PAGE FORTY— MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, Manchester. Conn., Thurs., June 13. 1974 Sewer Project Okayed •Public Records' $ About Town Warranly Deeds field, property at 66-72 Spruce Marriage Licenses John Haberem Jr. and Linda P. Katherine Stanton, 288 Timrod For Keeney St. Area St., conveyance tax $19.80. David William Morton, 345 The British-American Gub Adoniram Council, R&SM, to Arsene and Helen Richard, Rd., June 21, St. James Church. 'Trade Name Oakland St., and Joanne Irene will have a past presidents will meet Friday at 8 p.m. at U.S.-Egyptian Nuclear Power Pact Signed property at 80-82 N. Elm St., Richard E. Clough, doing Pugatch, Colchester, June 22, Ronald Earl Hicking, 123 buffet and dance Saturday. the Masonic Temple in irll Av*nW}«« /tttxtv «« —f ___ _ conveyance tax $44. St. Mary’s Episcopal Church. Waddell Rd., and Lynn Ethel Dinner will be served at 8:30 JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia (UH) - Presl- SOL R. COHEN business as Dick’s Service Sta­ Ellington. David Wainwright, of a communique signed by Nixon and Hillery Gallagher) voted Porterfield Enterprises to tion, 128 E. Center St. Robert Mark Badger Nelson, 186 Center St., June 22, p.m. Reservations may be dem Nixon, fresh from a triumphant visit Egyptian President Anwar Sadat before asked for cpmment on the tumultuous Saudi Arabia — the nation that led the fie Manchester Board of most puissant grand master, It also endorsed the existing policy of against this allocation. They Clarence A. and George Porter­ Syracuse, N.Y., and Ami Concordia Luheran Church. made at the clubhouse. will visit the council. to E p p t that ended with a U.S. promise to Nixon departed Cairo. reception in Egypt and Watergate back Arab oil embargo against the United interview he was suspect of that section. 3irectors Tuesday night ap- sell Cairo nuclear technology for peaceful home. settling the Arab-Israeli conflict on the want ramps placed at public Police estimated that 5.5 to 7 million States last winter. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said the ''^proved a $100,000 appropriation At one point in his motorcade back from basis of U.N. Security Council resolutions, White House expected no protests when buildings like Mary Cheney punwses, arrived today in Saudi Arabia persons had dogged Nixon’s tracks since The U.S.-Egypt accord signed after for sanitary sewers in Garden the pyramids, Nixon waded into the taking into due account the legitimate in­ Nixon visits Israel Sunday and said any Library and the Municipal OPEN DAILY 10-10 THURS., FRI.,SAT. for the second leg of his ‘‘journey for his arrival Wednesday. They followed the the final Nixon-Sadat meeting provided Grove Rd., Erie St. and a por­ peace. ’ throngs for the first time to shake hands terests of all the peoples in the Middle suggestions giving nuclear power to the Building and claim bicycle President until he departed today, out to for the sale of nuclear reactor technology East, including the Palestinian people and tion of Keeney St. King Faisal planned another lavish with blind children who had gathered a Egyptians could lead to the production of route designations aren't the pyramids and back, chanting and atomic fuel to meet Egypt’s power the right of existence of all states in the The sum will be financed by r^pU on for Nixon, whose plane landed at band to serenade him. Secret Service men needs of the 1980s; development of a joint nuclear weapons was “erroneous.” issuing temporary notes necessary nor worth the expen­ “Nixon...Nixon” all the way. area.” diture. this Red Sea port at 10:28 a.m. EDT. finally persuaded him to return to the car. group working in scientific fields — in­ He insisted the material would be sold (limited to expiration in 12 “Unquestionably this will help Nixon in King Faisal had American flags and But 'it was the nuclear portion of the under the strictest safeguards. Secretary • $97,532 to the Revenue- TTie announcement of the agreement to the United States,” the President’s chief cluding space; and major U.S. economic agr^ment that raised the first criticism. years). The notes, in turn, will provide nuclear technology came as part posters of Nixon placed along the of State Henry A. Kissinger said the Sharing Account, to be financed of staff, Alexander M. Haig, said when aid including an expected $2 billion in Moshe Dayan, former Israeli defense be paid from assessments President’s three-mile motorcade route in private American investment. (See Page Four) against abutting property by an equivalent sum of un­ minister, said in an American television owners. allocated principle and interest. [ i i • $3,300 to Mrs. Maureen F. 1 The board’s action (7 to 0, Gallo of 795 Tolland Tpke. - a with Pascal Prignano claim settlement stemming abstaining because he lives in from a two-car accident in CLOSED SUNDAY the area and John Tani not pre­ sent) is not the final action February 1969 on an icy Oak St. prior to sewer construction. She sustained multiple injuries The board still must hold a and sued the town for $25,000. iianrIjPBtpr Eu? ntn^ to a lh public hearing on a schedule of The settlement was 3 GALLON AIR recommended by Assistant assessments against the MANCHESTER, CONN., FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1974 - VOL. XCIII, No. 217 property owners. Present es­ Town Counsel Victor Moses. SPRAYER Manche»ler—A City of Village Charm timates are the assessments • $724,491 in revenue-sharing TWENTY.FOLR PAGES - TWO SECTIONS PRICE. FIFTEEN will be at about $14 per front fu^fSs (due in the 1974-75 fiscal foot. year) toward the 1974-75 ^Wessed Air' Under town sewer General Fund budget, as regulations, the property specified when the board adopted it May 7. owners will have up to 12 years Rejf. to pay their assessments, at 6.5 The board tabled, for further 14.97 per cent interest per year. The study, a request from Town interest rate is under a bill Manager Robert Weiss for Ehrlichman Trial signed into law this year by spending about $5,000 for an I Gov. Thomas Meskill. The rate audit (by J.P. Clark Associates of Texas) of the town’s elec­ had been 5 per cent previously. 5 Lb. Tanglefoot........... 7 .8 8 Public hearings may be trical bills, including street scheduled on sewers in other lights — to determine whether any savings can be effected. To Stgrt June 26 sections of the Keeney St. area. The directors named Leo J. 4 If approved, they may be in­ WASHINGTON (UPI) - U.S. District Kwash of 14 Elm Ter. an alter­ Not Available in Cromwell Nixon s No. 2 aide, and three other men to cluded in one total project. Judge Gerhard A. Gesell today ordered sought to put Ehrlichman in the witness The board’s action followed a nate on the Planning and Zoning trial in the Ellsberg break-in case on June chair to testify. Gesell said: John D. Ehrlichman, formerly President’s 26. public hearing at which nobody Commission, to fill an un­ “I will not hear Ehrlichman. Until expired term to November 1974. spoke. 24" Vigoro (Jesell said the White House had complied Brady (the federal agent dealing with In other actions Tuesday with federal rules on producing evidence goverment production of evidence for night (public hearings were Bulletin that Erhlichman had said was necessai^ criminal defendants) has been satisfied.” held June 4), the board ap At Plnehurst... BAMBOO to his defense. White House reluctance to Gesell said that if Ehrlichman believes proved: produce that evidence had threatened to there are documents he needs, he may • $1,500 for a language-arts MORE . prepare a subpeona for them with written ANNUALS & TREES AND GARDEN Soviets Ready delay Ehrlichman’s trial perhaps until program at Keeney St. School, LOW PRICES next year. justification and the judge will decide on a to be financed by a federal RAKE To Limit Tests Gesell also rejected attempts by court “document by document oasis. grant. With this warm weather the VEGETABLES SHRUBS ROSl William S. Frates, Ehrlichman’s chief • $583 for the Emergency- outdoor grills will work over­ MOSCOW (UPI) — Communist lawyer, to put Ehrlichman on the stand Shelter-Care Service, to be time... bUSi parly General Secretary Leonid I. today to testify that there still were White financed by a state grant House documents needed for the defense. We offer the best Skinless Kills aphids and thrips— stops black Brezhnev said today the Soviet already received. Union is ready to agree with the The trial of Ehrlichman, the remaining • $10,000 to the Downtown Frankfurt at a down to 1 / 2 OFF spot and mildew on roses, Easy to U.S.-Canadian United States to restrict un­ chief defendant in the case, had been Planning Consultant Fund, to earth low price... use squeeze duster scheduled for Monday. But in roller Energy Exchange be financed by an equal amount TOBIN’S (Herald photo by Dunn) derground nuclear tests and in time to han them. coaster developments during the week, it in a savings account established FIRST PRIZE appeared the trial might be delayed until Plani AdvocatedAc' Packaged 2-year, field-grown flow­ 1.97 East Catholic Graduate Congratulated by downtown interests. That Choose from large selection of next year because of White House refusal ering or ornamental shrubs and $10,000, added to a matching FRANKFURTS Vegetables & annuals. No. of 24" Reinforced Rake 1 0 oz. Roland Charest, East Catholic senior to turn over Ehrlicbman’s old files. $10,000 allocated last year by 3-lb.
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