This Man Can Show the Best in Hanking and Beethcnen

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This Man Can Show the Best in Hanking and Beethcnen 16 - BVKWINO HERALD. Tuei.. 3uae 10. IWO Appropriations, new fees on agenda for directors iianrlt^BtFr MANCHESTER - The Board of New parking regulations and fines Town Attorney’s Office. This SHVC won’t Directors will consider a number of are also on the b i r d ’s agenda. The amount, for stumbling on the appropriations and the setting of new ordinance to be co h sid e^ tonight sidewalks was set by the court in a fees at it 8 p.m. meeting to ^ ^ t. sets a $5 fee for overtime parking, a pre-trial hearing of Anna Dziordzi’s Although the board voted during $15 fine for parking outside 12 inches case. the budget sessions to increase the from the curb, and 10 feet from a ffoe sell building water rates 33 percent, there will be hydrant, and 25 feet from a comer. Although last month the board ap­ a public hearing on the ordinance There will be a $25 fine for parking in proved selling Buckland School to tonight. I a fire lane. Richard Hayes, the ordinance By MARY KITZMANN Although no work has begun, toe ’The board approved a 33 percent Establishing an Emergency finalizing the sale is not on the agen­ Herald Reporter Department of ’Transportation Increase in the 1980-81 despite a Medical Services council is da. The town management is I Vol.' XCIX. No 216 — Mincherter, Conn., Wednesday, Junp 11,1980 • Since 1881 • 20e"1 has begun acquiring toe rights of request from town manangement for scheduled to be finalized tonight. The reviewing the submitted bids before J MANCHESTER— The owners of way. After the project’s completion a 50 percent hike. ’The increase raises board earlier approved the concept drafting the ordinance. It is expected the Odd Fellows building have the remaining land, that was c the average water bill about $25.40 a of the nine-member council. the sale will be on the July agenda. ^ I. purchased by the state, will be year. ’The council, representing coun- TTie sale and toe building s demoll- returned to the town, There had been some question sumers, respondents, and medical Squirrel tion was plann^ as part of the According to Giles, the building’s whether a public hearing is required fields, would study possibilities of an reconstruction of the intersection of owners wished to sell toe property. for the increase which has akeady EMS service and report to the Board Marine Corps League Center and Main Street where toe ’The turnabout came as a surprise, been approved. of Directors. ’The council members MANCHESTER - A meeting of building is located. Under toe agreement with DOT, However, a search of the Town will be board appointed. the Marine Corps League will be held causes ’The oiraers, SHVC Inc., a family toe town pays about 30 percent of toe Charter showed a public hearing was Settling a claim against the town Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the Marine corporation, notified the board of op- comer’s revamping. ’The project will Volunteers honored not necessary, according to Kevin for $12,000 is recommended by the Club on Parker Street. position to toe plan to take toe create two separate intersections t> \ O’Brien, town attorney. But the pro^rty\ In a letter to the board, relieving traffic congestion at toe Mrs. Virginia Briggs, standing, coordinator volunteer drivers were honored for their past board decided to schedule a hearing read at Tuesday night s meeting, the comer. of the Meals-on-Wheels programs, chats with service during the last year. (Herald photo by to give the public another chance to blackout owners now suggest th at the According to Jerome Walsh, at- volunteer drivers at a dinner at Manchester Pinto) comment, and to avoid any mis­ Grasso OKs rewards necessary land be taken from the tomey for SHVC Inc., the state did Memorial Hospital Wednesday. The understandings. Center C ongregational Church not exercise the option to buy under a ’The board will also consider an or­ in four murder cases By KEVIN FOLEY property, across from the half-moon specified time. ’The owners feel toe dinance setting a $25 fine for pet Herald Reporter shaped stmeture. ’The corporation is stmeture is a good, viable building, droppings. HARTFORD (UPI) - Gov. Ella who both died June 2, 1980, in New composed of members of the Stuart and no longer wish to sell. Walsh said ’The ordinance was proposed by the Grasso has authorized rewards Haven. New Haven State’s Attorney MANCHESTER - A squirrel Colson family, that using empty land from the *Godiva^ protest planned town Health Department after which found its way into a 23,(XX)-volt The board scheduled a public church and possibly the Lincoln ranging from $20,000 to $10,000 for in­ Arnold Markle asked that a reward numerous complaints. formation leading to the killers in be offered. underground electrical system this hearing on the matter for July. Center grounds would be an alter- ASHFORD (UPI) — Thomas Supina Jr. is once again “It seems to me that the politicians are trying to freeze tinder the ordinance pet owners four separate m iners. Rewards of $20,000 each were also morning at Manchester Memorial Voters authorized the reconstmc- native solution, turning to “Lady Godiva” to show his upset with the me out, they do not want a sincere people’s candidate on are responsible for pet droppings and A $10,000 reward was offered Mon­ authorized by the governor in the Hospital caused a three-phase elec­ tion when approving funding for However, Walsh noted toe state political process and government. the November election ballot,” he said. must clean the area. day in the slaying of Janette separate slayings of Catherine trical failure, leaving 468 Hartford three other projects; the renovation could still condemn toe land. “What The 74-year-oid veteran protester has hired a young Supipa is well-known locally for staging unusual The board will also consider buying Reynolds, 17, of Griswold, whose Healey, 87, of Hartford, and Juan Electric Light Co. customers without of Main, Adams, and Vernon Streets, we’re trying to do is point out why music teacher to don a leotard for two midnight protests. Severl years ago he pitched a tent outside the two new dump trucks using surplus skeletal remains were found buried Angel Velez, 40, also of Hartford. power for about half an hour. 13.- According to Jay Giles, public works they should not,” he said, horseback rides through Ashford and a grand finale ride Town Hall and fasted for four days to protest a local money in the Highway Department March 25, 1979, in Groton. She had director, about $1.56 million was ap- Because of toe reversal, the board Mrs. Healey was severely beaten %5- to the 2nd District Democratic convention in Norwich. government decision. 1979-80 budget. last been seen on Aug. 27, 1978. and found in her burglariz^ apart­ Andrew Beck, a spokesman for the proved for the projects in November felt it necessary to re-evaluate the "She will ride the Nipmuck Trail from the boondocks to He also hired a University of Connecticut student one The money stems from the un­ ’The reward was requested by New ment on April 24. She died several hospital, said HELCO officials on the town’s position on toe project. the sea,” he said of the ride from rural Ashford to time to ride as Lady Godiva in a leotard to draw attention usually mild winter that did not London State’s Attorney Robert Sat- days later. Velez was found stabbed scene told him the squirrel got Norwich, which lies about 10 miles from Long Island require large amounts of snow K to another of his causes. ti, who said police had b ^ n unable to to death in his apartment on March between lightning arresters in the Sound. “Ashford’s midnight ride she’ll make to preserve Asked why the woman wouldn’t be riding nUde as had removal, sanding and salting. find any suspect. 14. lines which lead to the hospital’s new democracy.” her namesake of old, Supina said, “I have to follow the Several Republican directors have A $20,000 reward was approved for Rewards in the two murders were laundry touching off the failure. Beck Supina said Monday he hired Shazy Hopfenberg, a 21- law on public decency.” said they may oppose the purchase of information in the arson murders of requested by Hartford State’s At­ said the hospital was dble to switch Ninth graders year-old voice and piano teacher from Hartford, to draw the trucks. Gilbert Hegamin and Sam McNeil, torney John Bailey. over to auxiliary power Immediately, attention to Supina's candidacy for Congress in the 2nd and no emergency services were in­ District. terrupted. ’The operating room was The former Ashford first selectman and three-term Miss Rosemary Husky, right, was one of 34 School. At left is Mrs. Robert M. Stone, foun­ being used, but he added no problems students to receive scholarships from the pass state test state representative has failed to win support from any occurred there as a result of the dation vice president. In background is delegates to the July 22 convention. failure. Manchester Scholarship Foundation during Donald S. Genovesi, foundation president. the foundation’s 15th annual awards (Herald photo by Burbank) MANCHESTER — Reflecting a students passed; writing sample - George Nelson, a spokesman for ceremony Tuesday night at Manchester High districtwide priority on reading, 89.6 percent of the 603 students HEUX) said customers in Bolton and M a n c h e s te r n in th g r a d e r s passed; and mathematics 86.5 per- Candicacy set on E.
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