t - M Confident Com plaints I Helplngvirierchants* _ Bruins-Bfe" one ^ V Landowners irked ; map their future 73 .... .%:■ # ending bana^^ ^ by trail blazers /5 Scon The < award! year’s < membf televisi Nagy 0 award! ifflattrhrHtrr Im lft week a WAT ’The! meetT Monday, April 25, 1988 Manchester, Conn. — A City of Village Charm •: 15 to 30 Cents welcon Brld( Demjanjuk ’The Monda; Three lost DeMar sentenced Mendel Shea-L S. Fra Itics to death Thursd at sea as Mendel Louise JERUSALEM (AP) - An East-W inta Israeli court today sentenced MikeF Dunfiel John Demjanjuk to be executed sub bums for war crimes committed as p a g e 4 7 "Ivan the Terrible,” a sadistic Mysti Nazi guard who ran gas A**'' NORFOLK, Va. (AP) — An explosion and fire ’The i chambers where about 800,000 struck the submarine USS Bonefish off Florida, Jews died. Auxiiia forcing the crew to abandon the ship, the Navy said. p.m. M "He was a chief hangman who Eighteen sailors were injured and three of the meet a with his own hands killed tens of 92-member crew were missing today. leaves thousands with cruelty ... We i Crews from two frigates and a helicopter and ma sentence him to death,” said searched the Atlantic for the missing men after Judge Zvi Tal. Onlookers clapped Sunday afternoon’s fire, "looking and listening for and shouted as the sentence was any kind of sound or indication” of the men, said Lt. Legic announced. Some chanted Cmdr. Bill Sonntag of the Norfolk-based Atlantic “ Bravo.” Others shouted: Fleet. Dilwc “ Death, death.” march I ‘rnev “ We’re doing everything we can to find them out at Jew! ■r Herald Last week, the court convicted there,” he said. the 68-year-old retired Ohio auto­ Legion This morning, one frigate was still in the area, dinner: it was just a matter of worker of Nazi war crimes. It 1 . Reginald l^nto/MancheBter Harald hunting for the men, the Navy said. p.m. in East Catholic flexed said he was responsible for the The Bonefish, one of the Navy’s last diesel deaths of thousands of Jews at the Legion e muscles and had a submarines, surfaced Sunday afternoon 160 miles p.m. an Treblinka concentration camp in BACK TOGETHER — Esther Schuetz, left, of their long-lost sister, Daisy Pasdernak, of the potent All Connec- Foster Street, and Edith Moser, right, of Queens, N Y. east of Cape Canaveral, Fla., said Cmdr. Fred informs *ence. occupied Poland. About 800,000 Leader, a fleet spokesman. the ACC, this Friday Jews died in 1942 and 1943, when Concord, N.H., are reunited Saturday with Tbe fire was believed caused by an explosion in lash with St. Joseph’s “ Ivan" worked at the camp. the 30-year-old submarine’s battery compartment, Plant Only one man has ever been mbull was viewed as a Sonntag said. Because of fire and toxic fumes, the ’The I ne by the Eagle executed in Israel’s 40-year his­ commanding officer ordered the vessel evacuated, tory. Adolf Eichmann, architect tonight Sisters reunited after 32 years he said. Mounta jthpaw Marc Mangia- of the Holocaust, was hanged in 1962. Eighteen injured crew members were trans­ Show a through in the clutch ferred to the aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy, Louise! Court Spokesman Yossi Hassin By Andrew J. Davis remained in touch over the years. Maine, by searching through Maine les, hurling a master- three in serious condition, said Sonntag. Shortly makeM said Demjanjuk would most Manchester Herald Pasdernak was separted from her telephone directories. Through Mer­ er and aiding his own after 8 a.m. EDT, two helicopters from the JFK on Satui likely be hanged. “ If the sentence sisters 32 years ago after she left seve she located Moser, and through 1 a perfect 3-for-3 Saturday was a day that Esther landed at the Jacksonville Naval Air Station with 12 ;e. including a three- is upheld on appeal, the expecta­ their home in Scarborough, Maine, to Moser she located Schuetz. Schuetz will always remember. move to Florida. Though contact was of the injured, who were then taken to the in the first inning, in tion is he would he hanged," Though contact was made In Hook Hassin said. Schuetz, who lives at 11 Foster St., kept at first, as family members Jacksonville Naval Hospital, said Stuart Johnston, victory at Moriarty January, a reunion was put off until a station spokesman. Demjanjuk attended today’s was reunited with her sister, Daisy moved and were married, the lines of Saturday so Pasdernak would be able ’The a sentences in a wheelchair, com­ Pasdernak of Queens, N.Y. communication became fainter and to celebrate Schuetz’ 49th birthday, The conditions of the injured were unknown, but Studio 01 es are now 1-2 in the They hadn’t seen each other in 32 fainter until Pasdernak found herself “ some of them had smoke inhalation,” said Capt. May 2,1 5-2 overall while St. plaining of back problems. He which is Tuesday. entered the courtroom moments years. out of touch with family members. Brent Baker, another fleet spokesman. Hooked 0 2-1 in the league and The sisters said the reunion was before the verdict was read, “ 1 didn’t know where she was.” She finally decided it was time to The uninjured sailors were expected to arrive been cui East’s next game is Schuetz said of Pasdernak. “ I locate her relatives. delayed also because of poor weather back in Florida at midday aboard the frigate USS backing at 4 p.m. against ACC shouting in Hebrew: “ I am conditions and because Pasdernak innocent.” thought she was dead all this time” “ Everybody thought I was dead,” Carr, which along with the USS McCloy assisted the progran fligh School ofMiddle- Schuetz said she “ broke down and Pasdernak said. "I married in the needed time to recover from the Bonefish. They would then fly back to Charleston, various riarty Field. A Christian, he was seen death of her husband, Theodore, who making the sign of the cross and cried” after learning her sister was interim and I didn’t know their S.C., the Bonefish’s home port, said Lt. Cmdr. oded for seven runs in alive. “ Thank God she’s here.” married names.” died last August. Patricia McMillan, also a Norfolk spokesman. ’ St. Joe’s starter and whispering to himself, appar­ Trip I ently praying, during arguments Pasdernak spent Saturday at the After months of trying, Pasdernak Now that they have made contact, “ We don’t know whether they are still aboard the fontelli while Mangia- home of the Shuetz and her husband. was able to contact Schuetz in the sisters promise never to lose submarine or whether they were in the water,” The Li 1 just the four hits, two from prosecutors who demanded the death penalty. Roger, who works at the Manchester January, she said. The search contact again. Baker said of the mfsslng. Boston 1 ith frame. He walked church I After the verdict he was Herald. started in October with the aid of “ I’ve got a phone number and Leeder said the Carr would attempt to tow the uck out 13 Kadets. p.m. A wheeled away, expressionless A third sister. Edith Moser of family members she knew about. everything,” Schuetz said. submarine either to Port Canaveral or Charleston. i to see the ball hit informa and ringed by riot police. Concord, N.H., also visited during the Pasdernak first located a fourth The entire family hopes to hold a There apparently was no serious problem in t Coach Jim Penders weekend. She and Schuetz have sister. Doris Merseve of Westbrook. reunion within the next few months. keeping it afloat late Sunday, Leeder said. game we needed to be Please turn to page in The submarine rescue ship USS Petrel from n in the conference. It Charleston is on its way and will determine whether i day. He had a great the fire is out, the Navy said. The Petrel Is expected Pub is a good win.” to arrive early this afternoon. : 10 batters to the plate “ People from the Petrel will be boarding the sub tom of the first and ‘Sebaceous’ spelled the end of the line to make any kind of damage assessment,” Meetii ;n times on five hits, McMillan said, adding that afterward, a decision e Price led off with a By Anita Caldwell April 12. said a spokesman from th'^women’s “ The words got a lot harder as they would be made on where to tow the sub. senior Rob Stanford Manchester Herald Since placing second locally, Craw­ club. Elizabeth Magner of Cromwell went along,” VonDeck said. “ Most of Leeder said it would take considerable time to tow MancI left sending Price to the Bonefish into port. It can make about 3 mph ford said he tried to read as many spelled the word correctly and earned the words I knew, but some hard ones Eight! ir Pat Merritt followed under tow, a senior naval officer said. Twelve-year-old Andrew Crawford words as he could find that might be a $100 savings bond from Society for I never heard of,” the Waddell School PlannI p single to left scoring The Bonefish had been taking part in routine will put away his dictionary and go asked. Many of those words he said he Savings and became champ by sixth-grader said hearing and Stanford, back to reading his .schoolbooks after found in Time magazine. correctly spelling, “ acetate.” In Sunday’s contest, VonDeck was exercises for about a week with the Carr and the tnior Doug Rizzuto winning second place in the Connecti­ “ That does wonders for your But Crawford did remember other tripped on the word, “ harmonious.” JFK in what is called the Jacksonville Operations )ut, junior Paul Du- area, authorities said.
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