
Bonnet project Is okayed Garman’s hooked Bolton hires by Insurance officials on fresh trout town attorney page 3 ... page 11 .. page 7 Clear tonight; Manchester, Conn. sunny Thursday Wednesday, Aug. 3, 1983 — See page 2 iianrhpBlrr HrralJi Single copy: 25<t Nicaragua charges ‘Nazi’ tactics in use By United Press International surprise statement saying border incidents with Nicaragua had been Nicaragua charged Honduras is reduced. holding 7,500 Nicaraguan Miskito Indians in "Nazi-style” camps, but Castillo said, however, that the Honduran officials said the leftist controversial joint maneuvers in­ Sandinista government had forced volving 3-4,000 U.S. troops would the Indians to flee for their lives. begin as scheduled as early as Interior Minister Tomas Borge August. Martinez told a news conference: The fledgling civilian demo­ 'f "The Indians are prisoners in cratic government in Honduras Nazi-style concentration camps, took a blow when the president of detained by force." He estimated the country's first freely elected 7,500 Nicaraguan Miskito Indians government in a decade suffered were living in two Honduran two heart attacks in less than 12 camps. hours earlier in the week. Honduran and international ob­ servers, however, charge the Sandinistas have forced the Indi­ ans to leave their native homes along the Caribbean coast of Nicaragua when the leftist govern­ Average ment "militarized" the area to flush out rebels. Many other displaced Indians, U.S: home wtinatlon” however, have banded together in their own rebel army to launch Is $93,000 attacks across the border against the Sandinista regime. WASHINGTON (UPI) - The ATMCC Borge called the Indian anti- Commerce Department reports Irsr/fll Sandinista army's leader, Stead­ the average cost of a new house man Fagoth, "a compromised weht up $3,500 to a record element... who we discovered is an $9^,000 in June as sates of new ~-p.- agent of the CIA and worked for houses dropped 2.9 percent. (former Nicaraguan president ' The average new home price "1 Anastasio) Somoza," in June was nearly $io,ooo ..nm f ' ’ s ^ • '* ‘ 1 The Sandinistas toppled the higher than the average for all Somoza regime and his dreaded of last year, $83,900. Herald phofos by Tarquimo national guard in 1979. AJlhough salesjof new hotnes In southern Nicaragua, 111 civ­ were down in June, they stiH ilians fled Tuesday into Costa Rica maintained a healthy annual That time of yean when government army units cut saletKrate of 638,000, Commerce off their food, refugees told Red said Tuesday. It isn’t exactly football weather, but National Football Pleasantville, N.Y. Simms and Brunner are fighting it out Cross spokesmen. But bousing industry officials League teams like the New York Giants are already at for the No. 1 QB slot. Above right, second-year running The civilians were to be trans­ say higher mortgage intq^st work, preparing forthe coming season. In photoat above ported today to a refugee center rates already are keeping buy­ back Butch Woolfolk out of Michigan listens to some about 250 miles northeast of San ers away from new subdivisions left New York Giant quarterbacks Phil Simms (left) and music on his Walkman and spends time with his Jose where 400 Nicaraguans al­ and the growth rate for bouse Scott Brunner, friends for now, stand along the sideline girlfriend, Regina Pierce, during a break. ready reside. sales has peaked for the year. during pre-season workouts at the Giants' camp at 'The group, mainly women and The slowdown in the sales children, said the Nicaraguan rate meant there was a 5.7- N. army cut off their supply of food month supply of houses unsold and other goods to their villages at the end of June, the highest because the soldiers believed the inventory-to-sales ratio since residents were harboring anti­ December. After adjustment government rebels. Red Cross for seasonal trends there were officials said. 289,000 new houses still unsold In Honduras, Defense Minister at the end of the month. Col. AmilcarCastilloSuazomadea Truce is declared 4T in Meadows fight By James P. Sacks management relused to remove Herald Reparter warnings from the employees' files and restore back pay for Negotiations Tuesday afternoon Hogan. between the health care employees Following the disciplinary ac­ union and the Meadows Convales­ tions by management, oneof which cent Center resolved a heated involved a confrontation between labor dispute "in a manner satis­ Hogan and a supervisor, union factory to all sides," a union members conducted a demonstra­ spokesman said today. tion in the home and said the Staff organizer Wayne DeCapua. management was trying to break who represents District 1199 of the the union. * New England Health Care Em­ A three-year contract between c ployees Union, said members of 230 workers at the Meadows the nursing home administration expires in October and will be '■VUs ' • ' W l and its Michigan-based parent renegotiated in September. corporation met with union repre­ "Were happy with the out­ sentatives at the Meadows for come." DeCapua said. “We more than three hours Tuesday to walked away from the table feeling resolve union grievances. pretty good — we opened a good The union had objected to the dialogue that should help avoid disciplining of two employees and future problems." to a new disciplinary procedure that was instituted without negoti­ Rich Umphrey, a 6-foot-2, 255-pounder who won the ations. District 1199 representa­ the ’83 season, which starts in just over a month. More starting center position a year ago, works with the tives said the policy was arbitrary photos, page 11. and was part of an attempt to Inside Today weights at the'Pace University camp to help get ready for demoralize employees before con­ tract talks that begin this 24 pages, 4 sections September. Advice ..................... DeCapua said he had agreed not A re a .......................... to comment on the particulars of Business................... Condos planned on Glastonbury line Classified............................ 2 the settlement: and nursing home C om ics.................. If a Company beaded by promi­ representatives said through a E ntertainm ent.................. detached single- and two-family dence zone aliows a density of 1.3 According to the application secretary that they would not L o tte ry ............................ nent local developer Lawrence A. units on property with frontage on units per acre, while a PRD zone Fiano has its way, a 29-acre parcel they would be served by Glaston­ comment. O bituaries................... Keeney Street. The development permits up to four. bury sewers. Union-management relations in O pinion.................. of land near the Manchester- would be located near the intersec­ The proposed development P e o p le ta lk .............. Glastonbury town line will soon be The application is scheduled for the home have been strained since tion of Keeney Street and Bush Hill would leave the property with a public hearing at the commission's S ports............................ home to a 63-unlt planned resi­ mid-July when maintenance man T e le visio n ............................ Road with an entrance located density of about 2.25 units per acre^ Sept. 12 meeting. John Hogan was suspended for two dence development. about 1,100 feet north of the The plans call for the property to W eath er................. In plans filed Monday with a The proposed development is days after an incident with a Glastonbury town line. be divided into 63 lots, each near a proposed planned residence supervisor and head cook Robert zone-change application at the To develop the property, Gerald containing more than 9,000 square Manchester planning and zoning development near Country Club Krajewski received a warning. SAMPLES TODAY Investments needs approval by the feet of land. The units would be Drive and South Main Street by the The Manchester Herald today con­ office, Fiano, as president of The union had threatened to file Planning and Zoning Commission located around a circular roadway MIP 14 Corp. that was rejected by grievances with the National La­ tinues its sampling program to bring Gerald Investments Inc., indicates for a zone change from rural with one driveway to Keeney the PZC and is now the subject of copies of the newspaper to non­ ^|Mt the developers want to build 63 bor Relations Board immediately subscribers In Manchester. residence to PRD. A rural resi­ Street. an administrative appeal. following Tuesday's meeting if i' Wc(liic.s(l;jy. ■ i - MANCHKSTKR HKRALD, Wednesday, Aug. 3, 1983 IVIANCIIK.STKU IIKHAI.I). Aug. 3. 1983 - 3 Governors to decry deficit State came up with plan Peopletalk Manchester at coming date with Reagan In Bennet conversion snafu settled Koo at Balmoral? Lawn backers still hopeful By Alex GIrelli By Arnold Sowlslak and told reporters later that would chard, author of the Democratic Herald City Editor Leaders of the fund drive to save from A London newspaper says soft-porn movie star UPl Senior Editor be his message to the president at statement, was on the verge of Koo Stark has been invited to join the royal family the meeting requested by Reagan trying to force a vote of the full development the central seven acres of the The Bennet conversion project got Cheney Lawn,in Manchester's historic district at their traditional summer vacation at Balmoral P O R TL A N D , Maine — The new some time ago. association on the measure, but back on the track Tuesday afternoon said Tuesday they’re still optimistic about saving Castle, Queen Elizabeth's Scottish home. and old leaders of the National But Thompson made clear he was blocked by Republicans who when the state Insurance Department the property for historic preservation.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages13 Page
-
File Size-