20 - MANCHESTER HERALD, Monday, April 9. 1984

BUSINESS Town Realtors observe Her puppies help Basics stressed Private Property Week the blind to see for MHS team 'Medic Alert’ — a wise, lifesaving investment ... supplement inside ... page 9 ... page 15

1 saw it happen on a midlown New York City street to pay for a service that has saved countless information about a patient who is unable to famous for its great restaurants, 1 had just left a thousands of dollars in its 27 years of existence and communicate. (The woman who had had an epileptic business lunchpon that had spun out to 3:30 p.m. and that can save your life, too. seizure on the midtown New York street that day was rushing toward Fifth Avenue when a middle-aged Your An estimated 40 million Americans have medical might have been thought to be under the influence of woman walking ahead of me started weaving as conditions that call for special treatment, says the drugs. Without that bracelet, the police might have though she had had far too much to drink {not unlikely Money's American Medical Association. As a result, they risk taken her to jail.) receiving inappropriate or incomplete medical Cloudy tonight for lunches that end at 3:30 p.m.). She would have Under today’s conditions of spiraling hospital care Worth treatment during medical emergencies. For instance, Manchester, Conn. fallen had not a nearby man grabbed her left arm just costs, the medical ID makes even more sense. as she slipped to the street and looked as she weakly a person involved in an automobile accident may be and Wednesday Sylvia Porter Hospital emergency rooms, can act with more Tuesday, April 10, 1984 wearing contact lenses. If he/she is unable to speak, pointed to her bracelet. precision when thoroughly informed about the — See page 2 "The bracelet says 'Medic Alert' and that she's an and medics don’t check the eyes, the victim may Single copy; 2,54 patient’s condition, can avoid treatment that could be epileptic!" he shouted to the group of us now suffer corneal abrasions in addition to any accident- harmful and, in either case, can shorten your hospital gathering around. "She's having a seizure! Help me related injuries. stay. anrlj^atpr Mnulh get her to the nearest hospital fast." and CIVIC organizations, including the American We all helped. She received the attention she Academy of Family Physicians, the American Nurses Unconscious patients, unable to warn an em er­ If you are among the one in five Americans who has needed. And this morning 1 received a bouquet of Association, the American Hospital Association and gency room physician of special conditions,' wiii a special medical condition, you can easily join Medic lovely spring flowers for being no more than one of the American Legion. receive careful, speedy medical treatment. But il the Alert. several decent people. Its cost is negligible. For a one-time lifetime $15 fee, patient is allergic, the administering of a particular In checking my column file, 1 note that the first and you get emergency medical identification in the form drug could be precisely the wrong measure. Or, again The emblem bears the caduceus, the words 'Medic only time I wrote about Medic Alert was July 197,'i. In of a bracelet or necklace, a 24-hour emergency phone through no fault of the physician, life-sustaining Alert’ in red. and such special medical instructions O’Neill this span, the non-profit, charitable organization has number that can be called collect and an annually medications may not be provided when needed to as: "allergic to bee stings" or "taking anticoagu­ Solar M ax grown from a half-million to more than 2 million updated wallet card. those with congenital diseases. lants.” For more information, write P.O. Box 1009, members worldwide. It now has affiliates in 16 If you cannot afford the' $15, the Medic Alert In emergencies, a paramedic or attending physi­ Turlock, Calif. 95381. Or call (800) 344-3226. In dations. has the endorsement of hundreds ol medical Foundation will waive the fee. But $15 is a small price cian can rely on Medic Alert to provide important California, Alaska and Hawaii, call (209) 668-3333. captured by predicts Business \ aid fight WASHINGTON (DPI) — The In Brief shuttle crew administration’s decision to ignore world court jurisdiction in Central Small companies diversify America and the disclosure of By Al Rossiter Jr. ing such an operation in ground CIA-directed mining of Nicara­ EAST HAKTFORD — The small companies United Press International simulators, then carefully lowered guan ports is cutting into crucial relying solely on Pratt and Whitney are trying to the big satellite into a special support in Congress for President stop putting .ill their eggs into the jet engine CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - cradle in Challenger's open cargo Reagan's Central American basket. Challenger’s astronauts captured bay. policy. The .SO Connecticut companies whose only the disabled Solar Max satellite 307 Solar Max was clamped tightly House Speaker Thomas O'Neill customer is the East Hartford jet engine lirmsay miles above Earth with a bionic to its mounting ring by three said Monday the developments they stepped up efforts to diversily alter Pratt arm today and parked it in the jaw-like latches and two electrical made certain the House would and Whitney lost the major share of a large Ait- cargo bay for the first orbital connectors were attached. refuse to grant the additional $21 Force contract this February, overhaul by two spacqwalking The satellite* then was tilted million aid Reagan wants for "Probably we should have done it a lot sooner mechanics on Wednesday^ forward so its 22>A-foot-wide solar Nicaraguan rebels. that we did, " says Richard E. LeBorious, •2 ^ - s r Astronaut Terry Hart, using the wings cleared Challenger's tail as The controversy also spawned a executive vice president of R & S Machine Co, of shuttle’s 50-foot space crane, the satellite was rotated to provide new attempt in the ^ n a te to Enfield. reached up and grabbed the better access to the control system denounce U.S. support for rebels Stale economic development olllcials. who say 4-year-old satellite on his first try module that will be replaced trying to topple Nicaragua's Sandi- a company should not depend on one company for as both hunter and prey raced at Wednesday by George Nelson and nista government. more than 35 percent ol its business, say they more than 17,000 mph above the James van Hoften. Nicaragua filed suit Monday have been urging the companies to diversify, since Indian Ocean. "Our congratulations to all those against the United States at the the 1960s. It was a last-ditch rescue effort guys down there that made it world court in The Hague, charg­ that preserved N ASA’s reputation possible," Crippen told controllers ing it with violating international Demand for execs up 43% as well as the sun observatory that in Houston. law by mining ports and destroy­ would cost $235 million to replace. Shown on television beamed to ing bridges, hospitals and airports HARTFORD — Demand for executives in the Sunday's multiple capture at­ mission control, a close-up view of in Nicaragua. • .Northeast jumped 43 percent in the first quarter tempts, both with the arm and the satellite’s main electronics box In the past two months, 12 ^of 1984 over the same period a year ago, reaching during a spacewalk, ended in showed the outline of a Valentine the highest level recorded, an executive search vessels, including Dutch, Soviet failure. heart. Solar Max was launched The satellite Solar Max rests inside the experts had doubted whether the firm says. Shuttle commander Robert Feb. 14, 1980. and Japanese ships, have struck cargo bay of the Challenger space mines in the Caribbean port of El Along with an equal rise in the West, the jump Crippen was at the controls of the The astronauts let the 2>A-ton sun-watcher could be caught mechani­ Bluff and in two Pacific ports, led increases across the nation, with a 40 percent 105-ton spaceship as it slipped satellite slip away Sunday, but shuttle today after astronauts success­ cally after a first attempt to bring it to the Puerto Corinto and Puerto boost registered in the Midwest, a 36 percent rise Remodeling at SBM just about finished beneath ^ la r Max for the capture today's operation appeared fully captured it from space. NASA shuttle had failed. , Sandino. in the Southeast ;md 28 percent growth in the today. Hart, working from the aft flawless. The Senate Foreign Relations Southwest, said Arthur Young Executive Re­ part of the flight deck, carefully It was a magnificent recovery Committee has tentatively sche­ source Consultants. With finishing touches being put on executive offices on the second floor. maneuvered the cylindrical from ,a mission that appeared duled a closed meeting for today "Job opportunities for executives in the the remodeling of the Savings Bank of “ hand” of the robot arm toward its headed for failure Sunday when The staircase, with its attractive oak for a briefing from administration Northeast were higher this pa.st quarter than in Manchester’s Main Street office, bank precious target. spacewalking and arm attempU td Mondale has narrow edge officials on the C IA’s participation any other period since 1978, when we first tracked rail, "has become a focal point of the Guided by a television camera irab‘Solar Max failed, leaving the employees can breathe a little easier. 4 in the mining and Nicaragua’s demand in this manner," said Frederick von bank," Matrick said, adding that it is mounted on the arm ’s "w rist,” satellite in what engineers feared action before the world court, a Pechmann, managing principal of the company's Since work began in August, the quite a contrast to the narrow, dark Hart drove a wire noose on the end was a death tumble. panel spokesman said. Hartford bureau. stairway it replaced. of the space crane around a shaft Today's rendezvous and capture employees have had to endure the din in Pennsylvania vote today Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass,, Demand for executives nationwide grew 35 ✓ mounted on the satellite, the first sequence was made ail the mol-e of jackhammers and drills, gusts of offered non-binding amendment percent in the first three months of 1984, A new sprinkler system and night designed to be retrieved by a difficult by the fact that Challenger cold air and heavy dust. to a tax bill expressing the desireof compared to the same period of 1983, reaching the deposit box have also been added, shuttle crew. The snare was was low on fuel for its nose control Bv Laurence McQuillan ability to lure blacks may be During a slop in Bethlehem, Pa., Congress that no funds be spent for highest levels since 1978 in all regions except the " I ’m thankful that it’s just about Matrick said. tightened and Solar Max was rockets, the thrusters required for United Press International determine the winner. A duplica­ the senator from Colorado again the mining of harbors and ports-in Midwest, the company said, pulled tightly to the end of the arm. the close-in operations. Mission over," said Vice President of Opera­ tion of his showing in New York hammered away at linking Mon­ Nicaragua and that the United The changes are more than just “OK. We've got it,” Crippen control said the forward tanks had tions Thomas J. Matrick from his office PH ILA D E LPH IA — With poiiti- could hurt Mondale. dale with special interests. States withdraw its refusal to decorative, he said, reported matter of factly at 8:59 13 percent fuel left when Chal­ SNET offers more shares looking out onto Main Street. cians and poiisters caiiing today's In previous primaries and cau­ " I have raised a fraction of what accept jurisdiction of the Interna­ a.m. EST as Challenger came lenger approached Solar Max. Pennsyivania presidential prim­ cuses, Mondale has attracted some Walter Mondale has. He has raised tional Court of Justice. NEW HAVEN — Southern New England "It has helped to give us some within radio range of an Australian The astronauts were 61 miles The facelift — the bank’s first since ary a toss-up, the outcome may black support, while Hart’s lure $15 million or $18 million ... not one The amendment was debated for Telephone Co. has filed a registration statement privacy in dealing with customers," tracking center. away from Solar Max when they 1972 — will do more than just provide hinge on Jesse Jackson’s impact among that group has been small. cent from any special-interest two hours and action was put off with the Securities and Exchange Commission Matrick said. “ Outstanding,” replied Jerry awakened at 12:22 a.m. The more pleasant surroundings for bank upon black voters in the state’s Two key battlegrounds are Pitts­ group. until today. for on underwritten secondary oflering of 6.9 Ross in mission control as the approach to the satellite went employees, Matrick said. industrial areas. burgh and Philadelphia — where "Nobody owns m e." he said. "I Late Monday, defense sources million shores of common stock. Throughout the work, the bank has control center in Houston erupted smoothly, with Crippen and co­ With 172 nationai convention loyalties conflict. Both cities have don’t owe anybody anything ex­ told United Press Intenational the The shares will be offered through a prospectus tried to include its employees in the into applause. pilot Dick Scobee following the By taking over the building next door deiegates at stake — one of the large numbers of union members, cept the people of this country. ... CIA has directed a covert opera­ in the near future by American Telephone & project, allowing them to help choose Hart, a 37-year-old engineer who same type of rendezvous proce­ that previously housed the Camisole idrgest prizes of the campaign — who tend to back Mondale. Many, When I say we’ve got to have a tion for more than six weeks to lay Telegragh Co., which will receive the proceeds. new furniture and paintings, Matrick spent more than 150 hours practic­ dures used Sunday. Shop, the bank has gained 9,000 square Democrats in the Keystone State however, are blacks who take president who goes into the White mines in two Nicaraguan Pacific The oflering will be underwritten by a said. either will fuel Walter Mondale’s pride in Jackson’s candidacy. House with no strings attached, nationwide group of investment banking firms feet, he said. Most of that building now coast harbors and that the work serves as the bank’s loan center. resurgent campaign or Gary Mondale had an edge because he that’s exactly what I’m talking has been carried out in part by eo-managed by Morgan Stanley. Salomon Broth­ "They’re very pleased with the new Hart’s chalienge. earlier filed full slates of 117 about.” ers. Merrill Lynch Capital Markets and Lehman surroundings," he said^*~ former Latin American military Even with that additional space, the Harild photo* by Hudton Federal agents bust Ail thr^e contenders are stump­ delegates running in separate Jackson, meanwhile, demanded personnel hired by the CIA. Brothers Kuhn Loeb. ing the state today in last-minute bank will be nearly up to capacity when The entire project cost more than races in the 23 congressional an end to U.S. involvement ip the The mines have been placed in campaign appeals in the last the remodeling is finished, Matrick $500,000, Matrick said. The new staircase at the Savings Bank of Manchester's Main delegates. Hart, who only submit­ mining of Nicaraguan harbors and the ports of Corinto and Puerto m ajor contest until May 5, when Commodities scheme? said. Street office has become a "focal point” of the bank, according pizza shop heroin ring ted 47 slates, picked up another 70 said he will go there to meet with Sandino under cover of darkness "It came out very w ell," he said. Texas Ddmocrats hold party from candidates who have dropped both sides. from speedboats operating from a NEW HAVEN — A lawyer for a Greenwich to Vice President of Operations Thomas J. -Matrick. The caucuses. In addition to work on the facade of "W e’re pleased with it.” out. "The mining of those harbors is freighter with the objective of company being sued lor a commodities scheme NEW YORK (UPl) - The deals and often delivered the The latest tracking poll by ABC Mondale, swinging through the .building, the renovations involved The Savings Bank of Manchester is remodeling of the bank, which is nearly complete, has opened v e ^ close to an act of w ar," he harming Nicaragua's economy, said the company was a victim of the ploy, along “ Pizza Connection," a $1.6 billion narcotics in pizza boxes, investiga­ News and the Washington Post said. expanding of the lobby, adding a new up new office space. Much of the space was gained when the Scranton, Erie, Pittsburgh, Har­ the sources said. with the government of China and banks in the largest of Manchester’s three heroin operation spanning three tors said. shows Mondale favored by 41 risburg and Philadelphia on the The Washigton Post reported Germany. Austria and Connecticut. teller area, check desks, and staircase banks, with assets of $376 million in bank purchased the building next door and set up its loan center continents that was called the percent, with Hart getting 36 Attorney General William eve of the vole, repeatedly vowed today that CIA involvement in China National Chemicals Import and Export to the second floor, and opening up 1983. there. biggest drug operation ever, has French Smith called it the “ most percent. Jackson had 15 percent. he “ will put Pennsylvania back to covert operations against tte Co., known as SINO-CHEM, has sued Nitron been broken up and 31 members of significant case involving heroin Eight percent were undecided in work” if he reaches the White Inside Today Sandinista government may be International of Greenwich for $35 million, the syndicate charged with trafficking by traditional organ­ the poll taken from Friday to House. stepped up dramatically if Presi­ charging the company broke two contracts to conspiracy. Sunday. page ized crime ths$ the federal govern­ "Plants and factories all over 20 oes. 2l sectionssec dent Reagan is re-elected. deliver fertilizers, collecting $2.6 million by The operanon was run by ment has ever developed.” A Philadelphia Daily News poll this state are lying idle now” The White House said it had no forging documents or making "blatant organized"6Hme families in the Thirty-one people were charged released on the eve of the primary because of President Reagan’s Advice ...... 12 Here’s what to do with a financial windfall Business...... 20 comment on the Post report, which falsehoods". United States and Sicily and with conspiracy to violate federal also found the contest to be a economic policies. “ Reaganomics Classified...... ib- 1» quoted administration officials as Nitron attorney AnlhonyOFitzgerald said the included Italy’s most wanted fugi­ drug laws. Eight defendants were tossup, with Mondale leading Hart By Gail Collins has devastated Pennsylvania," he Comics .,...... 14 saying if Reagan wins re-election, firm received only $30,000 and "the bulk of the Participating mortgage investmenU are designed tive, federal authorities said charged under the “ drug kingpin” by a margin of 30.7 to 26.6 percent. 50 to 100 percent sheltered. Waesche chose it “ for 'said in Pittsburgh, noting the Entertainment...... 12 “ The president is determined to go money ended up in the hands of (a German man) United Press International primarily for pension funds, since their returns are Monday. statute, which carries a maximum Jackson was receiving 9.2 percent. Lottery...... 2 income supplement rather than as a growth state’s 8.9 percent unemployment all out to gain the upper hand” in who set up a bogus company which purported to totally taxable. Because Susan and Bill had such a low appreciation vehicle.” The massive operation relied on penalty of life without parole upon The pollsters generally are say­ rate. Obituaries...... g NEW YORK — Everyone dreams of a lottery win or Opinion...... 6 the region. sell commodities." He said the man is being held income, Waesche said, "it worked well for them. ’ ’ The •”rhere are other investments that throw off income the owners of pizza parlors in small conviction. ing they found a volatile situation, The former vice president said an inheritance, but actually investing a big windfall Peopletolk ...... 2 Such an effort could involve in jail in Hamburg, West Germany. trust, designed to last about 7 years, included a Midwestern towns to arrange drug The ring imported 1,650 pounds wi^ many of those interviewed — high dividend stocks, bonds, annuities,” he said. he would create new jobs by Sports...... 15-17 sdbstantialiy more money for may be more prosaic and complicated than your package of mortgages providing a return of more than deals between Sicilian suppliers of heroin over the past five years, saying they may change their dreams. "T h ey’re all good, but they’re no hedge against improving the economy through Television...... 14 U.S.-supported forces in the region 14 percent a year. In addition, the buildings inflation. We chose real estate to provide them with and U.S. distributors. The middle­ with an estimated street value of minds at the last minute. cutting the federal budget deficit Weather...... 2 Technicom makes investment Randy Waesche, a New Orleans investment rather than the sending of U.S. appreciated in value by about 50 percent, and Bill and men used pizza lingo to discuss $1.6 billion. Smith said. To a large degree, Jackson’s income that’s increasing and an asset base that and improving trade. troops, the Post said. DARIEN — Technicom International Inc. has counselor, recalled the case of Bill, 25, and Susan, 30, Susan received larger lump sums as the individual announced an investment of an undisclosed two social workers whose annual income was $15,500 parcels were sold over the life of the trust. before Susan’s father sold his. factory to a amount in Micro Computer Systems Inc. of The real estate equity portion of the portfolio Greensboro. N.C., a manufacturer of telecom­ conglomerate and distributed part of the profits to his children. included three different funds. One, a limited munications equipment. partnership, purchases property, improves the Blacks question police sensitivity following gun incident Under the agreement Technicom. which Susan, who was unemployed when the windfall arrived, found herself holding about 6,000 shares of management and then resells it within a few years. A LEAVE THE WORRYING TO US TIE-Communications Inc. owns the majority of, second is a real estate investment trust that returns has the right to buy the remaining equity interest the Fortune 500 corporation that had bought her By Kathy Garmus Lannan that they sometimes walk about 8 percent income, fully tax-sheltered. officer's actions in the Friday stopped 30 feet from Blanchard, Several people said it was in Micro in the future. father’s business, worth about $269,000. Herald Reporter the streets in fear. Several of the residents said that incident and said that without a opened the front door of his cruiser frightening that police would rely Technicom also announced it has formed When they approached Waesche, a partner in the " I didn't want to look for shelters per se, but if I “ Our psyche tells us that Man­ because of the environment in complaint, the incident would not and stood behind it. and three on the word of one person — the Technicon Systems Inc. to market a full range of financial planning firm of Resource Management could shelter a portion of their income that was fine,” IF WE DON'T SEll YOUR About 25 black residents met chester is a hostile environment to which they grew up, they, too, be investigated further. times ordered Blanchard to put his assistant director who called po­ outside plant products for the telecommunica­ Inc., their natural goal was increasing their present Waesche said. with police officials Monday night us,” said one woman. “ We have to might ignore an officer's request to “ I'm at a stalemate with this hands on the hood of the car. lice — who wasn’t even an tions industry. income. They were concerned about inflation, which HOME WE'LI BUY IT... to express their concern over watch out for our children. This put their hands on the car if they case,” he said. Each time Blanchard asked eyewitness. they exp ect^ to rise dramatically, but given their police treatment of minorities. young man could have been ddad.” were doing nothing wrong. THE THIRD FUND was a limited partnership that Citing several Supreme Court "W h y?" and continued to keep his present tax bracket, the Internal Revenue Service “ The origin of our fear comes "What about all the crackpots Mayor Barbara B. Weinberg buys land in high-density growth areas, constructs The two-hour meeting at police cases concerning detention with­ hand under his jacket, police said. Rhody firm reorganizes was not a major worry. out there?" asked one woman. received a resounding “ yes” when small warehouses on it, and holds the property for? to headquarters was sparked by an from the last place it should — the out arrest, Lannan said that officer When he began pulling an object Several people suggested that she asked, “ When you see a police EAST PROVIDENCE, R.l. - About 100 10 years before selling it for development. t incident Friday in which a police police department,” said one man. Joseph Amato acted properly out of his jacket, Amato drew his WAESCHE’S FIR ST STE P was to analyze the Call us today for our Blanchard’s activity was viewed officer coming, do you automati­ employees at the Fram Group will be part of a offiper drew his gun on an “ As long as I wear a tie and drive a when he stopped Blanchatd on gun, police said. stock. ‘ ‘We thought it was trading fairly high, and this The warehouses throw off income during the as suspicious by Cheney Tech cally think confrontation?” reorganization of the automotive businesses of guaranteed sales plan 18-year-old black man who was Jaguar or Mercedes, I might be Love Lane Friday shortly after was a good time to begin diversification," he said. waiting period — "graduated returns starting off at 3 safe.” employees simply because he is Allied Corp., Fram 's new corporate parent, the concealing what turned out to be a noon. Throughout the meeting, Lan­ Waesche drew up an investment plan aimed at to 4 percent, which could increase about 1*A percent a ONCE AM ATO R E ALIZE D the black. company announced. high school diploma underneath Police said they received a nan pressed the group on whether a producing an income stream that would increase object was a book, he put his gun "There’s been ho indication that Some of the employees are scheduled to be year,” Waesche said. The reai payoff, however, SEVERAL RESIDENTS re­ report from employees at Howell complaint wouj(l be filed. At one naturally each year, with a real estate equity base Anne Miller Jacki Smith his Jacket. back into its holster and searched there was suspicious activity,” relocated to Southfield, Mich., where the should come down the line when the land is sold and counted incidents in which they Cheney Regional Vocational Tech­ point, after asking if there were that should rise in value at least as fast as the Blanchard for weapons, police said one man. headquarters of Allied’s automotive section is investors receive returns that are taxable as Dick Bissell Rick Merritt The young man, Paul Blanchard said they were unfairly stopped by nical ^hool that a nian matching any more questions, he became consumer price index. long-tem^ capital gains. said. According to police, Blan­ They also suggested that the being formed, a Fram spokeswoman said. of Cbanning Drive, was present at police. Blanchard's description had bwn impatient and left the room. He Susan kept half her stock, and also decided to keep 8 the meeting but made no com­ chard said he went to the school to incident could have been averted The spokeswoman said it is still uncertain 'The real estate income investment was a limited General Manager Robert B. in the school asking questions and returned about five minutes later percent of her assets in a money market for ready partnership that buys garden-variety apartments and ment. Police said be has not filed a get information about enrolling had Amato simply asked Blan­ which employees will be offered jobs in Michigan Richard E. Marritt Agtncy, IVeiss promised that police guide­ “ acting very nervous.” The em­ and had brought his high school when members of the group cash, “as a security fund for emergencies." In office buildings. “ The investor can anticipate a 7 to 10 complaint. lines and sensitivity training chard what he was carrying under and which will remain at Fram ’s East Provi­ ployees said Blanchard was hiding diploma with him. his jacket instead of ordering him requested that he do so. addition, 9 percent of her portfolio was to be invested year holding period with fully sheltered income Roaltors Many of the residents said the procedures will be reviewed. something under his coat that dence office, adding details of the reorganization Lannan said that because of the to place his hands on the car. "You don't file a complaint by 3S in a participating mortgage trust, 20 percent in real stream beginning at 7>A percent and increasing incident reflected community­ “ It bothers me to be told you are could have been a stick or club, are yet to be finalized. 122 E. C«nt«r 8t. 646-1180 information police received from Lannan countered that anyone estate equity, 8 percent in real estate income and 5 percent a year, hopefully,” Waesche said. wide insensitivity toward blacks. walking in fear,” he said. police said. people discussing the matter.” he percent in oil and gas. Cheney Tech employees, Amato who ignores a police officer’s said. “ We have an IS-year-old The oil and gas fund pays about 13 percent and was They told Police Chief Robert D. Lannan defended the police According to police, Amato acted “ right by the book.” orders is taking a chance. I have yet to hear froth.” 2 - MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday. April to, 1984 Physicians for Social Responsibility visit Russia Students should be out by June 19 Manchester Group finds cold war feelings at ‘scary’ stage in Brief believe that (they’re) an evil, doctors continually encounter dur­ called saber-rattling by the Rea­ 'School N O T ending later each year" Bv Undo Cormon American public to the dangers of beginning first with exhaustive illegitimate empire. That is the strain can’t be reached ing these sessions: “ ’What about gan administration. United Press International nuclear war, returned last week articles in the New England message they’re getting.” from its first official trip to the Journal of Medicine. More re­ the Russians? Do Russian physi­ ,» The remarks of a guide, conduct­ Bill Strain, a 54-year-oId jobless man who Bv Sarah E. Hall ties, he said, have had to dip Into their interpretation of the law, kindergarten­ classes had to be canceled. Another ing the doctors through Lenin­ BOSTON — The hostility Rus­ Soviet Union. search followed and was increas­ cians and the public understand Alexander tried to deliver the recently founded a group called Concerned Herald Reporter April vacation:' Manchester has not. ers in both morning and afternoon time, a power failure at MHS meant sians feel towards Americans has The group got its start in 1961 ingly widely disseminated. The the consequences of nuclear wea­ grad’s Hermitage Museum during same message to ISO million Unemployed People in Manchester, apparently But this year's snow days have sessions will likely have to report to students there had to attend school one has left the area. escalated to a "disturbing level" when, at an informal Cambridge group now counts, about 30,000 pons and do they have any power to the visit, were typical, said Alex­ Russians over Moscow radio in a Manchester schoolchildren are NOT caused two problems, Kennedy said. class the morning of June 20, extra day, Kennedy said. because they are convinced the gathering, English humanist and members and holds that nuclear influence governments policies?" ander, back in his office at the seven minute spot. Repeated attempts by the Manchester Herald getting out later and later every year. According to state Commissioner of Kennedy explained that local kinder­ Struck by thehostility among the Lahey Clinic in Burlington, where to reach him have been unsuccessful. Superintendent James P. Kennedy told Education Gerald N. Tirozzi. Kennedy NEXT SCHOOL YEAR.a special day U.S. will use nuclear weapons Nobel Peace prize winner Philip war cannot be won and that there is In the broadcast, Alexander told garteners are currently one day behind Russians, the doctors decided it he is head of the cafdiovascular His phone has been disconnected. Several the school«board Monday. said, the law mandating 180 full days of has also been added to teachers’ against them, says the president of Noel Baker spoke on the environ­ no effective medical response to the Russians, that, “ no one wants the rest of the students in town: one was equally important for them to section. legislators he’d contacted earlier said they have Even with ail six snow and bad- school will not be bent because of this an American physician's group mental effects of above ground the devastation nuclear war would nuclear w ar” but Uiat “ the prob­ morning kindergarten .session this year calendars. Teachers will spend a full let the Russians know Amerieans not seen him since the opening day of the General weather days so far this year, students year’s bad weather. This means the seeking to prevent nuclear war. nuclear testing. Baker told the cause. The guide was certain the United lem is the methods we use to was canceled when the other grades day as "students" on Lincoln’s Birth­ do not speak with one voice. Assembly. One source said he’s heard the man will probably be out on June 19, date of Manchester High School’s The hostility is especially group, including Alexander, that One of the doctors’ prime activi-- States would attack the Soviet prevent it.” He said the physi­ had a late opening, he said, and one day, it was announced Monday. documenting and educating the ties is visiting cities nationwide, The universal view among So­ moved back to Virginia. Kennedy said. He was responding to a graduation ceremonies will remain "scary” because it "accurately Union because, she said, “ ‘E ve­ cian's group rejects Reagan’s afternoon session was called off when a Assistant Superintendent Wilson E. making what they call “ bombing viet citizens, that America is bent Strain had been holding meetings for jobless recent letter to the editor in a local tentative, pending any further school reflects what the military is public to the effects were the - ryone in the United State hates conviction that peace is only storin began later in the day. Deakin said he and the Manchester responsibility of doctors. raids," in which they describe in on destroying them, has grown persons more or less monthly until late January. newspaper, complaining about late cancellations. In addition, kindergar­ feeling," said Dr. Sidney Alex­ Communists and Communism,’’’ achievable through strength. The While in the past the stale has Education Association have agreed to ander, 52, president of Physicians "He may have even said it was minute detail what would happen if dramatically since the last time he The last story the Her:\ld wrote oh his efforts was school endings. The letter writer teners townwide will have to attend said Alexander. group, he said, believes that view, authorized a «179-day year for kinder­ the full day "in-serviee’’ session for for Social Responsibility. their social responsibility," re­ nuclear bombs were dropp^ on visited the country 10 years ago, in early February, and went under the headUne. suggested cutting out the February school one extra day, Kennedy said. “ is risky and ultimately disastrous garteners, that’s doubtful this year, teachers to attend workshops, replac­ Alexander, along with seven called Alexander. the cities. Alexander said. The world- He said the group told their ’’Jobless activist losing optimism.” vacation. “ It’s my intention lo have high school Kennedy said. and that there are better ing the two part-time .sessions they other members of the group, which Alexander and several other Alexander said the Russian trip renowned cardiologist attributes fellow physicians the United States “ He was pretty upset about his situation," said “ Manchester has tried that, and we graduation on the 180th day, whenever methods.” "What the attendance will be that have had to attend for the past few normally focuses on educating the doctors took up the challenge. was prompted by a question the the increased hostility to what he “ is not monolithic and we don’t all Sen. Joseph H. Harper Jr., D-New Britain. ’’He got absolutely no support from anyb­ that happens," he said. “ Right now, (extra day). I ’m not sure," he said, had this negative attitude that government is ody,” Kennedy said. “The pediatri­ that’s June 19." years. Originally, the administration grinning. "But we’ll provide an excel­ had reeomnimended two full days. doing nothing about the jobless." cians in town, including Dr. Malone (a Calls have already been coming in to lent educational experience for all Strain had also sought support from Rep. David school board member) blamed us for his office asking for a definite gradua­ those who avail themselves of it. ” Deakin also said he’s secured con­ Weather Thorp, R-Cheshire, and Rep. Elsie Swennson, every epidemic east of the Hudson tion date, he said. That date still hasn’t The additional day for selected tract language specifying that high R iver.” Peopletalk • R-Manchester. Both said they saw him last out in been set, however. students is nothing new in Manchester, school teachers, as well as those in front of the Capitol on the Legislature’s opening “ In Manchester, thank heavens, " I sec no other way to meet the letter he added. Once in the past. Highland elementary and junior high schools, Today’s forecasts day, picketing alone. we’re in real good shape this year of the law,” he said. Park School students had to report to must attend open houses for parents. “ I ’m not aware that he raised any funds for his because we started school before Labor Connecticut, Massachusetts and r school one day later than the others The school boalrd voted to accept the Freed mastiff in TV debut group whatsoever,” Thorp said. "I really don’t Day,” Kennedy said. Many communi- ALSO B E C A II c p of T irn z’ l's strict Rhode Island: Cloudy today with a hceau.se a broken u'aier nine had meant agreement Monday. American justice has gone to the dogs, or so believe he was a confidence man.” chance of showdrs east. Partly hopes consumer advocate Ralph Nader. sunny west. HigHs 4eeast 50 west. Tucker, the bull mastiff sentenced to death by a Tonight cloudy mm a chance of Maine judge for killing a neighbor’s poodle, will Teachers rain and snow showers. Lows in the 32-year teacher to leave appear on national television at Nader’s request 30s. Wednesday cloudy and a Friday night to tell his own side of the story. The school board Monday accepted the chance of showers. Highs from “ 1 thought he should be able to plead his case in resignation of Donald F. Warren, a science around SO west to 40 east. may be front of a national audience since dogs have done teacher at Bennet Junior High School since 1952. Maine: Windy today. Flurries or well over the years, going back to Richard Warren, who is currently the science department occasional light snow extreme Nixon’s dog," Nader said from his Washington chairman at Bennet, will retire in June. west. Snow elsewhere accumulal- called back office. The board unanimously accepted a motion lo ing an inch or two except up to 5 He will appear on the nationally syndicated send Warren a certificate of commendation for inches way down east. Highs 33 to "Thicke of the Night" show with his kidnappers, his Jong and dedicated service. 40. Scattered flurries tonight. Lows News affecting public school who call themselves the National Doggie 25 to 35. Cloudy with a chance of teachers at both extremes of the Liberation Front. showers Wednesday except possi­ experience scale was doled out at the The dog disappeared from a Belgrade kennel ble flurries in the mountains. Board of Education meeting Monday. Feb. 15, less than two days before he was 2nd shelter crackdown set Highs 40 to SO. Administrators said some junior supposed to be put to death by poison injection. New Hampshire: Scattered flur­ Health Director Ronald Kraatz said Monday he teachers may not be laid off as was After claiming responsibility, the NDLF prom­ ries today and tonight. Highs mid plans to send George Marlow, store owner and 869 expected. They also pointed to ised to return Tucker if state officials promised to 30s to low 40s and lows 25 to 35. Increasing cloudiness today Main St. landlord, notice of housing code reimbursements senior teachers may pardon the dog, but threatened to bomb the Maine Variable cloudiness Wednesday violations in his building today. get for college courses. Statehouse with dog excrement if it did not. Today: increasing cloudiness with a 30 percent chance of showers by except mostly cloudy with a “ I believe inspections of ail the apartments are The number of teacher retirements Tucker killed a neighbor’s poodle during a fight afternoon. Highs in the 40s. Wind north to mph. Tonight: cloudy chance of showers at the coast. 10 15 done,” he said. "W e ’d like to get them all recently announced means that at least in 1982 and the District Codrt condemned him to Highs in the 40s to low SOs. with a 50 percent chance of flurries. Lows In the 30s. Wind north 10 to tabulated and prepared for sending to Mr. three of the five teachers already given death. Owner Eric Leonard of Augusta exhausted Vermont: Fair early then in­ 15 mph. Wednesday: cloudy with a 30 percent chance of showers. Marlow Tuesday." lay-off notices will be called back to every avenue of court appeal, but the original creasing clouds. Windy and cool. Highs 45 to 50. Today’s weather picture was drawn by Angela Foster, Against Marlow’s wishes, a tenant in the 869 work next fall, Assistant Superintend­ sentence was upheld every time.^ Donald ready for birthday Highs 35 to 45. Chance of rain or 9, of 265 Oakland St., a fourth-grade student at Robertson School. Main St. building has made his apartment a ent Wilson E. Deakin said. He said he snow showers tonight. Lows 25 to makeshift shelter for a bunch of teenagers barred plans to meet today with all teachers at Donald Duck is busy training a flock of 50 35. Cloudy and breezy Wednesday. from the official one for Manchester’s homeless. the slated-to-close Highland Park special ducklings at Walt Disney World to wear Here, there and everywhere Chance of more rain or snow After summoned there because of Complaints School, to talk about where they will be party hats for his 50th birthday party. Donald, showers in the north east. Highs in two weeks ago, health and building department placed next school year. who was present shortly after their.birth, hopes A museum devoted to tlW-Beatles opened the 40s. North winds 15 to 25 mph officials discovered housing code violations — Sunday in the group’s home city of Liverpool Deakin also released a new teacher they will accept him as their parent figure. today and 10 lo 20 mph Wednesday. ranging from too-small rooms to cockroaches — contract.addendum he worked out with featuring the biggest permanent collection ol in several apartments. As a special feature for the May 19 premier Manchester Education Association re­ Beatle memorabilia ever displayed. Among the Long Island Sound: A small craft performance, Disney trainers hope to have the Bringing the building up to code could mean presentative Pat Guay, involving col­ works showcased in Beatle City are the late John advisory remains in effect. Winds / - i-; flock dressed up in party hats and name tags to displacing tenants, Kraatz said. He said he plans lege tuition reimbursement for Lennon’s radiogram — a combination phono­ will be north to northeast at 15 lo 25 follow Donald down Main Street at Disney World /■..-rX to meet with the building department today to teachers. in Florida. graph and radio — George Harrison’s first guitar, knots with higher gusts through determine how much time Marlow will be given to / / ' ;rr ' ‘-r----'] “ This is for senior teachers, who are a drum kit once owned by Paul McCartney and a Wednesday. Winds occasionally comply. i.- -•••*! at the highest place they want to be in compact car specially adapted to carry Ringo higher over extreme east portions. the salary schedule, to go back and take Herald pholo by Pinlo Starr’s instrument. Visibility will be 5 miles or more 1 -.-..J The museum was built by Brian Epstein’s a course to keep them current in their Show is on her terms except lower in some precipitation field,” Deakin said. Courses that are What a grand evening mother, Queenie Epstein, who said the venture in the east portions late today Gauvin likely MEA prez part of degree programs, and would In the wake of her "Term s ol Endearment" was a tribute both to her son, who guided the through Wednesday. Weather will MHS teacher and Republican A^ine Gauvin is The whole company was on stage for the programs. Some 1,500 people attended. Beatles’ early career, and to the band. Noneof the lead to a step up oh the salary scale, are success, Shirley MacLaine hoofs it to New York to be mostly cloudy through Wednes­ still the only contender for president of the not eligible for reimbursement. beginning of Manchester Senior Citizens’ Funds will help support the center’s meals open a five-week engagement of "Shirley three remaining Beatles attended the opening but day with a chance of light rain or Manchester Education Association, Peter Tog- Center’s variety show at Manchester High program, WINF disc jockey Bob Ford was MacLaine on Broadway" at the Gershwin Mike McCartney, Paul’s brother, was there. snow tonight and Wednesday. nalli, the group’s current president, said late last In the addendum itself, special Theater. Staged and choreographed by Alan Average wave heights — 1 to 3 feet week. mention was made of up to nine School Friday. The two-day vaudeville show emcee. Johnson, the show features original music and through tonight. Ballots have gone out to teachers to elect new computer-course credits for which raised about $4,000 for the center’s lunch lyrics by Marvin Hamlisch and Christopher M EA officers, and should be back the week after teachers may get reimbursed to Adler. Other dancers sharing the spotlight with It was a crash landing spring vacation, Tognalli said. “ prepare themselves for the future use Miss MacLaine will be Mark Reina, Larry Extended outlook of computers in the classroom." Vickers, Jamilah Lucas and Antonelte Juskis. Satellite view Prince Philip, who is president of the Extended outlook for New Eng­ Physician’s changed testimony International Equestrian Federation, crashed his land Thursday through Saturday: horse and carriage twice in a riding competition Commerce Department satellite photo taken at 3 a.m. EST shows a Kennedy boosts group home Connecticut, Massachusetts and comma-shaped cloud mass with embedded thundershowers overthe at Windsor Castle, Buckingham Palace said Rhode Island: Fair weather School Superintendent James P. Kennedy School board Brew from the Apple Monday. through the period. Daytime highs southern Plains. Rain clouds cover the mid-Atlantic states and the made no bones about boosting a proposed Olcott Queen Elizabeth’s husband, who competed on central Appalachians. Cloudiness blankets northern New England causes dispute in Lorbier case will be mostly between 45 and 55, Street group home for troubled teenagers at the It's known for Broadway and it’s known for Sunday, was “ shaken up and a bit bruised but overnight lows in the 30s. and much of the area from the Upper Midwest to the Pacific Coast. school board’s Monday meeting. pleasantry business. Can New York become famous for beer there is no problem," according to a palace Vermont: Dry Thursday and “ This is essentially a promo,” he said. He said By Sarah Passell recessed the trial lor the day. prosecu­ Irom the account Lorbier had given spokesman. The accident forcM him to cancel once again as it was before prohibition? Friday. Chance of rain Saturday. the home, which Manchester’s Transitional for a change Herald Reporter tor Lawrence Daly appeared to have Borden during the doctor's psychiatric Matthew Reich is working on it. The 32-year-oId plans to attend an 80th birthday celebration in Highs 45 to 55. Lows 25 to 35. 30.00 * c ,3 0 .0 0 Living Center committee is trying to establish. the upper hand in arguments against examination last year. London for actor Sir John Gielgud. developer of New Amsterdam Amber Beer, Maine, New Hampshire: Fair Would likely receice funding from.monies set HARTFORD — The trial of Laotian allowing the new evidence. But defense Borden stuck to his original The prince is scheduled to preside over the SEATTLE which he claims is New York’s only indigenous through the period. Lows in the aside for out-of-district tuitions. Board of Education members started refugee Loma Lorbier was halted attorneys were expected to respond to conclusion. equestrian competition at the Los Angeles brew, is currently- considering locations in mid 20s to low 30s and highs in the Some children for whom the school board pays their meeting Monday by handing out Monday afternoon just as at former those arguments today. "H e was being pursued and he had 1 B O S TO N Manhattan, Long Island City and Brooklyn as Summer Olympics. 40s to low 50s. P praise. state medical examiner was appar­ Prosecutor Daly spent most of been caught, ” said Borden. Those who tuition at special schools might be able to attend possible sites for the brand's in-town brewery. ently about to testify that he, had Monday grilling defense psychiatrist local public schools if the home is established, he The first framed “ resolution of witnessed the beginning of the July 8 Currently brewed in Utica. New Amsterdam has NEW YORK changed his interpretation of the Walter A. Borden on his testimony that explained. appreciation” went to Manchester attack have testified that Phommah­ become available in more than 3,000 East and CHICAGO Lorbier was sure Phommahaxay was High School’s Mary Faignant, for results of the autopsy he performed on axay turned his car around after West coast outlets since its debut in October 1982. Across the nation Linh Phommahaxay, the man Lorbier about lo kill him when he grabbed a Now you know ST. L O U IS * having been named Softball Coach of spotting Lorbier s van on Walnut Street "I'm trying to bring back the romance of Rainshowers will be scattered has admitted beating to death in 1982. baseball bat and beat Phommahaxay and chased Lorbier’s van to the brewing good, flavbrful beer in New York City as In medieval times, women who were convicted Tentative agreement reached the Year by the Connecticut High over New England and along the Charles H. Chambers, a staff physi­ tt) death at the corner of Walnut and intersection of Walnut and Cedar, was the tradition before World War If.” says of nagging were forced to weara ’’scold’sbridle,” School Coaches Association. south Atlantic Coast and also will LOS ANGELES Assistant School Superintendent Wilson E. cian at Aetna Life and Casualty, Cedar streets in Manchester in July where both ears stopped. Reich who predicts the brew should gross over 5 1 a cage that fitted around the head, with a barbed extend from the Pacific Northwest School board member Bernice E. testified two weeks ago that Phommah­ 1982. "If he (Phommahaxay) indicated million in sales this year. piece that jutted into the mouth. Deakin has announced that a tentative contract into the northern Plateau and L O W E S T agreement with Local 991, the custodial workers’ Cobb, who presented the document, axay died of multiple skull fractures Daly asked Borden to rethink his that he wasn't going to attack, if he Plains regions. Thunderstorms TEMPERATURES union, has been reached. praised Ms. Faignant. Ms. Cobb said and brain injuries caused by at least opinion assuming Phommahaxay had indicated that he was going toVl^. then said nothing threatening lo Lorbier, will over the southern Plains. 140 •.MIAMI Meanwhile, negotiations with school secretar­ she’d done “ so much to make girls at two blows to the head with a blunt we wouldn’t be here," Borden said. "I High’s will reach the 40s in New ies are going on, Deakin said. He would not reveal the high school feel very important.” instrument. He said then he found assuming Phommahaxay had gotten think that once fear is unleashed, it LEGEND' out of his car with his hands over his doesn’t stop in nice places." England and northern Plains details of either set of contract talks. She went on to cite the high school Phommahaxay’s skull shattered "like states, in the low 50s at the north head in a protective stance and Judge Corrigan ordered Daly to give ^^RAm SNOW softball team ’s impressive record, and when one cracks an egg." Chambers assuming Lorbier had continued lo up his efforts to show that Lorbier had Pacific Coast, mid to upper 80s in Ms. Faignant’s help to high school also said he had found three areas of AIR strike Phommahaxay even after given Borden a different version of southern Florida and the inland ■ 6 0 ' \ " ' 'j SHOWERS FLOW girls’ field hockey and basketball. extensive bruising on Phommahaxay’s Southwest and low 90s over south­ UPl WEATHER FOTOCAST Parents say ‘keep teacher* brain. Phommahaxay had fallen unconscious events than Lorbier gave the jury last to the pavement. ern Texas. Two parents of Buckley School students asked Board member Francis Maffe Jr. Defense attorney David J. Elliott week. Corrigan ruled that it is up to the Daly’s questions were bused on the the Board of Education Monday to keep the presented the next award to MHS’s called Chambers back Monday to jury, not the prosecutor, to decide testimony of several eyewitnesses to number of fourth grade teachers at three, instead David Frost, named Girls’ Swim Coach testify for the defense, and asked if whether Borden's analysis fits with National forecast the attack — testimony that differed Weather radio of reducing that number to two when the current of the Year by the CHSCA. Maffe said Chambers has changed his conclusions Lorbier's earlier testimony. class moves on. that Frost not only led the team to since reviewing X-rays taken at The National Weather Service For period ending 7 a.m. EST Wednesday. Tonight.'rain will be found many championships, but, as a gui- Hartford Hospital before Phommah- over parts of the Pacific Northwest, central Rockies and west Quif “ We have a fairly small third grade qiass this broadcasts qpntinuous, 24-hour year, but with the incoming students from . dance counselor, helped hi^ own son axy died. Black is "in" Coast region. Fair to partly cloudy skies are forecast elsewhere weather information on 162.475 Highland Park School we’ll have 55 students next advance from “going nowhere” to Chambers said Monday he had not mHz in Hartford, 162.55 mHz in across the nation. Minimum temperatures Include; (approximate becoming a chef. seen either the X-rays or the reports Black is classic year,” Dotty Paquin of 169 Hamilton Drive told I New London and 162.40 mHz in maximum readings in parenthesis) Atlanta 46(68), Boston 37(52) the board. Sandy Glaser of 132 Grissom Road was Hartford Hospital doctors had written Black complements any outfit Meriden. Chicago 33(57), Cleveland 28(53), Dallas 53(71), Denver 36(66)' there to boost the same cause. Susan Perkins, another board from them when he wrote the autopsy Duluth 35(48), Houston 53(73), Jacksonville 54(74), Kaneas City If Mrs. Paquin’s numbers prove correct, the member, handed out a resolution report. 42(60). Little Rock 52(67). Los Angeles 55(66), Miami 66(83), administration will consider adding a teacher’s honoring the Manchester High School The jury was not in the courtroom Air quality Minneapolis 41 (57). New Orleans 60(72), New York 40(52), Phoenix aide to Buckley’s fourth grade. Assistant Math Team for its recent state while prosecuting and defense attor­ Black Onyx Rings 59(80). San Francisco 43(61), Seattle 42(52), St. Louis 43(60) Superintendent Wilson E. Deakin said. But School championship. The team has never neys argued over the introduction of The state Department of Envir­ Fashionably accented with diamonds Washington 40(62). ' Superintendent James P. Kennedy said he finished below fourth place in Connecti­ the previously undisclosed medical UPl photo onmental Protection reported couldn’t promise anything until next year's cut Association of Math Leagues records. moderate air quality Monday in budget is prepared. contests, she said. When Judge Thomas H. Corrigan Today In history Hartford and New Britain and School board Chairman Leonard E. Seader good air quality for the rest of the reported at the meeting that he has received On April 10, 1963, the U.S. nuclear miles east of Boston in the Atlantic state. The DEP forecast good air Manchester Herald another request from the Martin School Parent quality statewide for today. submarine “Thresher” went down 220 Ocean. All 129 men aboard were lost. Teacher Association, asking for a full-time rather Richard M. Diamond, Publisher than a part-time principal. LEAVE THE WORRYING r " , USPS 327-SOO VO L. N o. 163 TO US! Almanac Lottery cm. / PubllilMd dally «xc«pt Sundav »«eeestod corrlor rotes ore si JO andmd cwcartoln lain holldaytays by thellw Man-Mon- w eel^, SS.1I for one month, SISJS IF WE DONT SELL YOUR Today is Tuesday, April 10, the ch««t*r Publlthine Co., 14 Bralrwrd to r three months. 830.70 (o r six actor Chuck Connors in 1921, and rine “Thresher” went down 220 Connecticut daily Placa, Manchastsr, Conn. months ond94) .40tor one veor. Moll For the Record 101st day of 1984 with 265 to follow. football coach and commentator miles east of Boston in the Atlantic Sacend d aft potloea paid at Mart- rotes ore ovallabls on reouest. HOME WE’LL BUY IT. Oval onyx with rope Elongated oval onyx Cushion shape onyx The moon is in its first quarter. Monday: 296 diattar. Conn. POSTMASTER: edge. Set with 1 surrounded by 24 full John Madden in 1936. Ocean. All 129 men aboard were Stnd oddrttt dianott to tha Mon- set with 1 diamond Satin The morning stars are Venus, To olooe o clotelfled or displav Almost 20 years of selling homes East of the River, Members of Man­ diamond $225. cut diamonds. Split On this date in history: lost. P l a y F o u r : 2973 d iM ta r H trq ld , P.O. Box 991, edvertlsement. or to report o news A story in Monday’s Manchester Herald on the finish setting. $440. Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. In 1864, Austrian Archduke Max­ Monclwftar, Conn. 0404a £*"*L.}f»Q',or ektore Idea, coll chester and Hartford Multiple listing services, “Reai Estate U.S.A." a shank $855. In 1971, the U.S. table tennis budget for the Human Services Department con­ The evening star is Mercury. imilian became Emperor of 4^3711. Office hours ore 8:30 o.m. National Referral Service. “Homes Unlimited" a Regional Franchise. 4 All mountings14k4k yellow gold team arrived in Red China, the To tubtctlbo, or to' report o to 9 p.m. Mondov th reiA Friday. tained an incorrect figure for the amount recom­ Those bom on this date are under Mexico. other numbers drawn Monday first American group to penetrate d tllv w v problMn, coll 447-9944. mended as a town contribution to the Child Guidance Full Time Experienced sales Associates; Are some of the reasons we the sign of Aries. They include In 1945, the Nazi concentration in New England: Office hours ore S:10 o.m. fo 5:30 The Manchester Herald It o the so-called “ Bamboo Curtain’ ’ m. Mondov throuob Friday and 7 Clinic. The correct figure is $49,083. can make that statement, call us for more information. journalist and publisher Joseph camp at Buchenwald was liter- New Hampshire daily: 7997. subKrBier to Unbed Frees Interna­ since the 1950s. & 10 o.m. Saturday. Dollvorv tional nows eorvkot and It a Anne Miller Q.R.I. CRS Rick Merritt Pulitzer in 1M7, explorer Matthew ated by the U.S. 80th division. Rhode Island daily: S469. should b4 mode bv S p.m. Mondov member of Bit Audit Mreou of Q cMidaS A brief notice in Monday’s Herald about two Health Perry in 1874, Russian Bolshevik Maine daily: 500. through Friday and by 7:30 o.m. ^Dick Bissau jacki Smith Q.R.I. TrustedJewelers Since 1865 In 1960, the U.S. Senate passed In 1972, more than 3,000 people Clrculotlone. Department clinics starting this week contained the leader Vladimir Ilyich Lenin in Vermont daily: 078. Saturday. 958 MAIN STREET the landmark Civil Rights Bill. were killed in an earthquake in wrong telephone number. For more 'information 1870, actor Max von Sydow in 1929, Massachusetts daily: 1428. Richard E. Merritt agency r e a l t o r s Manchester. Conn 06040 Tel 643-2741 In 1963, the U.S. nuclear subma- Iran. -a ^ u t the back care clinic or quit-smoking clinic, call M - na«‘st.‘wgt('M#$'«v t;a'(VV"»i Police said Monday Richard A. Papineau 11,35, — A Superior Court jury missiles protests," the spokesman said. We’ve come up with the best idea since the of Hartford threatened to "blow off some cop's Military sources and West German news media continues deliberations IRA. Prime Rate IRAs. They’re available only head" after he walked away from the Rutland today in the trial of former ■ have identified Rhine-Main airbase as the arrival State Hospital last week. r point for Pershing-2 nuclear missiles that are at Heritage and offered just in time before j state Agriculture Com­ 12 OO Officials said Papineau walked away from the missioner H. Earl Water­ ; flown to the base and then transported to the April 16tri deadline. Effective Annual Yield psychiatric hospital Tuesday night with another man Jr., who is accusedof ^ deployment sites around the country. patient against medical advice. He had been financially sandbagging With our new Prime Rate IRA you’ll always undergoing voluntary treatment since his arrest the town of Suffield. earn one of the best rates, because you'll in the New Year's Eve fire that destroyed the shrine in the western Massachusetts town of Waterman, 55, was ac­ Mexican leader warns of war earn whatever Heritage’s prime lending rate Hawley. cused of pocketing $38,000 is — Prime Rate IRA currently offers the MEXICO CITY — Mexican President Miguel % Federal authorities said Papineau uttered his in 1982 from a sand highest variable rate available. No more threat in a Worcester motel where he went with purchase he arranged be­ de la Madrid warned that a war in unstable the unidentified female patient. tween the town of Suffield Central America could have hemispheric reper­ shopping for IRA rates year after year. Now "She said he made a statement that he was while he was first select­ cussions, with tensions spilling over to other you can consolidate all your IRA money at going to 'blow off some cop's head,"' said U.S. man and a company he nations. one bank knowing you're guaranteed one of Interest Compounded Daily Marshal James Roche. controlled. “A war in Central America could affect the neighboring countries and would continue to feed The jury of five men and the discord among countries of the American Violation at dump cited one women Monday heard closing arguments by at­ continent,’’ he said in a "nationwide address NEWTOWN — Hundreds of seagulls which torneys and deliberated Monday night. "feast on rotting garbage" are only one of the for three hours in the The speech followed his two-week trip to Brazil, flagrant violations at the town landfill, says afternoon, but failed to Argentina, Colombia, Venezuela and Panama. Bridgeport businessman F. Francis D'Addario. reach a verdict before De la Madrid stress^ his visits had served to D'Addario, owner of D'Addario Enterprises, adjourning at 5 p.m. bring the Latin American nations closer together has asked state environmental officials for a If convicted. Waterman on solutions to their debt crisis and the Central American problem. A Heritage Exclusive: declaratory ruling and called for tests of nearby coUld face a maximum 20 wells and the Pootatuck River. years in prison and $10,000 During the trip — his first outside Mexico since His company operates a solid bulky waste iin e . taking office during a financial crisis in facility on property adjacent to the town landfill 'The state alleged Wa­ December 1982 — de la Madrid lobbied for and D'Addario complained of harassment from terman’s company deli­ support for the Contadora Group, which seeks a town officials. vered only 3,765 cubic negotiated solution to violent upheaval in the "The town has no right to criticize me for the yards of sand, rather than region. operation of my landfill when Its own dump is the 10,000 cubic yards the such an obscenity to the senses of its taxpayers town contracted to buy, Prime Rate IRA and citizens,” he said Monday. but Waterman said the "The Newtown dump has attracted hundreds of sand was delivered and Soviets kill Afghan civilians seagulls a distance of 20 miles from Long Island the profits went to Dale NEW DELHI, India — Soviet MiG warplanes Sound to feast on continuously uncovered rotting Adams, a man he had and helicopter gunships bombed three Afghan garbage," he said. “ (The landfill) is possibly looked after for many towns in the strategic Shomali valley, killing at discharging leachate into the Pootatuck River years. least 35 civilians and four rebels. Western and destroying this valuable natural resource.” Waterman, who also diplomats said today. headed the town highway The heaviest fighting took place in the town of Protesters to be tried department, resigned as Karaz-i-mir, where a ground offensive that began agriculture commis­ on March 31 was followed by the bombing raids, Two Connecticut residents and five other war sioner in December 1983 according to the diplomats, who asked not to be protesters accused of damaging a B-52 bomber when he was arrested on a identified. Hcrib^ Savings and aircraft engines in a Thanksgiving day first-degree larceny One of the attacks April 3 killed at least 30 hammer attack at Griffiss Air Force Base will charge. people, including many civilians and four rebels, Manch««tar; Main Office, 1007 Main St., Phona; 649-4S88 • K-Marl Plaza, Spencer St. • Corner Main & Hudson Sts. stand trial next month, a federal judge ruled. In his final arguments, the souroes said. Tolland; Rt. 195 • Qlaatonbury: Inside Frank’s Supermarket • Coventry: Rt. 31 • South Windaor 29 Oakland Rd. U.S. District Court Judge Howard Munson prosecutor Kevin Kane The Soviets bombed the town again on April 5, Monday rejected motions to dismiss the charges recounted evidence pres­ killing an additional eight people, the source said. against a group known as the Griffiss Plowshare ented in the three-week • According to the same diplomat, 20 aircraft, Seven, instead setting May 14 as the starting date trial. He said Waterman's including MiG jet fighter-bombers, dropped for their trial. motivation was to pay bombs on the town in the Shomali valley, just back taxes and other north of the Afghan capital Kabul. debts. MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday. April 10, 1984 - 7

t - MAlCcHESTER HERALD. Tuesday. Awil 10. O P iN ion Richard M. Diamond. PubUshar High School World

VOL. L — NO. 19 Newspaper of Manchester High School — Space courtesy of The Manchester Herald Our Congressional bankruptcy problem Jack A n d e ra o n

WASHINGTON — It’s often said that when politics and, in the end, the House passed a bill that would > Washington prevent the bankruptcy courts from abrogating and powerful special interests get involved. Congress Merry-Qo-Round can make a mess of the simplest thing. In the latest existing union contracts and make it m ore difficult for people to walk away from consumer debts. a’ Math Team upholds instance, it is trying to keep the bankruptcy courts from going out of business. Wagman File Then the nation’s district court judges started In 197S, Congress attempted to strengthen the twisting arms. Under the present system they control the bankruptcy court in their districts and with it the bankruptcy court by putting it on an equal footing with Robert Wagman the federal district court system. The bankruptcy court very lucrative business that court can give out to local Dam plan lawyers who act as refereees. They would lose this winning tradition would be a separate system, as federal tax courts are control u n ^ r the proposed separate and equal court iC . today. Its judges would be so-called “ Article III" held May 11 in Canton. Mass. On Saturday, March 31, the Meg Harvey; juniors Heidi Sulli­ judges (after the article of the Constitution which sets system. push is With a current third-place Manchester High Srtiool Math van, Dave Riordan. John Rogers, up the judiciary). equal to district judges, and, like So the judges lobbied bard to defeat the new system league standing for the season and Team demonstrated the skill it has and Kim Kurion, and sophomores them, appoint^ by the president and confirmed by the to add a few goodies of its own. and found willing allies among Democrats who did not a number of individuals with high been showing all year by winning Lisa Harvey and Manny Merisotis. The initial problem was who would control the want to give the Republican Senate all those life-tenure league rankings. Manchester’s Senate. unseemly the Class L State Math Meet. The Individual performances were appointment of the new bankruptcy judges. judgeships to approve. The Senate finally agreed and chances of winning more trophies But in setting up the new system. Congress made a competition was held at Berlin also strong. Jon Goldick won a and plaques before the end of tiK mistake. It set the term of office for the new judges at I4> passed a bill returning the bankruptcy court to district High School, and Manchester trophy for the highest senior score years and made their annual salary subject to the THERE ARE CURRENTLY 226 bankruptcy judges. court control, giving federal appeals court judges the WASHINGTON - The Reagan topped the scores of nine other of 17 (18 being perfect), and Heidi year are very good. A banquet will be held on May 2 to honor all federal budgetary process. The new court system will have a like number. All will power to appoint the bankruptcy judges and giving administration is bending the ru in high-rated schools to take the title. Sullivan earned the second-place members of the league. have to be appointed by the president and confirmed by them only 14-'year terms. to promote a $233 million boondof^ The winning score for large trophy in junior scoring with 14. Manchester High individuals THE SUPREME COURT, in 1982, ruled that this was the Senate. In 1978, when the law was passed, this was But the GOP Senate leadership liked the idea of gle in Southern California that schools was 93, followed by Hall Although the members of the High with 85, and Hamden High were also honored by being named MHS Math Team could not have unconstitutional. The court said the Constitution of little concern to congressional Democrats. After all appointing a lot of new judges. ^ they tacked onto the could bring immense profits -t^ there was a Democratic president and Democrats wiU) 78. Competition was also held members of the 1984 Connecticut succeeded without their own initia­ requires that all Article III judges be appointed for life final Senate bill an amendment creating 85 new judges land speculators. ■ . Stale Math Team. Jon Goldick, controlled the Senate. But now there is a Republican among medium and small schools. tive, advisor Roberta Thomp-son terms and that the Constitution forbids the lowering of a for other federal courts. The project calls for construc­ Meg Harvey, Heidi Sullivan, and president and a Republican Senate. The thought of The special significance of win­ must be given much of the credit judge's salary while he is sitting. That, of course, would tion of two dams — one on the Sant$ ning the State meet lies in the fact Dave Riordan will attend the for her dedication, organization, giving the Republican a political plum like 226 new be possible if the salary was set anew each fiscal year. NOW THE TWO BODIES cannot agree on a Margarita River, the other on.9 that large schools are required to Atlantic Regional Math League and hard work for the team. ^ the Supreme Court gave Congress a deadline for lifelong judicial appointments has been too much for tributary. The Santa Margarita is ^ ‘“'^send eight members, whereas Meet at Pennsylvania State Uni­ compromise. The House pro-labor amendment is And for those who believe that passing new legislation to remedy these defects. After the House Democratic leadership. the last free-flowing waterway m ordinary competition only re­ versity on the weekend of June 1-3 unacceptable to Senate Republicans, while those 85 new the success of the Math Team is Then special interests decided that as long as quires five members to be scored. as a part of the 33-member team. several extensions, that deadline becam e April 1 of this Republican appointed judges are unacceptable to Southern California. It rises in tlie simply the result of the work of an Congress was talking about changing the bankruptcy While many teams struggled to The State Math Meet has not year. If defects in the legislation were not remedied by House Democrats. mountains east of Los Angelwil isolated group of students at MHS law they would get their two cents in and attempt to come up with this number of ended season competition. One that date, the current bankruptcy court system would The near-term “ solution" has been to extend the life runs through fertile valleys of — you’re wrong! The Manchester qualified competitors for the State regular league meet of the Capitol go out of existence. make substantive changes in the system. avocado groves, and reaches the High School Math Team has of the present bankruptcy system until April 30 to give meet, the MHS team had no trouble Area Math League remains in It should have been simple to make the necessar>’ Labor unions are upset that companies like consistently contributed to a win­ Congress time to pass a compromise. Pacific near the Marine Corps’ picking from its strong April, and with its placement in the changes in the law. The Reagan Justice Department Continental Airlines have been filing bankruptcy in an Camp Pendleton. ning tradition that belongs to the Some bill will emerge this month but based on the membership. State meet, Manchester has drafted legislation to give the new bankruptcy judges attempt to break existing union contracts, something Damming the Santa Margarita earned an invitation to the New entire school. provisions that are in the already passed versions, The eight MHS students compet- life tenure with no pay reductions, and last May the the Supreme Court ruled is permissible. Loan would supposedly provide water ing were rroiHif*!' owh England Mnth M<>pt which will be Thi? year is no exception! many experts are predicting that it will not pass muster Senate passed by unanimous consent a bill that seemed companies and major retailers are upset that for the avocado groves and t& either. Many believe that the Supreme Court will throw to meet the objections of the Supreme Court. consumers can declare bankruptcy and easily walk nearby community, as well as out the new law. as it did the 1978 law, and that next In the House, however, the debate becam e embroiled away from debts. flood control for the Marine base. year, or the year after. Congress will be faced with the in politics and special interest lobbying; Then when the These benefits are cited to justify problem, and the chaos, once again. Photo by Mart* Big Pal program Senate saw what was going on in the House, it decided SO LEGIONS OF LOBBYISTS descended on the Hill the cost of the project. What proponents don't mention Peter Allyn (I to r), Laura Bottone, John Cor- of East Hartford and Enfield High of Enfield. Manchester is expected to do well if sopho­ An editorial A IBIR ? N\0i?TGAfie 60AN? w e l l , is the enormous benefit that could eau and Ed Lynch take to the field for a wor­ accrue to land developers and kout in preparation for a track meet tomor­ mores and juniors perform near their poten­ needs more volunteers Vt/e VQ HAVE yHHAT WE CALL A NO PO»l«T5, NO CLOSING COSTS, speculators from tte lake the dams row afternoon (4/11/84) with Penney High tial. Seniors are in short supply this year. ^ FINCH-NVE-I'M-W^EAMJNG" ^.OAN. NO TITLE SEARCH, NO FE E S... will create. Eager salesmen are Do you love kids? If so, you money. These children simply ents and simply need a male role already offering lots on the futqre should consider the possibility of enjoy being with you. You can fly model. Oneof the reasons there are Stop Reagan’s lakefront. so many little boys who need Big becoming a Big Pal. The Big Pal kites, go swimming, ride bikes, Track Team takes running program is run by Manchester's play Atari games, paint, or engage Pals, is the high divorce rate THE PENTAGON is enthusias­ Youth Service Department and is a in thousands of other free activities nowadays. secret war tic about the project and included it program very similar to'that of Big which can.be fun for both of you. "With many mothers getting in a secret budget report sent to the Brothers/Big Sisters. If you would There is a waiting list to ge't a custody, these boys rarely see their fathers." said one Youth Navy. Interior Secretary W illi^ like to help a disadvantaged little sister. However, if you can't The Reagan administra­ almost an admission that the start toward great season youngster, this program is right be matched up this year, you wili Service spokesperson. Clark has given the Santa Margar­ tion’s announcement that it U.S. is violating the laws of for you! To be a Big Pal, you must be first on the list next fall. On the Being a Big Pal can be fulfilling, ita dams a high priority, and has other hand, there is an extreme jump, and triple jump. Pole meets for both girls and boys be at least a high school freshman but it also requires a commitment. will no longer accept the international commerce by said he plans to brief President Spring has sprui^, and everyone need for boys to become Big Pals. I T vaulting is probably the most where terrific talents compete. and be able to spend about two There is nothing more heart jurisdiction of the Interna­ directly assisting CIA ’’con­ 1 Reagan on them personally. is eager to get outside and get some Some little boys have been challenging and unusual field There will also be a Greater hours every week with your little wrenching than letting a child Presidential counselor and At­ sun. Staying physically fit is what matched with female Big Pals, and tional Court of Justice on tras ” mine ports along the Manchester Invitational where pal. become hopeful and happy about TO QUALIFY. YOU MUST BE IS most people want. event. others have been on the waiting list matters pertaining to Central Nicaraguan coast. If not. why torney General-designate Edwin Many people enjoy field events many teams will run and have fun. The children involved in this his new Big Pal. have him show up Mobs of people want to partici­ for up to four years. Some of these m o n th s BEHINP IN YOUR OTHER ANP Be NAMEP Meese is another administration in which they can shot-put or throw The track team is psyched for an program range from kindergar­ once or twice, and then never hear America is but the latest in a is this the first time since 1946 pate in a sport, and some don’t children desperately need a Big m ortgage r a y m e n t s b e a insider who has taken an interest in a discus or javelin. excellent season. Don’t be left out! teners to seventh graders, and you from him again. Unfortunately, series of alarming develop­ that an American president , £ P > N I N know what talents they possess. Pal. the project. After meeting the With all the various athletic may request both the age and sex this happens too frequently. COUNSELOR TO THE PRESIPENT... Outdoor track is the perfect sport. Joey (not his real name) has ments in the way it has taken has seen fit to deny its manager of the Fallbrook Public talents and qualities that one may of your little friend. You may also Ttere are various events including been suspended from elementary If you are interested in helping a to conducting foreign policy. authority? possess, outdoor track is a sport for decide whether you prefer an Utility District, the local utility running, jumping, throwing, and school and has been moved from child by becoming a Big Pal, you H S W Staff active child or one that is shy and In fact, the administra­ In spite of the rhetoric that has been pushing for the shot-putting. everyone. school to school. His father, can sign up in the main office, or There are many other good tion’s tack in recent weeks surrounding it, the action dams, Meese wrote him a letter on There are running events that withdrawn. grandmother, and cat, have all call Mrs. Carol Molumphy at reasons to go out for track, but Oct. 27, 1982. This was long before last from as little as 10 seconds to EkIitor-in-Chief Lisa Gates died within the past four months. Youth Services, 643-3494. has made it clear that the resembles nothing so much there are no good excuses not to. Being a Big Pal need not be 21 minutes. Other running events News editor Meg Harvey Joey is only 7 years old. Both you and a child will be very Reaganites in Washington as a criminal claiming the the administration publicly sup­ While conditioning the body and expensive, as you don’t have to include hurdles and relays, which Feature editor Jeffry Borgida plan activities which require much Other bovs have divorced par­ glad you did! incorrectly believe that court before which he may be ported Santa Margarita. My asso­ require skill and coordination as staying physically fit and healthy, r - 3 - » ciates Donald Goldberg and Corky Sports editor Heidi Sullivan neither ordinary American placed on trial holds no well as speed. one can also get a spectacular tan. Art editor Heather Reading Etta Johnson obtained a copy of the Some activities in track call for Think of it that way. citizens nor members of jurisdiction over his fate. T r ywttmWE-wtesMM-HWLME Photo editor Susan Marte letter. flexibility, coordination, strength The team competes against Adviser Zane Vaughan Play Review Congress have a legitimate The move looks even worse Meese wrote; “ Although it is too and, of course, jumping skills are various teams around Connecti­ say in U.S. actions abroad, no when seen in the light of early to predict the final outcome essential for the long jump, high cut. This year, there will be state matter what their possible Congressional protests over ... I want to assure you that we will consequences. The recent the CIA’s role in the mining be giving very serious considera­ ‘Three Sisters” displays posturing on both Central and sharp reminders from Open fom ni / Readers' views tion to Santa Margarita as, a America and Lebanon is possible new construction start .*.” All-Stars vs. Magicians France and Britain that they The Fallbrook Public Utility proof that, despite his words respect navigation treaties Send letters to; The Manchester Herald, Herald Square, Manchester, C T 06040 District’s public relations consul­ many major problems to the contrary. President even if the administration no tant for the dams project is RobSrt Reagan seeks an election- longer deems them valid. Garrick, a retired admiral and fid proved to be great game stage. Unfortunately, she was just and energy to provide such a guarantee that the full autopsy Reagan hand. He served as The Hartford Stage Company brings her own brand of hard, year confrontation with Con­ Last week. President Rea­ Black vote as confused as I. well-prepared presentation. reports filed at the Office of the Meese’s deputy in the White House has produced several notable almost bitter energy to the stage, gress on the use of military gan wrongly placed on Con­ Hundreds of basketball teams plays on the squad, and still cians, although they were also in and in a few scenes, tends to make made difference Trooper Barnes was humorous Chief Medical Examiner would not until September 1981, when he plays this season, all of them Although the acting in “ Three force abroad. gress the entire blame for the enough to hold the attention of a be available to the general public have drilAIed down the court in continues to dazzle. On Thursday on the fun, laughing along with excelling in dramatic as well as her two siblings look dead by Sisters" was (at best) fair, I found returned to his avocado grove in night, he took shots (two-handed f everyone else while on the court. The episode concerning the failure — or “redeploy­ high school audience for about 80 without the written consent of the Manchester High School's Clark technical aspects. However, the comparison (although Monique the technical aspects excellent. Bonsail, next door to Fallbrook. Arena before, a ^ none have failed style) from mid-court and from The Magicians scored over 100 Fowler, as Irina, the youngest court at the Hague appears to ment,” as the case may be — minutes, pnd sensitive and clear next of kin or a court order. current play at Hartford Stage, Pat Collins’ lighting worked well To the Editor: to draw a crowd. On the night of over his shoulder, and wove his points, many on slam dunks, and sister, turns in an adequate mean that the administration of his policy in Lebanon. enough to make a serious impact This would assure the privacy of Chekov’s “ Three Sisters,” just with Mark Lamo's direction, both GARRICK DENIED he lobbied March 15. however, special atten­ way through his opponents with his have quite a record. They have demonstrates the old saying, performance). in illuminating the stage and on them. In general, I do not like the families of these deceased is now prepared to anger our Now it appears that his The purpose of this letter is to for Meese’s support on Santa tion was paid to the basketball dribbling abilities. taken on such formidable teams as “ Everyone makes mistakes.” evoking the proper feeling. John allies and throw the norms of confrontational stance has express my gratitude and appreci­ “ mandatory” programs. Yet the individuals, as autopsy reports are Margarita. He said Meese and players, performing as part of a Once, he was even on his knees the Boston Celtics, and are cur­ One of the more flagrant mis­ The rest of the cast, much like. Conklin's set, although sparse, as part of a dribbling routine and rently touring the United States international conduct to the ation to the many people who value of this program was such detailed compendia of intimate other Californians in the adminis­ fund-raiser for the Illing Junior takes is the play itself. Although Fowler, tended to be “ ad^uate.” gave the impression that these finally jeopordized his ability High School Band. Through ticket was seen passing the ball through, and Canada, with their main stop worked so diligently to get people that I believe it should be required medical details above and beyond tration are simply concerned Chekov is undoubtedly a theatrical Standouts in the supporting cast people were living empty, unful- winds in its quest to banish to conduct a policy in Central sales, the band hopes to finally not only his legs, but the other in Alaska. They also plan to play in included Chris Ceraso, as the to participate in the recent Connec­ viewing for all as a condition for those concerned with the cause and about the growing water shortage genius, I found myself bored filM lives. Applause should also communism from the region. America which ignores the the issuance or renewal of a manner of death. These have, in amass enough money to purchase team’s legs also. the Philippines, Egypt, Israel, and throughout most of the play. piano-playing Baron'Tuzenbach, go to Dunya Ramkova's costumes, ticut primary election. The black in the area. Other standouts on the Harlem Germany. Fortunately, however, the legal requirements and inter­ driver's license. recent cases, included evidence of their long-awaited new band Perhaps one of the reasons for this and Laura Hughes as the sister-in- which were a real pleasure to look community in particular can be Environmentalists and other Magicians team were'Ron Cave- Marques Haynes himself has move has backfired in Con­ national treaty obligations of There are few people who have long past suicide attempts and uniforms. was the absence of any discemable law, Natasha. Unfortunately, I at as they helped to convey the very proud of the fact that 100 critics of the proposed dams say The evening started at 6; 30 with nail, who stood at 7 feet, ohe-and-a- been performing for over 40 years, probably missed several good not, at one time or another, had venereal disease. plot. “ Three Sisters” seems to character’s nature and mood. gress, receiving harsh criti­ this country. percent of the eligible voters the project would have unpredicta­ a preliminary student-faculty half inches, and Valentino Willis, and in more than 10,000 games. He performances by other supporting enough to drink to impair driving Surely such information is not almost plod along. Although I cism from members of both It’s a good thing that participated in the electoral pro­ ble effects on four endangered game. The Illing boys’ faculty the clown on the court and the has played before popes and realize the play was written this actors due to the fact that it was Even though the technical as­ ability, and driven anyway. This chambers and threatening Congress, whose duty it is to cess during the primary by voting rightfully the property of the species and on beaches that s q u ^ took on the Illing staff. The captain of the team. Willis, whose presidents, and in such places as way, I think things could have been almost impossible for me to tell pects are up to Hartford Stage for the candidate of their choice. program makes clear the stupidity general public, and can cause, at depend on sand carried to the game proved exciting. Although jersey number was 6Vi. succeeded South America and Hong Kong. He done to quicken the pace and liven them apart. Perhaps the actors Company’s usual high standards, the president's not-so-secret oversee CIA operations, has in making the audience eitjoy Once again, we have demon­ of such behavior, as well as the risk the very least, embarrassment to the fai^ ty won, it was a hard- says he plans to play through the it up. should have done something more the dramatic aspects really aren’t illegal war against the Nica­ ocean by the river. The critics themselves, doing so through his 1990-91 season. He would then have scheduled immediate hear­ strated the cohesiveness, unity, of injury or death to self and the surviving family members. fought baMe on both sides. One thing that does seem to liven with their characters to set them as good. “ Three Sisters” falls flat contend that the project would humorous antics. p la y ^ through seven decades. because it lacks the most impor­ raguan government. ings on the administration’s and solidarity in the black com­ innocent others. The cause and manner of death, by At approximately 8 p.m., the up the play is the fantastic apart from the crowd, because I provide only 79 cents’ worth of Ashesays, “ If I could sum up my Probably hundreds of teams will tant element of theater — the The executive decison den­ dubious actions in Nicara­ The Manchester Police Depart­ contrast, are and would remain College All-Stars came out onto the performance of Mary Layne, as found myself constantly asking my munity and the importance of our benefits for each dollar of cost. But goals in basketball, it would be to play in Clarke Arena, but it will be ability to entertain. ment has received some publicity public information. court to begin their warm-ups. The Marsha, one of the sisters. Layne seatmate which character was on ying the jurisdiction of the gua. The time has come for voting power in town. We can and the administration has recently keep entertaining people through­ a long time before the Harlem recently for cracking down on team was comprised of local court is, in and of itself. our elected representatives do make the difference in local Some individuals in the news decided, in effect, to do away with out the world for as long as Magicians are forgotten. As long colleges and former college play­ elections because we now have the intoxicated drivers. As a Manches­ media have argued that as a public possible.' ’ Not only did he make the as they are around, the enjoyment to exercise their authority to such guidelines as justification for ers, all very talented. MHS student swing votes. ter resident, I want to thank the agency, all documents of the Office audience laugh, but he also called that basketball can provide will be curb the administration’s se­ water projects. Davey Woolbright, former MHS You are to be commended for police for caring enough about the of the Chief Medical Examiner down some of the younger children offered to their fans around the The rights and lefts of The administration, meanwhile, student Kevin Brophy, and MHS cret war, which in many ways safety of my family and friends to should be open to public scrutiny. from the audience to get in on the your efforts, and we must strive has shown an unseemly haste to staff members Mr. DePasqua and world. amounts to state-sponsored ever-increasingly to demonstrate clear the roads of those who don’t This is an appropriate approach show, too. nudge the Santa Margarita project Mr. Bujaucius, were all players on A typical Magicians’ stunt oc­ terrorism, before the U.S. our concern to make Manchester care enough about themselves or for the administrative records of along by approving it before many the team. The others came from curred when one of the taller becomes even more deeply the kind of town that it is capable of their potential victims to not drive this agency but not for the autopsy Palmistry: hands tell a lot of the economic and environmen­ around the area. players reached up and grabbed after drinking. reports and the intimate medical involved in the Cenrtral being. tal impact studies have been the bottom of the net so that the ball The Harlem Magicians, making parents and teachers hadn’t Peace. My thanks also go to the information contained therein. which had just been shot by the The hand can supposedly reveal accordance with body motions to American conflict than it is at completed. And they note that the a stop here in Manchester on their express a person’s emotions and interfered. Connecticut State Police for spon­ A state senator opposing the bill other team, could not fall through. - d o u s . miraculous and wonderous things present. White House has requested funds 1983-84 world tour, then appeared Tiy this; fold your hands so that Frank J. Smith soring the educational program I was quoted as saying he Was not When the referee came over to tell about a person’s future — or so unconscious reactions to things. for the dams before they have bten in tteir red, white and blue all fingers are interlocking and one So far, the mining has only viewed this morning. convinced that the “ media has him that he was not allowed to do palmists believe. By interpreting This is associated with the control 93 Ferguson Road authorized by Congress — an uniforms. The club is led by thumb is on top of the other (a damaged 12 ships — many of that, he let go, and the ball fell on various lines and gestures, one of the right side of the brain (the been guilty of transgressions.” We Marques Haynes, the greatest typical prayer position). Which Al Benford unprecedented reversal of stand­ the referee’s head. can, perhaps, learn something creative, unconscious half) over which belong to our allies — who support this proposed legisla­ dribbler in the world, and a former thumb is on top? If the left thumb is ard operating procedure. The College All-Stars did a very about himself and his friends, the left side of the body. while the CIA’s campaign of 4 Clyde Road tion question the need to wait for member of the Harlem Globetrot­ underneath the right one, you are a Police program respectable job playing the Magi­ although none of these things Realistic hands are square, economic sabotage has innocent families to be injured by ters. Now in his 60s, Haynes still should be taken too seriously. broad-shaped, and create an im­ rational, realistic thinker and mainly affected Nicaraguan worthwhile either “ media transgressions” or According to the “ experts,” pression of manual skill, energy, react logically to situations. You Letters policy recklessness and healthiness. are active and carry through with civilians. Now, however,, the idle curiosity of any member of there are two types of hands; Reports need the general public before protec­ The Manchester Herald receptive and realistic. Receptive These people are emotional, in­ your tasks. things have reached a turning tive legislation is enacted to give welcomes letters to thd hantls are those which are long, tense, robust, and occasionally, To the Editor: to be private Crafts Fair for scholarships People whose left thumbs are on point. statutory backing to the current editor. thin and delicate. They create an hot-tempered, lively and abrupt. Letters should be brief and impression of a pleasant, some­ They usually favor their right top, act instinctively and intui­ Congressional rejection of On a recent morning, 1 viewed a policies of this agency. _ ...... It ..... ^ to the point. They should ^ to 4 p.m. Participating in the show well as child supervision. what helpless, creative and neu­ hand, which indicates control of tively, and are not controlled by IV the current $21 million aid program sponsored by the Connec­ To the Editor: Legislators must be made aware On April 28, the Manchester High logic or reasoning. These people ^l9S4byNEAtnc typed or neatly hand-written, School Industrial Education D^ will be some of the area's most Conrad McCurry was a native of rotic person. These people are the left side of the brain (the request for the contras would ticut State Police about drinking of the feelings of their constituents * and, for ease in editing, talented craftspersons contribut­ Manchester and was an Industrial sensitive, introverted, inhibited, conscious, mathematical part). No react emotionally in situations, put the administration on and driving, as well as more On March 27,1984, the Judiciary on this matter. should be double-spaced. :nt is holding a Craft Fair to ing in a wide variety of fields. arts teacher at the school. and' romantic by nature. Gener­ one, however, favors their left or and are imaginative and have general issues of driving safely. I the Conrad McCurry Scho­ For more information, contact passive personalities. “By the way, just in case notice that it cannot go on Committee failed Raised Commit­ The Herald reserves the B ally, people with receptive hands right hand exclusively, and some want to commend the State Police tee Bill No. 126, “ An Act Concern­ Catherine A. Galvin, M.D. right to edit letters in the larship Fund. The fair will be held Many types of snack and lun­ Mr. Greg Kane at Manchester will favor their left hand over their believe that as many as 34 out of loo — do you know how conducting foreign policy and specifically Trooper Barnes, ing Autopsy Reports.” The intent Chief Medical Examiner interests of brevity, clarity In the MHS cafeteria from 10 a.m. cheon items will be available, as High School, 647-3861. right; the left being used in would be left-handed today if SUSAN BAKER to do a Hart/JFK hair styie?" with its head in the sand. the speaker, for taking the time of this proposed legislation is to State of Connecticut and taste. 8 - MANCHESTER HERALD, Tuesduy, April 10, 1984 MANGHESTER HERALD, Tuesday. April It). 1984 — 11 Bolton finance board is hot \ FOCUS/ Leisure over selectmen’s budgeting

Bv Sorah Possell Bolton Center School and to delete vine u.'.icu na^cs lor lownclcrksin Herald Reporter a $40,000 project to replace asbes­ neighboring towns ranging from $8 tos pipe insulation at Bol'oii High to more than $14 an hour. The BOLTON — A public hearing School. Bolton town clerk. Catherine V f Monday on the proposed $1,275,000 Leiner. earns $7.33 an hour. Ms. f'i. J --"'’-'; a Ursin predicted the finance town budget for 1984-85 turned out Levine said area towns pay their board, when it meets next week, to be as much a Board of Finance tax collectors wages ranging from will approve firp officials' request gripe session about the Board of $8.09 to $10.43 an hour. Bolton's tax to buy the Hurst rescue tool with Selectmen's budgeting policy as a collector, Elaine Potterton. earns funds from the current budget. hearing, $7.41 an hour. "W e're going to be washing Finance board members The finance board kept all salary some dirty laundry in public." brought one quarrel with select­ increases for full-time and near- HaraM ptioto by Pinlo finance board Chairman Raymond men to light when a resident asked full-time employees at 5 percent A. Ursin told the nearly 40 why the finance board cut $700 Ursin said he will not reconsider The wreckage of a 1976 Ford Mustang driving south on Main Street when his residents who attended, after from a $16,000 allocation for the finance board's decision to driven by Elwood A. Lechausse, 43, of car crossed the center line and struck a several gripes had already been engineering, and then took what keep raises equal until selectmen aired. remained out of the selectmen’s conduct a full-scale evaluation of 64 Tanner St., is removed from the tractor-trailer truck driven by a Massa­ Ursin listed what he thought budget and split it between the town salaries and workloads. scene of an accident Monday near Main chusetts man, police said. were the most critical issues the Planning Commission and high­ Morris Silverstein, vice chair­ and Grove streets. Lechausse was finance board faced when they set way budgets. Board members said man of the Board ol Finance, said the final budget proposal; the selectmen should have been ex­ the board has bedn waiting for decision to keep all wage increa.ses plicit in their budget request about selectmen to produce such a salary at 5 percent: not to include $12,000 exactly how they plan to use the study for the last three years. for a fire depailment rescue tool; engineering money. Ursin said the finance board cut spending about $100,000 on road Man hurt in car-truck crash The linance board transferred nearly $10,000 from the select­ reconstruction; setting aside $11,000 to the highway budget and men's request fur sand and salt for A Manchester man was se­ R. O'Marra said. ial Hospital and later transferred. $35,000 toward the cost of a another $3 000 to the Planning town roads in the winter after riously injured Monday morning According to police, Lechausse The truck could not be removed replacement fire truck in two Commission budget. Ernest H. calculating that the average cost to when the car he was driving was driving south on Main Street from the car because it was firm ly years: and the fact that the Grand Shepherd, a fonper selectman, the town over the la.st five years crossed the center line on Main when his car crossed the center locked together with parts of the List rose 3.4 percent last year, asked the finance board to return has been closer to the finance Street and struck a tractor-trailer line near Grove Street and struck a car that were wrapped around which means increased revenue part of the allocation to the board's estimate. truck head-on, police said. tractor-trailer truck driven by Lechausse, O’Marra said. lor the town. selectmen's budget so they can pay L'rsin's answer to a question Elwood A. Lechausse, 43, of 64 Frederick W. McKenzie, 38, of “ We cut the car out from around Ursin pointed out that the for plans for three proposed about 50-percent reductions in the Tanner St., was listed in stable Swansea, Mass. McKenzie was him,’ ’ he said. finance board cut only $57,000 from building projects. pony and midget football budgets condition this morning at Hartford unhurt, police said. A total of 22 firefighters re­ the spending plan recommended Selectmen have said they hope to was that the recreation director Hospital, where he was trans­ Firefighters and paramedics sponded to the accident, O'M arra by selectmen He said the propo.sed bring the three projects to a had failed to pro\ ide requested ferred with multiple injuries. spent about an hour and 15 minutes said, adding that with the two budget would raise the tax rate one referendum in the iail. The pro­ figures on the number ol town and Lechausse suffered extensive trying to extricate Lechausse from emergency medical technicians mill, from 30.2 to31.2, representing jects are a new town highway out-ol-town residents playing in fractures to his legs, possible the wreckage of his 1976 Ford and paramedics, “It was just an average property tax increase garage and firehouse and Com­ the programs. Board members spinal and internal injuries, and Mustang. They used two Hurst enough." of about 3.4 percent. munity Hall renovations. Select­ admitted they don't know the size injuries to his left shoulder and tools, a porta-power tool and an air Police are still investigating the After Monday night s hearing. men have e.stimated the total cost of the football budgets or how upper arms. Eighth District Fire chisel, O’Marra said. Lechausse accident. No charges have been Ursin said he hopes to hear more at about $1.3 million. loolball officials sp<‘nd their mo­ Department Spokesman Thomas was taken to Manchester Memor­ filed. protest Wednesday, at a public Finance board members said ney because most ol it comes Irom hearing on the school budget, than they turned down the selectmen's private sources, not town cotters. he heard Monday at the hearing on request for 10 percent salary Dot’s The board reduced selectmen's the town proper budget. He called increases lor the town clerk and request for $150 to buy an office Coventry people split at hearing T. "conniving " the actions by some lax collector because selectmen calculator to $60. the amount the finance board members to reduce have not properly researched pay school board has requested for a Herald pholoa by Tarquinlo the school board's requested $2 6 scales in similar tow ns. Selectmen calculator, despite .selcctwoman million budget by $125,000. Ursin claim such research has been Sandra Pierog's warning that the on new shop for Sabrina Pools Dorothy and Fred Wilmot sit in the iiving room of their school to be trained to be a guid e dog. Biii, their massive said he opposed a move to delete a (tone. $60 kind may List only a third as Coventry home with their dogs Claus and Bill. The black labrador, is a stud dog for Guiding Eyes for the $30,000 root replacement project at Town .Administrator Karen Le­ long as the $150 kind. By Traev L. Geoghegan Cooper asked what would happen if some o f the dogs Wilmots will be "foster parents” to the young German Blind. Some 150'of Bill's pups have graduated from the Herald Reporter chemicals mixed, but no one could answer him. shepherd for his first year, then he will be sent away to program to become guide dogs for blind people. Cooper said he could not give an adequate COVENTRY — At least 40 Coventry residents evaluation on the application at this point because Obituaries turned out at a public hearing Monday on Sabrina many of his questions to Nadeau remain unanswered. Polls and Hot Tubs owner Ronald Nadeau's Tony Laskus, of 875 Bread and Milk St., said: application to the Planning and Zoning Commission. “From what I’m hearing, you’ve got perfect Byron W. Hall Coventry woman’s ‘kids’ will guide the blind some day ing she had wm ked at Manchester Hazel A. Ebb Nadeau wants to expand his Bread and Milk Street conditions for acid rain here. You can’t see it. you COVENTRY - Byron W. Hall. Memorial Hospital lor many Hazel (.Anderson) Ebb. 81, o! business to include an acrylic vacuum forming shop. can’t smell it, but it’s there. It scares the hell out of 89, of 88 Twin Hills Drive, died years. Fore.stville, formerly ol Manches­ Townspeople were divided on Nadeau's proposal. m e.” Bv Tracy L. Geoghegan Monday at Manchester Memorial She leaves three sons, Cipriano ter. died Monday at her home. Many questioned the hazardous, possibly explosive, Lesia Laskus recalled that when Nadeau was given Herald Reporter Hospital He was the tuishand ol Padua Jr. ol East Hartford, Paul She was born in Manchester on chemicals the hot tub spraying process would involve. permission by the PZC to use the location for his the late Mabel iWalbridge) Hall Padua of Dorchester, Mass., and May 14, 1902. She was employed as Dozens of neighbors wondered about the effects of a business two years ago, chemical use on the premises COVENTRY — Dorothy and Fred Wilmot raise Wilmot wisdom: He was born in Coventry and had Philip Padua of Glastonbury: a a secretary at the Outdoor Sports fire, an accidental spill or equipment failure. was forbidden, and it was to have been strictly a guide dogs. They take them into their home as pups, been a lifelong resident. He was a daiighler. Mis Mary M. Sack ol Manufacturing Co. for several^ Others argued that enough precautions are woodworking shop and storage facility. teach basic discipline, expose them to life situations member ol the Second Congrega­ Salinas. Calil.; a sister. Mrs. years, retiring 16 years ago mandated by the state Department of Ehivironmental Ms. Laskus said she wondered what would be going for a year, then send them to a special school, after tional Church ol Coventry and •Magdalene Cagampan of San She leaves a son, the Rev never, never Protection to ensure no harmful chemicals would on in the shop two years from today if Nadeau were which they’re turned over to a blind person who needs served on various boards of the Diego, Calil : nine grandchildren; Ronald A. Ebb ol Kearney. Neb.; contaminate air and water in the vicinity of the allowed to expand. them more. church He was a U S .Arjny and a great-grand.son. two sisters, llildegarde Olding of proposed plant. Several said the town should Khalig Satari. a developer who is building an 11-lot “ It’s a hard day when you put them on the van and veteran of World War I He was The funeral will be Thursday Manchester and Esther Neubauer hit your dog encourage business people such as Nadeau to improve subdision on Bread and Milk Street, also spoke in send them off,” Mrs. Wilmot said. “ You cry. You pack wounded in the .Argonne Forest w itli a mass of Christian burial in of Hope Sound. F’la,; live grand­ Coventry's tax and employment base. opposition to the application. “ You all know their favorite toys, and some dog biscuits, and watch and received the I ’lirple Hi'arl St Mary's Church, East Hartford, children; and .several nieces and Nadeau is trying to bring his hot tub manufacturing everything goes round and round," he said. “ That them go off.” Dogs need vitamin C. Feed them vegetables He was a past master ol I, riel at 9 am. There are no calling nephews. operation, currently spread between three shops, into water will end up back on my property.” The Wilmots, who live at 325 Woodbridge Road, are such as lettuce and tomatoes to ensure they get a Lodge of Ma.sons in Merrow. a hours. Memorial donations may be The funeral will be Thursday at one location on Bread and Milk Street. At present, he on their eighth puppy — a German shepherd named balanced diet. " I never feed them from the member and past master ol made to the Leukemia Society of II a m. at the Gloria Dei Lutheran does the vacuuming portion of the process, where PHILLIP BOUCHARD of 732 Bread and Milk St. Claus. They prefer to raise two dogs at a time — a table,” Dorothy Wilmot said. Coventry Grange and was a America, 50 State St., Hartford. Church. Fore.stville. Culling hours acrylic sheets are .sucked into shape, at his Route 44 said he could not imagine two more incompatible liking they probably acquired from being the parents prompter tor square dances tor the The Callahan Funeral Home, 1602 are Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to < r . shop in Coventry. businesses to exist side-by-side than an orange juice of twins. They expect to get another dog soon. “I don’t believe in flee sprays. They’re grange. He was a .substitute mail Main St.. East Hartford, has 9 p.m. at the Funk Funeral Home, Then he transports the acrylic form to his shop in factory and one using chemical processes. He also Their prize-winning 9-year-old black labrador — X poisonous. If you feed a dog brewer’s yeast all carrier in Coventry lor seven charge of arrangements. 35 Bellevue Ave., Forestville. Hebron to spray them with polyester resins for cited the close proximity of neighbors and the area'll Barnstormer Billy — is a stud dog for Guiding Eyes year, flees won’t bile. Ticks won’t come either,” years, and lor nine years drove Memorial contributions may be support. This arrangement is costly and often results reputation for poor drainage. for the Blind, the New York organization that trains she said. Give them four tablespoons daily. Two school buses from Coventry to Floyd H. Putnam made to the church's Memorial in breakage of the fragile forms, said David Rappe, Bouchard’s mother, Agnes Bouchard, said she the Wilmot'pups and places them with blind people. in the morning and two at night should do it. Manchester High School Floyd H. Putnam. 78, of 78 • Fund. Camp Street, Forestville, Nadeau's attorney. worried about what a plant like this would do to “ Bill had four pups graduate a week ago,” Mrs. He was a member of the Benton St., died Monday at Man­ 06010. Do not hit dogs. Use gestures and firm words, Rappe brought in three professionals to support ^ p ro p erty values on Bread and Milk Street. Wilmot said with pride. “ He now has ISO graduates American Legion Post ol Coven chester Memorial Hospital. He Nadeau’s proposal. Coventry Environmental Consul­ repeated many times, instead. “ You can ruin a was the husband of Evelyn Several residents and local businessmen testified to total.” try. a former justice of the peace, a tant Robert Kortmann said the chemicals used in the good dog with hitting,” she says. “ The greatest (Knapp) Putnam. Ill Memuriam the persanal integrity of Nadeau, and said they charter member of the North process (acetone, M EK peroxide. Styrene resin and thing that works is love — all the hugs, etc. Like a Coventry Fire Department and He was born in Houlton. Maine, In loving memory of George C. supported and trusted the safety of the process for this GUIDING EYE DOGS are pure breeds. Few human being, they respond with love.” Mortlock. who pa.ssed a wav April methyl ethyl keystone peroxide) are less flammable reason. Rappe said Nadeau’s daughter lives on the imperfections are tolerated when it comes to raising was one of the organizers of Fire and had lived in Manchester for the and less explosive than gasoline. Department Co. 2 He had served past 24 years. He was employed as 10, 1982. Bread and Milk Street premises, so he surely must be dogs for the blind. Mrs. Wilmot makes her own dog biscuits. They Kortmann said only a relatively small amount of Not all of the Wilmots’ puppies have made it. One on the Board of Relief for the town a truck driver for Manchester confident the chemicals he wants td use will do her no are better for dogs than the store-bought variety, When tics of love arc broken. refuse from the plant would be dumped in the town harm. was disqualified becasue of an overprotecUve nature. and was also a member ol the Sand and Gravel. He was a landfill. “This refuse would be cardboard, wood and are so good humans can eat them, too, she member of the Elks Lodge of East And loved ones have to part Orin ’Junior’’ Miles of 2273 Main St. said: “ I’m Another had cataracts — and was made into a Historical Society. In 1982 he scraps and trimmings from the final pool product, says. All the Wilmots’ “children” receive a received an Outstanding Citizen Hartford and the Regiment of the It leaves a wound that never heals. amazed at this. There’s more explosives in my garage breeder. package of these goodies each Christmas. Here's And also a broken heart. none of which are toxic or in any way dangerous,” he than there would be at Mr. Nadeau’s place. “ I do get a little disheartened when I have one Award for service to the town. He Fifth Infantp- in Portland. Maine. said. the recipe: was also a former deputy judge for Besides his wife he leaves two But looking back with memories. “ This town’s gotta do something to get businesses in rejected,” Mrs. Wilmot said. “ Puppies are like the Town of Coventry. sons, Steven F. Putnam of Man­ Upon the path we trod. and not keep driving them out all the time. We should children. Some make it, some never will.” KORTM ANN SAID his inspections of the Hebron Homemade Dog Biscuits chester and Joseph P. Putnam of We bless the years we shared with have them here. We should be damn proud that When the Wilmots became puppy raisers, they He leaves a nephew, Herbert J. shop led him to conclude the proposed process would Hall in New Jersey: a niece, Syracuse, N.Y.; two daughters. him. they’re here.” learned that the job would require some sacrifices. 1 cup white flour not create an odor beyond the boundaries of the Frances Sinkin.son of Long Island. Mrs. Constance M. Roden of And leave the rest to God. ' Richard Breen of Main Street said the area has “ You notice I did away with the living room rug,” she I cup whole wheat flour property. A water filter ensures dust and other N.Y.; and several cousins. Manchester and Jeanette Shaw ol already been rezoned for light industrial uses, so the said. I can’t live for show when I'm raising these dogs. Vi cup wheat germ particle do not escape the plant into the air outside, Sadly missed by question of whether the town should approve the The funeral w ill be Friday at 1:30 Portland, Maine; seven grand Kortmann saiid. W cup dry milk p.m. at the Second Congregational children; and a great-grandchild. your children, process is moot. “ The house isn't the same since I started raising W teaspoon salt Eugene Brackbill of East Hartford’s TRC Consulat- Church of Coventry. Burial will be The funeral will be Wednesday David, George, Pamela, He said the only legitimate questions concern how dogs. 1 once had a house full of antiques ... and now le g g ants, said the chemicals the Sabrina process would in Center Cemetery. There are no at 10 a.m. at Rose Hill Funeral Virginia, Steven, the process would be carried out. He said state things look pretty battered.” Vi cup water use are common ones, found in products such as nail calling hours. Memorial contribu­ Home, 580 Elm St,, Rocky Hill. Kimberly. Chri.stine regulations would ensure the safety of the area. polish remover and car patching kits. He said 6 tablespoons margarine or bacon fat tions may be made to the memorial Burial will be in Rose Hill The hearing was continued to April 23. K E E PIN G UP/with the cost of dog food on a limited 1 ^ s p o o n brown sugar although these chemicals can under certain circum­ fund ol the Second Congregational Memorial Park. There are no income got to be a problem for the couple two years stances explode, they are not explosives per se, nor Mix dry ingredients. Cut in shortening until it Church. The Holmes Funeral calling hours. Memorial contribu­ ago. They turned to help from the Coventry Lions are they particularly flammable. resembies commeal. Beat egg and sugar Home. 400 Main St., Manchester, tions may be made to the Ameri­ Club, which took on the feeding program, and Fire Calls Engineer John May said the new Sabrina shop, together, add water, then add to dry mixture to has charge ol arrangements. can Heart Association, 310 Collins continues to pay for the two SO-pound bags the pups which would employ five or six full-time workers make a stiff dough. Knead until smooth. St.. Hartford. consume a month. initially, would not have a detrimental effect on traffic Two Flour counter and roll out dough into half-inch Commander Julian Gelzewich But the retired couple finds the sacrifices they make patterns on Bread and Milk Street. thickness. Cut into one-by-two-inch rectangles. Commander Julian Getzewich. W illiam C. A very Sr. Manchester Rappe read letters in favor from several Bread and Place on g r e a ^ cookie sheet nearly touching U.S.N., Ret , 71, of 40 Agnes Drive, A funeral was to be held today for funeral Please turn to page 13 Saturday, 8; 19 p.m. — porch fire, Milk Street residents, including the owners of Moser Mrs. Wilmot plays with Claus as Bill fixtures in the Wilmot home. “Puppies each other. Prick holes on top of biscuits with a died Sunday at a local convales­ William C. Avery Sr., 63, of 182 89 Laurel St. (Town). Farms orange juice processing plant, directly across fork. Put in pre-heated 325 degree oven. Bake for cent home. He was the husband of Hilliard St., who died Friday. homes... looks on. A full bucket of toys and are like children,” she s^id, “Some make Saturday, 9; 26 p.m. — mutual the street from the proposed Sabrina site. 25 to 35 minutes. Florence (Schildgc) Getzewich. Memorial donations may be homemade dog biscuits are standard it, some never will." aid, Hebron Avenue and Manches­ Richard Cooper, chief of the NorthCoventry He was bom May 22, 1912. and made to the American Heart ter Road (Paramedics). one had lived in Manchester since the Association, 310 Collins St., Volunteer Fire Department, said his department does Sunday, 12:20 am . - motor early 1960s. He was a veteran of Hartford. not ha ve the special suits and equipment it would need World War 11, serving with the U.S. vehicle-pedestrian accident, 30 to fight a fire involving chemicals of this sort. prompt Kenneth J. Vlara Oak St. (Paramedics). Navy on the submarine U.S.S. Kenneth J. Viara of 99 St. John Sunday, 2:05 a.m. — medical People of substance like to use their soles Drum. He retired from the Navy in response! St., died Monday at Manchester call, 51 Hartford Turnpike 1958 after serving 26 years. He was Memorial Hospital. He was the (Paramedics). Settlement accepted an inspector with Hartford Steam Talking about what you've done when you return When most of us walk these days, it’s from choice, husband of Elizabeth iMacInnis) Sunday, 3:04 p.m. — grass fire, Boiler from 1958 until his retire­ Viara. from a trip is never satisfactory. You can't remember not necessity. We have our horse in hand. Our horse is When most of us walk these ment in 1975. He was an incorpora­ 134 Rachel Road (Eighth District). in Mansfield suit anything interesting and even if you could, no one the car sitting in the (Iriveway. He was born in Amherst, Mass., Sunday, 4:37 p.m. — medical days, it’s from choice, not tor of Manchester Memorial wants to hear about it. The best thing to do in Paris is We could use it if we wished. and had lived in Manchester for the HARTFORD (UPI) — A Hospital. call, 2W E. Middle Turnpike homes or other commun­ It’s no mystery. The Holmes Andy Rooney past 25 years. He was a retired (Paramedics). federal magistrate has ity facilities. something you wouldn't spend a lot of time telling When all American cities had downtown areas with necessity. W e have our horse in Besides his wife he leaves two employee of the Southern New accepted a settlement in a Funeral Home and the Watkins people about anyway. a lot of small stores along the main street and the side sons. Roger J. Getzewich of Sunday. 6:44 p.m. — assist hand. Our horse is the car sitting England Telephone Co. He was a 5-year-old suit seeking Funeral Home telephone calls go to The best thing to do in Paris is walk around. It's a streets, walking was more interesting. Downtown is Wycoff, N.J , and Robert J. police, 1135 Tolland Turnpike It also calls for the state Syndicated Columnist life memner of the Rockville Fish (Eighth District). relocation of Mansfield to develop community great walking-around city. The best cities are all that gone now in most cities. in the driveway. Getzewich of Franklin Lukes. one central office to insure that all and Game Club, a member of the Training School residents programs for residents N.J.; two brothers, Robert Getze- Sunday, 8:33 p.m. — malfunc­ calls are answered promptly. When way. London, Chicago, San Francisco and New York If you’re going to do that kind of shopping-walking, East Windsor Sportsmens Club, to smaller, community- and for the training school wieh of Wethersfield and Frank tioning furnace. 127 N. Main St. are all good walking cities. You can amuse yourself in you drive to the shopping mall, park the car and walk and article ever written on the subject. the National Rifle Association, and (Eighth District). based group homes. to be brought into com­ you call, the receptionist will answer Getzewich of San Fernando. any one of them for hours without going far or around the mall. It isn’t as much fun. There’s a • Two Russian resUurants, three Thai restau- the International Benchrest Monday, 6:38 a.m. — medical In the decision Monday, pliance with federal “Holmes and Watkins Funeral Calif.; five grandchildren; and Shooters. spending much. In Los Angeles, you need a car to sameness to most malls. They’re predictable. They ranU, half a dozen Japanese, Italian and Chinese call, 281 Center St. (Paramedics). Magistrate F. Owen Ea­ standards. several nieces and nephews. Homes”. Just tell her which home you cross the street. all pay the same rent per square foot and they all have Besides his wife he leaves three Monday, 7:02 a.m. — medical gan made frequent refer­ restaurants, a dozen restaurants of unspecified ethnic The funeral will be private. are calling. Walking has gone out of style and it's too bad street. There ai-e no one-way streets when you're sons, Kenneth J Viara Jr, of call, 78 Benton St. (Paramedics). ences to abuse of resi­ the same look. When you’ve seen a couple of malls, origin and one McDonald’s. Burial will be at the convenience of Windsor Locks, David Viara and Monday, 7:09 a.m. — medical dents, including reliance because walking is good for the soul. The best people walking. you’ve seen them all. Even the fancy malls are • A dreary little hole-in-the-wall that specializes in the family. There are no calling Roljcrt Viara, both of Manchester: call, 99 St. John St. (Param edics). on drugs and restraints, a are walkers. They walk to work, they walk to the store • Walking is good for thinking. No one interrupts predictable in their fancy ways. old magazines. If you want an October 1946 Life hours. Memorial donations may be ***w **^**_w >** a sister, Gladys Viara of Manches­ Monday. 7; 20 a.m. — dumpster lack of treatment and and they take a walk. Walkers are people of your thoughts. You can ignore the surroundings and It’s difficult for anyone who doesn’t know New York magazine, the^ have it. made to the American Heart ter; eight grandchildren; and fire, 40 Olcott St. (Town). training and said some t AlTRpLOGY : substance. just keep going, thoughtfully. Association, 310 Collins St., Han to understand how anyone can love it. That’s because • A store for poodles. They don’t sell dogs, they sell several nieces and nephews. Monday, 7:24 a.m. — electrical residents regressed while Look at some of the advantages to traveling by foot: In school, I remember having to read a poem called ford. Holmes Funeral Hume, 400 they don’t know how to walk in it. My office is not in leashes, ribbons, little sleeping and carrying baskets The funeral will be Thursday at 9 fire, 200 Spencer St. (Town). at the school. MADIlfGS a Funeral Home Main St., has charge of ^ IT MS. lOU • No one can get you on the pbone. "Endymion” that I didn't understand. any midtown area but if I feel like taking a walk at and a line of canned vegetarian dog food. If you bavea a m. from the John F. Tierney Monday, 7:51 a.m. — motor The settlement calls for arrangements. 142 E. Center St. Manchester • Every step gives you a sense of accomplishment “ It is good walking when one nath his horse in lunclitime, I can pass the following places within 10 dog who’s a vegetarian, that would be important. It's Funeral Hme, 219 W. Center St. vehicle accident. Center Street and a team of professionals, a AOVK^ ON A U PROBUMS ? ! by bringing you closer to your destination. hand,” one line read. blocks of where 1 work: and at 10 a.m. at Church of the Love Lane (Paramedics). along with parents or [>♦■ fO m A P K IN T U tN T C AU » ] not important to me but it’s the kind of place in any Mrs. Poullne C. Padua 646-5310 • You see things you can't see when you drive. You It's obvious to me now that the author meant that it Assumption. Burial will be in Monday, 10:24 a m. — motor guardians of Mansfield • A store that sells nothing but shoelaces, soles and city that I enjoy walking past. Mrs. Pauline C. Padua, 84, of are free to walk fast, walk slow or stop and start when Wapping Cemetery. Friends may vehjcle accident with injuries, 110 residents, to evaluate res­ & pftN DACV MM-1M HOWARD L. HOLMES ARTHUR Q. HOLMES was better walking when you were doing it from heels, crepe, glue, shoe polish and other miscellane­ I didn’t happen to see one of those in Paris, but you East Hartford, died Sunday at a call at the funeral home Wednes­ Main St. (Eighth District. idents to determine if they you feel like it. choice and not because you had no other way of getting ous items for bootblacks and cobblers. can bet the vegetarian dog food in Paris is better than convalescent home. Before retir­ RICHARD P. HOLMES HOWARD M. HOLMES day from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Paramedics). should be moved to group • You can walk either way on either side of the somewhere. • The Flying Saucer Bookstore. It has every book what you get here. 10 - MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday. April 10, 1984 Yankee Traveler Diabetes can be complication MANCIIKSTLR HERALD. Tuesday. April 10. 1984 — 11 White shirts of prenatal German measles -.'H Revolutionary MMH honors volunteers still on top WASHINGTON (UPI) - Deafness is but that it happens years after the NEW YO RK (L’F I) - the most frequent and well-known congenital rubella.” A total of 185 volunteers were honored at Edna Christensen, EmaClendaniet, Ruth Peggy Kehler. Margaret Kuhiman, Nettie Men arc still basically consequence of exposure to German Some researchers believe the vinu ■ a luncheon meeting recently at Manches­ Conyers, Bea Cormier, Connie Davey, Lavinio. Genabeth Marchei. Martha Mon- conservative in their cho­ War enacted ' measles before birth, but now doctors m ay remain in insulin-producing cells,; ter Memorial Hospital. They donated Lorraine DesRosier. Angie Delizia, Sara tany, Jane Morse, Agnes McGuire. ice ol shirt colors, says say the disease can also cause diabetes. gradually impairing their ability to; more than 46,000 hours of service to the Dennison, Pat Dooley and Kathleen Pam ela Parandes, Mary Smith. Barbara manulacturer-retailer German measles — rubella — is a survive, she said. Others say only those • hospital. Downing. Smyth, Ginger Wagner and Russell Mortimer Ix-vitt. mild disease, iasting three days or iess. with a genetic propensity will develop; Jan Warzynski, a volunteer in the Also: Rhoda Dunnells. Faith Fallow, Graniss. in Bay State Many people might not even realize diabetes and would have gotten it; Engineering Department, was honored Mim Ferris, Marie Flynn, Esther Foley, White is still the favor­ anyway, although possibly years later. they have it. But when it strikes a for contributing more than 12,000 hours of Ginny Foster, Grace Gibbs, Gertrade Awards were also presented to Mar­ ite color, followed by blue pregnant woman, its effects on the “ It’s probably a combination of those service. This is the second year he has garet Brown. Virginia Flavell, Gertrude (iE^itor's Note: Another in a series of weekly Hagedom, Irene Harrison, Virginia Kelly, and cream. fetus can be devastating. things,” she said. broken ail records at Manchester Memor­ Morrison, Anita Murphy. Helen Me Adam features written for U P I by the ALA Auto and Travel Theresa Kloo, Eleanor Leone, Ema The virus can destroy nerve cells of One study has found genetic sim ilar!-: ial (or volunteer service. He was pres­ and Penny Telgener for their 500 hours of Club aimed at providing New Englanders with Loomis, Trudy Manchester, Mabel Morri­ "This preference has the inner ear, resulting in deafness. It ties between victims of nibella-induced ented with a pewter tray. son, Dot McCann, Mdrion McKay, Rosalie volunteer time. fuel-conserving, close-to-home leisure trips.) not changed much since can attack brain cells, causing retarda­ diabetes and diabetics who were never ■' Also receiving special honors was Mim 'Norris, Florence Pearson, Marilyn Perac- Attaining 400 hours time were: Eleanor The Custom Shop, Shirt tion, or cause heart disease, cataracts, ex|x»ed to rubella, she said, suggesting: Ryan of Andover, who topped the Gordon, Lorraine Hahn, Pauline Madden, By Maura Muicare chio, Isabel Reid, Sylvia Rood, Mary makers was established growth retardation or central nervous there is a genetic propensity for' 7,000-hour mark. Awards, including pins, ALA Auto and Travel Club Samuelson, Evelyn Seaton, Janet Serrell, Nedra Miller, Jean Trombley. Marguerite in 1937." said its founder- system abnormalities. diabetes. certificates, stars and tie bars, were Helen Solomon, Maddie Solomonson, Bea Vermilya, Lydia Simons and Catherine owner. These problems become apparent A 1970 Australian study found 20 presented to volunteers who achieved Vendetta. WELLESLEY, Mass. — A Revolutionary War Sweeney. Bette Thompson. Mildred Wald- soon after birth, if they are to happen at percent of the country's population increments of 100 hours of donated time in battle reenactment, a Vermont maple festival and an man, Betty Walker. Rita Wilke and Dutch Levitt said striped all. Diabetes, however, may not show deafened in a 1040 epidnnic either had; the past year, ranging from 100 hours to Appleby. Honored for 300 hours were Dorothy Easter Bunny parade are among New England events shirts are almost tied lor up until 20 years later. diabetes or showed pre-diabetes condi­ more than 5,000. Annulli, Paula Ballsieper, Marilyn Close- recommended by the ALA Auto and Travel Club for Achieving the 900-hour level were: Julie third place beeau.se ol . Dr. JohnL.Sever,areseareheratthe tions by age 30. ; Awards were presented (or 5,000 hours the weekend of April 14-15. Chadwick, Louise Darting, Ruth Gleick, Battoe. Rita Coulombe, Annabelle Dodge. renewed interest in the National Institute of Allergy and A new study is going on at Gallaudet; to Marion McCarthy; 4,000 to Hoyt F ife and drum music and musket and cannon fire Belle Hawkins, Peg Helwig, Dot Jenkins, Linda Erickson. Gertrude Gaudreau. London fashion scene. Infectious Diseases, told a recent College, which has a high concentra­ Stilson; and 3,000 to Nancy Akin, Hildred will pierce the Middlesex County countryside on Barbara Rohrbock, Ethel RoIIason and Eilefen Jeffries, Irene Mooney, Ann international symposium that studies tion of rubella babies, in cooperation Carlson, Avis Kellogg and Alyce The company makes Sunday, April IS, when the historic 1775 British retreat Fred Juul. Moore. Pat Purdy. Dorothy Rose, Vera have shown diatetes occurs in 20 with the National Institutes of Health Ponticelli. nearly I million shirts a from Concord, Mass., is reenacted. Those racognized for achieving 800 Sherlock, Elise Strickland and Robert percent to 40 percent of people exposed and the Medical College of Virginia. The 17 volunteers honored .for 2,000 year for its 57 stores Thousands of reactivated Minuteman and militia hours of service were: Olive Chambers, Brown. to rubella before birth. Among the goals is to find genetic; hours were: Anne Davis, Eleanor Free- throughout the United companies along with a host of reactivated British Madelaine Dieterle, Mary Dubay, Ma­ The foillowing donated 200 hours of Although scientists know bow rubella markers for rubella-induced diabetes- love, Vonie Irvine, Ann Johnston, Leona States and has a total of regiments will re-stage the running battle which rilyn Froelich, Mary Kuzmickas, Kay service: Lilia Barbero. Betty Barrett, UPI photo causes other types of damage, no one that could lead to better diagnosis and' Juros, Esther Lessner, Peg McNamara, 350 shirtings in a wide marked the first day of the American Revolution 209 •Rafferty and Marge Salmon. Irene Bourez. Dorothy Coe, Patricia knows yet why it can cause diabetes. treatment. Virginia Prior, Carolyn Raesler, Stella variety ol solids, stripes, ¥ 1 years ago. Passing the 700-hour benchmark were Coelho, Lillian Fitzsimmons, Pearl Gar­ Sweaters from England “ That's (he big mystery," said Dr. The last rubella epidemic in the Roath, Hope Roberts. Rita Rourke, cheeks and plaids. Starting at 7:30 a.m. at the Old North Bridge in Ella Atamian, Helen Ener, Julia luliano. land. M yrtle Hubbard. Nora Merritt. Mary Ann South, a colleague of Sever’s United States in 1964 and 1965 resulted Eleanor Trieschmann, John Piaseezny, Marjorie Morrison. Loretta McDonald. Concord, the reenactment will follow the battle route Em ily Peck, Edna Schuetz, Ruth Search, LevitI said the tradi­ Designer Rox Joffe shows oft one of her pure wool sweaters at and a medical officer at the National in 20,000 children with birth defects, Sylvester Benson, Charles Lynn and Nils Clarisse Ponton, Madeline Sime. Gehre through Lincoln, Lexington and Menotony (now Ditta Tani, Judith Welles and A l Puzzo. tional pointed collar re­ her premises near Kings Road in London. This winter sweater is Institute (or Neurologic and Commu­ some very severe. Introduction of the Shenning. Arlington). A major “fight” will be staged in Seventeen volunteers wee commended Tanner, Barbara Wagner, Glenda Walsh, mains the mo.st popular. nicative Disorder and Stroke. rubella vaccine in 1960 prevented Surpassing the 1,000-hour mark were: for contributing over 600 hours: Eleanor Beth Wilt, Caroline Zachmann. Robert Arlington at the Jason Russell House, where the most the "Sassa" model and will go on sale shortly in America for followed by the button " I t ’s not so shocking that it happens. further epidemics. Nancy Barnes, Bette Beebe, Lucy Brad­ Palisi. Russelll Peterson and Norman casualties were recorded on April 19,1775, and where $300. Coleman. Dorothy Collier, Lucille Covey. down, which is almo.'22.50 I up $5721 Modal 2000SE-5 Stay sober liam E. Glenney. Her ford and Georgianna Ni­ (lock *0-1493.0 Alcoholics Victorious, a Christian organization to maternal great- chols of Enfield. Her N O W 4 6 9 M Our Giant Easter help alcoholics stay sober, meets every Tuesday at grandm other is Mrs. paternal grandparents 'meflora 7:30 p.m. at the Community Baptist Chrurch, 585 E. Frank Fink of East are Mr. and Mrs. Percy Bunny Center St. Hartford. Byram of 1257 Lydall St. All Major Credit The group features prayer, discussion, scripture McCann, Kyle Mallery, She has a' sister, Nicole See Store for Detells Marie, 4*/i. Cards Accepted readings and fellowship. The public is invited. son of Terrance P. and oLilies Refreshments are served. Members should use the Bernadette Mallery Quish, Hadley Arlin, rear entrance at the back parking lot. McCann of Johnson City, daughter of Peter Jeffrey •Azaleas N.Y., was bom March 8at and Meg Malone Quish of Linen or cotton blend Jully lined btaser end shirt in a t'orieiy of ctdors Sis«« 3^ ^ Lourdes Lying-In- 13 Alexis Drive, Bolton, Children’s art exhibited SooourWMo WIdUl •Mums Hospital in Binghamton, was bom March 23 at Silt ENIIS turn 14. HIM t l 5 PM The YWCA Nursery School, 78 N. Main St., is N.Y. His maternal grand­ Manchester Memorial Btioo Dopi In Vomon sponsoring a children’s art exhibit through Friday in parents are Mr. and Mrs. Hospital. Her maternal •Tulips observance of the 1984 week of the young child. Chester M allery of John­ grandparents are Dr. and FMESIDE CENIERPECE The exhibit is open 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. son City. His patemai Mrs. H. John Malone of 84 •Hyacinths »U.5fl OVE1 100 USED HRS FOR SflE grandparents are Mr. and Prospect St. Her paternal RECAVS Him fpaitiiOfU Mrs. Patrick McCann of grandparents are R. Mi­ "Your_Quality Mmn't Shop" hirtrf Urtfli'f sii/fl Business women meet DOWNTOWN MANCHESTER VERNON •Silk Arrangements Ashworth St. His paternal chael Quish of 140 Eliza­ SOUTH WINDSOR — Robin chapter, American great-grandmother is Ce­ beth Drive and Mrs. Rosa­ MS MAIN ST. TM-CITY PLAZA PONTIAC-BUICK Business Women’s Association, will meet April 17 at lia Carroll of Manchester. lind (}uish of Hartford. Lou’s Restaurant, Route 5. A cocktail hour will start His maternal great­ She has a brother, Pa­ Open Daily eJ0-8:S0 Ml I A, and a sister, T h u ia .M M W I WaA, Thar, t Pri. M 9 i :) i i G i i ,'.AL M.Hl Neal Sullivan , head of security at Connecticut Ckiurtney, 4. Manchitlsr Zaicek of Johnson City. SPimiG BOUQUET Mutual Life Insurance Co., will speak. Business 646-8268 14.95 women who wish to attend the event may call 649-3931 « for reservations.

'll U - MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday. April 10, 1984 MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday. April 10. 1984 - 13 Duvall wins best actor for Tender Mercies’ ■ Muncheeter Yeetenietye **"*" Terms of Endearment’ takes five Oscars ius’s harmonica Her competition this year in-* WIN A GIGANTIC By Vernon Scoff record four Oscars — the most United Press International ever collected by a foreign lan­ eluded Debra Winger, who played! •nee entertained guage movie. The film about an her daughter in the hit Paramount; HOLLYWOOD - ’’Terms of eccentric theatrical Swedish fam­ film and was nominated last yean Endearment," the bittersweet ily, which Bergman has said was for "An Officer and A Gentleman. ’ ’! riders on troiiey story of a domineering mother and his final feature, won best foreign The actresses embraced as the, language movie, cinematography, winner made her way to the stage.* EASTER BUNNY! her independent daughter, won By Mrs. Joseph H. Johnston five top Oscars Monday night, costume and art direction. Nicholson’s Oscar was his se-! , r Special to the Herald including best picture and best "The Right Stuff,” the story of cond. The character actor, who has! actress, at the 56th annual Am erica’s Mercury astronauts been nominated seven times, won; that flopped at the box office, also the best actor award in 1975 for* Get Details At Participating Stores. Academy Awards. I remember the trolley cars in Man­ ■ "One Flew Over the Cuckoo'st Former television producer and won four awards — best score, best chester when we used to ride to Laurel sound, best sound effects editing Nest. ” He became only the third! writer James L. Brooks won two Paris on Sunday school outings. The Oscars for directing and writing and film editing. actor in history to win Oscars for; "Term s of Endearment," his Miss MacLaine’s portrayal of both best actor and supporting; trolley bam s were where the firehouse is movie debut. Shirley MacLaine the tenacious Texas widow coping actor, joining Robert DeNiro and.' now. The trolley tracks were all the way Jack Lemmon. won best actress for her acclaimed with her advancing age and her down Main Strrat on the west side to the portrayal of the headstrong widow daughter’s troubled life received "I have wanted to work with; SAMFU ' N r ' OUT Aurora Greenway, and Jack Ni­ rave reviews from the critics and Jack Nicholson since his chicken; terminus on Charter Oak Street. cholson won best supporting actor made her the clear favorite for sandwich scene in "Five Easy* Each trolley had a motorman and a WHEN YOU COME IN. for his role as her lecherous, best actress. Pieces,” and to have him in bed! conductor who collected the fare which " I ’m going to cry because this with such middle aged jo y ,” Miss; drunken ex-astronaut boyfriend. was five cents or 10 cents, depending on Robert Duvall won best actor for show has b ^ n as long as my MacLaine said of her romance^ THEY KNOW YOUl his performance as the down-and- career," Miss MacLaine said as with the actor in the film. where you were going. The conductor had out country singer in "Tender she accepted her award. "I’ve Linda Hunt won best supporting; to turn the seats over at the terminus as Mercies” who finds a new family wondered for 26 years what this actress for her role as a ubiquitous; the trolley didn’t turn around. The trolley would feel like. Thank you for male photographer in "The Year* Medium Yellow Walnut Vinyl and a reason to live. Horton Foote, that ran to North Manchester, we called who wrote the script, won an Oscar terminating the suspense." of Living Dangerously," the story! DEIIVEIY Lo-Back Indiv. Seats UPl photo for best original screenplay. The best actress nomination was of an Australian foreign corres-{ the Cross-Town. It was Duvall’s fourth nomina­ the fifth for Miss MacLaine, sister pondent living in Indonesia during; We all remember Gus Waltz, who was James Brooks (left) stands with Shirley night. Brooks won the best screenplay LIST PRICE $9556 tion and second as best actor. He of actor Warren Beatty. She lost the civil war. on that run. Housed to play his harmonica award, MacLaine won the best actress for performances in "Some Came "Flashdance ... What a Feeling"! MacLaine and Jack Nicholson after all missed Oscars for performances in CTocK » a n o Running" in 1958, "The Apart­ from the movie “ Flashdance" won; to entertain the passengers. $7999 three were presented yvith academy award, and Nicholson won the Oscar for "The Godfather," "Apocalypse Now” and "The Great Santini." ment" in 1960, "Irm a La Douce” in the best song. The title theme from* In the summertime, we had the open air TMS FOLLOWBia IT1MS AM BTANOmO AT NO EXTIU CHMOE awards for their roles in Terms of best supporting actor. •Fonca raoNT mac anAxa •oefrosteh-elect. reaa wmoow Director Ingmar Bergman’s 1963 and "The Turning Point” in “ Yentl" won for best original song! trolleys, where you stepped on the running •punAaFAM CLecra. KwanoN •AM CONOtnONEa Endearment’ in Hollywood Monday "Fanny & Alexander” won a 1977. or adaptation score. HIACK AM) maON STKMNQ •RAOW-AM/nS STEREO W/CAEESTTE board to get to your seat. If it rained, they •raoNTsrmajzia baa •MmROR-RIOHT HAND REMOTE had (urtains which you pulled down on •aSMOTS CONTROL NWROa •(UAM-TRITEO •ofLuxi aeAToeLTa •UFTBACM TMRO DOOR each side of the trolley. •w io e m o a •FULL INSTRUMENT W/TACHOMETER MANCHESTER •CONSOLE •4-MEED MANUAL TRANEMISttON Advice The company opened a trolley line to •WINOSMELO WIKRE-MTEaVAL •SHONto-ESL •/wFitonrsaM ssw rmnale •meUMNO LOW-RACE INDIV. EEATE Manchester Green, but it didn’t seem to •ETEERINO-FOVrEa •CARGO COVER S T A T E B A N K worit out, so they gave it up. MEMBER FDtC The winter trolleys were very comf orta- Teens who’re willing to work bte^pd were like the buses of today, only 1041 lUUN ST 185 SPENCEN ST. iw e comfortable. downtown MMiaiESTEN MNCNESTEN The trolley tracks which ran down Main 64M4NM 649-7570 Street were a big attraction for the boys in Q^nnivefsary' can always fin(d employment town around the Fourth of July. They would put a row of caps down and wait for “Your Loeol Momntown B o n lT DEAR ABBY: I'v e had that he had something the trolley to run over them when they a clipping of your column more important to do. > / weowil -Ta * 1 pasted in the front of our “ He took the time to nnd would pop, pop, pop. [Doii^ Ifiiaiom aHNm K Job application book for 12 out how we ’operate’ her I believe the man who owned the trolley i n a m e AD D R ESS years. Jm D ear A bby and what his day-to-day transportation company was a Mr. I ------Since we hire so many tasks would be. I think MANCHESTER I CITY______TELEPHONE teenagers, I hope some of he’ll keep his eyes open Chapman, who lived on Forest Street or them read it while filling Abigail Van Buren and work for me like he’d around that location. 315 CENTER ST., MANCHESTER, CONN. Drmiing Date — Saturday Morning, April 21 out their applications. By work for himself. the looks of it, I think they "H e was willing to start Phone643-5135 have. It’s so dog-eared at that point where I could Edilor’o Bote: Mra. Joseph H.Jolunion lives at and yellowed nobody can afford to pay. Someday, 73 Liagea SL Do yea have a M aa^ester memory make out the last half ot it. perhaps, he’ll get to the yoa’d like to share with Manchester Herald Could you please print it Cincinnati Enquirer, in Not experience; neitherof point where he’ll have readers? Perhaps yea remember the day the again? We need a new William Raspberry’s co­ you had any. Attitude, more authority over oth­ circas came to town or the aight the garage ENJOY THAT B-B-Q FLAVOR one. Thank you. lumn. It was written by son. A-T-T-I-T-U-D-E. He ers and a better paycheck. baraed down or the day yoar brother enlisted ia THE GOLDEN EGG Karen Rak. who teaches did his best to impress me. "You know, kid, men the army. Sabmit a photo if one is available. If Look OMELET HOUSE. YEAR ROUND! English to students at That is where he edged have always had to get a year sabmisMoa is ased, we’ll pay yoa $5. Photos NOVATO, CALIF. Center Junior High School you out. job like you get a girl: will be retaraed; sabmissioBs will not. in Strongville, Ohio. case the situation, wear a DEAR GOLDEN EGG: Ms. Rak composed a ” He wasn’t dressed like clean shirt, and try to Vour Jacu zzi The clipping looks as letter (ostensibly from an Easter Sunday, but then appear reasonably Jacu zzi though it’s been fried, employer) designed to let that wasn’t necessary. willing. poached and crambled. her youthful job seekers Coventry woman Be Kind 1b Put On A New His clothes were clean, "M aybe jobs aren’t as Here’s a clean copy for see themselves as they and he had gotten a plentiful right now, but you: are seen. With so many Ibur Eyes . . . Spring Face! haircut. He filled out the there are jobs. You may young people looking for application form neatly not believe it, but all brings up dogs D EAR ABBY: I am jobs now. I think this piece and completely. He did around you employers are enclosing a newspaper deserves all the exposure The light pair of frames not ask to borrow a pen. looking for young men and T126LPX T126LPC clipping that appeared in it can get. He carried his Social women smart enough to for blind people a section of the paper that ’DEAR KID: Today con enhance yaur facet Security card, had basic go after a job in the very few teenagers read. you came to me for a job. identification and did not old-fashioned way. Coatiaaed from page • I think it should be in From the look of your ask, ’What’s a reference?’ your column — or maybe shoulders as you walked “ If you have even the •are well worth it. Besides the satisfacUon they get from helping the blind, they say they also benefit from in the comics, where out, I suspect you’ve been "H e didn’t have two vaguest idea of what I’m the activity raising d i ^ involves. l 2 i teenagers would be sure turned down before, and friends waiting for him by trying to say, let it show “Even though H’s work, they’re great company,” to see it. maybe you believe by now the pop machine. He the next time you ask for a Mrs. Wilmot ^ < L "W hen you’re a senior citizen, the MRS. CLINGNER, that kids your age can’t didn’t start to chew gum job. You will be head and worst thing you can do is sit too m uch." COVINGTON. KY. find jobs. or smoke while being shoulders above the rest. Mrs. Wilmot got involved in the program five years ’’But I hired a teenager interviewed. He didn’t "F o r both our sakes, get •763 and 191 Main SL, ManchMter ago when she was on the mend after breaking two D EAR MRS. C.: The today. You saw him. What keep looking at his watch, eager, will you? Ptiong 643-1191 or 643-1900 piece appeared in the was so special about him? giving me the impression THE BOSS ’ Herald photo by Pinto vertabrae. “ I found myself sitting too much and thinking a lot,” • Eastbrook MaH. Mansfield Agnes Kamor, from left, last year’s president, presented flowers and a sbesaid. “I saw a newspaper article that said Guiding Phone 450-1141 W AXES queen, crowns the current trophy at the banquet last Thursday at Eyes needed foster homes, and it seemed an ideal GIANT queen, Evelyn Cady. Nina Armstrong, Piano's in Bolton. thing to get me up and around ____ ^______I I 9rilla88aaMai8r8i|Mvlnchar|t. This woman’s hiatal hernia Then there are the heartwarming letters from blind *~lKi$nnrfowiNVm^ people who have adopted their < h ^ . "Tbey’re like anyone adoptii^ a child.” she said. Name. Ropiacomont8*Grid» Gratoo«Bumwa«Rocic “They wonder about its early life. They want puppy ;pictures — of course they can’t see them, but they Address. ^ HOURS leads her to ask questions Evelyn Cady 'have their families describe them. W 0 MON TWURS Cinema “ It’s odd, but a lot of bUnd people are afraid to take a ■^IL 9 P«l til dog. It takes a person who can let go with that dog and 8 WED DEAR DR. LAMB: I’m older. Smoking is an aging j Phnnti Harllsrd trust it. A t fiieUert a woman and was re­ habit. People who smoke takes crown ANMatsm Clasmo— Reop­ “The bond between the blind person and the dog is 445 Hortford Id 647-9^647-9997 cently at a diet center, often look 10 years older ens Thursdoy. '.something you emo’t explain — tbey’re suddenly not EASTOtM COMMECTICUrS LEADIMQ FULL SERVICE O FTtO A M S Kv«n«Y $f Exit oH |•84 where I read an article than their non-smoking Claeaio City — Bosileus 647-9998 Quartet 7:15, 9:30. — Expe­ . 'alone anymore.” you wrote on hiatal her­ contemporaries. And peo­ rience Preferred...But Not nias. Two years ago I had Your Health ple who smoke as much as Essential (PG> 7:45, 9:45. — I HARTFORD] for WA TES The Dresser (PG) 7:30,9:50. a series of tests that your husband have about CinestHdIo — Born In I l)(T(»5T*n»4UITS3 ^ showed I had a hiatal Lawrence Lamb, M.D. 14 years less life Flomes 7:30 with Salt ot the ^ UST HAjmOf 0 >64 MtO ^ hernia. expectancy. Earth (PG) 9:10. X^otteae N otea Cslealol — Reopens Fri­ I ’ve lost 22 pounds, Evelyn Cady was named Manchester WATES UP THE The rest of his lifestyle day. ^estcfwii'^Pt}annacy which has helped a lot, but queen at the weight loss gniop’s annual banquet EsstHortlerd only makes matters I still have a bloating Thursday at Fiano’s in Bolton. Mrs. Cady, a Eostweed PuB A deetne— worse. He could greatly Untaithfully Yours (P G ) — SHOwnor:— problem. I ’d like some Connecticut State Queen in 1980, lost a total o f 35 improve his life expec­ Schrlder honored at college more information and pounds. RIcBsrd’s PoB A Cl- jayatuE. 445 Hartfonl Rd. / OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK pressure inside the ab­ 10019. tancy and his enjoyment hints on what would help. dominal cavity. aams — Untaithfully Yours • Gregsiy J. Shrider, son of Mr. and Mrs. John P. of good health in the WATES stands for Women’s Association to EInjoy (PG) 7:30,9:U. MOSOOWON Slimming. Shrider of tt Tonica Spring Trail, has been named to __ _ 643-5230 So when a person gains DEAR DR. LAMB: My immediate future if hp ate SBswcose CiBsmos — m m u D C O N i c DEAR READER: The Footloose (PG) 1 :», 7:30, the dean’s list at the C oU «^ of Graphic Arts and Far yaurcaamalance pap your ILEJJIK.tNETCOandCNaHgsliaNlAlao wave too much weight, the fat husband smokes two to Arline Griffin, 1963’s queen, had a weight loss of 40 — — sfewmvi— s U A F n s i — ------fact that you were at a properly, avoided excess 9:35. — Ice Plrotes(PG) 1:30, Pbotograpy, Rochester Institute of Technology. inside the abdomen tends three packs of cigarettes a pounds, but because she did not go below previous center to lose weight alcohol, stopped smoking 7:n, 9:30. — Terms of En­ He is a freshman, majoring in technical photo­ to do what a pregnant day, has a stressful job years' weight loss, she could not be considered queen dearment (PG) 1:40, 7, 9:30. .... THE FINEST EASTER GOODIES ANYWHERE... certainly fits with having and e n g a g ^ in regular graphy. He is a 1963 graduate of Manchester High uterus does. Losing ex­ and doesn’t exercise. His this year. — Against All Odds (R) 1:15, a hiatal hernia, which is a exercise. That wduld also 7:10,9:35. — Racing with the SchooL cess fat empties the fat diet consists mostly of red The following members were the club’s top 10 Moon (PG) 1, 7:15, 9:30. — OtEYnOKEw hernia of part of yoqr be a good way to cope with from inside the abdomen, meat, white breads, no weight iosers: Janet Ledger, 29 poounds; Alberta Grevsioke: The Legend of stomach through your the stress of his job. Torzon, Lord of the Apes SIWWtUS: ' decreasing the pressure fruit and little salad. Norris, 22; Margery Sardam, 20; Dorothy Hayman, diaphragm. (PG) 1:30, 7:W, 9:35. - Student wint top award and making you feel He skips meals fre­ 20; Barbara Sebwantor, 19; Susan Bigelow, 18.5; Police Academy (R) l, 7:30, There’s a natural hole in better. quently and snacks on Frances Mills, 18; Jean Downing, 16; and Helen — Moscow on the B asham CMoholm of M anchester is anoong four the diaphragm where the Household vinegar is an POUCE Gaseous distention also salty or sugary foods. His Patrauskas, 15. H w ^ (R) 1:40,7:30,9:45.— stwhaits whose projects took top awards in the esophagus passes from effective and Inexpensive Up the Creek (R) 1:15, 7:40, ACADEMYK Connecticut State Science Fair h M recently at the Steve^.Gkndi£6 makes the problem liquids are coffee. Coke, fabric saffner when Alberta Norris and Helen Petrauskas also received 10. CAIMMCt the chest cavity to the — ^SHOWnAT:— Uaiveisity of ConnecticnL worse. So will a large i c ^ tea and lots of beer. added to the final laundry a special award for having gone the longest period in MsacBsstsr abdominal cavity. The meal, a tight belt or 1983 with no weight gain. Janet Ledger also received a UA’TtMolers Bast—Splash She is a Grade 7 student at the Talcott Mountain He's 33, but looks older. rinse. Classified Is the 7:30, 9:35. — Romanc- llllltlt?^ftfllflW fllWSM STOFFED ANUUU esophagus joins the stom­ bending over. Losing special award for being the first member to atain her • Academy of Science and Mathematics. Help! effective and Inexpensive Ing the Stone (PG) 7:30,9:40. RACMGWITH ach just after it passes weight, small meals, not way to find a cash buyer goal in 1983. —^Hord to Hold (PG) 7:15, Her project was on the qaestien of if there is a through this hole. During lying down until a couple DEAR READER: I'm for household items you Marion Keegan and Nicky Savard, with a 14- and THE M OON H i difference in a mouse or gertaU’s ability to perform if pregnancy, as the abdo­ of hours after eating, not surprised he looks no longer use. 643-2711. 12-pound weight loss respectively, received honorable J T rw S ia c sEsse TWBi — hnman affection is given. She received a medal for her EASTER BASKETSTUFFERTABLE! men is distended, the sleeping propped up and mention, although they did not attain top It. Nicky Expwlence Pretarred...But creative project pressure is so great that it Mrt Essential (R) 7:15, 9. — Jim m avoiding foods that cause Savard was also given a special award for attaining Zellg (PG) 9 erith A MM- often forces part of the stomach acid all help. Here’s where to write her goal in 1963, as did Dorotl^ Longer for s u m ^ Night’s Sex Comedy A large assortneat eff ftems to seif all stomach through that nat­ To give you a more maintaining her goal for 10 yeras. (Pw^:3p. Named to society ^ ural hole. The whole pro­ complete guide to what U S V B S e Here's where to write for advice from the The Eager Beaver award, which is given to a O o e lA l — Tank(PG)7, cess stretches and en­ you can do for yourself. syndicated advice columnists featured in the member who works extra hard for the club, was given i^nmUasifSpsalOo.doiightirof John and Barbara larges -the hole. As a Spooito of Steel CrooMag Road. Bolton, a jaaior at I'm sending you the Manchester Herald: to Esther Armstrong. The Founders Aw ard, which is Wastown Pharmacy ^ result, almost 80 percent Health Letter 4-8, Hiatal WsstMarttMTd Wheaton College, has been named to PM Beta Kappa • Dear Abby — Abigail Van Buren, P.O. Box given to the m em ber who is most club minded, was ■Bb I A 1 — Tank (PG) 2, AGAINST of women have temporary Hernia: Esophageal Re­ awarded Lois Cbeslick. honor aodety. 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038. 4:30, 7, MB. - UntoltBfiili; REGISTER TO WIN A GIANT BUNNY hiatal hernias when flux. Others who want this Special recognition was given Alice IfcCavanagh Y o m (PG) 2,4:30,7:15,9:15. • Dr. Lamb — Dr. Lawrence Lamb, M.D., P.O. TBsMeetss— Splash (PG) they're pregnant. issue can send 75 cents for 20 years perfect attendance. Frances Cone was ------5NOiimi*:-wasi^ on nonore esis BOX 1551, Radio City Station, New York, N.Y. 1^ 2:30.4:30,7. f :M. — Hard That overstretched hole with a long, stamped, also given special recognition for five yars perfect to Hold (PG) )3:W. 2. 3:45. may persist, permitting self-addressed envelope 10019. attendance. ^30.7:35.9:2S.— Romanclnp ; Fnsdnn has been named to the dean’s hot for the Stone (PG) 12:25. 2:40. d ormrster at Briarwood College and Bath part of the stomach to for it to me, in care of the • Dr. Blaker - Dr. Karen Blaker, Ph.D., P.O. Manchester WATES celebrated its 2tth anniver­ 4:50,7:2A 9:40. Address. slide through the hole Manchester Herald, P.O. Box 475, Radio City Station, New York, N.Y. sary in January, and meets Tuesday nights at 7:30 I has been aaaoed to the president’s list at that when you’re lying down or Box 1551, Radio City Sta­ 10019. p.m. at 72 E. CenterSt., rearentrance. Membership is PISM — Broadway Danny Phone . when there’s too much tion, New York, N.Y.^ open to all area women who want to lose weight. IMrs.FYankFa Rose (PG ) 7:15. ; q ( M i Birch S t MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday, April 10, 1984 — 15 H - MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesduy, April 10, 1984 Tuesday TV

0 - SportsCanter 12:30 A.M. 6:00 P.M. ® - CPTV Auction 3:00 A.M. SPORTS ® - Alfred HitchcxTck Hour CD - Thicka of the Night - CBS News Nightwatch GE) ( £ QD @ ® ^ - Nevn - Monoyfina CD 0 - Barmy HW Show C n - Magnum. P.l. JIP m - ThrM's Company » - BaNa Conmigo 0 - Sparta Tonight CD-Nightiina CD - MOVIE: 'Medusa va. Son CD-V«««S ® - Enrtertaiomant Tonight of Harculaa' Parsaua baulea aird 0 - MOVIE: Th a U d y In Rad' 0 -M O V I E : •Piawlat-After 35 killa the swamp monsiar, restor­ (S>-Alica @1 - FamMy Faud This crime drama fc ^ w s the life years of deceptive calm, a psy­ Basics are stressed ing life to the army of Medusa. O • Mazda SpoftsLooli - Wild World of Animals and crimes of the woman who chopathic kMer reappevs to em- Richard Harris. Araia Ranalli. Ar­ ® - Stnnga Ooalh of Daiart A-TEAM BATTLE loved John IMtoiger. Pamela Sue .^ba^ upon another murderous turo Dominici. 1962 7:30 P.M. spree. Farley Granger. Rated R. Fox The bizarre story of Fietd Martin, Robert Conrad. Louise 0 - This Weak in the NBA C D - Magazina Ftetchar. 1979. Rated R. Marshai Erwtn Rommel's death ts Mr. T (I.) and George Pep- 12:45 A.M. 0 - Sports Probe presented CD - AM In tha Family pard take on memtjers of the 0 - Twilight Zona (S ) “ Errtartainmant Tonight 0 - Fraatnan Rsporta at Manchester HS ( S - USA Cartoon Express ( D - Muppat Show Chinese underworld's Lung 0 - MacNail/Lahtar Newsh- our ® - Lata Night with David (9^ - Dr. Gene S ^ tt CD - FamMy Faud Chin syndicate in Los Angela Lattarman 3:15 A.M. ® OK - M*A*S*H C D - Maior Laague BasabaM: on N B C's "Th e A -Te a m ," air­ 11:15 P.M. 0 - MOVIE: ‘Dead Man Don't By Rich Cahill had a good season last year for the and dependable" al the position. 1:00 A.M. Wanr PlakT A private eye inves­ Naw Vorfc Mats at Atlanta ing TUESDAY, APRIL 10. 0 - Mazda SportsLook ' Herald Sports Writer Indians' junior varsity, is expected The outfield is anchored by & - MOVIE; 'Dreem House' A - lavama and Shirley tigates tha disaappearance of a light-hearted drama cfeoraclmg (Hr - Indapandant Natwork CD 0 - Raportar 41 noted sciential. Slave Martin. to lead the staff. Tracy was wild center fielder Glenn Chetelat, the the traumais and tnumphs of a Nawe ( D - World Viaion Special CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME Rachel Ward. Cart Reinar. 1982. It was exactly what Don Race Saturday in his varsity debut. team's other co-captain. He hit .295 young man erho attempts to 0 - Inside tha PGA Tour 11:30P.M. GD - Twilight Zone Rated PG. was concerned about. Tracy, a junior, will be joined on last season;Seniors Rob Roya and hui dream house in a New York 0 - NHL Stantay Cup Playoffs City^>etto. dc^Schrteider. Mar- CD - Bamoy MWor 1:15A.M. 3:30 A.M. ■Race's Manchester High base­ the inexperienced pitching staff by Greg Solomonson are in lell and 5ft) - Crossfire Ai Henner. Mchaei Gross 1981 CD - Staraky and Hutch & - Homa Swaat Homa 0 - Otw Step Bayond ball team led East Catholic. 1-0. junior Pete Frankovitch and so­ right field, re.speclively. Others ® - Auction 0 - M -A -S -H CD - Campaign '84 1:30 A.M. 0 - Auto Racing '84: Fonnula Saturday in the season opener lor phomore Chris Helin. The fourth available are seniors Tom 0 - WtMMl of Fortune ® - Mundo Latino Jesse Lo- CD - Rockford FHea CD - Great Racord Album OiM BtazIHan Orand Prlx Cover­ the town rivals. Then, three walks member of the staff is senior Chris McCarthy, Todd Difonzo and Mark sada y Sorxa Vorhauer son los - Bamoy MMIor Coilac. age of this racing event it pre­ allowed the Eagles to take a 3-1 Repass, who was successful on the Mielette. anfritiones de este programs de (D - Top 40 Video ® - Pooplo's Court sented from Rio de Janeiro. lead.'East went on to win, 7-3, as mound for the junior varsity squad asuntos pubkcos naoonales pre- 0 - Honaymoonara CD-M cCloud Brazil. [90 min.) Race said the team's "tw o ® - D r . Who Manchester look itsell out of the two years ago but had trouble sentarKk) entrevtstas. rtotKrias. 0 - Lsavs It to Baaver GD - Independent Natwork 0 - Drnama of Gold glaring weaknesses" are "inex)H'- deportee y un segmento desde News game when three of its runners getting the ball over the plate for 0 - Crossfira rience and lack of depth at key- Hollywood. 8:00 P.M. - MOVIE: 'Silent Rage* A 4:00 A.M. were thrown out on the bases in the the varsity last season. 0 0 - Decision '84 GD positions ' Nevertheless, the ® - 3-2-1. Contact CD CD ~ Amoricon Parade hcmiicidal madman terrorizes a CD - CME Sat late innings. The Indians' inticid will be 0 - MOVIE: The Billy Texas town. Chuck Norris. Toni coach is optimistic. 6:30 P.M. Charles Kuratt artchors this pro­ 0 - Chespirito Sent) comica ® - El Malaficio 0 - TwHight Zona 0 - Ufa of Riley The three players who commit­ populated by both old and new gram which features views of the Goodman Story' Kalem, Ron Silver. 1982. Rated m - One Day at a Tima con Robeno Gomez Bolanos y - Amarican Playhousa 'The 0 - Frmman Raports 0 - MOVIE: ‘Don't Lose Your ted the base-running mistakes are hands. The experience is one the "1 have conlidenec in this year's - people of this country, the per­ Flormda Meza. 0 - Bob Nawhart Show R. - CBS News sonal impact of important rwws KiHirtg Floor.’ A black man. who - RamingM Staala A Head' This is the story of a young seniors, returnees from the team left side, with seniors Dave Dou- team. " Race said, "ltdoesnot look CD & - MOVIE: *SMn Gama* A 0 0 0 -N ig h tH n e 0 - Children Batwaan Ufa and car salesman and Ns miscNe- stones and profiles of fmnous emigrated from the South to ftn^ man who has multiple identilies which went 7-13 last year. Race strong at this moment, but 1 expect - Sanford and Son nrian repeatedly seHs his partner, work m CNcago's stockyards, Death vious grandfsther. Petula Clark, gan at shortstop and Chris Pe­ Americans. (60 min.) turns to Laura and Remington for who is posing as a slave. James 11:45 P.M. 0-Oaapadida said his players have to cut down tersen al third base. Petersen, one this learn to grow stronger as the ( S - Thit Weak in the NBA rises to a leadership position in a he^ when ha finds himsalf Jimmy Hantey, Hugh Sinclair. C D ~ PM Magazine Gamer. Lou Gossett. Edward As- formerty aH-white union. (2 hrs.) 0 - USFL Football: on their physical and mental ol the team's co-captains, batted sea.son progresses." O - MOVIE: 'Dead Men Don't m ^ a d for murder. (R) (60 min.) Washington at Houston or Los 2:00 A.M. 0 - Newsrtight Update Wear Ptard* A pnvate eye inves­ (D 0 - ^-ups/BkMps/ ner 1971. (Closed Caplk>r>edj errors. .388 last season and led the ssquad BHmdara & - SCTV #11 ITie ccHnical Angelas at Denver CD - CBS Nawa Nightwatch 4:30 A.M. tigates the dissappearance of a ( ® - Nova 'Locusts: War With­ 9:30 P.M. "Unless we can improve greatly with 19 runs batted in. Dougan hit Schedule (unless noted all noted scientist Steve Msrtm, 0 - MOVIE: The Duchess and out End.’ Some of man's chronicies of mythica) Melonvilla 0 - MOVIE: 'Sacond CD - MOVIE: 'And Soon the GD - Abbott and Costollo GD ® - Shaping Up Ben has television chanmH SCTV continue Thoughts* A married profes­ in our pitching and if we don't only .235, and Race is counting on games begin at 3:30): April 7 — Rachel Ward. Cad Remer 1982. tha Dirtwatar Fox* A dancahaN attiKnpts to nd himsetf of his Oarfcnasa* Tw o British girls are ® - MOVIE: 'Dot and tha problems in trying to replace the in all-new editions of tha Emmy- sional woman must make the improve our fundamentals, we East Catholic (L 7-3); 10 — Rated PG. girl and a con man try to hustle longtime enemy, the locust, are on a bicycle hc^iday in France until Bunny' ([>ot and her companion him tor more offensive production tiles in the rrien's shower arvi ¥vinning satirical series. Starring choice of whether or not to have a I S - Hogan's Heroes the old west. Goldie Hawn. ^examined. |R) (60 min.) (Closed one of them disappears. Pamela joumoy to Kangaroo VaKay in this won't be in it at all, " he said of the this season. Penney; 12 — at Enlield; 17 — at Melissa sperKts the rtight aboard Joe Flaherty. Eugene Levy, An- baby. Lucie Amaz, Craig Was­ George Segal. 1976. '(^pik>ned| Franklin, Sandor Etes, Michele animated feature. fight for the Central Connecticut Fermi, 1 p.ni.: 19 — Hall; 23 — at ® - Ask CNN a playboy's yacht. ckea Martin and Martin S h ^ . son. Ken Howard. 1983. Rated Junior Dave Mazzotta, a newco­ ® - Amateur Bming; USA va. Dotrice. 1971 East Hartford; 25 — at Wethers I S S - NBC News 8:30P.M. 0 - Conciarto 0 - That’s HaHywead PG 4:45 A.M. Interscholastic League champion­ mer lo the varsity, won the second Cuba from Rano. NV GD - doe Franklin Show ship. The Indians' league season Held; 27 — Simsbury: 30 — al @ - Notkaaro Nackmal SIN ( S > Caro) Buntatt and Friands 10:00 P.M. 0 0 - Tonight Show 0 - MOVIE: ‘Super Fuzz' A base job in tryouts. Others who can ® • MOVIE; -Bm Cosby 10:30 P.M. GD - MOVIE: 'Blondia'a Big begins this afternoon, when they play the position are seniors Mark Conard. ® - Jeffersons 'Himself* Funnyman Cosby CD ® - B.k.a. Pablo When a Moment* Dagwood smears jelly man exposed to radiation devel­ battle of the sexes erupts. Paul is GD - Nawa CD - Naw Jaiaay Paapla looks at the humor m everyday on an irate stranger who turns out ops superhuman powers. Terr­ host Penney, the circuit's defend­ Walling and Tim Grady and junior May 7 — Enfield; 9— Fermi; 11 & - ABC News drafted to defend the Rivera - Han Hart Jonathan 12:00 A.M. faults, foibles ar>d successes. BiH CD to 0 - N a w s to be his new boss. Penny Single­ ence HW, Ernest Borgnine. ing champion. — al Hall; 14 — East Hartford. 16 'machismo' by 'conqoenr>g' an and Jennifer try to save Hart In­ Jim Fogarty. Grady served as (S ) - Business Report Cosby Rated PG. 0 - Cauntdawn to'84 Tadsy's CD CD - Hawaii Fhrs-O ton. Arthur Lake, Hans Conreid. Joanne Dru. Rated PG. attractive businesswoman dustries from an European busi­ As with most teams, pitching designated hitter Saturday, bat­ — Wethersfield; 18 — at Simsbury; ® - MOVIE: ‘A Mmied Man* program features weekly prev­ CD - Barmy Hill Show 1947. 7:00 P.M. ness magnate who tries to kid iews and proNes of the 1984 will determine how far the Indians ting in place of first baseman 21 — Conard: ‘23 — at Windham: 24 Part 2 9:00 P.M. them in a cross-country car rally. 0 - Star Trak 0 - Maxtrax #2 USE RICE to clean the get this soenn Inhn Tr;icv. » hn -C B S News Olympics. Fogarty, who Race called "steady — at East Calholic. 7 p.m. CD ® - Prime News CD (D - Goofge Washington (R) (60 min.) (Closed C^tioned) 0 - NHL Stanlay Cup Playoffs ® - Our Mlu Brooks inside of tiottles and long- X P a tt2 0 - Alfred Hitchcock CD ® - M-A-S-H & & - A Team The A Team CD Hina on Naw Jarsay (38 - Dr. Gene Scott stem voses. Sprinkle rice UP) photo - The Merv Show 0 - 2 4 Haras 2:30 A.M. Inside container, odd (D - Tic Tac Dough comes to the aid of a Chinatown CD GD - Indapandant Network 0 0 - IMcke of the Night Reds’ first baseman Dan Driessen gets first inning Monday in Cincinnati. CD-ABC News restaurmt owner who i$ under CD 0 - TlHm'a Company News 0 - Indapandant Natwork 0 - Manayllna worm, sudsy water and siege by a syndicale (60 mm ) 0-Nawanight 0 - N e w s Jack dresses as a grandmother lo G $ - MOVIE: Max Dugan shoke vigorously. The airborne in an unsuccessful attempt to Raines advanced to third as Russell was CD claim prize money m a cookie 0 - MOVIE: 'The Cattle 2:45 A.M. Four-run eighth sends 0 - MOVIE: Hankytonk Men' Returns’ A struggling widow's rice will polish and clean (3 ) - Jeffersons Quean of Montana* The daugh­ catch pitcher Jeff Russell's bad pickoff charged with a throwing error. In hopes of perfomvng on the contest (R) [Closed Caplioned| long lost father appears with a 11:00P.M. 0 - SpaitsCantar ter of a man killed for his land, interior; Use the classi­ 0 - SportsCanter Grar>d Ole C^Ky. an aging country 0 0 - Riptida Nick. Cody aruf seemingly endless supply of mo­ 0 0 0 - News (0 - MOVIE: 'The Harrging throw on Montreal’s Tim Raines in the CD GD CD fights to hold property. Barbara fied columns to sell those singer travds across the back- Boz rec^ve a surprise visit from a ney to buy his grandkid's love. Traa' A frontier dactar, whh a ae- 0 - Radio 1990 Today s pro- G D -T a x i Stanwyck, Ronald Reagan. Gene gram looks at the hottest trends roads of America with his ne­ woman who has learned that her Marsha Mason, cret pest, nurses a blind girl back still good, but no longer Evans. 1954 arxf perfcxmers in the world of phew Clint Eastwood. Kyle husband plans a kiHmg. (R) (60 Sutherland. 1983 Rated 9 } - Laugh-In' la health. Gary Ceeper, Maria used items around your Baseball roundup Eastwood Rated PG. mm) 0 - O d d Coupis ® - Ten O'clock News Schell. Karl Malden. 1959. home. East to loss at home entertainment

East scored single runs in the J U 5 T P U T we SHOULD BE ABLE ■ e - e A 9 V ? C'AAON. W ASH. Matt McGivney drove in two Conlerence season today at home « THE^e PRY TO REMEMBER EN0U6H WE CAN'T LET BRIDGE ASTRO runs with a single in the eighth third, lourth and filth innings to against St. Thomas Aquinas. S R A e ^ OM TERRAIN FEATURED T0_ t h o s e RUSSIANS Reuss, back from injury, inning and Larue Graham knocked take the lead, 6-5. Left fielder Scott WA&H. GET BACK TO THE RUIN THAT CENTEM- Vibberts tied the game with a Roy pitched into the eighth STITT HOUSE. CELEBRATION.> in two more with a home run as North was taking a GRAPH Maloney High of Meriden scored a home run. and a run-scoring single inning for the Eagles and gave up chance, since he knew that by senior first baseman Kevin Hutt 14 hits. East had seven hits against NORTH 4-10-84 10-6 extra-inning win Monday over he and South held only 12 top East Catholic. put the Eagles in the lead. Maloney two Maloney pitchers. ♦ 73 tricks. impressive in first start The loss, in the Eagles' home tied the score in the topof the sixth, YA K 10 73 West made his safest lead Malonev (10) — Ladls U p 4-0-1-0, opener, dropped East's record to however, and won it in the first ♦ A932 By Fred AAcAAone out four and did not walk a batter slammed a iwo-run homer in his Graham 3b 4-1-12. KrvstocK ss 5-1-1-0, of a trump. South looked extra inning. ♦ 10 2 over dummy and counted: UPl Sports Writer before giving way to Tom Nieden- first at-bat of the season and Nick 1-1. Maloney was playing its first KoslensKi cl 4-2-2-0, Sosnowski p -lb 4-1-2-0. Kuhn 3b 4-1-1-0. Biestek rl WEST EAST there were stilt only 12 top C f e u r fuer with two out in the eighth. Esasky drove in three runs to game of the year. "You can't expect to win at Eagle field with six runs." said 2- 2-1-0, Sundbero Ib -ll 3-I-3-2. M c G iv - ♦ 952 ♦--- tricks. Surely he had to find Jerry Reuss, left behind in Niedenfuer got the last four outs to power the Reds to victory. Pete The Eagles took a lead in the first nev c 4-1-2-4. Totols 34-10-14 8. ^BirUiday East coach Jim Penders, alluding YQ985 YJ42 some sort of squeeze to Florida when the Los Angeles notch a save. Rose of Montreal went 2-for-5 to inning on a 3-run homer by senior East Calholic (6 ) — D a rb y 2b 2-0-1 0, ♦ KI04 fQjres bring home the 13Ui. Paul Roy. who was pitching his to the short fences at his team's M Irucki ss 3-10-0, Masse cl 3-3-0-0, Rov Dodgers headed home, must have “ It's not nice to be left behind." edge to within three hits of 4.000 lor p-3b 4-2-3-4, Feshicr rf 4 0-1-0, B vam c He needed help from his home field. He said he has been ♦ 964 ♦KQ875 April 11,1984 found that Fountain of Youth that Reuss said. "A ll the excitement is his career. Gary Carter homered first varsity game and making his 4-0-0-0, H u ll )b 3-0-2-1, Vibberts If opponents and got it right concerned about the inexperience SOUTH There will be a marked Ponce de Leon never could locate. here. I would have liked to have lor Montreal. first pitching appearance ol any 3- 1-1-1, Madden 3b 3-0-0-0, Stontord p away. East’s first discard kind in three years. Roy could not and lack of depth ol his pitching 1-0-0 0. Totals 30-6-7-6. ♦ AKQJ 10 864 Improvement this coming year finished, but you get the leadoff A ’s 4, Blue Jays 3 Kev: AB-R-H-RBI. Y6 was the eight of clubs to in conditions that aHect your hold the lead; he was reached lor staff and that his team must score show the K-Q. The 34-year-old left-hander, rec­ batter on and runners on base and At Oakland. Calif., Camey.Lans- THATS ♦ 8 work or career. Both promo­ overing from arthroscopic surgery two runs in the second inning and more runs if it expects to win. The M aloney 023 00) 04 10 4E GENERAL South took two more it's going to catch up with vop. lord hi! a Iwo-run homer oil ♦ a J3 tion and Increased earnings three more in the third. Eagles open their Hartford County East Calholic 301 1)0 00 6. IDEA! trumps white discarding a on his left elbow to remove bone In the only other National reliever Dennis Lamp in the eighth o are within the realm of posslbll- Vulnerable: Both heart from dummy. Then he ily. chips, made his season debut League game, Cincinnati downed ' inning to give the A's their victory. Dealer: South played A-K of hearts, dis­ ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) A Monday night and his arm looked Montreal 9-6. Oakland topped Lansford hit an 0- and-2 pitch for NBA roundup brand-new as he beat the Chicago West North Ea>l South carding a low club on the change lor the better is in the Toronto 4-3 in the lone American his first home run of the season off 44 king of hearts. Next he offing today regarding a Cubs 4-2 with 7 2-3 innings of strong League contest. Lamp, the third pitcher of the Pass 4Y Pass 4^ ruffed a heart in his band. project that has been fraught pitching at Los Angeles. Reds 9, Expos 6 inning. George Bell homered for Pass 4 NT Pass 5Y Meanwhile, West had been with problems lately. Progress Reuss allowed seven hits, struck At Cincinnati, Duane Walker Toronto. Pass 5 NT Pass 64 kind enough to siraal that he can now be made. The areas in Bullets, Knicks gain wins Pass ?♦ Pass Pass held four hearts. Then South which you'll be the luckiest In Pass simply ran off all his trumps the year ahead are revealed In to come down to a three- your Astro-Graph predictions By United Press International overtime and added a free throw In the only other game. New card ending. South held A-J for the coming year. T o get Courageous battle ends with two seconds left. York topped Cleveland 118-113. Opening lead: 42 of clubs and the eight of yours mall $1 to Astro-Graph, Perhaps it just takes the Wa­ Rod Higgins' 26-foot jumper with Knicks 118, Cavaliers 113 diamonds, while dummy was Box 489, Radio City Station, shington Bullets a long time to one second remaining fell off the Now York, NY 10019. Al New York, Bernard King left with a low heart and A-x Death claimed Tom Conran on April 1 after he warm up. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) In side of the rim. preserving the scored 32 points and Williams By Oiwald Jacoby of diamonds. EUist was down had staged a courageous but losing seven-year Although! they're the eighth — to K-Q of clubs and a useless loint ventures today, whether Bullets' victory. added 23 to help the Knicks and Jamei Jacoby battle against cancer. and last — team to qualify for the WATT.'' W HATEVER- / I.WANTTO MOM 6AIP,60 INTO \ queen of diamonds. West domestic or commercial, don't overcome a 39-point performance be too set upon having your Testimony oi his popularity and involvment in playoffs from the Eastern Conier- Washington. 3.5-45, was led by PEOBuewvou h a v e : CLAIM ■fHE:5IPrieBU6WEa6 N North and South were held the heart queen and two by Cavaliers guard World B. Free. own way. Victory comes the community of Manchester was displayed last Herald Angle ence, the Bullets have the league's Greg Ballard's career-high 33 W IT H t h e : I B 6 , I 'M MY HE:eP0F WITH PAP. BUT NOOO. playing a system in which diamonds. King scored II points in the fourth through teamwork. Tuesday night when more than 1,500 relatives, best record in overtime games. points. Ballard buried his first 14 6 U IS E : w e : C A N H 0 U 6 TT: iN 6 A 5 'M e . INPe:PE:NP&NCE::'' the opening four-diamond Now South, reiving on his period as the Knicks held off a late a GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) friends and acquaintances made over the years field-goal attempts before missing aOME:TH|sl6 O U r r / PE^’RsIPENTS). V\ANTEPA OOe WnH bid guaranteed a solid eight- opponents’ friennly signals, "If we weren’t 5-0 in overtime, Cleveland charge. Cleveland Tasks that you deem to be dif­ were at the Holmes Funeral Home to pay their Earl Yost one with 46 seconds remaining. ihe: GOVEeMME:NT.<: card spade suit and a possi- simply cashed bis ace of we wouldn't be in the playoffs," trailed 103-93 with 6; 17 left but ficult today are apt to be more last respects. ble side trick. So South clubs and squeezed West out so In your mind than in actuali­ Sports Editor Emeritus said Bullets Coach Gene Shue after “ You can feel it." he said of his whittled the deficit to 112- 109 on of his diamond stopper. Several hundred friends and relatives were in V r - opened four diamonds. ty. You'll discover this once you Monday night's 136-134 double- torrid shooting. "You can also feel two free throws by Paul Thompson North responded four hearts. Dummy’s remaining low get going. St. Bridget Church last Wednesday morning for overtime win over the Chicago with 1; to remaining. diamond became the 13 th Vf" it when you’re not hot. Coach CANCER (June 21-July 22) the funeral mass. The Rev. Clifford Curtin, pastor Bulls at Landover, Md. South bid bis four spades, trick. called the plays for me. He realized Williams then sank two foul and North Blackwooded his You're a pretty good plumber of St. Maurice Church. Bolton, anmd Wilson The Bullets' third overtime win (NE W SPAPER EN TE R PR IS E ASSN.) I was shooting the ball well. shots before Phil Hubbard hit one way to seven spades. today, especially at plugging up Deakin offered heartwarming eulogies. Both over the Bulls this season came leaks that have been draining for Cleveland. King's dunk on a were close friends of his. Deakin, in his layman's message, brought out when Jeff Ruland followed Ricky “ It’s very important that you pass from Williams made it 116-110 you llnanclally lately. Gains Mr. Conran and this writer were close personal should now replace losses. the fact Tom Conran was the one man responsible Sobers' missed shot with 41 se­ pull out a close gam e," Ballard w ith 18 seconds to go and sealed the friends of nearly half a century. CROSSWORD LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Begin­ for female athletes at Manchester High being conds remaining in the second added. win. ning today, devole more time We were both out of the North End, met up with recognized for their accomplishments each and energy to situations that one another officially when the YM CA opened in spring, win or lose, the same as the male athletes, A C R O S S 58 Dropist Answer to Previous Puzzle are materially meaningful. the mid-1930’s. We had played together and by town organizations. v y N ' You're In a cycle where you can against one another in several sports and later we w h a t is BEBBCIDC] I lost a friend, as did many. 1 Suppose D O W N ^ add to your resources. formed officiating teams for baseball and 5 Geit □ □ D D U D Tom Conran, somehow, crammed 100 years of VMIOO (Aug. 23-Supl. 22) It's basketball games. We served on many local 9 Bent to one Swarm □ D n E l D O very important at this time that accomplishment into his 62 years on this earth. □ □ committees together. tido Ceremony you begin to realize your desti­ □ D 12 EmareM Isle Big monksy ny Is hi your own hands. Take Many times my traveling companion to Yale □ □ Off the cuff 13 One (Ger.) Moist control of events; don't let Bowl, UConn or Harvard Stadium to watch 14 Poverty-war Siouan them control you. football games, or to Hartford to watch the Death also claimed three well-known local language agency (abbr.) LIBRA (S e p t. 23-Oct. 23) When Celtics, or to Yankee Stadium in New York or sports figures in the past week. Ed Flemke, one of N o tin g (Fr.j □uuuafD nnaQ 15 State (Fr.) bargaining for a better deal New England's top auto racing drivers for 25 Single thing □□□□ □□ nnoD Fenway Park in Boston for 16 Sat up goH today, whether you're a house­ Tirstoma □□□ anu □□□ games, was Tom Conran. years, died suddenly after completing his snow ball (D unnao ■ nDDDiDC] wife or a businessperson, you'll We enjoyed each other's company and found plowing schedule after the last snowstorm in Wild canine DDDDnin ■ [lEicinEiQ get better terms If you let the 17 Fall behind Bring up that we had many common interests. Manchester. Paul Ballsieper, former men’s club □ a n n o D ■ d c i e i c i d c ] other party woo you. 18 Gents Hindu ascetic Father Curtin, in his eulogy, said Mr. Conran golf champion at the Manchester Country Club, 19 Conquered SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) practica 26 Lacquered 42 Stolen Obstacles won't halt your prog­ “ would not be replaced in the community." and Bob Donahue, who managed the first Pratt & 20 Beyond 19 Chaeia ttata matsiwars property ress today. Instead, they’ll Truer words were never s|)oken. Whitney baseball entries in the local Twilight (prefix) (•bbr.) 30 Widamouthad 43 Chrittmsa serve to trigger your Imagina­ League after World War II, also succumbed- 22 Make Actor Sparks I often wondered how Tom Conran was able to iug 44 Go by car tion to make you think of better keep up with his daily schedule and still have time ...Back from a winter in Florida, Al "Yosh''Vin- eerUPAKP SHOT THE MMD0W...ir9 prograM Hubbub 45 Warrant ways to get things done. 24 Troubt# Englifh 32 Roof overhang to raise a fine family which numbered two cek is looking forward to a motor trip to Alaska. b r u t u s I o u r a p e ! 48 Place of SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Oac. 25 Honora architsct 35 Crash truck daughters and one son. His wife, to the very end, He plans to visit one of his sons and Bob marchandita 21) II your material desires and 27 Recondite 25 Something ra- 36 Child's marble was always in his comer. Turkington, a former teammate with local 47 Collaga mollvatlont are strong enough, 31 Biblical markable (tl.) 38 Actor Wallach you're capable of rather At the time of his death, Tom Conran was still a football teams, and a resident in Homer for By and by athletic group prapoeition 39 Ship racord remarkable achievements businessman, an independent insurance agent, years...Wally Fortin will coach the filing Junior Journsy 46 Upland plain 32 Ogles 41 Great Britain today. Keep in mind what you and active member of a half dozen clubs or High jayvee baseball team this spring. He 33 Flaxen Columnitt't 51 Macaw genus want. principality organizations at various times, holding high coach ^ local youth teams for years and is best 34 Voodoo god antry 62 Old boat CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) / offices in most. Politically, he was active with the known for guiding American Legion teams to 35 Give the alarm In promoting your present t 2 1 4 1 • 7 1 • 10 11 Democratic Town Committee. state championships...Ellington Ridge Country 38 Far (prefix) plans, you can whi support 37 Upset 12 11 14 today If you do not present Outside of his family, sports were his first love Club picked up more than 100 family member­ 36 O rtusty opus your proposals forcefully. Use and after a long playing career, he turned not only ships in its recent drive...Fred Spaulding, a local 15 tl (2 wdt.) 17 low-key tactics. to officiating, but also to lending his expertise to man, will try his luck in the Olympic Canoe and 40 Shaltar AQUARIUS (Jan. 204^. it) helping hundreds of Manchester youngsters learn Kayak trials this week at Sa'ndy Run Regional It zo 21 41 Zowie Factors win be at work today to the fundamentals of basketball, baseball and Park in Lorton, Va...John Ward of Rockville, T8 ■ ■ bring about a change that you 42 Poetic 11 21 football. For more than two decades he was in the representing Central Connecticut State Univer­ could not effact on your own it 45 Jokester ■ Little League program, coached Midget League sity, has qualified for the Division II track RBMeMBER THE TIAlVE SaiAETIMES 1 THINK I^^A SURE TH A T WAS 46 Compau If 2« 21 21 10 wW, avantuaUy. onable you to fulfill a aaciel desbe. football for a decade, jiandled the state-wide Nationals -next month with a Javelin toss of 345 AACHAEL JACKSON^ THE WHOLE WORLD le point ■ SMALL CONSOLATION TO 21 n S C E S 29 Marc h 20) Punt, Pass and Kick program for 10 years. He feet, ll'A inches in the Westfield, Mass. State AX HAIR CAUEHTON RRE7 49 Gallic (Pas. aOfWS UP IN RAAAES. MICHAEt-JACKSON. Banellla can ba derivad today was an assistant football coach at Manchester Relays. The throw eclipsed the Central record by affirmativa 2« ■ ■ from ona-to-ona relationships High for another decade. more than two feet, a mark that stood for 13 years SOPhUoaopher ■ •• ■ Voora even apt to prom in / \ Marx 17 11 His charitable contributions were not com­ for Ed Trengrove....Local insurance man Don / soma mannar through a person 52 Mexican ■ pletely overlooked as be was called front and Genovesi teamed with PGA touring pro Bob 40 «4io ta usually a n t a S ^ t s t T ^ ^ sandwich center by many groups, including the Elks, Elastwood in the recent New Orleans Open 53 Motheatan 42 41 44 ■ Jaycees, Army It Navy Club, VFW and West Side Pro-Am...Eamonn Coughlan, winner of the F ive 64 Clayaland'a ■ F 11 Old Timers for special recognition for his efforts. Mile Road Race in MaiKhester the last three walsifront 4t 10 11 12 One of the first to enlist in World War II in the Thanksgivings, captured the Waterbury 10-K UPl pholo 55 Rivar in Coast Guard, be was one of the last to come home, Sunday in aa tune-up for the 5,000 meter run in the 11 14 ODorevlota resultsi Be Russia If nearly five years later. Summer Olympics. Chicago Bulls’ Wallace Bryant (left) an(] for rebound in the first half of a game 56 Golfing aid •ur# reodara undwstond It 17 11 Washington Bullets’ Mike Gibson battle Monday in Landover, Md. 4-10 < W U i 57 TaNa (al.) » y owolding a t^ bravlotions. 643-271)., 16 - MANCHESTER HERALD, Tuesday. April 10. 19»4 MANCHESTER HERALD. Tuesday. April 10, 1984 — 17 Scholastic roundup NHL roundup Sports in Perez to talk Syracuse and Hobart tops Sophomore errors ^ C H A R LO TTE S V ILLE , Va. - Syracuse and Rangers try Hoba{;Konl inued their dominance in the national polls ortl.S, Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association lead to Cheney los^ to Bowie Kuhn coaches Monday, loading Divisions I and III. SANTIAGO, Dominican Repub­ Perez said he is ready to pitch In Division I. Syracuse swept all 10 first place Wh^n a coach stalls six sophomores, Cheney returns to action today whm lic (U P I) — Atlanta Braves pitcher votes. In Division I. Johns Hopkins was second, immediately, but Braves general he can expect growing pains. Beaver it hosts RHAM High School. Pascual Perez is expected to manager John Mullen said Perez to end dynasty North Carolina thiid, Virginia fourth. Army fifth, i return to Atlanta this week, but he coach Bill Baccaro sent a youthful Portland v OM OW 0-7-7-2 must go to New York to meet Kuhn Rutgers sixth. Pennsylvania seventh. Navy Will have to meet with Commis- contingent against Charter Oak Con­ Chenev A SCO 200 l-S-M as soon as he arrives in Atlanta. «Bv United Press International win tonight's game at the Nassau eighth. Hofsira ninth and Towson State lOth. Bastura and O'Nell.U-Gaqzolez and gipner Bowie Kuhn before he can ference powerhouse Portland and Kuhn’s office has been investigat­ Coliseum and advance to the finals Hobart took nine of 10 first- place votes Sunday Pelletier. return to the Bravesi- lineup. dropped the season opener, 7-3. WP-Bostura; LP-Gonzalez ing the Perez case and he could Give coach Herb Brooks an of the Patrick Division against to remain atop the Division HI teams. Salisbury "We made base running and fielding Perez said he planned to go to State, 8-0. was second and received the other first- face disciplinary action. Academy Award for best attitude, Washington. Washington com­ mistakes,” Baccaro said, “ but I'm Santo Domingo today to apply for a place vote. Washington third. Roanoke fourth and team with neck in the noose. pleted a three-game sweep of happy with the overall performance. 1 United States visa. He was to be Chuck Adams, a spokesman for Cortland State fifth. the commissioner's office, said "The pressure's on them, not on Philadelphia. expect we'll get better." accompanied by Rafael Antun, us,” said the New York Rangers' The Bast Catholic boys' tennis team 0)vnor of t^« Estrellas winter Kuhn had no immediate comment A passed ball and a droppied fly ball in on Perez’ status. Kuhn has sus­ coach Monday on the eve of his Unfortunately (or the Rangers, Charboneau in Class A improvM its record to 2-0 Monday with teague club in the Dominican they will be without Barry Beck, the third inning helped Portland score pended several players convicted team's deciding playoff game with a 6-1V ictory over South Windsor. Coatiti RepubUc who will act as the their captain and star defenseman. W OODBRIDGE. Va. - Joe Charboneau. a 1980 four runs and build a commanding 6-0 of drug- related charges. the New York Islanders on the John Rembela said Craig Steams and Braves’ representative. Islanders’ home jce. " I ’m very Beck suffered a separated left American League rookie ol the year, will play this lead. Winning pitcher John Bastura John Deaiiplayed well despite adverse ^ Perez, 26, was released from the season with the Class A Carolina league Prince struck out five and walked none in “ I’m confident I ’m going to win happy with our play over the first shoulder in the Rangers' 4-1 loss to conditionsJiariy Mirable and JdP San Luis prison Monday after the Islanders Sunday night and will William Pirates, the team announced. going the distance for Portland. 20 games this season despite being four games." Price also scored singles victOrys fof Prosecutor General Miguel Garcia so many days late,” said Perez, The Rangers, who have not won miss tonight's game and any Charboneau. 28. will bat fourth and play left Sophmore Rick Gonzalez was Uie the Eagles. Rich Gallacher and Jim Cordero decided not to appeal his UPI photo field when the Pirates open their season April 13 starter and loser for Cheney, walking who was chared and clapped on a Stanley Cup since 1940, had the subsequent games the Rangers Fallon and Jamie Smith and SebB conviction on a reduced charge of New York Islanders’ Greg Gilbert flips over New York might be involved in. against the Hagerstown. Md.. Suns. The Pirates --> r. four and fanning two in his seven the back by a crowd of fans on four-time Stanley Cup champion Powers teamed for doubles wins,. Cocaine possesion. jeaving the prosecutor’s office. Rangers’ defenseman Tom Laidlaw in their gameSunday Islanders heaten after two periods recently moved to Prince William County from innings of work.Both teams had seven The victory comes on the heels of a The lanky right-hander who had Alexandria. w m - hits. "Being out in the street again in . The two squads will meet at Madison Square Garden Sunday "Obviously, we will miss him ," 6-1 win over St. Thomas Aquinas of New DMn in jail since Jan. 9 said he makes me feel like a new man and night but gave up four goals in the Brooks said. "But we can’t say, Charboneau hit .289 with 23 home runs and 87 UPI photo Britain. The squad returns to action '.Would return to Atlanta either tonight in the deciding game of a series which could end RBIs in 1980. Two back operations over three Cheney scored its first runs in the confident I will never again be in final period and lost 4-1. ‘We’ve lost him and now we’re not Gamblers' quarterback Jim Kelly (12) gets hauled down from fourth inning when Mike Mancini and Wednesday when it plays St. Bernard Wednesday or Thursday. trouble with the law. the Islanders’ string of Stanley Cup victories. The Islanders are now favored to going to show up."’ years helped pul his career on the skids. in Uncasville. on a long fly ball and subsequent • Italy to play Team USA throwing error.Warren and Glen Car- An article Saturday inverted iSe USFL roundup vey each had two hits apiece for the names of the players on the Cbeney Scoreboard NEW YOR K — The 1982 World Cup champion losers. Gonzalez had a double in the Tech and Portland High tennis teams. Italian National Team will battle Team America second inning, blit was thrown out at The outcome of the match was reported May 30 at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, home after a single by Carvey. correctly, however. Cheney won, 4-1. N.J. Reds 9, Expos 6 Knicks 118, Cavaiiers 113 Gamblars 31. Federals 13 The match will be the lirst in a scheduled series Gamblers roll Feds Bowling ot international exhibitions hosted by the U.S. Scholastic MONTREAL CINCINNATI CLEVELAND 013) Calendar Wosbineten 8 7 0 6— 11 goal to increase the lead to 17-7. Harrell abrhbi abrhbi Robinson 813 8016, Shelton 812 8519, Houston 717 0 7 -8 1 Soci'er Federation to prepare the L.S. for this By Dave Raffo Rose II 5 1 2 0 Milner ct 3 1 1 1 HliBon 87 83 9, Bagiev 15 2-2 4, Free 14- First summer's Olympic Games in Los Angeles and the UPl Sports Writer scored his second touchdown on a James p 0 0 0 0 Conepen ss 5 0 2 2 2) 11-12 39, Thompson 86 2-2 8, Huston 4- Hou-Verdin 51 pass ( Fritch kick), 9:17 Pros at Bradley Bowl 7 1-2 9, Cook 1-2 8 2 2, HuUxird 1-1 5-6 7. $#co in I 16-yard run up the middle and Houston. Thomas ph 1 0 0 0 Foil ss 0 0 0 0 1986 World Cup m Mexico. The Ilaly-L.S. meeting Totals 4874 27-34 1)3. The Houston Gamblers sounded as if 4-3, led 24-7 at halltime. Little 2b 4 1 0 0 Driessn 1b 4 1 0 0 To da y W A-Bledsoe2run (Porter kick), 2:24 will be the first "full" competition between the Cunliffe Auto Raines ct 5 13 2 Parker rf 3 2 2 0 N E W Y O R K (118) BastHboll Hou-Horrell 7 run (Fritch kick), 3:53 two nations in the United States. they had just won a knock-down, "The Federals pulled within 24-13 Junior varsity baseball Stenhos r ( 3 1 1 0 Esoskv 3b 5 1 2 3 King 1818 66 32, Robinson 510 26 12, Penney at Manchester, 3:30 Hou-Fritch 39 field goal, 6:36 drug-out brawl with one of the USFL's early in the fourth quarter on a 32-yard Tom O'Connor 172-45$, Chris Plum- Carter c 5 1 3 3 Walker It 1112 Webster 1-2 82 4, Sparrow 7-14 1-2 15, Aaulnas at East Catholic, 3:15 Hou-Horrell 16run(Fritchkick), 13:49 The Italian National Team includes Paolo for Hartford Open lev 161-435, L o rry Seretio 153-434, Seon McCarthy's boses-looded sin­ Williams 814 7-10 23, Elmore 26 2-2 6, RHAM at Chenev Tech, 3:15 Fourth T D pass Irom Mike Hohensee to Greg Walloch 3b402 1 Redus It 3 0 2 1 Rossi. Marco Tardelli and Bruno Conti. Ricky elite. Trovis Cook 433, Crolg Coleman 155- gle In the bottom of the seventh capped Franco lb 4 0 1 0 (Tester 2b 5 0 0 0 Wolker 16 1-1 3, Tucker 59 80 10, Coventry at VInal Te ch, 3:15 . Taylor 32 pass (kick no good), Diivis. Steve Moyers and goalie David Brcic are Instead, they had registered a Taylor, but the extra point failed. The Bradley Bowl in Windsor Locks has p.m. Tomorrow the actual tournament 416, Bob Mike 150-416, Rollie Irish o 4-run rally and gave the Manchester Wohltrd r( 1 0 0 0 Bilardell c 4 2 2 0 Grunteld 67 85 11, Fernsten 00 82 2. Crom w ell at Bolton, 3:30 2:18 lopsided 31-13 win over the winless Gamblers closed out the scoring when the honor this week of hosting the qualifying begins. There are two squad 153-409, Dove LoChapelle 151-405, M ike iunlor varsity baseball team a 14-13win Salazar ss 5 1 1 0 Russell p 3 0 2 0 Totals 46-84 2636 118. MCC ot Yale JV, 3 )oH®«<«"Yille 23 poss (Fritch kick), expected to play for the C.S. Mcholson 404, Jim Sokolowsk1 152-400, Saturday over Eost Catholic In the (Tulicksn p 1 0 0 0 Power p 0 1 0 0 Cleveland 33 M 38 28— 113 Setiball Washington Federals in Houston Mon­ Kelly hit Vince Courville with a 23-yard Professional Bowlers Association and groupings in the toiruney. Squad “ A " Georoe Kelley 400, Doye Castogna 399, season opener (or both teams. Schatzdr p 0 0 0 0 Scherrer p 0 0 0 0 New York 3118 38 39^1)8 Manchester at Penney, 3:15 A-16,710 day night, scoring on lour ol their first touchdown pass. the $115,000 Greater Hartford Open. bowls six games beginning at 9 a.m. Rick Johnson 165-396, Mike Pagan! Paul Govarrrlno got the win with Speler ph 1 0 1 0 Hume p 0 0 0 0 Fouled out— Shelton. Total tools— Aquinas at East Catholic, 3:15 Scott out four games "The Gambler defense did what we 163-394, Don Logon Sr. 394. lour and two-thirds Innings of relief. Harris p 0 0 0 0 Cleveland 32, New York 3). Rebounds— Bolton at Crom w ell, 3:30 first downs 23 15 six possessions to put the game away The greatest bowlers in the world are “ B " bowls its first six games at noon. Bob Latvis hod three hits to pace the Cleveland 39 (Hinson 9), New York 22 rushes-vords 3— 65 14-72 expected," Hohensee said. "They did . ' Standings: CunIKte Auto Body 24-15, Lucas p 0 0 0 0 Tennis INGLEW OOD, Calif. — Los Angeles Lakers early. making their yearly appearance in “ A " squad returns at 4 for their second C ivic Pub 23-16, Vllloge Stylist 21-18, Indions’ offense. Kevin Riggs hod three Dilone II 2 0 0 0 (Robinson, Williams 4 each). Assists— Chenev Tech at VInal Tech passing yards JQS 307 "When you play a team that hasn't an excellent job ol pressuring me on Connecticut. The week-long activities six-gamme block followed by " B ” Coleman Brothers 20-19, New England hits tor the Eagles. Totals 41 6 H 6 Totals 36 9 M 9 Cleveland 17 (Free 6). New York 33 Golf sacks by-yards —62 7-41 guard Byron Scott may miss the final four (Sporrow 10). Technical— Robinson return yards 1)3 g) won a game, you're always thankful to passes. We will have to execute better will be capped by an AB C-TV telecast squad shooting its second block. - • Engine 20-19, K .M .S . 20-19, M arks Montreal 811881038— 6 Bolton at Chenev Tech regplar-season games because ol a mild knee Brothers 20-19, Duboldo Electric 20-19, aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaamaaama Cincinnati 410 200 28x— 9 2 posses 44— 27— 0 27-140 sprain suffered in the team's Pacilic Division come away victorious." said Gamblers to win. We didn't have a rteeiver open Saturday at 3:30 p.m. The final qualifying round is con­ Herltoge Bait Catering 20-19, Purdy Game-winning RBI — Esosky (1). (elected). A— 8,242. Wednesday pun** . . 5-3 3.0 644.5 Couch Jack Pardee. "Our pressure all night." Corporation 19-20, Notional Tool & Die E— Russell, Esoskv. LOB— Montreal Baseball tumbles-lost 5— 2 2-I clinching victory against Portland, it was cluded Thursday. “ B " squad rolls its penoltles-vards 5— 42 843 kept them from sustaining drives. Of In another game, Denver downed Los Tom Milton, last year's winner, is 11-21, R & G Auto 17-22, Pumpernickel 13. Bacon Academ y at C o ve ntry, 3:15 announced Monda6. back to defend his title. All of the final six games starting at 9, then “ A '' Pub 16-23, Th e Pantry 15-24. High Baseball Cincinnati 10. 2B— Rose, Solozor, Wol- Aquinas at East Cothollc, 3:15 time ot possession 38:47 21:13 course the turnovers (t.wo fumbles) Angeles 35-27. squad finishes up startiong at noon. At Buiietsl36.Buiis134 MCC at Holyoke, 3 Scott, acquired earlier this season in a previous champions from Bradley will , overage — Chris Plumley 140.28. •••••••••••••••••••••• loch. Carter, Parker, Esosky, Concep­ helped a great deal." Gold 35, Express 27 that point the field will be cut to the top cion. HR— Corter (1). Walker (1). SB— Softball Individual Statistics controversal trade involving Norm Nixon, be returning this year except Mark East Catholic at Rockville, 3:15 ^RUSHING-Woshington-V. Taylor 18 Sam Harrell scored on touchdown At Denver. Craig Penrose fired a 24 scorers. Thursday night at 6:30 they Wolker (I), Milner (4), Redus (2). S— C H IC A G O (134) slipped late in the fourth quarterof Sunday's gam Roth and the retired Earl Anthony. Pinmttfs (Tullickson. SF— Milner. Higgins 511 1-111, S. Johnson 1817 2-3 Tra ck runs of 7 and 16 yards and Jim Kelly hit 73-yard scoring pass and David Martin will begin match play with the first of Nitiofiil League standings IP H RERBBSO 22, Corzine 513 80 10, Dailey 11-K 18)3 Manchester and Entleld at Penney, Blew e 1853. Houston-Horrell 9-49, Kelly in Portland. Roth captured the 1978 GHO and ,, Bette Copeland 182-176-516, Carolyn 3:30 2-19, Fowler 84. on 14 ol 27 attempts for 367 yards and ran back a punt 79 yards to carry the three eight-game blocks. The final Lettw lch 181-459, Ellle Luce 187-491, Montreal 32, Wahtlev 7-14 44 18, Bryant 812 84 Anthony the 1976 Midas Open. Past East Gllcksn (L 82) 3 23 8 7 7 4 3 18, Oldham 26 1-1 5, Wiggins 812 2-3 18. Penney and Enfield at Manchester PASSING-Woshlngton-Hohensee 44 two touchdowns. big-play Gold to their fourth straight eight games will be bowled Friday Barbara Armour 177-470, DIone Tho- (g irls ), 3:30 27- Dartmouth loses coach winners that are bowling are Nelson mos 196-456, Tin a Bumpus 182-474, W L Pet. 6 B Schatzeder 1 13 2 0 0 0 3 Totals 56108 22-29 134. "It wasn't great, but we needed to get victory. The Gold, 6-1, struck for 25 night starting at 6:15. New York 4 T .800 — Harris 123 3 2 2 2 3 W A S H IN G TO N (136) Golf 3080. Houston-Kellv27-14307O. Burton. 1974 & '75. Tommy HUdson, Carol Moriortv 204-180-519, Evelyn Volley Regional at Bolton, 3 ^ECEIVING-Woshlngton-G. Taylor HANOVER, N.H. — Dartmouth's head basket­ back on the winning track," Kelly said. points in the second quarter by During match play they bowl a Thibodeau 205-534, Debbie Wheelock Philadelphia 3 2 .600 1 Lucas 13 0 0 0 0 0 Ballard 1620 1-2 33, Rulond 7-13 56 19, 1977, Joe Berardi. 1979, Steve Martin. Pittsburgh 3 2 .600 1 James 1 1 0 0 0 2 Mohorn 56 26 12, F. Johnson 4-12 OO 8, ball coach will accept the job at the Air Force "We hud some guys drop passes and I capitalizing on electrifying runs and one-game match against each op|k>* 176-461, Lorra ine Loponsky 176, Ro­ Cincinnati Thu rsda y 102, Walters 7-71, SlmnrKXis 854, M . 1980, Wayne Webb. 1981, and Pete semary Krai 190-518, Carol Reed 456, St. Louis 3 2 .600 1 Sobers 8)8 85 20. M cMIllen 611 4 6 16, missed some reads. We still have room Express fumbles. Russell 5 10 3 3 2 3 Malone 511 OO II, Dove 59 82 12. Baseball HOTrls 867. Houston-Verdin893, Johnson Academy after the Ivy League school finds a Weeber. 1982. nent with the 24th and final game being Betty P lum ley 464, Lois Begin 478, Lois Chicago 3 3 .500 m 508, Courville 1-23. 3 3 .500 m Power 2 2-3 4 3 3 2 1 Kopicki 800 80 0, Gibson 1-1 1-2 3, Dovis Manchester at Enfield, 3:30 replacement, both .schools said Monday. for improvement. We'll get better." Denver used the barreling running of a position round. 1 against 2,3 against 4; Brow n 472. Montreal Hyssed field goals— Washlngton- West Scherrer 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-2 OO 2. Totals 59-10317-2$ 136. Eost Hampton at Bolton, 3:15 Reggie Minton, a l etircd Air Force major, had Kelly hit Clarence Verdin on a Bo Matthews. Harry Sydney and Bill There will be a total of 160 bowlers etc. There are still tickets available,tq Hum e ( S I ) 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Softball Porter San Diego 4 1 .800 — Chicago 36 381839 6 7— 134 49. been an assisttint coach at the academy in 51-yard T D pass on Houston's tourth Johnson for 147 combined yards to competing for the top prize ol $16,000. all sessions. If you have never been to a Galaxies Cincinnati 3 3 .500 1W Russell pitched to 2 batters In 6th; Washington 38 3518 30 6 9 ^)3 6 Enfield ot Manchester, 3:30 extend its Pacific Division lead to three The “ rabbit" squad was conducted Atlanta 2 3 .400 2 Scherrer pitched to 1 batter in 8th. . Three-point goal— Malone. Fouled East Catholic at Norwich Free Colorado Springs. Colo, for 13 years, leaving in of tensive play. PBA event, you should consider ’ll. Sondl Pogonl 134-367, GIsele Golding P B — B llorde llo . T — 3:24. A — 7,092. A cadem y, 3:30 games. yesterday to fill the remaining 68 spots Los Angeles 2 4 .333 2'/i out— 1983 to accept the head post at Dartmouth. The Federals tied it in Ihe second There's nothing like the excitement q( 127-353, Ester Wells 128-342, Teresa Houston 1 4 .200 3 S. Johnson, Oldham. Total touls— Gold 35. Expreu 27 This sea.son his team regi.stercd an 11-15 record quarter with a 2-yard dive by Curtis Express rookie quarterback Steve available in the tournament. 190 being there. The rabbit squad Monday • Mlchoelson 129, Ca rolyn M iner 149-157- Son Francisco I 4 .200 3 Chicago Frid a y 404, Solly Phillips 141. M onday's Results 27, Washington 27. Rebounds— Chicago 45 Baseball overall. 6- 8 in the Ivy League. Both murks were Bledsoe, but Houston look the ensuing Young accounted for 301 yards of total professionals competed, each rolling was led by Jay Stout of Levittown, Pa. Chenev Tech at Cromwell, 3:15 Les Angeles M 8 7 827 Cincinnati 9, Montreal 6 A’s4.BiueJays3 (Bryant 10), Washington 42 (Ruland 15). Denver 825 1 7-35 Dartmouth's best in the past five years. kickoff and marched 78 yards in lour offense. Young led the Express to a 14-0 ten in two five-game blocks. The He shot 2224 for his 10 games for a 222 Los Angeles 4, Chicago 2 Assists— Chicago 29 (Whatley 13), Wosh- Portland at Coventry, 3:15 AARP Bolton at VInal Tech, 3 First plays. Kelly hit Verdin lor 40 yards and lead and later connected with running official name of Ihe “ rabbit" is the average. Local bowlers to qualify for TutsZtay's Gomes ington 37 (Bollard, Ruland 7). Technicals LA-Nelson 2 run (Zendehas kick), 5:31 (AH TImos EST) TORONTO OAKLAND — Chicago Coach Lougherv. A— 5,268. MCC at Becker Junidr College, 3 then Ricky Sanders for 20 to set up back Kevin Nelson on a 69-yard scoring "PTQ " or Pre-tournament Qualifier. ' Bruon Giordano 515, Pat Longo 512, Seftball LA-Drane 22 Interception return (Zen- the tournament include Mike Triggs Mike Plerro 554, Pearl Burnhom 480, Houston (Ryan 1-0) at Philadelphia ObrhM ObrhM Bernal takes title Harrell's 7-yard touchdown run. pass. The remainder of Ihe schedule is as G o rd o 2b 4.0 2 2 Hendrsn II 4 0 1 0 Rocky Hill at Bolton, 3:15 delos kick), 9:37 from Windsor Locks, Gary Morgan, Dot Ferrell 458, Jeannette Plerro 467. (Denny 0-1), 1:05 p.m. 5

By Susan E. Klnsnrtan sail for the windsurfing competi­ If the shape looks promising and United Press International tion in the 1984 games in Los the computer shows it likely to be Angeles. fast, a molding program is used. It MILFORD — Computers have Nine Olympic medalists work mathematically drapes a three- never raced or trimmed a sail, but for North, inciuding Marshali, who dimensional mold of the sail with they are essential to the crew at North convinced to give up studies panels of cloth for the best fit. North Sails Inc.. among the first to in research biochemistry to join Computers produce a stretch use computers in the sail-design the firm in 1969. He became map of a sail surface so threadlines business. president in 1980. in the cloth can be oriented to From designing faster sail Racing may be its first love, but stress points. The mold may be shapes to testing and measuring North has made headway in the modified to compensate for fabric stretch and even cutting the cruising-sail market in the last stretch. Sail cloth is measured for cloth, computers have given North four years, passing on design and measure strength, stretch resist­ a considerable technical saiicioth improvements intro­ ance and durability. advantage. . duced in racing circuits. Cruising To minimize human error. North ■’When I started working at sails accounted for 20 percent, or uses a computer-driven cutting North in 1969. an electronic desk $5.5 million, of-the company's 1983 table, using mold measurements calculator was pretty sophisti­ sales, Marshall said. to guide the plotter head whose cated." said John K. Marshall. The company aiso has divisions movement is precise to 1-lOlh of a North president. "Today the entire manufacturing its trademark Nor- millimeter. process is dependent on iam Mylar and Kevlar-Mylar Computers may suggest a de­ computers." laminated sail cloth, sailing gear sign, but prototype sails are still North has a worldwide computer and windsurfing saiis and masts. test^ on the water in boat-to-boat network connecting its 26 manu­ Voilrath Co. of Sheboygan, Wis., sailoffs. Several innovations pro­ facturing lofts, allowing sail de­ purchased a 51 percent controlling duced by the process have become signers and programmers to share interest in North for $3.2 million in racing standards, such as North's REA winning designs and ideas. The December. Marshall said Voilrath emphasis reflects founder Lowell trademark vertical panel Leech will give North the financial Cut genoas and main sails and North's philosophy of designing backing it needs to grow and and producing the fastest sails. valuable computer and data pro­ radial clews. It has made the 25-year-old UPi photo cessing assistance. "We’ve been able to break out of company the largest sailmaker in Specialized computer programs the traditional approach,” said the world with sales of $26 million John K. Marshall, left, president of controlled machine in the company's developed by North's engineers Marshall, “and the America’s Cup in 1983 and the "absolute leader in North Sails Inc., watches operator Felix Milford sail loft. and designers are the heart of is testament to innovative design. racing and high-performance Robles cut sail panels with a computer- North’s innovative success. We’re at toe stage where the sails." Marshall said. A flow program, acting as a strength of our competition is "Racing." he admitted, "is the computer wind tunnel, simulates technology and a technological heart and soul of the company. " coveted prize. sails for one-design racing, espe­ a lot about his sails.” air flow on a sail shape. It can approach.” North sails were carried by Marshall was sail trimmer on cially for Olympic classes. In Since 1968, competitors using measure forward force, side force nearly every competitor in 1983 Liberty, the losing L'.S. defender in one-design racing, where the only North sails have won more medals and heeling in various wind and America’s Cup campaign off New­ the Cup competition. significant variables are the sai­ in every Olympics than those of sea conditions and then define Harry S. Truman, 33rd president port. R.I., as its designers worked North, whose sails have won two lors. their preparation and their any other sailmaker."The Interna­ depth, draft and shape variations of the United States, was born on a with 9 of the 10 syndicates Olympic medals, started his loft sails. North Sails excelled. tional Olympic Committee also to make the most of a sail’s farm near Lamar, Mo., on May 8, competing for yacht racing's most with the goal of building the fa.stest "North. " Marshall said, "knows selected North to build every surf potential. 1884. More in Northeast buy first homes; downpayments iess

Bv Joseph AAlonowanv United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) — The following is a breakdown of Median price drops to $65,002 key characteristics of the 1983 housing market in selected WASHINGTON - Peoplebiiving Northeastern cities, according to the United States League their first home are more common in the Northeast last year, down homebuyers lollow ing the national nsylvania. New Jersey and of Savings Institutions. in the Northeast than anywhere troni $783 in 1981. .-\cross the I r I II d in t e r m s o 1 low Delaware. else in the country and smallei' (•oiintry. the costs were $709. down downpayments. The organization said the report The statistics, based on mortgage loans made last year, downpayments from all purchas­ trom $816 in 1981. Nationally, the report showed a was based on more than 13,000 are all median figures from the various metropolitan areas. ers seem to be a growing trend, a The study said a hettereconomic record .55.1 percent of all home mortgage loans made last year at The monthly housing expense includes real estate taxes, savings institution group said climate and mo.stly lower interest buyers made a downpayment ol 371 savings institutions. The sav­ utilities and insurance. today. rates were the main tactors in less than 21) percent, compared to ings institut ions provide the bulk of Price Monthly Down The United States League ol allow ing first-time homebuyers to the ,311.9 percent of purchasers who the nation's mortgages. Savings In.stitutions. in a bi-annual make up 39.7 percent ol the market made such downpayments in 1981. cost payment report, added that the median in 1983 - up Irom only 13.5 percent In the Northeast. 44 2 percent In terms of what kind of home Nation $65,000 $709 NA price of houses in the Northeast in 1981. made the lowerdow npaynients. up was bought, the study showed that Boston $80,525 $868 $20,400 dropped slightly during the past That trend was even more from 20.9 percept in 1981. between 1981 and 1983, the rate of Nashua, N.H. $60,026 $787 $9,003 two years — from $66,898 in 1981 to pronounced in the Northeast, condominium purchases took a The median dow npaymcnl in the sharp dip in both the Northeast and Newark, N.J. $83,015 $931 $17,640 $65,002 in 1983. where 51 2 percent ol the purchas­ Northeast was $15,000. compared New Haven, Conn. $81,900 $867 $19,998 Nationally, the median price ers bought their first residence in to $18,089 in 1981. The median the nation. was put at $65,000. compared to the 1983. That figure was a dramatic New York $89,875 $927 $30,036 downpayment nationally was However, while new home pur­ Pittsburgh $56,008 $633 $12,700 1981 figure of $72,000. jump from the 13.9 percent of $ 12, 000. chases jumped from 12 percent to Meanwhile, median monthly first-time homebuyers found in the For the purposes of the study, the 19 percent in the Northeast, they Rochester, N.Y. $51,513 $648 $7,425 housing costs — including taxes, region in 1981. Northeast consisted of the six New dropped nationwide from 26.1 Syracuse, N.Y. $52,950 $636 $10,725 utilities and insurance - were $724 The study alsoshowed Northeast England states. New York, Pen­ percent to 19.1 percent. Business Stocks are changed little in slow trading NEW YORK (UPI) — Wall Street’s fluctuated in a narrow range through­ volume totaled 71.57 million shares, increase in the cost of money and In Brief big investors, uncertain about the out the day after plunging 32.67 overall down from the 86.62 million traded strong economic growth that has led to course of interest rates and the last week. Friday. fears inflation might revive. But the Towns fight for plastic title economy, stayed on the sidelines The gain was only the third time the Analysts said Monday's slow trading government’s report Friday of no Monday and the stock market finished Dow has finished on the plus side in the indicated many investors had antici­ change in the jobless rate indicated PITTSFIELD, Mass. - A proposal to name the mixed in slow trading. 13 Mondays the market was open so far pated the Federal Reserve’s decision things might be slowing down a bit. Berkshires community of Pitlslield the "Plastic.s Analysts said the market is due for a this year. It has done just a little better late Friday to raise the discount rate it Capital of the W orld" Monday has to contend with rally soon because it is oversold but on Tuesdays, gaining in six of the 14 charges member banks for loans. Salomon Brothers economist Henry a central Massachu.sctts community that already they would not preilict what prices second-day sessions. But they were disturbed that federal Kaufman predicted the prime lending claims the title. would do in today's session. The Dow transportation average funds rates banks charge one another rate, up a point to 12 percent over the City Councilor Peter Arlos suggested the title in The Dow Jones industrial average, rose 0.72 to 484.88 but the Dow utilities rose to lOVi percent from 10 percent past three weeks, would climb to 13>A recognition of General Electric Co.’s decision to which, managed to gain 1.67 Friday, average fell 0.19 to 125.24. late Friday. percent by yearend and to 15>/4 percent • open a major research and development facility tacked on 1.68 to 1.1.33.9U Monday It Monday’s New York Stock Exchange The rate increases resulted from an by the end of 1985. in the western Massachusetts city of 52,000. 'When anyone thinks about plastics, we want them to think about Pittsfield, " said Arlos. "ft would be a good marketing tool to attract other businesses in similar fields ' Communications to Impact New England But Reubin Kravitz ol Leominster, president of Bv Steven W. Svre "The only icai asset incw England don’t realize it has to be well paid for the National Plastics Museum planned for that United Press International ways resemble that of airlines and city, responded Monday that Pittsfield’s claim has is the Yankee brain; there are no what it does,” he said. trucking — particulariy for the consu­ natural resources. We are finding that Alfred Kahn, the former presidential has "no credence." BOSTON — As the telecommunica­ mer. He said many buyers didn ’t mind The central Massacliusetts city’s roots in the our major industry, brain power, is adviser who engineered deregulation paying high prices so much if they tions industry continues to evolve at an going to be moving into telecommuni­ of the airline industry, agreed New indu.stry date to 1774, added Evelyn Hatchey of increasing pace, it will have a particu­ knew their competitors were paying the Leominster Historical Society, She noted the cations," said Howard Anderson, man­ England would be particularly af­ the same thing. larly sharp impact on the New England aging partner of the Yankee Group, a fected, but said it would not be alone. Smjthsoninn Institution has recognized the claim economy, experts say. Finding the best buys after deregula­ by designating the city of .34,500 as the site of the technology consulting firm. ”What is true in the national tion took work High technology and service- Anderson said areas that will rely on economy is even more true for New planned museum. oriented companies expected to domi­ ’’Regulation in many ways made a good communications as a "pipeline” England. Opportunities have to come softer life for the customer as well as nate the regional economy will have to also must be willing to pay more for the from neo-technology, but success is not rely on theircommunications networks the provider,” he said. Divestiture ”is service in the future. assured. New England is not the only making life much tougher for AT4T, to compete, they said Monday at a "We have been underpaying oiir area that has brains,” he said. Court limits Seabrook question conference on the region's telecom­ but the less obvious fact is it’s not going telephone bill for three generations ... Kahn said he expected deregulation to make life easier for their business CONCORD, N.H. — The New Hampshire munications prospects. That pipeline is going to struggle if we of telecommunications would in many customers.” Supreme Court has requested more information before it can consider the constitutionality of a state law that prevents utilities from charging INVITA'nON TO ■ID MyfTATION TO BID TOWN OF MANCHUIRR Ssolad bids will b« racelvad The Eighth Utilities District, LE

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IIM Zoning 0 pub- u April In ttw In Con- . Mon- I d con- Itlont: ETAL- ORTH M)-To wlflco- •nooto 1 of op- is-Roor I Main ENTS, -4»)-T0 ippros- i4»lott Mtoldo "Th» Sirtnglh of » Nation Us* in tha Homat of lu PaopI© Town Realtors observe ~ Abraham Lincoln Blanchard & Rossetto offers selling hints Getting ready tosell your house? Private Property Week your property — everybody else knobs, stuck drawers and warped First impressions are the most will be as they go through it. Don’t cabinet doors. Frechette started important, advises Blanchard & hesitate to make small, inexpen­ • Keep stairways and doorways The Manclwster Board of Realtors is observing Private Property Rossetto Realtors, an ERA asso­ sive repairs as necessary. ciate in Manchester. clear to avoid cluttered appear­ company In 1982 rHa H “ d V ® ^ " " ° “ "ced Ed Gorman, president of the • Always have your home neat ance and possible accidents. Be sure that the exterior of your and tidy. ^ a r d . Private Property Week is observed annually to remind ' home is inviting; • Keep all rooms clean, bright • “ Thin out” your furniture — and neatly arranged. The H.M. Frechette Real Estate Co. Inc., was people of their constitutional right to own private property • Lawn & shrubbery should be fewer items in a room gives a formed in July 1982. Herman M. Frechette is according to Gorman. v y y trimmed. • Turn on lights in dark rooms feeling of increased size. and raise the shades. president and treasurer, and Annette J. The national theme of Private Property Week observance is • Sidewalks edged. • Give special attention to your Frechette is vice president and secretary. They • Yard cleaned. • Depending on the season have m e Strength of a Nation Lies in the Homes of Its People” - a kitchen and bathrooms — these have combined 33 years of experience in the real • In season have flowers culti­ rooms sell more homes than any a fire in the fireplace or outdoor estate field. Their goal is to provide their clients grill ready to use. quotation from one of America’s greatest presidents, Abraham vated and blooming. other feature. with personalized service in a small office Private Property Week Lincoln. • Touch up anything necessary • Windows should be sparkling • Be aware of odors — they very atmosphere to help meet each individual’s needs. April 8-14 Gorman stated, “ We want everybody in the town of Manchester — shutters, drains, etc. clean, walls unmarred. seriously influence buyers. Be Their next step was to join the fast-growing • Consider the value of a quick to be aware of the significance of the right to own private property • Rem ove all unnecessary cautious of smells from cooking, franchise of Realty World since they offered an m coat of exterior paint. Interior material -from garage, utility smoke or baby's room. The aroma extensive training program and Relocation The widespread ownership of private property — homes decoration can make your home rooms, and closets toshow off their of coffee perking, a hot apple pie or Service. They changed their name to Realty condominiums, apartments, offices and industries - help keep our more saleable, but it will not get full storage and utility space. perfume in the bedroom are most World-Frechetle Associates. community strong and prosperous.” you a better price. Be critical of “ Fix leaky faucets, loose door­ pleasant. They continued to grow and rather than expand their South Windsor office, they chose to open another small, personalized office in February at Greenback lawn Fish offers guide to choosing a mortgage 73 W. Center St.. Manchester. MARYSVILLE, Ohio They wish to thank their friends and clients for Here’sH a I-o ' o aO guide to choosing___ < 4 the.. their continued support. (UPI) — A good looking payment ca|». with scheduled payment in­ green lawn can put more right mortgage, describing each Readily available. Starting in­ creases. green in homeowners' type of loan and listing pros and terest rate is slightly below Step early mortgage: Fixed bank accounts when they cons, compiled by D.W. Fish; market, but payments can in­ interest rate but monthly pay­ put their houses up for Fixed rate mortgage: Fixed crease sharply and frequently if ments may vary according to sale. interest rate, usually long-term: index increases. Payment caps agreed-upon schedule of Merrill Lynch tells An independent survey equal monthly payments of princi­ prevent wide fluctuations in pay­ payments. . of real estate brokers pal and interest until debt is paid in ments but may cause negative Permits rapid payoff of debt full. indicates the condition of amortization. Rate caps, while because payment increases re­ of multiple offers the lawn can increase the Offers stability and long-term rare, limit the amount total debt duce principal. Buyer's income selling price by as much tax advantages: limited availabil­ can expand. In today's market it is not uncommon to have a must be able to keep up with multiple offer situation. as $4,000. The average ity. Interest rates may be higher Graduated payment mortgage: payment increases. A multiple offer is when there is two or more offer- ED GORMAN, PRESIDENT amount was $750, or 1.44 than other types of financing. New Lower monthly payments rise Buy-down: Developer (or third on the same property at the same time. percent on a $50,000 home. fixed rates are rarely assumable. gradually (usually over 5-tO ye­ . Manchester Board of Realtors party) provides an interest sub­ When this happens, it is the listing agent - FOREST HILLS COLONUL — Adjustable rate mortgage: In­ ars), then level off for duration of sidy which lowers monthly pay­ responsibility to treat all parties involved in the Features 4 bedrooms, 2V4 baths, 1st floor terest rate changes are based on a term. With flexible interest rate, What influences home buying? family room with fireplace, treed lot with ments during the first few years of situation equally and fairly. financial index, resulting in possi­ additional payment changes possi­ the loan. Can have fixed or flexible LINCOLN, Neb. (UPI) — Age and income are 24’x4’ above-ground pool. Many extras. ble changes in your monthly ble if index changes. The listing agent .should educate a II parties involved interest rate. as to the sequence of events during the negotiatidas major influences on the home buying decision a $97,500“ payments, loan term, and/or prin­ Easier to qualify for. Buyer’s B uying Or Offers a break from higher At Merrill Lynch, we strive to treat all of our clients leccnt university study shows. Call Nancy vonHollan at 643-1439 cipal. Some plans have rate or income must be able to keep pace payments during early years. Social status, for example, was the main reason Selling A Home? and customers equally and fairly at all timc.s given by home buyers who are older and have higher Then Contact Utl OR incomes. Larger households gave a desire for a home for their GROUP I REALTORS M errill Lynch lamilies and-or a yard as a major reason for buying. F.J. SPILECKI— REALTORS IT For many younger home buyers, financial strain is For prompt and courteous aervice R e ^ t y a factor. call Barbara Wainbarg at847-1410 ______6 4 3 -2 1 2 1

l2 l K-MART PLAZA 164 EMt Center 8li*«t 3 5 295 HARTFORD TPKE., VERNON 872-7777 OPEN SUNDAYS SEEVINO- MofKKMter, Vsrnon. Tollond CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. # j m m n o n m tm ta il Hartford. Oollon. Ellington ond Sooth Windtor 99 EAST CENTEk ST. WOODLAND MANOR MANCHESTER CONDOS 157-211 Homtstead St. Manchester Presents 2 VERNON Fine Locations For • I Bodroom S41.B00 Your New Homer' •2 Bedroom Townhouies $51 .BOO* FACT: MERRILL LYNCH REALTY •9 Bedroom Townhouiei w/2 ev gir. SS6.B00* sells more homes in Connecticut than any other real estate company!* - ■. ■ GREEN HILL ESTATES *Now carpotlHg ioclHdod In price or $1,500 off Sandhill Rd., South Windsor RAISED RANCH VERNON off price St keep the oxltthif waH-to wall. Do some companies advertise in the newspaper more? YESI 3 BEDROOMS — 1*A BATH Do some companies advertise on TV more? YES! . 126 X131 LOT $79400 Do some componies'advertise on radio more? YESI MANCHESTER-43 FOREST STREET & HOU£: Built 1»73 Excellent 10% VRM no points n n f lih! S ’® original Cheney Estates. Sound and EvSEnRT.y'bMutlful irtllng: Lanscaped Does any company sell more homes? NOI” EXT^IO H : Shinglei; Anhalt Roof So Impossible to reproduce S. RAINBOW ESTATES INTERIOR: Living Room: Dining Room: Patio: Kitdien- mortgage available. [vt bath: 3 bedrooma: Family Room Postures large en- off Dart Hill Rd., South Windsor GARAGE; 2 Car Baiement lKbatiw.Mp.lMt.paal^oftlwBESTeaa4asia EXTRAS: W/W CarpMing: drapea: Fireplace: woodatove: Hin?nnstalrcase, living room garage door opener: water aoltner. tewa far priM, caaittiaa, tiza A tecatioa! torv h ®’^' ^TOdfoized kitchen and lava- APPLIANCES: Diabwaaher: Ret./Freeaer: Waaher' W HY? We have the formula for results Dryer ®®‘^ond floor has four bedrooms, SVz baths O R * BB heat: 1040 gal. tank: “Total ^toketlng”!!! REALTY CO. INC. ANNUAL TAX; tl.S00.00 Open Sun. 1-4. OCCUPY: Immediate If you wont service and bottom line results, contact your local 99 EAST CENTER ST. Merrill Lynch Realty office today! Let them explain our success ^ p^j.GomaTii KEITH REAL ESTATE formula to you. 9*a?age MANCHESTER 5,”r- ‘'nealestaie 643-2692 — 643-6472 ] 646-5252 640-4126 •Merrill Lynch Realty sold a home In Connecticut ^^4LTY WORLD-Frechette Associates every 43 minutes in 1983 based on on 84 hour work week! 73W iilC inlir8l. *22 a Bindiistir **ln 1983 our dollar volume was over $571,000,0001! REAUY WORLD. 644-3481 646-7709 Al Weitliidige AsibUf^k W1d9 o f formr offend Home shopping, financing can be one-stop Shopping for home mortgage essential underwrites, processes and prints all tailor the mortgage to individual needs. Suppose your company has trans­ on-line computer counseling we can CHICAGO (U P I) - Finding the best dent of the Real Estate Research Corp. an interest rate. If rates fall, the buyer the interest rate, the monthly payment, loan documents, and generated closing Westledge Financial Services, Inc. is ferred you to the Greater Hartford area provide gives both new and sophisti­ mortgage for your new home these Even industry professionals do not could be stuck with a burdensome the term of the loan or the principal documents and verification materials administered by Richard Rist, Man­ and you have only 30 days to select a cated potential buyers every possible days is not a job for tjfe lazy or the faint agree on how to categorize today’s monthly payment. balance. including letters to employers and ager of Mortgage Services. A resident home, purchase-it, close, the sale, and financing program available.to them." of heart. mortgages. In general, however, here In addition, FRM s usually require An adjustment in the interest rate is credit checks. of Somers, Rist brings 18 years of move. Do you despair? Do you feel Customers need not enter a bank. In the ISSps:^'nnost home buyers are the available mortgages, their the buyer to pay a huge amount of the trickiest. Most ARMs stick to 1-, If the information which is fed into banking expertise to this newly- forced to rent something for six months With an in-house computer capable of plunked d o ^ 20 percent of the price terms and their pitfalls. interest over the 30 years — as much as 3-or 5-year adjustment periods. created post. until you can locate a home? Do you try processing and printing mortgage the computer is correct, the initial and signed up to pay off the rest over 30 $307,249 on an $80,000 loan at 16 percent. When the interest rate changes, the decision will reflect the final decision Westledge is the largest independent to get a loan assumption on a house you applications and all land documents, years at a fixed interest rate. In the Since interest payments are deducti­ monthly payment changes too. That is with a very high degree of accuracy. real estate firm in Greater Hartford. can tolerate? buyers can be pre-qualified on the spot, ’80s, fixetf rate mortgages are scarce — Fixed-rate mortgages ble from federal income taxes, buyers good news for the buyer if the interest Once the computer program has all the It’s seventh regional sales center Westledge Associates, whose Vernon so they know immediately what price and the alternatives can be The traditional fixed-rate mortgage in higher tax brackets may find the rate goes down, but it can become necessary data elements, it generates opened last month in Suffield at 110 office is located at 148 Talcottville home they can afford. It follows the bewildering. lasts 25 or 30 years, with the interest traditional FRM attractive. Other disastrous news if rates skyrocket as for the customer a personalized printed Mountain Road. The towns serviced Road, can keep you from having to "one-stop shopping" concept now Adjustable rate mortgages now rate set at the beginning of the loan. buyers may find paying hundreds of they did two years ago. report that even includes an estimate of through this newest office include elect any of these unappealing soiu- popular and prevalent in retailing. account for almost three-fourths of the The first payment is the same as the thousands of dollars of interest Buyers considering a mortgage with income tax savings. Suffield, Enfield, Somers, Windsor, lions. Through its revolutionary new 'This program is based upon an market. Balloon mortgages are still last payment. At the end of the appalling. an adjustable interest rate should insist The personal printout is one feature and Windsor Locks. The Vernon office mortgage-making program, buyers association with The First Boston around, as are the wraparounds and mortgage, the buyer owns the home Short-term F R M ’s, a very recent on a “ cap" or ceiling on the amount of that Westledge agents find especially services Manchester, Vernon, South cun get immediate conditional loan Capital Group and has only been on the real estate contracts that boomed outright. wrinkle on the old formula, decrease change, industry professionals say. appealing. They need not have to be Windsor, Bolton, Tolland, Ellington, approval, and after selecting the home market since last October. Westledge during the 1979 to 1982 "creative Most people think the FRM is "th e” that total interest payment But, they warn, some lenders do not financial wizards in order to perform East Windsor, Coventry, Stafford, they love, find the right mortgage plan is one of the first firms in the nation to financing" craze. mortgage, but its popularity dates back dramatically. offer interest rate caps. the needed and complicated calcula­ Willington, Ashford and Union. for it. process application, and arrange have been invited by First Boston If you do happen upon a fixed-rate only to the Depression. Before then, “ Short termers" offer higher Caps also are available on mortgages tions. The possibility of error is The firm has over 100 full-time sales for a closing often as quickly as three Capital Group to participate. mortgage, it is likely to be a "short most home buyers took balloon mort­ monthly payments in a briefer period with adustable monthly payments, but reduced, too, because the report will associates. A member of Homequity- weeks. Another important benefit is the time term er" of 15 to 20 years' duration. One gages that had to be re-financed or paid (commonly 15 to 20 years) at a lower they can cause problems. reveal immediately any inversions or /Homerica. it is a designated national But then you don’t have to be savings offered by the program. When Chicago builder is even offering a off within two or three years of interest rate (usually about 10 per­ When a monthly payment is not large mis-entries. A customer on a tight corporate relocation center. Last year, transferred to take advantage of this the buyer selects a home and submits a zero-interest loan. purchase. cent) . Buyers who can afford them love enough to cover the interest due, that schedule can carry the report with him it achieved a 54 percent increase with exciting new program. It is an mortgage application, Westledge will As a buyer, you must know what you When banks began calling in these them, industry observers say. unpaid interest is added to the balance and go over it at leisure. Regardless of total sales for 1983 of more than innovative alternative for anyone be able to issue an instant mortgage need and be willing to search hard for balloons after the crash of 1929, and “ There’s a strong feeling again that of the loan. This “ negative amortiza­ whether a customer buys or not. the $115,000,000. interested in baying a home. It commitment, contingent upon verifica­ it. There are no "standardized" thousands of Americans lost their it’s not a bad thing to have a house paid tion" can mean the buyer actually owes printout is his or hers to keep. It’& Persons wanting details on this new eliminates the apprehension, frustra­ tion. Final commitment could mate­ mortgages and no disinterested organi­ homes, the federal government off,” said Dali Bennewitz, an econo­ more than the sum of the loan. called an Affordability Analysis and is mortgage-lending service should con­ tion and uncertainty which is some­ rialize as soon as todays, as compared zation that keeps a running list of what stepped in. mist with the U.S. League of Savings If you absolutely must have predicta­ absolutely free for the asking. tact their nearest Westledge center. times associated with the home financ­ to 45 to 60 days, which is currently the is available. The Federal Iflousing Administration Institutions. ble monthly payments you may find a The loans will be arranged through ing process. average time between sale and closing. Above all, you should be aware that developed the fixed-rate mortgage as a payment cap an advantage. And if The First Boston Capital Group, a This nationwide program, coordi­ Based on the buyer’s financial status, the biggest problem facing home tool to revitalize the real estate market. interest rates go down, a payment cap subsidiary of First Boston Corporation, Executive moves Adjustable-rate mortgages nated by a computer network, is the computer used by Westledge buyers is not accessible mortgages but Later, Veterans Administration loans may mean you will pay off your so an ample supply of mortgage money NEW YORK (UPI) — Dual career ffered through Westledge Financial Financial Services provides buyers affordable housing. Until the late 1970s, linked the fixed-rate mortgage with the These go by many names — "negoti­ mortgage a little sooner. will be available. Rates are very families make up the fastest growing ■icrvices. Inc., a new affiliate of with comprehensive information about federal regulation of savings institu­ "American Dream" in the minds of able rate mortgages," "variable rate Graduated payment mortgages, in­ competitive. segment of all executive relocations, a tVcstledge Associates, Realtors. their best mortgage plan, the right tions, the m ajor lenders, helped keep returning G I’s. mortgages,” “a^ustable mortgage cluding two variations on this theme, Over 240 mortgages are available survey shows. The concept has been well received, home purchase price, maximum mort­ real estate prices reasonable. With The FRM means security and loans” are just a few. No matter what have been popular among younger through the program, from fixed-rate The recently released study also .iccording to Ann Koenig, Manager of gage the buyer can afford, and monthly deregulation, "we have radically stability. The cautious home buyer you call them, the adjustables are the buyers. 30-year plans to adjustable rate loans. indicated pressures of relocation in the Westledge Vernon office. “ This payments that fit the buyer’s budget. changed the proportion of households knows exactly what the payments will hot new ticket in the housing market. The straight GPM has a fixed Using the financial data provided by such households are especially great, program has created a tremendous The computer sets up criteria and in the United States that can buy be and exactly when they will end. While there is no typical adjustable the buyer, the computer system will and that corporations need to be more advantage forourclients. whether they makes an initial decision on whether homes," said Leanne Lachman, presi­ On the other hand, the FRM locks in mortgage, all vary one of four factors: Please turn to page 6 are buying or selling a home. The the mortgage will be accepted. It also choose several suitable plans, then sympathetic and supportive of them.

NEED TO MOVE QUICKLY? m m t AssoaAiES, realtoki HOUSE CALLS! "Serving all Greater Hartford with Quiet Diftinction" ’C T Here are some of the people at VERNON 872-1100 Ed Gorm an’s that can show 148 TalcoItvHI* Road Varnon you how to move quickly. If you need a new home or want y%sk Vernon $86,500 to sell your present one call Due to the inconvenience of Don’t let this temporary eyesore Tom Eastman, Laurel Guil- SPRING IS working in our Manchester office on the exterior cause you to miss beault, Tom Cantone, Yo Yo the Ideal time to move right in during remodeling, our agent will out on the personal, experienced do everything possibie to accom­ help inside. Carroll or Mary-Jane Pazda i=r this weil-maintained 4 BR Coio- now. Call 646-4040 and move modate your needs including nial. Offers 1V& baths, country making house calls. quickly. kitchen, covered deck, garage, and alum, siding. All in a conve­ TOM CANTONE nient iocation. Wastladga AsiociatM 871-1100 D. W. Fish is Happy and Proud to announce the addition of 3 new personable agents to our staff. Manchofter $74,900 rv ' John is ready and Roxanne brings to us willing to assist in all her broad knowledge ENJOY SPRING ^ F i I t Cynthia, before join­ your home buying of the Real Estate ing D. W. Fish Realty, from the deck of this immaculate — ■' \ — and selling needs. He market, having par­ Colonial that’s just 3 years old. 3 ^ earned a degree in Is an native of Man­ ticipated in the suc­ Business Admin­ cessful conversion of BR’s, 1V4 baths, kitchen, and fire- chester, attended lo­ istration from Cen- ajSi f cal schools, spent 4 the Bushnell Tower placed living room. trai Connecticut years in the U. S. Ma­ C o n d o m in iu m in Waftladga Astodotsf 872-1100 State University. Her rines and is presently downtown Hartford real estate experi­ "W living in Manchester as well as the past ence includes sev­ with his wife and two years in our He­ >1 eral courses as well their 3 children. He is bron office specializ­ TOM EASTMAN LAUREL GUILBEAULT as some personal in­ an active community ing in new construc­ vesting. member and would tion along with exist­ Manchester $52,500 like to help you in any ing home sales. way possible. r— CAREFREE Cynthia Panella John W. Dumas Roxanne W. Elwell Living offered in this townhouse ED GORMAN condominium where living is af­ ASSOaATES Real Estate Mortgages fordable! 2 BR’s, baths, fully 604 MIDDLE TURNPIKE EAST, MANCHESTER Vernon Circle 243 Main Street applianced kitchen & patio. 646-4040 Vernon THE D. W. FISH COMPANY Manchester v .. -- WastlMige AstociotM 872-1100 872-9153 646-6760 ' * i’ ^4 McCavanagh Realty’s reputation built on service “Our reputation is built Richard, and their young­ She is also active with McCavanagh way of do­ McCavanagh Realty,” asserts, “service is more Shopping for mortgage essential Some facts on service,” proudly est daughter, Maureen, at local PTA efforts in the ing things. McCavanagh confidently than an empty slogan." claims McCavanagh 99 Keeney St. In her free schools of her children. McCavanagh Realty Realty's president and time, Barbara enjoys Completing the McCa­ specializes in ail aspects Continued from page 5 ing interest rates made conventional can a buyer who plans to sell the house about Sentry mortgages scarce. before the balloon comes due. founder, James R. McCa­ French cooking and en­ vanagh team is Diane of local real estate: resi­ vanagh. To ensure that all richment courses at Man- Willett, holder of the GRI dential, condominiums, The H. J. McKinney Company 1 interest rate but low monthly payments Most involve some sort of seller- But if the money does not materialize backed financing. Not all are legal. or the value of the house goes down, the clients receive uniformly chester Community designation, signifying custom home building, at the beginning of the loan. An fine service, each McCa­ College. her advanced real estate industrial and commer­ adjustable GPM also includes a fluc­ These arrangement are not as buyer who cannot find new financing, is Did you know th at... A ppraisera popular in 1984 because “there is so in deep trouble. “When (a balloon) is vanagh agent is well- Equally well- training. Diane, who spe­ cial leasings and rentals. tuating interest rate. Sentry has four regional offices vers^ in all aspects of established in the Man­ cializes in constructing Call now for your real Low beginning payments help young much money looking for work in the poorly applied it's like a smoking gun," mortgage market,” said Garth Mar- Marston said. East of the River? mortgage financing, chester community is life­ financial packages for her estate needs. Any of the buyers qualify more easily for their , whether it be CHFA, long resident Nancy customers, particularly real estate professionals Robert J. McKinney mortgages. In both GPM’s, payments ston, co-author of “Creative Real Other “creative” mortgage instru­ Sentry has a large full-time Estate Financing,” a mortgage ments have similar pitfalls. CHIF, FHA, VA, ARM. Taylor. Nancy, a product first-time home buyers, is at McCavanagh Realty rise along with income, a situation professional staff? Farmers Home or of local schools, offers her active in real estate se­ will be happy to provide some young families find attractive. handbook. In a real estate contract, the seller 808 Main Street, Manchester Still, balloon mortgages have main­ holds the deed to the house until the Conventional. customers not only a minars in the Manchester you with free appraisals, But do not be too dazzled: in the Sentry belongs to three compu­ ‘‘In addition, our wide-ranging knowledge area. market analysis, or just 643-2139 mortgage market, adjustables can be tained their appeal in states such as buyer makes all the papaents. But the terized multiple listing systems California where property values run buyer may not be considered the legal agency is fully-equipped of the housing market, but Diane was raised in some free advice. “At the biggest gamble of all, industry offering the widest property with state of the art also an extensive back­ East Hartford and has professionals warn. high and sellers are anxious to help owner if the house is damaged or buyers make a purchase. destroyed. exposure? on-line computer capacity ground in the banking resided in Manchester for ‘ You’ve got to sit down and say ‘If which complements the business. Before becom­ the past 12 years. Along the worst happened to me. how much Put simply, a balloon is a loan from In a wrap-around mortgage, the Sentry belongs to the world’s ALIBRIO REALTY, INC. seller to buyer that must be paid off in seller continues to pay off the original three distinct multiple ing a real estate agent, with her husband, Doug, 182 South Street could 1 pay on my mortgage? Would the largest and most powerful reloca­ listing services we use in Nancy worked for seven former principal of East payment be so high it would cause me full within a short time, usually two to mortgage. The buyer pays the seller an Manchester, Connecticut 06040 five years. The buyer takes a balloon in amount equal to the original mortgage tion system? locating just the right years in a local bank, the Hartford High School, Di­ to sell my house?’” Ms. Lachmansaid. selection of houses for our last three years as a ane is busy raising three the hope that alternative financing will plus the extra selling price. Sentry has a long-standing work­ be available by the pay-off date. “Wraps” usually go atbelow-market customers.” McCava­ manager. This combina­ sons while enjoying polit­ ‘Creative financing’ A buyer who can borrow from family prices, making them attractive to ing relationship with many lending nagh said. tion of real estate and ics, the theater, and her finance is in the McCava­ SPRING LISTING SPECIAL!! Under this category come all the or friends, or who can count on an buyers. But they are also extremely institutions? Typical of McCavanagh church group. Diane is a Realty’s commitment to nagh tradition of full former board member of ingenious arrangements buyers and inheritance or a raise, can legitimately risky — and against the law in many Sentry is proud of its creative Tou Save Hundreds of Dollars!! sellers started cooking up when climb­ consider a balloon, Marston said. So states. customer service is Bar­ service to its customers. the Unitarian Universal- advertising and marketing bara McConville. Bar­ Nancy and her husband. ist Society: East List with Alibrio Realty, Inc., before May 15.1984 and when we sell programs? bara has nearly a decade Bob, reside at 115 Wa­ These real estate pro­ your proporty during th6 torm of th© listing agreement. . . of realty experience in the shington St., in Manches­ fessionals provide McCa­ Realtor makes selling pleasant and profitable Sentry has a proven track record Manchester area. Her ter with their four boys. vanagh Realty customers having been involved in over 3,000 background includes real Nancy enjoys bowling, with the same personal­ We Will Pay the Va% Connecticut transactions locally? Thinking about selling your home pleasant and profitable experience. your property? estate sales, rentals and politics and church work ized, friendly and reliable construction. in her spare moments. service that marks the Sales Taxi! yourself? Without professional help, If you’re still convinced you can sell • Are you able to give wide exposure Sentry is most proud of its This offer is good for all properties, residential or investment, “East of you’ll, find it will be a time-consuming your own home, the Manchester Board to your property? Convinced that real est­ relationship with its clients..-. ’Just ate is a cornerstone of any the River." We further pledge to advertise and multiple list all proper­ energy-draining experience. For those of Realtors asks you to consider ttese • After considering the above points, ask them.' who are unacquainted with the seem­ points; < do you still want to sell your home sound financial planning Property being recycled ties. Call us today for complete details at.. ingly endless amount of details in • Are you able to determine the yourself? A qualified professional who Sentry has a positive attitude? package, Barbara has ad­ vised five of her six NEW YORK

UNMHIE M M ESTATE Tho oplondor el yootoryMr unfotdo whon y w CHENEY HISTORICAL DISTRICT tour tiio graclouo mini oototo with ■ broothtak- Th ii 6 room homo haa tha charm of yoatarday kig vlow tot on 3-30 tcrot. T h it chtrmino hlo- with tha convonlonoaa of today. Parquat floor In Redwood Farms t vie V ld orim foatufto 18 roomo including t rw dming room, canvas callinga, uniqua doors, 3 Outstanding 4 bedroom Colonial with fantastic view of the coptlon room, mutic room, otudy, brookfatt badrooms, 1 bath and a 1 car garaga. CHFA fi­ room, butlor'o pantry, gama room, art otudlo. nancing. Connecticut country side. Large fireplaced family room EAST HARTFORD $85,900 corriaga houta, 7 badroomo. 5 baihroomo. 3 car and fireplaced living room, plus formal dining room. 2 car EAST HARTFORD $69,900 garaga 8 raar ataircma garage and more. Price: $112,000. A house you can call homel Lovely 6 Pure pleasure best describes this at­ tractive Custom Built 6 room Ranch room Colonial with 3 bedrooms, with fireplaced living room, IVi baths, baths, completely remodeled kitchen and aluminum sided exterior. A plea­ family room and enclosed rear porch. Let Bob Conner show you A careful buyers dream. sure to see. this lovely Condo... 643-4060 643-4060 RtAL ESTATE SERVKES REAL ESTATE SCffWICES We Can Help You Become Bolton $83,500 Mandieettr $65,000 20 RNNUTES FROM HARTFORD MAKE AN OFFER a Radwood cualom Conlamporary on lava! 7 rooms. 4 badooms, 1 bath. Colonial. Convo- lightly woodad acra m oulat araa. nlant localion — on bus Mna. XRRSh ESTER QUALfFIES FOR CHFA 0 7/8% PRIpES m 7 “REALE PROFESSIONAL!” A NEW CONCEPT IN CONDOMINIUM LIVING Call

6 4 6 -4 5 2 5 Lovely 3 room Condo with now wall-to-wall carpet, bal- EAST HARTFORD $90,900 EAST HARTFORD $115,000 “A8k for Dan” cony and close to shopping, and transpclation. Price. Selective buyers will single out this ex­ Exquisite taste Is evident In this gorgeous 8 ceptional 1-owner U&R Raised Ranch room Colonial with 4 bedrooms. 1M baths, fI- featuring 4 bedrooms, 2 fuii baths, 2 fi­ replaoed family room and oversized 2 car replaces and artfully landscaped arage BaauUfully landscaped and In prime DANIEL F. REALE, INC. ZINSSER AGENCY gicatlon. An outstanding buy. grounds. One of the nicest In the area. S i REALTOaS __ 643-4060 175 MAIN STREET, MANCHESTER 888.1511 MAt. eSTATC Ctf«V1C«8 REAL ESTATC SERVKES 643-4060 iWIMH....s.Sf aegiaei WHfc ttiwMfat 23 East Center St,, Manchester 643-4060^ I dan aur Wee laAaiieomHouei l e t i a al ie i W e n w k eiraal Monday thru Friday 1-S. Saturday 98. Sunday 11-8. If thaaa Umaa art not convanlant caN us tor an appointmani that maae your so

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