PAGE TWELVE - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD,Manchester, Conn., Tues,, July 20. 1976 By 1779 the British navy suf­ Obituaries fered from a dwindling supply of tall masts for its ships, previously cut from pine The weather forests in Maine. British Inside today General MacLean was sent to Clearing tonight. Low6 In 606. Fair Sister and brother die Penobscot Bay to collect VERNON Gregory Eussiere, 24, of South and cooler Thursday with highs In the Area news ...14-15 Ekiltorial ........... 4 timber. An expedition of 1,000 Walter Grabowski, 19, of 12 Oak 70s. Chance of rain 50 per cent tonight hours apart on Monday patriot troops' under General Dennison, Mass., was charged Mon­ Classified ... .16-18 Obituaries.......10 Lovell left Boston in July to St., Rockville and Gary E. Crandall, day with illegal possession of con­ and 20 per cent Thursday. Comics............19 Sports............ 11-12 16, of 2 Green Rd., Vernon, were Dear Abby.......19 A double committal service for Duxbury of Springfield, Mass.; five attack the British, but Lovell trolled or restricted substance after Mrs. Jane Edwards Dolsen, 84, of lacked sufficient strength and ^arged Monday night with criminal a complaint was received about grandchildren and several nieces and the attack never came off. Milford, formerly of Manchester, nephews. mtempt at larceny_after a complaint someone sniffing something from a After a 47-day stalemate, the was received from a resident of Park and her brother, Ellsworth (Barney) The funeral will be Thursday at 10 plastic bag in the area of Howard Americans were frightened West Apartments in Rockville. Edwards of Groton, who died within a.m. at the Mary Taylor Methodist off by British reinforcements Johnson’s on Rt. 30. a few hours of each other Monday, Church. and a few were eventually Police said he was taken to will be Thursday noon in Elm Grove Calling hours for Mrs. Dolsen are court martialed for their Both were released on $250 non­ Rockville General Hospital for treat­ Cemetery, Mystic. negligence. The World surety bonds for appearance in Com­ ment and then released on a $500 non­ Wednesday from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. Almanac relates. Mrs. Dolsen died Monday at at the Cody-White Funeral Home, 107 mon Pleas Court 19, Rockville, Aug. surety bond for appearance in court 11. * Milford Hospital and her brother died Broad St., Milford. in Rockville, Aug. 11. Viking finds nitrogen at his Groton home. Her family suggests that any Mrs. Dolsen was born March 19, memorial gifts may be made to the Staff changes approvec 1892 in Manchester, daughter of the Mary Taylor Methodist Church late John and Annie Bird Edwards, Memorial Fund. by Board of Education About town in atmosphere of Mars and lived in Manchester until moving Mr. Edwards was born June 12, to Milford about 30 years ago. She 1911 in Mystic and lived in the Miss Karen Krinjak of 216 Fern St. The school administration has PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) - was a Navy veteran of World War I Groton-Mystic area most of his life. has been appointed to teach in­ Martian atmosphere. That informa­ shower of fertilizer for Mars,” he scheduled a districtwide inservice Mr. and Mrs. Paul Stianson of the Viking 1 radioed back a narrow pic­ and a member of the National He was a house painter in the strumental music at Manchester The Manchester WAXES will have tion was analyzed during the night said at a news briefing. program for about 550 school staff Campus Crusade for Chrift at the ture of the rocky Martian surface Yeomanettes and the Manchester Mystic area for many years. He was High School. Her appointment was and scientists reported early today The presence of argon in the at­ members on Oct. 14 regarding drug, University of Connecticut, Storrs, a splash party tonight at the home of today to add to results that already and Mptic American Legion a Coast Guard veteran of World War approved by the Board of Education the discovery that Mars’ atmosphere mosphere, although far less abun­ alcohol and tobacco abuse. Classes will present a “Dynamics of Prayer suggest Mars had the stuff necessary Auxiliaries. She also belonged to the II. Monday night. will dismiss at 1 p.m. that day. Assis­ Workshop" Wednesday from 7 to 10 Mrs. Robert Lannon, 400 Lake St., has about 3 per cent nitrogen and 1.5 dant that some earlier data in­ Mary Taylor Methodist Church, for life to have developed on the per cent argon. The funeral is Thursday at 11 a.m. Miss Krinjak will fill the position tant Superintendent Alfred Tychsen p.m. at the Church of the Nazarene, planet at some earlier age. dicated, means Mars must have Milford. at the Shea-Williams Funerai Home, left vacant by Andrew Shreeves Bolton. Weighing in will be from 6 to These findings have important im­ expelled gases from its hot interior said, and the three-hour inservice 236 Main St. The workshop is open to Earth control resumed radio con­ She is survived by three sons, 19 E. Main St., Mystic. whose resignation was accepted by plications for Mars’ early history and at a rate about 25 times less than that will follow. There is also an evening the public. A nominal fee will be 7 p.m. at the Italian-American Club tact with the nuclear-powered Richard E. Dolsen of Clark, N.J.; C. There are no caliing hours. the board. Shreeves, who taught at the possibility that life may have which occurred on Earth. This, meeting planned for interested charged to cover the cost of spacecraft, now a surface obser- Phillip Dolsen of State College, Pa.; Memorial gifts may be made to the materials. on Eldridge St. evolved at some earlier age on the McElroy said, would suggest that MHS the past four years, has parents and students. yatory, after Viking had weathered and Clifford W. Dolsen Jr. of Pom- Heart Fund, 88 Main St,, Norwich. accepted a position at Wagner planet. Mars lost about 25 times less water its first night in the cold desolation of fret. Md.: a sister, Mrs. Sarah Dr. Michael McElroy, an at­ than Earth. College, Staten Island, N.Y. the Martian desert called (Jhryse. A graduate of MHS, Miss Krinjak mospheric scientist from Harvard But since Earth has so much Darrell E. Hovey Sr. Marianna Fillipuzzi Pavan, and lived has taught music in the South Wind­ University, said the data suggest that water, McElroy said this means Town, police in fact-finding Whether or not there is any life on Mars had a nitrogen-rich atmosphere Darrell E. Hovey Sr., 70, formerly in Manchester for 40 years. He was sor school system for four years. She Mars still must have large amounts an Italian Army veteran of World received her B.M. degree from cent of municipal labor disputes Mars now, is a question biologists billions of years ago. Nitrogen is a of water in a subsurface reservoir, of Danforth, Maine, and East Hart­ (iiiiiliiiiicd from Page One;------- • According to Taylor, the union is hope Viking will answer. The first War I. He was a communicant of the Boston Conservatory of Music and is were settled in mediation. Taylor key to the origin and support of probably in the form of ice. ford, died Monday at Hartford asking for a 12 per cent pay raise results from its three biology in­ Earth-type life. Hospital. He was the husband of Mrs. Church of the Assumption. doing graduate work at the Universi­ agreed with that figure. spread over two years. He said the Asked what this all means about Other survivors are two sons, ty of Connecticut. Her salary is $10,- arbitration is supposed to begin 90 According to McCarthy, labor lob­ struments are expected in three the possibility that Viking might find Elsie Moody Hovey and father of town has offered a Vk per cent raise weeks. The initial two photos Louis Pavan Jr. and Enso D. Pavan, 640. days after the contract ends, or 135 bied to get the binding arbitration Although there :s only three per some kind of life on Mars, McElroy Darrell Hovey of 26 Jarvis Rd. for the two-year period. Tuesday and the new one today did both of Manchester; a daughter. In other personnel actions, the days after fact-finding starts. The clause passed through the state cent nitrogen in the Mars at­ said: Mr. Hovey was supervisor of the "We could get together not s h ^ any light on the ages-old Miss Alba Pavan of Manchester; board approved the following: final decision is supposed to be made General Assembly, and the Town of mosphere now, according to the "If you look at what you need for First National Stores in northern economically if they want to talk,” question. three brothers, Umberto Pavan, Leaves of ubsenee about three months after arbitration Manchester has contributed money preliminary data, McElroy said it is life as we understand it, you need Maine for 25 years before his retire­ begins. Taylor said. He felt the real snags Today’s black and white picture ment. John Pavan and Joseph Pavan, all of • Mrs. Cathryn Colesanto, a to a lawsuit attempting to have the are over non-financial differences. more easier broken down in' Mars’ energy, that we have (in form of Binding arbitration for municipal was much narrower than the first Manchester; a sister. Miss Maria Nathan Hale teacher, an extension of binding arbitration clause declared He said, for instance, the union wants upper atmosphere into nitrogen sunlight), you need water, that we Other survivors are a daughter, a employes went into effect in two because the spacecraft Pavan of Italy; and one grandchild.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages23 Page
-
File Size-