MANCHESTER SPORTS 1 FOCUS \ Teachers ready Bosox, Blue Jays Walach’s musia for a new year both keep winning ^ i travels to China . . . page 11 ... page 15 ^ iHaurhrstrr HrralJi ) Vancnesle'" A City ot \/illaqR Charm 25 Cents S O fficials T If T investigate E w lumber fire Damage unknown; P company still open

By Alex GIrelll j Assoclote Editor

EiKht area fire departments fougfit a blaze Monday nlKht and this morning that destroyed the Manchester Lumber Co.’s 6.000-square-foot storage shed and three smaller buildings on Center Street. About 125 firefighters were involved in putting out the fire and protecting nearby buildings. Deputy Chief Peter Beckwith of the "rown Fire Department estimated today Although firefighters from the Town Fire Depart­ ment were still at the scene this morning dousing i smouldering embers, the lumber company was open for business SI Neal A Tyler, an owner, said he was unsure of the extent of the damage " I have no idea." he said when asked for a financial estimate of the loss Meanwhile, two fire investigators from the Manchester Police Department and a representative of tfte-state fire marshal's office were beginning an T investigation to determine the cause of the blaze, Oi which destroyed vehicles stored in the buildings as well as the structum themselves Acting Manchester fH W 1IW W B i»*W W t BVchdlMI VaMtiriWi tmd’ * ^ ^ b e g n rulct^dut as cause of the fire, which was Htrald phew fey tuotur at 11:25 p m>^nd declared under control Flames shoot up and smoke billows from a burning shed which continued into the eariy morning hours, destroyed niovt an hour later. full of lumber Monday night as more that 100 firefighters the lumber shed and three sma'ler buildings at the I AM firefighters worked Monday night smoke and flames coUM be seen from long distances away. pour water on the blaze from several directions. The blaze, Manchester Lumber Co. on Center Street. Crowds of spectators watchhd from Center Street. 2 Broad Street and other pointsMn town Im Firefighters from the #th UtiNtle^District. Vernon. South Windsor. Andover. Bolton, ujastonbury and Pr East Hartford helped the Town FirKDegaHment lundreds still missing in shipwreck earl] extinguish the fire or protect nearby property The they Rocky Hill Fire Department sent a lighting unit to iCOW (AP) — At least 79 people Nedyak said. He did not provide details Foreign radio monitors said they did Ron, Illuminate the scene ' freighter or the passenger ship was a Soviet passenger liner on the condition of thos^bspifhlized. not hear a distress signal after the liner Morr The alarm was first turned in at 11:25 p.m by a considered to have caused the collision. plunged loThe bottom of the Black Sea Divers, helicopters add surface ves- and the Soviet freighter collided. Averin said a government commission "M police officer who saw the flames while on patrol in 15 minutes after being rammed by a s^s were s^ c K in g the disaster site for The official news agency Tass said headed by Politburo member and First thouf About 10 minutes later. Beckwith began calling In freighter, and 319 still were missing more survivors, ■ maritime ministry Monday without further detail that Deputy Premier Geidar A Aliev was in amai other fire departments to assist more than a day and a half later, a official Igor M. Averin told The there was “ loss of life” In the collision Novorossiysk to investigate. were About 60 firefighters from the 0th District helped maritime official said today Associated Press earlier today. and that help was being given to the "Usually a collision at sea is a result Larr; out. and the district's water tower was used to pour Deputy Merchant Marine Minister All those aboard the cruise ship were injured. of a clash of opinions between two appei water on the fire from above. Tank trucks were used Leonid Nedyak said 836 people were : Soviets, he said. Weather conditions were calm when people, Just like in a marriage." Averin to pump water from distant hydrants Into other tank rescued after the cruise liner Admiral The official government newspaper the collision occurred eight nautical said. “ In a marriage you can't find a trucks. Nakhimov went down about midnight Izvestia said the rescue operation was miles off Novorossiysk, he said. single person guilty, like at sea.” Ca Water was also pumped from Center Springs Pond Sunday after It was struck amidships by being carried out by a fleet of ships and Averin said he did not know how Averin said civilian and military across Edgerton Street at the rear of the lumber yard the cargo vessel. small boats off the port of Novoros­ quickly the ship sank, or what danger helicopters, divers and other vessels For after 8th District firefighters cut a hole in an iron He said 29 people were hospitalized. siysk. where the 61-year-old liner sank. there was for passengers who had were Involved in continuing rescue be gut There were 1,234 people on board, Tass. the official Soviet news agency, fence to get a hose into the pond. already retired to their cabins for the operations to try and find survivors. He millio according to official reports. said the ship was resting on the tottom Beckwith and Deputy Fire Chief William Griffin night. did not specify how many people were downi The rescue operation is continuing. at a depth of 142 feel both said there was no thought of saving the hullings. Asked whether the crew of the involved in the rescue operation. The which were engulfed in flames when firefighters pletec arrived. The object was to protect adjacent buildings, Carte they said. birthc A relatively new building built by the lumber Non-aligned summit closes its session company for mill work suffered only slight damage No one was hurt in the blaze. Beckwith said, though HARARE. Zimbabwe (AP) — The nei’s 37-page speech in In the coveted by the big p o w e rs was not to ne a member sti^V from the movement. some firefighters "took a beating” from the intense non-aligned summit abruptly went into prepared remarks he said: "The Iraqi tolerated." the Iranian president said. He describra Iran’s Islantdc foyem - heat. closed session today when Iran’s crimes, according to many interna­ “ It had to be invaded from all fronts. ment as the “ flag bearer of-jMvine Paramedics with their rescue truck and an president lashed out at Iraq in a speech tional authorities, have made Gengis And Iraq, in the honorable role of the values.” ambulance from the Manchester Abulance Service in which he also called the United States Khan and Hitler seem lame in executive agent of imperialism, was Khamenei attacked the stood by at the scene. the "arch Satan." comparison” selected and assigned the job.” States, callinf It the "archi Although Manchester Lumber Co. was open and Live television broadcast of the Khamenei blamed the superpowers Khamenei accused the Iraqis of such Iranian officfhls often reh doing buisiness this morning, things were hardly session broke off as President All for the war and expressed anger that “ war crimes” as the mass slaughter of United States as "the greet I normal. Fire apparatus was still at the scene while Khamenei described Iran’s foe in a neither the U.N. Security Council nor women and children, the use of 6-year-old war as "an agent of super­ 9 lumber yard employees were loading materials onto the non-aligned movement had labeled chemical weapons, the bombing of “ Look what the arch Satai customers’ trucks. power imperialism." Iraq is also a Iraq the clear aggressor. civilian areas and the burial of people Nicaragua. Vabk what they . member of the non-aligned movement. Please (urn to page 3 "The emergence of a truly non- alive. He said any of these should be to the IslamiciKVolution in Irl Iranian aides had distributed Khame­ aligned state in a region much loved and "sufficient grounds for the expulsion of still doieg.^ilM eclared.

TODAY’S HERALD State’s 1985-86 surplus GrandnUmer, child Campaign loopholes Pilot had dHack officially $350.3 million leave wodds safely An investigation into alleged The pilot of the small plane that abuses by a campaign committee collided with ah Aeromexico jet TO LLAND (A P ) — A B4-year-old Tolland run by three close associates of woman and her granddaughter, reported suffered a heart attack before the HARTFORD (AP) - Gov William A. charged by his Republican opponents, but a Gov. William A. O’Neill exposed a missing Sunday night, are safe after spending accident, and authorities said 18 O’Neill announced today that the state result of “ good, prudent management” series of loopholes in state election people were killed on the ground in closed the books on the 1985-86 budget year the night in the woods, police said. law. And Jeffrey B. Garfield, Cerritos, Calif., in addition to the 67 All of the 1985-86 surplus was earmarked Search teams had spent four hours Monday 6 with a $350.3 million surplus and expects a executive director of the state for various programs and paying off state victims on the planes. Story on $55.8 million surplus for 1986-87. night looking for Joan Falconer and her Elections Enforcement Commis­ page 9. debts by the 1986 General Assmebly. seven-year-old granddaughter Laura Kearns sion, vows to tighten, if not close, "Our surplus is basically the product of in woods near Tolland Stage Road, those loopholes with the help of the Of the total, $ ioo million goes to education our booming economy,” the governor said Police said they called off the search around 1987 General Assembly. Story on improvement programs. $50 million to local Ind«x midnight and were planning to resume the next page 4. at a news conference in his office. highway and bridge projects. $30 million to 20 pagfet, 2 ••cMons Over the past three years, the state has olber local infrastructure projects, $33 morning when the two walked out to the woods. amassed $881 million in surpluses and at the million in per capita grants to cities and State police Sgt. Bob Keihm says they Advice. Lottery. same time cut taxes by $300 million.\ towns. $16.2 million to the reserve fund to apparently got disoriented after it got dark last Business. Obituaries____ 10 Because of the uncertainty over federal, guard against future deficits and $50 9 night. He said they slept in the woods and came Classified _ 10-20 Opinion_____ 8 tax and budget laws. O’Neill said it waVtod^ million to pay off current state bonds. out shortly after six this morning Cloudy tonight Comics______8 People______2 early to know whether additional tax cuts O’Neill said the early bond retirement was Police said canine and bloodhound units Mostly cloudy tonight with a low Connecticut _4-S Sports___ 11-14 would be possible for the 1987-88 budget a first for Connecticut. were called to the scene to aid in the search, Entertainment 17 Television___ 17 In the 50s. Partly sunny Wednes­ year. The reserve, or "rainy day" fund, totals along with Tolland Fire Department personnel Focus______15 U.S.AWorld_7, 9 day with a high from 70 to 75. The governor said the surplusM were not about $221 million «$ $ percent of the state and the families of the missing. Local naws-3, 10 Weather_____ 2 Details on page 2. a result of over-taxation, as frequently budget. '’j J l •V..

si MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday. Sept. 2. 1966 — 3 Town educators gear up

Co!imectlcut forecast for new year’s opening

CentrafT'Eastern Interior. Sonthwestem Inte­ By John Mitchell educators know that the commun­ president of the Manchester Edu­ rior: Tonif;ht. mostly cloudy. Low in the 50s. Herald Reporter ity appreciates their Efforts, cation Association, said it is Wednesday, partly sunny. High 70 to 75. Kennedy said. ( ’’important for teachers to be West Coastal, East Coastal: Tonight, cloudy. Although "How was your Other objectives he c it ^ include politically active.” Low around 60. Wednesday. nnostlycloucN. High 70 summer? — Too short. Ml bet," concentrating more on staff devel-. Mazzotta told the teachers that to 75. proved to be the most popular opment, gaining support for the she hoped to visit every school in Northwest Hills: Tonight, considerable cloudi­ greeting among the 535 teachers $8.9 million 'school renovation town to explain the education ness. Low in the 50s. Wednesday, partly suriny who got together in the Manchester proposal that will be on the ballot in enhancement bill designed to High 70 to 75. High School cafeteria this morn­ November, and looking into long- raise teachers’ salaries to a ing, most "seemed happy to be range plans to address the Rowing minimum of.$20,000 within three back. elementary school student popula­ years. tion. "We do have a fighting “Help us to do a better job than Coastal forecast Educators from the town’s pub­ chance to achieve these objec­ ever before working for teachers,” lic schools gathered for about 50 tives,” he said. Long Island Sound to Watch Hill, R .I., and minutes of rallying speeches, the union president said. "Join Montank Point: "I really appreiate and thank with me this year as we seek the anecdotes and general loosening Winds light and variable through Wednesday you very much for making my job prizes we as teachers so richly Today In history up in preparation for the opening of easier these past years,” said deserve” generally about 5 knots during nighttime and early school Wednesday morning. Board of Education Chairman ” We have a chance, each year, to morning hours and 10 knots during the afternoon. One year ago today, it was annou need that a U.S.-French Seas less than 1 foot. “ You always look so well, so Leonard E. Seader, who will step begin again ” Kennedy told the young,” said assistant superin­ down when his current term ends Weather, rain and patchy fog today and tonight expedition had located the wreckage of the Titanic about group. That renewal, he said, is tendent Wilson E. Deakin Jr., in October with rain likely during Wednesday. 560 miles off Newfoundland, 73 years after the luxury what "brings vitality to this speaking to the teachers for his Catherine Mazzotta. the new busine.ss.” Visibility probably below 3 miles at times in rain liner sank. Here, Robert Ballard, who discovered the I7th year in a row. "Don’t act old” and patchy fog through Wednesday. sunken liner, holds a replica of the ship during a news Deakin went on to introduce 26 Cloudy tonight, sunny Wednesday conference earlier this year. new teachers and give out 10 H#ftld photo by Tuckor. Enrollment rises at MHS, The Connecticut forecast calls for tonight to be mostly cloudy with a low Across the nation golden rulers to Teachers who have A hBBvy strsam of water flows from the managed to last 25 years in the In the 50s. Wednesday, it will be partly sunny with a high from 70 to 75. the Manchester Lumber Co. on Center schools. but not In lower grades Rain dotted broad sections of the West and 8th Utilities District fire tower truck onto Street. The shed and its contents were Today's weather picture was drawn by Jodi Wilcox, 10, of Summer Street Almanac This year’s crowd, he said, who attends Washington School. South today while much of the East was fair and the burning skeleton of a lumber shed at destroyed. More students will be attending Final tallies at the end of the temperatures were comfortable across most of the represented "the largest number high .school in Manchester when 1985-86 6|pbool year showed that nation. of new faces we’ve had in five or six classes begin Wednesday, but the 3.575 stud^ts attended the ele­ Today is Tuesday. Sept. 2, the Department announced that the Rain and thundershowers were scattered across years.” Addressing the new lower grades will see a decrease mentary schools, while 1,635 went 245th day of 1986. There are 120 the northern and central Rockies, the High Plains. United States and the Soviet teachers. Deakin joked. "Any one from last year, officials said this to junior high schools in town, he days left in the year. Oklahoma. Texas, the Gulf Coast region and from Union had started preliminary of those people around you can morning. said. ’Today’s highlight in history: Alabama to the Florida Panhandle. talks on the issue of verifying Fire hits lumber company show you where the credit union Jacob Ludes. the principal at On the morning of Sept. 2.1945. compliance with future arms is." Manchester High School, said he Based on past history. Deakin Rain was scattered from the Tennessee and Ohio predicted the elementary ‘Wiool local time. Japan formally sur­ control agreements. Superintendent James P. anticipates 1,736 students will valleys to the middle Atlantic Coast and North CoiillnuMi from page I and equipment 'You find out who rendered to the United States in One year ago: It was an­ on vehicles in the buildings that Kennedy fold the crowd his main attend classes when school opens. population "won’t drop much.” Carolina. your friends are" on such Junior high school attendance will ceremonies aboard the USS nounced that a US.-French In the main office of the lumber burned. objective for the year is to ensure That's about 50 more than last Strong thunderstorms rumbled across the occasions. Tyler said. probably drop, he said, noting that Missouri in Tokyo Bay. World expedition had located the yard, workers were at the phones that everyone benefits from the year’s enrollment at MHS, he said. northern Plains Monday evening. Rain and fog Griffin said firefighters were Educational Enhancement Act four grade schools have closed in War II was over. wreckage of the Titan ic about 560 taking orders and arranging for During the blaze, poles that Ludes said about 600 students were widespread early today from the northern helped by that fact that there was passed in June by the General the past 10 years and the trend is miles off Newfoundland. 73 years new supplies to replace those lo.st carry power lines along a railroad will be .sophomores, up ten from Plains to the upper Great Lakes. Dense fog also On this date: no wind and the weather was not Assembly. starting to affect the junior high after the luxury liner sank. in the fire track west of the lumber yard last year. A breakdown wasn't covered broad sections of northeast Texas the In 1666, the Great Fire of cold. There were no large sparks level. Tyler said the lumber yard will caught fire and the lines them­ “ For the first time in my 30 years available on the other two grades Texas Panhandle and the Nebraska Panhandle. Today's birthdays: Author- going aloft to threaten houses in this profession I think there’s a London broke out. The fire be short of .some items for a few selves were lightly burned A at the three-year high school on Manchester High School will Skies were fair over much of New England, from claimed thousands of homes, but conservationist Cleveland nearby on Edgerton Street, he significant chance to raise Am ory is 69. Sen. Alan K days, but was making deliveries to propane tank vented, and the gas said. East Middle Turnpike. start classes at 7:50 a m. For the lower Great Lakes to Missouri and Iowa and only a few lives, in the several teacher’s salaries in a short period students at Bennet and filing Simpson. R-Wyo., is 55. Former customers this morning and will from it burned brightly for a few Beckwith, who was in charge at Assistant Superintendent of 7( over inland sections of California. Oregon and New days that it burned. continue to do so moments. of time.” he said. “ That is a Schools Wilson E. Deakin Jr. said junior high schools, classes will Mexico. football player Terry Bradshaw the scene, said he was not unhappy realistic goal for us to look to.” In 1789, the United States Tyler said he had gotten many Beckwith said there were sev­ there were no final figures for the begin at 8:20 a m. The grade Low is 38 Tennis player Jimmy with the outcome, considering how The bill will help in two ways — Early-morning temperatures were mostly in the Treasury Department was offers of help from other busine.ss- eral small explosions In the fire, far the fire had progre.ssed when junior high and grade schools in schools will start at 8:50 a m. or 9 Temperatures 40s the northern and central High Plains and established. Connors is 34. Actress Linda Purl men who are ready to loan space by assuring that the best teachers Manchester for the coming school a.m.. depending on the school, and is 31 some of them possibly from tire.s firefighters arrived. Rockies; 50s across the northern tier of states; 70s In 1864, during the Civil War. continue to serve and bv letting year as vet will meet for a half day. from the southern Atlantic Coast across the Guif Union General William T Sher­ Coast region and the lower Mississippi Valley to man's forces occupied Atlanta, Campaign pays off central and southwest Texas; and 70s tb 80s in the one day after the Confederates for New York state FRONTS: desert Southwest. retreated. TLC pushes forward with North Street group home plan Today’s forecast called for showers and In 1901, Vice President Theo­ A LB A N Y N Y (AP) - Since John F. Kirch W arm .^^ Cold-*^ Bv about $125.OOQ. or self-destructive will not be thundershowers scattered across the northern dore Roosevelt said in a speech the "I Love New York" campaign Herald Reporter Plains and from the southern Plains to the southern at the Minnesota State Fair: began marketing the state in 1977, The house, which TLC; is cur­ allowed to stay at the home. Showers Rain Flurries Snow Occluded Stationary. rently leasing from the Commun­ So far. T L C has received $45,000 Atlantic Coast; rain likely from northern Minne­ "Speak softly and carry a big Newu^ork's tourism revenue has The Transitional Living Center sota to northern Michigan and from Kentucky stick.” risc(n to more than $14 4 billion, up ity Child Guidance Clinic, was from the town and another $45,000 Foundation, which is moving vacated this weekend by the from the Board of Education to across the southern and central Appalachians to In 1924, the Rudolf Frim I from^.Kbillion in 1977 closer to opening a Manchester the middle Atlantic Coast; and showers widely For^-flwry tax dollar collected second of two families that lived cover first-year operating costs. operetta "Rose Marie” opened group home for emotionally there. It must be converted into a National forecast scattered across the Rockies and northern Maine. on Broadway. and spew on tourism in New York, DiYeso said a stronger town troubled teenagers, has received a single-family unit before if can commitment will come if the Temperatures around the nation at 3 a m. E D T In 1935, a hurricane slammed $67 flows into the state's tax coffers $75,000 challenge grant from a The National Weather Service forecasts areas df showers across the — a 67-to-l return on investment. operate as a group home, accord­ program proves succe.ssful. ranged from 43 degrees at Craig. Colo., to 89 at into the Florida Keys with 200 Hartford-based foundation to help ing to zoning regulations country for Wednesday. Warm weather is expected for most regions. Phoenix. Arlz. The program also generates pay for the project two organizers “ This wasn't a one-shot deal.” mph winds, claiming 423 lives. jobs Nearly 650.000 New Yorkers That means major renovations, In 1945, Ho Chi Minh declared said today which T L C is now planning. DiYeso said. "Th e y’re committed work at hotels, restaurants, attrac­ to it as long os it works.” Vietnam an independent tions. travel agencies and other T L C President John Yavis and DiYeso said. Bids are being taken republic by three local contractors who DiYeso and Yavis have said that tourism-related busine.sses Executive Director William opening a group home for local In 1963. Alabama Gov. George Di Ye.so .said they could not disclose may be engaged to do the work. C. Wallace prevented the inte­ "We're looking at an extensive youths would save the Board of where the money was coming from Education money. The board gration of Tuskegee High School pertod of renovation,” DIYeso r e O P L E until later this week But they said spends as much as $15,000 ayearon Lottery said. " It ’s going to be beautiful.” by encircling the building with the funds will help pav for youths who are placed in group state troopers. renovations at the Iwo-famlly Asked when the home would open. DiYeso said. "M y dream homes outside of Manchester. Ten years ago: Riot police in house at 17-19 North SI where the DiYeso said. Impressive guest There^will be 26 million library papers and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and stop at South Africa fought with thou­ Connecticut daily group home will operate would be Thanksgiving ... Reality a museum. From his new office. Carter will is the beginning of (next) year.” When the North Street home Burberry’s, a British clothing store. sands of mixed-race and black The way the grant works, the President and Nancy Reagan had to get up command several organizations established After a reception given by the British demonstrators in Cape Town Monday: 062 The home will serve seven opens, T L C will be the third private non-profit T L C organization will Manchester teenagers who have organization to operate a group early during their California vacation, but to continue fighting for his causes: human Consulate, Charles will be guest of honor at Five years ago: The State Play Four; 3823 receive $25,000 outright from the shown they can succeed in local home in town, DiYeso said. The Herald photo by Rocha they didn’t mind. They watched their son, rights, the environment, and resolution of Harvard’s 350th Anniversary Dinner in international conflicts. Hartford foundation The founda­ schools, but who come from other two serve children from all This house at 17-19 North St. is where home for Ron, as guest host on ABC-TV's “Good Memorial Hall on Wednesday night on the tion will then give T L C one dollar / troubled M anchester Morning America.” “I did not want a monument to me, ” Carter problem families. The children over Connecticut. the Transitional Living Center Founds- teenagers, Cambridge campus. for every two dollars it collects^ would live at the group home with Meanwhile, another organiza­ ’’Mrs. Reagan said this morning she said of the 30-acre complex at Copenhill On Thursday, the prince will be the from other sources. Yavis said, tion plans to open a supervised group from whbre Union Geri., William T. Sherman F two superivors while undergoing tion has applied to open a fourth thought he was great. He was just wonderful, featured speaker at the anniversary celebra­ meaning it will have to raise viewed/the Battle of Atlanta counseling by an off-site therapist. group home on Hartford Road. amazingly poised, really very good, and we tion. He will attend an afternoon seminar at $100,000 to gel the remaining Di Ye.so said The Shelter For Women Inc of were impressed.” White House spokesman Harvard’s Graduate School of Design. $50,000 in grant funding "W e’re really providing the Hartford, a non-profit group, has Larry Speakes said of Ron Reagan’s Charles later flies to Chicago, where he O The organization is planning a home atmosphere.” DiYeso said. applied for a special exception to appearance Monday. Rcjlyal visitor will attend a Polo Ball to benefit the city’s drive to raise the money .so it Under a T L C proposal approved open a supervised group home at Field Museum of Natural History and the become.s eligible for the full grant. by the Planning and Zoning 151 Hartford Road, according to Jeans+Plus for Prince Charles arrives in Boston tonight Salisbury Cathedral Spire Trust in England. C the organizers said The money the Commission in July, children site plans filed at the town for a four-day U S, visit during which he will Carter’s new office The trust is seeking to restore the historic drive raises will also help buy the involved in violent crimes or drug Planning Department. No further help celebrate Harvard University’s 350th British structure. North Street house, which will cost abuse or who are overly agreesive details were available today. anniversary and play polo in Chicago. Former President Jimmy Carter has On Friday, Charles will stop at the The heir to the British throne on U begun moving into his new office in the $27 Marshall Fields department store in Chicago Wednesday plans to visit Lowell, one of the Levi'S million Carter Presidential Center near for a ribbon-cutting ceremony and a tour of a nation’s 'Xjjdest industrial communities, downtown Atlanta. promotion of British merchandise. Later, he Board to vote on library projects where he will tour Wang Laboratories to see ‘S05’ DENIM The first presidential library was com­ will meet students at the Whitney Youne s the latest computer technology. pleted for Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1940. High School. He then goes to Boston to attend a special Portions of the Mary Ch^ey Manchester is reconstructed.^ is Carter’s is scheduled to open on his 62nd Just before returning to England, Charles The First Marathon birthday, Oct. 1. state conference on youth employment, visit Library will be air conditioned and The path of the proposed access also expected come up for a vo\eJ will join in a game of polo at the Oak Brook Historians mark today as the anniversary of marathon the Whiton Memorial Library will road to be used when downtown tonight Polo Club. racing. On this day in 490 B.C., Persian armies attacked receive a new coal of paint. .some Pre-Washed the Greek city of Marathon. Phidippides, a trained landscaping work and repairs to its The show will go on chimney if the town Board of Dance at thet runner, ran all the way to Sparta to seek help in Directors approves a proposal it A perforated eardrum has forced Austral­ righting the invaders. Finding help unavailable, will consider tonight ian soprano Joan Sutherland to cancel Phidippides ran the 26 miles back to Marathon. He The board is scheduled to voteon tonight’s gala performance with Luciano approving $28,250 for the improve­ Pavarotti in San Francisco. arrived to find his beloved city conquering the Persians on Its own. Phidippides then carried news of the battle ments at Mary Cheney, which is But the show will go on with Pavarotti located on Main Street The work singing a program of arias and duets with to Athens, where he died from exhaustion. includes putting in air conditioning American soprano Madelyn Renee. for the reference area, and relocat­ Dance Studio The "Silver Jubilee Concert” marks the DO YOU KNOW — What city hosts the oldest marathon race in the United States? ing some ceiling lighting units. 1159 Main St. (Rt. 31) 25th anniversaries of Sutherland’s American Coventry recital debut and of Pavarotti’s professional The cost of the proposed im­ opera debut in . FRIDAY’S ANSW ER ^ The fort at West Point was located provements at Whiton. located on " A Complete, Professions! Dance Program latighi bv a Sutherland, who developed an ear infec­ •long the Hudson River. Nc.-th Main Street, is $25,000. D.M. o f K. Certified Teacher. Specializing in Dance tion while in Hawaii, suffered a perforated 9-1 *86 Under the proposed plan, the Education for boys and girls for over tweni v-fi ve years." ’______Knowledife Unlimited. Inc. 1986 • Men’s and Students’ eardrum when her plane landed at San exterior of the building will be Francisco International Airport, said San painted, some sprinkler heads will Classes Begin Sept. 15 A Newspaper in Education Projfr^Tn be replaced and some minor repair Francisco Opera spokesman Scott Horton. • Straight Leg Sponsored by work will be done to the library’s Tap • Ballet • Jazz • Acro-Gymn^stics Emerson Buckley will conduct the San The Manchester Herald chimney. Francisco Opera Orchestra at the Oakland Also tonight, the directors are Sizes 28 to 38 Coliseum concert. • Kinder-dance for preschool children scheduled to hold a workshop on starting at three years of age the proposed reconstruction of Abble tries radio Tolland Turnpike. The workshop will begin at 7:30 in the Lincoln Sale Ends Manchester Herald • Familv Multiple Class Rales Register at the Studio Center hearing room and the Original Yippie Abbie Hoffman is showing Thurs. 4 Fri., Sept. 11 4 12 no signs of easing his radical ways even USPS 327-500 V O L CV , No 283 regular meeting will follow at 8. 1 Special Emphasis on Dance for Bovs Under preliminary plans, parts from 2-7 pm and Sat.. Sept. 6 though he turns 50 in two months. PublMisd daily except Sunday Suggested carrier ratesaralil.SO of 120 properties — mostly five-foot • Graded Oasses for all age groups Sat.. Sept. 13 from 10am-2pm Hoffman’s newest venture, a radio pro­ ■ n d w w in hoNdaya by the Man- beginning *gr 3 to adults ^ fW e r Publlahing Co.. tSIbainard weskly. $6.50 tor one month^t9.25 wide strips — would be taken in gram called "Radio Free U SA,” begins for three months, $38 50 for six Or by telephone — Ptsca, Mancbaater. Conn. 06040 order to widen the road. Friday on the New York O ty FM station [wnths snd $77.00 for one year. • \dult tap and jazz classes S a c ^ d m poatage paid at Man- However, one of the properties, Call 742-6886 or 742-9666 w b a i . M ill rates are available on request. cha^r. Conn. POSTMASTER the home of Minnie Blanche Webb, • "Kinderdance" for 3-4 vear olds anytime "It will be .the latest in high-class Sand a d d rm changat to the Man- which was built around 1790. is subversion, satire and entertainment ” w « « a r Herald. P.O. Box 591, Man- ctiesler; Conn. 06040 directly in the path of the proposed Hoffman, a 1960s radical and a founder of the To place a classinad or display advertisament. or to report a news relocation of the intersection of Youth International Party, whose followers A dedicated, professional teacher and a qualified staff. g u a r a n t e e d DELIVERY: If Item, atory or picture Idea, call 643- Tolland Turnpike and North Main were called Yippies, said Sunday. you Oont rsoalve your Hersid by 2711. Office hours ars 8:30 a.m. to 5 Street. It would either have to be Mr. Rislev is a member of the Dance Masters of \merica. Inc.. Immediate PasI Presi­ XP photo The program will be aired for two hours p.m. Monday through Friday. demolished or removed to make dent o f the Dance Teachers Onh of Conn.. National Direelor o f Mr. Dance of each week on the New York « t y station. P**"* '•••Phon® your carrier. way for the road, according to the \merica Scholarship Compelilon. Nationally known faculty member for dance con­ HELPING HAND — Actress Joanne Woodward cuts the taping off husband On the first program, doctors will tell yyW s to reach your car- plans. versions and workshops. Sludenls are currenllv darning on Broadway and al the ^ ^ ^aubaertbar aarvloa at 647- 297 EAST CENTER ST MANCHESTER, CT listeners how to beat urine d w g tests he The Manchaalar Herald la a mam- The project would cost $5 5 MGM Grand in Reno. They are accepted into major college level dance programs, Paul Newnnan’s hands after Newman was forced to drop out of a Camel G T •>46W 6;30p.m.waafcdaysor10a said. Future topics will incIMe saring bar of the Aaeoclated Press and a million and the work would be three are currently attending the I'niversitv of Utah Dance and Musical Theatre race at Lime Rock Park Monday. Newman’s car spun off the track on the mambar of the Audit Bureau of O r - Major Programs. OPEN MON.-SAT 10-6 THURS. NITE TIL 9 Halloweeii and people under 30 yob can trust culatlons finished by 1990. A public hearing second lap of a two-hour race. Hoffman said. on the plans is scheduled for Sept. MANCHESTER HERALD, Tuegday. Sept. 2, 1986 — 5 Connecticut In Stie$ TEIections panel targets loopholes Eddy hammering Group protests aquarium’s treatment B y JuiM Everhart law must DC rectined. ^ S n c - The New Haven-based Animal Rights Front is The Assocloted Press found that Democrats For Victory New* Anah^m 86 was helping Democrats other ’”The other weakness that we calling attention to treatment of animals at Mystic Marinelife HartfordD" --/ao investigation road repair at DoddV record knew about and we have fouf^t to Aquarium. than O’Neill and rejected Moffett’s into alleged abpbpses_____ by______a campaign contention that it was a “shadow” rectify without success is that B y Judd Everhart fornia event that featured enter­ Group spokesman William Mannetti said. "We’re trying to tell committee run by three close O’Neill committee. these independent political com­ The Associated Press tainers Jane Fonda. Edward people what it’s like to be taken from the open sea.” associates of Gov. William A. sarcastic responses from, among As it tu m ^ out. Moffett failed to mittees do not have limits on what STAMFORD (AP) - Connecti­ They held a protest outside the aquarium Saturday, where O'Neill exposed a series of loop­ others, state Republican Chair­ they can give to candidates.” cut won’t be able to keep up with Asner and Mike Farrell. who Eddy get the nominating convention NEWINGTON — Roger W. about SS protostors lined Coogan Boulevard, carrying signs like* holes in state election law. man Thomas J. IFAmore Jr. He Garfield said a reasonable limit the commuter crush on highways calls representatives of the left support he needed for a primary Eddy, the Republican challenging wing. “Mystic Animals Are Dying to Entertain You.” And Jeffrey B. Garfield, execu­ said it was laughable for the against O’Neill and is now out of would be $2,500. which is now the in its southwest corridor despite its Democratic U.S. Sen. Christopher Dodd also claims that Eddy is The group said that several marine mammals have died at the tive director of the state Elections commission to conclude that Wade the race. limit that labor political action multimillion dollar road and J. Dodd, decided early that if he trying to paint him as unpatriotic aquarium since 1983. and called attention to an annual inspection Enforcement Commission, vows to didn’t know such things as the ’That case is behind Garfield commttees can give to a single bridge repdir program, state accomplished nothing else in his and "less than interested in the tighten, if not close, those loop­ limits for contributions made by now. and he’s concentrating on candiate. Corporate PACs can give transportation officials say. where the aquarium was cited for storing bad fish to feed the uphill campaign, he would make defense of this country” for his animals. holes with the help of the 1987 individuals and political action legislation he’ll propose next year. up to $5,000. Interstate 95, tbe nation’s most voters aware of Dodd’s record. votes against research funds for General Assembly. committees. ’’The existing law has some ’”The rationale for the difference traveled thoroufdifare to New Mannetti said the animals are forced to live under abnormal the proposal Strategic Defense He aims to reduce the influence Garfield said the Wade’s "IpVel holes in it.” Garfield said. ’"The in those limits is fallacious and we England, and the older Merritt and “What a man does or doesn’t do conditions that include eating dead fish, living in chlorinated Initiative, popularly known as that political action committees of expertise” had been considered law imposes a prohibition on a want to achieve parity among all of Wilbur Cross parkways will be is the.second-most important issue water, swimming in restricted areas, and playing with beach President Reagan’s “Star Wars” have in Connecticut campaigns. in the commission’s deliberations the political committees. overrun with traffic by the turn of in a campaign; the first is his balls. I candidate from authorizing or program. I The commission’s investigation and that it decided that Wade had establishing a committee .other “We will also pursue legislation the century unless commuter voting record," Eddy, a former In a spwch to delegates at the into Democrats For Victory 86 made some honest errors. StiH. he that has been adopted in Montana patterns change drastically, re­ state senator, said in an interview than a single candidate committee July nominating convention. Eddy resulted in a $900 fine against said, ’’ignorance is no excuse.” and currently is being considered ports say. last week on his 90-acre farm. Anti-pipeline shirts selling quickly to promote his own nomination or described Dodd as the "senator attorney James A. Wade, a long­ ’The investigation was the result in the United States Senate, that “I’m making progress: he’s election.” The reports are part of the from Communist Nicaragua” be­ WASHINGTON, Conn. — T-shirts protesting a proposed time political confidant of the of a complaint by former U.S. Rep. candidates should be limited to an paying attention to me. Maybe for He said a loophole exists there Southwest Corridor Transporta­ cause of his opposition to giving 355-mile natural gas pipeline that would cut through western governor, and $12,200 in forfeited Toby Moffett, who at the time was aggregate amount of contributions the first time he knows he’s in fora because other committees can tion Study, a five-phase examina­ any American aid to that country’s Connecticut are selling as fast as they can be manufactured contributions. challenging O’Neill for this year’s contribute any amount they want received from all political tion of conditions along the 1-96 fight. Christopher Dodd has had a organizers say. Despite Wade’s years as a Democratic gubernatorial nomi­ committees. free ride all his political life "contra.s” as pushed by the to a single candidate as long as corridor between Greenwich and president. More than 100 of the shirts, emblazoned with the slogan “Fight lawyer and dealing with politics, nation. Moffett claimed that the they also give at least some money "That kind of legislation willgoo New Haven. The state Department including O’Neill’s campaigns, the "B y the time this thing is over. "Y o u ’re not unpatriotic because The Pipe, sold out within an hour on Saturday, and when the committee was a "phantom" to other candidates. long way toward removing the of Transportation study began in I ’m going to be sure that. win. lose panel concluded he broke the law committee promoting O’Neill’s you di.«n Nil«t Sristians know who delivered the biblical Sermon on the tional convention began Satur­ a state of emergency on slate grain of salt. He had a falling-out The transcribed interviews col­ leave his or her own mark jail. They have been in jail fbir a SOUTHINGTON til 9:00 P.M. highways Aug 22. in the wake of with Roosevelt and was trying to lected at UConn include: "Connec­ Listening to the tapes may have EbLens Mon fit unt and many would have difficulty naming the 10 year without atrial and it looks like day. when about 25 rob«'d K K K W. SPRINGEIELD CASUAL CLOTHING b FOOTWEAR Sot U F M St^ tI S M Commandments.' It will be another year before they members were outnumbered increasing traffic accidents He set the record straight." Stave ticut Workers and a Half Century advantages, if you want to hear ever get a trial. four-to-one by police officers called for extra police patrols and said of Technological Change. 19,30 to accents, that sort of thing." she The group burned a 25-fool a temporary truck weigh si at ion on Eventually. Stave resolved his 1980." "The Peoples of Connecti­ said. “I think one of the objectives is to 1-95 in We.stport problems with the genre known as wooden cross on Saturday even­ cut” descibing the state's ethnic The UConn Center lets people Raid nets cocaine and poticd^badge keep them in there (jail) so they The reports identified the most oral history. becoming president of makeup. "The Political Activities ing on the properlv of Edwin edit their own transcripts. Stave WE VE GOT EVERYTHING can get at least a year or two out of crowded sections of 1-95 through a the New England Association of of Fully Enfranchised Connecticut -- TORRINGTON — A suspended police officer has denied any Thrall says that the more educated knowledge of a badge found at his uncle's apartment during a their hides” he said. “Even if computer analysis of 1984 data on Oral History, and director of the Women," and "Holocaust Survi­ subjects want to alter the record. some Hartford jury ever acquits Five people — none of whom drug raid that police say netted 12 gram s of cocaine and a pistol. rush-hour traffie The analysis University of Connecticut’s Center vors of the Connecticut Region” “They don’t like the way they FOR BACK TO SCHpOt) them they will be prevented from were Klan members — were shows that traffic exceeds eapiie- Vance Williams, 30, who is awaiting trial on charges of cocaine AP photo for Oral History. There are also individual inter­ sound, they don’t like their gram­ doing the work they are fighting for arrested Saturday, but there ity and slows to a crawl along at possession stemming from the grand jury investigation of crime KKK IMPERIAL WIZARD JAMES FARRANDS Stave, a Fulbright professor who views. such as that conducted in m ar” he said. ^>1 — the independence of Puerto were no arrests Sunday, police least 35 percent of the Greenwich- is also chairman of UConn’s 1981 with Chase Going Woodhouse. A helpful subject will correct 2 in Torrington, said all of his badges have been taken away from Rico” . . . with cross burned at East Windsor farm said / him. New Haven stretch during rush history department, says that oral a former Secretary of the Stale and dates or names. Stave said. A crowd estimated at between hour historians had to earn approval congressw om ^ Mrs Woodhouse "Memory distorts," Stave said. Andrew Williams. 47. and LindaSMorrow, 33, were arrested 300 and 400 — comprised of R G G b d h i n Three areas are identified in from their peers. Some thought it described hdivsBe decided to teach “To do a good oral history Saturday at the Torrington apbrtnmnt they share and were supporters of all races — were which rush-hour traffic volume wasn't a scholarly pursuit. (consumen conswmptton el Con­ interview, you should do a lot of charged with possession of cocaine with intent to sell, police said bused in from Boston. New York. already equals or exceeds turnpike Since ancient times, the oral necticut College when it was an background, because if the subject Because life is not a spectator sport.<^ Polite said they found the cocaine, a pistol and a police Philadelphia and Washington. capacity: tradition has existed. Oral history, all-female .school — and how “all starts heading off in a direction you officers’ badge during the raid conducted after a one-week D C to participate in the midday Pay toa low at group homes "The 10 miles between the however, requirwl the invention of the sweet old ladies in the English don’t think is right, you can steer investigation, but Police Chief Mahlon Sabo declined to reveal to rally in Hartford. Other rallies Greenwich-Stamford border and the tape recorder. The other tools department thought I was talking it.” whom the badge belonged. were scheduled for Puerto Rico A t h l e t ic H A R T FO R D (AP) - Thq,st^te’s for state employees at group Route 7 in Norwalk: the 6 miles are the subject’s memory, and the about the disease” For those who want to try their and San Francisco, supporters are turning me down because of between Fairfield and Stratford: interviewers’ skills Tracing changing social mores push to develop privat^ group homes and institutions the salary," he said own hand at interviewing family or said. the 3 miles through JiJrw Haven — like teaching sheltered young community members. Stave says homes for the mentally rg^ti ^ The starting salary for state Peril Katz, director of residen­ Stave says that oral history was Off-duty cop rescues six boaters The trial delays, which infuriate As expected, motorists .sun eyed women about, money — is oral the first step is to be prepared. OOTWEAR has hit a snag — salaries of l -'employees was raised from $8 44 tial centers for the Society to launched in 1938. by Columbia the defendants and their attorneys, an hour that are too low to aitract in October at 1-95 toll stations University historian Allan Nevins. history’s turf The language some­ "Know about the person before STAM FO RD — An off-duty police sergeant using a rubber life an hour to $8.86 an hour. Advance Retarded and Handi­ are attributed to the sorting of workers needed to operate\he deplored the driving conditions At first, prominent subjects were one uses is particularly telling. you go in." he said. raft rescued six Long Islanders from the waters of Stamford The Rev Earnest Brooks, presi­ capped in Norwalk, said job • MENS mountains of evidence collected by facilities. dent of Lutheran Child and Family Harbor after their motor boat crashed into a solid rock F B I agents who worked on t he case applicants laugh when they hear • WOMENS I breakwall, authorities said. About 1.50 private group honigs in Services of Connecticut, said a new the starting salary at the agency’s for two years The evidence Connecticut now house 900 people, group home scheduled to open in • KIDS ( Stamford Police Sgt. Thomas McGuinness repeatedly rowed includes more than 30.000 docu­ group homes is between $4 and $5 and about 50 state group homes the Hartford area in mid- LIMITED R G G b o ' K ^ out from a cabin cruiser to rescue the six during high tide ments, wiretaps and hundreds of an hour Yale students renew protest have about 400 residents. During September probably will not open State officials are looking to Saturday night, when waters were 15 feet deep, authorities said. hours of videotapes. the 1986-87 fiscal year, the state until October because of difficulty OPENINGS Language has also proven a private group homes as the future have to do in situations like that," plans to place 236 more people in in finding staff N EW H A V EN (AP) - The start events for the month, which will major hindrance for both the for mentally retarded people, Katz uration. Pardo said 3 year old McGuinness said Sunday. "You don’t even consider your own private group homes and 54 more Susan Lanzoni Middletown- of the academic year at Yale culminate on Sept. 19-20. Pardo prosecution and the defense The said Yet, she said. "W e can’t Last year, city and campus personal safety. You just get out there.” in state-operated group homes area coordinator for the agency, University will bring renewed said. Yale’s new president, Benno nursery school ISIMAN defendants speak mostly Spanish, attract and retain competent police mode 322 arrests at various Two men were hospitalized with broken bones and a third was Complaints from private group said that of eight calls .she receiv^ staff." efforts by protesters to convince C. Schmidt Jr., will be inaugurated anti-apartheid demonstrations program. treated for deep facial lacerations. Police Lt. Thomas Lombardo and much of the evidence is in home operators have been growing the .school to dive.st its estimated Spanish. in response to a job opening at the The private group homes, al­ on Sept. 20, while the school’s around campus More than 1.000 Q SIJUVIVOUS said. Three others on board were not seriously injured and did not over the summer, said Margaret group home five people said they $400 million in slocks in companies board of trustees will also be on U.S. District Judge T. Emmet most all of which are non-profit, people attended one Yale divest­ require medical attention. Dignoti. executive director of the were not interested as soon as they that do busine.ss in South Africa. campus on those two days. Clarie has not scheduled pre-trial rely on contracts with the state to ment rally Connecticut Association for Re­ were informed of the starting pay "O ur group is more sophisti­ Organizers have scheduled a hearings on what evidence he will get clients The state pays the Students were anxious to find out W a te rp ro o f tarded Citizens. Douglas Anderson, residential cated and a lot more skilled at forum on divestment for Sept. 19. exclude from the trial, and a trial agencies a predetermined amount how the divestment issue would be “The whole situation has been director at the Shoreline A.ssocia- organizing than we were last Nuclear plant due back on line date has not been set. to care for each client, depending Pardo said The Rev. Jesse Jack- handled by Schmidt, who replaced exacerbated with low unemploy­ tion for Retarded and Handi­ year.” said Beth Pardo, a protest son. the Atfierican civil rights Boots ”We have done everything hu­ on the client’s needs A. Bartlett Giamatti as president. HADDAM NECK — Connecticut Yankee nuclear power plant ment, combined with the fact that capped Citizens in Guilford said organizer and a second-year law leader, and the Rev. Alan Boesak, manly possible to bring this case Last spring, state legislators Giamatti left Yale on June 30 was to have been brought back on line today, a spokesman said. the state is continuing to hire from he recently had four of five school student at Yale “The an opposition leader in South MANCHESTER expeditiously to trial, ” said U.S. authorized a study of the disparity Last spring, students were ar­ Richard Gallagher, a spokesman for Northeast Utilities, said the same labor pool." Dignoti said applicants end discussions about a campus generally is in support of Africa, have expressed interest in Attorney Stanley A. Twardy in pay at state and private group rested and suspended, and a CALL Monday night workers were beginning to start the reactor back She said the crisis has worsened job at one of the agency’s group this whole issue. We will get people attending, she said. But New Haven defense attorney homes. State officials have protest shantyloivn they built on up. but the turbines weren’t on line. during the summer, partly be­ homes because of the low pay. He involved” Protesters are also considering a campus was torn down by the 6 4 3 - 5 5 3 5 Diane Polan said. "It is outrageous cause of a wage increase that the pledged to propose changes during He said he expected the nuclear power plant to be back in declined to say exactly what the the next legislative session that The group has planned several demonstration at Schmidt's inaug­ school at dawn one morning. Siiei; 7 to 13 9 operation this morning that people are being detained New England Health Care Em­ pay was. without bond with no trial in ployees Union, District 1199, won would enable private group homes X'C*I*X^*X“X*t*X^’“X*X*X»X*I' sight” “A number of qualified people to pay employees more E b le h r EVERYDAY DUBALDO MUSIC CENTER ALL YOUR SPORTING NEEDS BETTY-JANE TURNER LOW Two affordable ways to make PRICEL Registration io o % c o n o N | ii-J - ® R c z o b o iK iP a house your home. I O R IG IN A l RIVITED BecmaeHkanof»$ptctaiortpori.'‘ Sept. 3rd - 4th - 5th \ IkTlhUji' 1 ')c;ir SCHOOL OF DANCE UNWASHED • SWEATSHIRTS and SWEATPANTS STRAIGHT LIO 3:00 pm - 6:00 pm • SUPPORTERS . \ .irulilc Rate Morlijam' X* 40 OAK ST. 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She has CLEATS I&99 up ___Q ( d i( d a s ^ .AO-vear term tO-year term IISalmday,FrMay, Sapt SepL 5 ------C . 10 AM.2 ta to 7 2 P.M. P.M. recently returned from New York City where she hu Prke! SENTRY OIL CO. been studying the latest in dance education. F A S T D E LIV E R Y 10 SPEED BIKES $129.99 up Stop by tbe Herih^ office nearest you today: 2 Main St.. Manchester Previous students may call tor class schedules, beginning Sept. 2nd 643-7111 646-3998 Help y o u r child o b t a in telf confidence, poine, and 150 Gal. Minimum ...... Op*** 0«fi» B l Su" * ' ^ Heritage physical fitness through dance training 59» • STRAIGHT LEGS Route 195. Storrs. C T A Federally Insured Savings and Loan Association 243-5074 FARR’S Manchester Division Coventry Route 3^742-7321 AMl't.(3l-U|, ituAmTi Puce le Change 429-1372 Mam Office 1007 Mam S t . 649-4586 Glastcmbury Inside Frank's Supermarket, 649-0256 — 563-8205 t K i* ' lim I ^ K Mar^ Plaza, Spencer S t , 649 3007 Fox Run Mall, 633-7655 Corner Mam & Hudson Sts , 647-0568 ______^ t h Windsor 29 Oakland Rd . 644-2484 M ANCHESTER H ER ALD . Thieaday. Sent. 2,1988 — 7 VS.fW oHd in Brief Soviets deny arrest is retaiiatory MlnMeri SMk Lebanon caata-flra By Carol J. Williams Asked if the material in the Daniloff has been in Moscow 5'/i The Assocloted Press package was enough to convict years and was to leave this week on r 9 ’^***“" Moslem Cabinet ministers Nations can’t Daniloff on espionage charges, a monthlong trip retracing the months today and issued a call for a M >' ' '' MOSCOW — A Foreign Ministry Gerasimov today told reporters: steps of a Russian ancestor jailed w fr cease-fire” to end the civil spokesman today denied the KGB I ! I|I!I ' claimed more than 100,000 lives. “The materials he possessed in Siberia in-1825. He then was to had ja NawSiNaln tM -aiir Witofbun has been established in light of the fact the ALEXANDEK QlltELLI 646-3687 n r - e m blight on the country that is popularly known as capita, but it ’s.'^ond to none in television A a to d a to EdR or ■ c .H « n o fg tS».Sm NawHaaan SN-gm WatofSnn illiterate can not write for information. nS-6SW Naw Lenden 44Mni (W a te ^ g t) TN*7fP1 OK) the most advanced on the planet, and Kozol adds viewing. (M m 44S-61M NorateR MS44M W .Hailtord ‘ Fee tor tubeequent weeks S7 Vtss ctai rales Weight Watchers and O uidi DENISE A. NOSERTB ...... AdvtrtWng DRactor ' 697 Parker Street, Manchester that it suggests-"a dark and stormy future for us 3 min. from Vernon / 5 min. from 5 Corners, S. Windsor MttNEegN tagsnr RoekyMn • n - I t t Z Waal Haven j arx) MasterCard accepted at aalectad Stan are raoiaiefad trademarks of And there are more subtle causes as well. The MAMK F. ABRAinS ...... BuNnaae Managar . aaa,^aaa ^ - WEIGHT E t c h e r s in t e r n a Tom Tiede has written often during the past 20 N> NMtfoftf •tl-tm Waatbrdok/ PM m r locations tor prepayment Offer vaiid at PREV all.” pressures of culture, to name one Karl Haigler. S H E LD O N C O H E N ...... Compoatng Managar - g. u n p e g M S-flir Tanington 4gt-rg4T pamcipMing locations only Cannot be DONAL. INC } 1966 WEIGHT years about literacy in the United States. He also 4M -17M combined with other diecounts or epa- WATCHERS international , INC What Already, the nation is populating its military the director of a federal program to combat NOSEhTH. HUSBAAD ...... Prteeroom Manag* ' has personally taught a number of adults how to JEANNE a. mOMCSTM ...... CtrculaHen Managar ranks with recruits who are not able to illiteracy (the Literacy Initiative). says that when read. Open House Saturday, Sept 6., 10am-2pm M A N C H E S TE R H E R A L D , TueBdmr. Sent. 2. IBSB — »

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By The Associated Press $34.09 million to the Jerry Lewis merged with the Congress of Labor Day Telethon to combat Industrial Organization in 1$$$, Some marched in picket lines or Muscular Dystrophy. This year’s and the organisation now has l$.l in parades celebrating the lOOth pledges, which surpassed IBSS’s million membera. anniversary of the American Fed­ record $33.1 million, mean that In Chicago, about 40,fB6 onkm eration of Labor, while others took more than $400 million has been members marched down Michigan advantage of Labor Day to get r a i ^ in the 21-year history.of the their last taste of summer. Avenue in a parade beaded by nationally televised event. AFL-CIO President Lane Kirk­ New York City’s Labor Day About 2.100 teachers on strike in land, joining Gov. James R. parade was canceled when union Pennsylvania, Illinois, Ohio and Thompson, the first Republican to leaders decided to give partici­ Michigan were among those on be endorsed by the state A F L-CL-tJlO. IO . pants a holiday, and chilly weather Labor Day picket lines. Also on Richard Trum ka, presidentdent of . put a damper on activities in the strike were nearly 500 steel­ the United Mine Workers union, South. workers in Bridgeport, Conn., who served as grand marshal of_____ t W ^ . staged a walkout against Carpen­ Labor Day parade in Princeton, But autumn-like temperatures ter Technology Corp. didn’t stop 71-year-old Steve Woz- Ind. The town of 9,000 has marked niak and Jim Quinn, SI, from "We will walk the picket line on the holiday for 100 years, getting swimming nine miles in Lake Erie Labor Day,” union spokesman an eight-year head start on the at Buffalo, N .Y ., with their feet Edwin A. Gomes said. "W e feel national celebration approved by tied together. that is very, very appropriate.” (ingress in 1894. In Detroit, parades drew an And 27-year-old Brendt Smith About 1,000 people in Lorain, Ohio, on Monday marched outside estimated 165,000 participants and spent the day swimming in 49 lakes the USX Corp. steel plant, which spectators. S in Indiana to raise money for the has been shut since Aug. I in a But in New York, there was no American Cancer Society in me­ labor dispute. parade. Thomas Van Arsdale, mory of his father, who died of head of the New York Central An Aeromexico cancer three years ago. Smith, of On Saturday, union members Labor Council, said it was felt that Warsaw, Ind., began his swim commemorating the founding of "the members who participate and DC-9, upside around dawn as the temperature the A F L held an hour-long parade the people who do the work would down, plunges was 48 degrees. through downtown Columbus. welcome a day off” The parade toward the Also in . the spirit of giving, Ohio, where the organization was has been held intermittently since Americans contributed a record founded on Dec. 10, 1886. The A F L ground seconds 1882. E after colliding with a light plane over Cer­ Strikes by teachers affect ritos, Calif., Sunday. This picture was made by ama­ 45,000 students in 4 states P teur photo­ grapher Al BvArthur Buckler aided by a federal mediator, school A strike by 55 teachers in the Francis, who AsAssociated Press spokesman Chuck Zillo said. 1,050-student Harbor Beach, lives near the The agreement halts a strike Mich., district continued with no crash site. Teachers in Youngstown, Ohio, that threatened to mar the opening new talks scheduled. Walkouts ended a one-day walkout today of schools Wednesday. Teachers also continued in Champaign, Sygmi photo vli AP without any disruption of classes were to report today for meetings Okawville and Berkeley, 111., for 15.500 students, but 45,000 and in-service training, Zillo said, schools attended by about 10,700 students in four states were and both sides were to vote on the students. affected by strikes. contract today. Pilot suffered heart attack Classroom walkouts began to­ In Pennsylvania, 527 teachers But some 100 public school day in four districts in Michigan teachers in Newton Falls, Ohio, continued to stay out of class in and one in Ohio, and strikes walked off the job today, disrupt­ Bethel Park and Spring Grove, continued in six districts in Illinois. ing classes for 2,000 students. where about 8,700 students attend. Pennsylvania and Michigan. In School had opened there last week. Bethel Park canceled classes this before mid-air crash with jet morning after not enough teachers Rhode Island, Washington. Pen­ In Port Huron, Mich., 643 nsylvania and Massachusetts, teachers on Monday night rejected showed up, said spokeswoman Audrie Bennett, though officials By AvI ArdIttI are involved, but as a matter of sister were in the small plane. teachers called strikes today that a tentative contract by nearly 4-1 had vowed to open classes despite The Associated Press routine." John Lauber. a National Kirkpatrick identified the pilot could affect classes scheduled to and voted to walk off the job today. the strike. Transportation Safety Board in­ as William Kramer, his wife as start Wednesday. Picket lines were posted and C E R R ITO S . Calif - The pilot of vestigator, said Monday. Kathleen Kramer, and the daugh­ In a Labor Day twist, mean­ classes for 13.000 students were Strikes in districts where classes the small plane that collided with "It is a fact that (the third craft) ter as Caroline Kramer. Ms. while, employees of teachers’ canceled this morning. are to begin Wednesday were an Aeromexico jet suffered a heart took the attention of the controller Kirkpatrick declined comment. unions in Indiana and Ohio went on Instructors in three smaller called in North Smithfield, R.I., attack before the accident, and during the time he was dealing Kramer had recently moved to Los strike Monday. Michigan school districts also with about 120 teachers and 1,800 authorities said 18 people were with Aeromexico," Lauber said. Angeles, Kirkpatrick said. Representatives for about 1,000 stayed out of school today: Niles, students: East Greenwich, R.I., killed on the ground in addition to When the controller returned to The Piper pilot's log. found teachers represented by the with 4,164 students and 258 with 170 teachers and 1,900 stu­ the 67 victims on the planes. deal with the jetliner, he got no among its wreckage in a school- Youngstown Education Associa­ teachers; Cass City, with 1,578 dents: Steilacoom, Wash., with 85 The latest report of fatalities response. yard playground, indicated he had tion reached a tentative agree­ students and 71 teachers: and teachers and 1,500 students; and today in the Los Angeles Times The crash in the Los Angeles 231 flight hours since January 1980. ment with the school board at 6:30 Mount Clemens, with 3.558 stu­ Attleboro, Mass., w ith400teachers included 15 people in a single suburb of Cerritos was the worst said Lauber. who said that was a a.m., after 2'Y hours of bargaining dents and 222 teachers. and 5,400 stqdents. house. U.S. air tragedy since 137 people relatively low level of experience. In another development, offi­ were killed Aug. 2, 1985, when a Preliminary transcripts from cials disclosed late Monday that Delta Airlines L-1011 TriStar the traffic control center didn't the air traffic controller guiding crashed while landing at Dallas- indicate the Piper's flight path the jetliner when it collided with a Fort Worth International Airport. because the pilot apparently never private plane Sunday was appar­ The Piper's pilot suffere^^a heart made contact with controllers ently distracted by a third craft attack moments before th& colli­ there. Lauber said. 2 2 Invalidated nearby. sion. Bill Gold, a spokesman fotthe Just before the crash, the 3 Ate away Los Angeles County fire spokes­ Los Angeles County C o ro n e ^ controller handling the Aeromex­ 1 Levels 4 degree man Capt. G arry Oversby told the Office, said Monday. J ico jetliner’s approach became The East Catholic High School 6 Broedwey 5 Regard Times that the dead included 67 Lauber said he hadjiointjicajii^n aware of a third plane in the area, musicel 6 Long time people aboard the two planes and if the hpSrLattack could h a ve T^ to although it didn't appear ta be in 18 residents of the neighborhood the colljson. Parents’ Club 11 Deteriorated 7 Tank danger of crossing the DC-9's path, devastated by flaming wreckage "That, of course, is a significant 13 Growled B Flattened Lauber said. of the crash. finding that we will be pursuing "Immediately following that ex­ 14 Weelthler 9 Card Fifteen of the victims on the extensively." he said. "There isn’t change. the controller tries to 15 Ghent combination ground were in one home, appar­ much at this point we can say about make contact with Aeromexico to 16 Anglo-Seson let 10 Expert ently at a party. O v ^ b y said it, other than to note it with great give him a left turn." a routine ter 1 ’’ Selected card w THIS FLU Found in the .same homeNvere the interest and we will pursue” landing instruction, Lauber said. Presents 17 Printer's 13 Funny bodies of three of th^ jet's Officials were not able to deter­ During the next 2'Y minutes, the measures 18 — culpa V 1 A VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Your ability Ji* Vff/?Y T H o p o u G H . passengers, he said. The boaies of mine the severity of the heart controller tried to contact the 19 Short sleep 21 Actor Al A R N A to gel along well with others will prove three other people who had been on attack, but said it did not kill the jetliner eight tirrws without suc­ to be your greatest asset. Now is the the ground were founcLin a sfcond 20 Profound 23 Most wise T A C K| '' NEVFP A pilot. He was decapitated in the cess, he said. / time to try to establish a broader range house. collision. Gold said. 22 Chinese river 25 Distance s N E E of contacts Get a jump on life by under­ Investigators have identified 32 Previously confirmed deaths The coroner's office did not 23 Denomination measure standing the Influences that will govern witnesses to the crash, 11 of whom you in the year ahead. Send lor your As­ included 64 aboard the Aeromexico identify the pilot, but Robert have been questioned. Most indi­ 24 Normandy 27 Disrespectful 36 Each 49'QT'hoaling tro-Graph prediclions.today Mall $1 to DC-9 and three on Piper Archer. Kirkpatrick of Spokane said the cated the planes were flying invasion day 29 Arrange 39 Opera house: Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper. PO The air traffic controller will coroner’s office notified his former generally toward each other when The Scott Magoon (comp. wd.| La (abbr.) differently Box 91428, Cleveland.OH 44101-3428. CtBM W NiA T*-tw.vie$ 9-2 take a drug lest today "not because wife, Suzanne Kirkpatrick of Spo­ they appeared to make simultane­ 26 Scratch 41 Charitable or 33 Baseball fan 51 Army Transport Be sure to slate your zodiac sign. there was any indication (drugs) kane, that her father, mother and ous left turns. Lauber said. 26 Railroad vahicia ganiiatlon 34 City in England (abbr.) WINTHROP - by Dick Cavalll 30 Soldaring piaca Service (abbr.) LIBRA (Sapl. 23-Ocl. 23) Something of 35 Salt water 43 Made public a beneficial nature is stirring behind the 31 Make engry 37 Salt lake Benefit Dance 4B to Joy 52 Acquired scenes today. It's about ready to cast a MY efRANPRATHER THAT ENABLE HIM TO 32 Netherlands bright influence over your financial IN VENTED A RA|R O F THOSE i^LASSEScSOT HIM affairs. READ WHILE STANDI(skSr THROWN OZ-irOF THE BEVERLY BOLLINO BURTON c commune EYESLAeSEB... ON HIS HEAD. 33 Musical L IB R A R Y Y E S T E R D A Y . SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You are movements now entering a new cycle full of hope DANCE STUDIO 36 Former weather and promise. However, don't be dis­ U LINDEN STREET, MANCHESTER bureau turbed or frustrated if early Indicators Satui^day, September 6, 1986 39 By itself go against you. Directors: Beverly & Lee Burton SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Ooc. 21) 40 King (Sp.| You're in a positive opportunity trend 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. 42 Mulberry cloth where your work or career Is con­ CLASSES FOR CHILDREN AND ADULTS IN CLASSICAL BALLET, 44 Food fish cerned. You can realize goals related to TAP, JAZZ, ACROBATICS-TUMBLING 45 Equine mother these areas. 1*^ 9 46 52, Roman CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. IB) Be your >^^l‘(Vnn Nutmeg ’niealer. M (X TTieater 3 and l.iltle llieater of Manchester. ning in your favor at this time Their in­ Opening lead: ▼ Q sand years before the arrival of Euro­ notice it was doubieton?) and the de­ Students have won nnmeroiV^ trophii^s^d'scholarships al tianiv «'ompetitions. Thev are well known as faculty fluences will be exceptionally strong fenders quickly took four heart tricks peans in North America. Metis are of today to set the contract. mixed native Indian and non-Indian memU’rs of dani'c workshops and adjutlirators of ('ompelitious and scholarship auditions throughout the ixkuntrv. ancesir^ ) J* — MANCHESTER HERALD. Tueaday, SepIt. 2 19;« MANCHESTER HERALD Tuesday, Sept. 2, 1988 - 11 O b itu a rie a Police busy SPORTS Mary L Coburn DavM W. EnwiBon with traffic Maiy L. (Conmra) Coliiirn. ff , of David W. Emenon. 29, of Ea«t Hartford, a former M anch^ Unkniville, died Aug. 26. He was on weekend ter rcaMent, died Monday at home. the brother of Elizabeth Emerson She was the widow of Frank A. and Linda Turner, both of Cobam. Coventry. While most people were relaxing ‘ She is survived by four sons, He also is survived by a son. during the Labor Day weekend, the Robert C. Cobum of Cromwell, Matthew Emerson; a daughter. Manchester Police Department John T. Cobum and Richard E. Ericka Ennerson. both of Wethers­ was busy trying to stop speeders Coburn Sr.. both of East Hartford; field; two brothers. Donald Emer­ and drunken drivers. and Anthony P. Cobum of South son Jr. of New Britain and Ronald Between Friday and midnight Windsor three daughters, Harriet Emerson of Newington; another Monday, six people were arrested Smith of Glastonbury, Joan Leo­ sister. Audrey Emerson of Hart­ for driving while intoxicated. 41 nard of Bedford. Mass., and Sister ford; an uncle and an aunt. were ticketed for speeding and 59 Ellen Marie Cobum of the Sisters ’The funeral and burial were held other motor vehicle citations were of Mercy, West Hartford; two at the convenience of the family. issued, according to police. sisters. Catherine O’Connor and The Maple Hill Chapel. 380 Four people were injured Sun­ Agnes O’Connor, both of Glaston­ Maple Ave.. Hartford, had charge day in a two-car accident on West bury; 16 grandchildren and six of arrangements. Middle Turnpike, police said. The great-grandchildren. driver of one of the vehicles was The funeral will be Thursday at Donna Dance charged with operating under the 10; 49 a.m. at the Callahan Funeral influence, police said. Home. 1602 Main St., East Hart­ Donna (Belinchio) Dance. 87. of Wayne Monnier. 25, of Myrtle ford. with a mass of Christian Wethersfield, wife of Paul Dance Beach, S.C.. was following a burial at 11:30 a m. at St. Rose Sr., died Thursday at her home. vehicle driven by Matthew Leon. Church. Burial will be in St. She was the sister of Margaret Pitz 16, of Glastonbury, near the on Bridget Cemetery. Calling hours of Coventry. ramp to Interstate 84 when the are Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to She also is survived by a son. accident occurred, police said. S s 9 p.m. Paul J. Dance Jr. of Wethersfield; Monnier’s car struck the left rear Memorial donations may be three other sisters. Rose Gillen of quarter panel of Leon’s ear as Leon made to the Sisters of Mercy. Clearwater. Fla.. Camile Carter of was making a left turn, police said. Mercyknoll, 243 Steele Road. West Nutley. N.J.. and Jean Thomas in Monnier claimed Leon had at- Hartford 06117. Florida: a brother. Fred Bellochio ^ tempted a left turn from the right of West Palm Beach. Fla., two ' lane, but police said they could find grandchildren; and two great- Raymond L. Smith This picture taken by the SPOT I from one of the two civilian satellites no evidence to support that, and grandhcildren. skid marks showed Monnier had Raymond L. Smith. 82, of 51 Sateliite 500 miles above the earth that are giving the public a close-up E The funeral was today at the been traveling in the left lane at a Walnut St., died Monday at Man­ E D’Esopo Wethersfield Chapel. 277 shows the New York harbor and lower glimpse of the world. high rate of speed. chester Memorial Hospital. He Folly Brook Blvd.. with a mass of Manhattan Island. This image came was the husband of Ruth (Proctor) The two drivers, along with X Christian burial in the Church of Smith. Dewight Monnier. of45 Benton St., Harild photo* by Tuekar the Incarnation. Wethersfield who was traveling with Monnier. Born in Manchester. Jan. 26. Burial was in Mount St. Benedict and Seth West. 16, of 131 Hartford There was plenty of action on Labor Day at the 4th annual Coors event capped four straight days of racing for King, who has 1904, he had been a lifelong Cemetery, Bloomfield. Wheeling Road, who was a pa.ssenger in Light/Exposition Wheelmen criterium at the Manchester competed in the Tour de France. At right, a pair of participants resident. He worked as a foreman Memorial donations may be Commercial satellite photos Leon’s car. were treated at Industrial Park. At left. Betsy King (center) of Farmington, riding for many years at Cheney Bros., made to the American Cancer are virtually neck-and-neck in the day's feature race, the Senior Manchester Memorial Hospital for and dealing tor Peugeot Factory, leads the pack in the women’s race. The P and since 1948 he had worked for Society. 670 Prospect Ave., Hart­ back injuries and reieased. a II and III for a top-prize of $1,000. Pioneer Parachute as a foreman in ford 06105. P hospital spokesman said this the pack department until his let public enter spy business morning. retirement. He was a member of Anthony J. Lupacchlno,^ Poiice said Monnier refused a AL roundup South United Methodist Church. By Deborah Mesce biood test, which means his Besides his wife, he is survived Anthony J. Lupacchino of East Since its inception, oil compan­ available only to U.S. and Soviet Hartford, died Saturday. He was The Associated Press ies, geologists, foresters, crop driver’s license will automatically by one son. Bruce P. Smith of intelligence agencies from their be suspended for 90 days. He was Ellington: one brother. Harry the brother of Daniel Lupacchino forecasters and others involved in spy satellites, which some say are Red Sox hang tough released on a written promise to Smith of Manchester; a sister. Jr. of Manchester. WASHINGTON - Satellites are resource management have been sensitive enough to read the He also is survived by a giving ' the public a close-up appear at Manchester Superior Blue Jays won’t give in Landsat’s main customers be­ Mildred Klatt of Manchester: and license plate on a car. Court on Sept 15. By Dave O'Hara two granddaughters daughter. Patricia L. Lupacchino glimpse of the world — including cause its give a broad view of the "The military can see tennis The Associated Press missile sites, ships and military The funeral will be Wednesday of East Hartford, his parents, Earth, showing drought and vege­ balls: the civilian can see tennis Bv The Associated Press fielding all year has been okay” with a two-run homer in Oakland’s bases — previously seen only by A Deerfield Street man was at 1:30 p.m. at the Watkins Funeral Daniel and Patricia (Kelley) Lu­ tation patterns. The smallest ob­ courts,” said John Pike, associate The Indians’ other costly mis­ five-run second inning, and the A s BOSTON — Marty Barrett, Home, 142 E. CJenterSt. Burial will pacchino. also of East Hartford: U.S. and Soviet intelligence ject its sensors can distinguish is director of space policy for the treated at Manchester Memorial TORONTO — Clutch hitting and take came in the seventh after the Boston Red Sox’ tough little officials. held on to beat the Yankees with be in East Cemetery. There are no five other brothers. Charles Lu­ 100 feet by 100 feet. " Federation of American Hospital and released Sunday for solid pitching are two keys in Brett Butler singled with one out second baseman, had just gone The technology has been in the the help of Mike Davis’ eighth­ calling hours. pacchino and Richard Lupacchino. SPOT can discern objects about Scientists. injuries he suffered earlier that keeping a team on a winning streak Julio Franco then swung and inning solo homer. The homer gave O-for-5. even hitting into a private sector since 1972 when the Memorial donations may be both of East Hartford, Donato one-third that size — about the size A 1984 law that turned over the day when he lost control of the car and the Toronto Blue Jays got missed on a hit-and-run play, and Canseco 101 RBI. double play with the bases U.S.-owned Landsat satellite be­ he was driving and it struck a tree, made to the South United Metho­ Lupacchino ofWaterbury. Francis of half a tennis court, but even with operations of Landsat 4 and 5 to the some of both at the right time on the instant catcher Buck Martinez Davis’ homer gave Oakland a 9-6 loaded. gan delivering images from space, officials said. dist Church Memorial Fund. Lupacchino of Wind.sor and Mi­ SPOT pictures, the significant Earth Observation Satellite Co. Monday. threw to second Butler scampered lead. and New York scored t wice in But Barrett had an impish but a government decision to Police said John P. McCarthy chael Lupacchino in California: features sometimes have to be last year provides that the satel­ The result was a 5-4 victory over back towards first the ninth to pull within one run. One grin Monday night after the Red commercialize Landsat and the Jr.. 19. of 80 Dwrfield St., was two sisters. Patricia Zukowski .of pointed out to the untrained eye. lite’s photos be available “on a the Cleveland Indians and a club However, the throw to shortstop of the Yankees late runs scored on Sox survived four Texas homers Nearly 470 die launch of the French-owned SPOT fined $40 for traveling at an Somers and Barbara Lupacchino The satellites, orbiting about 500 nondiscriminatory basis’’ to record-tying ninth consecutive Tony Fernandez wa.s low and Willie Randolph’s bases-loaded for a 6-4 victory over the of Wipdspr Locks: eight nephews satellite in February are fueling a miles above the Earth, caught the anyone who wants to buy them. unreasonable speed after the car win. With Boston beating Texas skipped to center field but Butler, Rangers. new industry. grounder, and the second scored o n n a tio n ’s ro a d s and thrw nieces. public eye last spring by supplying Eosat. based in Lanham, Md., is a he was driving west on Lydall Rangers 6-4, the Blue Jays re­ in.stead of being on-third, was back “ We kept pace with them, “ It opens up a whole new window when second baseman Lenn Sa­ CHICAGO (AP) — Nearly 470 The funeral will be Thursday at the first news pictures of the Soviet joint venture of Hughes Aircraft Street failed to negotiate a curve mained 3‘A games behind the at first. It cost Cleveland a run as didn’t we — even though no of information on the world that kata threw away the potential people had died in traffic accidents 8:15 a.m. at the Callahan Funeral Union’s Chernobyl nuclear disas­ and RCA Cjorp. His car skidded over the curb off first-place Red Sox in the Ameri­ one out later. Joe Carter .singled. double-play relay, thanks to me.” Barrett said we’ve never been able to look the street and toppled a tree, police nationwide by the official end of Home. 1602 Main St., East Hart­ ter , showing the destroyed reactor Landsat and SPOT satellites can League East race. Martinez, meanwhile, had suc­ Dwayne Murphy hit an inside- with a wink as he nwde his way through before,’’ said Mark said the Labor Day weekend. ford. with a mass of Christian and scorched earth beside it. circle the Earth in near polar The clutch hitting came from cessfully 'ursed Key into the the-park homer for Oakland, and through a crowded tiubhouse to Brender, ABC News assignment By 3 a.m. EDT Tuesday, the total burial at 9 a m in St. Rose Church. More recently. The New York orbits, covering all points on the He has until Sept. 12 to pay his Lloyd Moseby who drilled a seventh rookie Leo Hernandez homered his locker. “ That’s' all that editor who heads a space commit­ this holiday weekend was 467 East Hartford. Burial will be in Times on Aug. 25 published SPOT globe except the areas around the fine at Manche.ster Superior Court. one-out. bases-loaded line drive to “ He didn’t have his good stuff and doubled for the Yankees. counts, winning. No one can do Cedar Hill Cemetery, Hartford. tee of the Radio-Television News deaths. photographs of the Soviet Union’s poles. The satellites orbit continu­ left over a five-man infield, snap­ today, not at all.” said Martinez. Whit* Sox 4, Royals 0 anything as long as we win” Last year’s Labor Day weekend Calling hours are Wednesday from Directors Association. Baikonur space center in central ously and cannot hover over a A Glastonbury man was ar­ ping a 4-4 tie. “ He couldn’t keep his best pitch, For the most part, the Red ended with 439 people dead and 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Paul Stares, a Brookings Institu­ Asia. Analysts said the pictures particular spot. rested Monday on charges that The solid pitching came from his sinking fastball down but came Floyd Bannister pitched his first Sox insist they’re playing “ one 18,000 seriously injured, according tion research associate who spe­ show construction of support facili­ Landsat satellites circle the stemmed from leaving his 3-year- reliever Tom Henke, 9-3, who up with other pitches to somehow shutout and fifth complete game of game at a time” and not to National Safety Council records. cializes in military uses of space, ties for a space shuttle. globe every 99 minutes, but it takes old son and 10-month-old daughter retired all seven batters he faced, keep us in the game. the season, beating the Royals with worrying about what the surg­ Felix J. NIewInskI Jr. said the intelligence implications a seven-hitter for his lOOth career The council had predicted that The New York Post in March 16 days for a satellite to cover all locked in his car in a Broad Street five by strikeouts “ Butu u i that iiiai waswaz* ao definiteuriiiiiitr keyRry for------ing Toronto Blue Jays or other low gas prices likely would mean Feiix J Niewinski. 70. of Rock­ of the civilian surveillance can be used a Landsat photo of a Libyan points on the planet except the parking lot for at least 15 minutes, Equally as Important, though, is us today We won although o u r ^ ^ ‘‘^“” T Carlton Fisk drove in one American League East rivals an increase in Labor Day traffic ville, husband of Beatrice (Usher) expected to grow as its use air base, showing SA-5 and other areas near the poles. At higher police said. The car’s windows that the Blue Jays never hurt starter had mediocre stuff But scored another for the are doing. increases. 2 deaths this year. Niewinski. died Saturday at home anti-aircraft missile emplace­ latitudes, near where the paths of were rolled up in temperatures themselves. Starter Jimmy Key that’s how you win nine in a row.’ White Sox. It’s just a party line They California reported the most He was the father of Joseph F. “ There’s going to be more ments and runways to accommo­ that measured 115 degrees, police was far from his best, giving up a Bannister raised his lifetime knew when they took the field 2 the two satellites converge, they Up until Henke arrived two outs fatalities, 49. Texas was second Niewinski of Bolton. challenging of government sour­ date about 70 warplanes. can cover a site once every eight said pair of two-run homers and seven into the seventh, the game was one mark against the Royals to 14-6. against Texas that Toronto had with 44. He also is survived by a brother, ces than before,” he said. “ They Television networks also have days. John C. Simpson. 36. was other hits, but he managed to stay of two-run homers. giving him more victories over beaten Cleveland 5-4 in the t w o sisters and two (media) will be able to take around long enough for Henke to Kansas City than any other team. The national count began at 6 been broadcasting satellite- SPOT, which has a smaller field charged with two counts of risk of Cliff Johnson and George Bell hit afternoon. With a ninth consecu­ p.m. local time Friday and ended granddaughters. photographs of alleged arms supplied photos of Soviet naval get into the game Fisk doubled and scored Chica­ of view, takes 26 days to cover the injury to a minor, police said. The their two-run homers in the first tive victory, the Blue Jays had at midnight Monday. The funeral was today at the treaty violations ... and see for The Blue Jays also made no go’s first run in the second inning, bases near Murmansk and the globe, but because its sensors can two children were “ sweating a and sixth innings while Carmen put pressure on Boston once themselves, and bring in a nongo­ mistakes in the field — unlike the and he drove in the White Sox’ final again. AP photo The safety council had predicted Ladd Funeral Home. 19 Ellington Soviet Union’s main nuclear test see side to side as well as straight great deal” and were taken to Castillo and Snyder returned the Ave., Rockville, with a mass of vernment expert and say. Is this site. Indians, who committed two se­ run of the game with a ninth-inning However, after southpaw that at least 400 people likely would down, the satellite can view a Manchester Memorial Hospital to favor in the second and the fifth. really a treaty violation?’’’ rious blunders which ultimately single. Bruce Hurst surrendered solo Rich Qedman of Boston has no place to go as Rangers die in traffic accidents by the end Christian burial at St Bernard Such pictures previously were particular site twice a week. be treated for dehydration, police The homer for Bell was his 28th, of the three-day holiday weekend Church Burial was in St. Bernard said spelled the difference’\ homers to rookie Pete Incavi- catcher Don Slaught waits with the ball during a SPOT’s side-to-side sensors also tying his career high. The two RBI Tigers 6, Mariners 5 Cemetery. Rockville. Moseby’s single yame after glia. his 21st. and Larry Par­ and that 16.000 others would suffer enable the satellite to view a site They were treated and released gave him 97, two more than his Alan Trammell hit two solo rundown in the second inning at Fenway Park. Qedman serious injuries. to their mother later in the day. Cleveland manager Pat Corrales rish. his 22nd. the Red Sox Police officer from .several angles, producing a major-league high of 95 last year. homers, and Lou Whitaker hit a was out but the Sox went on to win, 6-4. sues town police said. decided with the base.s loaded and bounced back to preserve their Laurette Mathurin three-dimensional image. The homer for Johnson was his two-run shot to lead Detroit over Simpson said he had left the two no one out to bring right-fielder I5th. Castillo hit his seventh and and help the Tigers end a 3>/i-game lead over Toronto. Baby James dies Landsat’s primary advantage is Laurette (Phaneuf) Mathurin. over injury in ball game in the car for 10 minutes to buy Cory Snyder in as a fifth infielder Snyder No. 18. four-game losing streak. The Ma­ Veteran slugger Tony Armas, couple of nifty plays In the field. bullpen in right-center and being able to record in a wider 82, of Putnam, died Sunday at Day some fish at the Super Stop & Shop and station him in front of second While Key struggled. Cleveland riners lost despite getting three the major league’s 1984, home And Bill Buckner was thrown Darrell Porter lined another LOS ANGELES (AP) - The range of spectral bands, which Kimball Hospital. Putnam She A Manchester man who injured at 342 Broad St., police said. base. starter. Greg Swindell, 21. a rookie home runs from Jim Presley. run and RBI champidm con­ out at third trying to stretch a pinch shot into the Texas child known as Baby James, who Busick missed several weeks of enables the satellites to identify was the mother of Mrs. Albert himself playing softball at Robert­ However, the time printed on his Moseby thought it was flawed left-hander, was impressive. Al­ Jack Morris pitched a seven- tinued his comeback from a double just before Jim Rice hit bullpen in right. The pinch underwent one of a series of (Juliette) Bradley of Coventry. work and lost wages while recover­ certain minerals and better distin­ son Field in 1985 is suing the town ing, the papers said In addition, he purchase receipt showed that the strategy. though he served up the homers to hitter for his 16th victory, walking miserable first half. He put the his 14th homer with none out in homers tied the major lague pioneering infant-to-infant heart She also is survived by another guish such things as vegetation for $15,000 or more, according to ■’may continue in the future to children had been in the car for at “ I think by bringing the right Johnson and Bell, he was touched four and striking out 12 in his llth Red Sox in front to stay with a the seventh. record for the most in a game, transplants, died after his body daughter, Marie C. Mathurin of stress, said Michael Douglass, a papers filed with the town clerk’s suffer severe pain, physical and least 15 minutes, police said. A fielder in takes a little pressure off for just four other hits and struck complete game. three-run double with two out in Veteran Steve Crawford, done 10 times, and for consecu­ rejected his implanted heart, a Putnam; two brothers, Lawrence spokesman for Eosat. office mental distress,” the notice said. thermometer placed in the car by m e," said Moseby. “ Iknowthey’re out nine in 7 2-3 innings. Presley drove in four runs with the third and then paved the making his first appearance tive pinch homers. 6 times. hospital spokeswoman said Phaneuf of South Woodstock and None of the satellites produces Monday. Richard V. Busick of 15 Eliza­ police for 15 minutes registered 115 not going to pitch me inside. It’s homers In the second, fourth and way to the sixth run with since being disabled by arm “A lot of balls were hit hard by Emile Phaneuf of Newport News, The notice of the suit, which was actual photographs. Their elec­ Orioles 9, Angels 3 another double in the seventh. trouble on July 18, bailed out The I'/i-year-old boy died about beth Drive was playingthe outfield degrees, police said. definitely a tip-off. I was looking eighth innings. both teams, but we won the Va.; two sisters. Theresa Sheehan filed in Tolland County Superior tronic sensors measure the reflec­ 'T m swinging the bat pretty starter Bruce Hurst with 9:05 p.m. Sunday after a futile during a Manchester Recreation Simpson was released on a $ 1,000 outside all the way. I had it in my Eddie Murray hit a three-run game and that’s all that of Plymouth. N H., and Marie Court last week, claims the town tion of energy from the Earth and Twins 9, Brewers 3 good again, and at a good time.” runners on first and second and search for another donor organ to League softball game on July 18. non-surety bond and is scheduled mind to try and hit the ball to left homer in Baltimore’s five-run counts.” said Rice, who also set Louise Knickerbocker of Albu­ 1985. when the injury occured. the “ had or reasonably should have beam the data to ground stations. Armas said. “ We have to win none out in a 4-2 game in the top replace the heart he received April to appear in court Monday. field or up the middle. I definitely third inning as the Orioles ended Gary Gaetti drove in five runs up a run with a single in the fifth querque. N M ; and three had notices adequately warning of games now and I want to do my of the seventh. With two more 26, said Anita Rockwell, spokes­ papers said. Busick. who is a did not want to hit anything on the California’s seven-game winning with two homers, pacing the Twins despite a stiff neck. grandchildren. the dangerous condition prior to part.” man for Loma Linda University sergeant with the Manchester ground” streak. Scott McGregor allowed 11 over Milwaukee and helping Min­ runs to work on, Crawford “ With a 6-2 lead, two out In the The mass of Christian burial will July 18. 1985 ” With Texas trying to overtake Medical Center, 60 miles east of Police Department, said he H&R BLOCK TAX COURSE COULD BE TICKET But the Indians had already hits over eight innings and raised nesota end a three-game losing breezed through the eighth, ninth and nobody on base, we be Wednesday at 10:30 a m. in St California in the AL West, the Los Angeles. stepped in a hole with his right foot Town Attorney John W Cooney, made the key error by the time his lifetime record against Califor­ streak. Neal Heaton gained his although Dave Henderson had were going right at them," Mary Church, 218 Providence St.. TO EXTRA INCOME victory over the Rangers didn’t to range near the 420-foot mark Rockwell identified the child, while going after a ball, causing who handles injury claims against Moseby arrived at the plate. nia to 19-7. first victory at home since being catcher Rich Gedman said. “So Putnam. Burial will be in St. Mary come easy. whose real name was kept secret him to step akwardly and hyperex- the town, could not be reached for After Ernie Whitt singled, Willie Fred Lynn and John Shelby also traded to the Twins from Cleve­ to grab Parrish’s long fly. what if they hit two homers in Cemetery, Putnam. Calling hours Thousands of people are finding that learning income tax The Red Sox had runners until his death, as Nicholas Law­ fend his left knee. comment this morning. Upshaw laid down a sacrifice bunt homered for Baltimore. Dick Scho­ land on June 20. Crawford retired the first two such a situation? They still had at the Gilman Funeral Home, 104 preparation is the perfect way to supplement their Incomes. thrown out at the plate in each of batters in the ninth. Then he rence Miller, who was adopted by but Whitt reached third and field tied an Angels’ club record Gaetti hit his 28th homer, a to hit two more to just tie” Church St., Putnam, are tonight Upshaw second when pitcher Er­ the first two innings and third kind of ran out the clock—like in Thomas and Jayne Miller, of Many people use the tax preparation skills they learn In H4R with two triples. two-run shot, to give Minnesota a “ With a four-run lead In the from 7 to 9. nie Camacho threw the ball up the 3-0 lead in the fifth. Tim Laudner base coach Rene Lachemhnn football. ninth. I had to go with my best Redwood City, immediately after Block’s Income Tax Course to tfdd to their Incomes. H&R A’s 9, Yankees 8 9 Memorial donations may be right-field line. added a solo homer two outs later. heard plenty of boos for his part. Odibe McDowell hit a pinch stuff, my fast ball—or try to,” his birth Feb. 15, 1985. 9 made to the American Cancer Block is now offering its basic income tax course starting The Rangers came up with a The boy died during an acute " I just threw it away,” said Jose Canseco became the first Gaetti hit a three-run homer homer, his 17th, into the Boston Crawford said with a grin. Society. Norwich-Quinebaug Unit, yeB/l\^ID C)PE\^II\^45 September 11th and 12th. Morning, afternoon, and evening Camacho. 2-3. “ No excuse. My 100-RBI man in baseball this year during a five-run eighth inning. rejection episode, Rockwell said. 257 Main St.. Norwich 06360. classes are available. No prerequisites are required to en­ ANGELO’S PIZZA & RESTAURANT. roll. In Memoriam TUESDAY, SEPT. 2 During the 13 week course, students will study various In loving memory of Theodore LeOK phases of income tax preparation and receive actual experi­ Standing Room Only crowds fill up Fenway Park Lawrence Schultz, Sr., who passed ence in preparing individual returns. Experienced Block in­ away August 31, 1983. F U E L O IL structors will teach tax law, theory and application, as prac­ BOSTON — It was nearly an hour after the Boston “What time do tickets go on sale?” one of them group decided to take their chances with Standing he years seem to pass us by, and ticed in Block offices nation-wide. There is a classroom dis­ 8 __ Red Sox had rallied to beat the Cleveland Indians. 4-3. asked an Italian sausage vendor who looked like Room Only tickets — at 85 a pop — rather than help tD es^lin ess is easing, but the cussion on each tax subject and many practice problems. on Labor Day Sunday, and droves of fired up fans Norm from “Cheers” with a Hawaiian shirt on. support some lowlife’s crack habit. By the time they m em oH^ of you will always be Pizzas — Grinders — Cal^nes Courses are programmed to teach students increasingly were still filing into the Cask ’n Flagon behind the "They don’t," he answered smugly. “Sold out” passed him to enter the turnstiles, his price was up to there. Yqur family is starting to 59» complex tax problems as study progresses. Students will Green Monster for a continuation of some premature B o b Senior Citizen A The stunned party had been under the ignorant 815 for bleacher seats. unite andUhe love and memory of find the course both interesting and challenging. pennant celebration. J impression that ballparks were required to keep a your loss has brought us all closer Plus a wide variety of Their “stands” were pretty good ones, with an Volume Discounts Sure, nobody had to get up ItDr work the next P a p e t t i stock of bleacher seats in reserve for Game-Day sale together. excellent view of the whole field and the hand-worked Italian Dishes Because tax prepartion is h M 'd ed during the months of Jan­ morning, so everybody could affoM to toast a few only. THRIFTY OIL CO. scoreboard on The Wall that kept depressing tabs on Love, uary through April, you can pufyour skills to use immedia­ more cold ones. But thirst-quencjjmg was hardly the Herald Sports Writer Not any more. Featuring: tely during the winter months and may be able to make en­ reason that so many Red Sox roerers were singing and ^Bii 1 *\ another comeback win by late-charging Toronto. 6 Your wife and children 2 8 9 -8 8 4 3 “It’s been that way for five years,” scowled a park They kicked when Julio Franco’s sky ball off OH Can ough extra money to pay off Christmas bills or make money swaying back and forth in booths and on bar stools. attendant, in an offensive tone that could’ve ended 6 Boyd stayed fair for a three-run homer in the second. for that summer vacation. This was a time to savor, a time to relish in the role of with “you idiots” . “Every ticket is sold in advance, The SCACCIATA being wrapped up in a championship race that was They squirmed as the immortal Scott Bailes had and it’ll be that way forthe rest of the season. The only blanked the home team for six fell. And they stomped a pizza dough pie! J* Qualified course graduates may be offered job interviews finally beginning to soothe the tension of historical reason people got in on the day of the game in the past ROBERT J. SMITH, inc. for positions with Block. Many accept employment-vvith inevitability. emphatically when the electronic scoreboard In is because there was no pennant race” center flashed the paid attendance figure of 29,995 — Robert LSmMi, Me. Choice of fillings - Block because of the flexible hours available. However, The fold and the flag. The fold always comes first batter in baseball and Marty Barrett does the job and So where are the scalpers? INSLIRANSMITHS Block is under no obligation to otter employment, nor are around this time of year in the minds and the hearts Tom Seaver dresses for work in the same clubhouse 3.’588 less than official capacity INSURANSMITHS SINCE They found the prototype around the comer, a few But they were already up when the rest of the house broccoli, spinach, potato graduates under any obligation to accept employment with and the words of hopelessly fanatical Bosox cult and Rocket Roger is the most valuable player in the aggravating yards from the ticket office that was H&R Block. members. American League. bounced to attention in the seventh after Buckner, the party sizes, individual meals ^ doing a brisk business selling future memories. A ultimate gimpy gamer, was hit by a pitch that ignited 1914 or by the slice. The fold and the flag. It isn’t going to happen this One group of intersta: e spectators from Connecticut scaly swindler of mixed reptilian ancestry was One low course fee includes all textbooks, supplies and tax year. This is the year. had stood in the aisk l>:;hind Section 15 on the first a bSnch-clearing carnival. And the entire mob took a clutching a wad of tickets in one claw and a roll of bills cue from the SRO crowd by jumping up and down It isn’t going to happen this year because Jim Rice is base side all aftemo::n and sensed the implications forms necessary for completion of the course. Certificates in the other throughout the outrageous ending as Barrett and Rice a hitter and no longer a free-swinger and Don Baylor along with nearly 30.000 others. ANGELO’S and 7.5 continuing education units will be awarded uppn “Ten bucks for bleachers. 20 for box seats.” he delivered clutch hits and Schiraldi blew’em away and 649-5241 662 Center Street ^ ^ 1 leads by example and Bill Buckner won’t stand for it The two carloads of ballgame goers had pulled up to 65 E. Center Street successful completion of the course. For more information hissed. Baylor’s flare -f^>jn for the ganr»e-winner in the Manchester 647-9334 - and to obtain registration forms and a brochure for the in­ and Calvin Schiraldi can disintegrate a flock of blue Fenway Park at 11 a m. and quickly headed for the They offered 160 for nine bleacher seats that legally jays off a telephone wire from 60 feet, 6 inches. bleacher gates on Landsdowne Street to wait in line bottom of the ninth. Manchester, Ct. See the Dining Quide our weekly specials. come tax course, call H&R Block at 529-1489. go for 84 apiece. A disgusted laugh was the only reply When they got to the bar after It was over, they This is the year because Wade Boggs.is still the best for the ticket windows to open up. After a half hour or so of anxious deliberation, the found a booth and sat down. H riB iR A L 0 . TucsdstV^S^iK 2. 19W SCOREftOARD Carter’s return te a big hit; RMS»x8lllM|gn4 Natlanal Lugiw raauna R M N n & r i * w 4 » r — vowf ParieYtM 4df, Wbiiy irisn B M c b a l f Vi»d0, dea. A ^ n TTii-O I, Povi ATLANTA aWAVtS-Rttmed Eddie TBXAS ' )i(i20rpdtwinerekil3-iA4r, MottMsri mmor leaoM boltMd instructor BOSTON and specioi asstann^r eeauf. f R M OBMIBr lialli5.SlM lli? 0 PNILA . ib e d T S -^ , Bill Suitlyan 8IV11- FletcSyss 4 0 0 0 Boeosas 3 1 1 0 oBrbM iB riiM Kevin Hodon 83-14#. Oats C — CHICAGO (fu B S ^ e e a fld d Brian num ber Sierra ef 4 0 2 0 Barrett 3b Royster 3b Oroee — jock McCollum 84, Bin Ooyeit, Dove M arttn« and cnico 5000 4220 walker, outtteiders, and Oreo Moddux flim flngt Podorklb 3 0 10 Budmrlb 5 220 SAW PWAW RCMt YORK Owvnnrf 4oJo M T ? !w e f 502 1 ~ Ml 84. Net — Bab Bridoemon OBrien ib . O b rilM A MeRvidcr and Ouy Hoffman, pttcnars, Iroram - lowo- 1 0 0 0 Rice If 5 12 1 bmM 5 122 Ron C rd d 9IV3466,90-21' " Chos. of ibeAmericanAssaciaWon. LARrsfidh 4,1 1 I Boylerdh 220 1 Otoddener 4 1 0 0 Ovkstnief 3 0 0 0 Gixveyib s o il ^ S d ? 3 6 4010 wlwianBf^iTjb,Nick...... OiPletre93-23-70, • y t u b As5«crot«(f Nrffss season,” stated Carter, who \Mordir 4 0 0 0 Armosrf RDipsnab 4 13 1 Bckmn 2b 3 2 1 0 Bocbyc 3 1 0 0 Rbenickrf Wood 8T17- A), VIC PIODOe 8415- Last September, Carter batted Gladden’s fielding error, went to 4023 3000 CINCINNATI REDS— Aettvoted Dove '* L ^ • M incvBllo rt 4 111 Gedmon c 20 10 WCiorkib 3 000 KHmdrib 4000 Kennedyc 2020 Sdmuel2b 3121 71, Brooks Allen 86-15841471. singled home Wally Backman hi 27 games, hitting 13 home third on an infield out and made it r ' *ri V tt m siouontc 2 0 0 0 DHedsn cf 40 11 MMndoif 4 0 11 Carter e 3 22 1 Martm*if 4111 Concepdon, dwriwttp, Tracy Jones, out­ from second base wtththe first Met Toroirto CDovIs rf WVnnepi) fielder, and Jpg ^ice , pttmer, from S ~ Carter, runs and driving in 34 ninsreight of 2-0 on Rafael Santana’s single. u m M\ MStanlyc 1 0 0 0 (Xsenss 3 0 10 1 0 0 0 MWlisonir 4 111 0000 taek in the New York Afets lineon run in the opening inning. M M rYork 2 « .530 Retrolll pti 10 0 0 Kutetier3b 30 0 0 Heeprf 30 10 Tmpitnss 401 r disobied lists. PufefWfdif IM controd them game-winners. His averse ’The Giants tied the score with OairoK Wlmn3b Monday afternoon for the first # M .519 Buect)le3b 20 20 1000 HJoi)sn3b 30 12 Roberts 2b 4010 of Dove von Gorder,careh«r,from Denver “ No cffiestion, (he rest helped climbed from .270 to .284. \ two runs in the seventh on a walk to « 45 .504 McOwIpl) 1111 Oiarrirreitsp 0 0 Sontoness Whnsenp 2000 Scflupb of the American AsebctaflOn. tune since being placed on the ClwvMnd 4021 U V0 o 0 T\M1(O M A N COMBINE_____ SCORES me. Being placed on the D L was ” 1 really feel as if I didn’t rfiiss> 45 4;r .4 » HorrahJb 20 00 PWllimsp 'dOOO Pmdezp 2000 Krukph 0000 Jim Bldweil-Sfan Domion 152, Jtony HOUSTON ^TR O S— Recoiled r a i l e d list August 17. served Gladden, Robby Thompson’s triple Mllwaukw « 44 .4 » Porter pn 1111 Melvin c 2 0 1 0 Hearnpb 1 000 WWterp I t u & p 0000 S ^ W T -e d Sfone 154, LOU Arpenio Don Oriessen, ttrsf bosemon, and the only way to get me out of the beat,” continued the catcher. " I ’m to center and Candy Maldonado’s TeiMs M 4 9 4 TetOlS m m CBrownpr 0 0 0 0 McDwilp 10 00 Nettles pn 1 0 0 0 RoReytsc 1000 Kon Comorford 158. Net — Jim Mott Keough, pifeher, from Tucson ofthe . notice that he wants to win the lineim. I didn’t want It to happen, sure I drove everybotty crazy while^ CoOfBmlO 74 57 4M MDovlsp 0000 Lefferisp Podtlc Coast Leogue. one-out single to left. 0 0 0 0 Boofh-John MufChohy 143, Ken National League RBI title. but I expected it. Now that I’m sitting on Ihe bench. You can only Tm m 0 a '.529 5>/7 Texas Oumons3b 1000 Tetow V4t4TeNW 8 91T8 Duttbor-Stan Skiba 143, Sam Sopiento- LOS ANGELES DODGERS-Recolled Oakland jock back, I'm going after the R B I 43 71 .444 13 Uribe ss 3000 WoH Kokoszka 144, Ted Biosko-Soi Boh/ino Galvez, pircner, Fimpie, he a cheerleader so long. After a ^ Backman led off the eighth with JOBiaiCIIV « 71 .450 14 Oonje(VameAnn.e. wmnina RBI — Armes (4). Aidreiepb 0000 Russo 144, Don Gotnors-Noisan Eddy eotcher, and Ralphph Bryont,Bryonf, outtlelder,outfielder; ' '^l^Tlng tape on his lead." while it gets a little old.” ^ ^ Dewnsp from Aibuoueroue of the Pwtffc C a walk off Mark Davis, 65, and one .430 14'A 1, Boston 1 . 2000 xsga 144, Roy Boii-Ron Bdsiw i « , Gordon Coost injurM left hand, collected two hits Carter’s run-scoring single .436 17 LO*-Texos 4, Boston 10. 3B— Buecbeie, Breniyc 2000 lOtbo-RoBor LonfochaT45, BobMiiier- out later. Carter was intentionally A4lnn«M>tossr 336 75s TeM s ""ISIw YORK METS— Recoiled John and drove in a run in three at bats boosted his season’s total to 88, .427 10 22*".' ■“^ .* * ^ OHenderson. 10 2 5 2 TetON 3t 5 8 5 Rich Borkowski 14M. Was there any pain in his hand? passed, setting the stage for , Owdors>aww HR— in e o ^ la (21), LAPorrisb (22), Rice Phllodeiphlo 1. LOB Son pteoo 17, LO-LN . e x c L u S e 1ST HOLE - Mitchell, ptfeher, from TMeerofer ot me as the Mets beat the San Fran- seven behind Mike Schmidt and Batten 4, Ciovetand 3 International League. Purchased me " ’There was a bit of soreness Mookie Wilson’s single to center (14), McDowell (17), Porter Sestpyondeco 880 882 880—2 PhiiodeipMa 12. 2B Redus, MThl^wson, Gross— Stan Domfon 69, Tony Stoutiet cicsco Giants 62. Dave Parker of Cincinnati. T^ente 7, MUmoMto 5 IP BR BB SO WwrYerk wo « 8 Gorvey, ‘^mplefon, Royster, Hoyet, 70, Mike Davis n , Jim Booth 72. Net — contract ot Keytn Eisfer, intlelder. from time to time.” replied Carter off Scott Garretts that scored OMeoDe 3, Texas 1 Texas from jockson of the Texas League Roger McDowell. i3-7, was the ’"They didn’t get that far ahead Gonje Wlnninp RBI — MWlison (5). Kwnedy. 3B— Redus, HR— Samuel (15), Nelson Eddy S7. Bob Rosch 58, Ken who easily threw out Chili Davis Backamn with the tie breaker. ■CoMos City 4, Milwaukee 1 Correa L412 5 7 4 3 3 2 E— Oioddw. LOB— Son Francisco 8, p u i ^ r 62, Sal Russo 63, Gordon Beebe Optioned Rick Anderson, pitcher, to winner in relief of starter Sid of me In the two weeks I was out,” O o k lM 7, Baltimore 0 New York 7,38— RThompson. S— WClork. Tidewater of the internotlonol League when the Giants’ right fielder tried Another walk to Danny Heep Monorcic 123 3 2 2 4 0 64, Bob Forrond 64, Bob Miller 64, Leo Fernandez, who registered a continued Carter, the league Confomio 5, Detroit 3 Moson 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 H R ER BB SO Brovokls 66, Sam Sopienia 66, Wolt Activoted Gary Carter, catcher, from me to steal second in the fourth inning. loaded the bases and Howard Seottie 6, New York 2 Boston Son Francis CO 8W.DW.0 '/««««» ISdoydlsableiflHt. career-high i4 strikeouts through leader at the time of his injury. Kokoszka 66, Chet Lukas 66, Dick ’T m still wearing tape and Johnson followed with a two-run _ MendoYt Oomet Hurst W,27 6 7 2 2 3 9 Downs Whttson 5 9 4 4 1 3 ^ llle 66, John Mulchohy 67, Ron seven innings before being lifted ‘"rhe way I feel right now, I ’m Toronto 5, Cleveland 4 Crowtord S,4 3 2 2 2 0 1 MDovIs L.45 Walter 7 i n n i i Basiie 67, Warren DeMartin 67, Don PITTSBURGH PIRATES— Colled up probably will for the rest of the single to right. Gorrelts for a pinch hitter with the score going to have the same kind of AF photo S S Minneteto 9, Milwaukee 3 Correo pitched to 1 botter mtheOth; Horst LetjertsL,78 Heme 67, Dick vizard 67. John Smiley, pIfeher, from Prince season, but that’s only for support. tied 2-2, McDowell's I3 victories. The win cut the Mets’ magic Batttmore 9, Confornla 3 pitched to 2 botters in the 7lh Fwniloms Phflo BEST 9— A Gross — Chic (Jognon 32, Wllllom ot me Carolina League and September as I did last year, ’That I ’m raring to go.” Mets catcher Gary Carter (8) gives relief pitcher Roger Detroit 6, Seattle 5 WP— Hurst, Correa. New York Ruffin Hipoiito Peno, pitcher, from Ngshuaotme ^1 In relief, tied the club recordset number for clinching the National Fmdez S N*t— Tom Johnson was one of the finest months of my Boston 6, Texes 4 Umpires— Home, Polermo; first. Brink- 7 4 2 4 Hume . „ „ „ , r .' "J" Sfeeves 29, Ted Eastern League. Activated Bob Kipper, by Jesse Orosco in 1983. Carter opened the fourth Inning League East title to 13. With an McOoweil a high-five after New York beat the San gucaao 4, Kansas City 0 man; Second, Merrill; Third, Morrison McDwii_ W,127------2 1 0 0 2 . SchtzdT 2^ 0 0 0 I 1 ■ J«k o » B Gross — Les Christensen pitcher .from the2i-davdisabied list, career. I ’ll gel my average (.246) with a single to center, for his Oakland 9. New York a "It was like starting a new 88-43 record, they lead second- Francisco Giants, 5-2, MoneJay to reduce their T— 3:05. A— 26,196. J^rwfts oftch«, »:3S p.m. Cottoct 3 12 0 Tettletonc 0 0 0 0 George Young 62, Tim Wdtson-Bruce WedM84lay's Oomes CWshtn ct RRevWs It 4 0 0 0 Stilwll ss 4 0 11 CRenIds ss 3 10 0 RDcryls p 0 0 0 0 — Waiyed Sam Bow 2 1 1 0 Sokata2b 4 13 1 TPenac 3 11 0 Francop 0 0 0 0 Thonss 0 0 0 0 Troutp 0 0 0 0 Skivington 62. ers, fight end. and Stan Dayld and Herb New York at Oakland, 3: is p.m. Skinner c 3 0 0 0 LG -LN — A Gross — Tony Steullet 70, Cleveland et Toronto, 7:35 p.m. Posaua ph Bonilla 3b 3 10 0 Esosky 1b 4 12 2 Walllng3b 5 1 1 2 Bosleypti 0 0 0 0 Spencer, llnebockers. Placed Jim Hosletl By Bill Barnard 0 0 0 0 Bel lardss 3 111 OesterTb 3 0 0 0 Drlessn lb 4 12 0 Sndbrg 2b 3 0 11 Ken Cemerterd 72. Net — Steve and Lucius Sanford, linebackers, on least In the big leagues.’ Houston a 6-2 lead. Texas at Boston, 7:35 p.m. Espina c 0 0 0 0 Schackner 67, Leo Brovokls 67, Ron The Associated Press for Montreal with one out In the P Oiloago at Kansas Clly, 8:35 p.m. Little 2b Blele^lp 1 0 0 0 Power p 2 110 Bassrt 3 1 2 2 GMttiwsIf 2 0 00 Injured reserye. Power had Just one save this The Cubs got a run In the bottom P 2 0 0 0 DIstetn cb 1111 Cncpoi ph 10 0 0 Cruz It 4 12 1 Mareindrf 5 0 2 1 BjHlIe M, Roy Bell 69, Paul Kenneson CHICAGO BEARS— Waiyed Pot Duns bottom of the ninth Inning against Milwaukee at Minnesota, 8:35 p.m. Lmbrd ph 1110 70, Ted Blasko 71. B Gross — Dick season before being supj^lanted by Detroit ot Seottie, »:35 p.m. FIschlln 2b Krwczykp OOOORRobnsnp 0 0 0 0 Ashby c 3 0 11 Ourhm lb 5 13 1 more, , Tyrone Keys, detenslye While every baseball team of the eighth on Leon Durham ’s Los Angeles. 0 0 0 0 Srnllev p 0 0 0 0 Larkin ss 10 0 0 Pnkowts 2b 4 0 10 JDavb c 4 0 10 Cuezzp 80, Mark Dennis 86. Net — Dave end, Tom Andrews, center, Dayld Ron Robinson as the main right- 14th homer and they had the bases Boltlnxire ot ColltOmlo, 10:35 p.m. Polruleph 10 11 Winn p 0 0 0 0 f*i’ *«fom , Al Smith 70, Jim Autmon wants some power In their lineup, Tim Raines, who earlier hit his Roenlck 3b Oarwm p 2000 Cey3b 4000 0 66 Williams, wide recleyer, ond Maurice handed reliever. He went into the 0 0 0 0 MDlazph 10 12 (Sornerph 1 0 0 0 Dunstonss 4 110 71, Dave Camalone 72, Kurt Hassett 73, the Cincinnati Reds have pinned loaded and no outs In the ninth ninth homer, led off Ihe ninth with Totals 38 8 15 6 Totals Douglass, detenslye back I l f rotation on Aug. 22 because of National Loagut atandlnga 38 916 9 Reuschl pr 0 0 0 0 Kertddp lOOOLynchp 2 0 00 Don Wennlk 74. C Gross — Paul their pennant hopes on putting before Houston reliever Dave his third hit, a double, off Ken HPeno p 0 0 0 0 DSmlthp 0 0 0 0 Oumpertp 00 00 Cosmon 87, Bob Miller 88. Net — Dave CLEVELAND BROWNS— Placed Mario Soto’s shoulder problems Smith escaped the Jam for his 28th New York I 311-8 Totals 31 5 6 5 Tetoli 37 6 13 6 Sf*’! « ' Tom Goodman 66, John Fleet Power in their starting rotation Howell. 5-9. After an Intentional Oakland Froncon ct 1 1 o 0 Gary Danielson, auarterback. Bob and'John Denny's sprained wrist. save. Beat Divblon 151 81X-8 Totals 31 4 W 6 Totals M 4 9 ] 67, Pot Parodlso 71, Tim Hogan 71, Jim Gruber, offensive lineman, and James Ted Power, who made 229 walk, a sacrifice and another walk, Game Winning RBI — Canseco (12). Pittsburgh ggg em isg-x Creogan 76. "The difference between being a White, defensive end, on Inlured re­ (ronsecutlve relief appearances "The first five months we scored Foley hit a pitch from Dennis New York *88‘•43 -? • X/ * LOB^ew CindnnafI m m - O'-®** - «ov' serve Waived Greg Allen, running hack starter and a reliever Is when PiniodHphla 69 62 . 527 19 York 8, Oakland 10. 2B— Willard, Sakata, Game Winning RBI — Daniels (1). Bell-Ken Comerford 64, Tony Steullet- until Manager Pete Hose recently In the late Innings and we haven’t Powell Just past the edge of the LHernandez, Canseco, Lansford, Paglla- '•s*** ... - 888 8» 811—4 you’re starting, you know that If St. Louis 66 65 504 22 E— Belllard. DP— Cincinnati 1. LOB— Game Winning RBI — Bass (9). pave Kaye 64, Ron Boslle-Nlck Pohou- CINCINNATI BENGALS —Waived put him Into the starting rotation done much of that In the last few Inflel^or the winning run, JJontreol 63 65 .492 23'/j mlo. HR— Murphy (7), Canseco (28), P^burgh 2, Clndnnotl 8. 2B— BDIaz, E — Mumphrey, Dunston. DP — ^ BMtUl Paul Kenneson 65. you give up a run In the first three LHernandex (1), MDovIs (18). SB— M L. Horris, tight end, Pat Fronklln, because of injuries, won his first games.” said Walling, who re­ J e ff Reardon. 7-8, was the Cf.'.tOflO 55 76 .420 33 TPena, Belllord. 3B— Daniels. HR— Houston 1, Chicago 3. LOB— Houston 6, Net Dick Cuozzo-Henry Dorna 54, running back, Doug Landry, line­ Innings you’re going to go back out PlttsburWi 53 77 .408 34'/j MDovIs (20), RHenderson (75), Cotto (2) DIstetano “ ‘ ■ ' Walt Komlnskl-Pat Parcwlso 55, Jim game as a starter since 1983 on cently criticized the Astros for wjiming pitcher after blowing an S— Willard. (1), Esosky (10). SB— Bonds Chicago 10 2B— Pankovtts, Walling, backer, and James Grittin and Jimmy there and pitch,” Power said , ^ West OlvMlen (26). Boss, HR— Cruz (6), Durham (14). SB— Aufman-Paul Cosmon 55, Al Smlth- Turner, sofetles Monday night He pitched six shabby play, ‘"rhls was good, •^portunlty for his 29th save when IP Durham (7), Sandberg (24). SF— Sondberg, F.H Sulllvon 55, Ken Anderson-F.H "This has given me the opportun­ 74 57 .565 — New York ««««*• H R ER BB SO Innings of one-hit ball, and the Astros’ type of baseball. We’ve he allowed a game-tying homer to Clndnnotl 67 64 .511 7 Ptttsborgh Boss. Sullivan 55, Pete Ramey-Tom Good­ — Wolved Max ity to build up the confidence I San Francisco 65 66 .496 9 ArmstronoLrO-l 1 ?. BleleckI L8-10 5 7 2 2 1 2 IP man 55, Chet Lukos-Blalne Hareld 56, Reds went on to beat the Pitts­ been In close games all year long. rookie Ralph Bryant In the top of 3 5 6 6 2 2 H R BR BB SO Zendelos, placekicker. Garth Jox, Hn6 Los Anoeles 62 69 .473 12 Krawczvk 1 I 2. 1 0 0 Houston Dove Camalone-John Fleet 56, Jim backer, and Kurt Ploeger and Bob Otto, burgh Pirates 65 probably losl when I wasn’t the ninth. Atloma 61 69 .469 12'/j Pulido 2-341100 Smiley 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 Dorwln W,l-1 6 7 2 2 2 5 Creogon-Ron Broege 56, Al Smith-Ken pitching well.” PhlllltB 8, PadrM 4 Shirley 3 23 4 1 l l i Anderson 56. defensive linemen Placed Chris Dullban. It was the 11th victory In the last San Oleeo 61 71 .462 13'/7 vyinn !3 3 0 0 0 1 Kerteld 2 2 2 1 4 2 linebacker, on Inlured reserve. With the Reds leading 62. Ihe Philadelphia won Its sixth Cardinate 8, Bravet 2 Sunday's Oomes "ISSTland * 3,1,0 DSmIth S,28 1 0 0 0 0 1 DENVER BRONCOS— Waived Scott 14 games for the second-place Son Diego 4, Montreal 1 ”?;?annotl ' 0 0 0 0 ’ Chlcdgo Pirates chased Robinson with a straight game, beating San Diego St. Louis scored four runs In the Krueger W.1-1 6 1-3 8 5 5 2 2 LPBA raaulta Slankovoge. auorterbock, Jock Well, Reds, who stayed seven games Los Angeles 7, New York 4 Power W,58 6 1 1 1 0 4 Lynch L84 5 !3 7 4 4 1 4 punter, Walt Bowyer, defensive end, ond walk and three hits in the eighth when Von Hayes doubled home a ninth inning to overcome Atlanta. Philadelphia 4, Son Francisco 3 Bair 0 1 0 0 1 0 RRoblnson 1 5 4 4 i o Gumperl 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 behind Houston In the National JHowell 1 2-3 4 3 3 2 2 Billy Hinson, guord Placed Jim Jurjga, before the right-hander could run In the eighth. Jim Acker. 64, took a three- St. Louis 9, Cincinnati 3 Franco S.23 2 0 0 0 1 3 DlPInp 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 tockle, on Inlured reserve. League West Atlanta 4, Chicago 3 VonOhlen S,1 l 0 0 0 0 0 RRoblnson pitched to 4 batters In the 8th. RDavIs 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 nS? — .]*’ FInol seexes retire a batter. Rafael Belliardhad Hayes, who also Med the game hitter and a 2-1 lead Into the ninth, Bair pitched to 2 batters In the 7th; i**i*^. T ? '’*f 56omtay In the 1200,000 DETROIT LIONS— Activoted Chuck "This Is Just kindoffun.that'sall Pittsburgh 8, Houston 2 Trout 1 00021 LPGA RMI Charity Golf Classic, played at Long, quarterback PlacWl George Jami­ an RBI double and Mike Diaz a 4-4 with his 12th homer in the fifth, but he surrendered four consecu­ Monday's (Somes Howell Pitched to 3 botters In the 9th. Ump^lres— Home, Runoe; First, Pallone; Kerteld pitched to 3 botters In the 9th. It is to me,” Power said of his role. WP— Krueger PB— Wlllord. the — par-72, *« 6 ,2 ^ a ord i Roll Golf Course son ond August Curley, linebackers, Tim pinch-hit. two-run single before now has 35 doubles to lead the N L tive hits with one out, starting with New York 5, Son Froncisco 2 Second, Darling; Third, Engel. PB— JDavIs, Ashby. (o-denotes omareur; x-won sudden death Krarse, wide receiver, ond Allen Hughes, “ I ’m filling In for somebody. I ’m Houston 6, Chicago 4 Urrylres-Home, Phillips; First, Denkln- T— 2:35. A— 22JI64. Ump^lres— Home, Pulll; First, West; plovotf): Franco stifled the rally. The game-wInnlngVhlt was a a single by Andy Van Slyke anil a ger; Second, Voltogglo; Third, Young pensive lineman, on Inlured reserve. trying to hold the store down for as Cincinnati 6, Pittsburgh 5 Second, McSherr^Thlrd, BWIIItams. x-Betsy King 530,000 Signed William Graham, safety. Acquired Nick Esasky hit a two-run homer blooper off reliever Craig Lefferts. game-tying double by Terry Montreal 7, Los Angeles 6 T — 3:19. A— 30,167. T — 3:01. A - 70- 72-63— 205 long as I can and give our guys a Alice RItzman 16,000 686369— 205 Shelton Robinson, linebacker, from me for the Reds. 7-6, that dropped between short­ Pendleton. Philadelphia 5, Son Diego 4 Cardinals 5, Bravaa 2 Colhy Kratzert 16,000 Seattle Seohowks (or on undisclosed drott chance to score some runs.” St. Louis 5, Atlanta 2 6370-70-205 stop G arry Templeton and left White Sox 4. Royals 0 Judy Dickinson W JOO 67-7267-206 choice. Waived John WItkowskl. ouoHer- Power. 5-6, retired the first 17 Astros 6, Cubs 4 John Morris then singled in the ^ TuesdaYs Oomes STLOUIS Kothy Posttewolt 7,750 67-7268— 207 bock, Alvin Hall,safety,DoveD'Addlo,tight fielder Carmelo Martinez, who had go-ahead run and Ozzie Smith Houston (Ryan 48) at Chicooo (Moyer ATLANTA Lourl P ^ s o n 7,750 •h”' dhji Oil* Gront, wide reclever. Pirates until he gave up a plnch-hlt Houston scoped four runs In the 44), 4:05 p.m. CHICAGO O brh M obr h M 706372— 207 homered earlier for the Padres. followed with a triple, knocking out KANSAS CITY Colenxin It Golf Martha Nouse 5,900 707266-208 ^— Waived Lynn homer to Benny Distefano in the sixth inning to overcome a 2-0 Sem Francisco (Krukow 138) ot New _ o b rh b l 4 0 0 0 Somplert 3 0 10 Chris Johnson 4,475 DItkey, ouarterback, Paul Coffman, tight Lefferts retired the first two Acker. Reliever Paul Assenm- Obr hM McGeect 4 0 10 Morenort 10 10 89-7268— 209 sixth. Power was lifted for a York ((rooden 134), 7:35 p.m. Boston cf 4 111 LSmIth It 4 0 0 0 Herr i Colhy Morse 4,475 726369— 209 end, Curils Pardridge, wide receiver, and deficit against Chicago. batters In the eighth before walk­ acher got Tito Landrum to hit a Ptttsborgh (Kipper 38) at Cincinnati Nichols rt 4 0 2 1 Wilson ct 4 12 0 Romlrz 3b 2 0 0 0 Jonel Anderson 4,475 Billy Kidd, center. pInch-hItter In the seventh, andthe 4 0 3 0 VnSlyk 1b 4 11 0 Oberkfl3b 10 10 716969— 209 Denny Walling hit a two-run ing Gary Redus. who stole second ((Jullickson 128), 7:35 p.m. Foster It 3 0 10 McRoe dh 4 0 0 0 Susie McAllister 4,475 667370-209 HOUSTON O ILE R S -W o lve d Jesse Pirates rallied from 4-1 and 6-2 ground ball, but second baseman Los Angeles (Welch 6-10) at Montreal Congels It Pndltn3b 4 11 2 Murphyct 4 0 0 0 Country Club double. Kevin Bass hit a sacrifice and went to third on an error by 1110 Bolbonl 1b 4 0 10 Morris rt Jo Ann Washom 3,500 TO TO TO— 210 Baker, defensive end, Mike Stensrud Glenn Hubbard’s wild throw home (Youmans 11-9), 7:35 p.m. Pisk dh 4 12 1White 2b 4 1 1 1 Horner 1b 4 111 Kothryn Young 3,100 AP p ho to deficits to make the game close fly and Jose Cruz had a solo homer 4 0 0 0 OSmIth ss 4 111 Griftey If 4 0 0 0 MCC LADIES — 3s and 4s — A Gross 69-7367— 211 ond .Lynn Modsln, defensive tockies, ond Padres second baseman BIp allowed Smith to score Son Diego (LaPoint 0-1) ot Phllodelphia Nulett 3b 4 0 0 0 ASolozrss 4 0 10 — Bert Groman 68. Net — Edna Wodas Noncy Lopez 3,100 71- 7070-211 Ston Edwards, running bock. Placed Mike until John Franco got the last six in the sixth for the Astros, helping (Blttlger (VO), 7:35 p.m. Mormn lb Lvilrec 3 0 0 0 AThomsss 4 0 0 0 Connie ChlllemI 3,100 Roberts. Ray Soff pitched the eighth 4 0 2 1 Sundbrge 3 0 0 0 Wallace pr 0 0 0 0 Benedicte 69-21-48, Flo Borre 69-21-48. B Gross - 67-7371— 211 Kelly, guard, on Inlured reserve San Diego pitcher Ed Whitson drops the ball as Phillies outs for his 23rd save _ St. Louis (Tudor 138) otAtlontolMahler Guillen ss 3 0 0 0 Motley rt 3 0 0 0 Vicki Fergon 2,600 INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Danny Darwin post his first N L Juan Samuel and John Russell inning to win his first major-league 11-14), 7:40 p.m. Karkovicc 3 0 2 0 Sottp 0 0 0 0 Hubbrd2b 3 111 Boot* Carnlello 64. Net — Marlon 72- 7367— 212 "That was very exciting.” 2 3 110 Pryor 3b 3 0 0 0 Zomoltls 66-24-42, Mory Bllsh 75-28-47, Amy Alcott 2,600 736968-212 Reoctivated Mark KIrchner, offensive Juan Samuel is sate at first during the second inning of victory since being traded from also homered for the Phillies Wednesday's Gomes £*15°'” Hurdle ph 0 0 0 0 Acker p 3 0 10 Marlene Floyd 2,600 decision, while Todd Worrell 2 0 0 0 Lndrm ph 1 0 0 0 Asnm^r p C Gross - Alice 71-7071— 212 tockle, from me retired list. Placed Bob Monday night's game In Philadelphia. Whitson lost the Power said of his no-hIt bid “ I ’m Milwaukee on Aug. 15, 2 Houston at Chleogo, 2:20 p.m. Totols 32 4 10 4 Totals 0 0 0 0 Mory Beth ZImmrmn 2,350 earned his 30th save, tops In the 33 0 7 0 Worrell p 0 0 0 0 ^*- ~ ■••Ph Buccherl 71- 71-71— 213 BrotzkI, offensive tackle, on Inlured not going to deny It I knew what Expot 7, Dodgers e Los Anoeles at Montreal, 7:05 p.m. Shirley Furtong 2J50 707073-213 r « e ^ e Waived Raul A llegre, ploceklcker, throw from Steve Garvey on an infield grounder. Phils Bass also had a run-scoring NL Son Froncisco ot New York, 7:35 o n Mathews p 2 0 0 0 71-32-39, Lll Donovan 70-31-39. D Gross Morporet Word 2,150 was going on. That’s the closest Ford ph 10 0 0 — . Bev DIPIetro 78. Net — Rose 697370-214 Chris Scott, defensive end-nose tockle. double In the eighth and scored on a Tom Foley’s bases-loaded bloop Hubbard and Bob Horner ho­ Pittsburgh at Clndnnotl, 7:35 p.m. K m o i Chy 000 000 000—0 Lakec CrispinoCrlsplno 80-40-40, Linda Roficurrel MIssle McGeorge 2,150 737072— 214 James Harbour, wide reclever, and Don won, 5-4. I've ever come to a no-hItter. at single by Alan Ashby, giving single knocked in the winning run San Diego ot Philadelphia, 7:35 p.m. s°'h* PBI — Mormon (2). 10 0 0 Cindy Hill 1,944 Bolley, center. mered for the Braves. Tetals 36 5 7 4 Totals 32 1 6 1 82-^44. 7671-70— 215 St. Louis ot Atlanta, 7:40 p.m. I GP- 3 0 2 0 5 2 3 3 PBrodly It 5 0 0 0 LOS ANOELS 59-13-46, Don Franklin 58-12-46, Pool _ . Amwlean League — Waived Bobe Mandlikova's dethroning as U.S third set. The Associated Press Ogllvleph 1 0 0 0 Bushph 1110 Gibson rt 5 0 2 0 ADovIs 1b 4 0 0 0 MONTREAL BALTIMORE ORIOLES— Recoiled Mike the game. She led 40-love in the last O, brh . .M obr hM White 57-11-46, Wolly Irish 58-12-46, Bill Loufenberg, quarterback. Lorry Hardy, "She couldn’t keep It up,” Lloyd _ Lmbrdz 2b D 0 0 0 Grubb dh 3 13 1 Phelps dh 2 10 0 Sox 2b Sulllvon 57-11-46. C — Tom Lynn Vwng, puttleWer, from Rochester ot the tight md, Jim Rourke, tackle. Adam Open women’s champion In a 64, game, lost three straight points for Tetals 33 3 3 Totals 39 9 DaEvns 1b 4 0 0 0 Presley 3b 5 1 1 0 WJhnsnIb 4 12 0 Intemotiwol Leooue. Optioned John Ho- KANSAS C IT Y , Mo - He 8 16 9 4 3 3 4 Andesn ss 5 12 0 Webster cf 4 0 10 Belleville 62-19-43, Jolln Setaetoer, word, and Scott Pelluer, 1-6, 63 loss to Turnbull, the oldest said. "She made four errors. Those Collins It 4 0 0 0 Trtobll rt 3 110 byon, pitcher, to Chorlotte ot the Southern Inebocker. Placed Pot Solndon, guord, on deuce, then missed her first serve won’t play until a sore hamst­ Modick 3b 3 11 0 Raines If 5 3 3 1 "VSKDick Seovey 72-28-44. LMOU0. shots had been going In the second *\ MRwgukoa 080 081 810—3 Coles 3b 4 0 0 0 SBradley c 4 0 11 Brock 1b SWEEPS — A Gross — Tony Steullet Inlured reserve. player in the women's draw and finally netted a volley on im Sherldn ct 4 113 Dawson rf 3 111 ring muscle heals, but Bo Minnesota m 4 1 1 OOulnonsss 3 0 10 Howell p Sortorl 737-66, Terry ^BOSTON R M SOX— Retolled Rob ^255 GIANTS-Wolved Dee set .” Lloyd brokethe first game at Oorne Winning RBI — Hrbek (10). Lowry c 2 10 0 Mosesph 0 0 0 0 Kmchc3b 4 111 Woodwork pitcher, from Pov^cket ot Responding to a question about a match point. Jackson, who turned down 10 0 0 Powell p 0 0 0 0 McOurep 0 0 0 0 Schilling 738-68, Steve Motovo 75-6-69. Hordtson, defensive end, Conrod Goode, A love and was leading the third set DP— Milwaukee 1. LOB— Reynids 2b 4 0 10 Motuszk It B Gross - Bill Sulllvon 78. Net - Pot th0 Intcmohonot Leboue. guord, ond Phil McConkey, wide reclever. late game she lost, Mandlikova ” lt was an added Incentive to ifiillions of dollars from profes- Mllwoukee 8, MInnesoto 7. 2B— Puckett, TetoH 3S 6 18 6 Totals 3 10 1 Reardon p 0 0 0 0 60 before Lindqvist could regroup. 34 5 7 5 Cabell 1b ■ 1 0 0 0 Whifrdph 0 0 0 0 MIstretto 78-11-67, Al Ober 82-14-68, ANGELS-Recolled £ 'Vhhlng bock, ond said, ” I think a more important prove to myself that I still had it in TOonal football to play baseball, * '»> ' Loudner (9), Sclosdac Steve Donoohue 79-lb69.~C Gross — White, outfielder, Roy Chadwick All Hall-Sheikh, ploceklcker, on Inlured Detroit 881 022 810— 6 4 0 10 Law2b 4 0 2 1 The entire match took 93 min­ pas officially arrived In the Stubbs rf 3 0 11 Foley ss 4 13 2 L"J2 N*’ — •''^Inp SoSobolov w i^rbpno Logo,pltehers, GusPolldorond reserve. game was where I was one up and me,” said Turnbull, 33. "It was a (^snuo^TiSS"*” Soottte 828 188 810-8 BRussell It 89-22-67, Bob Lochopelle 8315-70, M « ^ A^Lemore, Inllelders, and Dotrell NEW YORK JETS-SIgned Jerry utes, 34 longer than Navratilova’s ''m ajor leagues. Game Winning RBI — Whitaker (9). 1 0 0 0 Blirdelo c 3 0 11 Miller, hittelder-outflelder, from Edmon­ love-15 and Wendy served a double shock to the system when my RWIImsct 3 0 10 DMortlzP 10 0 0 Fltzgerold 86-~15-7iT ' Holmes, oomerbock, to a taree-yeor and only three less than Tile Heisman Trophy-winning MHwouke. "* E— MYoung, LOB— Detrolt 11, Seattle 6. APenop SCRAMBLE — Tom Lowerv-Llovd ton of the Podtlc Coost Leogue t » n ^ ^ Waived Rogers Alexander, fa u lt" ranking dropped to 17 and I wasn’t Nieves L.Hve 5 10 4 4 1 x 2B— Tortobull, Trammell, Grubb. HR— 2 0 0 0 Newmnph 10 0 0 Pyrdiosed Ihe controets ot Willie Turnbull’s running back from Auburn was Holton p 1 0 0 0 McGttgnp 0 0 0 0 Dovldson-Bob Gustamachlo-Bob Bon- llnerocker, Nuu FOoola, running Ixick, She thought. The ball was ruled seeded. But as it turned out it was JHJohnsn 2 1 0 0 0 2 Presley 3 (24), Trammell 2 07), Grubb (13), odies 62, Steve Motovo-Tom Leone- Froser,pltcher,ondMork Ryol, outfielder, M Cesorlo, offensive tactile, cmd Corl one of four minor leaguers Whitaker (18). SB— Sheridan (7). J(3onzlzct 0 0 0 0 Wnghmph 10 0 0 from Etkiwitton. Activated Terry in. and Turnbull held serve. Shriver said she is familiar with _____ ’ 5 5 5 0 2 Bryont rt 1111 Burkep 0 0 0 0 Pete Tovlor-Mlke Gotzklewlcz 63, Howard, cornerbock. Ploced Kirk the best thing for me.” mifW«W0Ta IP H R ER BB SO FOrster, pitcher, from the 21-dov disabled Springs, safety-kick returner, on Inlured her opponent in the quarterfinals called up by Kansas City Heaton WA-12 6 42234 Dotrelt Rivera ss 10 0 0 Word Holmes-Ben Oelmestro-Jee IHt. " I felt I was a little bit cheated,” Incentive, lights, ankle, bad call Totals SS 4 9 6 Totats SS 7 14 7 Macoione-Blll Leone 63, Bob Jones- reserve. "Well, I think she’s a leR-hander. Monday when major-league RUocksn 1 1 0 0 0 1 Morris W,168 > 7 5 5 4 12 Dlck Potemostro-Pete Corrao-Den CLEVELANDINDIANS-RecolledOoug PHILADELPHIA EAGLES— Mandlikova said. "But Pm not aside, Turnbull said she is also a rosters could expand to 40 g n tw o t 0 21100 Seattle and she’s big and strong" Los Angeles lOS 988 881— 4 fiTw or* 63, Pete Denz-John Plckens- '®°''* Clork, Wolved Rich Ackerman, defensive taking any credit from Wendy.I players Frazier S,4 2 1 0 0 1 3 Morgon L.9-15 6 7 5 5 4 6 outtlelder, from Molneotthe Intemotlonol tackle, Rovmond Morris and Seta tough opponent for Mandlikova. Montreal ns SS Kevin Hogon-John (Sromon 63, Tom LfOOU0. She’s Navratilova, who will play 9 55**2.°’ P” ***” 7 batters In the 8th Trullo 1-310010 Joimer, linebackers, ond Jim Gilmore, Just want to say though there were ”I mix it up quite a bit. She likes ’’Whatevif happens, WP— Frazier. MYoung One out when winning run scored Prlor-Myles McCorthy-Bob Wolloce- 2 !3 2 1 1 1 4 Gome Winning RBI — FPley (2). Glno Morotti 63, Carroll Moddox-AI . «lk e otfwsive guord. Placed Nick Hoden, some questionable calls.” someone like Chris (Evert Lloyd), doubles with Shriver today after happens.” said Jackson, who Umpires-Home, Coble; Rrst, Evans; HBP— Sheridan by MYoung, Lowry by L « S , ffrst bosemon, from the 21-dov wwnslvtouord, on Tnlurcd resorvo. MYoung. E— Brock. DP— Los Angeles 3 LOB— pber-Herm Dyorak-JIm Rafferty 63, disobied list, their singles match recovered from a horrendous Second, Lepperd; Third, Kosc. Los Anoeles 5, Montreol 11. 2B— S.tgn t^lnskl-Eorl Everett-Dennis Ra- Mandlikova tied the earliest exit who/ gives her a lot of pace and a T— 2:49. A— 16474. Umpires— Home, Bremigon; First, . KANSAS C ITY ROYALS-Colled up Bo “ It’s nice, it’s familiar, it’s Bllordello, Stubbs, Low, Raines. HR— dobaugh 6 ! Nino Nistri 63. STEELERS-Signed by a woman U S Open champ in nice even bounce. I sort of jog her start to hit 277 for Memphis of Clork; Second, Johnson; Third, Kaiser. Brock (14), Rolnes (9), Bryant (1). M EM BER-M EM BER — Net — Ren Jockson, outtteMer, and Terry Bell, friendly, it’s competitive.” Shriver the Double A Southern League T — 2:49. A— 13,410. Crolg-George McNIff 58, Reger poteher, from Memphis ot the Southern tW Is tqCllff Stoudt, cxiorterttock, tathe St. the Open era. Billie Jean King lost around a little bit,” Turnbull said. OrialisB, Angelas SB— Anderson (4), Webster (35). S— League. Colled up Rondin Johnson, second said of the rivalry with her this summer ’ I ’m hereto play Bllordello, Wohiford. SF— Foley. Macolone-Bernie Glovino 58, Bob Louis Cardinals tor cxi ixidlsctosed draft in the round of 16 in 1973 "She was the Rrst serve-and- Gustomachlo-Nlno NIstrl 59, Bill Jtasemqn, and Kevin Seltzer, out- c h o ^. Wolved John (Soodmon and Von partner ball and to help the Royals win. OMOho ot the Americon im ^es, defensive linemen. Cap Boso. ” ! play a tough player like volley player that 1 played here,” BALTIMORE CALIFORNIA IP H R%R BB SO Tomklel-Jock McCollum 60, Bob AtSoCOTiOn. I ’ll do whatever they want me to irhM Blua Jays 5. Indians 4 Les Angelee Brldgeman-Pete Cerroo 60, Steve tight end, Brian Blankenship, guesrd, Two other unseeded Americans. Obr hM ^MILWAUKEE BREWERS- Wendy and I play at night. So it’s a said Mandlikova. "and I believe do.” Shetbyrf 5 2 3 2 Petth ct 4 0 10 APeno 2 6 3 3 0 0 Hormon-TIm Cooney M, Joe oito Steve Morse, runntog bock. Placed Todd Witsken and Gary Donnelly, Lynncf 4 2 11 Joyner 1b Holton 41-3 4 2 1 0 3 Macalone-Walt Forley 61, Brooks w p i a ^ the controct of Pete Vuckovich, Don Reeder, running bock, and Erroll little bit unfair.” Mandlikova said. that if I played under the sun The defending W orld"-^ries 8 5 0 3 0 CLEVELAND Ripken ts 4 2 2 1 Dwnngdh .TORONTO Howell L,5-9 2 3 2 2 3 0 Allen-Ben Delmastro 61, Honk Ojtwjer,from Voicouver ot the Podtlc Tucker, defensive lineman, on Inlured will try, to reach the quqriers 5 0 10 O brhM Coast League. reserve. “ I had problems with the ligjjls It during the day 1 wouldn’t have had AP ptioto champions began play Mohday Murray 1b 4 12 3 DeCncs3b 5 0 0 0 Bernzrd 2b r « » - - O b rh M Powell 0 1 0 0 0 0 Murphy-Corl Enberg 61, Tom Leone- today. Donnelly dra ^th ird seed Sheetsc 3 0 0 0 Hendrck rt 5 0 0 0 Femndz ss 5 0 10 Montreal Sondy Leone 61, Bill Palma-Chorlle - LOUIS CARDINALS—Wolved was absolutely different (Tom as many problems ” night 14 games out of first place 4 111 Butler ct 5 12 0 Moskbyef 4 111 _ NEVy YORK YANKEES-Recolled Bob Boris Becker of S T^t Germany: Dempeyc 1 0 0 0 Grich 2b 3 110 Franco ss DMortlez 4 8 5 5 2 3 Whelan 61. Gross — Oom DeNIcolo- punier, and Rick Mclvor, playing during the day ... I had Earlier Monday, top-seeded Steffi Graf of West Germany sights the ball tossed for a In the A L West Tfabertr 3 0 0 0 Sdiotlld ss 4 13 1 4 0 10 Johnsndh 4 2 2 2 McGffgon 2 0 0 0 0 2 T e r ^ Schilling 67, Pete Foster-Ray Tewk*urv, Scott Nielsen and Mike ctaorterbock. Resigned Evan Anapostalhls, Carter It 3 0 1 0 Bell It 4 12 2 PunTw. problems ’ serve In her U.S. Open match against Italy’s Rafaella Witsken. who ^ a t Jim m y Con­ "The fact that we’re not in a RovthdSb 10 11 Boonec 4 0 0 1 Snyder rt Burke l 0 0 0 0 0 Eyelhoch 0 , Tom Prlor-Ston Hlllntkl it522L'"‘£ia'£]Il''*r.*' Lombardi, Ivan Lendl eliminated the last Bantauz3b 4 1 1 2 Barfield rt 3 00 0 69, Doc McKM-Bob Venderkall 70, ' Meochom, shortstop, nors. meets (Milan Srejber of pennant race probably means 3 10 0 Norronc 0 0 0 0 Toblerlb 4 12 0 loro 3b McClure 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 from Columbus ot international Leogue -S ANPI.EGO CHARGERS-Wolved Ron "Wendy also maybe didn’t see seeded American man as he beat Reggi. Graf, seeded third, won 6-1, 3-6, 6-0 at the MkYhgdh 4 0 0 0 DWhItelf 4 0 2 0 3 0 10 Reardon W,76 11-3 1 1 1 0 1 Ward Holmes-Brod Downey 71, Dave nle_ Wqshingten, llnebocker, John Walker, Czechoslovakii8 Bo will get more of a chance to Jacoby 3b 4 0 0 0 Mullnks3b 100J Purehosed the controets ot Alfonso that well but I think it affected me No. 15 Brad Gilbert. 7-5. 61, 62 GutlerzSi 4 1 0 0 CCostlll dh APendpItchedto1batterlnthe3rd,Powell Kave-Tom Vecsey 71. Bock Side Gross Wfcisfve «nd, Oovfd Morttn, cdmertxick, National Tennis Center in New York. play than he would otherwise.” 3 11 2 BAAortnze 2 0 0 1 -^orl-John Everett 35, John p y i Wilkison is the only Anterican *1 998 Totob ■ 312 3 Bondoc 4 0 10 Whlttph pitched to 1 botter In Ihe 9th. O ' McCoy, deien- much more than her,” she said. Lendl said afterward that he is in 10 10 li^ ^ P — Webster by APeno, Dawson by Lotonzle-Frank Llvtagsten 35. Back InPelders, and 2!y* '''ipniln Wenstrom, deton- man already in the quarters. He Royals general manager John Bemwiei e *15 ow i i i ^ Shphrdur 0 0 0 0 Shea-Pete Teets 39, nenrvcatto,outflelder,fromColumbus. slve llnemon. Ploced Timmie Wore, wide Mandlikova said the loss was better condition than when he won Grosse Pointe, Mich.. 63, 7-5. 64 beat No 15 Kathy Jordan. 6-4. 6-4: Schuerholz said. Upshaw 1b 3 10 0 Dick McNamara-George Martin 30, lecelyer, ond Curt DKSlocomo, offensive finds that “scary.” but "consider­ 6 cemgntig is* oei oso-s GorckJ 2b Umpires— Home, Grtoo; Rrst, Harvey; “ disappointing and not disappoint­ the Open last year: Tim Wllkison of Asheville N O. and eighth seed Bonnie GzHhisek of After rushing for more than Gome Winning RBI — None. 3 0 0 0 Second, Stello; Third, DovIs. Moynord Ctaugh-Jock Devonney 30, MikeOoiiego, guord, on Inlured reserve. ing the draw and the way I played Leach ph 0 0 0 0 Jock Gonnon-Bob Maher 30, Tom taflekler, and Ston Jovler, outfielder, ^ANCISCO 49ERS-PMced Wen- ing. Before the Open I wasn’t sure “ The reason I ’m hitting the ball is the only American man io reach Largo, Fla who beat No 13 1.886 yards In his senior year, E— Hendrick, Sheets, Grich. o p - Tetats 31 4 9 4 Totals 33 5 8 5 T — 2:56. A— 10610. from Tacoma of the Podtlc Coast this week. I’m not really Bolttmere 1, CMItamle 1. LOB— Baitinwre Atamlan-Carroii Maddox 30. LM0U0. PJlljYler, rjmnirrgbock,