lHatu:i|p0tpr lEuemng te a lJi MANCHESTER, CONN., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1975 - VOL. XCIV, No. 114 Manchester—A City of Village Charm TWENTY-FOUR PAGES PRICE: FIFTEEN CENTS Kissinger Says Mission Is ‘Still in Business’ DAMASCUS (UPI) — Secretary of State started, but instead the two men would month, after the Israelis and the Egyp­ Henry A. Kissinger flew to Syria today give a broad review of the Middle East tians have had time to ponder possible from Cairo, saying his talks with Egyptian situation. compromises. V - ■. President Anwar Sadat were “very In Cairo, after finishing a meeting with The senior official said that while Egypt positive” and his Middle East peace mis­ Sadat, Kissinger said before boarding his and Israel were far apart on terms of an sion was "still in business.” airliner, “I consider the talks were very A senior official aboard Kissinger’s positive.” Israeli pullback in the Sinai Desert, Kissinger would not be returning to the plane said the secretary’s mission was the Later, on the plane flying to Damascus, area if he felt the situation was hopeless. D p e most difficult so far of all his shuttle- he told newsmen, “We are still in liwash diplomacy tours of the Middle East. business.” The official also said he believed that ’The official said the Egyptians and the A senior American official said both sides would have to sign some Israelis were far apart on terms for a Kissinger will report to Israeli leaders in agreements, but he refused to speculate [ e second-stage troop pullout in Sinai but detail on Sadat’s position tonight in on their nature. agreement was not hopeless. Jerusalem, but he said he did not expect In Cairo, Kissinger and Egyptian Kissinger met with Syrian President any answer from them now. Foreign Minister Ismail Fahmi signed an Hafez Assad shortly after arriving in Reg. 129 'The official said Kissinger will fly to ?80 million loan agreement for supplies Damascus. A high American official said Jordan Friday and to Saudi Arabia before jz.Size and equipment and had a 40-minute con­ i T v * ! : HI no new negotiations with Syria would be returning to the Middle East early next ference at Tahra Palace. alox acid Law May Require DellaFera .-5-' f To Relinquish State Post By JUAN TAMAYO DellaFera said he has never nominees of the Connecticut applied to all members of the j.Size HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI) - tried to hide his ownership of Association on Non-Profit board. Records of legislative The chairman of the licensing the nursing home, and added he Homes and Hospitals for the action on the bill, passed in board for Connecticut nursing would resign if he is ruled to be Aged, one from the nominees of 1969, do not shed any further home administrators may be violating the state law that es- the American College of Nur­ light on its meaning. ie Vilbiss ordered to resign because he tablishes the board’s sing, Home Administrators, DellaFera, who worked on Cool owns a n u rsin g hom e in membership. one from nominees of the behalf of the bill as president of This cyclist probably found navigating just as unidentified cyclist was turning into Winter St. from Manchester, UPI learned The meaning of the law is not Connecticut Hospital Associa­ the Connecticut Association of Vaporizer treacherous as did motorists during Wednesday’s Center St. (Herald photo by Dunn) today. clear, and at least one other tion, one from nominees of the Extended Care Facilities Inc., snowstorm. Like many motorists, he’s minus chains. The Francis P. DellaFera, of nursing home owner, Samuel Connecticut State Medical said the phrase in question was 99 Manchester, not only sits as Deich of Glastonbury, was a Society, who shall have no never meant to prevent nursing chairman of the licensing board member of the board. Deich, financial interest in a licensed home owners from serving on Reg. 9.99 while owning the Crestfield owner of the Salmon Brook Con­ chronic and convalescent nur­ the board. Nursing Home, but he is also valescent Home in Glaston­ sing home, and two who are not mist; “The proof is that the gover­ president of the state associa­ bury, resigned from the board associated with any of the .7 hours. Old-Fashioned Winter Returns nor appointed me,” he said. tion of nursing homes owners. last July when his term above organizations.” . DellaFera was named to the The state Attorney General’s expired. A member of the legislature board in 1970 by fo rm er office said it ruled earlier this Public Act 19, section 42b, who is also an attorney said the Democratic Gov. John N. By SOL R, COHEN He said it looks like pleasant weather Wednesday’s helps cool transformers and week on whether DellaFera is says the governor will apppoint phrase “ who shall have no Dempsey. His term expired Ju­ Wednesday’s eight-hour snowstorm until Monday (Sunday night at the makes them operate better. in conflict of interest. But nine members to the board as financial interest” applied only ly, 1973, but he has not been dumped 5 to 7 inches of new snow on follows: earliest), with a warming trend today “Unless someone clobbers a light pole DeilaFera and the Attorney to the preceding phrase, the replaced. General’s office declined to say Manchester (depending on where in town which will place tempertaures in the 30’s or unless we experience heavy icing or “Two from nominees of the nominee of the Medical Society. Deich was appointed by you live) andmiade believers of many per­ Friday, Saturday and Sunday. which way the ruling went until Connecticut Association of Other lawmakers said, sons who were beginning to doubt weather He said the chance of snow Monday is 30 it is put in writing, perhaps on Extended Health Care however, its grammar and predictions. to 50 per cent, with the disturbance too far (See Page Twelve) Friday. Facilities Inc., two from the punctuation showed the phrase (See Page Twelve) IHIIff Lulled by a comparatively mild January away to predict the amount of snow possi­ l U I E I 46/.W, into the false hope and belief that old- ble. fashioned winters are a thing of the long- Manchester Police said there were ago past and trusting the ground hog when seven accidents of the fender-bender type he (or she) didn’t see his (or her) shadow as a result of the storm. Vocational Ed Makes Full Circle at Old School Feb. 2 and predicted an early end to Area towns likewise said they winter, most Manchester people have experienced some minor accidents. The basement rooms of the old Trade valuable people,” says Roberta Walnum, nouncer, and others in other fields experienced two major snowstorms in cities in the state now having state ap­ TTie state was spared of any major School on School St., long deserted by the Manchester school career education describe their jobs. proved COEP programs. ’The program eight days. ’The one eight days ago also crashes, and there were no casualties trade school students who have gone to a specialist. dumped about 5 to 7 inches on Manchester, They told the young listeners the merits here, originally a pilot program, is about reported. new and larger building, are once again A phase of the vocational education and disadvantages of their jobs, the five years old. clos^ schools and some offices and Officials for the Hartford Electric Light being used to teach young students a program is to teach students to analyze training required, the salary that could be businesses and made driving hazardous. Co. and Southern New England Telephone trade. and evaluate. According to Lawrence, Manchester has Wednesday was almost a duplicate, expected, and the future possibilities. Co. said Wednesday’s storm had little, if The vocational educational student “We now need independent thinking in Such seminars may help the student to the largest approved program in the state except that schools and some offices and any, effect on service. training program has come full circle today’s world of work,” says Mrs. and is considered to be outstanding in the businesses were closed for a different select a vocation in the high school COEP “It was a very quiet storm for us,” said back to the building where it originated. Walnum. program. field. reason — it was Lincoln’s Birthday, a local Charles Hoffman, manager of HELCO’s Administered by the Manchester school A series of career seminars was in­ and state holiday. Today, schools again The young students are developing a Perhaps Manchester’s future success Manchester office. "Actually, a storm like Cooperative Occupational Education stituted in the junior high schools last respect for the working community, says were in session and it was business as may lie in the fact that the school system this one seldom causes problems and, in Program (COEP), students are in­ year. Covering many phases of vocations Mrs. Walnum, through exposure to per­ usual elsewhere. cares enough about its students to provide fact, usually helps us.” troduced to their first experience in in­ — specialized and general — the students sonal accounts of the community’s Wednesday’s storm started at about a vocational education program sufficient He explained that snow like dustry and business. have heard a veterinarian, a carpenter, an vocations. 10:15 a.m. and, except for a mini-dusting, to qualify them to manage the town's The purpose of COEP is to provide a architect, an electrician, a radio an- Manchester is one of about 60 towns and businesses and industries.
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