new parts, needs minor fiee in said F2ast Hartford 201.98 ft.; T\AX PREPARERS - hours only, Monday thru inch Fuffy bike. $2IL00. 649- location with ample 1978 CHEVETTE, four Ea sterly By Elast Hartford-Manchester Town line and by the part time. Experience our special, patients and CUSTOM MADE antique 7963. work. $600 or best offer. Experienced. Hourly rate necessary. Call, Command staff. Unique''e’x^rience, Friday. Call 643-9511.. LEON CIESZYNSKI parking. Call 649-2891. speed, $2500. Excellent first piece described herein, 50.04 feet; and bonus plan. Full or satin drapes for picture PAIR LIVING ROOM FOUR ROOMS - Third Tom, 674-9413 days; SOUTHERLY By Lot 23 as shown on said map, 200.06 feet; Performance' of challenging, never boring...... BUILDER. New homes, window, gold, long, Table lamps. $25.00 for the condition. Telephone 646- part time hours. Beneficial - - bicycle 26 inch, three floor. Heat, stove and OFFICE SPACE - First 1236. evenings 646-6727. WESTERLY By Burnbrook Road. 50 feet. Manchester, ask for Excellent supportive staff. Buelneat _____ additions, remodeling, rec very good condition. $50.(W. pair. Telephone 646-4995. speed. $20.00. 643-1061. refrigerator. Adults. No Said premises are designated as "right of wqy to properties in the Income Tax Service, Please call: Paula Howe, Opportunities 14 rooms floor. East (Center Street. iHaufhrstrr Phone 646-4156 today. Manager, 643-8^9.______^ garages, kitchens Call 647-9515 after noon. pets. $330. Security and 1971 FORD TRUCK - good rear" on 4aicl map. RN. DNS: 243.8931 remodels, ceilings, bath SNOW BLOWER Toro, Good visibility. Bus line, 1969 MUSTANG - 3 speed. Being a porlion of premises in a deed from Thence Shannon to John E.O.E. F M. CHAIN Saw„ McCulloch references; CaU after 6 free parking. Keith Real Good running condition. running condition. Four X-RAY TECHhilCIAN - evenings. WANTED: SOMEONE to tile, dormers, roofing. WINDOW WITH casing 20” . $90.00. Telephone 646- p.m., 649-2236. speed transmission. Call I’’, and Terrence R. Shannon dated June 18.1959 arid recorded in Volume Hrralr^ become a partner in small Mini-Mac. $50.00. Estate, 646-4126. $1000. 295-9734 after 5:00 .145, Pade 436 of the Manchester Land Records. Private office, Residential or commer­ and storm window. Both 3323. Telephone-647-9357. 647-8341. ■Manchester. Send resume LOOKING FOR someone Travel Business. Write cial. 649-4291. p.m. This Ordinance shall lake effect ten (10) days after this publication open - Bolton Public same size. 28x46. Asking NINE ROOM HOUSE in this newspaper provided that within ten (10) days after this publica­ Schools. For application io Box LL, c/o The reliable, energetic and Box L, c/o The Manchester $W.00. 'Telephone 649-6757. BARBIE DREAM HOUSE available November 15th. Homos-Apts. (o share 59 CHEVY PICK-Up, 1972. Herald. CROCKERY chef electric tion of this Ordinance a petition signed by hot less than five (5) percent call 643-1569. Manchester Herald. available for immediate ELECTRICAL SERVICES with furniture - ideal slow cooker 5 Vk qt. with Suitable for one or two 1973 PONTIAC LEMANS - 3/4ton, 350 V8, power of the electors of the Town, as.determin^ from the latest officials lists employment. Opportunity - We do all types of Elec­ EIGHT TRACK with Christmas gift. Excellent families. $625 monthly plus 53,000 miles. 350 engine. s te e r in g , automatic, of the Registrars of Voters, has not beci) filed with the Town Clerk NEW HAMPSHIRE removable crockery server PROFESSIONAL to earn $300 per week to trical Work! Licensed. Call speakers, $35.00. condition. $50.00. Phone and cookbook, never used. security. 643-1442. Male/Female over 40 to Excellent running condi­ camper cap. $2,475. Mint. rc(iuesting its reference to a special Town election. start. Call 646-3936. E.O.E. Convenient store with new after 5:.00 p.m., 646-1516. Telephone 643-4389. 647-9028 after 6 p.m. Asking $25.00. 646-5358. tion. $1150. 647-89M. 643-2764. 1 FOUND THEM UNDER JAMES R. McCAVANAGH ' equipment. Top traffic share Manchester condo.. . Secretary DELUXE 4Vk room Kitchen privileges, private • p et s, H0USEB(?0 .14 vise developmentally dis­ Estimates. Fully insured. Vi”, excellent condi­ tion. Asking $50.00. Call LARGE wooden three door basement, garage. $495. N/A Telephone 643-6017. tion. $30.00. 640-9537. 643-1037. ; cabinet for collections like 646-1540, 64O-0M0. Blue Cross U Blue Shield of Connecticut (the Company) has requested the approval of the Insurance Com- Dental Plan • Rider A abled adults required. Send Situation Wanted 15 miMloner of the State of ConnecUcut for program-modifications, new programs, and revised membership Additional Basic Benefits (50%) resume to Hockanum In­ liens or rifles. $99.00. Call charges and contract benefits various Blue Cross It Blue Shield Plans, as specified below. A public hearing Individual 8 2 05 8 I 95 dustries, Inc., P.O. Box SKAPARAS HOME GOOD CHRISTMAS gift, ROLLER Skates, ladies in­ 649-4679. FREE Color TV-w/one was held on the requested changes. This is to give public notice that the Company intends to implement such Family ' 5.62 5.36 HOUSEWORK WANTED - Remodeling - all types ad­ irls single speed 26" door, size 7, very good con­ year lease. 2 bedrooms, Itk 2002, Vernon, Ct. 06066. Own transportation, rate and benefit changes, new {Ht^ams and program modificatiems as may be ajiproved by the Insurance Com­ Dental Pldn - Rider B E.O.E. ditions, interior and rown Columbia bicycle, dition. $10.00. Phone 646- LADIES SKI booto, Lage, baths Condominium. New missioner. effective January 1, 1983 or as soon after his approval has been obtained as shall. In the Company’s Prosthetics (50%) experienced, reliable exterior, repair work. Free fexcellent condition. Only 3599. size 8 Vk, never used, mint carpets, appliances. Judpnent, be r^sonable a ^ appropriate. individual 8 6.44 8 4.47 References available. estimates. Reasonable $25.00. Phone 649-0832. condition. R eg., $140. Parking for i cars. -$475 BLUE CROSS DIRECT PAY PLANS Family 12.9! 6.95 CHALLENONC POSmM Ironing also done. 649-5007.. rates. Call Joe - 649-1733. DATSUN 200SX snow tires, Sacrifice $50. Telephone monthly. 647-0391. Current Proposed Dental’Plan - Rider C Quarterly (Quarterly 8500 Year Periodontics (50% ) WET/DRY vacuum, good 185/70 SR14 radial with 6494113 keep trying. . Condominiums 22 Booling 34 condition. $8.00. Call 643- rims, used one season, 460 MAIN S’TREET - Six Rates Rates Individual 8 i.7 8 8 1.24 I>ental group practice seeking DP-12 Family 3.84 2.66 mature, outgoing individual 4859 before noon or after 4 $75.00. Phone 646-1780. BIKE - Girls 20 inch Hi- room apaitenent. Heat, no Individual 8‘58.77 Dental Plan - Rider D 1 - . with experience in appoint­ MANCHESTER - Two BIDWELL HOME Im- p.m. rise, $40.00. Ehtcellent con­ appliances. $520 monthly. Family 13>t64 1600 Lifetime Orthodontics (60% ment book control and bedroom condo for rent. A- provem ent Company - STORM DOOR, aluminum, dition. CaU after 4, 871- Security and tenant in­ DP-15 . Family 8 8.94 8 7.06 pegboard system. 4>/ii day C. $575 with heat. 273-2013, R o o fin g , s id in g , BROTHER PORTABLE complete, 33 'A by 81 V4, 1538. surance required. 646-2426 Individual I 43.78 8 69.60 Full Prescription Drug Rider week. Salary commensurate 659-3008. alterations, additions. electric sewing machine hinge on left. $20.00. 649- 9 - 5 weekdays. Family 94.90 153.45 Individual 8 5.58 . 8 6.70 with experience. Please send ...... 6495. with attachments, like new 8089. Dogs-BIrda-Pete 43 DP-IB Family 19.07 2.89 resume to Box K. c/o The Individual o $ 49.17 8 78.21 Co-Pay Prescription Drug Rider Manchester Herald. □MISC. FOR SALE condition, original cost 2>/k ROOMS - Heat, hot 162.93 □ BUSINESS water, references, securi- Family 100.75 > Individual 8 4.66 8 5.59 Don’t wait till the last $125., will sacrifice for COFFEE table, very FREE "«) GOOD Home - _ DP-25 Family . 15.69 18.83 and SERVICES $50.00 for quick sale. 649- modem, black Italian mar­ four adorable abandoned ' ty. Appliances. Call after Individual I 51.46 8 81.81 Blue Book Drug Riders Individual Family BAKER - Full time in ble, walnut inserts, brass 6pm. 646-3911. preparation of breads, rolls Household Goods 40 1794, grey LH kittens. CaU 528- Family 105.11 176.04 8 .25 Co-Pay . 8 6.34 821.53 minute! Be part Services Olfered 31 base, 22 X 72, $99.00. Call 5110 or 649-2345. DP-30 .50 Co-Pay 5.96 20.18 and cakes. Able to work MANCHESTER - Central­ I 67.40 8107.19 1,00 Co-Pay 5.24 17.49 with handicapped adults. USED TWO LR78-15 Goodrich 646-1599. Individual REWEAVING BURN REFRIGERATORS, snow tires, steel belted TWO AFFECTIONATE ly located three bedroom, Family 134.16 216.96 ,.1.25 Co-Pay ' . 4.87 16.14 References required; very DP SP-200 , 1.50 Co-Pay 4.50. 14.79 of the smart shoppers Salary negotiable. HOLES. Zipper^ um­ WASHERS, RANGES - radial, white walls, Morris kittens. Erick and six room apartment. brellas repaired. Window Clean, Guaranteed. Parts good condition. $75.00. 643- Ericka yearn to join a Woodstove, no appliances. Individual 91S0.C 8219.81 1.75 Co-Pay 4.14 1344 M.A.R.C., 57 Hollister shades, Venetian blinds. 6586 after 4 p.m. Lovely Knit $360. plus security. 649- Family * ^ 284.50 42.76 2.00 Co-Pay •3.?8« 12.10 Street, Manchester. 646- & Service. Low prices! loving family. 342-0571,633- DP-SDE Major Medical Programs 5718 - ask for Gerri Kelly, Keys. TV FOR RENT. B.D. Pearl & Son, 649 Main 6581. 6285. 4 Individual 829.08 8 36.39 . All Plans, increase of 11.3% who shop from the hours 7:45 to 3:15 p.m. Marlow’s, 867 Main Street. Street. 643-2171. 2. BLUE SHIELD DIRECT PAY PLANS: 4. BLUE SHIELD GROUP PLANS • 3 TO 99 MEMBERS: 649-5221. Minfeaf Instruments 44 TOWNHOUSE - Two Current Proptfsed Chirrent Prt^xised LPN OR RN - for G.E. WASHER, dryer, A Basic Style bedrooms, heat, hot water, Quarterly Quarterly Monthly Rates Monthly Kates Manchester pediatric prac­ BRICK, BLOCK, STONE - large refrigerator and BEAUTIFUL CONN Elec­ appliances. No pets. Rates Rates Christmas Gift Guide tice. Applicant must enjoy Concrete. Chimney electric stove. Telephone tric orgap, dual keyboard, S ecurity deposit. $410 Century 90 Individual 8 12 98 8 15.85 monthly. 644-2w. Individual $4185 8 60,03 Two Person 2.96 ^31.70 working with children and Repairs. "No Job Too 646-4962. 115V, M cycles, (appraised 31.10 37.96 have a pleasant personali­ Small.” Call 644-8356. $700.00). w s t offer over Two Person 93.70 120.06 Family Family 96.90 12.87 Ontury 94 Home A Office Endorsement of thfe Manchester Herald. ty. Monday, Tuesday, ArUcles for Sale 41 $400. 429-3133. MANCHESTER - One Centu^ 94 Home & Office Endorsement Individual 8 5.07 8 4.66 Wednesday, Friday 9 - 6 C & M Tree Service, Free bedroom condominium. Individual $ 19.66 8 14.55 Two Person 10.14 9.2 p.m. Call 643-5218 between estimates. Discount senior Boats-Aeeesaorles 45 A p p lian ces. $325 per Two Person 39.30 2.10 Family 18.83 17.2 »48^2ri1 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. citizens. ' Company month. Mr. Martin, 646- Family 73.05 52 83 Century 96 Home A Office Endorsement Manchester owned and ★ COLEMAN CANOE- 3 4144. Ootury 96 Home S Office Endorsement Individual 8 4.52 8 4 84 8 14.37 TYPIST for busy operated. Call 646-1327. a l u m i n u m SH EETS seater. Large size with Individual I 16.20 Twq Person ' 9.04 9.66 Beginning Nov. 26. 1982 used as printing plates. .007 oars. Ehccellent condition, EAST HARTFORD - Two Two Person 32.40 2.74 *Famlly 15.64 16.74 Manchester medical prac­ Family 53.20 46.08 Ckimmunity Contract tice. Applicant must be a LIGHT TRUCKING - Fen­ thick, 23x28Vk’\ 50c each, hardley us^. $250. Call bedroom townhouse, IVk or 5 for $2.00. Phone 643- baths, heated,, fully Community Contract . ^ Individual. « ' 8 2.94 8 3.73 Every day till Christmas Eve! good typist and transcrip- cing. Attics, cellars, gar­ 64i02ra. Individual $ 7.45 8 9.60 Two Person 5.88 7.46 tionist. Medical ter­ ages cleaned. All types 2711. They MUST be picked ##•••••••••••••••••••••• applianced, carpeting, Two Person 14.90 19.'2 Family • 7.77 9.2 minology a plus. Send trash, brush removed. up before 11:00 a.m. only. Spotting Goods 40 private basement, washer Family 19.75 24.90 Preferred Contract - Coverage 20 I Individual 8 2.07 resume, salary Picket, Split Rail, Stake ••#•••#••••#•••••••••••• 'n dryer hookups. Preferred Contract - Coverage 20 ' requirements and Fences installed. 528-0670. DARK LOAM - 5 yards FOR SALE - ROSSIGNOL Available January ist, Individual 8 5.60 8 7.2 Two Person 5.02 ^ 6.50 •••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••a !••••••• delivered, $60. plus tax. Skis - 180mm. Great for $450. and $475. Cali 528- Two Person 10.45 13.47 Family . • . 6,34 8.2 references to: Box KK, c/o 15.55 19.62 Preferred Contract -*Coverage 25 Help Wanted 13 Help Wanted 13 The Manchester Herald. SMALL LOADS OF Sand, Gravel, Stone & beginners! Best offer. 1708, 8 to 4:30. Family p □ NOTICES ...... STONE, trap rock, play Trap Rock. Call 643-9504. After 5:30 pjn. call 232- Preferred Contract - Coverage 25 Individual \ # 8 2.2 8 3.00 MANCHESTER Individual 8 6.35 8 8.19 Two Person 5.58 7.15 aaaaaaaa sand, white stone, loam 8528. Two Person 11.96 15.42 Family * - - 7.10 9.19 and pool sand CONTEMPORARY arm Convenient location, one Family 17.80 2.41 5. NEW PLANS OR PROGRAMS Lost end Found 1 chair upholstered in red bedroom apartment. Heat, ••aaaaaaaaoaaaaaaaaaaaa# OENTM. ASSISTANT LOOM FIXERS DELIVEFfED. Telephone dtndguea 4$ 3. BLUE CROSS GROUP PLANS • 8 TO 99 MEMBERS: 'Home A Office Endorsement 94 , . * 644-1775. velvet, chrome legs, $150. appliances, carpeting in­ Current ' Proposed ' Alternative maximum benefit of 8180 FOUND - SET OF KEYS Assisting general dentist Experienced on Shuttle or Rapier Velvet Brown vinyl recUner, $50: ANTIQUES AND cluded.- $355 m onthly. Monthly Rates Monthly Rates Alternative maximum.benefit of 827Q at Lincoln Center. Can be preferably experienced in 4* DESIGN KITCHENS - Contemporary black and COLLECTIBLES - Will Security and lease Semi-Private Hoapitaliiatlon Home A Office Endorsement 96 / looms. Good wages and working conditions. - Alternative .maximum benefit of $200 picked up at the handed denUsU7. F r i l l y of* cabinets, vanities, counter white fabric wall banging purchase outright or sell on required. 647-1718. Individual 836.39 8 44.2 Manchester Herald Office Complete company paid fringe benefit X Family 2.31 111.64 . Alternative maximurn benefit of $300 fice. Benefits. Please call 646*. tops, kitchen cabinet 50” 50”, $25. 646-0479. commission. House lot or ' Family maximum benefit Increase to 8800 between 8:30 and 5 p.m. d527 with qualifications. program - profit sharing. fronts, custom single piece. Telephone MANCHESTER • Four Extended Plan Hospitalization Monday - Fridav. Individual 817.34 8 2.45 Family maximum benefit increase to 8 1 .^ woodworking, colonial 6444962. room apartment, Family 50.2 74.54 Merit Rating'Program reproductions in wood. stove, refrigerator. No Semi-Private Maternity Merit rating will be applicable to groups with 50 or more contracts. KITIN’ CARLYLE by Larry Wright AMEHICAN VELVCT COMPANY J.P j Lewis, 649-9658. pets. Security and Family Only 810.35 8 14.42 Blue O ots Direct Pay . •« 22 Bayvtaw Ava. FULLY* SEASONED SMAU references. $325 plus Additional Room Credit A new program. DP SP-450 with semi-private hospital coverage, and a 8450 deductible provision. Sthfilngton, CT 06378 SNOWPLOWING Firewood cut to length, A4EDIUM utiUties. Also three room Individual (per unit) 8 .2 8 M Blue Shield Group Plans split and delivered. $90. a * RENTALS Family (per unit) .S .15 A new rider for non-student.children over age 19 and students age 23-25. (Average previously available un­ 203-53S-1050 Driveways and parking mOT04t)lM apartment, $280. S4M003. • e.o.e. cord. Call 649-1831 •••••••••••••••••••••••• Newborn Baby Rider der Blue Shield Group Plans as part of the basic contract will be provided only through this rider in the ' Wrteae cowvis fteM? lots. -Call after 0 p.m. 64^ *8. 1.09 futufe. 0539. anytime. Rooms lor Boat 52 s u N n y , i m m a c u l a t e Family Only . “ loo WAVS To PiaC W R c IbOR. 5043 four rooms, first floor, lots Maternity Credit Rider 6. BENEFIT REDUCTIONS WILL PAY YOU to show QUEEN SIZE SI Waterbed, Family (per unit) 8 .18 -Blue %leid Direct Pay Plans PIZZ h COOKS our EJectrolux equipment. FALL CLEANUPS - Large This popular, versatile MANCHESTER - Nice more. Retird or mature Full Service Dental Plan . Elstabllshment of benefit levels consistant with Blue Cross Direct Pay Plans, including no coverage for Experienced preferred. all set up. Baffled mat- eardigisn with 2 conve­ room* with kitchen working person(s) 811.78 8 11.34 ; childfmbver agq 19 except students age 19-23. - CATMiP.* Will also provide a free lawns done with leaf tress. $r*' or best offer. Individual in person - LaStrada training program-. Full sweeper and curb side nient pockets is knitted privileges. Gentleman referred. Non-smokers, Family * 18.77 ,S7.M The (Company has also requested and received approval of the Insurance Commissioner for a new plan, and to 471 Hartford Road, leaves vacuumed. 647-0191. laVk-MMl in sn fntereating pattern prefeiTM. $50.00 weekly. Rfo pets. 649-5097. Co-Pay Dotal^PUn (lO/SO) revise m em ter^ip charges and contract benefits for Blue Ooss 65 and Blue Shield 65 coverages, as specified I » commission 'paid oh all stitch; it’s a year ’round Individual 8 8.37 ' 8 8 » below. A public hearing was held on the requested changes. This is to give public notice that tbe Company will Manchester. sales. Call 646-3375. E.O.E. Telgihone 56M396. ^ Security. Telephone 643- A sip-front shirtdress for favorite to wear With 1878. DOWNTOWN MAIN Street Family i l M > ' 2.81 im p ^ e n t these approved changes commencing January 1, 1983. WOMAN’S CHOCOLATE skirta or pants. Imkmnlty Dental Plan • • Hie new plan, Blue (?ross 65 (304), will replace the present Blue Ooss 66 ( 280). (Average under Blue Cross 65 LAWNS CLEANED and Brown cordory coat, wool the hslf-slxe figure Is al- - remodeled two bedroom wure in style. No. 5043 has directions Individual 86.78 8 4.70 (904) corresponds with the higher Medicare amounts announced by the Federal (kivemment in the October 1, mowed, leaves raked and Unlng, very warm. lYac- CENTRAL LOCATION, apartment, beat stove, . 15.M CELEBRITY CIPHER . No. ISIS with Photo- for Sises Small, Medium kitchen privileges, parking parking. $350. purity, Family 33.61 1982 Federal Register. O a M iliy , p M taken away, general yard tlcally braM new. $80.00. CaMe is in SIset U H to and Large (8-18) inclu- Dependent Dental Plan lS-84 In order to qualify under new Federal regulations which establish minimum standards and benefits for policies W bnM M . EM h M H r ki M ibpM r • M M l M r inciaMr. riM W '« X b b M * W . care. CaU 64»303 or 647- Telepiione 2324028 after aive. available. Security and references. 646-1042 after 5 (IndldRing ipedfle rate that sui^lement the Medicare Program, the maximum calendar year liability for Blue Shield supplemental 24H. Size 14H, 87 boaL written references weekdays. MNl______- ■ 8:30 p.m. 8 yards 46-inch. TS ssani. esse s ijs iw sme allocatkie fo r all CQVtfagM has been increased to 85.000 from tbe present 82,500. Blue Shield 66 contracts have also been m m sssitss sss required. For appUcatlon Mpeodant D ntal Riders) amended to provide hospital outpatient benefits when the member does not have a Blue Cross 86 contract or a 'KEUTYZQLUO XUPL NYTQTVK UQ Pattome avelMIe eehn c«a 643-2888.______MANCHESTER --Unusual All Coveragea commercial equivalent. Furthermore, Uie Blue Cross (904) plan will cover an additional 366 lifetime days CmLD CARE Provided in .THREE PIECE Maple in sloes skernn, sasteufT conveniently located child wood frame living room deluxe one bedroom FtoDy On& 8 1.41 I^/A after the exhaustion of Medicare inpatient hospital coverage (including the 60 lifetime reserve days), rather SHARE A KITCHEN and townhouse. Pine Ridge FuU Plan than an additional 90 days of coverage. Blue Crass 65 (92) and Blue Shield 65 Plan 83 will not be qualified as IVV-UCOpiEPlYP, STJIFQT XUPLNPP safe home. Reasonable set plua hassock, good con- Family Only N/A Medicare supplemental programs under the new Federal regulaticms. rates. 646-MeO. dlttoo. 8296. 849-MU. bath with one other Village. Private entrance, w sjssnm gentleman. Own room. patio and full basement. Co*Pay Plan 1. BLUE CROSS 65 AND BLUE SHIELD 66 PLANS: UP NYT JIYYNP ST KSUYTZQ'XUPL sajRutt.-* FUnUy Only N/A Current Approved WILL bABYSlT in my IS” TRICYCLE-10” wheel SPECIAL; Ovar 200 se­ . M.OO per week plus securi- Includes beat, appliances, Indemnity • Individual Indlvdlvidu^ SR$SimSe ^ 6 tf l8 7 8 . carpeting and air- lYWNYT TVOT.” — TYTIYME Manchester home trl«7 cle, 18” girls bicycle lections and a 10-pagt Family Only N/A . Monthly Rate Monthly Rate anytime. Adores children.. with trsining wheels. Gym GIRT aection in tna conaltioning. $455 per RlderA Blue Shield 66 Plan 81 813.46 ‘816.02 Call 643-0407. set. 646-1340. ALBUM. Jnst $2.26. NICE ROC)M - parking, month. No pets. Damato Family Only N/A .11 Blue Shibld 65 Plan 82 7,72 9.93 New FASHION with private bathroom, for an Rldar B Blue Shield 66 Plan 63 7.07 6.14 (f-l-i SNNOTRTVP Photo-Oalde psttons In ■tasssTtsjsun ^tw -prlses, 648-1021. s-ijs-ssus-ew me stejMe 'oldar gentleman abont 80. Family Only N/A Blue Cross 66 (92) . 7.66 953 FREVKXI8 SOLUTION: "A woman shouM bo Mia a good WILL REPAIR rusted SEASONED HARDWfOQD all alas rsagsst haa a Looking for a car? Don’t Rider C Blue Cross 66 (304) N/A 18.78 aiNponaa movla: tha mon laR to tha knagmatlon, tha mora - Cut to length, W inN Moi Me te Mat isciL Nice private home, no trunks and floors oa jrodr sBadal Grace Cole Csllee- other roomers. miss the many offeriii^ to Family Only N/A Ira Colby, III anoNamarn thara It.” — Rogar Moora car. Reasonable rates. deUvoM, |80.w/cord.'Cut, tfea for larger elseei piss References. CaU 640-7SS5; c!brporate Secretary aiMlkrNCA.ine. QuaUty work. Call Ed in deUverad, f75.00/canl. 228- '8 BONDS Cm d sm I today’s Classified columns. etM»V«A.lM. ^ n e b e ste r, 643-7250. 9101 evenings. Prlcw.... iU i.