— MANCHESTER HERALD, Monday, June 6, 1983

BUSINESS How depression Recession surfaces Bolton cites affects children In the music Industry top students Plan would cut hospice care ... page 2 .. page 11 page 9

To destroy a benefit program that it opposes, the so increasing the amount now won’t show up as an Reagan administration is drafting cost-cutting increase in the budget (or add to the huge deficits). regulations that would gut Medicare payment for But far more dangerous are the proposed methods hospice treatment of the terminally ill. Unless the Your and amounts for payment of various hospice services. White House softens its proposals, the hospice The per diem reimbursement rates, especialiy for Clearing tonight; program — so fundamentally decent in its approach Money's hospice-based (as opposed to at-home) care, wtii — will shrivel and probably die. undercut the abiiity of hospices to provide the very sunny Wednesday Manchester, Conn. Under a law passed last year. Medicare will pay for Worth hospice care of patients with a life expectancy of six speciai care and services, and wiii open the way for — See page 2 Tuesday, June 7, 1983 Sylvia Porter unscrupulous providers. For instance, the ievei caiied months or less, starting Nov. 1. But the totals set by Single copy: 25

in investments U l Boyle MONTPELIER, Vt. (UPI) — Are you concerned . , . Idontlet Gryk argues that the money you invested may be squandered on ventures that are repugnant to you? changing interest rates pleads For instance, a pacifist who learns his money is being used to develop a new bomb? Or a vegeterian who finds he’s helping finance a cattle ranch, or a botherme. guilty condos best black who inadvertently invests in a firm with large holdings in racially segregated &uth Africa? Your worries may be over. Tm satisfied that ri^ t now A family-owned research firm has been formed to VERNON — Edward F. Boyle By James P. Socks After describing the plans for 2’'' advise people how to make a profit while plugging pleaded guilty today to first- Herald Reporter two-bedroom units, Gryk said they their money into “socially acceptable” investments. I can lock in a nice degree manslaughter in connec­ would better fit the historic district “We see ourselves as a kind of investment advisory “Now I can get tion with the strangulation death At an emotionally charged Plan­ than single-family homes. While firm for socially concerned investors,” said Ritchie $282.00 interest high one-for IV i to of a Columbia woman in 1980. The ning and Zoning Commission pub- the developers could control the Lowrey, co-director of the Center for Economic on my $1,000 in plea is part of a plea-bargain 1 lie hearing Monday night, attorney appearance and use of condomini­ Revitalization Inc. “These are people who want their arrangement that will also dispose 'Wesley Gryk argued that a 26-unit ums, he said, they would have no money to do good, as well as make money.” ju st Vh y e a rs!” 5 years-on a CD of eight cases of alleged rape condominium development on 3.9 such control over single-family Lowrey’s son, Peter, and daughter-in-law, Susan, charged against him by Manches- acres of the Great Lawn in the homes. started the operation in their Worcester home last at the Savings Bank ter ...... vif Cheney National Historic District The condominium plans have summer, and now have two offices in Montpelier, he Boyle, 23, is a former Manches­ will better suit the area than the been engineered to protect the said. ter resident. construction of single-family lawn’s vista from Hartford Road, He said the family hopes the business will grow into of Manchester. I Under the plea-bargain arrange­ homes. he added. a nationwide service providing updated information ment, according to State’s Attor­ Representing himself and busi­ Gryk said he and Lynch bought about the social responsiveness of corporations. It figure, in the long ney Donald Caldwell. Boyle will be nessman Michael Lynch, Gryk the lawn partially to protect the already has received inquiries from Japan, Australia, in prison for no less than 21 years said he ’’abhorred” being called a value of their homes and to Argentina and even the Fiji islands. and no more than 41 years. criminal by those in favor of straighten out their property lines. Lowrey. a self-avowed socialist, said he and his run, long term The sentence includes a 6- to preserving the lawn, some of The developers have not consi­ relatives have their own personal views about what is 12-year term Boyle is presently whom he termed ’’hypocrites.” dered whether they would make “socially acceptable,” but do not Impose them on savings are a better serving for a rape case in Testifying against the develop­ more money on condominiums or their clientele. Manchester in 1980. ment were three members of the / Each investor expresses what his or her own social Boyle had been indicted by a Cheney National Historic District Please turn to page 10 concerns are. he said, and the center seeks J si. deal for m e.” grand jury on the charges of felony Commission — Judge William E. investments that are both fiscally sound and in line murder and third-degree sexual FitzGerald, Joseph L. Swensson with their customer's concerns. assault. Sr., and William Desmond. Attor­ “What we’re saying is, if you make social Tolland County Superior Court ney Alan Thomas represented judgments in your investments, you actually will not Judge Eugene T. Kelly accepted Thomas and Vivian Ferguson, who :nly make money — but you may do better.” he said. the plea-bargain arrangement. own a Cheney mansion abutting Drink age The family’s work involves extensive research, m m m Boyle is scheduled to be sentenced the proposed development, in using both the Wall Street Journal, several other m July 6. opposing the application. publications and about half a dozen research centers In the interim he is expected to Herald photo by Pinto The commission postponed con­ hike Is up throughout the United States. The firm also works h m .' plead to four of the outstanding sideration of the hearing until its with brokers, who provide updated daily financial rape cases. The other four will be I can do It myself, thanks June 20 business meeting, citing information. nolled. the difficulty of making a decision to O’Neill “We’re trying to make available reasonably priced The cases will be transferred and the mass of information information,” Lowrey said. from Hartford Superior Court to Justin Steullet, age 3, and his father, submitted by both sides which . Tolland. a drink from the fountain whiie enjoying The center publishes a bi-monthly newsletter, with Henry Steuiiet of 62 Russeii St„ stop for nice weather in Charter Oak Park. needed to be reviewed. HARTFORD (UPI) - Gov rates adjusted so corporations pay more and students ‘of Manchester In its mail concerning the William O’Neill says he will go and low-to-middle income people pay less, he said. development, the commission re­ along with the Legislature’s deci­ ceived several telegrams — two sion to raise Connecticut’s drink­ Soil reeks of gasoline from descendants of the Cheney ing age to 20 if neighboring states MtemfMlaMgl family — opposing the develop­ do the same. *-‘^*aedl|nltei.44*5uB!Wl*a ment. Town Planning Director The governor said Monday he Business Alan F. Lamson said the telegrams was concerned Connecticut tee­ were a first for the commission as nagers would cross the border to Market site worries inspector far as he knew. drink in other states. The legal In Brief By Raymondn o n d T.T . DeMeo ______.. “ In arguing for the condomini­ minimum is 19 in New York and 20 concrete poured,” said Conti. ums, Gryk told the commission in Massachusetts and Rhode Herald Reporter soil around the site doesn’t appear tion. He said the company is The site, behind Bradlees de­ to be a health problem, town and that he and Lynch had given Island. partment store at the Manchester considering air-drying the soil to opponents of the development 18 If approved by O’Neill the new Firestone elected Building Inspector Francis J. state officials said today. evaporate any residual gasoline Parkade, includes the former Town Sanitarian John Salcius months to come 'u p with an drinking age would go into effect Conti today said that soil on the location of a Hess gasoline station. before replacing it under, the proposed site of a new Stop & Shop said there are no wells in the area foundation. alternative plan for the lawn which Oct 1. It would be the second time Daniel S. Firestone. CPA, son of Ann Firestone Our new 2 Vz-to-S is, the Savings Bank of Manchester Conti said It’s possible that what he that could be polluted by contami­ was financially feasible, but one in less than a year Connecticut has SBM 2 Vi-to-5 Year Bond' M arket eupermarket reeks strongly of calls the "saturation” of the soil by raised its drinking age. It was and the late Morris Firestone of Cobum Road gives you choices. ^gasoline, a fact that could hold up nated ground water. But Conti said he wants to see k • , Manchester, has been elected to the 12-member WarBond Narfcet CD CD, is locked in for the hill term you gasoline was caused by a leak from Brian Coss, a senior field inspec­ hiked from 18 to 19 only last July 1. Come with your figures—a specific Conti’s approval of construction Hess’ underground gasoline tanks. more soil tests at the site before he Board of Governors of the Connecticut Society of is for savers who want requested. The rate is compounded ihere. tor for the Department of Environ­ allows construction to proceed. ”I haw'f ® a I’d The latest increase won finsd Certified Public Accountants (CSCPA). amount of money and a specific Him* Conti said he is also concerned mental Protection’s oil and chemi­ legislative approval Monday when continuously and credit^ monthly, Coilti said the possibility of because the site was the dumping want them to dig test holes of at *'®''®^‘|f3 l‘^*osetlandfillitupwith ------’ Firestone is a partner in the Hartford to secure today’s attractive period you’d like to invest the money gasoline leakage, plus the unstable cal spills division, said DEP tests least ten to twelve feet before I’ll *^9''- Fauliso broke^tie accounting firm of Apter and Franklin. He has 0 the day you start to the day you ground for stumps and fill cleared conducted last fall showed "some be satisfied ” he said Lynch, who paid vot® m the Senate in favor of the interest returns for a m—and we’ll show you tte interest condition of subsoil at the proposed from the site of the Manchester chaired pnd is a member of various CSCPA withdraw it at the end of your term. you’d be paid on our Bond Market yite on Broad Street, could cause evidence of low-level ground con­ A spokesman for Orlando An eight acres of the House-backed measure, committees. Parkade in the mid-1950s. He tamination” at the site. nulli & Sons, the local firm lawn, have offered to sell it The drinking age amendment longer time. Although it takes only $1,000 mini- CD. (Also, see examples.) problems for construction thinks the presence of the fill, in contractors. He said he’s “not aware of any assigned to build the new Ston & for preservation if buyers meet attached to,a bill eliminating You choose the length of term on inum to open one of these CDs, ob­ poorly-drained land, makes the problems” of contamination in Shop, was out of the office this e°"^'tions. the state s alc^ol and treatment In the run, our long term ; “I’ve got to be certain that the ground level unsUble. If the fill Underwriters forum your ^rtificate of Deposit, we’ll pay viously the more you deposit to ^y , savings could be a better deal for underlayer (of soil) is good. Right Bigelow Brook, which runs in a morning and couldn’t be reached devdlopers, who live in fund, adding tees from the pro- sinks deeper after the proposed westerly direction near the pro­ for comment. Cheney mansions on either side of gram to the General Fund. good interest on it. For exactly how the more you get back later. You you, too. ' I now I’m not,” he said. building’s foundation is installed : “Until I’m satisfied that the posed supermarket site. Annulii bid $1,380,000 for the development, are Fauliso, who presides over the good that interest is right now, see could even request your interest in the building could settle or even Coss said DEP officials have met Gregory S. Wolff of 361 Timrod Road, monthly divided diecks. :(Broad Street) site is usable for oollapse, he said. construction contract. The build- ^ zone( change for the Senate, cast an affirmative vote accepted as a member of the box at far right. instruction, there won’t be any with a consultant hired by Stop & ing was originally scheduled to be Bortion of the lawn J fh® chamber deadlocked the 1983 Eight Million Dollar Forum. W l^ h long term Bond M arket CD The presence of gasoline in the Shop to discuss the soil contamina­ completed in mid-November Residence’ AA. to Planned the amendment. Earlier, A lot of people—^maybe you’re one June 1-J m 13, US3 This association is made up of the top 800 life of them—are bothered by not know­ is light for you? If you want a Inng Residence Development, which s®ssion the Senate killed an underwriters in the country and membership is Anaml Imcrcft Rate would allow condominium con- ®ff®.rt f® raise the legal age to 21. based on life insurance production for 1982. ing exaedy what kiiid of Werest rate term interest rate careiiilhi' d id ter^ struction. Single-family homes Nine of the chamber’s 23 Demo- Wolff’s office is in Vernon. to expect from one day to the next. fit»n changes in tlm nation’s econ-' r C l I ¥ ®®a'd be built with no zone change ‘'■'ats joined nine of 13 Republicans They’re the ones who see an impor­ omy, you may decide to leave your Soviets back Arafat in PLO ■ W in voting for the change. After By United Press International Fauliso broke the tie, the chamber tant financial edge to securing their His.comments came as Alger­ under the leadership of Yasser Soviet ’’assistance for the coming *••*•••••••••••••••««. approve the main Firm sues AT&T money at our present ^ n d Market Invest $1,000 ian, Saudi and Romanian leaders Arafat,” said Abu lyad, thenom de battle” with Israel. * • • • bill. Efieedve Annual Yidd Soviet-leader Yuri Andropov has sought to end the rebellion by AI CD rates for a longer time period— during this period : sent two messages to Yasser guerre for Salah Khalaf. In Damascus. Algerian Presi- I n S l d f i T n H a u R®8ina Smith, D-North of Andover. Fatah guerrillas that flared a ”We confirm that Yasser Arafat dent Benjedid Chadli met with I V U a y Branford, argued for a higher Mass., has filed a $156 million antitrust lawsuit in 2‘/2 years, 3 years, or any time period 3 jtcMs iram now. reoeive $1347J0 : Arafat supporting his leadership of month ago in Lebanon’s Bekaa • the Palestine Literation Organiza- not only is now but always will be Syrian President Hafez Assad in jn nan,, ■>.. drmking age. She said statistics federal court against AT&T. Western Electric you select, up to a maximum of S 4 jr u n fion DOW, recene $l,488aS Valley and erupted in a gunbattle the outstanding leader of our 5 yesn from now, ncehre $1,843.52 .tion despite a bitter guerrilla an attempt to mediate the crisis paoes, 2 sections have shown a dramatic decrease in Co. and Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc. years fixim now. between guerrilla factions last organization and of the Palestinian within Fatah — the largest PLO Advice ...... ,, fhe death rate of young drivers in The suit, filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court ; revolt that threatens to shatter the weekend. ft* • doe mtaB revolution,” he said when asked guerrilla faction, a PLO official Area towns...... , afates where the drinking age has for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, Minimum of $1,000 opens one. rciuln in ■ inlaiantiil pcnajtv ; organization, a top PLO official In Israel, Prime Minister Mena- m on^ locked up tight at todies ^AUftwdw inumi iqi ID $IM,0M Iv dK role*'” -said today. how the revolt had affected Ara­ said. Business...... been increased. contends AT4T and its subsidiaries control prices Interest rate is locked in. Issue rates chem Begin faced growing domes­ fat’s status in the PLO. and exclude competitors through equipment interest rate for a full S years. But Abu lyad, the No. 2 man in tic criticism of the June 6 invasion The rebels vehemently oppose com ta*''...... ^ ^ ^^ ^ G e o r g e G unther, R- change biweekly. But the rate you ; Arafat’s A1 Fatah group, told The PLO official gave few Arafat, fearing he wants to with- Entertainment!'! ;? attempt to in^rconnection policies and other restrictions if you’d like to get at your funds of Lebanon and parliament sche­ details on his weeklong talks with DASA produces and sells automatic dialer start with, when you open a new sotmer, you can arrange to do it just ' reportei's in Moscow Andropov duling a vote on opposition motions draw the PLO’s estimated 10,000 Lottery...... *^®!9®fhe drinking age to 21 failed, :also discussed the threat of “a new Soviet officials, but said the troops from Syrian-controlled Obituaries...... s®'® Connecticut should lead the speaker phones. ' 2^A or 3 years from now. The point for an inquiry into the govern­ question of new arms shipments to ; A i|I^can-I|raeli agression” in his ment’s conduct of the war. eastern Lebanon. They also charge ...... i ^ i i:!!...!! 6 ‘‘ year ‘n raising the the PLO had not been discussed. At he has taken to soft a stance on ...... drmking age. -mOMages to the embattled PLO Andropov’s messages “ex­ the outset of his trip, Abu lyad was chainnan. pressed Soviet support for the PLO President Reagan’s Middle East Weof^her“ " ...... “The people of Connecticut quoted as saying he was seeking peace initiative...... overwhelmingly want the drinkinc ••••••••••••••••••••* » age raised over 19,” he said t — MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday, June 7. 1983 MANCHE-STER HERALD. Tuesday, June 7, 1983 - 3 Chlldren*8 Express N matti Neighborhood and business How depression affects children conflict over area zoning Editor’s note: Children’s Ex­ •ANHIANCMOO press, a privately funded news Bv James P. Sacks service, is real world Journalism for expansion of its facilities. Aii already been closed. Herald Reporter " I ’m Mrs. Diminico,” she said • OSAI{)^^ ^ reported entirely by children 13 three homes are included in the area for which the change is before Gates told her she was out of years of age or under whose Four individuals and a lawyer sought. order, "the one to start all the LoimaT tape-recorded interviews, discus- TEMKIMTUKS representing Manchester State Rubinow said the two Eldridge trouble.” sions, reports and commentary Bank a r^ ed against a zone Street homes were not for saie. He Former commissioner John J. are etf ted by teenagers and adults. change sought by residents of a said the owners of both homes were Hutchinson, who also opposed the downtown neighborhood at a Mon­ among his clients and were present application, said the zone change By Glenn Golz, 12; Jessica day night Planning and Zoning at the hearing to support the would contradict the planning Schanberg, 13; Elizabeth Cof­ Commission public hearing. application. goals formed during his seven fey, 9; Simone Du Gay, 13; The zone change application was Bank president Nathan Agosti- years on the commission. C 3 - made by 31 residents of the UPi WEATMA rOTOCAST fc G ra d e Harry, 13; Eben David­ nelli testified that Manchester The neighborhood for which the neighborhood east of Main Street State Bank feared its expansion zone change is sought largely son, 8; Adam Davidson, 12; Ben around School and Eldridge plans were endangered by the contains the homes of former mill Jorgensen, 13; Assistant Edi­ streets who want to restrict change and said the bank was, workers which were sold at auction NaUonal forecast tor: Ehran Ellsho, 16 business uses in the area. They unfortunately, “ caught in some by the Cheney brothers in 1937 and For period ending 7 a.m. EST Wednesday. Tonight, thundershowers want the area’s zoning changed sort of a neighborhood firefight.” is part of the Cheney National will be expected In the Middle Atlantic Coast States. Elsewhere NEW YORK (UPI) - Children’s from its present classification as In his statement about the Historic District. weather will remain fair In general. Minimum readings Include; Express reporters discusses how Central Business District and "firefight,” Agostinelli was appar­ Attorney Rubinow produced real (maximum readings In parenthesis) Atlanta 62 (79). Boston 57 (72), depression affects children: Business II to Residence C. ently referring to charges made estate appraiser James W. Finne­ Chicago 54 (77). Cleveland 46 (70). Dallas 63 (65). Denver 47 (76). Attorney Lawrence Rubinow, during the hearing by Joe Dim- gan to support the zone change « SIMONE: "When I get de­ speaking for the applicants, application. Duluth 43 (65). Houston 62 (87), Jacksonville 73 (84), Kansas City 56 inico — who preceded him in pressed I don't eat. I don’t sleep. I argued that the neighborhood has opposing the application — that the In response to questions from (79). Little Rock 56 (80). Los Angeles 59 (72). Miami 77 (69). won’t do anything. I just sit. I build been residential since the Civil zone change was being sought to Rubinow, Finnegan said he though Minneapolis 53 (79), New Orleans 67 (67),NewYork57(71),Phoenix a tent over my bed, turn out all the War when housing was first built prohibit the conversion of his the change would be good (or 73 (100), San Francisco 54 (64). Seattle 55 (80). St. Louis 56 (80) and there. He said the zone change mother Josephine’s home at 39 property values In the Washington 61 (77). lights, open the window, close the shades, and sit there all day would make the area’s zoning Eldridge Street to a restaurant. neighborhood. staring at a book. I look at the conform to its present use. Mrs. Diminico has applied for a Finnegan said all 33 of the homes The commission tabied the ap­ building permit for the conversion, included in the application were words and I read them, but I don’t plication for consideration at its according to Zoning Enforcement worth preserving and that their Weather think them. They don’t mean June 20 business meeting, citing Officer Thomas R. O’Marra. potential sale status was harmed anything when I read them.” the need for further study of the O’Marra said even if the zone by being in a business district. possible Impact of approving it. change is approved, consideration Faced with a choice between two tered showers becoming partly GRACIE: "There’s a lot of Attorney Leonard Jacobs, re­ of the building permit application homes — one in a business zone and Connecticut today sunny south this afternoon. Highs things that can be depression, like presenting the bank, said the wili be not be affected since the one in a “ stable residential zone” Today cloudy with a 50 percent 65 to 75. Clearing tonight. Lows when you lose a friend and you’re change would be bad for business area was zoned for business when — a buyer would probably choose chance of a shower becoming upper 30s to upper 40s. Partly to really mopey and you Just walk and would contradict the compre­ it was filed. the latter, Finnegan said. partly sunny by midday. Highs in mostly sunny Wednesday. Highs in around really dull. Nothing is hensive development plan for the Mrs. Diminico stood up following In his rebuttal to Jacobs, who the 60s to low 70s. downtown area. the upper 70s to lower 80s. Winds going right, you feel like your- the conclusion of testimony but had argued that the change repres­ New Hampshire: Mostly cloudy Jacobs said the bank has pur­ managed to say only a few words ented "spot zoning,” Rubinow said becoming west 10 to 15 mph. world’s caving in on you and your Tonight clearing and cooler. Lows with scattered showers today chased a home at 23 Eldridge before being silenced by acting it was not spot zoning to make the around 50. Wind becoming northw­ except partly sunny south by friends are all a bunch of jerks. Street and might want to buy those commission chairman Ronald area’s zoning designation conform Herald photo by Pinto est 10 to 15 mph. Wednesday sunny. afternoon. Highs mid 60s to mid You’re really lonely, you feel like at 19 and 25 Eldridge in the future Gates because the hearing had to its use. Highs 70 to 75. Light northwest 70s. Clear south and partly cloudy nothing’s going your way and that Chow time wind. north tonight. Lows 38 to 48. Partly there’s nothing you can do. There’s to mostly sunny Wednesday. Highs no way out. You feel ugly, your hair Ronald Ravizza from Berlin washes for Hollow. Ravizza is blasting contractor Air quaiity in the 60s to low 70s. doesn’t look good and your pants chow in the Hop Brook near Globe Vermont: Becoming partly for the pipe hookup to the reservoir. The state Department of Envir­ are all wrinkled and a mess.’ ’ Democrats announce plans sunny today. Highs around 70. Fair Glenn: "My room is usually so onmental Protection forecast good and cool tonight. Lows in the 40s. messy and it’s like so depressed. air quality levels statewide for Sunny but cool Wednesday. Highs today and reported moderate air 65 to 70. When I wake up to it and I see this HRC term error affects 11 conditions across Connecticut on mess all around me, I pull my over such a minor thing. I was said, ‘Oh no.’ And BAM! It made cope with it. Monday. Extended outlook shades down and close the door and reading this comic book called me feel really crummy. to seek Board reelection When the Board of Directors sets SIMONE: "One reason I like terms of the commission action. Ms. Tonucci was reap­ everything. And I won’t go in there. ‘E ir something, and the start of it "What really ticks my depres­ out tonight to rectify the error it . Extended outlook for New Eng­ getting depressed is it’s also a way members. pointed, but to a one-year term. L.I. Sound "The last time I got depressed the cat got stabbed. I would be sion off is when a girl I like doesn’t By Raymond T. De/Meo made in setting terms for Terms for all 11 members were Cooney and Sarkisian were serv­ land Thursday through Saturday: of putting a real guilt trip on my board. was when I saw the movie depressed for my whole life if one Herald Reporter “ I don't really care what he members of the Human Relations ing the unexpired portion of terms Long Island Sound to Watch HUl, Connectlcul, Massachusetts and like me. It’s just Uke, ‘Well, I didn’t Crombie, elected board secre­ set by the motion that Town or my cats died.’’ parents. They’ll fuss over me if I’m does,” said Dyer, asked about the Commission, indications are the scheduled to end in 1983 R.I., and Montauk Point: West Rhode Island: Sunny Thursday ’’Frances.’’ It was a real depress­ exactly like the way that girl tary last November, is seeking a Attorney Kevin O’Brien has said is depressed. ‘Can I get you any­ . The four incumbent Democrats implications of Pohl’s challenge. Democratic majority will vote to void. winds today 10 to 15 knoU. and early Friday. Chance of ing movie because she went into a treated me.’ And I Just lie there third term. He is a financial thing...’ Other than that, my on the Board of Education an­ "This is a very democratic town. If replace Betty Tonucci on the Northwest winds tonight around 10 showers late Friday and early mental institute and they did a JESSICA: “ I get really de­ like, ’Ob, no.’ I can’t do anything analyst for the Hamilton Standard A check of the minutes of board Cooney's term was set by the parents are nagging if the room’s nounced formally Monday that he (Pohl) wants to run it’s entirely commission and the Republicans meetings seems to indicate that knots and north winds Wednesday Saturday. Highs from the mid 60s lobotomy. It may seem like a pressed, like if you’re with r«Mly and it’s Just really terrible.’’ division of United Technologies. his decision,” he said. Dec. 14 vote to end in 1984 and to mid 70s. Overnight lows from the not clean enough, if the dishes they’ll 1 run for additional terms in will raise no objection. the terms of Ms. Tonucci, John W. Sarkisian’s to end in 1985. 10 to 15 knots. Partly cloudy today, stupid tUng, but even now — and crazy friends and they take, Perkins and Dyer were elected Crombie said the major issues of mid 40s to the mid 50s. aren’t shiiQr enough, the cats November. to the board in 1981. Perkins is the But Ms. Tonucci’s term is not the Cooney and Edward Sarkisian, all The other eight terms seem to clearing tonight and fair Wednes­ this was a few months ago — I still advantage of you. Say if you have a BEN: "Say a teacher bawls me the campaign will "develop during only one involved in the Dec. 14 Vermont: Clouding up Thurs­ aren’t fed enough, the rabbit’s not The four will vie against four chairman of the board’s subcom­ Democrats, were altered from have been unaltered by the board day. Visibility improving from don’t think it was a stupid thing to party or you get out with them, and out for something in class and I’m the term of our candidacy.” He action by the directors in setting west to east to more than 5 miles day, chance of showers Friday, fed enough, and then the TV’s left Republicans for six three-year mittee on long-range planning. normal duration by the board action. get depressed about.’ ’ there are a lot of people, and then reaUy angry. He says, ‘Okay, Ben. positions on the board. Threeof the mentioned the pending change to a today and continuing through clearing Saturday. Continued cool, on too long." Dyer, a partner in the Manchester four-year high school system and highs 65 to 75, lows 45 to 55. they start to really overwhelm you. You’re talking out in class. You get winner will begin their terms of Wednesday. Average wave heights E L IZA B E T H : “When m y law firm of Phelon, Squatrito and the potential closing of Highland Maine: Fair Thursday and Fri­ They don’t listen to you. They’re office in November; the remaining 1 to 3 feet today and less than 1 foot brother found out that Superman an F for this.’ I might be depressed GRACIE: "Usually when I get Fitzgerald, is the former chairman Park School as likely points of day. Chanbe of rain Saturday. your guests and you say, ‘You three will take office in November, tonight. and Spiderman were not real, he and I’d (feel ^ilty because I’d depressed it’s because I want of the town’s Human Relations discussion. Highs in the 60s. Lows in the upper cannot do that in my house.’ And 1984. Commission. got really depressed and so did I. realize what I did was wrong. So attention. I was eating dirmer and The four incumbents are ex­ 30s and 40s. they do it anway. You get your I’ll walk into my next class and ' The four Democratic contenders At an informal press conference How be found out was, be went to all of a sudden I put on this-quick are board chairman Leonard E. pected to win the endorsement of New England New Hampshire: Fair Thursday mother to stop them and if you did say, ‘I can’t read this damn book. Monday, the four Democrats had the Democratic Town Committee and Friday. Chance of rain Satur­ an amusement park on the day that depression and sat there and Seader, Secretary Peter A. Crom- Children they would be reaUy mad at you. little to say about the candidacy of Massachusetts and Rhode Is­ It’s such a bore, and it makes me moped over my food. Everyone bie, Richard W. Dyer and Susan L. at its nominating convention in the day. Highs in the 60s and lows in the SpideriMn was supposed to guest Then you get so depressed that Michael E. Pohl, 29, who has land: Cloudy with a chance of sad and it’s badly written. ’ And you was making a big fuss, ’What’s Perkins. Seader and Crombie will first week of August. upper 30s and 408. \ star. He followed this guy in his they start to stop." vowed to challenge the party- Republican Town Chairman showers possibly a thunderstorm tend to exaggerate everything wrong with you ? You don’t like us? run for terms starting in 1983. becoming partly sunny from west costume and he found out that he endorsed nominees in a September Curtis Smith said he doesn’t know else." Is it my fault? I’m sorry for The four announced their can­ primary. to east today except persisting High and low was a real guy, ADAM: "The other day I who his party’s contenders will be whatever I did.’ Artd I quickly didacies at a joint press conference Democratic Town Chairman southeast sections until late in the "He got so depressed. He had punched my brother in the face and in the November election. Besides The highest temperature re- JESSICA: “ If there are a lot of snapped out of it.” before the start of Monday’s board Theodore Cummings has criticized day. Areas of dense fog southeast ported Monday by the National > wanted to go on the rollercoaster I was so depressed about that. I meeting. "I think it’s appropriate the incumbents. Dr. H. John coastal areas. Highs in the 70s. things going wrong, or you get a lot Pohl, a former member of the Malone and Nicholas J. Costa, a Weather Service, excluding ; and I said, ‘I’ll take you on the didn’t mean to do it. We were that we announce together because Tonight clearing and cooler. Lows of criticism — all kinds of pres­ For more information about Commission on Children and possible candidate is Geoffrey Alaska and Hawaii, was 110 rollercoaster.’ And be went, 'No watching this movie, and I said as we serve together,” said Dyer. Youth, for aspiring to office in the 50s. Wednesday sunny. sures, from parents or anything — Children’s Express, send a Naab, a member of the Human degrees at Palm Springs, CaUf. way.’ He was really depressed.’ ’ a Joke, ‘If anybody talks again. I’ll Seader, a vice president of First without gaining experience in the Highs in the mid 60S to mid 70s. Today's low was 31 degrees at and you don’t get an outlet and you stamped, sell-aildressed envelope Hartford Realty Corp., has been Relations Commission who Smith p^nch them in the face.’ Andafterl party. Cummings doesn’t think Maine: Mostly ploudv with scat­ International Falls, Minn. can’t talk to people, then you get to Children’s Express, 30 Charles chairman since 1981. He is seeking said is “ very interested” in serv­ ' EBEN: “I once got depressed said, ‘One, two, three, shut up,’ be Pohl has a chance and privately, so ing on the board. really depressed because you can’t Sl , New York, N.Y. 10014. election to a fourth term on the do many political insiders.

Peopletalk Teacher contract change approved

Lana’S bash Today is Tuesday June 7„ the 158tb day of 1983 with 297 to follow. It was a late Lana Turner at a book bash Pocket The moon is moving toward its Layoff plan clears hurdle Books’ President Ron Busch held at a Dallas hotel new phase. Saturday for the paperback version of “ Lana; The morning stars are Mercury The Lady, The Legend, The Truth.” and Mars. As expected, the Board of teachers in different teaching more qualified (or the job. The party was to end at 8 p.m. Ms. Turner, 62, The evening stars are Venus, Education Monday, approved a areas. arrived Just after 8, with perfectly coiffed silver The new language allows less of Jupiter and Saturn. change in the teacher’s contract Under the proposed change, a role to seniority, and more to hair, a sprinkling of diamonds accenting her ’Those bom on this date are under affecting the fate of laid-off which still must be ratified by the administrative discretion, in de­ black beaded dress. the sign of Gemini. teachers. members of the Manchester Edu­ "I ought to belt you one,” Busch was quoted as ciding which teachers are laid off On this date in history: . The contract change was the cation Association, skilled or transferrred to another schooi. saying to her. "One more stunt like that and I’ll In 1933, Great Britain, France, Oniy item of business at the board’s teachers who lack seniority would have you thrown out of this hotel.” Fifteen teachers are scheduled to Italy and Germany signed a public meeting; immediateiy af­ not necessarily be terminated or be laid off at the end of this year. 1983 Ms. Turner swept past him. “ Well, here I am at 19-year peace pact. World War II terward members went into closed transferred when school staff is last,” she said. "W e had a little trouble It also spells out a laid-off began less than six years later. session to discuss a performance reduced. teachers rights in competition for downstairs and I was threatened by that man.” In 1942, Japanese forces occu­ evaluation for Superintendent Under the existing contract, She said she was suffering from jet lag. Her job openings, a vague area in the pied Attu and Kiska in the Aleutian James P. Kennedy. according to Assistant Superin­ present contract. hairdresser-companion, Eric Root, said she had a Islands, U.S. forces retook the The new contract language tendent Wilson E. Deakin, primary ’’tummy ache” after eating bad oysters. "We think its a step forward,” islands a year later. leaves it to the discretion of school grade teachers with seniority said Deakin Monday. Busch cooled down, took two yellow roses from In 1982, Israeli Jets bombed principals whether teachers who affected by layoffs would force out Peter Tognalli, president of the a vase and apologized. "Just never forget again central Beirut while Israeli ground have seniority, and are dispiaced teachers in higher grades with less just who you’re dealing with, ” she said. MEA, agreed, and said the change forces captured heavily defended from their jobs for enroliment or seniority, even though, in the has the support of the union’s FREE Beaufort Castle in southern Le­ ^dgetary reasons, should move judgment of the school principal, members. banon and surrounded the city of into the jobs of other less senior the less senior teacher might be Best actors Sidon. Alan Alda, Carroll O’Connor, John Forsythe UPI photo June 9 , 10, 11 10 A M - 1 PM and Larry Hagman were rated television’s best UPI photo A thought for the day: American, actors by a panei of six Hollywood casting poet Ralph Waldo Emerson said, Today In history directors. Stop in this Thursday, Fri, or An elated Sadie Fricke hoists her award "Beauty without grace is the hook Performers who could move into the top without the bait.” li" . forces occupied Attu and Kiska In the Directors to consider plans category were Valerie BertinelU, Veronica aioft after being named female vocalist A eutlan Islands. A year later, U.S. forces retook the Hamel, Stefanie Powers and Daniel Travantl. of the year at the Music City News islands. Here, a wounded Ql Is carried toajeepon Attu In- Sat. from 10 A.M. til 1 P.M. and The panel’s findings were reported in the June Country Awards show Monday night in June 1943. .: 11 TV Guide. The panelists called Alda the Nashville. "consummate actor,” said O’Connor was a L ottery for Municipal Building have your picture taken by our "super craftsman," gave Hagman credit as "extremely competent, skillful, multi-Ulented,” and said Forsythe was a somewhat underrated and you know what a terrible day yesterday Manchester Herald ! A $37,140 allocation for renova- town attorneys will be a confer­ room will removed. The small photographer and placed in a "skilled actor with great range.” was.” Her husband said, ” ... it’s not easy being Connecticut daily jions to the Municipai BuilcUng will ence room for the time being and offices underneath the balcony, married to Henny Youngman, I’ll tell you." considered by the Board of wiil be held in reserve for a however, will remain. Monday: 058 Richard M. Diamond, Publisher Directors tonight after the direc­ personnel office if one is ever On the first floor the office now frame for you to give your Dad to Steve & Eydie Play Four; 5696 Thomas J. Hooper, General Manager tors hear a report from a subcom- reestablished. used for word processing will Quote of the day piittee on the latest changes in The suite in the rear of the Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme have been again become an' office for the Joseph Kennedy II remembered his father, Other daily numbers drawn USPS 327-500 plans for moving offices within the second floor, now used by finance, assistant general manager. Some keep for years to come. married for 25 years, a fact they wilt celebrate at Monday in New England: VOL. CII, No. 210" building. New York’s Carnegie Hall June 10-18 Rotwrt F . Kennedy, Monday on the IStii will be devoted to the town space in an office used by the Vermont: 188. Publish^ dolly exctpt Sunday ! The subcommittee met Monday attorneys and to the secretary to David Hartman of ABC’s "Good Morning anniversary of his assassination. assessor would be devoted to the New Hampshire: 8191. morning to discuss those changes, the Board of Directors. ABSOLUTELY FREE! America” asked them how they made marriage Kennedy, 29, called his father a man of Chester Publishing Co., 14 erolnord 1®f..one month, S15 J5 collector of revenue. work. “ contradictions in an article in the Washington Rhode Island: 3357. Ploce, Manchester, Conn. 04040. fo r tiv e e months, $30.70 fo r i S all of them on the second floor. A petition across the end of the Few changes are planned in the Post, and added; "B om rich', he worried about Maine: 884. Second cIc m postage paid at Man­ rats*?re"i5l/'Sii;£i*“ '’ ®"*''*“ '- Manager Robert Weiss described hall will be moved forward so that basement. The General Services “ I don’t think you have to make it work. If you chester Conn. POrrMASTER; or# QvoiloDlg on rgQuott. the poor—tried bard to improve their lot here and Massacbusette: 3833. the newest plan after the meeting. It will enclose a larger area. office there will be devided into two have to make it work,” Lawrence started, then Smd oddress changes to the Man- . In it the former hearing room his wife joined in and they said in unison, "then it elsewhere on this planet. Tough aud forceful in ^es^ Herald, iTo. Box m , o classified or disolav The town treasurer’s operation sections and one small room will Solar syatem Manchester, Conn. 04040. odverf Isement, or fo report a news will be devoted entirely to the doesn’t work.” He added. “ I think if you reaily the cruelly competitive world of politics, he was wili stay in its present location, but become a conference room. Plctur” ^ ' ' S 5 l Finance Department, but will be the treasurer will have full use of a have to concentrate and think about it and work at compassionate in his regard for those who had no The planets of the solar system, To subscrite, or to report a 44^2711. (Mfice hours ore 8:30 a m Changes in the building hinge on to 5 o.m. Monday through Friday.' subdivided only with temporary vault there instead of having to it all the time, then it’s like being in the wrong power. Practical and keenly aware of the in order of their distance from the M very problem, coll 447-9*44. transferring the probate court constraints that press upon all leaders, he was a Office hoprs are 8:30 o.m. to 5:30 petitions. The present office of the share it. A small office now part of OeQemmis job. sun, are: Mercury, Venus, Earth, across Center Street to the Hall of p.m. Monday through Friday and 7 Herald/IS g probate judge will be used by the the treasurers’ complex will be- His wife said it had been a lot of fun. “ It feels to stubborn dreamer, a man anxious to inspire Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, 10 o.m. Saturday. Delivery subimber to United Press Intefmk Records. Renovations to accom­ others, extend a nation’s vision of what is both budget officer. The office of the 'come a conference room. me like it was just yesterday (pause, laughter) Neptune and Pluto. Uranus,, Nep­ sitould be mode by 5 o.m. Monday modate the court are nearing desirable and possible." through Friday and by 7:30 o.m. probate staff will be used for the The temporary office of the Store hours: Mon.-Fri. 10-6; Thurs 'til 9; Sot. 9:30-5:30 2450 Main St., tune and Pluto are too faint to be Saturday. CI??Slrtiom.^ ■“"•‘I" completion and the court is sche­ seen from Earth by the naked eye. .word processing operation. Board of Directors, constructed on duled to move June 24. Work is ’ Glastonbury 633-5203 The office now occupied by the the balcony outside the hearing being done mostly by town forces. 4 - MANCHESTER HERALD, Tiiesduy. June 7. 1983 MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday, June 7. 1983 - 5

'll!,(I U.S./World U.S.diplomats Connecticut Senate overturns House tolls removal plan By Bruno V. Ranniello the Charter Oak Bridge, wou|fl be lost than realized in state and federal The amended version was returned In Brief are expelled in Brief United Press International removed in 1987. revenues if the state moves too fast to to the House which last week agreed on The action brought an angry, imme­ end the tolls. Ms. Neidermeier’s phase out plan to Rebels say attack success HARTFORD — The Connecticut diate response from DiBella’s co- His amendment requires the depart­ remove tolls beginning in 1984. Senate has overturned a House plan to chairman, Rep. Christine Nieder- SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — Rebels killed ment of transportation to come up with by Nicaragua Fronton seeks workers begin removing tolls next year and nteier, D-Fairfield, who vowed to try 15 soldiers in an attack on a microwave a plan by next January on exact costs instead voted to push the earliest and overturn the amendment by the transmitter that cut off telecommunications to HARTFORD — The owner of Berensons’ for toll removal and anticipated federal The Senate rejected the House starting date to 1986. Legislature’s Wednesday adjournment nearly half of eastern El Salvador, the rebel MANAGUA, Nicaragua (UPI) — Nicaragua Hartford Jai Alai says he will seek a court order to revenue to insure against a loss of any version 22-14 and approved DiBella’s deadline. Radio Venceremos said. expelled three U.S. diplomats on spy charges, forew state gaming officials to license non-union The Senate with only four dissenters, general fund monies. plan on a 32-4 vote. 'The four dissenters Monday approved the amendment Military sources said Monday the army would accusing them of trying to recruit a Nicaraguan workers as replaceinents for striking employees DiBella argued the state would stand were Democrats Wayne Baker of proposed by the co-chairman of the use radio communications to contact troops until double agent to kill Foreign Minister Miguel D’Escoto at the fronton. Ms. Niedermeier has led a group of to lose about $56 million put into the the Danbury, Regina Smith of North Transportation Committee, Sen. Wil­ the microwave link was re-established. with brandy laced with poison. The state Division of Special Revenue has Fairfield County lawmakers pushing general fund from toll collections “ and Branmford, Kevin Johnston of Putnam liam DiBella, D-Hartford. The rebel radio said Monday that 15 soldiers The government Monday expelled Linda M. Pfeifel^ refused to issue the licenses on the grounds it for the early removal of the tolls which the state should be paid back for those and Eugene Skowronski of Derby. It would allow the state to begin in died in the guerrilla attack Sunday on the political affairs officer, David Noble Greig, first would be taking sides in the 11-day-old walkout by they describe as unsafe, unhealthy and funds” before any toll removal begins. Ms. Niedermeier was joined by Rep. 1986 removing tolls on the Connecticut state-owned telecommunications microwave sta­ secretary and Ermila Loreta Rodriguez, second about 250 service and concession workers over unfair. The amendment requires that all Vincent Chase, R-Stratford, in de­ tion at Cerro Pacayal, 61 miles southeast of San secretary, for “ activity destined to destablize the stalled contract talks. Turnpike and two Hartford area But any further action on the tolls bonds used to construct the turnpike nouncing DiBella as responsible forthe Salvador. government of Nicaragua.” “ We’ll go the mandamus route if the state stays bridges, the John Bissell and Putnam, issue had only a faint hope of success. and bridges be retired and the amount defeat of their proposal. only after assurances there is enough The radio said there were no rebel casualties. "Among the criminal actions the diplomats in with that position,” Louis “ Buddy” Berenson If the House rejects the Senate of toll receipts deposited in the general “ One can only speculate that he was question planned to undertake were organizing said Monday, adding that the agency has no money collected to pay for all toll version, the bill would have to go to a fund “ equals the amount expended for under the governor’s thumb or that his attempts against the lives of leaders of the Sandinista choice but to grant licenses to the new workers he removal and reconstruction of joint committee of lawmakers who the department of transportation’s cost own self-aggrandizement got in the Clues sought in bloodbath revolution and high officials,” the Foreign Ministry has hired as part of the division’s regular roadways. \ must try to work out a compromise. to operate, maintain and reconstruct” way of helping the people of Fairfield function. Tolls on a third Hartford area span. DiRpiia said more revenue could be the roadways. CHINO, Calif. — Doctors will implant an statement said. and New Haven counties,” said Chase. electronic voice box in the slashed throat of the The three diplomats left Nicaragua Monday night Striking workers shut down the fronton May 28 aboard a plane to Guatemala City and will fly to in a dispute over wage hikes sought in a new 8-year-old survivor of a bloody weekend rampage / in hopes he will provide clues as to who Washington today. three-year contract. slaughtered his parents, sister and a playmate. U.S. Ambassador Anthony Quainton called the < X Nicaraguan charges<'"preposterous,” and said the Senate digs through The coroner disclosed late Monday the killers UPI photo thrust sharpened weapons — an ax, hatchet, expulsion “ in no way improves” strained relations Police say Madera knew knife, screwdriver, or ice pick — more than 20 between the United States and Nicaragua. Traffic uses an earthen bridge to cross artery, was turned into a river to heip times into each victim. In Washington, the State Department denied the the "State Street River" in Sait Lakb City controi fiooding. W ATERBURY — Police who questioned A force of 35 officers searched for six potential charges and said it was considering retaliation forthe Monday. State Street, a major traffic accused arsonist Israel Madera about a tenement agenda of 70 bills suspects in the slayings, San Bernardino County expulsions. fire that killed 14 people say a copy of his Sheriff Floyd Tidwell said, adding leads were “We reject the Nicaraguan allegations our confession was read to him three tim es— twice in "very weak” and no piotive has been established. personnel were engaged in non-diplomatic activities Engiish and once in Spanish — before he signed it. By Bruno V. Ranniello Lt. Gov. Joseph Fauliso, who pre­ Tidwell said Joshua Ryen survived because the and we are protesting this action to the government of “ I gave him the piece of paper and asked him if United Press International sides over the Senate, broke an 18-18 tie killers "probably thought he was dead." Nicaragua,” said spokesman Alan Romberg. this was the truth, the whole truth and nothing but vote in favor of a higher drinking age Big storms speW trouble HARTFORD — Overtime efforts by amendment which the House added In Managua, State Security authorities said the CIA the truth, so help you God. He said, ‘Yes sir,” ’ Lt. offered $5,000 to Marlene Moncada, 28, a Foreign Humphrey Bridges told a pre-trial hearing the Connecticut Senate have sent the last week to a bill eliminating the Jury clears CBS, Rather Ministry employee, to give Foreign Minister Monday. House proposed tougher penalties for state’s alcohol and treatment fund. drunken drivers and sent Gov. William LOS ANGELES — A jury said CBS and Dan D'Escoto a bottle of brandy laced with thallium, a Bridges, the desk officer who notarized the Ef(orts to raise the legal age to 21 O’Neill a bill to increase the state’s Rather did not show "reckless disregard for the potentially lethal substance. contested statement, testified on the fourth day of were voted down by the Senate earlier Miss Moncada, presented at a news conference, from Texas to New York drinking age to 20. this session. truth" in a "60 Minutes” segment that linked a the hearing on defense efforts to exclude as A. bill to delay removal of tolls from doctor to a fraud scheme, ruling against the said she had worked as a double agent for the evidence a statement Madera made to police and O’Neill said he would gladly support the Connecticut Turnpike until 1986 7 physician in a $4.5 million defamation suit. Nicaraguan government since Feb. 2,1982, when she By United Press International minutes, and thousands of homes more, both inland from Corpus signed about 18 hours after his arrest. the bill if neighboring states went also was approved Monday as the "The verdict strikes a blow for the First was recruited by the CIA while serving at the in the Washington and Baltimore, Christi. Madera, 33, of Waterbury is charged with 14 along. The legal minimum is 19 in New chamber worked late on more than 70 Amendment," CBS attorney William Vaughn Nicaraguan Consulate in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. Violent thunderstorms that Md., area remained without power counts of arson murder, one count of capital York and 20 in Massachusetts and Winds gusted to 70 mph at bills, trying to finish business by said Monday outside the courtroom, after the The head of state security, Lenin Cerna, said Miss hurled tornadoes, hail and winds early today. felony and one count of first-degree arson for a Rhode Island. Laredo, and 4 inches of rain Wednesday’s adjournment deadline. jurors’ 10-2 vote was announced. Moncada was transferred to Managua in December as high as 70 mph from Texas to District of Columbia firemen July 5,1982 tenement fire in which 14 people died. In other major action, the Senate drenched Batesville, 75 miles A tough House bill against drunken Dr. Carl Galloway, who claimed the network 1982 and once in Nicaragua she was contacted by Miss New York, knocking out power to had to rescue people trapped in two overturned a House plan to begin Pfeifel and Miss Rodriguez. southwest of San Antonio. In drivers was made even tougher by the removing tolls from the Connecticut and its best-known newsman had damaged his thousands and blacking out TV elevators at a senior citizens extreme southern Texas, hail the State Security officials ran a videotape they said stations in the Washington area, Senate with an amendment requiring a Turnpike next year and instead pushed personal repution and humiliated him, and his apartment complex. There were size of baseballs pounded Alice and attorneys said the ruling may be appealed. ’ showed Miss Moncada meeting with Miss Rodriguez. moved into the Southeast today. no injuries. Court upholds damages five-day jail sentence for any person the earliest starting date to 1986. Kingsville, and golfball-sized hail driving while their license was under Asked if he felt CBS had been vindicated by the Cema said Miss Pfeifel was a CIA agent in charge of The National Weather ^rvice “ Substantiai hail” and winds The bill was sent back to the House contacts with opposition parties and lalxir and Miss damaged crops at CotuUa. HARTFORD — The Connecticut Supreme suspension for a previous drunken which last week agreed on a three-year verdict, Galloway said, “ If you can vindicate said the worst storms would be gusting to 55 mph were reported in Court today upheld, all or in part, damages Rodriguez has been in charge of the effort to kill An evening tornado touched driving charge. toll removal plan beginning in 1984. incompetence, if you can vindicate ineptitude, concentrated along the eastern Washington’ s Virginia suburbs. awarded by trial courts''in three civil cases D’Escoto. down near Waycross, Georgia, and The Senate approved a mandatory The Senate, with only four dissen­ then they have been vindicated.” Gulf Coast and into the Fiorida Tornadoes touched down in involving divorce, breach of contract and Cema also said Mario Castillo, president of the one-year license suspension for any ters, voted32-4 for an amendment by UPI photo Panhandle, Georgia and the east­ central and southern Texas. One afternoon storms downed trees accidental negligence. youth organization of the Conservative Democratic and power lines near Binghamton drunken driver who kilis or injures a Sen. William DiBelia, D-Hartford, to ern Carolinas. twister tore apart farm buildings The justices said Superior Court Judge Alfred Aid cutoff ‘arrogant’ Party, an opposition group, has been arrested for in south-central New York. person. begin removing toils on the turnpike Widespread storms Monday at Alazan, a tiny town near Covello did not err in dividing the property of a Inflating balloon plotting with Miss Pfeifel to destabilize the leftist The revised bill was sent back and two Hartford-area bridges only LOS ANGELES — A federal court judge knocked out power in Texas and Nacogdoches. Another snapped off A flood warning remained in couple divorcing after 23 years, but said it was government. immediately to the House where after assurances there is enough Dennis Demers of Shelburne, Vt., checksthe inside of his hot air accused the Reagan administration of “ arro­ around Washington, D.C.. power lines 10 feet above the effect along the South Platte River wrong to ask the husband to pay $10,000 in legal One diplomatic source said the incident was aimed members cracked down on drunken money collected to pay for all toll gance" in cutting off Social Security disability Three District of Columbia area ground and blew them onto Texas and $1,500 in expert fees incurred by his wife. baiioon while inflating it for a fiight at the Lake Champlain at silencing opposition parties. in northeast Colorado, where high driving last week by making a removal and reconstruction of payments to more than 72,800 people and said he television stations were blacked 359 about 40 miles inland from In another case, the justices upheld a lower “ I think they are trying to crush the political water closed some roads. More hit-and-run accident a felony punisha­ roadways. Balloon Festival near Shelburne. would issue an order to reinstate the aid. out two times, qualifying play for Corpus Christi. A tornado dam­ court verdict and judgment in a suit stemming opposition, then hold their elections in 1985 and win,” floods were reported downstream ble by up to five years in jail and Tolls on a third Hartford-area bridge U.S. District Judge William Gray said Monday the U.S. Open at Bethesda, Md., aged mobile homes at Freer and from a Nov. 11, 1977, motor vehicle accident in the source said. '' on the Platte R iver in western approving license suspensions of up to would be removed in 1987. that Health and Human Services Secretary was delayed for two hours and 40 another touched down at Skid­ Nebraska. Southington. six months, rather than 90 days, for The state Department of Transporta­ Margaret Heckler is ignoring a ruling handed Also, the justices found a lower court’s award of Body is that of missing teen refusal to take a drunken driver test. tion also would be ordered to come up down by the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals by damages in a Willington breach df contract suit A drunken driver charged with a with a plan by next January on exact cutting the monthly payments without first was not clearly erroneous. WESTBROOK (UPI) - State police Johnson was missing since April 1 j proving the recipients are no longer disabled. death or injury, could not seek costs for toll removal and anticipated say a body found washed ashore when he and another Old Saybrook O’Neill: Time for rich to pay fair share accelerated rehabilitation and a de­ federal revenue to insure against a loss “The word arrogance comes to my mind,” Saturday at West Beach has been resident, Ronald Muggleston Jr., were fendant's refusal to submit to a Gray said, acting in a class action lawsuit filed of any general fund money. id en tifi^ as an Old Saybrook teenager lost and presumed drowned after they earlier this year in Los Angeles federal court by Phoenix sues Merrill Lynch sobriety test could be used in court The four dissenting senators were missing for more than two months after failed to return from an overnight under the proposed bill. Democrats Wayne Baker of Danbury, leaving with a friend for an island camping trip on Menunketesuck Island several legal aid foundations. WASHINGTON (UPI) — House Speaker Thomas O’Neill promised Senate Democratic leader Robert HARTFORD — Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Also, the Senate voted 19-17 to send to Regina Smith of North Branmford, camping trip. off Westbrook. O'NeiH’s proposal to have the rich share “ the burden Byrd of West Virginia last month the House would Co. has filed sqjt in U.S. District Court, charging Gov. William O’Neill an amended bill Kevin Johnston of Putnam and Eugene The body of Jack Johnson, 17, was of Reaganomics” by limiting next month's income- send the Senate a bill before July 1. M errill Lynch Phoenix Fund Inc., a mutual fund, Reagan readies arms plan to raise the state drinking age to 20. Skowronski of Derby. found floating in the surf by a Their 6-foot dinghy was found cap­ tax cut to $700 already has been rejected by the White Byrd said Monday he supports the O’Neill proposal with unfair competition. House. Westbrook resident, poiice said. The sized April 5 off Greenport, N.Y., and WASHINGTON — President Reagan is work­ and hopes his Democratic colleagues will endorse it In its three-count complaint, the life insurance body was taken to the state medical Muggleston’s body was found May 21 ing on a new U.S. nuclear arms reduction O’Neill, saying the money saved would help reduce unanimously. company Monday claimed Merrill Lynch kne\yof examiner’s office in Farmington where on a sand bar near the island where the proposal expected to demonstrate more flexibil­ the federal deficit, outiined his proposal in a speech to “ You hear all this muckety-muck from the White the insurer’s rights to the trade name “ Phoenix” identification was made. two were last seen, police said. ity in the Geneva negotiations. American Stock Exchange officiais Monday. House about how the Democrats are raising taxes,” when it offered shares of its mutal fund in u Reagan set a meeting today with the National The plan is an attempt to find middle ground he said. ‘ ‘This is not a tax increase. It is an instrument interstate .pommerce and showed reckless Fazzano plea expected: Security Council to discuss arms. He also had two between those who want to eliminate the tax cut whereby the taxpayers would be treated fairly.” disregard for potential confusion among separate meetings on tap with bipartisan altogether and those who want to leave It intact, but investors. members of the House and Senate to review the the White House said it represents old Democratic The suit charged Merrill Lynch with false policies. no contest in hit-run case American negotiating position in advance of the designation of origin under the Lanham Act, resumption of the Strategic Arms Reduction “ We don’t see (the proposed limit) as anything new unfair competition under Connecticut law and Talks Wednesday. for the Democrats. "They’ve always wanted to raise common law infringement of its trade name. HARTFORD (U PI) — A prominent But Fazzano’s attorney, James A. Sitting in on the NSC meeting will be chief taxes,” Deputy White House press secretary Larry Hartford lawyer is expected to plead no Wade, called such a scenario innaccu- N negotiator Edward Rowny who flies to Geneva Speakes said. contest Wednesday and avoid a trial on rate and declined to discuss defense tonight. Speakes said President Reagan would absolutely Fall ruled death cause misdemeanor charges in the hit-and- strategy. Aides indicated Reagan may unveil the outlines adhere to his threat to veto tax bills be opposes. run death of a 10-year-old girl, The plea is not an admission of guilt, of a new proposal on Wednesday. House Democrats meet today to decide whether — FARMINGTON — Edward S. Wenograd, published reports said today. and such a plea cannot be used against and how — to attack the final stage of President whose body was found on Simsbury’s Talcott Joseph E. Fazzano, 53, will likely a defendant in civil lawsuits. Sentenc­ Reagan’s tax program scheduled to take effect July 1. Mountain Friday, died of multiple injuries, the make the plea in Hartford Superior ing would be left up to a judge, who Andropov likes n-free site O’Neill said his announcement did not mean the chief state medical examiner’s office has ruled. Court on charges of negligent homicide could pass sentence immediately on MOSCOW — Soviet leader Yuri Andropov House Ways and Means Committee would approve the The medical examiner’s office performed an with a motor vehicle and evading the two misdemeanor charges that called U.S. nuclear policies “ the biggest threat” bill, “ But at least they will have my thinking on it.” autospy and said Monday Wenograd’s injuries responsibility. The Hartford Courant carry a combined maximum of 18 to Europe and said the Kremlin supports the idea The speaker told the group of predominantly were “ consistent with a fall.” said. months in jail and a $1,200 fine. of a nuclear-free zone on the continent. wealthy stock-exchange executives Monday someone Wenograd, 25, of West Hartford, was found By pleading no contest, Fazzano Some members of the Hispanic Andropov, speaking Monday at a dinner for earning $100,000 a year would gain $2,300 from the 10 about 130 feet down a slope from a footpath, would avoid a trial in the death of community are demanding that more visiting President Mauno Koivisto of Finland, percent cut in tax rates scheduled to take effect July 1. Simsbury fire officials said. Jeanette Ortiz, who was killed April 27 serious charges be lodged against said any discussion on banning nuclear arms in “ It is time the burden of Reaganomics is shared by Wenograd worked for Aetna Life and Casualty while crossing Park Street in Hartford Fazzano and the Committee for Justice Europe might also be expanded to include some those in.the upper-income groups,” he told reporters Co., and received a master’s of business degree — allegedly when she was struck by a for Jeanette Ortiz planned a news Soviet territory. before the speech. “ For two years, this group has last month from the University of Hartford. sports car driven by Fazzano. conference today to explain why it is “ TheSoviet Unionisnotjustsympathetictothe benefited mightily from the Reagan tax program.... State police, which investigated the death, were The case has enraged some Hispanic pressing the issue. idea of a nuclear-free zone in the north of Europe It is time the rich started to accept their fair share of notified by hikers Friday about the body. There leaders, who claim Fazzano was given Hispanic leaders have charged that but is prepared to facilitate its creation,” the the burden.” was no sign of foul play, police said. special treatment from police. Fazzano, who at the time of the Soviet leader said in remarks carried by the TheJulJr Itaxcutisthefinalstageofth e three-year, The Courant quoted “ people familiar accident was the lawyer for the city’s official Tass news agency. 25 percent across-the-board tax program Congress with negotiations in the case” as saying police union, was given special treat­ "W e would not only assume the commitment to approved in 1981 as a compromise with Reagan’s Builders end picketing that Hartford’s state’s attorney’s office ment by authorities in their investiga­ respect the status of such a zone,” Andropov said, proposed three-year, 30 percent reduction in income would make no sentence recommenda­ tion of the case. Police deny the charge “ but also would be ready to study the question of taxes. WATERFORD — The Norwich-New London tion as part of an agreement to have and Fazzano has since resigned as the some measures — and substantial ones at that — Reagan said O'Neill was just looking for a way to Ivan small businessman Buildings Trades Council called off eight months Fazzano plead no contest. union’s counsel. concerning our own territory adjoining the zone. make the tax system more progressive. of picketing at the Crystal Mall construction site “ He, ignores the fact 72 percent of the savings haws cash flow proMsms after reaching agreements with union-affiliated already will go to people that are below the figure he contractors. Dioxin probe expanding wants to cap, ” the president said. “ And if he wants to Council President John Silva said Monday the NEWARK, N.J. — The owners of a dioxin- increase the progressivity of the tax structure, why unions have reached agreements with a number contaminated chemical firm that once made UPI phoU doesn’t he just introduce a bill to do that?” of contractors who are expected to be awarded Under O’N eill’s plan, every taxpayer would get a 10 bids for segments of the $70 million mall Agent ^Orange knew their workers suffered House Speaker Thomas O'Neill, speak­ severe skin disease but were “ determined” to percent cut in tax rates, but no one’s taxes would be construction. keep operating, a doctor who treated the workers ing to American Stock Exchange reduced by more than $700. He said the limit, which Your newspaper carrier depends on The contractors have agreed to pay prevailing says. members, proposes a cap on the third would effect mainly those earning more than $99,000, dlls collections each week to pay his union wages and grant prevailing fringe benefits "They were aware of what was going on,” Dr. would save $6 billion in 1984 and almost $7 billion in to the union members they hired to work on the D u e D ad s year of President Reagan’s tax cut. 1985. Roger Brodkin, head of dermatology at the—I bill, whether or not he has; received mall, he said. University of Medicine and Dentistry of N ^ ^ Silva said the council has not and will not reach for Father's Day Jersey, said Monday. 'C payment from hl% customers. When an agreement with Beaver Builders, the general 7 "N o one worried much about the skin^disease’ contractor for the 85-acre mall project. But he because everyone was determiijetP'to make 18 killed in Taiwan plane crash he doesn’t get paid, he has to dip conceded talks for several months with Beaver production schedules ” for the Vietnam War Into his pocket to make up the Builders contributed to the end of the picketing. defoliant, said Brodkin, who treated up to 50 The mall is expected to open in the summer in TAIPEI, Taiwan (UPI) — A military transport employees of the Diamond Alkali Co. during the The Defense Ministry did not disclose the accident difference. 1984. 1960s. plane carrying 47 passengers and crew caught fire until today but denied reports all passengers aboard and crashed into the Taiwan Strait minutes after Brodkin said he alerted public health officials had been killed. takeoff from the island of Quemoy, killing 38 people, years ago "they had a health problem,” and, Quemoy, about 95 mUes west of Taipei and in the You can help make a small EB workers offer plan the Defense Ministry said today. ? ( styled by BRONZINI for the contemporary man although they inspected the site, “ nothing” was center of the Taiwan Strait, houses a Taiwanese GROTON — The Marine Draftsmen’s Associa­ V A ranking ministry official said the C-119WorldWar 'businessman from going under If done. military base which was the target of Chinese tion has presented Electric Boat with a ...it’s the ultra-soft, ultra-smooth all cotton fine Il-vintage aircraft plunged into the Taiwan Strait artillery bombardment in 1958. iyou pay your carrier three-year contract proposal calling for an 8 gauge interlock knit shirt In handsome colors, after one of its two engines caught fire at 12:40 p.m. with the famous BRONZINI unicorn Monday (12:40 a.m. EDT). percent pay raise, effective June 9, 'and an Weapons blast hurts 26 when he calls to collect. Thank you. / embroidered on the front, The Defense Ministry said the plane was carrying 39 agreement to re-open wage talks in each of the EL PASO, Texas — The commander of Fort next two years. select your colors today! civilian passengers and eight military crewmen. • Navy • Kallay Bliss says the Army should suspend the use of an Many of the civilians were employees of the Quemoy The current contract between EB and the anti-tank weapon that exploded during a training HARVEY PASTEL, M.D. 2,100-member union expires at midnight • White • Lt Blue county government, the ministry official said. Yellow Cold Filled Yellow Gold Filled exercise, injuring 26 soldiers, one of whom was in aiid Wednesday. Sterling Key holder Yellow Cold Filled • Yellow ' • Black $2400 The plane went down about two minutes after taking engravable pen knife, engine with engravable plain tie bar. $12. critical condition today with "total body MDA members voted last week to authorize a cuff links. $28. wounds.” from Quemoy, the Nationalist-held island off OM P. SAINI, M.D. turned design. $26. tab. $25. China’s coastal province of Fujian, he said. strike vote if negotiators are still deadlocked Engraving Extra Six of the other injured men were in serious The ministry said 17 bodies were recovered and 21 Manchester Herald, Wednesday. condition. have moved their office to: others were missing and presumed dead in Rep. Sam Gejdenson, D-Conn., said Monday he Officials at Ford Bliss said the shoulder-firing Manchester Cpnn will telephone union and management represen­ FATHER'S DAY i "Your Quality treacherous waters off the Quemoy coast. Nine other One Heritage Place, Suite 105 IS SUNDAY. LAW (Light Anti-tank Weapon) exploded Mon­ people presumably survived the crash, but the tatives to urge them to settle and avoid a strike. _ I U N jl9 lh _ Man'a Shop" day , spewing fragments and flames into a class of ministry gave no details on their condition. The union, which presented its packa$|e Sunday trainees. Those not familiar with the new location should The spokesman said it was not immediately known to EB negotiators, also announced it has collected ThMad JeM h n Since 1000 BEGALS call 643-9527. if any of the three crewmembers, all military $12,000 in outstanding fines pending since the n iM A M m m T MANCHESTER VERNON m personnel, were killed. ______Any inconvenience is regretted. 6 4 7 - M 4 6 1979-80 stt-ike. MinchMMr, Com. 08040 Tot. 643-2741 903 MAIN ST TRI city plaza OPEN DAILY 9 30-S 30. THUPS til 9 00 O P E N W fD Tm u RS & Mil I.I9 0C t — MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday. June 7. 1983 MANCHESTER HEKALU. luesQuy. June i, i»a.> — <

Richard M. Diamond, Publlahar Dan FItta, Editor Transplanted North Dakotans hold picnic In Connecticut OPINIOW Alax Qlrelll, CHy Editor SIMSBURY (UPI) - Connectl without trees,” said Johnson, a also known as the Flickertail State — North Dakota’s state flower. the reaction she gets is, “Oh, it’s but most agreed their lives are now cut’s first North Dakota State nuclear engineer who grew up on a — named after a ground squirrel. Many discovered that if they. cold there.” in Connecticut. Bill Pierce, now of Canton, Picnic — attended by former Sioux ranch near the Badlands, which ”We fit into our Connecticut talked long enough with new Some are still homesick — State residents who do “under­ author John Steinbeck described lives, but once in a while you miss friends, they almost always found remembers walking at night and talking to people who understand seeing the shimmer of the northern including Marie Eberhard, who stand a place without trees’ ’—was as “like the work of an evil child.” they had a mutual acquaintance. joined her son, Harold, in Bristol 10 Jack held in green and sh^dy Tariffville Loering’s wife. Mama, who what words like ’uff-da’ mean,” All shared an annoyance for the lights. His daughter, Julie, 23, has she said, adding that loosely lived most of her life in Connecti­ years ago when her husband was Park. grew up in Bismarck, N.D., and lack of recognition given their ill. She said she misses her many Reagan gets rave reviews on summit Anderson Loering Johnson, who is still hah lived in Connecticut since 1955, translated from Norwegian, uff-da home state by those living in cut, but vividly recalls her visits to friends in Minot and Fargo, N.D. proud to be a North Dakotan after came up with the idea for a picnic means “good grief.” There is a southern New England with its North Dakota. Washington almost 30 years in Connecticut, after a small group of North strong Norwegian presence in remote past and bustling location “You’ve never seen a rainbow Besides, she added, ’’They’ve WASHINGTON - In the among other politicians and the depth in the White House. That Merry-Qo-Round was one who donned his checked Dakotans gathered last winter in a North Dakota, she said. between Boston and New York until you’ve seen it run from land to got flat land back there. You can post-mortems on the economic press — as a president with a shirt and imposing Stetson hat to restaurant. People attending the picnic in city. land, with no trees in between,” see where you’re going.” That summit at Williamsburg, both is what Walter Mondale means, notable lack of interest in many for example, when he talks Join about three dozen others at the She made some telephone calls the heavily wooded Tariffville Charlotte Sadowsky, originally Julie Pierce said. might be expected, since Connecti­ the press and the White House picnic Sunday. and placed notices in area news­ section of Simsbury, a suburb of Many of those at the picnic said cut’s North Dakotans point out that issues and a ven^haky grasp about himself as a candidate from Manning, N.D., said that stall have been giving Presi­ on otherk. IndeeC-“little sto­ “It’s special there. People here papers to locate other transplants Hartford, circled their hometowns when she mentions North Dakota, they will head west next fall to the state has the longest stretch of who would “know what he is from the plains, who still have fond on a state map next to the Sioux dent Reagan rave review^ on ries” about Reagan’s gaffes on don’t realize what’s out there. people “usually just smile.” celebrate the 100th anniversay of perfectly straight road — 130 miles the way he conducted the doing” as president. They can’t understand a place memories of their home in a place Indian bust and plastic wild roses Donna Oman, from Bismark, said the University of North Dakota, — in the United States. matters of substance have As a matter of fact, however, meetings. become a staple of Washington Teamster We are being told, ad nau­ there has been no sign of that gossip. kind of doubt about Reagan in Activist scolded for seeking ‘martyrdom* seam, that the President This has caused some obvious showed himself fully capable of the electorate at large. Experts uneasiness among presidential on public opinion in both parties files not New Ensland playing with the big kids in advisers — to the point that you terms of both substance and this year. of Canada. 'T must say I had to say they find no evidence of that have such things as Secretary of kind of feeling in their survey style. And we are being reas­ Moreover, although the final congratulate him for having in Brief the Treasury Donald Regan data. On the contrary, Reagan’s Draft resister, spared jail, gets lecture sured that in private meetings declaration did make a conces­ won that gamble." flattering reassuring the press before ability to handle himself on his with the other leaders he sion to French President Fran­ In short, the verdict seems to Williamsburg that Reagan was feet apparently is convincing to resister would not be helped by showed himself to be both cois Mitterrand by raising the be. as a writer in The New York Key witness takes stand By Dennis C. Mllewski tion law. well-equipped to deal with most voters, despite carping in WASHINGTON - Jackie United Press International rehabilitation. Blumenfeld could have sentenced said he would not “saddle” officials knowledgeable on issues and possibility of a conference on Times noted, that Reagan dis­ issues at the economic summit DEDHAM, Mass. — The key prosecution But Blumenfeld, who seemed both Ford to a maximum of five years in with the task of supervising Ford’s skilled as a moderator in international monetary reform pelled his “cowboy image” in the press about whether he has Presser, the beefy, street-smart, witness in the trial of five men charged with because, among other things, he his facts wrong. S6-year-old newly-elected presi­ HARTFORD — Draft resister Rus­ amused and annoyed during the short prison and $10,000 fine for failing to activities. achieving his own — meaning somewhere down the road, it the international community. gangraping a former beauty queen says he drove court session told Ford “you won’thave ”I assume you will continue your was an economics major in As a general rule, there is dent of the Teamsters Union, has the woman to a fire station after the alleged sell Ford has been spared a jail register after reaching his 18th birth­ the United States’ — objectives avoided anything that might be He didn’t fall asleep into the college. sentence by a federal judge who to go back to jail again.” day on the July 4, 1981. search for martyrdom. You are not a fit at the summit. soup. little political capital to be promised to run “an open, honest January 1980 attack. Christian Dickson, 23, an Friends and supporters cheered and subject for rehabilitation,’' Blumen­ read as a rejection of Reagan’s admitted member of the group who tumedstate’s scolded the 19-year-old activist for Ford, a native of Chevy Chase, Md., opposition to a new system of earned by a president from his administration.” He’ll be given a seeking “martyrdom.” applauded the decision. Ford gathered now living in Middletown, said he feld said. IN POLITICAL terms, the conduct of foreign policy, ex­ chance today to reveal his plans for evidence in return for immunity from prosecu­ But the judge agreed Ford was THERE SEEMS to be a solid fixed rates of exchange. THE QUESTION no one hazard to Reagan has always U.S. District Judge M. Joseph up the handful of purple and yellow would continue to oppose the draft and cept, of course, in cases of cleaning up the mobster- tion, said the woman asked to be driven toa police Blumenfeld said Monday he refused to flowers and a green, stuffed dragon he has no immediate plans to return to "totally non-violent” and noted he had foundation for such judgments. But the President was given seems to be asking, however, is been that these harsh judg­ station, but said he told her, ’’’I couldn’t do that The final communique on eco­ the highest marks for the way why this should be considered international crises. The voters infiltrated union when he testifies aid the activist’s “search for martyr­ had brought along for moral support Wesleyan, where he is two years short been held in solitary confinement ments of his knowledge of issues are more interested in issues before Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, because we would get into trouble.’” dom” and sentenced Ford to 35 days in and left the courtroom. of earning his bachelor’s degree. between Aug. 10, 1982, and Sept. 14, nomic policy may not have been he conducted the summit as the news. Why is it such a big deal would ripple out to the electo­ as optimistic as Ronald Reagan that touch them directly than in on proposed anti-racketeering jail, crediting him for time already At his one-day trial. Ford admitted 1982, at the federal prison in Danbury. host — and particularly for his that a president of the United rate at large, as did the Navy ignored promise spent in federal prison. Later supporters held hands and "You don’t need to be locked up as a always seems to be, but it did willingness to bring the national States manages to acquit him­ the wording of diplomatic com­ legislation. formed a ring in front of the federal he had broken the law, but claimed Washington consensus that muniques that reiterate obvious Justice Department files paint PORTLAND, Maine — The Navy has failed to The former history student at Wes­ there were “higher laws.” He told danger to society,” Blumenfeld said. spell out a great deal of common leaders together without de­ self well in dealing with other leyan University in Middletown be­ court building, shouting, “thank you,” The judge appeared impatient to end developed even during his first commitments at summit an unflattering, though possibly make good on recruitment promises, a petty in unison so it could be heard by Blumenfeld Monday he would agree to ground. And the statement on tailed agenda or advisers to world leaders? Shouldn’t that months in office that Jimmy came the first person in Connecticut on the proceedings and brought howls of security projected a picture of meetings. unfair, portrait of Presser. They officer said in documents filed in federal court. Blumenfeld in his second-floor probation with community service if seek common ground. be the least we are entitled to Carter was “not up to the job.” John Stuart Grant, who is assigned to the USS April 14 to be convicted of violating the laughter from the courtroom when he unity among Western leaders in But Ronald Reagan is pecul­ also provide background material chambers. the judge could find some way ”to ■’The President took a very expect? Indeed, the long-range stra­ Paterson now at Bath Iron Works for repairs, nation’s new draft registration nullify the conviction.” told Ford he would carry the “stigma of the face of some tough talk by iarly a politician of image, and the senator might want to quiz the program. Ford said he would not likely appeal a felony" throughout his life, "Unless big gamble that we would have The answer, obviously, is that tegy of some of the Democratic says the Navy failed to fulfill its promises to the Soviet Union about what he has managed to wring new president about. For Blumenfeld scolded Ford for choos­ the judge’s decision, which he regarded The smiling Blumenfeld refused, the president sees fit to pardon you." an unstructured summit and Reagan has acquired a reputa­ presidential candidates rests on provide him with an education in nuclear calling Ford a nuisance who was not may happen if those missiles still produce results,” said tion throughout the political something out of Williamsburg example.’ technology. ing “to flaunt the law” by refusing to as the “first step” in an ongoing protest Blumenfeld abruptly ended the pro­ are deployed in Europe later the proposition they can make a that defies the usual rules of register for the draft and said the to void the peace-time draft registra­ likely to change his ways. The judge ceedings with a curt, "Next case.’’ Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau community here — meaning case that Reagan is out of his • AN APRIL 28, 1977, intelli­ politics. gence report titled, “Labor Rack­ MDC says it compiies eteering in Ohio,” contained a list of alleged mob-related figures, BOSTON — The Metropolitan District Commis­ including “Jackie Presser, a well- sion says it has complied with federal clean water A SPECIAL MESSAGE TO RESIDEMCE CGSTOAAERS known corrupt union labor leader laws in spite of two lawsuits charging the state agency has fouled Boston Harbor with millions of OF SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND TELEPHONE QUICK. (who) has continued to build his gallons of raw sewage. The suits were filed by the GET ME public image in the (Ohio) area. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Suit shows FBI His goal is reportedly the presid­ Conservation Law Foundation, a private legal PIIIUP ency of the International.” environmental group. HABIBIlK • ANOTHER DEPARTMENT, can’t police self report, “Organized Crime and the Biii to protect rivers Labor Unions,” written by attor­ neys Douglas Roller and Peter AUGUSTA, Maine — The House wasted no time The recent settlement of a Vaira, states, “The organized in debate as it approved Gov. Joseph E. of new regulations which Brennan’s bill to protect more than 1,000 miles of : long-pending lawsuit in a crime affiliations and involvement ANNOUNCING again allow the penetration — the state’s most beautiful rivers from hydroelect­ : Michigan federal court of Presser through and independ­ ric development. The measure, which is expected prohibited after Watergate — ent of the Teamsters Union are serves as a good reminder of by FBI agents of domestic to be approved by the state Senate, was hailed as well documented.” a national model that would protect the rivers for why the FBI should not organizations accused of no However, a source close to recreation for decades. continue to be a self-policing crime except “advocacy,” Presser told my associate Tony agency with no Congressional which is protected by the Capaccio the report provides no SELECT-A-CAI1 Suspect heid without bait charter. First Amendment. evidence of this supposed docu­ At present, the FBI’s ac­ The new rules scrapped the mentation. “You don't have even WHITE RIVER JUNCTION, Vt. — A Spring- one guy saying, ‘We have Presser field man has been held without bail after denying tions are governed by unen­ regulations imposed by charges he raped a young Springfield schoolgirl forceable guidelines promul­ playing golf with a known mob former Attorney General Ed­ member,” ’ he said. in Aprii, then bludgeoned her to death before A NEW RATE OPTION THAT CAN CUT gated by whoever is ward Levi, who was brought abandoning her body in an overgrown field. Gary appointed attorney general • ACCORDING TO a stiU-secret Schaefer, 31, had bran held on $50,000 bail since to Washington to clean up in document, informant James “The April 11 on a charge he kidnapped Katherine YOUR LOCAL PHONE BILL by a given administration, the wake of Watergate. Those Weasel” Fratiahno told federal Richards, 11, two days earlier as she walked with and monitored by the bureau a young friend. rules were intended to cor­ investigators that “through the Until now, Jou and your neighbors in Manchester have probably YOU CAN SAVE EVEN MORE IF YOU CALL EVENINGS AND I itself. This is a process which rect FBI abuses revealed by intercession of Cleveland organ­ been paying the regular monthly full rate of $12.40for local leads to uneven administra­ ized crime group members, ON WEEKENDS. With Select-A-Call, you can cut your local the press. Washington Wtndow Berkshires tdse buses telephone service. And whether you made a great many calls phone bill even more by scheduling calls at specified times of tion and, more importantly, Among the revelations Presser agreed to allow (Frati- anno) the use of a mob financier to - or very few calls - your bill was the same. the day or week. For example: endangers civil liberties. were a series about the PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Carpools, bicycles and But now you have a choice. With the new Select-A-Call rate The Michigan iawsuit was set up a union dental plan in feet have replaced buses for thousands of If you call anytime between 8

USA Host Don Dcyadala looks 1:00 A.M. Insanity plea would and performers in tha world of CD-* m4«*p 4:30 P.M. errtertainment. bahind tha sesnaa of Amarioa's (D-BMtiwHM8how ( D - Sanford and Son National Pastkns. CC - MOVIE: 'The Saint In ® - Festival of Faith (D - Hogan's Hsnaa (D 0 - Mghtllns Umdon’ The Saint becomes in* Tuesday (9 - Sunday at the King's ( D - McMillan and WHs volved in a web of intrigue and ® - Hogan's Haroas Houaa 0 - O d d Coupla be tougher to make crime after pickir>g up a wounded ®-Monaytlna ( D - yVmM Vision Special 0 - Charito's Angela 0 - HBO Rook: Daryl HaN and man on a country road. George @ - News 0 - TwWght Zoru Sarnlera. Satty Grey. 1939. O - Froaman Bapocta John Oatas Thlg rock duo par- 1 8 - Sneak Pravlawa Co-hosta O IS - NBC Whits Paper; forma old and naw Mu. 0 - MOVIE: 'Tha Com Is 5:30 P.M. Neal Gabler and aieffrey Lyons Jack's (John Ritter, center) Tha Popes and ttialr Art Host Otssn' An Engkahwoman atrugr. By /Mark A. Dupuis didn’t belong before the Legislature. glee to educate youthful WaWi O - MOVIE: Poltargaiat' Su- take a look at what's happening worst fears are realized — to the Jamas Mason axarnkwa how tha UPl Capitol Reporter “There are many trouble spots in the at the movies. coal mkisra. . Katharine Hapbum',' perr>atural spirits haunt a peaceful Popes bacama patrora and col- 0-Ciaaallrs world,” said Rep. Richard Belden, suburban hc^e. Jobeth Williams. distress of pals Terri. Larry, Mr. BM Fraaar, Patricia Hayaa. 1979. - Soleded Serie dramatica. Isctora of soma of tha woritfa 6- HARTFORD — Chief State's Attor­ R-Shelton. " I think that we have Craig T. Nelson, Beatrice Libertad Lamarque. Furley and Janet In 1YIREE*8 nsat art maataiplacss. (60 mki.) 0 0 - Tonight Show John­ 0 - DaapadMa COMPANY, airing Tuesday. ny's guest Is Leonard Waxdack ney Austin J. McGuigan says he’s enough problems dealing with the state Strai^t. 1982. Rated PG. (S i - Entertainment Tonight @ - MOVIE; 'The Farmer 0 - FHm June 7 on ABC. acKi thsBirdcalsra. (60mki.) pleased by House approval of a bill of (Donnecticut’s needs ...” 6:00 P.M. ® - Business Report Takas a WHs' A man (okw tha 1:15 A.M. CHECK LI8TINQ8 FOR EXACT TIME boatman on the Erls Caiul to fh 0 - MOVIE; 'Uttls MIsa designed to make it tougher for In other action, the House killed, on a GD (E) CE) @ ISISS - Maws Mariiar' A bookie and a gamUar 0 - MOVIE; *111# Comabaok' ‘ 7:30 P.M. nance Na own taim and tala In criminals to carry out a^plea of not 74-71 vote, a bill to establish a state CSD - Thraa'a Company love with the cook. Hemy Fonda, ars rsfofmsd by a Ktia ( ^ who An Amsrican isconNng star (ED - PM Magailna has bean left aa an KXJ tar a gam­ saakatoiscovarMaloatauoGaas. , guilty by reason of insanity. inspector general’s office with a charge - B.J. and tha Baar Janet Gaynor, Charles Bickford. C£ (ED - AN In tha Family bling debt. Wahar Matthau, Juke Jack Jonas, David Ooyls, HoNy The insanity defense bill was adopted to weed out waste, corruption and fraud 0D - Jaffersons 1936. (ED - Muppat Show @1SS3 Compuloe Andcawa, Tony Curtis. 1S80. Palancs. 1978. Rated R. 142-0 Monday after a key amendment to in government. ® - USA Cartoon Exprasa S - MacNeB Lahrar Bapoit Rated PG. (ED - Family Feud 1:30 A.M. shift the burden of proof in insanity plea "It's a positive move for more O - Living Faith S -2 4 H o r a s 0 -M O V I E : 'Tha dood Humor (ED - Barmy HW Show (D - Tom OotOa Show cases from the state to the defendant efficiency in state government,” said - Buck Rogars S - That* a HoNywood Man' A 'Good Humor' man and (SD-Nowa Ms girifrisnd dari wHh many mia- ( D - Chloo and the R4an squeaked through on a 73-72 vote. Rep. Maureen Murphy Baronian, R- ® - An Orphan'a Tala, Part 1 10:15P.M. ® - ESPN SportaCantar faka and miasdvaptucoa. Jack n ii ~ wMispeiNisfn iseiwofii The House, which must adjourn West Hartford, who bad petitioned SE-StudioSaa 0 - MOVIE; 'Pamilaa horn Carson, Lola AkxigM. I960. O - Insida Boidng 19^bws Wednesday, also adopted a bill to limit lawmakers to revive the bill after it ® - Rapoctar 41 llaavan' A laiaiman longa for OS - Sports Look Ha to be Iks tha songs ha sals. 12:00 A.M. 0 - Dr Jam es Scott state investmeents in companies sel­ was killed in committee. 8 - MOVIE: ‘Authorl Autliorl' ( 9 - 1983 CoBcgc Worid and travel between tha stars. (R) a a - Ramington Btaala Ra- l a - Houaa CaHs . (60 min.) |Ck>sad Captionsd) mkigton and Laura ettstxl a party Stave Martin; Bsmadstta Pataca, (D-Quincy 0 - NBC Nows Overnight ling arms in Northern Ireland and She said Massachusetts had a similar A playwright is finishif>g his new Setfee: Qanw 8 ham Omaha. Jaaaku Harper. 1B81. Rated R. 0 - Saturday Night Uvs rejected a plan for a new office to fight office that cost $440,000 to set up and Broadway play when his wife S ) - Croasflia NE a - MOVIE; 'Yankae DoodM In which each of tha guasM ars 2:00A.M. rnacksd for murdar. (R) (60 mbi.) waste and corruption in state returned 33 million in savings in its first runs away and leaves five child­ a - M*A*8*H ( 8 - MOVIE: 'Safari 3000' A DerKfy' Thia nostalgic view of the 10:30 P.M. 0 - U8FL FootbaB: CMcagp at (XI - CBS Nows NIghtwateh ren in his care. Al Pacino. Dyan GokJan Era of show buebian tale (B - Myatscyl 'Fsthsr Brown.' government. year. 1 8 (B ) - MacNaN-Lshrar Playboy magazine photographar ® ) - New Jersey People ID - MOVIE: 'Oaughlam ' Cannon, Tuesday Weld. 1982. and a race car driver team up for about George M. Cohan, the man Fathar Brown tries to aolva the 0 - Radio 1990 Today'a pro­ The insanity defense bill, sent to the Rep. Dorothy Goodwin, D-Mansfield, Report who mads it glitter. James Cag­ mystery about the Minding affect (3D O-Independent Network Coucagaous'Thaaloryofdaugh- Rated PG. tha African kitamational Raly. . ivewvme------gram looks at tha hottaat trends tsra trying to work out thak rom- - Senate, would require a defendant to said there were adequate safeguards to ® • Chesplrfto Serfs comica. ney, Walter Hinton. 1942. of light on a aun woraMppar. (R) and parformara In tha worid of ® - M*A*8*H David Catradina, Stockard Chan- anesa and tha praUsma of thak, prove he or she was not sane at the time Roberto Gorfiez Bolsnos, Florinda ning, Chriatophar Laa. 1982. a - MOVIE: 'Tha Effact of (60 min.) (Closad CaptkxudJ ( 9 - Sports Look entartakimsm. find corruption and fraud. She said the IB )-D r . Who Meza, Ruben Aguirre. poranu. Priadla Lana, Lois Lana, Rated PG. Oamma Raya On Man In tha (B) - Amsc(can Playhouaa 0 - Bualnaaa Rapoct 0 - MOVIE:'Run For tha Bun' Roaamary Lana. 1939. . of the crime. The state is now required state instead should concentrate on ® - Match Game Moon MarHiolda' Part 2 'Woiking.' Tonight'a parform- to prove the defendant is insane. 6:30 P.M. (9 - MOVIE:'BWy U ar'A dark (B ) - NightaNr An author and a raportar crash ki ( D - Joe Fmnhfln Show training and management CSD - Man About tha Houaa Barney MWer in an undsrtaksr’s offics finds ® - Nova 'The Road to Happi­ anca la an adaptation of Studs the jungle and (kacovar an Engksh A defendant, acquitted by reason of improvements. Tsifcaf's baat-aaMng book in 10:45 P.M. 0 -R o o ltla s (E) - CBS Nawa ® - People’s Court hirfiself sngsgsd to two girts. Ju­ ness.* The life and timss of Henry traitor and a Nazi who hunted insanity and committed to a mental Miss Goodwin also objected to using Herald photo by Pinto ke Chritba. Tom Counnsy. Ford is axamlnsd. (60 min.) which several ddfarant people in 0 - Reporter 41 them. Richard Widmerk, Jane 0 - MOVIE:'AudioriAulliort' Q ]) - Bamay Millar Wilfred Pickles. 1963. (Closed Captionsd) dWterent oocupatlone era knar- Greer, Tisvor Howard. 1956. A ptoywright is fktiahing Ma new institution, would be required to prove the example of Massachusetts. “ I ’m n o 8:00 P.M. vkiwad. (R) (90 mki.) ((3oaad 11:00P.M. themselves sane before teing released, t, repeat not, impressed with the 0S) - ESPN'a Sportaforum a -M O V IE : 'BldawIndarOna' 0 - Nawenigtit Broadway ploy when hie wife . - CBS Raporta: 1984 8:30 P.M. Captkmad] a y (D (9 o 0 0 - tune awey and laevae five cNM-. rather than the state proving them still comparison with Massachusetts. I’m Top scholars In Bolton ® iSt - NBC Nawa (E) (ED A motorcycle daaignar ottompti 0 - MOVIE: 'The Turning Revisited Walter Cronkite looks to win a national motocroaa race (ED - Carol Bumatt and Ftlatida 9:30 P.M. ran ki Me care. Al Padno, Dyan insane. sorry, I don’t think Connecticut politics IS ) - Untamad World at how dose we’ve come to Polm' Two women review the di- Cannon, Tuaeday Wald. 1982. - with him new bita. Mkdiaal Parka, (ED a - Joania LovaaChacM ( D - B to B The ofNca starts (D - M*A*S*H ractione thak kvae have taken and “I am obviously pleased,” said are that bad,” she said. These are the top five graduating Bolton High Brown and Miss Ursin are the class' valedictorian ® - NoUdaro Nadonal SIN George Orwel’s totalitarian world Matjoe Gortnar, Susan Howard. Chachi wkida up aa a modal for Rated PG. Noticiaa nacionaies con Guillanno that he wrote about in his b ^ a tumor that Mr. Hart, Judy, Dora- (D - Barmy HW Show question thsk Ghoiesa. Anm Ban­ McGuigan, “ this is significant.” He In other action, the House: School seniors. Left to right, and in order of rank, 1977 Joania'a act dams. (R) (Ooaad las and Violet wM be laid off. (R) croft, Shirisy MacLakw, Mikhak 2:30A.M. and salutatorian respectively. They were an­ Raatrapo. '1984.' (60 min.) Captlonad) 0 - ESPN SpoitaCamor had sought additional changes but said • Again voted to increase the amount S ) - Prime Nawe ( 9 - MOVIE: 'PoHergelst' Su- Baryahnikov. 1978. Rated PG. (ED - Tom Cottle Up d oes they are Theodore Brown, Cheryl Ursin, Kate nounced as the class’ top scholars at an awards - Jaffaraona 0-8aborUdno 0 - Hot Spots Tonight's pro- the bill as passed would help protect of damages a liquor seller can GD " PM Magazine a a - A Team Ahar thair psmetural epWu haunt a peacaful grem features 'Pegasus,* ‘Mis­ S I - ABC Nawa 0 - Hapbum and Tracy The public safety. required to pay to a person injured by Shorey, Robert Cusano and Rebekah Gleason. assembly. d ) ® ' Happy Days Two Is- plana craehat in tha Nfc, the A 9:00 P.M. aubufhan home. Jobath WWama, tress/ 'Egdon Hssth* and team of Ksthsrina Hapbum and @ - Ovar Eaay Team cornea faca-to-faca with a Craig T. Nalaon. Baatrica 12:30 A.M. Also, it would eliminate compulsive an intoxicated person who bought gendary television moms help out (I D CE) - MOVIE:'Juat TaS Ma 'WimssB* from the Brsndywins, Sperreer Tracy is profasd. band of mountain man. |R) (60 Straiglit. 1982. Rated PG. Chsdfford, PA. |60 min.) CD - AH In tha Famly gambling as grounds for an insanity liquor from the seller. The measure 7:00 P.M. the Cunninghams and Fortzie. (R) mki.) WhatYouWam'AwaaWiybua- 0-Croasllro (Oossd Captionsdl kiaaa magnata grooms ona of tha 0 - F s s tM of Faith (ED - IMary Hartman, Mary defense and eliminate erasure of passed as an amendment and was sent QD - CBS Nawa Hartman - BawHohad a - MOVIE: 'Tha French woman in Ms secret srisi pool to records of a person acquitted by reason to the Senate where earlier versions (ED ® - M*A*S*H Uautanant'a Wtonan' An ac- bscoma Ns iMatraas. Ak Mac- 10:00 P.M. CD 0 - ABC News One on ( D - MOVIE; *Mr. and Mre. Bo 0 - Sports Toniglit 3:00A.M. of insanity. had failed. (ED - Muppat Show do Jonoe* A young couple is trou­ treas' poteaativs on-acraan tra­ Giaw, Alan King, Oku Marril. Q D -N o w a Ona gedy is juxtaposed with an off­ (D - CBS Ntows NIghtwateh The House sent to the Senate on an The measure would raise the liabill (ED - ABC Nawa bled with parental pressures in a 1S80. ( D ® - Hart to Hari Tha Hana 0 -P a B c u la : 'El Muarto Falta (D-UaDMactar JIP o screen romance with her laedkig alaCita’ 88-50 vote a bill to require the state to from 320,000 to 335,000 for an injured (ED - Barmy HHI Show small Eastern town In the fiiftios. ars held aa hoatagsa In a achama 0 - Worid Team Cup Tennis 0 - ESPN SportsContar .> Ossi Amaz Jr., Chris Morris. men. Meryl Streep, Jeremy kone. (ED - Tha Marv Show 0 - TwBIght Zoru divest itself of investments in compan­ person and hike the totol liability for Area tow tf^ (S) SI-Alice 1981. Reted R. to ascure Hart kiduatriaa funds. 0 0 - Lata Mght with DavM 0 - Volos of Faith I 1971. ( D a - Thraa'a Company (R) (60 mki.) [(Nosed Capdonad] 0 - Bualnaaa Report ies manufacturing, distributing or any one incident from $50,000 to 370.000. W - Thia Weak In tha NBA a -C o e m o c 'JoumeyekiSpece LaMarriian David's guaau am 0 - Fraaman Raporta G3) - Lsogus BsssbsB; Jack's Biatro hoMa its grand ( D - Nina on Now Jaraay selling firearms for use in Northern • Gave final legislative approval and Clsvslsnd at New York and Txna.' Dr. Cart Sagan ex- opankig and nobody comas to 11:30P.M. author Calvin TriBn and Dkactor ® - Radio 1990 Today'a pro­ John Saylaa. (R) (60 mki.) 0 -Q u n a m a k s Ireland. A n d o v e r gram looks at the hottest trends plaitw the concept of a l^ -y a a r dkwur. (R| [Ckuad Captkmsd| ( 9 - 0 . Drvadala'a BaaabaN (ED (D - HawaN FMa-O sent to Gov. William O’Neill a bill to Rep. William Scully Jr., D- extend the phase-in for elimination of a B o l t o n / C o v e n t r y Waterbury, displaying a rubber bullet residential property tax differential in ANP SO. EASV BORROWS POT'S CAR WHAT IS THIS. CALLIN'/ME of the type he said killed a dozen Hartford. O ’Neill has indicated he will TO PRIVE ON TO AWeELA'S... YER HUSBANP IN FRONT OF children in Northern Ireland, said the sign the bill. HIM? YOU COJLPA 0U7WN BRIDGE ASTRO TH' WHOLE SCAM. goal behind the bill was to help remove The bill, passed 118-21, would base ...BUT I'M NOT guns from Northern Ireland and bring residential property taxes In Hartford SO SURE ABOUT GRAPH peace. on the full 70 percent assessments by THIS CAR. Opponents voiced sympathy with the Oct. 1, 1986. The present rate of Bolton High students get awards On the rocks fteople of Northern Ireland, but said the assessment would have had that figure bill w as a foreign policy matter that reached by Oct. 1, 1984. some rock-crusher hands. < V M ir BO LTO N — Many high SCHDOL AWARDS ing achievement and excel­ Music Deportment (pres­ Ferguson. Here we see Ely wreddns school students were ho­ Art Deportment (pres­ lence bv a sophomore In ented bv Mr. Ketterer) — Student Council (presented East and West In a 19Sl ^ B i r t h d a y ented bv Mrs. Nlcolov) — biology: Geffrey Hlnds,*^out­ John Phillip Sousa Aword — by Mr. Falcetto) — Rebekah NORTH S-T41 nored for scholastic four years ot outstanding standing achievement In team maU*. He sat South Rebekah Gleason and Mary Gleason, president; Susan $10175 achievement Thursday at achievement In art — David chemistry — Mythlll Venko- Ann Dufrolne: National High Cdvanogh, vice president; VAJMM 4 and decided to try to deprive the annual awards cerem­ Caruso and Gretchen .Ge- tokrlshnan; outstanding School Choral Award — Do­ Shelby Fraser, secretary; U s vulnerable opponents of Juiia0,1903 V Kinsella panel demands romln; tour years of excel­ achievement In physics — reen Gagnon and Laura Michael Fenton, treasurer. 6... ony. The names of the bidding space by jump to Do not give up on things for lence In ort — Heidi Luck. Theodore Brown: outstand­ Dufrolne. Outstanding Serviceto Bol­ $541 senior class’ top five grad­ Business Education De­ ing achievement In general Social Studies Department four q «d e s — not that he which you have worked long.^ ton High School (presented WEST EAST uates were also released partment (presented by Mrs. science — Feroze Deen; (presented bv Mrs. Hopper) by M r. Fleming) — Rebekah Li didn’t espect t m he might and hard. They could com a f Bohman) — outstanding oc- outstanding achievement In — excellence In social stu­ Gleason and Shelby Fraser. E 4 $ A release of documents by Principal Joseph 'nto fruition In tha year ahead. * compllshment In Typing II — computer science— Jennifer dies tor all tour years — Outstanding Service to the E 32 $73 Keep plugging along familiar Fleming. Leah Plano; outstanding Ac- Warner and Theodore ChervI Ursin: excellence In Senior Closs (presented by ARE YOU OKAY MAN.I THOUGHT I RAM O U T ♦ M IM Itl 6AKQ llnaa. In order, they are: countlng I student — Brown. U.S. history — Malcolm Mr. Fleming) — Heidi Luck. MISTER? YOU WERE GONNA O F GAS/ E 8S7 $ A K Q Jlllt OEMMI (May 21-Juna 20) Nor­ HARTFORD (UPD — A select House spelled out that the committee had Shannon Brown; The reet of the bidding is Theodore Brown (valedic­ outstanding Accounting 11 PUT YCXJR PLANE mally you are not disturbed by - committee investigating whether Hart­ SOUTH almost self-explanatory. power to subiMena documents such as torian), Cheryl Ursin (sal­ student — Blaine Grisel; best RIGHT THROUGH outside InfluefKes, but today . ford Probate Judge James H. Kinsella TH' SI PE OF M Y $ IQ J M t i E ak ’s Ud <4 six clnbs was those demanded of Kinsella, said Rep. utatorian), Kate Shorey, all-around business student TOUCX THERE, $KQS you will be able to get mora should be impeached has voted to issue Robert Jaekle, R-Stratford, committee — Donna Bolduc. an attempt to get Ely to bid Robert Cusano and Re­ English and Foreign Lan­ FOR A m i n u t e ! 6J74 accomplished If you work in a'!^ subpoenas demanding the release of co-chairman. six qiadee. East wanted to quiat anvironment. Order now: bekah Gleason. guage Department (pres­ $--- certain documents. ented bv Mrs. Hopper) — extract a bigger penalfy The NEW Astro-Graph Match­ In rejecting the request for the Here is a list of the than be expected against Creative Writing Award — Vulnerable: East-West maker whod and booklet which The committee Monday voted un­ transcripts and records, Wade told the awards; Debra Marshall and William Just five spades, and East Dealer East reveals romantic combinations, animously to issue the subpoenas after committee in a letter that he was Groot; excellence In French I THE 1983 ,»was sure that Ely would not comiiatlbllltles for all signs, ' NON-SCHOOL AWARDS — David Sargent; excellence Kinsella’s lawyer refused to provide concerned the secret documents might West Nartk East Saalfe let hla vulnerable opponents tdls how to got along wWi " Awards from non-school In French II — Patricia organizations were pres­ Sobol; excellence In French 1$ 4$ piM In six clubs. others, finds rising signs, hid- voluntarily records and transcripts of be made public if provided to the □ Peee committee. ented by Mrs. Krisch, M i­ III — Morclo Manning ond Pam 5$ Pam & poor East doubled, and don qualities, plus more. Mail ; proceedings that led to the judge’s chael Fenton, Mrs. Raymond Mythlll Venkotokrlshnan; Pam 5$ S$ censure for his handling of a $35 million 6$ as yoa can see, all East $2 to Aatro-Qraph, Box 480, . Wade also cited the committee’s Allen, Mrs. Dorothy Miller outstanding performance In Pern Pam DbL Pam could score was U s ace of Radio City Station. N.Y. 10019. , f estate. and masters of ceremonies Latin I — John Llebler; WEIGHT contention, outlined in court last week Pam Pam trumps. Send an additional $1 lor your Leah Plano and Rebekah outstanding pet'formance In that the tovestIgaUon into whether Gleason. Lotin II — Tracey Rich; In 1932, matches were Gominl Astro-Graph predic­ The committee wants the records of Kinwlla should be impeached was not Delegate to American Le­ outstanding performance In scored In total points, and tions lor the year ahead. B » .. the proceedings before the Probate gion Bovs' State — Malcolm Latin III — Malcolm Fergu­ WE RE BIRP5 OF ESPECIALLV WHEN I Jo/e that She always says 1 Opening lead: 0 subjM t t review by the courts. Ely’s score for making six sure to give your zodiac sign. Judidal Council for its investigation 9 Ferguson. son; outstanding perfor­ A FEATHER'" OUR JAWG GTICK little verse. It when we eat CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) “ into whether Kinsella should be im­ Alternate delegate to mance In Latin IV — Cheryl THROUGH ALL KINC^ TOGETHER' peanut butter and spades doubled was 1219. "This is a position with which we American Legion Boys' State Ursin; Spanish Notional Ho­ WATCHERS Involving yourself In new proj­ At the o tt o table Blast peached for his handling of the estate of — Douglos Moore. OF WEATHER'" . ects today will help refurbish".' cannot agree and therefore we must nor Society Award of Honor Jel ly sandwiches. B y O iw aM Jacoby decided to take the expected Ethel A. Donaghue, 87, of West Delegate to Laurel Girls' — KerteShorev; excellence In 'four outlook. The more practi- • respectfully decline your request,” •Bd Juneg Jaegby profit at five doubleo. The Hartford. Slate — Marcia Manning. Spanish I — Catherine Ge­ cal they are, the more success^.'! Wade said in the letter refusing to Alternate delegeachal[>ie offense was unconstitu­ Carpenter. four years — Mary Beth 0 Large dear Rensselaer Math and dling your own. However, this The full House without debate tional under th^ U.S. Constitution. Luchenblll. 12 High priest of 1 Elactriefish Science Award — Malcolm Moth and Science Depart­ 2 Issue will work to your advantage. adopted a resolution Monday to keep A t.O T SerT£p IF lirssl Ferguson. ment (presented bv Mr. 3 Lata Yugoslav SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) the select committee in existence Wade said the lack of standards and The 20th Connecticut Jun­ Pease) — outstanding 13 French river Isadsr Where Important decisions are '', beyond the Legislature’s acljournment rules for the impeachment procedure ior Science & Humanities achievement and excellence JOIN Y o u Sto p cpu,it40 14 Hsbrsw Istttr 4 Facility concerned today, you're rtot Wednesday to complete its "make it impossible for our client to Symposium — Mythlll In moth — Grade 12: Theo­ 16 Honwtits apt to be wishy-washy. You'IT Venkcrtokrlshnan. dore Brown; outstanding 6 Positivapola investigation. make an intelligent decision to waive University of Connecticut 9 10 Unfattanad know exactly wtwre you aland" achievement and excellence Back known statutory rights at this time” Alumni Association Award— In math — Grade 11: Mal­ e. ’ T o N T O " ! 17 Spanish chaar and so will your associates. Thrsa.(prsfix) The 'resolution also specifically and voluntarily release the recxirds. Robert Cusano. colm Ferguson: outstanding ' lOCunad 6 Carnwdal SAOITTARIU8 (Nov. 23-Doe. Yale Club of Hartford Book achievement and excellence Award — Malcolm 20 Place fora 0 Adams' 21) Put your precious hours to In math — Grade 10: Mythlll OtOnbyMA.IK.TMMaBU.t.rBlOndO'l 6*7 Ferguson. Venkotakrlshnon; outstand­ drama critic grandson worthwhile uses today. If you fall to use your time product; Yale University Applied ing achievement and excel­ 22 Compass lORasphs 20 Qodof war 40 Charges Science Symposium — Phil Ip lence In moth — Grade 9; lively, your Inactivity could lataa- point 11 Part td tbs log 31 Suffix SOSsrissof Rumm. Jack McLarnev; outstand­ 10 Rogaiding Invoke feelings of guilt. *■ Priest accused of having 24 Noun tufflx 32 King -namat 21 Annoying C A PM CO m f (Dae. 22-Jon. 19) CREAM FDR C?E65^,5IRZ 26 Timber M e Mongkut'a 51 Except that V e . TIM th e r e (5 fading tutor You're a good organizer today. 28 Plant pan S3 CSizan When you step In and restore- 23 Optic 33 Afiprova sexual relations with girl Preuss supports J lM E ^ MOFUDbE ^WC6...W ia 30 hslian applicator otOer to chaotic condlHonT' 30 Court cry 64 Ram's matss created by others, all will be NOW THROUGH JUNB 18th ONLVI '/DU HAVE ITWITMDUr .grafting 24 Mote uncanny WITH OR 34 By birth 26 Novalitt 40 Boor makata 56 Liability happy. ^BUTTERSCOICH ^AOCE"?^ 36 Tima division Bagndd 46Paddlat 58 Olympic AOUARHI8 (Jan. 20-Fob. W) NORWICH (U P I)\ a civil suit has said. cable TV tower .withoidt: 20 Play the firtt 48 District board (abbr.) ARhough you may be reluctant The girl’s mother discovered the 1965 PRICES FOR A UNITED TIME ONLYl without. 36 Horn sound been filed in Superior Court against St. 37 Othello villain card attomay so Mrs. Ptron to commit yourself today, orice I M ary’s Church of Groton and a Roman alleged incidents in June, 1981, and FIRST MEETING AND REGISTRATION FEE. JUST $5. FUD&e you do you won't be easily dis^ BOLTON — Selectmen Carl A. Preuss said M o n d a y 30 Infant 27 Million (prafix) (abbr.) 60 Obtain reported them to the church, the state •uadod trom your course ol ‘ Catholic priest accused of having n6 will introduce to his fellow board memloers a andosurs 1 Z ' 3 4 8 sexual relations with an 11-year-old Department of Children and Youth 8 7 8 8 t o 11 action. resolution supporting construction on Boston Turn­ 41 Actress girl. • Services and police, but did not press PIECES (Fob. 20-Mareh 2 0 )- pike of a head-end tower and base station a cable TV nef’? t z t l 14 criminal charges. Markal to n g rostricted or staring at The complaint filed by the unidenti­ company. 42 Normandy the tamo four walls could, fied girl’s family against the church She has since changed her mind on 11 18 17 A public hearing on the proposal, held by the invatkm day to>tess your spirits, today. the criminal complaint, said Horton. and Father James Curry of Groton, ^nnecticnit Siting Council, will be convened Wednes­ 18 Plan activltlot which constantly ‘ 43 Customer 18 31 said Hartford attorney Stephen Horton, He said the family is seeking keep you on tho go. day at 7 p.m. in the Community Hail. 44 Express ■ k ■ ” representing the family. undisclosed monetary damages in the TOLL FREE t z 2 3 AW ES (Merab 21-AprM 19) The I feel that it s in the best interest in the town, and 45 Extrasensory Curry, 59, founder of St. Mary's and civil suit. 1 art ol accumulating should I K N O W . I perception hopefully t will attract some other light industries.” I T H I N < A IF ViSIU CW NT I f m 81 S 3 3 3 work to your advantage today ‘ form er pastor of the church, denied the “ I ’ve been trying to negotiate the (•bbf.) Preuss said in explaining his reasons for submitting - - KNOW..THER^S BIRO M U S T ■ 1 in material situations, as wall ' charges. No criminal charges have case with the parties involved, but 1 800 942-1916 WANT TO SEE 47 Oklahoma •4 the resolution. “I hope the board supports it ’’ A Bk5 H OLE IN HAVE FLOWN M E RALU ON as In other araaa. Use your ' been filed against him. haven't been successful,’’ Horton said. rivsr . 1 1 MIdaa touch. ^ The Board of Selectmen meets tonight at 8 p.m in MY BALLOON. 9 T Curry said the victim’s mother Also, Horton claims to have a sworn THROU&H IT. MYHEAQDOb/r 40 Turned to lea the Community Hall. TAURUE (April OlHEay 10) , statement from a woman who alleges A S K y 1 - 1 worked for him at the time the suit 62 Stopped 4 2 Sometimoa M's asaantlal to Preuss said the Conservation CommissioQ has also claims the assaults took place. He said she was assaulted by the same priest atoaplna focus on your personal Inter- approved the site, and finds that the business is 1 1 the child was alone with him at his 10-11 years ago. 66 Long time <• 4 8 esta. In order to advance your 1 insistent with conservation and development plans bouse only twice during that time and Chief State’s Attorney Austin McGui­ 67 Subject *• ■ cause It may ba necessary for ' ■or tne town. OPFIR GOOD IN PARnCIPAHNC ARIAS ONLYl 4 8 • 0 8 t gan said Monday has been asked by the 01 Wonder 8 3 • 4 1 8 you to do so today. never for more than a half-hour. United Cable Television Corp. of Eastern Connecti- ■ 1 ■ Horton said Monday the suit alleges governor’s office to review the case. 02 Room thspa 8 8 M t, which w o n ^ h t s last year to wire the franchise 1 7 8 8 8 8 8 0 81 McGuigan said he recieved a py of 63 Soeatiiaart Curry engaged in sexual intercourse that comprises Vernon. Bolton, Andover, Tolland and 8 Z a letter the girl's mother sent to Gov. 04 Corahuakor at. 8 3 8 4 H i r i n g for the 'OOs: ,i and other sexual conduct with the girl other surrounding towns, has applied to the siting 03 Wily Installing a refill h.u..,,„t, on seven oiocsslons between late 1980 William O’Neill complaining the state WEIGHT WATCHERS® MF M council for approval of the 63-foot-high tower and 8 8 ; r had failed to prosecute the priest on ______lose WHCHT ONCE AND FOR ALL t-7 <2MUJ 66 Ruiw away you’ve no more throwaway ' and early 1981. The priest has since adjacent base station. The tower will be used for pens left. ' criminal charges. - j retired for medical reasons. Horton reception only, company officials have said e WHgnt witchen intwnitlonsi inc. 1965 owner Of the weleht Witehen iradwwrk 10 — MANCHESTKR HKHALD, Tuesday, June* 7, 1983 MANCHESTER HERALD, Tuesday. June 7^ 1983 - 11 Obituaries Three Coventry residents

Alexander Smyth Alexander Smyth, 83, of Vernon Leisure died Monday at a Rockville conva­ blast proposal for garage FOCUS/ lescent home. He was the husband of Rhoda 0. Smyth and the father of David A. Smyth of Manchester By Sarah E. Hall time in the ramsnackie old one is storage tanks, sander racks, and and Donald W. Smyth of Coventry. Herald Correspondent running out. "Let's stop fooling impermeable surfaces on which.tfi ' « Before his retirement he was an around,’ he said. pile sand and salt. accountant for Hamilton Standard COVENTRY — With loud voices "Band-aid tactics,” accused In response to a question by Propeller for 20 years. He was a and strident protests, three resi­ Twerdy: Green went on to call the Olmstead, Holmes said "no reno­ member of the Association of dents — John Twerdy, Roland Bearce proposal "a makeshift vations need be made” to Retired Persons. Green, and Robert Olmstead — solution.” Green adamantly de­ Bearce-property septic system. . He also leaves a sister, Mrs. blasted the town garage proposal fended his own garage proposal: Olmstead, however, had othejr Sour notes Arthur (May) LeClaire of Man­ at a special town meeting Monday building an 8,000 square foot, steel qualms about the Bearce site. • chester; three brothers, Harold night. butler-building on 60 acres of “Size-wise and location-wise, ) Smyth of West Hartford, Norman The rest of the 20-odd residents property owned by Alfred Heckler think we’re in the wrong place,” hi Smyth of Phoenix, Ariz., and attending appeared to favor the on Sam Green Road. said, adding that the Beared Russell Smyth of Manchester; Town Council’s proposal for a "I’m going to talk about the Sam property and building are too The world of rock talks back to the recession three grandchildren and several $232,000 garage package at the site Green property until somebody small to allow for growth and are nieces and nephews. of the old Bearce Company on throws me out," said Green at one some distance from the center 61 By Mark Schwed Funeral services will be Thurs­ Brandbury Lane, in the South point. town. United Press International compares the life of autoworkers in the day at II a.m. at the Holmes Village area. An existing 10,000 While Green contended his plan Olmstead also claimed—in spite 1950s to today’s depressed auto industry Funeral Home, 400 Main St. Burial square foot, concrete block build­ would cost less and allow for more of Holmes’ insistance to thh will be in Fairview Cemetery, ing would house town trucks and flexibility than the council's, coun­ contrary — that the Bearce prop­ where “you’re lucky if you work.” West Hartford. Friends maycallat highway equipment on the 1.6 acre cil members defended the opposite erty is too close to the Mill Stream, Jonny Taylor’s “Reaganomics” is One the funeral home Wednesday from site. NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Love conquers case. They claimed that after which might be polluted by road al), even double-digit unemployment, in of the political recession songs. Lyrics like 7 to 9 p.m. Memorial contributions "We’re in a dump now,” said thorough investigation, it was sand and salt. He went on to point, I na so high I’m talking Reaganomics” may be made to a charity of the Twerdy of the current garage, found that Green’s cost estimates out that highway trucks would Barbara Mandrell’s bluesy song “In donor's choice. "and we’re going to moye into were too low and that the Heckler have to navigate a hill on one side Times Like These.’’ say it all. “Solidarity” by Billy Brown also another dump. If we buy that piece property would require more site of the Bearce property. takes a slap at Reagan’s policies. “Take it Martha C. Mayo of property down there, I think . A punk group called The Dead modifications (leveling, installing All three of the anti-Bearce Kennedys takes a decidedly different 1 J frona the needy, give it to the greedy, Martha C. Mayo, 54, of Bristol we’re going in the wrong a septic system, contracting an property spokesmen at the meet­ that’s what Reaganomics say.” Gil died Monday at her home. She was direction.” access road) than the Bearce ing objected to the fact that the approach in the song “Kill the Poor.” the wife of the late Albert Mayo Twerdy went on to predict the property. Beault family, which owns prop­ ’The bad news of the recession has Scott-Heron’s “B-Movie” lament talks and she also leaves a brother and Bearce property proposal would Selling price for the Bearce erty abutting Bearce’s, had been surfaced in rock 'n' roll and country. Paul about “Ronald Raygun” and his three sisters in Manchester. meet the same fate at the hands of property is $150,000. The town approached by the town manager administration. She was a member of St. voters as the recent sewer prop­ assessor valued the property at concerning a first-option agree­ McCartney, Bob Seger, BUly Joel, The Gregory's Church in Bristol. Her Herald photo by Pinto osal: defeat. The garage proposal $121,000 some time ago. although a ment should the town need t{ Pretenders, the Dead Kennedys and the Some .suggest taking to the streets for a three sisters in Manchester are will go to referendum June 15. more rerant appraisal by an enlarge the garage site in the Oak Ridge Boys are among dozens of recession revolution. Mrs. Joseph Coulombe, Mrs. In response, council member outside firm set the value at future. L artists who have reieased songs about “We’ve been quiet too long, my friends, Wilfred Giguere and Mrs. Armand Old welcomes new Betsy Paterson, who headed the $165,000. Town officials foresee no suc^ Mayo. She leaves four other f today’s bard times. but the working folks of this country will Outgoing AARP chapter 1275 president Fred Towle, left, committee which drafted the prop­ Town Engineer Donald Holmes enlargement. _’ sisters, Mrs. Thomas J. Williams osal, said the Bearce property was does plan some “minor repairs” to Some of the songs are siily, others Just rise again,” Tom Juravich sings in “Rise welcomes incoming president Harry Jenkins at a recent Surprisingly, two residents wh^‘ “Everybody’s needing money, even the protectionism in their song “American of Hartford, Mrs. Marie Cormier in chosen because "it has an existing the Bearce building, at a cost of usually oppose spending for ne\r cute, but a few may rescue rock from its preachers preaching on TV. Again.” Maine, Mrs. Jack Dalson in Ohio meeting of the organization. Nbuilding which we felt suited our $32,000. “We intend to insulate town projects spoke up in favor oC Made.” The song starts out, “Seems Eddie Grant’s “Electric Avenue” is 7 and Mrs. Sylvio St. Germain of recent function as juvenile escapism, “I thank the good Lord I got you in times meeds, and it is affordable.” extensively, and to turn one of the the ^arce site. Joyce Carilli*; everything you buy these days has got a getting lots of radio airplay. “Now in the Ellington; her brother in Manches­ / “It’s a viable solution,” she low overhead doors into a high bay former head of the Coventry where the message takes a backseat to the like these.” ter, Gerard Charette; another foreign name, from the kind of car I drive streets there is lots of violence and not a Police roundup added, “although we have said door,” he said. Taxpayers Association, said "let’s beat. Miss Mandrell’s song proves It’s not to my video game,” but winds up by brother, Paul Charette of East right from the beginning it is not Other planned site modifica­ go with it, let’s support it, and let’C lot of work to be done.” Hartford; and several nieces and the optimum. But people have not tions, which account for $50,000 of vote it In.” .impossible for someone who has enough saying, “Oh, my baby’s American made, nephews. wanted to pay for the optimum in ’THE RECESSION’S first musical child money to park a 72-foot luxury yacht in a bom and bred in the U.S.A.” the total garage cost and would be “Let’s get something now, eveq- STEEL WORKERS, nuclear power Funeral services will be Thurs­ the past." An active search for a necessai^ at any site, include if it’s temporary," urged fiscaf. was an updated version of Johnny lake to sing about hard times. The many studies correlating the day at 9 a.m. from Dunn Funeral suitable site has been on-going for installation of underground fuel conservative Archie Haynes. > Paycheck’s “Take This Job and Shove plant operators and farmers have cap­ Home, 191 West St., Bristol, with a Man arrested more than a decade, she said, “It doesn’t mean you have to have lived increase iij unemployment with increased mass at 10 a.m. at St. Gregory's I t ” Rodney Lay’s “I Wish I Had A Job To what a lyric is to identify with it,” she tured the attention of songwriters. although residents rejected at illness, death and crime are dealt with in Leon Reece has lived the lyrics in his Church. Friends may call at the referendum al of the earlier, more Shove” reflected a change in the woiidng said. Springsteen’s “Johnny 99,” about a laid funeral home Wednesday from 2 to song “ Laid Off,” co-written with Johnny costly, garage proposals. Coventry council OKs- man’s attitude. Fewer people are bold « off Mahwah, N.J., autoworker who got 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. in fight at cafe Lawrence Abbott, who partici­ Robbins. He wrote it the day he was laid enough to tell off their bosses and risk a' ’THE SAME HOLDS true for McCart­ dmnk on gin and wine, got a gun, and pated in a federally-funded study pink slip reply. off from his job as a crane operator at the Police Saturday arrested a man police said. on the possibility of a solar-heated ney, who seems to be doing fine in his killed a night clerk. The Judge gave him 99 who, after interfering with town A Manchester Memorial Hospi­ garage a few years back, agreed computer service pacti ip ss ^andrell’s song takes the positive Hartsville Nuclear Plant in Tennessee. medics working on a heart attack post-Beatle days. McCartney’s “The years. Governor tal spokesman said Eskandan was with Paterson that the Bearce site COVENTRY — In an attempt to approach, similar to the flood of escapist Pound Is Sinking” strikes at the pocket- Reece says he feels like a “worn out pair victim, jumped and fought a police checked out at the hospital but not would be “less than ideal.” How­ subsequent years. "T" About 70 miles southeast of Mahwah is a officer, they said Monday. modernize town payroll and Holmes said he was “optimistic” movies released during toe Depression. book of every Englishman. of shoes” and asks “How much more can a treated for injuries. ever, “this is the best option the record-keeping systems. Town place called Allentown, Pa., the setting poor man stand to lose?” Douglas Scruton, 29, of 635 South Kinney and Farrell were later town has, and we ought to go for about working with people front “It’s the typical A m ei^n attitude of Merle Haggard asks the question that’s for Joel’s hit song about an industrial town intervenes Main St., was charged with assault Council members approved at MISTI, who have a “fine reputat “Fired, Laid Off, Terminated, Let Go” charged with third-degree assault it," he said. “It would be a sensible their Monday night meeting plans you can’t get me down,” she said. “This: on everybody’s mind — “Are the Good where the collapse of the American dream on a police officer, breach of peace, in connection with the attack on purchase, the price is reasonable, tion.” Town data will fit into ad by Sweet Revenge features Beraie Kelton, and interfering with a police to sign a three-year computer existing computer format, he said; song is about the economic situation. It’s a Times Really Over?” is a reality. Eskandan. police said. After and the building is all there and contract with the Town of a laid-off security guard in New York City. on officer. He was released on a $2,500 further investigation, police said until staff learn how to custom- love song. It’s also very entertaining. It’s Haggard yearns for a return to the days “Well, we’re living in Allentown and very sound.” Mansfield. design their own. bond for a Manchester Superior they determined that Kinney had Most agree that the current kind of like laughing at your troubles.” when a “buck was still silver,” when a An agricultural economist in Hutchin­ Court appearance June 20. Under the terms of the contract, He preferred to rent, rather than they’re closing all the factories down,” Continued from page 1 been struck on the back with a club garage is literally crumbling p>ventry will hook into Mans­ It goes like this: Ford and a Chevy “would still last 10 Joel sings. son, Kan., has some radical advice for In describing the incident, police wielded by Mohammad Ali Dada- away. Because the Bearce prop­ buy, computer hardware, for fear fanners in his tune, “Let the Whole Crop said they were dispatched to the field’s computer processing unit that it might become obsolete in a “We can read about the latest in fashion years like they should, when a man could tion grants to communities and in hah Nikoo, 23, of East Hartford. erty already has a building on it, via telephone, at a cost of $12,000 J magazines Rot.” Eric B. Allen’s record comes with a lesser areas, Stolberg said. Gaslight Cafe on 30 Oak St. for a Dadahah Nikoo was charged with council Chairwoman Joan A. Le­ per year. - field of such rapid advances. still work and still would,” and when “a SEGER ALSO IS taking a part in rock’s reported heart attack and upon “It’s a good beginning step, a full color poster showing a family leaving O'Neill, who has said for weeks a second-degree assault, police said. wis noted, it would provide imme­ It will cost about $2,900 per year “but that don’t change the fact that we girl could still cook and still would.” rehabilitation. arriving, received complaints The four men arrested were fin^/introduction,” said Council the farm with a Century 21 sign in the budget was in reach if lawmakers diate shelter for highway staff and to rent computer hardware from jgot patches on our Jeans. ’The Oak Ridge Boys address the topic of On “Makin’ Thunderbirds,” Seger put their minds to it, sounded less from town firemen, who were given court date on June 20. equipment, while at another site, it member William Paton of the yard. working on the victim, that an outside firm, according to the computer plan. However, he ad­ optimistic about a compromise by would take considerable time to proposal which Town Engineer Wednesday, though he wasn’t Scruton and another man were vised Holmes to shop around loi forceably pulling medics away Warrants served construct a new building. Donald Holmes presented to the giving up hope d special session Roger Bellard, superintendent the best rental prices and to from the victim. council. Management Information investigate liability for the accid-‘ could be avoided.' Police this weekend arrested of streets, gave a satirical account Systems and Training, Inc., of "I'm hopeful, not overly optimis­ The officer went in and asked the Scott Pinckney, 19, of 148 North ental loss of data before actuall)( two men to leave, but they refused of how the this-is-not-the-best- Farmington wil! provide training signing any contracts. U tic, but optimistic enough to School St., on a warrant charging altemative rationale has led to a when one said he hadn’t finished for^town staff at a cost of $3,000 the “We’ll do what’s cheapest,” believe that it can be avoided," third-degree larceny and two long wait for a new garage, while first year, and $1,000 or less in Join the club. Be mad at Andy Rooney O’Neill told reporters who ga­ his beer, according to police. counts of third-degree burglary, agreed Holmes. Another man, Bruce W. Cobum, thered in his office after the* late according to police Monday. Did you ever have one of those they’ll accept the money from me meeting with Groppo and Stolberg. 30, of 18 Lilley St., later charged Pinckney was presented in court with breach of peace in the weeks when you’re in trouble with though, even if I send it in late.) where to send it, and I’m sure I’m O'Neill warned that failure to Thursday. in plenty of trouble with whoever it adopt a budget by the July 1 start of incident, then came over and Friday, in an unrelated arrested, Gryk says condos better everyone? I’m in trouble with the asked the two men to leave. A fight • My sister. I’ve been in trouble is. the new fiscal year would keep police served a warrant on a following people for the following Andy with my sister since I was 4. ‘Maybe next week will be the week I’m spending at current levels, which started between Coburn and Scrut- reasons: •The fellow whose umbrella I on’s partner, and the officer then Vernon man charging criminal N he said could hurt the poor and • The company, because I ha­ not in trouble with anyone. If that took by mistake in a restaurant tried to break up the fight. trespass, police said Monday. iRooney • The waiter in a restaurant I ate cities, which could least afford the Bernard Kelley, 25, of Vernon, ven’t done my expense accounts in Thursday night, because I only last week. I didn’t remember until harm. But Scruton grabbed the officer than single-family homes happens, it will be for the first time.’ was charged with first-degree since January. You may not think tipped him $2.30 on a $23.00 check I got back to the office with it that I Stolberg, speaking after the from behind and tried to wrestle criminal mischief and disorderly Syndicated hadn’t taken an umbrella with me. him to the ground. The officer had Continued from page 1 January is that long ago...but after he provided us with some of evening House caucus, said that if conduct. Kelley was presented in Arguing for the Fergusons, Thomas told the commission Mrt. Columnist • The newsboy who delivers our to use his blackjack to subdue single-family homes, he January 1982? the worst service I’ve ever had. a special session is needed he court Friday. Ferguson had collected the signa­ “heart” of the historic district and paper, because we haven’t been hoped the conflicting sides in the Scruton, and meanwhile, the other contended. tures of the owners of 20 percent of challenged Manchester residents • Private aircraft owners, be­ i t man fled, police said. cause I said they were all rich and •Everyone who likes John McEn­ pounds on the trip. (I’m pleased, home much and we’re three weeks House could reach a budget by July He played down objections by the land within 500 feet of the to save it. “No government will do taking a tray, I balanced a cup of behind. Police said warrants will be Gambling charged Town Planning Director Lamson proposed development, thus re- ' . it, he said. , used tax-supported government roe, because I said that, as an though, that they hate to see me coffee on top of a container of sought for the arrest of the other to traffic problems which would quiring a two-thirds vote by the facilities without paying much for American, I’m embarrassed to gain weight.) "I would hope they will recog­ man. Two men will appear in Man­ FitzGerald presented the com­ lot of my old clothes in his closet yogurt and when I reached for • Several hundred people wHo nize as we approach June 30 that arise on Hartford Road due to the commission rather than a simple mission with petitions containing them. A lot of private plane owners have him represent this country in Coburn wa^ released on a $100 chester Superior Court June 16 to that I won’t get rid of. some money in my pocket, you have written me nice letters to the integrity of their positions face gambling charges. development and claimed the majority. 1,194 signatures collected by Mrs. are rich, but a lot more fly for fun, any kind of international competi­ • The place where we rented an bond for a court date June 20. density of the proposed housing He said the lawn was “a unique • About a dozen readers who guessed it. I said I’d pay to have his which I have not responded. perhaps ik not as crucial as the The two. Michael Burdic, 27, and Ferguson in oppostion to Um do not deduct their travels as said I wrote too much about the tion. You won’t find me taking that expensive camera lens, because integrity of the state continuing to was allowed for in zoning regula­ area in a historical district” with a development. ; pants cleaned but he wasn’t John Dadiskos, 55, both of Man­ business expenses and often share helicopter trip across the country. back. we lost the specially fitted metal pleased with me. • Several dozen people who have function after June 30,” Stolberg Theft try alleged tions. Lamson had said in a memo heritage which must be preserved. The judge warned the commis­ chester. were arrested Monday by to the coinmission that the pro­ ownership of an old secondhand •The college I went to, because I case it came in. I’ll have to pay for written me angry letters to which I said. the Statewide Organized Crime “I question whether this com­ sion that allowing the planned •The dry cleaner, because I left have not responded. Groppo grumbled over the pros­ Two Hartford men were ar­ posed density of the complex was mission is prepared to destroy that aircraft with two or three other forgot to send them the amount I it if I don’t find it, but they’re mad • Some unidentified person who Investigative Task Force of the residence development might Ue people. They are not rich. two pairs of pants and a raincoat anyway. V pect of the special session, which rested Saturday on charges that state police. 6.7 units per acre in an area where heritage,” Thomas said. cons dered spot zoning, which pledged as a contribution, and sent me a copy of my book to be Maybe next week will be the two are allowed. • My wife, because she bad for more than 30 days. he said would cost state taxpayers they tried to steal a car from the Both were released on written He said Gryk had used similar prohibited by state statute. their year for that sort of account­ autographed, because I lost the week I’m not in trouble with Downey Drive area early that Gryk called the proposed devel­ arguments to bis own when he Brian’s room painted and found a • The fellow behind me in line at *9,000 a day. He also said the longer promises to appear in court. FitzGerald called the historfi: ing ended May 30. (I have an idea • My kids, because I gained nine envelope he or she gave me to send anyone. If that happens, it will be the state went without a budget, morning, police said today. opment “a lair solution to a tough argued in 1977 against a develop­ the cafeteria yesterday. Instead of it back in. I don’t have any idea . Spokesman John McLeod said problem." district “unique” in the nation for the first time. the longer it would take to get one. Daniel Ortiz, 24, and Ephrain the arrests were part of an ongoing ment by the South Methodist because it preserved the only "I think the longer they go into Ortiz, 21, of Harford, were each investigation by the task force, In an angry rebuttal after Church on the south side of intact mill area from the 1800s. Ife June the worse it’s going to get,” charged with possession of bur­ dating back to earlier this year hearing the opponents of the Hartford Road. said the Cheney district could in said Groppo, who said while he glary tools and criminal attempt to when search and seizure warrants development, Gryk told the com­ Gryk said in his rebuttal what the future become a major New personally wouldn’t try to deal commit second-degree larceny. were issued for illegal sports mission the future of the area was while the arguments may have England tourist attraction. ,’ with Republicans on a budget, Police said Daniel Ortiz was also betting activites in Manchester, at stake. "You want a California seemed similar the propsals dif­ ’’Circumstances beyond some Democrats might and “hope^ wanted by state police on a charge Terryville and New BriUin. Ranch house on the lawn?” he fered because the church plan anyone’s control may have fully they wil come up with a of perjury, and that Ephrain Ortiz Burdic was charged with five asked rhetorically, pounding the called for 100 units. doomed this asset,” he said. bipartisan package.” was wanted by Hartford police on counts of profession! gambling, rostrum. “Cars, swimming pools Judge FitzGerald, following Several other residents of thb charges of burglary, failure to all over the lawn — that’s your Thomas, said in his testimony district, along with historic com­ five counts of using a telephone to decision to make.” Car hits deer appear and criminal mischief. receive and record gambling infor­ there was no point in having mission members Swensson and Gryk commented in an interview created the district if the whole Desmond, spoke against the devel­ mation and one count of possession that he found the opponents’ ANDOVER — An unidentified area wuld not be preserved. opment. One witness spoke in ■■ -/ Four held In brawl of gambling records. testimony “ridiculous.” driver suffered facial lacerations Dadiskos was accused of one He called the Great Lawn the support of the appUcation . early this morning when he hit a Four men were arrested early count of conspiracy to commit deer and it smashed through his Friday morning in a brawl that left professional gambling and one windshieid, authorities said today. one man lying on the floor of a bar count of using a telephone to Police said the injuries to the on Hartford Road injured, police receive and record gambling driver, whose name could not be said Monday. Family furious at acquittal 7 information obtained this morning, were minor Charges, of assault, interfering Making up facial lacerations. Specific details with a police officer and breach of Assault charged HARTFORD (UPI) — The acquittal of a Granby ordered Jones released from jail on a written promise about the accident, which was peace were lodged Friday morning man charged with murder and larceny in the 1982 to appear in court. Val Johnson of Manchester earned reported at four minutes before 1 when police were called to the COVENTRY — A local man was robTOry and death of a Simsbury restuarant manager charged Saturday night with as­ her "good sport" badge last week by a,m. and happened near the incident at 12; 07 a m. Friday at has left the family of the victim bitter at a three-judge serving as a model for a Little Theater intersection of Routes 6 and 316, Luigi’s Bar at 706 Hartford Road, saulting a person, who was later panel. ' , were not available this morning, they said. treated at Windham Memorial Kevin A. Jones, 21, had been charged with felony PRAISE SONG of Manchester makeup demonstra­ police said. When they arrived, they said a Community Hospital, at the Lake- murder and second-degree larceny in the July 3,1982 ■^■*f***.v- tion. While LTM members looked on. view Terrace Beach, police said slaying of Madelyn Walker, 49, of Canton, the crowd was standing outside the Monday. You are invited to a festival of Bob Kelly of Bob Kelly’s Cosmetic Royal habits bar, with the fight apparently over, manager of the J*'arm Shop restaurant. and three men became abusive Gary Spaulding, 27, of 195 At the completion Monday of the state’s case in praise with Praise Song, a Company of New York City appiied An entourage of 24,000 — noble­ and ignored officers' requests to Hickory Drive, Coventry, was Hartford Superior Court, the defense claimed the stage makeup. charged with second-degree as­ pro^ution failed to show sufficient reason for the music ministry of Elim Bible men with their families, servants quiet down. They then arrested Herald photos by Pinto and household goods — accompan­ James R. Deere, 24, of 248 School sault and carrying a dangerous trial to continue. Such motions are routinely made and Institute. ied the Empress Elizabeth of St., oii charges of breach of peace weapon, police said. Police said rejected, but the judges, in a rare legal move, granted Imperial Russia whenever she and interfering with a police the victim was treated at the the defense motion. hosptial for a possible broken Join us for an evening of moved the 400 miles between her officer, Clarence Kinney, 24. of 147 clavicle. Defense attorneys and prosecutors said separately palaces at St. Petersburg and School St., on a charge of breach of they could not explain the reasoning behind the music and worship on Wed­ Moscow. At her death in 1702, Spaulding was released on a decision of the panel, chaired by Superior Court Judge peace, and Paul F. Farrell, 26, of 92 $5,000 surety bond for a Tolland nesday, June 8th, at 7:00 Elizabeth's closets contained Spruce St., onachargeofbreach of John D. Brennan, with Judges Thomas J. O’Donnell 15,000 dresses. peace. County Superior Court GA-19 ap­ and Harry Hammer. pearance June 14. They then found Rashid Eskan- Prosecutors said the state was considering an Church of the Living God dan, 27, of East Hartford, on the appeal, but since they were not certain the decision Robertson School floor inside the bar, wbo was later Now you know could be appealed, they asked and were granted two About 30 million persons own weeks to weigh possible strategies. N. School St. (off N. Main) determined to be the victim of an The seed of the double coconut shares in American corporations. assault by Kinney and Farrell, Brennan said the panel recognized the state’s desire Manchester I may weigh as much as 40 pounds. to appeal, and he continued the case to June 20 and Ati M — MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday, June 7, 1983

MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday, June 7. 1983 — 13 rillMJAW VAMMrm*. Com. Advice ••nifaaav MUMWM. M onkeys The ‘write’ word prompts mdCHEH m ay lead

MAHIMiOOTUIItM •» Mcttnufinc tooo servicemen’s letters home rtiftVr r.r' to A ID S AND '' ’. ' ^ 'v-.‘ rem edy DEAR ABBY: "Empty complains because con­ Boards for Electrical Pur|x>ses. Mailbox in Yorba Linda" cerned friends telephone M EDICAL LAKE, Wash. (U PI) eniisted your help to get ♦•r»' - constantly to inquire — The search to find a cure for the sons and daughters who about the condition of a mysterious and often fatal disease are far from home in the f j * called AIDS has spread to a remote Dear Abby seriously ill family t military service to write member. Because I have breeding colony of monkeys home. All the parents also been through the housed in a form er mental wanted was an occasional hospital. Abigail Van Buren finger, I offer this /T note assuring them that Scientists at the Regional Pri­ £ solution; A' their children were alive Rent, borrow or buy a mate Research Center’s sprawling and well. telephone answering ma­ Medical Lake field station are Your “ To Whom It May chine. Record your mes­ M . trying to find out whether a rare Concern" message, ad­ sage on the tape. It should / , ■ ‘ ailment appearing in some mon­ dressed to those in the low the counsel given. even though the young be brief. Example: “ ( ) ’s keys is related to the acquired military, was fine, but I A CHAPLAIN IN men and women in the condition is unchang^, M a .v k e fl: lii ’ immune deficiency syndrome. submit some additional OKINAWA service don’t write home and we are still greatly AIDS has killed more than 500 advice: DEAR CHAPLAIN: I much. Being away from concerned. No visitors at people in the U.S. since 1981 by Parents not receiving cannot imagine a more home is a new experience this time. When we hear causing a breakdown of the body’s mail from their sons or effective way to “ encour­ for most of them. Their from the doctor, we will disease-fighting system. daughters in the military age" our men and women days are often boring and update this message. This Case Brothers billhead is one of a Manchester Historical Socle y- Though it has occurred primar­ may write to the com­ in the military to write monotonous; there isn’t Please leave your name dozen invoices recently acquired by ily among homosexual men, in­ mand chaplain or com­ home. One “ official” much to write about be­ and phone number so we travenous drug abusers, recent manding officer at the counseling session with cause they’ve said it all in will know that you cared Haitian immigrants and hemophi­ military member’s a^ the commanding officer the previous letter. enough to call. We’ll get liacs, AIDS has also appeared dress. The chaplain will should be sufficient. I ’ve had many soldiers back to you as soon as among people fitting into no “ unofficialiy” counsel tte Now let’s hear it from a tell me they hate to write possible. Thank you for obvious category. serviceman or woman Historical society acquires chaplain in Korea; home because they’re try­ understanding why we AIDS outbreaks in monkeys regarding family respon­ DEAR ABBY: I sympa­ ing hard to act grown up, are not taking personal have been reported at two other sibilities and encourage thize with “ Empty Mail­ and they don’t want to calls at this time.” Herald photo by Pinto government primate research cen­ him/her to write the par­ box in Yorba Linda,’ but depress their parents by Abby, you’ll probably ters — one located in Davis, Calif, ents. The commanding what’s wrong with the telling them they feel get a thousand letters with N e w b l o o m s and one at Southborough, Mass. officer will “officially” new pieces in history puzzle parents? Abby, soldiers homesick and blue, so this same suggestion, but At Medical Lake, scientists have counsel the member and have told me that their they Just don’t write at all. by publishing just one, been trying for several years to “ strongly” encourage So, have a heart, you Betsy Baker of Manchester’s permanent kindergarten students at Washington unravel the cause of a fatal parents didn’t even send you could lighten the This photo of a 1903 Case family correspondence. folks at home, and write monkey disease known as Enzootic them a Christmas card, burden of thousands of Brothers invoice with its I to order. Memorial Day committee gets help School. The plants were given by the Herald photo by Torqulnlo Writing these officers but their pen pals came anyway. Retroperitoneal Fibromatosis, exhausted people. “ Highest Award” medals The Historical Society’s planting flowers by the War monument Manchester elementary school will not result in any HUBERT WADE JR., which is characterized by scar through! SM ARTER NOW from Paris and Mel­ acquisitions chairman, trouble for the service CHAPLAIN, KOREA Collectors' in Center Park. Assisting her are Anne children. tissue growth in the abdomen. Tell Mom and Dad that DEAR SMARTER: bourne introduces us to a Herbert Bengtson, would Mr. and Mrs. Fred Thrall were recently installed as member, unless-he or ^ e their child away from DEAR ABBY: “Been Kitsock, left, and Heidi Peltier, both "A ll the animals are exposed to Thanks for a helpful dozen billheads recently welcome other material. commander and president of the Manchester barracks persistently refuses to fol- Through the Ringer" Comer it, but only those animals with home needs their letters sugg^tions. acquired by our Historical of this nature at any time. ‘ something wrong with their im­ and auxiliary of World War I Veterans. Society. Call 649-2502. Russ MacKendiick mune system seem to get a It is a kind of everyday full-blown case of the disease,” material that proves help­ About Town SM ALL WORLD said Dr. Gerald Blakley, director ful in piecing together the Senses of taste and smell The very next day after of the Medical Lake facility. elements of the town’s a recent column appeared; ” If we should find something in history. WWI Vets, auxiliary “ Coal and Mason Supp-' “ Pleez call and see us.” It going “ out on a limb” to Testimonial for Masons p.m. No appointments are necessary. Pharmacists the monkey’s immune system that There is another 1903 lies, FineCarriages, Wag­ is said that this firm say that no place but will l>e available to answer questions about high blood patterns out, we could say with a Case Brothers in the lot Manchester Masons Lodge 73 will meet June 14 at ons, Harnesses and House supplied the blinds for the Mainewouldgiveusatitle . pressure medication. Call 649-9110. fair amount of accuracy that it plus two more Highland 6:30 p.m. at the Masonic Temple, 25 E. Center St., for come and go with the wind Furnishing Goods, ” sent a State Capitol. . like “The Wiscasset applies to humans,” Blakley said. install new Park billheads from B.S. a testimonial dinner honoring Russell W. McClelland, receipted bill for 3 tons of Loreston S. Emmons Newspaper,” darned if a So far, the primate ailment — Carrier — Groceries, Dry past master who received the Pierpont medal for Mr. and Mrs. Fred Thrall were coal $22.50), dated Nov. (at 79 North Main St. in reader didn’t bring In the i more commonly known as E R F — Also: Maude White, chaplain; DEAR DR. LAMB: Goods, Shoes and 23, 1906. Near the bottom distinguished masonic service in April. installed as commander and presi­ Jennie Doggart, guard; Mrs. Ha­ blacks with big names. 1909), put out a 1904 whole front page of “ Park VFW auxiliary to convene has appeared only among the About 15 years ago I lost Rubbers, Flour, Feed and Dinner will be served at 7 p.m. The event is open to dent of the Manchester barracks rold Olds, patriotic conductress, The military allows the was a scribbled apology: invoice with 11 items City Newspaper) (no' colony’s ’’pigtail” monkeys, and my sense of smell and General Merchandise. “ ought to of paid it be­ ail Masons and their families. Call John O. Nelson at Mary E. Leduc of 41 Congress St. will chair the and auxiliary of Veterans of World and Mrs. Olds and Mrs. Doggart, growth of a beard to hide totaling $24.88. There was “ The” ) , hailing from far- • then only about a dozen cases turn taste. At times I can smell One is dated March.10, 646-1318. annual state convention of the VFW ladies auxiliary War I at a recent meeting. Mr. aiW* trustees. the discolored pock marks fore.” Twoyears later the a charge for eight and a o ff Utah state. up each year. and taste for a few days or 1902 and the other Oct. 1, same customer was again Friday through Sunday at Howard Johnson’s Mrs. Thrall are the first husband Harold Osgood, past com­ and scars left by slicing half hours time at 30 cents convention center in Windsor Locks. That is a relatively small for just an hour. ’Then 1904. The 1909 Manchester dilatory and contrite — It is a weekly published^ Supper at Grange and wife team to head the mander, installed Arthur Hoa- Your Health the hair when it has per and another eight and by the firm of Ink, Inc. number when considering that months pass before it Directory indicates that the $30 for 4 tons of stove Mrs. Leduc is a past auxiliary, county, and district organization in five years. gland, vice president; John Ow­ curved back into the skin. a half at 25 cents, proba­ Manchester Grange wil have a scoop supper Friday more than 1,500 monkeys are happens again. Carrier still had the store coal “ ought to bin paid The masthead shows the . president of the organization. She is the state Other officers installed were ens, chaplain; Harold Olds, Lawrence Lamb, M.D. Do you have anything to bly the helper. at 6:30 p.m. at 205 Olcott St. housed at the Medical Lake I went to a doctor and he and also at that time was before.” names of two Manchester sargeant-at-arms, secretary of Unit 102, and were Ida BCruby and Ethel Brown quarter master; Albert Post, suggest for us? Emmons had a wide facility, which was used as a state gave me prednisone pills postmaster for Highland High graduates: Curtis • treasurer of the first district auxiliary. Swanson, vice presidents: Flor­ The oldest billhead was scope. He offered stoves, mental institution for the crimi­ sergeant-at-arms, and Jonathan to take for a week. My DEAR READER: The Park. from R. Joslyn, Mfg. of Willey, a contributing edi- ' Card party at HiH^wn Others serving on the committee are Florence ence Streeter, secretary; Mrs. Law, judge advocate. Osgood, best solution of all is to tinware, hardware, tor, and Sharon Pain, Streeter and Doris Laferriere, and guests Lucille nally insane until transformed into smell and taste comes One of the bills shows a Doors, Windows and Felix Jesanis, treasurer and Mrs. Law, and Hoagland were also grow a beard. ’The condi­ pumps, sinks, lead pipe, typesetting. EAST HARTFORD — HiUstoWn Grange, 617 Hills Hirth, Terry Varney and Laura Freeman. a primate breeding colony in 1%7. back, but dwindles away list of goods bought run­ Blinds, with a place at Albert Post, conductress. inducted as trustees. tion is called pseudofoUi- tarred paper sheathing, St., will have a Monte Carlo Whist card party Friday when I stop Uking the as is the only story about ning over several months, South Manchester. The Willey is also-working ' plained loss of taste or culltls barbae (PFB ) and paper and carpet lining, at 8 p.m. Admission is $1.50. There will be pills. t h e effects of suggesting a slow pay-off. date on it was sometimein on a new golf courfik being smell should have a com­ it is caused by the curied steam heating, tin roof­ refreshments and door prizes. The first time he in­ prednisone 1877 with a notaUon of old built by Jack Nickipus. plete medical examina­ hair turning inward and OTHER MERCHANTS ing, sheet iron and copper jected predonisone into The cells that sense tion. The cause may not be had trouble. G.H. Allen, and new balances plus So m u c h for going out on penetrating the skin. work and general jobbing lim b s . FOCIS plans dance my nose. The next m om -. odors are high in the top of discovered but in a signifi­ There are accompanying ing I was able to smell and the nasal cavity. If you BOLTON — The Fam ily Oriented Childbirth cant number of cases, infections. If the beard is taste. But he said you have an obstruction that there’s an important un­ Information Society will sponsor a dance with Chuck CALL DENISE about an inch long, this can’t take prednisone all blocks air flow to the area Skoog Friday from 8 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. at St. Maurice d e r lying medical doesn’t happen. ’The hair the tim e. I haven’ t you may not perceive problem. Thoughts Parish Center. Call 643-8957. smelled or tasted any­ shaft is then softer be­ odors. I wonder if the DEAR DR. LAMB: I thing for a few months cause of its length. predonisone relieved na­ am a black male and have Emerson’s thesis in his Freudian, Anti-Freudian, ” now. Last week while You are right. Many of not a machine but a man Camp for toddlers 643-2711 sal congestion and trouble ridding myself of classic essay on Friend­ Rogerian, Adlerian, Jun- befriend us and our child­ walking to the store I the promoted products do or woman who cares enabled odors to reach ingrowing hair after shav­ ship js that through “ total gian, whatever — one ren because we pay them The Manchester Recreation Department will suddenly smelled gaso­ not work. I note that the about young people and your odor-detecting cells. ing. I understand this is magnanimity and trust,” to do it. While all the time sponsor a camp for children age 3 to 5 beginning in line from a car but it only American Safety Razor overwhelming fact be­ can share a passion for the YOUR CLASSIFIED AD Why not review your predominantly a problem we ourselves grow to we grow further away July. The camp will run twice a week for two hours for lasted a minute. Co., Shaving System comes to me more clear: subject matter with the problem with a specialist in black males. become more humane from that more normal two weeks. I was hoping you would which is reported by some what counts in therapy is student as two kinds in in ear, nose and throat For years there have and better friends to oth­ and neighborly way of ’The children will have picnic lunches, will meet a be able to tell me what you to be belptel. Many other the quality of confidence love approach one soda REPRESENTATIVE IF YOU problems? If you have a been many so-called ers. In this respect Idoubt good friendship which can clown, and will take a field trip to the Lutz Children’s think is wrong. I tried zinc razors promoted for PFB and trust that the thera­ with two straws. nasal allergy or a me­ cures for this but many of things have changed mean so much. Museum. Each will receive a camp T-shirt. but it didn’t help. are not very effective. pist provides. If the thera­ What is so sad in our chanical obstraction, he the products marketed much since the days he pist cares, then healing The only way to become Sessions run July 5 through July 15; July 19 through DEAR READER: Your The chemical depilato­ times is that we increas­ may be able to improve seemed only to take ad­ wrote in Concord 150 can take place. If not, a friend is to be with July 29, and Aug. 16 through Aug. 26. Call 647-3089. WANT TO: intermittent loss of taste ries, Magic Shave and ingly become dependent things for you. vantage of us, including years ago. another deeply, pro­ and smell is a bit unusual. Surgex, have been satis­ purity of doctrine won’t on such professional lov­ Anyone who has unex­ those advertised by some In ail the modem writ­ matter. foundly, and as com­ factory for some men. ers as psychiatrists, Workshop for teachers ing on psychoanalytic the­ The teacher who moves pletely as it is possible for ory — Freudian, Neo- teachers, clergy and the two lives to touch. a student to scholarship is like, expecting them to The Institute of Local History, Manchester Rev. Arnold F. Westwood Community College, will offer a five-day non-credit Unitarian UnlversalkM history workshop for teachers and youth workers. Reading‘how to’ not enough cinema Society: East Entitled “ Manchester; A Social Studies Labora­ tory,” the course will- present techniques for introducing young peoiple to the town’s industrial BUY IT! . heritage. Included will be a survey of the town’s past, HARTFORD 7:10, 9:30. — Th# Man with AltiniMmi Clnsma — Soy WILLIMANTIC " t fam ily history, oral history and geography. Fiel(l Amm, Somebody 7:30,9:M. “ I®!?* <>*> 7:40, Jlllsen Square Cinema — to cure a case of shyness 9:45. — Blu# Rriura of the JedI (PG) 6:50, , trips and walking tours will be taken. Cinema City — Betrayal Thun«^ (R) 12:45, 2:55, 5, (R) 2:30, 4:30, 7:30, " » ! _ oiS ’ ~ 5J“* P '" " ® " ’ (R> 7, The teacher is Dr. John F. Sutherland, director of J:S0. — Spacohunter 2 Gomes (PG) 7, For From the Madding AOvtnturjs In the Forbidden ; the Institute of Local History. Classes will meet June SELL IT! Cro«rtl:45,4:30,7:10,9:55.— ':45. ; '20 through June 24 from 9; 30 a.m. to noon in Room 107, DEAR DR. BLAKER: I ,Bj?<2hle»s (R) 2:20, 4:20, 3:30,5:10, 7:30,9:20. M M CH R STR R Hartford Road campus. Fee is $34. Call 646-2137 or am shy. My problem is like all this has happened (FG) 1:30,4:15,7,9:45. : 646-2138. - Bast — 9 -Ftoo — Tootsie (PG) 7:15, that I don’t know what to to you — and there is B ^ h le s s (R) 7:15, 9:15. — do about it. nothing you can do to turn ■if®' ‘ FG) 11, DRIVE-INS TRADE IT! I started reading books Ask it around. — Rolders Manchester — Reopens Widowed plan potiuck “ Vith Friday. about shyness several ye­ That just is not true. Snake Rstflghter (R) from . noon. Widows and Widowers of Connecticut wil meet ars ago and they haven’t Dr. Blaker You can take charge of Khan (PG) 9:20. FrwSy.""'***’^ ~ HMT HARTFORD mansfibLd TBunday at 1:30 p.m. at Emanuel Lutheran Church, 60 helped at all. 1 have never KAran Blaker, Ph.D. your life again. Start by -r A Cinema— TMtHe IPO) 7:15, 9:20. . TronfrLox Coiiogo TsHn— FrTdSJ. ~ ■7M -tiSS.440.IS •rhurcji St., for a potiuck luncheon. talked to anyone about my attending a meeting of -SHOWHM.. ---- FIX IT! Peer Rlcbar* Fob * ci­ A meeting and program will follow. A social hour of problem because I would Alanon, a gathering of nema — Tootsie (PG) 7:30, of ^ Dead (R) 9:15. — La be too embarrassed. spouses of alcoholics. Ooleo VHa 7:15. - HMirmMEIIT [450856 fUCBSl ; card games and scrabble is planned. The event is open VRRNON For pertles, diowen, noep- ■ to all widowed persons. Cali 871-8675 How can I overcome my Maybe your son would Sliewcaie Cinema- - Fiash- » . S " f U * * T ToofSit (PG) shyness? drive you there. 7:20,9:30. — E.T. The Extra- tlqns, meellogs. Complete FUSNbilllCE painful to interact, the will help me is my 22-year- 7:15, 9:30. — Gates ot Hell Terrestial (PG) 7,9:10. kitchen facilities. Large anxiety will not kill you. It will help you see the (R) 1,^3, 5:10,^50, lo " - encloMd paiting lot Inqulie; iPIcnIc for singles RENT IT! old son. He is going to — IHOWHMi _ a i DEAR READER: Well light at the end of the Chong Still Start today with the next drive me to the market SROkIn w 12,30, 2:35,4:30, WfltlH^TFORO ... •aitsdsaMs.iMe Manchester Chapter of Parents without Partners reading is a solitary pur­ tunnel. 7 — Gandhi (PO) UthwmlaipNall ...... IIIIIN l person you meet. ’The this week and that will be )“• Fi’evlew: Trad- 24 QOLW AY STREET will have a family picnic Saturday from 1 to 5 p.m. at suit and you cannot over­ challenge is out there in nice. Jng Places (R) s o.m. (with come your shyness by gkJIlfh and Chong Still B ^ h le s s MANCHESTER w n a o u m 114 Lamplighter Drive. Call 643-9382 or 646-8643. the real world, not at Scared of snakes? Smokin’ 10) — Psydio It f R1 o.m ' '=2'.^®:70, 5:30, CaSbalora8P.M. staying alone. il28' 77 Friorn of the HIRE home with the self-help 12:20, 2:3S,4:»!7ru!!9:4A^ YOU CAN RUN AN AD m DEAR READER: Pho­ Phone 643-0S18 You will probably re­ Afraid of flying? Nervous War Games (R) 12,2:30,^35, jfS ’ :40, 7:40, SNOMmari— - books. bias are usually moti­ 4:30,5:30, 7,0,9:40.10:35. Choir tours Britain member that most of the about leaving your home? vated by depression and *4*44H5235iSSS$M8hgsq self-help books on shyness Get help from Dr. Blak- •: The Chancel Choir of South United Methodist FOR FREE! TOO! DEAR DR. BLAKER: I anger. You sound both e.g. "Shyness” by Philip eris newsletter "I f you are : Church has scheduled a tour of the British Isles in am 48 years old and very depressed and angry, de­ Zlmbardo, Ph D., recom­ phobic.” Send 50 cents GET AWAY AND STAY ;July. The 35-voice group will perform at St. Giles FIND IT! unhappy. My life is falling pressed about the direc­ mend exercises where and a stamped, self- 'SMOWnATi—JasS Cathedral in Edinburgh, Scotland; at Ambleside a part and I don’ t know tion your life has>teken addressed envelope to Dr. ..

MANCHESTER HERALD, Tuesday, June 7, 1983 - 15 Kittredge retlalns High School World Jim SPORTS state 1,500 title Page 16 VOL. IL. No. 31 Newspaper of Manchester High School — Space courtesy of The Manchester H erald Eight-run first buries Tigers Student Senior picnic East roars into semifinals By Mike DeCourcv awards Herald Sportswrlter lost by 25 to the ferociously nieski belted a triple and two though, was winning pitcher Mike powerful East squad in the tour­ singles and collected four RBIs; Byam, who started and went six ney's first round. Doug Bond had a pair of hits, drove MERIDEN — Bullard Havens innings before giving way to satisfies aii "They didn't quit. They had in a run and scored twice: Paul reliever Brian McAuley. Coach Jeff Hickey was terse, received nothing to be ashamed of,” said Roy smacked a towering shot to Byam went to the mound with an abrupt, even downright • On Wednesday, May 25, the at the waterfront with the play by East Coach Jim Penders. "They unfriendly. right field for his first of eight-run advantage in his pocket, On Wednesday, June 1, 1983, an Manchester High School class of play being provided by Coo Coo. didn't hang it up. They stayed in the season and Jeff Riggs tripled “ They hit. They’re legitimate. but he pitched beautifully in evening of awards was held at 1983 had its first senior activity, the Donning their pirate’s, hats,. 6 there the whole game.” and singled in five at-bats. That’s all I have to say.” Then he holding the Tigers to sevin hits. Manchester High School to recog­ senior picnic. As in previous years teams of 7 members raced up apd That took a lot of perseverence, It's getting so all this is routine. packed up his beaten ball club and Control, not speed, is the key to a nize outstanding MHS students for the picnic was held at the Frank down the riv^r, with eah heat’s in light of the fact the game was “ We have as fine a high school started back down 1-91 toward well-pitched game. Byam had the 1982-83 school year. Many Davis Resort in Moodus. rules being altered. The final race over some 10 minutes after it hitting team as you're going to see Bridgeport, where the Tigers both. different kinds of awards were Nine buses left MHS shortly had both teams paddling with only began. would have to cope with the around," said Penders. “We're “ Ordinarily I would have kept given to various kinds of students. after 9 a.m. and upon arrival at their arms. Following the canoe Thanks to an errant two-out memory of being beaten 16-6 by hitting the baseball, that's for him in the game, but I'd like to see The evening began with a Frank Davis Resort were greeted race, an obstale course contest was pickoff play by starter and loser sure.” him go again Thursday," Penders by a man named Coo Coo — whose East Catholic in a CIAC State welcome by Principal Jacob held. Many MHS students took Scott Burns, the Eagles stomped It would be easy to say that said. Ludes, after which came the name fits his character — outlined Tournament Class L quarterfinal out eight runs in the top half of the home blue ribbons for their suc­ at Ceppa Field iil Meriden. there's nothing more to the Eagles, Actually, he'd like to see everyb­ announcement of the class of 1983’s the resort’s rules and the day’s first inning and few at Ceppa that they'll be stopped cold when cess in this event. If only they’d realized what ody go again Thursday. valedictorian and salutatorian activities. Also occuring in the afternoon believed there was any purpose in they’d accomplished. and if the high school equivalent of “ I don't know when this is going These were Sean Sullivan and From that point, the over 400 were field events such as two- finishing the final 8’s next pitch order of their finish the previous season, with the in Vernon on May 17. The purpose The American Association of will be to his toughest opponent, Minnesota of the banquet was to allow the leagues alternating choices. The Twins picked Physics Teachers awarded Chris­ Twins owner Calvin Griffith. topher Surh the Outstanding Stu­ studens an opportunity to express Foster arts head first following their 60-102 mark in 1982. The Annually undermined by the major league’s their appreciation to their cooper- selection order for the secondary phase was dent in Physics prize. most feeble pitching staff, the Twins opened Four students received recogni­ ating employers by having them as ■The Industrial Education hall is have arisen. determined by lots drawn by the league their guests for the evening. visited by only a select group of at Fenway Park Monday s regular phase of the summer free presidents. tion for their “ Hire the Handi- He says even though the past two agent draft by selecting the hard-throwing junior Further appreciation was ex­ people at MHS. These students are In the special draft, the Mets selected pitcher years have been very trying on the By Fred McMane The change, voted Monday, made right-hander from Mt. Vernon (Ohio) Nazarene Ca| Schiraldi of the University of Texas and the Besterfieid, Ron Berlin, Kristen pressed by awarding certificates privy to what is soon to be one of the students, next year they will Elsewhere in the American College. to all cooperating employers pres­ M st equipped shops in all of UPI Sports Writer LeRoux, a trainer on the 1967 picked Wichita State out­ Carlson, and Scott Pinckney definitely benefit from the League, Milwaukee outslugged ent. This was the students’ way of Connecticut. The man leading that Boston championship team, the The Twins also owned the No. 1 selection in the fielder Russell Morman. Schiraldi won his 13th Heidi Suilivan and Meg Harvev improvements. California 9-7, New York defeated saying thanks for having been department Is Neil Foster They say a baseball team is only newly created managing general seconda^ phase — for players drafted pre­ game and lowered his ERA to 1.74 Friday, received t^ie Jeanne Low Memor­ Seattle 6-2 and Baltimore topped viously but not signed — and they chose Arizona ial Book Award. employed during the school year Foster has taught 13 years and a reflection of its management, so partner. blanking James Madison 12-0 in the Longhorns' Toronto 8-1 in a game called in the State outfielder Oddibe McDowell, who led the and for having been given an ?®® ^ n department head for Foster received both his bache­ it was no surprise that the Boston "The whole thing stinks,” Sulli­ College World Series opener. lor of science degree, and his Red Sox looked like a bunch of van said. sixth inning because of rain. Sun Devils into the College World Series by i.tanguage awdius went to opportunity to fulfill their work Industrial Education three years Cincinnati, selecting second in the regular master s degree from Central - displaced persons Monday night.. So did the Red Sox, who played Oakland at Cleveland was post­ blastuig seven homers and knocking in 50 runs in Joanne inompson aiiu Carinen requirements for their COEP Though most of his time is stili 63 games. phase,.chose shortstop Curt Stillwell, a switch- courses. Connecticut State CoUege. He is Early Monday the long- simmer­ like a bunch of sandlotters in losing poned because of rain. Bonacorsi, who received the hf*l!P” i*** teaching electronics, hitter from Thousand Oaks (Calif.) High School qualified to teach an y of the ing internal squabbles in the Red to the Detroit Tigers, 11-6. The Red There were no games scheduled Under the stem hand of Griffith, the Twins have Jeanne Low Awards forexcellance On this occasion awards were l i f J l ™®P®"**We for keeping who batted .552 this spring. The Reds announced various Industrial ArU subjects Sox’ front office surfaced when Sox made three errors, including in the National League. developed a reputation for frugality and it’s in French. Excellance in German given to outstanding students by Stillwell had signed less than 30 minutes after he their teachers, and scholarships offered at MHS. Usually, however, Edmund G. “Buddy” LeRoux two that led to runs, and their best questionable whether the club will offer Belcher a was chosen. went to Meg Harvey and Lisa sssxsr™' Brewers 9, Angels 7 six-figure signing bonus, usuaily tendered to the teachers have a specialty which seized control of the team and pitcher. Bob Stanley, was tagged Gates. Sean Sullivan and Sven were given to some students by Ws duUes, which none Texas picked Rider College shortstop Jeff they invariable will teach. He has ousted his one-time friend and for seven runs and seven hits in 1 Paul Molitor went4-for-4, includ­ No. 1 player selected. Roth received awards for the their cooperating employers. ,^**®'‘ ‘•epartment heads ing a pair of doubles and a homer, veteran umpire h®ld y®rlous other industrial jobs .partner, Haywood Sullivan, as 2-3 innings. '1,"* *]®PPy for the Twins and I ’m happy for Consulate General of the Federal Pam 3 e rry and Dean Page u m to spark the Brewers to victory. Bill Kunkel, the New York Mets tabbed third S *^i''®.^‘^ “»tingofrenova- but his prim ary work, he feels, is general manager. LeRoux then “ I guess I fell out of my tree,” whA u Belcher, a 6-foot-3, 210-pound junior Republic of Germany for excel­ served as the master and mistress tiona in the entire industrial Bob McClure, 2-7, went 7 1-3 baseman Eddie Williams of Hoover High School teaching, and he loves doing It. He named Dick O’Connell to replace said Stanley, whose earned run who struck out 93 batters in 66 innings this spring. lance in German. of ceremonies. Among the guests innings for the victory with Tom in San Diego and Oakland chose pitcher Stan enjoys his time at MHS and hopes Sullivan as general manager. average soared from 1.04 to 1.88. ®T,Pr®‘fy 8ood indication the last few days Hilton of Bavlnr were Jim Kennedy, Manchester with the Tellmann pitching the last 1 2-3 school superintendent, Jacob to continue there. LeRoux announced at a news “ Things have been going pretty that the Twins wou Id draft me No. 1.1 knn-v they ’ll Next came awards for outstand­ re fln irtu 2 'V "? i"’u""‘* de®**"® the innings for his fifth save. Ron Ludes III, MHS principal, Wilson reflnishing of alLthe shops. In the future, Foster expects hi. .conference that the team’s eight good. Tonight it didn’t.” ®™Tu® honest attempt to sign m e.” for the m®®'* ® obtained from the White Sox ing students in computer science XU ^ Jackson hit a grand slam for d e p a r^ e n t to grow, even thougl , Jimited partners, upset by the Domininlf"'".*!?^ Floyd Bannister and chose Old These honors went to James ueakin. assistant superintendent, wofk® In part with I'he attendance was 23,961, with California and Bobby Grich and rounds*oMhi.°" "'®,®‘ ‘"8 began with the.first two the school s population is declfii- ^bickering in the front office be- S X r L i k ‘ q'’® 'J® ''''y,®® " Angeles took Kurien, Kathy Szarek. and Steven Gerry Fitzgibbons. asistant super­ Vvu ” "®®’ '* * “ ‘® the supervi­ all net proceeds going to the Tony Bob Boone added solo homers. dubs^whiei^^ ‘’*’®®®’ ® ®P®®‘®‘ ‘*''®B for tag. He said because of the grea' • tween LeRoux and Sullivan- Yaw- chniL Sonberg of Wichita State, Boston CQlIins. Kenneth Gagnon won the intendent, and Bruce Dardick, sor of the renovations. Every day C. Fund. The fund is set up to Orioles 8, Blue Jays 1 thmLlT » ®‘ JyP® "®” '■®'"“"8 players State Vocational Education improvements that are takini' key, had voted to change the pitcher William annual Science Fair award. he meets with Lawrence and defray hospital bills for former At Baltimore, Cal Ripken hit a rec3ari^Dhil®' ‘be entire Department. place, more and more students wll' partnership agreement which had .u The remainder of the rejKular ‘ ^® ‘'*®'^ ' ' “ fit Mets, on a choice Mr. Nell Foster **1.® P*^**’«®s they are Boston slugger Tony Conigliaro two-run homer and Leo Hernandez be enrolling. been in effect since they bought the r o® f °" ‘l|*cted Tuesday and Wednesday Fal^ponp*^ j'll®t'ta for the signing of Pete "taking, and any problems that who suffered a heart attack in Jan' cracked a three-run shot to lead the in 1978 for about $15 million. In the regular phase, teams selected in reverse —Jeff&rgida team Orioles to victory. ^tanTy Je'?[ereon.®"‘ '’ “ "®- ®“ ‘ “ ®'‘*®>' I 1« — MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday, June 7, 1983 MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday, June 7, 1983 - 17 Where do you stand? NHL dilemma continues Scoreboard S6 Rocky Mount, N.C. 52, St. Louis. Tennis is now my main outlet for fun and Gory Green, ss, Pittsburgh. S3, Bal­ Blues tossed back timore, Michael Conley, p, Hamilton, exercise as it has been for a number of years since Softball Little League Ohio. 54, Milwaukee, Glenn Braggs, of. I decided first to end a long basketball officiating Herald Son Bernardino, Collf. career of 25 years and then a 30-year tenure as a MONTREAL (UPI) - The Na­ The comglomerate tendered the first-round pick to Hartford last baseball umpire. tional Hockey League didn’t hesi­ franchise to the league Friday to year for aU-star defenseman Maiic TONlbHT'S OAMIS Secondary Phase Angle Amarican First Round Now in semi-retirement I try to get out onto the tate when the St. Louis Blues dispose of as it wished. It was Howe, the New York Islanders, w nilUfl .•'y? V**— " «h «d ie n 1, Minnesota, Oddibe McDowell, of, ^ l l s s n vt. Cherrene's, 7:38— Pltts3 courts three or four times a week if there are any Earl Yost, franchise was thrown in its lap — speculated NHL scouting director who hold third overall pick from a ■Todd Cox hurled a no-hItter last Hollywood, Flo. 2, Son Francisco, Robert playing opponents like Mai Darling, still a master the league tossed the Blues right Jim Gregory would make draft previous trade with the Colorado frl6oy nlgM at Waddell Field as Thompson, ss. West Polm Beach, Fla. 3, -Sports Editor Fitieereld''*' •=<*“ Modern Janitorial upended Bob's Gulf Baltimore, RIchord Rice, p, Lontono, with a racquet in his hand. into the hands of the NHL owners. selections for the club while the Rockies; and the Detroit Red by a 131 count. Flo. 4, Pittsburgh, Tony Blosuccl, p, I’ve been asked that kind of a player I would The NHL board of governors was league sorted out the Blues owner­ Wings, who have fourth choice, all ^jwtrada vt. Highland, 3 - Pltige- Mlromor, Flo. 5, Toronto, Otis Green, classify myself. were rumored to have offered Miami. 4, Chicago Cubs, Gary Pormen- scheduled to meet ti^ay at 10 a.m.' ship problems. M H v m vt. Allied,» - Poeoni ter, p, Bennington, Vt. 7, Oakland, The answer has always been, Class B among EDT to discuss the Blues situation Blues chief scout Dennis Ball deals for the first overall pick. M CC Vett Vt. Hlehlonder, 4— Nike Inlernatlenal Robert Nelson, 1b, So. Pasadena, Calif. 8, playground players and Class C among private The first overall choice this year T.*»» « Ig: Club, 7:30— Nike * from a far more aggressive said he had not yet received word ^e n g rv Tl w vt. Talogo, 3 - Charter Ansaldl's won Its second In a row, 37, St. Louis, Tom Mauch, of, Covina, (iailf. club players, the caliber, as a rule, of a higher it was better than nothing. from Ralston Purina whether to means a pick of two U.S.- bom over the Lawyers Monday night at 9, NY Yankees, Bradley Arnsberg, p, perspective than envisioned when Medford, Ore. 10, Montreal, Mark grade among the latter. The scores were close, 7-S, 4-6, 7-6, but I found participate in the draft. players considered among the vt. JC ’t Blue, 3 — Robertten Leber Field. John Carlin singled and the four-day NHL annual meetings CCenee vt. Purdy’t, *— K e e n^ doubled, drivingfIngiL In fwo ______runs In thesixth Tindall, p, Dayton, Ohio. 11, Boston, However, on trips around New England and out that I had advanced into another round. began Sunday. most talented available in recent to win It for M Ansoldl'3 Vic Torres Randall Byers, ot, Bridgeton, N.J. 12, Florida in particular, where tennis facilities are I didn’t win the tourney, but I reached the The NHL announced Monday it While the governors talked, drafts — centers Pat LaFontaine added a single and homer. Brvon Philadelphia, David HInnrIchs, p, Plano, Charter Oak Monroe singled and tripled to pace the Texas. 13, Chicago White Sox, Michael readily available. I've found that most players I semifinals, the only Class C player. would not pick players for the there were unconfirmed rumors of of Detroit and Brian Lawton of . Young, p. Rancho Polos Verdes, Ctallt. have run up against have a much higher opinion 33 Lawvers. Blues in its draft Wednesday of 252 a major trade for Minnesota’s first Mount St. Charles High Schodl i*'* J'"* fre e Innlnm, 14, Son Diego, Philip Reid, ss, Sherman, of their ability. near Boston. Bonk and Trutt over- Texas. 15, California, Byron Kemme- Whafs my line amateur players from Canadian draft choice. Amarican rllng, For example, I checked into a private club in junior teams, U.S. high schools and Minnesota general manager Lou p, Arcadia, Texas. 14, NY Mets, Robert In the only trade of the day, the Hawaii and sought out a match with anyone. The About a decade ago, when my wife was my colleges and European clubs. Nanne holds the Pittsburgh Pen­ TomottettI, Bruce Canty and Cliff Behind the no-hIt pitching of Rob Grondstoff, 3b, Huntington Beach, Calif. Minnesoja North Stars, who iJoitett had three hitt and Cralo Stanford, American Legion blanked 17, Detroit, Glenn Simmons, p, FIshkIII, pro asked what caliber of player I was. The regular partner in mixed doubles, we were The league also called a board of guins first overall draft choice Arm y B Navy, 11-0, at Waddell Field. swapped 25-year-old Steve Chris­ Bon NIcholton two apiece N.Y. 18, Atlanta, Kevin Williamson, p, answer was as explained above. playing at a Cape Cod resort. We had finished our governors meeting for June 13 in from a trade last year that sent Jg;BBT. Fourplayert hlttafelyforthe Stanford twirled his second n3hltter In Tucson, ArIz. 19, Cleveland, Richard toff to Calgary last season, got him os many outings. Dom Laurinitls and "All we have looking for matches are Class A, match, which was against, by coincidence, a Chicago to discuss legal action, Anders Hakansson, Ron Meighan Belli, p, Pacifica, Collf. X , Cincinnati, back from the Flames with Cal­ In a make-up tilt, Tierney's outlatted Stanford collected two hits apiece. Robert Dibble, p, Southington, Conn. 21, club tournament players. If you would like to hit a couple from Glastonbury. against Ralston Purina, owners of and the North Stars’ first draft Stanford fanned 14 and walked three. gary’s se(x>nd- round draft choice i i^ovy, 1310. Jim McAuley ond Milwaukee, Ricardo Abbott, ss. Hunting- few I guess I could arrange a match,” he I was anxious to continue and as we awaited a the Blues who have launched a $63 choice to Pittsburgh for George B rlo n ^ lg le y each had three hItt, Jack ton Beach, Collf. 22, Houston, Paul explained. court opening, another couple sat near us and we million suit against the league for Ferguson and the Penguins first in either 1983 or 1984 in exchange Williams, of, Bronx, N.Y. 23, Seattle, ond Ron Laniano added two Jose Rodlles, p, Houston. 24, Los I accepted. The only name on the Class C list. struck up a conversation. blocking the sale and transfer of pick. for center Mike Eaves and minor- National league defenseman Keith Hanson. hitt apiece for TIerney't. Sam HarrI- Angeles, Jon Leake, 3b, Sacramento, The guy I played was dressed to kill, The woman was a knockout, to say the least. It the club to Saskatoon a month ago. Philadelphia, which traded its ton timmed three hitt and Bruce Morlarty Bros, topped Carter Chev­ Collf. 25, Kansas City, John Nero, of, well-tanned with a graphite racquet he won in a was obvious that she was in the money, from the •*oo Chetelot rolet, 8-4, at Buckley Field. Ryan Barry Yorbo Linda, Collf. 24, Texas, Romon tourney. As we warmed up I knew he was a ter ABN Bave Drench two apiece fanned 14 and Jeff Levitt hodthreehlts, Rosthenhausler, ss, Tucson, Ariz. Cadillac that she drove and parked next to me. Including a bases-loaded triple, to pace Second Round hard-hitter with a biillet-like serve, when it went The diamonds she wore and the tennis outfit the Gas Housers. David Rlsley played 27, Minnesota, Henry Gonzalez, p, in, then a marshmallow for a second. came from the most expensive line available. r / n brief well defensively for the winners. Tony Pomono, Calif. X , San Francisco, Nika Kastauskas and Dave Golos hit well Stephen Eager, c, Orem, Utah. 29, We finally started our play and after losing the She told us, she belonged to ad exclusive golf Looking back at the local sports scene Baltimore, Robert MllackI, p. first two games, I decided to try and throw off his Nelt Johnson Insurance topped Flo's and Craig PardI played well defen­ and tennis club in Washington, D.C., not coaches. Cost is $40 per athlete for the four-day JyOke Dect^otlno, 35, In a battle for sively for Carter'3 Lake game with some junk shots. He got so Connecticut, and listed the players she has been Hovosue City, Ariz. X , Pittsburgh, Holik gets promotion session. Checks should be made payable to the hnS* *'*?!•*• Ban Morshall The West Side Rec Basketball Champs Frey, Joe Beilis, Claren<» Lupien. Front James Eurton, c. Son (tabriel, Calif. 31, exasperated chasing down the angled drop shots with, Billie Jean King, Virginia Wade, Bobby hod fhree hits, Joe ErordI a two-run Manchester Athletic Club and forwarded to 23 Iramer and double and Reggie Frottor- Int. Farm back in the 1938-39 season were the Toronto, Michael Clorkln, p, St. Paul, that he lost his effective game completely and I Riggs, Jack Kramer, Pancho Gonzales. "Former Manchester High football coach Jack CampHeld Rd., Manchester, 06040. Applications row: Tom Martin, Charlie Beilis, Ed Minn. 32, Chicago Cubs, Carlton took the set, 6-2, as well as the next two by the SH*’’ 'O'" *•' Johnson. Ansaldl's outlasted the Lawyers, Hamilton, p, Chicago Heights, III. 33, Really an impressive list. HoUk has been named assistant varsity football may be obtained from gym teachers or at the •O'*’ collected 1311, at Verplanck. Andy Solo fanned Vikings. Team members were (l-r) Back Fraher, Joe Toman. two hits for 32 Flo's. Oakland, Mork Bauer, p, Snelllng, Calif. same scores. As we watch the competition, waiting, she said coach and instruc­ MCC Athletic Office. 10 In going the distance for 7-3 row; Ray Zemanek, Ed Fitzgerald, Henry 36 St. Louis, Jack Hein, p, Danville, III. Ansaldl's. Mott Epstein and Joe S3 "Next time we play. I'll bring a can of balls. I her husband was one of the most successful tor in physical edu­ Signups for Bolton youth soccer play will be X , NY Yankees, William Fulton, p, couldn't get used to yours,” he said. That was just Rac rube hit well and Katie ButkowskI and Pittsburgh. 34, Philadelphia, Mi­ lawyers in Washington and her children were at cation at Springfield Wednesday through Friday evenings from 68 Todd Emerson starred defensively for chael one of several excuses he used for losing. an exclusive prep school but currently were at a College, it has been Coble fumed back Nelson the winners. Darren Goodard pitched •••••••••••••••••••••a Hennemon, p, Festus, Mo. 37, Chicago o’clock and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 o’clock at well, O.J. Cromwell and Mike Dore Tigors11,RodSox6 The results were the same the next time we summer camp. announced. Holik is . Herrick Park. The program is intended for those Frelghtway, 133, at Nike Field. Bob Yankaes6,Marlners2 White Sox, Troy Thomas, of, Pomona, played...with his balls. Palozle had three hits and Tom each hod two hits and Dennis Joyner Calif. X , San Diego, Ted Kockenm^ster, My wife and I were really getting a little bored a former all-New in grades two thru eight. For further information, » o y o " 0 ' Len Riccio, Blit Tremko and Tim Prewitt played well defen­ p, E. North Port, N.J. X , California, I also ran into a situation at Mt. Snow. sively for 2-7 Lawyers. DETROIT BOSTON SEATTLE NEW YORK with all the hot air we were being subjected to. England lineman at contact Claude Ruel, 6433828. Motke two apiece tor Basebaii abrhM obrhM Alelandro Dloz, c, Miami. 40, NY Mets, " We have only Class A players here. Come back Pprtw. AAoc (Jroy and Sam Worona ObrhM abrhM Kenneth Reed, p, Laurence, Ohio. 41, “ By the way,” she asked me, “ what I did for a Trinity College. He eoch had two hits for Nelson's. Whltakr 2b 5 2 4 2 Remy 2b 4 110 SHndrsn If 3 0 1 0 Rndiph 2b 4 1 2 0 tonight and you might get a court after 9 o’clock or Cabell 1b 5 14 2 Evans rf 5 2 2 Detroit, Scott Baker, p. Mesa, Ariz. 4% living.” has served as a National Farm 1 RNetson If 0 0 0 0 Griffey cf 3 1 2 0 Atlanta, Timothy Englund, p, Waxoho- the women may need a fourth for doubles at 4 Texas wins thriller Herndon If 4 0 0 1 Rice If 5 12 0 Allen 3b 3 0 10 Winfield If 3 0 0 1 Quick-thinking, my wife answered, “ He’s a part-time assistant Morlarty Bros, trimmed Auto Trim B ' Baaoball standings Parrish dh 5 0 0 0 Armas cf 3 111 chle, Texas. 43, Cincinnati, Gregg o'clock,” the pro said. WamaiTa Rac Point, 137, at Bowers Field. John OHndrs cf 3 0 1 1 Gamble dh 4 l l o Schifflebein, of, Topeka, Kon. 44, garbage collector.” coach at Springfield Jamie Doughty went to junior college in Wilson rf 4 2 3 0 B oim 3b 3 0 3 1 Zlsk dh 2 0 0 0 Kemp rf 4 1 1 3 No thanks. BBJ Arto IteiMir turned bock Renn's Coleman, Scott Schilling and Toby WockntSs c 5 1 1 0 Ystrzm dh 2 0 1 1 Milwaukee, Alexander Madrid, p. Mesa,. The woman was taken back. She nearly fell off for three years, Oklahoma and seemed set to continue his Sloan ployedWell forM orlorty'L Steve Amarican League JCruz dh 110 0 Wynegor c 4 0 1 0 Ariz. 45, Houston, Scott Sempler, ss, I had a free day and decided to hang arouAd the Tavern, 9-5, at Charter Oak Field. Sue East Lemon cf 2 0 0 0 Ntdiols dh 2 0 1 0 Cmens rf 4 0 0 0 Nettles 3b 4 2 3 2 the bench. She had never played a garbage coaching both the collegiate baseball career at Oklahoma State. M fy o o htte a three-run homer and Copeland doubled and tripled and Gibson cf 2 12 1 Stapletn 1b4 0 0 1 Bloomtield, N.J. 46 Seattle, Den­ courts, hoping for a no-show. The caliber of Larry MIclette pitched well for A TB P . » * *- •’C*- OB Edier 1b 4 0 0 0 Smalley 1b 3 0 1 0 nis collector! defensive ends and But no sooner did Doughty look to be headed for Cindy Dlshow, Laurie Gifford and Baltimore 30 23 .544 — Brookns 3b 5 3 3 0 Newman c 3 0 0 0 Mercado c 4 0 2 1 Robrtsn ss 4 0 0 0 players were in my, class, or below, in my opinion. Darlene Stevens three hits apiece for Trmmll ss 3 1 1 3 Miller ph 10 0 0 Carter, of, Jackson, Miss. 47, Los I’ve lost as many matches away from home as I. offensive line. He the Cowboys, he was no Sooner, period. The Boston 28 23 .549 I TCruz ss 3 0 0 0 Angeles, Terence Guzman, p, Richmond, Finally, there was an opening, a no-show for the winners. Liz Shea and Bonnie Rookioa Toronto 28 23 .549 I Gedmon c 0 0 0 0 Romos 2b 3 1 1 0 have won but I've found that most players will now concen­ ■nfielder chose to attend Texas, and Oklahoma Thom m slapped fhree and two hits Hoffmn ss 4 1 1 1 Va. 48, Konsos City, Robert Vodvarka, p. match against a young, blond-haired fellow with a respectively for Renn's. Milwaukee 24 24 .520 2Vi T o M 30 2 4 2 Totals 31 4 II 4 Upland, Callt. 49, Texas, Jody Reed, ss, encountered consider theniselves a notch or two trate on the defen­ State now wishes he had decided otherwise. Blue Joys topped the Blue Bombers, New York 27 25 .519 2Vi Totals 40 11 18 9 Totals 34 8 12 4 *•***• 000 0110110-2 Brandon, Fla. shirt that was lettered U.S. Open 1982. better than they really are. sive secondary. Doughty doubled to right center field in the 11th 11-5, at Center Springs Pork. Dove Detroit 24 25 .510 3 Detroit 1021M 258-11 New York OOI OOO OSx— 4 He was reluctant to play against an old guy but What’s wrong with being Class B or Class C? Indy Rohrback and Chris Llebler each hod Cleveland 23 28 .451 4 Bnton 103M1M1— 4 Gome-WInnlng RBI— Kemp (5). "Jack knows the inning, scoring Mike Trent with the winning run three hits and Ryan McGee and Mott w#st Gomewlnnlng RBI— Whitaker (2). ^ V o n d e Berg. DP— Seattle 1. LOB— program well,” said and leading the top-ranked Longhorns to a 35 Zembrpwskl's ripped 25 hits en route Willis played well defensively for the California 30 23 .544 ______E— Stapleton, Boggs, Hoffman. DP— Seattle 5, New York 4. 2B— Mercado, Boston 1. LOB— Detroit 4, Boston 10.2B— Springfield Coach College World Series victory ,over Oklahoma te o 1310 decision over Pumpernickel Blue Jays. Robbie Cole and Eddie Oakland 24 24 .500 3Vi RontaS, Smalley. 3B— O. Henderson. HR Pub crt Fitzgerald. Jim LoPenta hod PInkIn hit well and Dawn Carlin ployed Kansas City 23 24 .489 4 Whitaker, Armas, Boggs, Evans. HR— «7>-KSTP »)• SB— J. Cruz Howard Vandersea. State in a second-round winner’s bracket . *"*t Bulouclus, Kevin well defensively for fhe Bombers. Toxos 24 24 .480 4'/i Cabell (1), Evans (8), Hoffman (1), (33). S—-Allen, Griffey. SF— D. Hender­ Transactions Roy, Prior set MHS marks “ He has done an contest...The Cleveland Indians have traded for O Brien, Brian Faust and Peter Barto- Chicago 24 27 .471 5 Whitaker (4), Trammell (3). SB— son, Winfield. outstanding job re­ ^ a three apiece and Mike Hull, Jeff Minnesota 23 31 .424 7Vi Brookens (4), Remy (4). S— Trammell, - ■_ IP H RERBBSO ••aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Jack Holik the power they have sorely lacked this season, Peck and Fred Leroy two apiece for Amarican Farm Seattle 23 33 .411 SVz Boggs. SF— Herndon, Stapleton, Ar­ gggffM cruiting and he obtaining slugger Gorman Thomas from the ifn 'tvp w s k rL Bulouclus homered. Monday's Results mas. POfty 7 7 110 3 Rich Busick smacked four hits, Al Completing o suspended contest, Oakland at Cleveland, ppd., rain ^ „ IP H RRRBBSO Stanton 0 1110 0 Baseball brings an extensive background and fine Milwaukee Brewers for outfielder Rick Manning Detroit knowledge of the game.” Holik served as head Andvson three and Greg Holmes, Rich A m erican Legion outlasted Eighth Detroit 11, Boston 4 Vande Berg(LI-2) 0 o 1 l o 0 Baltimore — Recalled pitcher Allan and left-handed pitcher Rick Waits. M lek^lcz, Pete Gourley and Mike District, 2320, at Valley St. Field. Baltimore 8, Toronto 1, called In 4th Rozemo 21-3 7 4 4 ) 1 Cgudlll 23 3 3 3 0 0 Ramirez from Rochester affiliate ot 1,500 title to Kittredge coach at his alma niater, Manchester High, four Cleveland also got pitcher Jami^ Easterly and Zotta two apiece for Pub. Zachary Allarre was the winning Inn. Berngr (W 2-0) 3 2-3 2 1 1 2 4 Thomas 13 0 0 0 1 1 International League. years in which his overall record was 331. His minor league pitcher Ernie Camacho in Mon­ Over at Robertson Pork, Lathrop pitcher. MlchoellneVIvIgote had three - New York 4, Seattle 2 Bailey 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 New Yoik Houston — Reactivated pitcher Nolan Insurance toppled Farr's, 7-4, with a hits and Brian O'Moro three RBI for Mllwoukee9, Calltornla7 Lopez (S 8) 21-331103 Guidry (W 83) 9 4 2 2 2 7 Rvan from 21-dov disabled list; placed high mark was 1978 when the SilkTowners posted day’s trade. “ We’re delighted to have Gorman Boston 8:52.38 shattered the Manchester run In the eighth Inning. Dave Bldwell Legion. Kevin Dukett and John Tuesday's Games Stanton pitched to 1 bolter In 8th; pitcher Mike Madden on 21-dav disabled WILLIMANTIC - East Cathol­ a 6-4 record. He stepped down following the '79 Thomas,” said Indians’ president Gabe Paul. homered and singled twice, driving In Thompson were each 3for-4 and Rick (All Times EDT) Oledo 4 1-3 8 4 3 1 2 Vande Berg pitched to 1 batter In 8th. list. High mark. Bob Dussault placed Aponte 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 ic's Steve Kittredge successfully season in which Manchester went 37. “ We hate to lose Rick Manning but our need for ttk» winning run, and Mike Calottl Botticello had fhree doubles for Milwaukee (Caldwell 5-4) at Baltimore T — 2:44. A— 13444. Milwaukee — Traded center fielder fourth in the 1,500 with a 4:05.87 w d M two hits for Lathrop. Ken District. (D. Martinez 3-9), 7:35 p.m. Stanley (L 43) 126 7 7 4 0 2 (vornrtan Thomas and pitchers Jamie defended his state Class L cham­ home-run power dictated the move.” Thomas, 32, Johnson 1 13 3 0 0 1 2 and Don Hickey grabbed an eighth R i^ck hod tour hlt3 Greg Fellows In the regular contest. District Detroit (Wilcox 5-4) at Boston (Tudor Easterly and Ernie Camacho to pionship in the l,S06-meter run has averaged 35 home runs and 98 RBI during the Mike Sheehan and Joe Cappuccio turned the tables on Legion, 135. 3 ^ , 7:35 p.m. T-3;01. A— 23,941. Baaebaii dralt Clevelond for center fielder Rick Monday at Windham High with a place in the javelin with a toss of three each and Ken Motor, Mark Winning pitcher Ned Moulton fanned Cleveland (Blvleven 4-4) at New York Manning and pitcher Rick Walts. Track clinics planned past five seasons and played a key role in the Snyder and Roy Frederickson two 12. Beth Romonewlcz hod three RBI (RIghettI 7-2), 8 p.m. Philadelphia — Released out­ 3:59.4 clocking that bested nearest 164 feet. At New York, June4 The Class L girls meet became a Brewers pennant drive last year. He has hit only apiece for Farr's, who outhlf the and Thompson and Dukeft drove In two Minnesota (Schrom 44» at KonsosCIty BrBwars9,Angola7 fielder rival Brian Bailey of Wilbur Cross The Manchester Community College New .183 so far this season, but has five homers- winners by a 2313 count. apiece. Vlvlgote hod two doubles to (Renko 4-4), 8:35 p.m. Regular Phase Bobby Mollnaro. by a full six seconds. personal showplace for Manches­ IMice Legion. Texos (Honeycutt 7-3) at Seattle F ln l Round Toronto — Placed outfielder Dave England Relayk and the Manchester Athletic . ..For Milwaukee Brewer reliever Rollie Fingers, 1, Minnesota, Tim Belcher, p, Sparta, East finished with 30 points as a ter’s Sandy Prior. She won the (Stoddard 46), 10:35 p.m. CALIFORNIA MILWAUKEE Collins on the 15-dav supplemental Cluh are co-sponsoring track and field clinics for who has not pitched in a regular season game Nartharn Toronto ((Jott 2-4) at Oakland (Norris ^ , ObrhM ObrhM Ohio. 2, CIndnnatl, , ss. disabled list; purchased pitcher Stan team in the class championship, discus with a throw of 115-8 that Thousand Oaks, Calif. 3, Texas, Jeffrey hoys and girls 1314 from June 1320 at since last Sept. 2, it was another bitter setbackin Jim 's Arco banged out IS hits In Its 4-5), 10:35 p.m. Corew lb 4 0 10 Molltor 3b 4 3 4 3 Clarke from Knoxville of the Southern dislodged the school record from Chicago (Dotson 5-5) at Collfornla Foil ss 4 1 1 0 Yount ss 4 1 1 2 Kunkel, ss, Leonardo, N.J. 4, NY Mets, League; recalled catcher Jay Schroeder tying the Eagles for fifth place with Manchester High’s Pete Wigren Track. The ^ 2 romp over North United Methodist Eddie Williams, 3b, Son Diego. 5, its previous owner, who was also his attempt to return to the playing field. The at Robertson Pork. Rich Duschene and (Zohn 5-3), 10:35 p.m. Adorns ss 0 0 0 0 Cooper' 1b 5 12 1 from Kinston of the Carolina Leagueand Wilbur Cross and Lee. Killingly purpose of the clinic is to introduce youngsters to Wednesday's Games Oakland, Stan Hilton, p, Hurst, Texas. 4, designated him for assignment. named Sandy Prior. Brewers said Monday night Fingers needs Leo Maheux each roped three hits and Sconirs ph I 0 1 0 SImmns dh 5 1 2 I Chicago Cubs, Jocfcle Davidson, p, won the title with 56 points. track and field in a positive manner. Basic Rick SlecowskI, Tom Vecsev, Bob Texas at Seattle, night ReJcksn rf 4 I 1 0 Brouhrd pr 0 0 0 0 Football Though they didn't earn any surgery to remove a bone spur on his right elbow. Toronto ot Oakland OeCIncs 3b 4 1 10 Ogllvle If 5 0 0 0 Evermon, Texm. 7, Seattle, Darrel CIndnnatl — Signed center Dave Kittred^je’s time in the 1,500 was instruction in the events will be offered. Watts and Wayne Thibodeau two Soccer Akerfelds, p, Lakewood, Cota. 8, Houston, more points, the Manchester girls The club said Fingers, 36, who won the American apiece for Jim's. Wayne Sfeely and Chlcogo at Californio, night Lynn cf 3 1 1 1 Moore rf 4 0 10 Rlmlngton of Nebraska. his best of the season but was more Instraction will be headed by George Suitor, Minnesota at Konsos City, night Robert Wine, c,9 Norristown, Po. 9, ITenver — Signed running backs also got fine performances from League Cy Young and Most Valuable Player Dave TImbrell hod three and two RJcksn dh 3 1 1 4 (tantner 2b 4 0 2 2 Toronto, Matthew Stork, c, Hodenda than three seconds slower than his Manchester High track and cross country coach, safeties respectively for Methodist. Milwaukee at Baltimore, night Grich 2b 4 111 Yost c 5 12 0 Sammy Winder and Rick Porros to a Mary MuUaney and Maureen awards in 1981, will have the operation Friday at Cleveland at New York, night Heights, Collf. 10. Son Diego, Roymond series of one-year contracts. winning time at the 1982 state and all activities will be supervised by high school Poo Woo Benlouz If 4 0 10 Edwrds cf 3 2 2 0 Hayward, p, Enid, Okta. 11, Clevelond, Lacey . MuUaney leaped 15-4 in the Centinela Hospital in Inglewood, Calif. Detroit at Boston, night Boone c 4 111 New Orleans — Signed defensive meet. In contrast, Kittredge ran a Waat Sida llling— Meteors 1 (Don Roberts), .Totals 35 7 10 7 Totals 39 9 14 9 David Clork, of, Tupelo, Miss. 1Z lineman Gary Lewis, q fourth round 1:57.4 in the 800 and finished third long jump, while Lacey ran an Sharks 0 (M ark RusconI ployed well). NATIONAL LEAG UE CMItemla M10N 048W Pittsburgh, Ronald DeLuccht, of, Mor- selection. behind Platt’s Jerry Ridhardson, 11:30 in the 3,000-meter run. Both Word Monutectuflng was outhit by Tigers 4 (Brian Kellogg 4, Brian East Milwaukee 108 285 lO x -d ogo, Phllodelphta — Signed linebacker dn 11-8 count but hod what counted ter Burke, Jacob Odell), Jaguars 0 (Scott w L Pet. O b Gom e-W inning R BI— M olltor (4). (tallf. 13, Chicago White Sox, , Jerry despite having won the event-last were personal bests. a 138 win over Elks Club at Pogonl Sorgeont played w ell). « St. Louis 27 21 .563 p, Jacksonville, Flo. 14, Montreal, Robinson to a series of 1-yeor contracts. year with a 1:57.83. East Catholic’s Theresa Kit­ Held. Allan Lehren hod three hits and MCC— Express 3 (Seth Egnosko 2, Montreal 26 22 .542 1 Rldiord Stoll, p, Attica, Ind. 15, Detroit, Tampa Bay (U S FL) — Signed guard — Grich. DP— California 1, Mllwou- Arnold Dotson, p, Lubbock, Texas. 14, Kittredge got some help in tredge placed fourth in the 1,500 at Jeff Warner a poir for Ward's. Darryl Randall Slllman), Tornadoes 2 Philadelphia 21 24 .467 4*/2 Fred Dean of the Washington Re

Would you believe another rouglily SOO-point rise in with an eventual move up to the 2.500-3.000 level by the istic of this reading over the years. the Dow by February, sending it booming to'around mid-to-ioie 1980s.” So, says Gould, “ you’re not looking at any rich, CALL 643-2711 OR STOP IN AT OUR OFFICE 1 HERALD SO., MANCHESTER 1,700? The early part of Gould's timing (a 1,200 Dow) was overblown number.” And when this go-go market is finally whacked for right on target, although he’s now pushing back by Before this bull market takes its first real drubbing, its first important setback, you're not going to see the four months (to February of ’84) his forecast of about Gould believes a $30 reading in the “ sentimeter” is a Dow down at the 1,000-1,150 level, as many analysts Dan Dorfman a 1,700 Dow. He had originally predicted it by October strong possibility. Based on the latest Dow dividend of are forecasting, but rather at around 1,400. o f’83. $54.61, a $30 reading would take the Dow above 1,500. •••••••••••••••••••eooo aaooooasooaeaoooooaoooo ••••••oaooaaaooaooooaoa ooe Grandiose, blue-sky numbers, you say — too much Syndicated To achieve a 1,700 Dow by February, the Dow would r^ UNlNfi A 'PeAcM Although technically oriented, Gould takes note of Rentals Stora/Omoe $paoo 44 Services Oftared s i HouselMld < 42 M Isc for Sole 63 MIsc. for Sole 63 Cors/Trucks for Sole 71 optimistic bull. have to continue to rise — as it has since the rally several fundamental plusses — namely a peppier I TREE?! X HOPE Maybe so, but the fella out with these buoyant Columnist started — an average 50 points a month. aaaooooaaasaoaooaaoaaoa ooasooooo economy, low inflation and a prospective easing of the ••••••••ooaooaoaooaaaoa k*eeaeaaaaaeee ••••••••eaaaeaaaeaaeeea •eaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaeaaaea I t h a t coesN'r ^ numbers has his head anywhere but up in the clouds. To reinforce his bullish case, Gould points to the deficit (a reflection of higher tax revenues for Uncle { m e a n a l l t h d e e He's one of the respected grand-daddies of the Roems for Rant 41 LIVE-IN BABYSITTER GAS R4i!NGE-20". Apart­ RUG-Fiber, 9X12, Never TWO CORDS plus- Fire­ TRIUMPH SPITFIRE- positive reading of one of his most important and Sam as a result of the improving business climate). or light housekeeplno. ment. slae. Very cleon, used. Great for cottage, place length. $79.00 takes I PEACHE& W1UL investment business — 81-year-old Edson Gould. And effective indicators — the “ sentimeter" — which he The volatility of the market is such, as Gould sees it, 1980. Red convertible. Ex­ ••••••••••ooaaaoaaoaaaa MMDB.fL«NfiliMiaD«raM.__ , Hove references. Coll good condition. Window rec room, porch. $35.00. oil. 649-6801. cellent conditon. Extras. llU R N INTO PI?UMes|» you'd be hard pressed to find any stock market created and researched back to 1871. that we’re bound to have fast and at times scary 80-90 MmM ml Lm Arm 4:30 to 6:00. 649-2915. In oven door. $75 or best 649-4339. technician with as dazzling a forecasting record for In brief, it’s a ratio of the 30 Dow stock prices to the tiDMi IpDiiM ¥mmt 19,000 miles. Rust- point declines. And it would be foolhardy for any . GENTLEMAN PRE­ offer. 643-6630. g o l f CLUBS-Storter set proofed. Must sell. $4500 accuracy as the one that Gould boasts. (such as IBM, Pfizer or Texas Instruments). But none cash dividends that the owners of these stocks investor to try to catch these sharp swings. The idea ; FERRED. $51.00 weekly. I W M t y 644- f f M aaeeeeeaaeaeaeaeaeeaaea RCA-19" Block a. white of Spauldings with cart, At 81. Gould — once described as The Wizard of Wall Pokittne/Poperine S2 or best offer. 649-1943 of them, Gould says, is visible at this time. receive. In other words, you’re measuring the market here, he says, is not to sell into strength, but rather to Kitchen privileges. 646- Mr. Norman T.V.. Recently paid bog and balls. A ll In good evenings. Street takes life a little easier on his 31-acre farm A graduate of I^high University, he once worked price of $1 worth of dividends. 2000. MIsc for $alo 61 $40.00. for repairs. Runs buy on weakness. aaeaaeaaessaeaaeaeeaaae condition. $75.00. Coll an­ outside a little town called McKeansburg, Pa. briefly as an engineer in the early '20s (while playing To calculate the “ sentimeter,” you simply divide well. Coll 649-3434. $40.00. ytime 649-1794. FORD BRONCO-1970. (population: 156). He does some gardening, feeds his the banjo in a five-piece Dixieland band on the.side). the Dow each month by the dividend on the Dow “ We have,” says Gould, "one of those great, almost FURNISHED ROOM- PAINTING AND PAPER or best offer. asking $1700. Coll 646- Moln Street location. $155 ONE WAY TICKET to dog, cat and 10 ducks and reads extensively from what Gould — who has also had his share of bloopers — average. For example, if the Dow was at 1,000 and the once-in-a-lifetime opportunities...to get in the ’80s NOW DINTING HANGING —Exterior BOWLING-Poir duck 3345. he terms his "library of junk," wrote his last major market report in November of'79 Dow dividend was at $50, the “ sentimeter” reading what you had in the ’20s (when the Dow rose from 60 to a month. Includes all and Interior, celllnos re­ Seattle, Washington, FOR SALE-Used apart­ pins with leather case. utilities. Security and ref­ 822 MAM ST. good for April 1st. Coll But he's still active in the business as chairman of with the Dow at around the 800 level. would be $20 (1,000 divided by the $50 Dow divided 386 between ’21 and ’20) and what you had in the ’50s paired. References, fully ment size electric Ken- Not used much. $40.00. 1973 V O L K S W A G E N - the investment committee of Anametrics, Inc., an equals $20). erences. 643-0108 otter insured. Quality work. 644-2063 otter 5 p.m. nmore stove. Best offer. 649-4649. (when Dow — with most of the rise coming in the ’50s Spm or before 9am New rebuilt motor. New investment consulting and investor relations firm IN THAT REPORT — a bi-monthly investment — ballooned from 93 to 1,001 between ’42 and ’66).” Martin Mottsson, even­ Coll 649-6864. muffler, rimmed snow- that reportedly pays Gould over $150,000 a year for his publication called Findings tc Forecasts — he GOULD’S KEY POINT here is that despite the His conclusion: “ The bull market is just 2 STODY DUNS. ings 649-4431. SCHOOL DESKS and tires, Needs body work. Biaiyetloa PICNIC TABLE with ott- choirs for small children. market thoughts. However, it’s not anything like predicted the end of the 600-1,000 trading range in the market’s big rise, the “ sentimeter” reading only beginning.” Apartments tor Rent 42 649-3619. those hectic days of yesteryear when Gould suddenly INTERIOR — EXTE­ oched seats. $25.00. or Sturdy steel frame. 2 sets. Dow which had been in effect for nearly 14 years. “ The stands at $22 — its average figure of roughly the past Most wines, as we all know, get better with age. ALUMINUM SHEETS best offer. Coll 646-2136 became the darling of Wall Street and the financial unexpected,” Gould wrote, “ is a move (in the Dow) 110 years. And that’s just the mid-way point of the TXIVBriLIVAlIlH RIOR Pointing — Wal­ $12.00. per set. Telephone 1968 BONNEVILLE two Whether the same continues to hold true for Gould is • PMKiNa raivuon lpapering and drywoll used os printing plates — anytime. 649-1724. press with a series of spectacular market calls. over the next several years to the 1,200-1,400 level, approximately $15 to $30 range that’s been character­ something we’ll update in February. door hardtop with olr. M A N C H ES TER — one, ALTm TO SUIT Installation. Quality pro­ .007' thick, 23 X 284'. 50c Excellent motor. New lAMIeejIOOS/F each, or 5 for $2.00. Phone two and three bedroom FnFLO on fessional work. Reasona­ TORO LAWNMOWER BABY FURNITURE-AII tires, battery, and rodlo- wecAMnjf^>t)uR INCLUDED HERE was a September '71 prediction apartments. Heat and hot ble prices. Free esti­ 643-2711. They M UST be needs repair. $25.00. Coll that the Dow, around 915 at the time, would soon top OFFicasumn excellent condition.. tor.Asklng $495. Coll 649- e x T r ^ * in t o CASH! water. $375., $425., $495. rmSTPLOOnilBTAH. mates. G.L. McHugh, picked up before 11:00 643-8798. Good selection. Coll otter 4294 otter 5pm. jusrsive us a 1,000 (which it did in January of ’72) and then collapse C all 649-4800. o n o F F ic n 643-9321. o.m. only.. 4:30pm. 646-5150 or 646- to between 500 and 600 in the next few years (it Supreme Court reinstates windfall oil tax C / ^ A M P P L A C E A 6 4 7 -S 0 0 3 WALLACE BROTHERS 8316. f a m i l y w a n t a p subsequently tumbled to 570 in December of ’74). 118 MAIN STREET- 3 PROFESSIONAL EN D R O LLS — 27 utilities. Coll 647- dal. $20.00. Coll Mark Krupp 6434M68 or Jeff lort viewer editor. $30.00. and one female. Hunting 643-8729 otter 3:00. BOLTON APARTMENT 0359. Lom bardo 64641650. 649-2470. and/or family pets. To — Quiet neighborhood. QUALITY HARDWOOD- good homes. 646-1423. - ROOMATE NEEDED- Cuf, split. $65.00. Two 1969 HONDA CB. $300. No pets. References re­ BABY CARRIAGE-Folr Coll otter 5pm. 643-0185. quired. $360. monthly. Coll 649-9721. eecaaaaeaeeaeeeeaeaeeae cord minimum. Small de­ condition. $10.00. Coll 649- THREE WEEK OLD NU­ 643-5983. livery charge. Coll 649- 1921. BulkNng/Cantractlng S3 BIAN GOAT. Doe with KAWASAKI-1981 KE 125. 1831 anytime. white areas on brown. Classified....Business Opportunities ...2 2 Services Excellent condition. 670 Notices Store/Office Space ...... 44 Household G o o d s ...... 62 643-2711 FOR RENT-One bed­ eeeeeaeaeeeeaaeeeeeeaea SCANNER -10 channel Registered. Please coll miles. Coll otter 5pm. Situation Wanted ...... ,..23 Resort Property ...... ,45 room, third floor of three SEASONED with Tolland County Fire L o st/F o u n d ...... MIsc. for S a le ...... 63 Rates For advertisements to be 649-6320. 649-4190...... 01 Em ploym ent Into...... 24 MIsc. tor Rent...... 46 family. $290 plus utilities. •••••oaoooooaoooaoaoaoo ROBERT E. JARVIS FIREWOOD-Cut, split, Crystals. Bose or mobile Per$onals...... 02 Instruction...... H om e and G a rd e n ...... 64 Minimum Charge: published Monday, the dead­ Quiet person. No kids, no BUILDING — Remodel­ delivered. $82.50/cord. operation. Ac/OC cords. .2 5 Wanted to Rent...... 47 P e t s ...... 65 SorvIciBOfMed si D O G TRAINING- TAKARA BMX Excellent Announcements...... m $2.25 fo r one d a y line Is 2:30 p.m. on Friday. pets. After 4pm. 646-647T. ing Specialist. Additions, Cut to length delivered, $99. firm C oll 643-5257. Obedlonce dosses stort­ A u c tio n s ...... Roommates Wanted ...... 48 Musical Items ...... 66 garages, roofing, siding, $75.00/cord. 228-9101. condition. $75 firm. Coll ...... 04 P a r W o rd ; ••••••oaooooooaaooaoooo ing June 20th In Bolton. otter 5pm. 643-0185. Real Estate Recreational Items ...... 67 1-2 d a y s ...... i 5g MANCHETER-NIce 5 kitchens, bathrooms, re- GO-KART. 7 hp. Wiscon­ Coll 643-9839 for A n tiq u e s...... 68 Read Your Ad \ rooms. 2nd floor apart­ C 8, M T R E E Service — plocoment wlndows- FOR SALE-Boys Roller sin engine. $98.50 Coll registration. ••••••••aaaaaaaaaaaaaa# Hom es to r S o le ...... 31 Services 3-5 d a y s ...... i 4g Pree estimates, discount Financial Tag S a le s ...... 69 Classified advertisements ment. 2 bedrooms. A vail­ /doors. 643-6712. Skates. Size 8. $20.00. Coll 646-1565 otter 4pm. Condominiums...... 32 Services O ffe re d ...... 51 6 d a y s ...... senior cltbons. Company ••••••••••••••••••••••a M Isc Automotive 76 W anted to B u y ...... 70 are taken by telephone as a able Ju ly 1st. $410 per 568-6295. Ask for Glenn. M o rtg a g e s...... 11 Lots/Lond for Sole .. ..33 26 d a y s ...... 12* Manchester owned and LEON CIESZYNSKI Painting/ Papering ...... 52 convenience. month plus security and SWEDISH BOW SAW- Recreotlonol Items 67 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Personal Loans ...... 12 Investment Propefty ... .3 4 H a p p y A ds: utilities. 646-2000. operated. Coll 646-1327. BUILDER— New homes, FOR SALE-10 speed mens 30” ; Hand coping sow, Bullding/Contractihg ...... 53 The Manchester Herald is Insurance...... ___13 Business Property ...... 35 Rooflng/Sldlng ...... 54 $3.00 p er co lu m n Inch additions, remodeling, bike. $45.00. 27” Huffy 7” ; sell both for $11. Also aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa CAMARO-67, 68, right responsible only for one Incor­ REWEAVING BURN rear quarter panel. After Wanted to Borrow...... 14 Resort Property ...... 36 Heating/Plumbing ...... 55 Automotive NEWER FIVE ROOM rec rooms, gwoges, kit­ Santo Fe. Coll 649-6646. sold separately. Excel­ CROSS COUNTRY Ski rect Insertion and then only HOLES — zippers, um­ 6:00 pm. $30.00 646-1172. F lo o rin g ...... S6 Deadlines DUPLEX-ovoltable July chens remodeled, ceil­ lent condition. Coll 649- outfit, consists of skis, C a rs/T ru cks fo r S a le ...... 71 for the size of the original brellas repaired. Window ings, both tile, dormers, ROUND OAK TABLE and 2433. Income Tax Service ___. . s j 1st. $475 monthly. Secur­ low leather boots, ladles Rentals Motorcycles/BIcycles ___72 For classified advertise­ Insertion. ity. No utilities. 643-7344. shades, venation blinds. roofing. Residential or buffet. $375. Coll 649-3109 Employment Services Wanted...... 58 ments to be published Tues­ size 9, bamboo poles, INVITATION TO BID Rec V e h ic le s...... 73 Errors which do not lessen Keys. TV FOR RENT. com m ercial. 649-4291. before 10:30am. FOR SALE-Two burner & Education Room s for R e n t ...... 41 day through Saturday, the Marlow's, 867 Main used three times. -Sell Sealed letters of intent to For Sale Auto Services...... 74 the value of the advertisement HEBRON-Two bed­ porcelain gas stove for $90.00. 528-1880. perforin trial will be received Apartments for R ent ...... 42 deadline Is noon on the day Street. 649-5221. DESIGN KITCHENS by In the office of the Director of Help W anted ...... 21 A utos fo r R e n t/Le a se .. .. " 7 5 will not be corrected by an rooms, heat and hot wa­ CHAIR-WIng bock. Co­ comping with propane B-180 Hom es fo r R e n t ...... 43 before publication. J. P. Lewis. Cabinets, lonial. Gold color. Fair ••••••••••••••••••••••• General Services, 41 Center Hollday/Seasonal...... 61 MIsc. Autom otive ...... 76 oddltlonol Insertion. ter, appliances. Large valve regulator. $15.00. Street until June 17, 1983 at AU SUIS yard, parking, storage BRICKS, BLOCKS, vanities, formica, Wilson condition. $40.00. Coll 649- 644-3583. Antiques 68 4:30 p.m. for bid opening of 13V6-24VS STONE — Concrete. art, Corkin counter tops, 1921. Ju ly 25, 1983. ••••••••••••••••••••••• area. 20 minutes to Hart­ ***•••••••••••••••••••• ••aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa •••••••••••••••••••■••• ford, IS minutes to Man­ Chimney repairs. No lob kitchen cabinet fronts, SWIM POOLS warehouse ••••••••••••••••••••••• POLYMERS « SERVICE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •■•■•••••••••••••■••••• The Town ot Manchester Is A handsome yoked dress ••••eaaaaoaoaaaaaooaooo - chester, 15 minutes to too sm all. Coll 644-8356. complete woodworking FOR SALE-CrIb. Very forced to dispose of new with raglan sleevds has Notices Insurance 13 Help Wanted 21 Help Wanted 21 ANTIQUES AND on eouol opportunity em­ Help Wanted 21 Help Wanted 2i Help Wanted >1 W lllom antlc. $410 service, custom mode Good condition. Many on-ground 31' long pools ployer, and requires an affir­ a companion jacket for a ****••••••••••••••••••• Business Opportunities 22 ''' monthly. Coll 228-3245, EXPERIENCED furniture', colonial repro­ baby clothes, etc. Asking complete with huge sun- COLLECTIBLES- Will mative action policy for oil ot smart half-size ensemble. •aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa ••••••••••••■•••••••••• »> M purchase outright or sell jis Contractors ond Vendors ••••••••••••••••••••••a aoooaaooaoooooaaoaaaaoo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;••» 649-2871. PAINTER-Quollty work. ductions In wood, 9 varie­ $45.00. for crib. Coll 646- decks, fencing, hl-rote Yoke can be ruffled for a SAVE M O N EY on Auto, PART TIME SALES Reasonable rotes, pully on commission. House lot os o condition of doing dressier look. Lost/Found 01 NURSE'S AIDES- ties of hardwood and 4415. after 5:00pm. filters, ladders, war­ business with the Town, os Life, Health omd Motor­ MEDICAL TRANSOnPriONISTS HELP-VIdeo and T.V. ARTS 8i CRAFTS START YOUR OWN BUS- ~ Insured. Free estimates. veneers NOW IN STOCK. ranty, etc. Asking $966 or single piece. Tele­ per .Federal Order 11246. B-180 with Photo-Guide We currently have two poeitions Certlfled. Part time 3 to 11 MANCHESTER-Two ****••••••••••••••••••• cycle Insurance. Call for Evenings and Saturdays. HOMi HEAITH AIDE CONSULTANT-GIrls INESS with no risks. Ex­ 643-9237, ask for Jerry. Coll 649-9658. phone 644-8962. Bid forms, plans and speci­ is in Sizes 12V5 to 24H evenable aa medical trantcriptlon- ond^ to 9. Immediate bedrooms, 2 baths, fully SIMMONS SOFA BED-. COMPLETE. Financing Size 14(4, 37 bust . . . a quote today. SAVE I iata. Must have knowledge of Resident Comp. Stafford pert advice for fast start. '••'t $75.00. Coll 646-7055. fications ore ovolloble at the lAAPOUNDED-AAale she­ (CdrtifiMi) -openings. Manchester Springs. June 26th to appllanced. Poolside available. Coll NEIL toll ••••••••••••••••••••••• General Services Office, 41 ^ess, 3 yards 46-inch; SAVE! SAVE! 563-3487. Houra are: 8 am . - 4:30 p.m. every Video Equipment. Home Financial Independence BLACKWELL LANDS­ FARRAND REMODEL- free 1-800-221-1461. pherd. French Road other weekend 20 Noura per week. Needed for private Manor Nursing Home. August 14th. Room and Condo with all the ameni­ Center Street, Manchester, jacket, 2 yards. *****•••••••••••••••••• 6 hour* Sunday plua 4 houra Wed> hobbyist considered. Call for those serious. 524- CAPING Provides affor­ ING —.Cabinets, roofing, C O U R T STENO­ Wanted to Buy 70 Connecticut. Area. 649-5900. duty case In Manches­ Coll 646-0129. Board. C all 677-2667. ties. MIMbrIdge Hollow. Potteme ovailahle aafy FrI. eveninga or 6 houra Sat. & for an appointment, Al ter. Must be good with $490 monthly plusutilltles dable service for gutters, room additions, GRAPHERS steno-type CUSTOM MADE UP­ TOWN OF MANCHESTER, EmDlovment Sunday plua 4 houra Friday even* ••••••••••••••••••••••• CONNECTICUT tn aitee ehown. mg Sleffert's. Appliances 647- children and nave driv- EXCELLENT OPPOR­ 646-7693. Gordon/Lown/Sh- decks, oil types of remo­ machine with Instruction HOLSTERED choir. Blue FOUND-acqua parakeet. 9997. LABORERS-Entry level- aaaaaooaoaoaaoaaaooaooo ROBERT B. WEISS, T* onlir. M N $2J 0, 80* & Education Good typing andextenalve knowl* .eFs license. TUNITY In established rubbery.core and general deling and repairs. FREE books. $99.00, Firm . 643- ton print. Perfect condi­ WANTED — used World GENERAL MANAGER BU tia aad kiUliof. Vacinitv of Bluefleld edge of m^edical terminology re­ ■ ■(Many) In/outside Instruction 2$ yard clean up. Coll 644- estimates. Fully Insured. 5296. 017-06 Drive. Pay tor this ad-the quired. For more information con­ Call for interview. insurance agency. Gua­ * A APARTMENT FOR tion. Coll 646-3532 otter 5 Book encyclopedia' set. 881 88|NnT -■•••••••••••••••■••••a NEED EXTRA CASH? work.$4 and up.236-2396. 1686. Telephone 643-6017. bird Is yours. 649-9103. tact the Peraonnel Oept. at 047- CA R E NURSE ranteed management for Workmates. RENT-Two bedrooms, weekdays. All day wee­ Will pay up to $50.00. mndwtor H«cUd 4710 Companies need people Help Wanted 21 hard workers that will appliances, heat 8, hot FOR SALE-30" electric kends. $99.00. 643-1346. INVITATION TO BID to start Immediately, noo 233-2194 ODD JOBS, Trucking. stove. Self venting. Good FOUND-Near Verplanck MunHEsrn memorui Hosmu adhere to our training OFFICE WORK- SUMMER TUTORING-J* water. No pets. No child­ aoeasaeaeaeeaeeaaeeaeea Sealed bids will be received rniwIIIHttat '•••••••••••••••••••••a per week plus possible. Home repairs. You name condition. Avocado School. Girls 3 speed 71 Haynae Street program. Experience ad­ Exoerience not neces­ Spelling and or reodlng. -- ren. $425. 646-4288. FOR SALE-New Maytag WANTED TO BUY-Used In the Of flee of the Director of Mancheater, CT 00040 For Info coll 1-312-931-5337 It, we do It. Free esti­ Rooflng/Sldlng S6 green. $85.00 or best washer. Emerson 8200 Tire machine, tire ba­ Genargl Services, 41 Center bike. C all 647-9925 to ______E.O.E. M/F______vantageous. Call Diane sary. $Good. Full/Part Children, teens, and __ _ StreefTMonchester, Connec­ W ANTED-Cyllndrlcol Ext H2340. HAIR STYLIST-Full time mates. Insured. 643-0304. offer. Coll 742-9681. BTU olr Conditioner. $300 lancer, cor lift. And any Identity. for busy Manchester at 563-3487. time. 236-2396. adults. Substantial gain -. MANCHESTER GREEN- aeeaeeeVeeaeeeaeaeeeaeeeeVei ticut, until June 17, 1983 at Photo-Guide pottorng Is Grinder operatar. Must ' Senior citizen or quiet each or best offer. 646- other miscellaneous gar­ Jti«Oji.m. (or the (ollowlnp; salon. Base pay plus com­ Workmates. In eight weeks begInnIng.VJ allaUerangea. F IN D IN G A cash buyer be experienced on Nor­ ASSISTANT BUYER CLEAN ING-Second and June 27th with Inovated person. Two bedrooms, LAWNS MOWED AND BIOWELLKELI HOME Im­ FOR SALE-Morble coun­ 1031. age equipment. Coll any­ — SOCCER ton 6X30 grinder and mission. Call Command NURSE EMT or LPN- FIELDS, KENNEDY ROAD. Prica.... $1J 5. for sporting goods (Mature). Apply ,ln per- third shift. Experience Glrls Resident Camp. linguistic approach.-w 1stfloor,2famlly,bus. No RAKED. Cellars, attics, provement Company — ter top 10'X 2'1••• con bo youto. ••••••••••aooasaaaooooo 649-1265. rotes. Fully Insured. 649- Manchester. doctors; telephone. Send I Ae I 9874. Folding bed with mat­ and houseplonts. Reaso­ !**• Town of Manchester, County of M ogee waloomo resume to Box FF, c/o . •eaooaaaooaasasaao'aooso •••eeaeaebaaeaeeeeeeaae State of Connecticut, has voted to dissolve . CELEBRITY CIPHER Jm:721-70SS tress. $8.00. Telephone nable. Private home. 649- 1973 OLDSMOBILE CU­ Itself In wrsuonce to o Plon o( Llouldotlon adopted by the eleem>cl|ilieici>|Xogreiiie ere melee »uiiiieiiHeSiimh»»niiei«pinelet pen NURSE AIDES-ProvIde The Herald. UNO UQUIDATION 649-2430. 6486. TLASS Supreme. 2 door. wdprm nl.Eectilemrlnlhec|pliem eiideletia«ier.roexyiideerZeeMew. _____ 10 eje. - s pdn. Homes for Rent 43 PAINTING-Yord work. For Sale shareholders and directors on Mov 2, 1983. The calendar' personal care to people In 22 mmm Attics 81 C ellars cleaned. New ports and tires. $850 •!" property shall be June. aoaaaaaoaasaoooaaosoooe. MORSE ZIGZAG SEW­ or best offer. 646-4692 ” of dissolution has been filed with the Secretary their homes. Home MEDICAL SECRETARY- PART TIME general of- Tree work. Houllno. 429- of the State os required by low. health aide certificotlon 39 MXES-*16,900 6344. NICE WHITE LEATHER ING MACHINE,.wrodel otter 4pm. ••d v o o y v a c n v o c d v w c y p Wonted Immediately. flco. Must bo good typist. P O R R E N T -6 ro o m 'couch. Price $60.00. Coll All crMItors, It any, of sold corporation ore warned to or nurse’s aide training Manchester office. Typ­ SOITHERN VERMONT sods 62 6300. Hardly usOd. Excel­ presfnt^rltten claims to Attorneys Kohon, Kerensky, 649-9015 otter 9am. house. Purnished. Shore 643-2840. CapdMIo, Levine & Breslau, Juris Centre. 45 Hartford ZCVLCP-XJI NT VOC IZJPWCO VPW preferred. Flexibility in ing and Insurance forms. AMBITIOUS COLLEGE lent condition. Coll Lori I960 DUNE BUGGY. Run­ with landlord. eeeeeseaeaaeoaeaeeaeeae 644-3084. Turnpike, Vernon, CT 06066 on or before September 30,1983, hours. Must have own Reply Box F, c/o The STUDENTS wish to point ning condition. Body or othwwise sold claims will be forever barred os provided transportation, mileage your house or windows. . A-FRAME TOWBAR with Good. Needs minor work by statute. EYAZIPYPA." — UEYPI CVNIOTTW. Manchester Herald. RECEPTIONIST TODAY IS a good day USED REFRIGERA­ coupler and safoty paid.-For further infor­ NEEOED-Port time for Will also do odd lobs. Best offer. Coll 647-8043 Doted at Vernon, Connecticut, this 18th day ot M'oy, 1983. to ploot cm od in doM l- TORS. WASHERS. chains. $20.00. C o ll 843- OUTDOOR GFR, INC. (FORMERLY PREVIOUS SOLUTION: “They say that the pan ia mlghtlar than mation, coll Manchester COUNCILORS-GIrls Res­ busy Manchester Solon. Free ostlmotasl Low Ranges -< clean, guoron- mornings. the sword-at least It would be n wa coukt Juat gat more Public Health Nursing fltd to soli those Idle 4389. FURN1TURE-S«t of REDFIELD RENTAL CENTER, INC.) fc-7 ident Camp. Stafford Must hove pleasant per­ Items you've been ttor- rotesl Professional teod, ports and service. By MIchoel A. Bars of criminals Inside It." — Mary Martin. A s s o c ia tio n , 647-1481, . IK-IIM-ISII1 work! Call nowl Tim Three, 2' diameter coble 1971 327 CAM ARO-New Springs. June 26th to sonality and neat appear­ r n w e-itom VmtSSm kftow IncL A q u ick co ll to Low prices. B.D. Pearl 8, CRANE OIL BURNER Kohon, Kerensky, Coposselo Pitas by KA VK *MR«9 u t Pw a tmoh • 19eSbyNeA.me. Monday thru Friday. August 14th. Room and 646-3193 after 4pm or spools. Use for tables or transmission and new Levine 8, Breslau ance. 643-8339 ask for ^ 2 7 1 1 Will put your od Son, 649 Main Street, with controls. $20.00. Coll stools. 3 for $13.00 or $5.00 EOE/AAP Employer. Board. Coll 677-2667. Carol. PinEN RBUTY emiP Dove 646-3842 anytime. 643-2171. ports. $1800 or best otter. 0964)5 Attorneys In print. 649-0468. each. 649-0832. Coll Bob 525-4336.