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M — 1*

. Lovely 3 ape, V / 7 a room, -oround ul neloh- lers relo- HX). Cen- eseekers 4.7 room

I) on 1.4 lorooe. 3 h baths, epiace In $169,900.

. Moonlf- e setting Street Is 0 . Com- mted! 3 k Ranch, al dining lasement s, hard- car gar- Klernan

f .site new V anch, nal dln- paclous rlthfleld- ce, sun- hts, |a- :h, much I quality $349,900. Ity 649-

AAove In >m,3or4 )e with ltchen.2 ^ear old ie heat. I. Great . Strano 17-7653.0Cozy 3

on quiet dining,

i lower itorage hs with fly sten- kltchen.

Fish.D

Excep- Well

Duplex cated In arhood. 3 bed­room,

d eot-ln >e seen. '. Fish .0f o r d - arge 8 Ranch

las, 1'/j sliders dining

:overed I large antage. homel Miller

-8000.Oirlglnol 'e their ground »ady to weather auollty :ludlng Malls, 3 baths, room, room,

jmmer mouth Martin r i c t .

ion & Eitate,

Istingl anch Is

from de fea- iquore s one B. Per- ement naster llt-lns. al dln- ry klt- llvlng place. ;le Ints.ooo.cksonMOO.o

ilshEtrrr/ ly

6

re

AP

4

9

to — MANCHESTER HERALD. Thursday, April 14, 1988

00HOMES FOR SALE

PORTER Street 6 room, 1'/2 bath Colonial with quarry stone front. 3 bedrooms, deck and garage. Clean and at­tractive. $164,900. Blan­chard & Rossetto Real­tors," We're Selling Houses" 646-2482.0

MANCHESTER. $209,900. Immaculate 9 room U Si R Built Ranch In area of fine homes. Lovely yard with In-ground pool. Must see! Kler- nan Realty. 649-1147.

SOUTH Windsor- "Newer Tow n ho u se", mid $150's. Price reduced tor quick sale on this spacious 5'/3 rooms, 2 bedrooms, beoutitui kitchen, dining area, sunken Hying room with rtice fireplace, fomlly room, deck and garage!! Don't miss this one! Century-21 Lindsey Real Estate. 519 Center Street, Man­chester, CT. 649-4000.

W ILLIM ANTIC- "More to r the m o n e y " , $140,900. Don't miss this fabulous buy, stately and Impeccably clean 9 room Colonial! Features 4 bedrooms, 1 bath and 2 lavatories, beautiful center chim­ney fireplace, finished basement, woodstove, plus 2 cor garage, car- part, separate work­shop and professlan- ally landscaped flat left! Centurv-21 Lind­sey Rea! Estate. 519 Center Street, Man­chester, CT. 649-4000.

ID CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE

MANCHESTER. Beauti­ful 1 bedroom Condom­inium, carpeting has been updated, kitchen appliances Include m i c r o w a v e . $95,900. Realty World, Benoit, Frechette As-, soclates, 646-7709.O

GLASTONBURY. Im­maculate Townhouse. 3 bedrooms, formal dining room, rec room, fireplace, central air and much m o re . $195,900. Realty World, Benoit, Frechette As­sociates, 646-7709.D

C O N T E M P O R A R Y T o w n h o u s e . 1800 square feet of living area available within 2 bedroom, I'/? baths home. 20' studio on 3rd floor. Garage. $160's. Blanchard 8, Rossetto Realtors," We're Sel- llng Houses" 646-2482.□

VERNON. Back on the market. Cozy Condom­inium with view. New corpet, appliances, etc, $74,900. Realty W o r l d , B e n o i t , Frechette Associates, 646-7709.g___________

MANCHESTER spacious 2 bedroom Townhouse, 1 '/ 2 baths, large kit­chen, basement In s m a l l c o m p l e x . $119,900. By owner. 643- 7930.

APARTMENTS FOR RENT

LOTS/IAND FOR SALE

STORE AND OFFICE SPACE

BRAND New Listing! Popular N orthfleld Green Condominium complex i 6 room Townhouse with 3 bed­rooms, 7>/i baths, gas hot oir heat with cen­tral air conditioning. Extra bonus of brand new double pane Insu- l a t e d w i n d o w s throughout, tilt out for easy cleaning! Carport tor 1 car, full base­ment. $145,000. Jackson & Jackson Real Estate, 647-8400.D___________

MALLARD View- Quality constructed 3 bedroom attached single family homes (you own your

* own lot), fireplaced liv­ing room, V / i baths, Anderson permashleld termopane windows, range, refrigerator, dishwosher and win­dows, range, refrigera­tor, dishwasher and microwave oven, car­peting, full basement and even an attached gorage. $149,900. Blan­chard & Rossetto Real­tors," We're Selling Houses" 646-2482.0

COLCHESTER. Excel­lent country atmos­phere. 1.15 acre lot In newer subdivision. Easy commute to Hart­ford or New London area. $69,900. Realty W o r l d , B e n o i t , Frechette Associates, 646-7709.0

MANCHESTER- Level Cleared lots. About acre. City sewer and water. 646-7207.

LARGE, Wooded build­ing lots In Southwest- e r n p a r t o f Manchester. $102,000- $125,000. 563-1413.

101MORTOAOES

HEALTH Spa Included In this magnificlent 10 room home, 3 full baths. Inside pool, sauna and work out area. Must be seen! Blanchard 8, Rossetto Realtors," We're Sel­ling Houses" 646-2482.g

DO NOT OO BANKRUPTI Stop Foreclosure! Home­owners, consolidate your bills, pay off your credit cards, yaur cor or busi­ness loan, your mortgage and save, save your homell NO PAYMENTS UP TO 2 YEARSI Bad credit, late poyments or unemployment Is not a problem. Foreclosure as­sistance avollable for the DIVORCED and SELF- EMPLOYED.

Swiss Conservative Oreup qt 2SS-SS4-ISM

or MS-4S4-4404.

N9w OMe* Spae9 corner Manchester Rd. & Hebron Ave., Qlas- tonbury. Available June 1at, 420 aq. ft., Utilities Included. Call Savings Bank of Man* Chester, 646-1700, ask for Mr. Matrick

RESORTPROPERTY

8ARABES AND STORAGE

Rentals One car garage. In quiet area. Available May 1st. $65 month. 646-1686 or 569-3018.

ROOMSI ^ F O R RENT Merchandise

Furnished room, $60 a week, 1 week security and references. Call 649-9472, Monday- Frldov 3:30 to 8:00pm. Ask tor Eleanor.

E ] FURNITURE

CLOSE To buslines and downtown. $80 per week. Call 643-2659.

MOVING- Living room set and fireside chairs. Excellent condition. Call 649-9334.

3 2 1 apartmentsFOR RENT

QUEENSIZE Waterbed complete. Dark pine, 4 drawer base, amtching nightstand and chest of drawers. $500 or best offer. Call after 4pm. 568-1903.

MANCHESTER- Availa­ble May 1st. 6 rooms, wall to wall In 3 rooms, no appliances, wa- sher/dryer hook-ups, parking 2 cars. $600 security deposit. $600 per month plus heat and utilities. No dogs. Adults preferred. On busline. 649-8188 call between 2 ond 4pm.

inig3iB0ATS/MARINEEQUIPMENT

12' Aluminum boat and trailer. Also, 4HP Mer­cury motor. Call after 3pm 649-5889.

MUSICALITEMS

ROCKVILLE- New large 1 bedroom. Washer/D- ryer hook-ups. 2nd floor. Stove, refrigera­tor, carpeting, park­ing, storage area. $490 plus utilities. Evenings 643-8557.

AMPEG Amplifier with 4-12" speakers. Excel­lent condition, $300 must sacrifice. Call Bernie, 649-5819.

MANCHESTER. 2 bed­room Townhouse with fireplace. Heat, cor- petlng, A/C, oil ap­pliances. Nice loca- tlon. Call 647-1595.

EDH 71 MISCELLANEOUS “ '■FOR SALE

4 .Room apartment, 2nd floor with gas, gas stove and a refrigera­tor. $500 per month with 2 months security. Telephone 645-6773.

3 Rooms portlyfurnlshed, heat. Working single male preferred. No pets. Lease. 643-2880.

RESULT of a renovation. We have 15 doors, 80"x30" and 80"x42". Some are fire-rated. Colors are white and mahogany. For more Information call Man­chester Manor. 646- 0129.

Automotive

M A N C H E S T E R . For rent. Big 3 bedroom on busline. $575 plus utili­ties. Security and ref­erences required. 643- 1577.

MANCHESTER. 454 Main Street. 2nd floor, 3 room heated. No ap­pliances. Security. $480 per month. 646-2426, weekdays 9am-5pm.

EDCARS FOR SALE

CLASSIC Ford Falcon 1964. Runs, needs some work. $200. Call Gene after 5:30pm. 633-6164.0

1983 Chevy Cavalier Wagon, 4 speed, power s t e e r i n g , p o w e r b r a k e s , A M / F M Cassette. $3200. 742- 5459.

CONDOMINIUMS FOR RENT

MANCHESTER. 2 bed­room Townhou se Condo. Heot/garoge. Good location. Avalal- ble Immediately. $700 per month. 646-3339 or 649-8638.

TOYOTA Tercel 1980. 5 speed, deluxe. Air con­ditioning. $750. Call 646- 0213 a f t e r 6 p m weekdays.

TOYOTA Corolla 1977. $500. Good condition. 646-5184 after 4pm.

EDHOMES FOR RENT

MANCHESTER. 3 bed­room Colonial, stove, ref r igerator . Quiet street. $975 per month. 646-3339 or 649-8638.

BRICK Cape Cod- 3 bed­rooms, 2 baths, garage, washer-dryer haok-up. Large yard, referen­ces, security deposit. Available May 15. Rent $625. 643-6452.

m JAPARTMENTS’ < I fdr rent

C L Y D ECHEVROLET-BUICK, INC. ROUTE 83, VERNON

82 Ragtl Couq* *569584 CemaroCpa. *799584 Century LTD 4 dr. *8295 84 Citation 4 dr. *499588 Spectrum 4 dr *399588 Oldt Celle to r. *7995 88 Chav. Aetro Van *969688 Century 4 dr. * 5 9 %

88 Cavalier C8 4 dr. *59%88 Century 4 dr. *99%88 Camaro Cpe *10,7%88 Olda Delta cpe *11,2% 87 Caprtca waeon *12,595 87 Chav. CalatNity 4 dr. *89% 87 Pont. 8000 4 dr. *99%87 Century 4 dr. *99%

8 7 2 - 9 1 1 1

CARR FDR RALE

H A . R T F O R D - Wethersfleld Avenue. Business zoned. Newly renovated 2 fam ily house. 1200 square feet. Parking In front/rear. $1,000 per month. 229- 9340 otter 5pm.

SUITES Available. 1000 square feet per unit. Utilities additlonol. 1 mile to 1-84. Peterman Building Company. 649r9404.

SUBARU DL Wagon 1961. New clutch, new axels. Good condition. $1300 negotiable. Call 649- 7494 after 6pm.

P LY M O U T H Horizon 1980. Good condition, 4 cylinder, 4 door, 4 speed. $1500 or best offer. 649-3692.

T H E O L C O T T40 Olcott St. a Manchester, CT 06040The Olcott is now managed by the Beacon Man­agement Corp. We are now accepting applica­tions for our 1 and 2 bedroom units, starting at *500 for our 1 bedroom units and *550 for our 2 bedroom units. Fully appllanced kitchens, pri­vate parking, near schools and shopping malls, swimming pool, wall to wall carpeting, resi­dent paid utilities, no pets.

Rental Office is open dally,9-5, Monday thru Friday

Please call 643*0612 OF 643-6432

Equal Housing Opportunity

LIPMAN #1VOLKSWAGEN

87 Buick Rsgal, Immaculat* LosdwI. •18,880

88 Subaru QL, 3 dr, Sllvar, 8 w>. 4 WD. AC, AM-FM, 'TSOO

s8vwaTi*ess688 Trana Am, Blk, •11.000 88 Toy. Tatcal, 2 dr, rad, roiOO 88 (2) Taroala 4 dr. AT, >8006 SO Chav Cavallar Typa 10. •3200 04 CuOaaa Clarra bm. •7000 04 Audi 4000, quarto. •0400 04 Volvo OL 4 dr. bm, AT, *7800 S4VWaLI^S700 ' OOVWCampar AT.rTOOO S4 VW RabbH, 40K, rASOO S3 BuIck Skylark, •3200 70 BMW 3201, •STOO

AMC Eagle 4x4 1981. 57,000 miles. Good run­ning condition. $1200 negotiable. 646-6173.

DATSUN 216 1980- Excel- lent running condition. Automatic, A/C, ra- dlols. $1200. 649-5121.

CHEVELLE 1973, Rebuilt 3504BDL 4 speed, posl. Very good condition. $2800 or best offer.

■ 647-9925 offer 3prh.NISSAN Sentra 1982- 5

s p e e d , ' A M - F M cassette, 69K. M int condition, $1850 firm. 649-1310

RHODE Island, Mantu- nuck Beach. Ocean view. 3 bedroom Con- t e m p o r a r v . F u l l equipped, '/z-mlle to beach. 644-9639 after 5pm.

24 TtllaMl Tiipli, Hit. 63 Vtnm, CT # i4f-263t

OLDS Sierra Wagon 1984- Power steering, power brakes, A/C, AM-FM stereo. $5500, 646-6168.

FORD LTD 1976- 4 door, V-8, A/C, 7300 miles. Excellent running con- dltlon, $500. 649-4109.

I f th is name is not on your

car, you probably paid

too much!!80 Safari wood wagon, apx. 3800 87 Tram Am, blaok 0 gold, TPI 87 Ponllac Grand AM 4dr, gray 87 Pont SunMrd 4 dr aadan 87 Chavy Nova 4 dr, AT, AC 87 Trana Am QTA, rad 87 Toyota 4x4 PU, blua87 Toyota PU, standard, fad88 Calica QT LB. 8 apd., AC 88 Toyota 4x4, rad, 10K88 Nova 4 dr. AT. PS. 18K 88 Pontiac STE 4 dr, blua 88 GMC Safari Pamr van, 12K 88 Cutlatt Suprm. ops., maroon 88 Buick Ragal Cpa, V8 88 Chavy Cavallar CL wagon 88 Toyota DIx Paaa Van. 8 apd 80 Toyota 4x4.longbad 88 Toyota Extrq Cab Pick-up 66 Toyota MR2, 14K ml 86 Olds Calais 4dr, gold 86 Toyota Corolla 4 dr 86 Grand Prix, V6, Buckets 86 Chav C20, 5.7 P/U, red 85 Flero QT, V6, AT, AC 85 Toyota Forerunner AT 85 Olds Delta 88 Royals 85 Toyota Tercpl 3 dr, AC 85 Toyota Tercel 4 dr, AC 85 Dodge Lancer ES turbo 85 Mazda deluxe 4 dr QLC 85 Corolla LE, AT. AC 85 Ford Ranger 4x4 P/U 85 Nissan DIx P/U. 5 apd 85 Toyota SR5, 4x4, plow 85 Olds Cutlass Ciera LS 65 Bonne. 4 dr, apx. 28K ml 85 Caprice CLaasIc 4dr, V8 85 Corolla SR5, LB, AC 85 Pont. T1000, 18K 84 Honda Accord, 4 Dr. AT 84 Tercel Wag. 9 Pass 84 Parlalenne Wgil.> 9 paaa.84 Celica QT, Cpe, 5 Spd.84 Mte. Carlo, Wht/blue top 84 Flero Spt coupe, AT 84 Buick Century Ltd., 34K 84 Buick Skyhawk 4 dr, AT 84 Toyota Corolla LE 64 Toyota Camry DIx, 4 dr.84 Trans Am, blue, T-tpa 84 Pont. Flero SE, 4 apd.83 Ponllac 8000 LE 4 dr 83 Subaru GL, 4 dr, AT 83 Chevette 4 spd., AC 82 Corolla SR5 Spt. Cp.. AC 82 Bonne. Wood Wgn.82 Pont. 6000 LE, 4 dr.82 BK. Regal LTD, Sunroof 79 Mustang 4 cyl., AT, PS

Ml VBhklBt Warrsutigg

L Y N C HPONTIAC-TOYOTA 500 W. Carter S t

MaiwhattBr

646-4321★

ig 3 iM M P |R R /TRAILERS

SUNLINE 1987- 20 foot Travel Trailer with awning and TV an­tenna. Used twice, $7,800. 871-0672.

MOTORCYCLES/MOPEDS

YAMAHA 1980 250 Exci­ter. Runs good. Needs minor repairs. Asking $250. 646-4704.

HONDA V-65 Magna IIOOcc 1985. Very low milts. Excellent condi­tion. $2900 or best offer. Call 643-9910.

KAWASAKI GPZ 550. Ex- cellent condition, low mileage, many extras. $1800 or best offer. 645-6822.

W h e n w as th e last tim e you enjoyed b u yin g a car?

F A M U X - S m e SA LES

^eo-u^c (jc ia rd 'Wtiicf'Dx ^oc

When you shop for a car at DeCormier'i, you're not dealing with a saieiman, you're talking with • DeCormier. There is no high*presiure. We do not try to tell you a car. We help you decide on the car and accetioriet that are right for you. Of course we'll give you the best price, but more importantly, we'll treat you like one of the family.

M O T O R SALES, IN C .^ : : ^ -Secde SaieA

S n iC N - 6 4 3 4 1 6 5M T W A I 'I jO t..fl on I n n . 0 lu s.it ') :m) i«- 1 iMi S o r v l c i ' 6 4 3 - 5 1 5 0 P a r i s - 6 4 9 1 0 1 3M I h f u f H 00 It. (10

CASHF R O M NISSAN! PMOOOs

For a limited time* you can get $500 to $1000 Cash Back on selected Nissan cars and trucks. $700 Cash Back on Sentra Standard, the most trouble free car in its class, accord­ing to J. D. Power. $1000 Cash Back on Stanza and Stanza Wagon, the luxurious cars w ith the economical price. $500 Cash Back on the Hardbody Special, the great truck that comes w ith $1000 worth of savings on special options.Cash Back from Nissan, p/us the Family- Style Sales and Service you get from DeCormier Motor Sales. An unbeatable combination that lets you enjoy buying a car!

_ _ _on Stanza & Stanza

.JWagon

on Hardbody Special,.J ^ ? 0 0

•Cash Back o lfe r ends M ay 3. 1988.

PLUS THESE GREATNEWNISSANS FROMDeCORMIER!1987 Stanza XE Wagon5-Speed, power steering rear wiper defroster, two-tone paint, dual rear sliding doors.Slock V6038

1988 Sentra Standard. 2-dr sedan with lift-up sunroof. ET200 stereo w/elecironic tuning

& auto reverse cassette, ac-

M S R P Dealer Discount RebateFinal Cost A C O AAlter Rebate ^ U , 0 0 9

$1 2 ,4 8 9-6 0 0

1.000

cent striping, body side moldings, enrome deck

rack, halogen f<^

1987 Pulsar NX XESports coupe. 5-speed, factory AC, power steering, T-top roof Stock #5915-$10,999

lights. Stock #617:M s R P . SB.44BRebate - 7 M

Final Price *7 0 * 4 >1After Rebate

1987 Kingcab SEV6. full Sport and Power

Package Incl. factory sunroof.pwr windows and doorlocks.

cruise, dual pwr. mirrors, stereo cassette/radio with

electronic tuning, alloy wheels. “ chrome rear bumperS tock #5993. $11,999.

O NE OW NER u.«i C a r s a i i d T I r u c k s

1985 Mercury Lynx3 door hatchback, — ■ ■ —automatic, power steering 37,530 miles Stock #6123-1.

1964 Nissan 4X4 KingcabRed, 5 speed - - rmanual trans. J .62,481 miles. .Stock #8028.

.J

$ 3 ,6 9 5 $ 5 ,9 9 5

1983 Nissan StanzaMaroon 4 door, automatic.66,065 miles.Stock #8023,

.-4::

$ 4 ,9 9 5

1983 Nissan Pulsar NXWhile 2 door notch- back, automatic. /T™ 42,754 miles. — --rT/.f-.-,-. Slock #8027.

$ 4 ,6 9 5n_«» m jj

1982 Buick SkyhawkWhile 2 door sedan with automatic.29,274 miles.Sik. #6133-1.

$ 4 ,2 9 5

1981 AMC SpiritRed 2 door hatchback, automatic,6 cylinder.47,023 miles.Stk. #5964-1.

$ 2 ,9 9 5

NISSAN

Genuine Nissan W IP E R BLADE IN SE R TS$ 7 9 5

f P A IR

CASH AND CARRY WITH

P A I R THIS COUPON

PARTSSPECIAU

Coupon good only al DeCormier Motor Sales, tnc. 285 Broad St., Manchester, CT COUPON EXPIRES 4/30/88

lim it 2 per coupon

FAMILY.STYLESERVKE

Any GenuineNISSAN OIL FILTER

9 1 $ ^ 9 9“ T CASI

T m y V eCASH AND CARRY WITH THIS COUPON

Coupon good only at DeCormier Motor Sales, Inc. 285 Broad St., Manchester, CT COUPON EXPIRES 3/31/88

limit 2 per coupon I________________I

At DeCormier Motor Sales, the service department is run by Willy DeCormier. Every vehicle receives expert service, and Willy De is right there to tee that the job it done righti We want to make your driving trouble-free. While other dealers may talk tarvict, the DeCormier Family delivers.

De CORMIER ^285 BROAD ST., MANCHESTER 643-4165

.SHOWKOOM MOUfi.S M, T, W itncl F 9:30 8:00, Th 9:30 6:00. Sat. 9:30 4 00 SLHVICL PAR IS DEFn. HOURS: M F 8:00 6:00

M ir e to flo ^ m e ! I f s o v e rOfficial pralsea aquifer proposal /3

Comic~Steve Landesberg amuses MCC audience with dry humor / I I 1 Iv 1 Whalers home

for the summer /13

llanrl)fatpr M praliManchester, Conn. — A City of Village Charm 30 Cents

P r ic e ju m p a d d s jitte rs to m a rk e ts

Texas deaths resemble the Manson case

SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) — Four members of a family were found stabbed to death early today in a mobile home, and the bodies were soJbrutally mutilated that police did not recognize at first that one victim was a male.

“ It resembles the Charles Manson thing. It's the worst I ’ve seen in 28 years on the depart­ment,” Sgt. George Wilson told the San Antonio Express-News.

“ It's unbelievable. All of them were savagely stabbed. There are knives broken off in their necks,” said Wilson.

Officers were searching for a man who was seen leaving the mobile home in a car belonging to one of the victims.

Police first reported that four girls had been killed, but the mother ,of the victims later confirmed that one was a boy.

The mother collapsed after identifying her children, police said.

The killer used an entire set of kitchen steak knives, police said. Broken knife blades were scat­tered around the mobile home and some knives had been broken off and left in the bodies.

" I t ’s a mess down there. A real mess," said San Antonio Detec­tive Richard Roberts.

A friend identified the victims as Jennifer Mann, 19; Shannon teann, 17; Martha Mann, 14, and Ernest Mann. 13. r A former neighbor, Janice W pe, identified the parents as Ernest and Becky Mann, who are separated.

Please turn to page 12

WASHINGTON (AP) - Whole­sale prices jumped 0.6 percent in March, the biggest increase in 11 months, the government said today in a report sure to add to Jitters on financial markets about the health of the economy.

The increase more than erased a 0.2 percent drop in February.

Wholesale energy prices, which had been falling at an annual rate of 17 percent, rose 0.9 percent in March, their first increase since August, the Labor Department said in today’s report on whole­sale price activity.

Food prices, after dropping 1.1 percent in February, advanced by 0.7 percent last month. For the first three months of the year, beef and veal prices climbed 43.6 percent.

Overall, wholesale prices rose at an annual rate of 3.1 percent from January through March. If the March increase were main­tained over 12 months, the full-year inflation rate would be 7 percent.. Eponomists said they expect today’s report to add to the havoc evident Thursday in stock, bond and money markets following the government's announcement that the nation’s trade deficit worsened in February despite a 36 percent devaluation of the American dollar over the last three years.

The Dow Jones Industrial Aver­age of 30 blue-chip industrial stocks dropped 101 points Thurs­day in reaction to that news — its fifth biggest loss ever.

As for today’s report, Donald Ratajezak, a Georgia State Uni­versity economist who special­izes in wholesale price trends, said that “ the re-acceleration of commodity inflation after a one- month hiatus may be greeted with some concern on the credit markets.

“ The widespread nature of these price changes suggests that inflation pressures may be intensifying,”

foreclosure SALEi . o i j a a ' a M ; .''......

FRI. APRIL 15,19183112:001101111 ON THE PREMISES

FRMS- s9!in nnn deposit im cash oiu n m e r n c m i o c o

TERMS: $250,000. DEPOSIT IN CASH ORCERTIFIED CHECK AT TIME OF WLE

. . Vn PC Dim wmiM TWRTY ($CERTIFIED CHECK AT TIME OF MLE.

Ml 6HCE TO BE PAID WniW TWHTY (301

J W fS ?( 2 0 3 ) 2 4 T ^

THE SALE IS OFF — This sign was still in place this morning at the Weaving Mill in the Cheney Historic District, but the sale did not take place at noon. Brophy Ahern,

Divid Kool/Minehntar Htrald

the West Haven development company that owns the mill, paid off the mortgage on the property Thursday afternoon and the sale was called off.

By Andrew Yurkovskv Manchester Herald

A subcommittee of the town Board of Directors gave the go-ahead Thursday for architects to develop preliminary plans and a cost estimate by July for a new six-story municipal building that would include a two-story park­ing garage.

The building plan was one of four proposals presented by The Lawrence Associates of Man­chester to the three-member subcommittee, which is studying space needs in all town buildings.

“ I think it's really an exciting, imaginative plan,” Director Mary Ann Handley, a member of the subcommittee, said during the meeting in the gold room at Lincoln Center.

The directors voted last week to spend up to $30,000 to have The Lawrence Associates investigate alternatives for new buildings and additions to existing build­ings. Last year, the board looked at a number of options for expansion of the buildings and construction of a new building.

but the board took no action.If a new. six-story municipal

building were constructed, the offices of the town admini.slration would vacate the existing Munici­pal Building and Lincoln Center, No specific plans for the u.se of those two buildings were pro­vided at the meeting Thursday

The three other proposals pres­ented by the architects involved the continued use of the Munici­pal Building and Lincoln Center One of them would require the purchase of ad.iacent property.

The proposed six-story building would be built at the north end of the parking lot behind the Munici­pal Building, on the edge of Center Springs Park.

'The two-story parking garage would be sandwiched between two floors of office space on the top and the bottom. The first level of the parking garage, where the entrance to the building would be located, would be al the same level as the existing parking lot.

The land around the south side of the building would be lands­caped so that the lower floor of the parking garage and the office

level immediately below it would receive sunlight, but the ground floor would be below grade level. On the side facing the park, all levels of the building would be expo.sed.

The building would have 65,000 square feet of office space and parking for 80 cars. Forty-four more parking spaces would be provided by expanding the park­ing lot westward. The total number of parking spaces would grow from 188 to 312.

Director Stephen T. Cassano. who chairs the subcommittee, pointed out that the three other proposals would require an up­grading of the Municipal Build­ing, including the installation of an elevator. He said the elevator and other work would cost $1 million.

Cassano said today that the goal of the subcommittee is to bring a plan for a new building to the voters in a November referendum.

One advantage of construction of a new building, as opposed to

Please turn to page 12

Tearful husband pleads guilty in slaying; sentencing slatedBy Nancy Concelman Manchester Herald

PUTNAM — Thomas E. Brown kept his head down and cried occasionally before he pleaded guilty Thursday to first-degree manslaughter in the stabbing death of his wife, a former Manchester resident.

Brown, 29, formerly of 74 Foster Drive, Windham, had been charged with the murder of his wife, Susan Lacey Brown. 24, The body of Mrs. Brown, for­merly of Shallowbrook Lane, Manchester, was found in the couple’s Windham apartment Feb. 7 with a reported 26 stab wounds in the chest.

But Windham County State's Attorney Terence Sullivan said Thursday in Windham (bounty Superior Court that he agreed to reduce the charge to first-degree manslaughter because Brown had been under the influence of an “ extreme emotional distur­bance.” Brown was represented by public defender Richard Kelley.

The manslaughter charge car­ries a maximum prison sentence of 20 years. Brown is scheduled for sentencing May 27. following a pre-sentence investigation and report. He was being held at the Brooklyn Correctional Center until 'Tuesday, when he was transferred to the Somers Correc­tional Institution. He is being held on $250,000 bond.

Brown, dressed in a suit, cried as Sullivan read the details of what happened the weekend Susan Brown was killed. Brown's parents, Charles and Judith Brown, watched the proceedings.

Susan Brown’s parents, James and Irene Lacey, were not at the court and could not be reached for comment.

Sullivan reported that Brown spent the evening of Feb. 5 and the early morning of Feb 6 playing basketball with his friends and then went out drinking.

Sullivan said Brown’s sworn statement to New Jersey police, that he had come home unexpect­edly the night of Feb. 6 and found

another man in his home, was found to be untrue. Sullivan reported that Brown did not go home that night, but arrived at the couple's apartment at around 9:30 on the morning of Feb. 6.

The couple got into an argu­ment. probably about Brown’s staying out all night and his recurring use of cocaine, Sullivan said. Susan Brown told her husband she was leaving him and threw her wedding and engage­ment rings at him, Sullivan said.

At that point. Sullivan said, Thomas Brown’s anger “ turned to absolute rage” and he grabbed a pair of scissors and stabbed her repeatedly.

“ He probably was acting under extreme emotional distress,” Sullivan said.

Brown was arrested Feb. 11 by Willimantic police, after being turned over to Connecticut au­thorities by police in Red Bank. N.J. Brown had been arrested Feb. 7 in Red Bank after police said he was driving erratically

Please turn to page 12

D^bt payment keeps mill off auction blockBy Alex GIrelll Manchester Herald

Eleventh-hour negotiations Thursday afternoon averted a sale at auction today of the Weaving Mill at the northeast corner of Forest and Elm streets in the Cheney Historic Di.strict.

A court-ordered auction was to have been held at noon, but it was called off because the Brophy Ahern Development Co. of West Haven and the Century Develop­ment Co. of Hartford has paid the approximately $1.6 million mort­gage to Century Development Corp,. the owners of the mort­gage. Lawrence Brophy, presi­dent of Brophy Ahern, said 'Thursday that the mortgage figure was set by Hartford Superior Court.

Com m ittee gives go-ahead on m unicipai buiiding pians

The court had ordered the auction because the mortgage had not been paid by Brophy Ahern. Brophy Ahern is the developer that is converting the Yarn Mill at Hartford Road and Pine Street into apartments and stores.

Conversion of the Weaving Mill into 249 apartments has been delayed for many months be­cause of litigation concerning the mill development and ownership. While the two companies report­edly agreed over the mortgage, they are still in a dispute over a lease Century has on a portion of the building. Brophy said the conversion by his firm cannot go forward until that is settled.

Kibbe I. Gersfein, the original

owner of the mill, had sold it to Silk Mill Associafe.s. which had planned originally to convert the mill into apartments.

When Silk Mill failed to pay the mortgage, Gerstein attempted to regain ownership of the mill .so that he could sell it it Century Development, but the Superior Court held that Gerstein could not reclaim it. But Gerstein assigned the mortgage and lease rights to Century Development Corp.

Gerstein sold the mill to Silk Mill Associates for $1,4 million. Silk Mill Associates later sold the mill, along with plans and devel­opments, to Brophy Ahern for $2.4 million.

Century also wanted to develop the Weaving Mill.

Litigation did not end with the sale to Brophy Ahearn, however, Gerstein sought and got an order from the Housing Court prohibit­ing Brophy Ahern from continu­ing todoany work on the building. Restrictions on development under that orderare still ineffect.

Brophy said Thursday that there are no liens or encumbran­ces against the mill except forthe un.seltled question of Century’s rights in its leasehold.

Officials of Century Develop­ment Co. could not be reached this morning for comment on either the mortgage settlement or the leasehold dispute. A secre­tary to Daniel Blume, the lawyer named by the court as a commit­tee for supervision of the auction, confirmed this morning that the auction would notbe held because the mortgage had been paid.

/

Grand List update expected by todayBy Andrew Yurkovskv Manchester Herald

The updated 1986 Grand List that will be used to calculate the tax bills coming due in .July was scheduled to be completed today. Deputy Assessor William Moon said this morning.

Moon said today that between 500 and 600 notices of increase went out last year and at least that many will go out next week.

He said the information had been put together and was to be run through a computer system. He had rto estimate of how much the Grand List would increa.se over the one used last year.

Notices of increased assess­ments, based on the updated Grand List, are to go out to taxpayers next week Those notices will be sent only to tho.se taxpayers whose properties have been added on to or in some way improved.

'The notices that went out last month, based on the revaluation, are void. The town decided at the end of last month to scrap the 1987 revalued Grand List and u.se the updated 1986 Grand List because the Board of Tax Review did not have time to hear all the appeals.

Assessor J Richard Vincent has been criticized in recent weeks for his handling of the revaluation in light of the number of appeals received and confusion over the format of the revaluation notices of increase^ In addition, an official from the stelejBffice of Policy and Management has said that the 1987 revaluation was done incorrectly because it was based on 1986 rather than 1987 real property values

In a related matter. Town Manager Robert B Weiss said

today that he was awaiting word from officials from the Interna­tional Association of A.ssessing Officers about an inquiry that the group would carry out into how Manchester’s revaluation was done. He said he expected to receive a written message from the association as to the cost of the work, which would include a review of the computer software used in calculating the revalua­tion assessments and a review of the equity of the assessments.

He said the review, which would last about a month, could begin as early as May.

“ We’re anxious to get it done as soon as possible because we have a revaluation for next year to carry out," Weiss said

How that revaluation would be carried out depends on the outcome of a review being carried out by the 0PM. When the administration decided last month to scrap the revaluation and the 1987 Grand Li.st, Weiss told the town Board of Directors that he would call in the asses­sors’ association in order to determine that the revaluation was properly handled.

Index24 pagat, 2 tactions

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t - MANCHESTER H ERAU ), Friday. April 15. 19«a

About Town

Support group meetsA cancer support group will meet on Monday at 7

p.m. at Manchester Memorial Hospital. A presenta­tion w ill , be given on finding insurance. The presentation will be followed by a discussion of concerns of cancer patients and their families. For more information, call 647-4739.

Alliance plans meetingThe Alliance for the Mentally III of Manchester

will meet Monday, May 2, at 7 p.m. at the Genesis Center on Main Street. The support group is open to families and friends of those with prolonged mental illness. ^

Annual card partySt. Bridget Rosary Society of Manchester will

sponsor its annual card party on Friday, April 22, at 7:45 p.m. in the school cafeteria. Military Whistand Setback will be led by Ed and Mary McKeever. Prizes will be awarded to the winners and door prizes will be given away. Refreshments will be served.

Talk on Greece and EgyptA slide show on Egypt and Greece will be shown on

Saturday, April 2Z at 2 p.m. at Whiton Memorial Library on North Main Street. The travel program will be led by George and Barbara Potterton. The event is sponsored by the Friends of the Manchester Libraries.

Births

Kimball, Sawyer Anne, daughter of Steven and Judy LaMarche Kimball of Haddam Neck was bom March 4 at Middlesex Memorial Hospital. Her maternal grandparents are Eugene and Emily LaMarche of Willington. Her paternal grandpar­ents are Margaret Kimball of 184 Hackmatack St. and the late Chester Kimball.

St. Germain, Andre Joseph, son of J. Yvon and Carol Hubbard St. Germain of 40 McCabe St. was born March 26 at Manchester Memorial Hospital. His maternal grandparents are Margaret and Warren Hubbard of 805 E. Middle Turnpike. His paternal grandparents were the late Louise and Joseph St. Germain. He has three sisters, Danielle, 4, Jaclyn, 3 and Cherie, 17 months.

Lang, Melissa Marie, daughter of Robert and Ann Marie Litrico Lang of 7 Ridgebrook Drive, Coventry, was bom March 25 at Manchester Memorial Hospital. Her maternal grandmother is Mrs. Frances Litrico of 60 Hamnlin St. Her paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. William Lang of North Kingston, R.I. She has two sisters, Stefanie, 3 andAmy, li/i.

AP photo

Divorce workshop tonightBEAM WALKER — Whitey McKenzie of the Doral Steel Company is seen against a highrise view of downtown Boston

Monday, as he walks carefully across a steel beam structure going up in the city.

A free workshop on divorce and the law will be held on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Manchester •Community College Women’s Center. The work- i J D l t l l i i n e S shop will be led by Atty. Ellen Burns and is open to both men and women. To register call 647-6056.

Emblem Club officersJeanne Volpe was installed as president of the

Manchester Emblem Club on Thursday, April 14, at 7 p.m. at the Elks Club on Bissell Street. Officers were installed by Marion Zwart, past supreme president; Helen Walker, marshal; and Helen Weber, organist. Those in attendance were Delia Zieziulewicz, past supreme president; Carlene Ouellette, supreme fourth vice president: Claire Miller, supreme assistant marshal. Supreme officers from District 1 were Ruth Ventura, assistant chaplain: Helen Riccardi, press corres­pondent; Helene Szewczk, district deputy; Joanne Lemon, District2; MarieDryzgula, Districts; Elise Zwart, president of the Connecticut State Associa­tion. Mrs. Agnes Hebert was chairman of the installation.

Program at hospital

Stephen J. BaziloStephen J. Bazilo, 74, husband

of Josephine (Dombroski) Bazilo, of Wethersfield, died Wednesday at Hartford Hospital. He was the father of Sandra S lifer of Manchester.

Besides his wife and daughter, he is survived by a' brother, Edward Bazilo of New Britain; a granddaughter, Pamela Slifer; and several nieces and nephews.

The funeral will be Saturday at 9:15 a.m., at the New Britain Memorial Funeral Home, 444 Farmington Ave., New Britain, with a Mass at 10 a.m. in Holy Cross Church, New Britain. Bur­ial will be in Mount St. Benedict Cemetery, Bloomfield. Calling hours are today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

New developments in anesthesia and pain reduction during childbirth will be discussed at a free presentation open to the public at Manchester Memorial Ho.spital on Thursday. April 21, at 7 p.m. in the auditorium. Dr. Robert Audet. M.D.. an anesthesiologist on the staff, will be the speaker.

William F. MasindaWiiliam F. Masinda, 90, of the

West Willington section of Wil­lington, formerly of Manchester,

died Wednesday at Manchester Memorial Hospital. He was the husband of Johanna (Hauschild) Masinda.

He was bom in New York City on Feb. 7,1898, and was a resident of West Willington for many years. Before retiring in 1983, he was a deputy sheriff for Tolland County for 12 years, and had previously been a state police officer, serving with Troop C at the Stafford Barracks. He was the Tolland County sealer of weights and measures for 28 years, a deputy fish and game warden, and a longtime member of the Republican Town Committee in Willington. He was the Republi­can registrar of voters in Willing­ton for 44 years, a member of the Willington Cemetery Association and a former mail carrier. He was a 50-year Mason, and a member of Uriel Lodge of Ma­sons, No. 24, of Mansfield.

Besides his wife, he is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Raymond

(Amelia) Hicking of Manchester; two brothers, Frank Masinda of East Hartford, and Emil'Masinda of West Willington; and several nieces and nephews.

The funeral will be Saturday at 1 p.m. at the Holmes Funeral Home, 400 Main St. Burial will be in St. James Cemetery. Calling hours are today from 7 to 9 p.m.

Memorial donations may be made to a charity of the donor’s choice.

In MemoriamIn sad and loving memory of Angela Massaro DeSimone, who passed" away on April 15, 1949.

God saw her footsteps falter. The hills become too steep,

and with farewells unspoken. The Savior bade her sleep.

Sadly missed. Children, Grandchildren &

Great Grandchildren

Szymkowicz, Megan Marie, daughter of John D. and Karen Hanson Szymkowicz of 341 Oakland St. was born March 24 at Manchester Memorial Hospital. Her maternal grandparents are Theodore and Gladys Hanson of Patten, Maine. Her paternal grandparents are Andrew and Beverly Szymkowicz of Vernon.

Barstis, Scott Alan, son of Jeffrey A. and Teresa Culver Barstis of 193 Oakland St. was born March 24 at Manchester Memorial Hospital. His maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Roy of East Hartford and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Culver of South Windsor. His paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Lachat of Enfield and Joseph Barstis of Willimantic.

Anderson, Nicole Teresa, daughter of Kevin M. and Mary Kay Schmitz Anderson of Route 6, Andover, was born March 30 at Manchester Memorial Hospital. Her maternal grandparents are John and Florence Schmitz of Denver, Colo. Her paternal grandparents are Duane and Betty Anderson of Quincy, Mich. She has a sister, Megan, 21/4.

Laurinitis, Katherine Myrie, daughter of Richard and Beth Raybourn Laurinitis of Long Hill Road, Andover, was born April 1 at Manchester Memorial' Hospital. Her maternal grandparents are Robert and Mary Raybourn of El Toro. Calif. Her paternal grandparents are Regina Laurinitis of 582 Bush Hill ■ Road and the late Anthony Laurinitis. She has a brother, Daniel, ,2.

Wright, Darren William, son of William E. and Janet M. Gavlin Wright of 29 Charter Oak St. was born April 4 at Manchester Memorial Hospital. His maternal grandparents are Christine Gavlin of Stafford Springs and the late Wilfred G. Gavlin. His paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Wright of 18 Chambers St. He has a brother, Dustin G.,2.

Fay, Jennifer Ann, daughter of Donald T. and Laurie Mikulski Fay of 204 Deer Run Trial, was born April 5 at Manchester Memorial Hospital. Her maternal grandparents are Frank and Helen Mikulski. 180 Greenwood Drive. Her paternal' grandparents are Shirley L. Fay of 707 E. Middle Turnpike and the late Henry J. Fay Sr.

MCC planning trip Deaths Elsewhere College Note%^A bus trip to Lexington and Concord. Mass., is

being offered through the Continuing Education Division of Manchester Community College on Saturday. April 23. The bus will leave the college at 8 a.m. and return about 7:30 p.m. The tour, which" costs $40. includes the Battle Green at Lexington, the Buckman Tavern, the Hancock-Clarke House and the Munroe Tavern. In Concord, the group willhave lunch, which is included in the trip price, at the historic Colonial mn and later visit the Antiquarian

Camilla RaveraROME (AP) - Camilla Rav­

era, a founder of Italy’s Commu­nist Party who championed women’s rights and became the first woman elected to the na­tion’s Senate, died Thursday. She was 98.

John StonehouseSOUTHAMPTON, England

(AP) — John Stonehouse, the novelist and former British Ca­binet minister who faked his own death in 1974, died Thursday. He was 62.

Mu.seum and the North Bridge. A pretrip-lecture will be held Monday from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the college. Re.servations may be made by calling 647-6242 between 1 and 7 p.m.. weekdays.

Prepare for pregnancyManchester Memorial Hospital is offering a free

two-night early pregnancy class on Monday and April 25 from 7 to 9 p.m. No registration is necessary. The sessions discuss maintaining a healthy pregnancy and living with pregnancy. The class is recommended for women in their second to fifth month of pregnancy.

Although Miss Ravera had been a founder of Italy’s Commu­nist Party, she was expelled from the party in 1943 because she bitterly criticized Soviet leader Josef Stalin and the Soviet’s 1939 non-aggression pact with the Nazis. She was reinstated during the 1950s and was elected to the Senate in 1982.

With his business ventures crumbling, Stonehouse faked his death by leaving his clothes on a Miami beach and disappearing. He was arrested two months later in Australia where he was living under an alias, extradited to Britain and tried on 21 charges of theft, fraud and deception involv­ing more than $382,500.

He was convicted in 1976 and

seiiieiiueu lu seven years, serving three before being released on parole.

Stonehouse was a member of Parliament for the socialist La­bor Party from 1957 to 1974. He served in a Labor Cabinet from 1967 to 1970.

On U of H dean’s listJames Duffield of Manchester has been named to

the dean’s list for the fall semester at the Ward College of Technology, University of Hartford.

sallacher on dean’s list

Bernie SimonOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Bernie

Simon, who battled cancer while serving as Omaha’s mayor last year, died Thursday of the disease. He was 6Q.

Simon, a Democrat, was first elected to the City Council in 1981. He was named mayor Feb. 3, 1987,

David M. Gallacher of Garden Grove Road has seen placed on the dean’s list at Salve Regina! College, Newport, R.I., for the fall semester.

longhts

New Books

Senior citizens meet Whiton MemorialCOVENTRY — Coventry Senior Citizens will

meet Wednesday fora pot luck luncheon at 1 p.m. at the Knights of Columbus Hall on Snake Hill Road.

New books available at the Whiton Memorial Library are;

FICTION

Dr. Crane’s Quiz

1. Until 1900 A.D., local natives threw live babies into which river to placate the river god?

NILE SEINE VOLGA GANGES2. The call "3 & 2” suggests which related term?

BOWL PLATE CUP SAUCER3. Which nicknamed creature furnishes a choice

menu item at restaurants?CYGNET WOODCHUCK POLLIWOG FOAL

4. Which one of these is not a common source of our meat supply?

SHOAT F ILLY HEIFER CAPON5. The rubber center of the world is located in

which nicknamed state?BAY KEYSTONE BADGER BUCKEYE

6. Analyze the various species of creatures shown at the left. Then try to match them appropriately with the typical sounds they make.

(a) Palom ino.................................... (v) Cluck(b) Hereford................................... (w) Gobble(c) Orpington................................. (x) Whinny(d) Chester White................................ (y) Moo(e) Bourbon R ed ................................. (t) oink

Answers in Classified section

Barnes — A trbuble of fools Beckwith — A proper woman Clarke — 2061, odyssey three Collins — Red Rosa Cussler — Treasure Delphian — Winter Douploss — Royal Polnclono Flonopon — The tenants of time Gardner — The secret houses Gill — The Boozer challenge Hloosen — Double whammy Howard — Quick silver Hunnicutt — In the music library Ludlum — The Icarus ooendo

Lyons — The president Is coming to lunch

Michael — Inheritance O'Donnell — The other side of the

doorPeters — Ttftlierm lt ot Eyton Forest Ross — Arizona I Thayer — Morning Trenholle — The gates of exquisite

viewTrew — Yashimoto's lost dive Weldon — The hearts and I j ves of men Wllleford — The wov we die now

\ NONFICTION

Amorv — The cat who came for Christmas

Carlson, ed. — Tales of gold Collier — The Fords Fodor — Spain, 1998 Glnsburg — Poisoned blood Hansen — Stranger In the forst

Huslifiws — The Korean war Hynes — Flights of passage Jones — The L.L. Bean book of New

England cookeryJones — Somehweres east of Suez Kenney — Dukakis Makebo — Mokeba Marlin — HopeMarone — How to father a successful

daughterMasters — CRISIS Moffatt, ed. — AIDS Peters — Thriving on chaos Pulitzer — The prize Pulitzer R e u k o u f — C o m m o n s e n s e

breastfeeding Roble — Eyes of fire Schneider — Sound off I Smith — The power gome Yaeger — Voyager York — Making weapons, talking

peace

If someone were to say to you, “ You’re a person i after my own heart,” you would most certainly take: it as a compliment. He or she would be in tune with I you on something of concern to you both. It would be ‘ pleasing to both the person giving the compliment ■ and the person receiving it. There is nothing truer: than persons offering or giving of themselves to the: service of God because, in that sense, you are a i person "after God’s own heart” ! Too many people \ are impressed by the amount of money they make or their social status. But God doesn’t consider such ‘ things. He is concerned about whethefweserve him 1 faithfully and show qualities such as kindness.' purity, and a desire to serve, without the thought of ■ when, what, or how rewards will be! Themeasureof I our success is not up to us. We serve God and leave I the rewards up to Him because He measures our i successes by completely different standards than j we would. By seeking “ God’sown heart” , we stir up ' a feeling of being needed — needed to be the person ! God created us to be. There is a place in God’s heart; for each of us.

Rev. Robert T. Russo | St. Bridget Church i

Manchester |

WeatherN

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Chance of rain, snowManchester and vicinity: To­

night. a 30 percent chance of showers early then partial clear- ing/<Low in the mid 30s. Saturday, variable cloudiness with p a t ­tered showers and thunder^rms in the afternoon, some accompan­ied by wet snow. High-w to 50.

Connecticut daily Thursday: 245. Play Four: 7886.

Today’s weather picture was drawn by Rich Prenetta, who lives on Nutmeg Drive and attends Keeney Street School.

Northwest H ills: Tonight, mostly cloudy with a chance of flurries. Low around 30. Satur­day, mostly cloudy with snow showers likely. A diunderstorm may accompany the snow show­ers. High around M.

Southwest Interior, West Coas­tal, East Coastal: Tonight, varia­ble cloudiness. Low 32 to 38. Saturday, variable cloudiness.

Manchester HeraldUSPS 327-500 VOL. evil. No. 108

Publlahed daily except Sunday and certain holi­days by the Manchester Publishing Co., 16 Bral- nard Place, Manchester. Conn. 06040. Second class postage paid at Manchester, Conn. Post­master; Send address changes to the Manches­ter Herald, P.O. Box 691, Mancheeter, Conn. 08040.

If you don't receive your Herald by 5 p.m. waekdays or 7:30 a.m. Saturdays, please telephone your car­rier. If you’re unable to reach your carrier, call subscriber service at 847- 9048 by 8 p.m. weekdays for delivery In Mancheeter.

Suggested carder rotes are $1.80 weekly. $7.70 tor one month, $23.10 tor three months, $48.20 tor six months and $92.40 tor one year. Senior citizen and mall rates are availa­ble on request.

To place on odvertlae- ment, or to report a news Itom or picture Idea, call 843-2711. Offico hours ere 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. .

The Mancheeter Herald Is a member of The Associated Press, the Audit Bureau of Circula­tions. the New England Newspaper Association and the New England Press Association.

Towns told ;tiousing is local issue

,Bv Anita M. Caldwell Manchester Herald

State Sen. Marie A. Herbst, D-Vernon, asked about 50 people who attended a meeting on affordable housing issues ’Thurs­day to get their communities behind an effort to combat the problem instead of waiting for the atate or federal government to •come to the rescue.• The meeting, sponsored by the ■Capitol Region League of Women Voters, was held at the First Federal Savings and Loan Asso­ciation office on West Middle Turnpike.

“ The housing crisis will not be solved by the federal or state programs,” Herbst told the au­dience of citizens and town officials from East Hartford, Vernon, Manchester and South Windsor. Anyone who thinks that “ is dreaming,” she said.

Ronald Osella, a Republican town director in Manchester, agreed.

Oseila said that while the state has some good programs there is a greater need for local effort.

Herbst and two other members of the panel, Michael Duffy, deputy commissioner of the state Department of Housing, and Dick Jackson, executive director of Creative Housing Inc., a non­profit consulting firm in Hart­ford, told the audience that the state could adapt programs to individual towns’s needs.

“ Affordable housing is what your community and your region tends to define,” Herbst said.

She added that low to moderate income does not define the welfare client any more.

“ It is my daughter, your son ... the teacher in your school,” ^ e said.

“ We could strangle on our own prosperity if we do not address the issues of housing,” Duffy said. t

Duffy said the issue of afforda­ble housing is the primary topic in state governments across the nation today. In Connecticut, rental housing is not being built, but there are programs that will make lower-cost rental units available, he said.

“ The state can’t do it all,” Herbst said.

She suggested the towns take a “ needs assessment” of their communities.

Herbst also said the myths about housing for those with iow incomes must be destroyed. She told the audience that such housing does not threaten prop­erty values.

Jackson agreed.“ You have to rethink some of

your assumptions and stop blam­ing each other,” he said.

Jackson said he formed Crea­tive Housing Inc. to help people find an alternative to federal housing assistance.

“ This program is not for poor people,” he said. “ It ’s for work­ing people and their children.”

.MANCHESTER HERALD. Friday, April 15, 1988

State official recommendsmore groundwater protectionBy Nancy Concelmarx Manchester Herald

David Kool/Minchwtar Harild

COME HOME TOTO — Matthew Schlllt, 9, played Toto during an adaptation of the Wizard of Oz at Buckley School Thursday. Schlllt Is a fourth grader at the school.

Housing crisis pushes some people to streets

A state official has recom­mended that further steps be taken to protect groundwater, possibly including the passage o an o^lnance that would outlinl strict procedures for the storage, use and disposal of hazardous chemicals by existing businesses

Throughout Manchester.'But Jim Murphy, of the state

Department of Environmental Protection, also told the Conser­vation Commission Thursday that the town’s proposed aquifer protection regulation was a “ landmark” plan worthy of praise.

Murphy, principal environ­mental analyst with the Wafer Compliance Unit of the DEP, said the aquifer protection regulation was one “ of the best regulations I ’ve seen in Connecticut.”

The regulation is now being revised by members of the Planning and Zoning Commission and noxdate has been set for a public hearing on it, Planning Director Mark Pellegrini said.

“ I think your town ought to be applauded. You’re way ahead of other towns,” Murphy said.

Murphy said only about 35 towns in the state have done anything to protect groundwater supplies, but Connecticut is far ahead of the rest of the nation.

But while he commended Man­chester for trying to prevent future contamination of water

supplies, Murphy said the town must also consider protecting the

/groundwater from existing busi­nesses, possibly by passing the townwide ordinance that would apply to all areas of town.

“ I tend to think zoning regula­tions don’t da a good job of protecting anything that’s here now,” he said.

According to a map Murphy brought showing the extent of contam ination of aqu ifers throughout the state, Manches­ter’s aquifers are in danger of being contaminated, but the situation doesn’t demand emer­gency action. But, he added, if wells are contaminated the costs of treating the water will increase.

The town’s propo.sed regula­tion, created by the Planning, Water and Sewer and other town departments, prohibits certain “ high-risk” businesses that use hazardous materials from locat­ing over aquifer protection zones, which surround the aquifers that provide Manchester with about 40 percent of its drinking water.

The regulation as it is written now also would prohibit expan­sion of about half of the 418 businesses that exist in the.se zones. Under the proposed regu­lation. these businesses would be classified as non-conforming uses and would be unable to expand.

Members of the Planning and Zoning Commis.sion, who decided in March to revise the regulation

it goes to hearing, plan to

reduce the list of prohibited businesses in the regulation, a list the G re a te r M a n ch es te r Chamber of Commerce and indi­vidual business owners have said is too long.

But the Conservation Commis­sion has recommended that the prohibited list include at least one other type of business, especially in the zone over the New State Road aquifer. Commission Chair­man Arthur Glaeser said the commission and town are espe­cially concerned about that area. Murphy agreed with the^mmls- sion’s request that stpbfiger res­trictions be placed" on develop­ment over the New State Road aquifer.

Murphy said the commission could ask the town to rezone the New State Road area from Industrial to Commercial, rezone a portion of the area or indicate where high-risk and low-risk industrial uses would be permitted.

The commission had also re­commended that the regulation prohibit storage tanks for fuel or other materials from being bur­ied. which Murphy said was probably a “ wise Idea.”

But, Murphy added, the town must make the final judgment, and a compromise such as requiring busines.ses to meet ■strict .specifications for the tanks may have to be reached.

“ It’s a tough local decision,” he said.

By Anita M. Caldwell AAanchester Herald

Commission wants bone siteMembers of the community

had a chance Thursday to air their concern and disgust about the housing crisis.

JoAnn Brooks of Manchester voiced her despair at the dim prospect of her family ever living in a home of their own. She and her husband have two children.

She spoke at a meeting of state and local officials on affordable housing issues sponsored by tbe Capitol Region League of Women Voters.

She said the family has lived in an apartment for 11 years. Both she and her husband work, and her daughter was just accepted at Trinity College in Hartford, she said.

Meanwhile, a South Windsor woman said the afforddble hous­ing crisis had .put her on the street.

Elizabeth Anderle said that as of April 30 she will be homeless. She has an 8-year-old daughter, and is putting herself through school, she said. She said she had already sought assistance from the South Windsor Town Council, the town’s Planning and Zoning Commission and the state De­partment of Housing.

“ My next step is to go to my car because I refuse to go to a Hartford shelter,” she said.

State Deputy Housing Commis-

"My next step is to go to my car because I refuse to go to a Hartford shelter."

— Elizabeth Anderle

protected from developrnentBy Nancy Concelman Manchester Herald

sioner Michael Duffy responded to her complaints by asking to speak with her after the meeting to explain the state rental assist­ance program as a possible alternative.

Doris Suessman. chairman of the East Hartford unit of the League of Women Voters, said that the housing issue is “ not a popular political issue.”

State Sen. Marie Herbst, D- Vernon. replied that it is indeed a political issue.

“ There comes a point in a politician’s career where they say, ‘I ’d rather be right than m a y o r , or s e n a t o r , or whatever.’ ”

Herbst urged the audience to begin advisory committees to address the housing issue more clo.sely.

In Manchester, a cqpimittee of the Board of Directors formed about two weeks ago will consider the housing issue, said Theunis ’ ’Terry” Werkhoven. a town director and member of the committee.

The Conservation Commission is recommending that a .strip of land next to the propo.sed north access road for the 380-acre Mall at Buckland Hills site be donated to the Manchester Land Conser­vation Trust or be purchased by the state because .scientists think dinosaur bones may be buried there.

The commission reviewed a preliminary plan of development for the portion of the site owned by the Trammel Crow Q). of Dallas, Robert Weinberg of Man­chester and New York developer John Finguerra’s 1-84 As.sociates, and will vote on a recommenda­tion on the plans at its May meeting. The mall developer is the Homart Development Co. of Chicago.

The plans are scheduled to be reviewed by the Planning and Zoning Commission May 16.

Trammel Crow proposes 1.1,50 Apartments for its parcel, while Finguerra proposes a retail, office and restaurant develop­ment and Weinberg proposes a mixed-use development.

Commission Chairman Arthur Glaeser said Thursday the quarry is the commission’s only

real concern because wetlands areas on the site have been left open or protected.

Glaeser sent a letter March 1 to the state Department of Environ­mental Protection asking that a .strip of Finguerra’s land about 100 feet wide and about .500 feet long located between the pro­posed north access road and the South Windsor border be consi­dered for the department’s Re­creation and- Natural Heritage Trust program.

The program, enacted in 1986, allows the DEP to acquire land to protect unique natural features, forests and wildlife. The commis­sion voted Feb. ll to recommend the quarry for this program.

The Recreation and Natural Heritage Trust Advisory Board recommends priority acquisition areas to the DEP. The program encourages funding and assist­ance for acquisition of these areas for non-profit land trust and conservation organizations or

municipalities.“ This (the quarry) is one of the

areas identified as having his­toric and resource value,” Glae.ser said. “ Our concern is to purchase it and save it.”

The possibility that dinosaur bones may be buried at the site was discovered in December 1987, when scientists from the University of Bridgeport and the Peabody Museum at Yale Uni­versity said they believed bones similar to those discovered in the quarry 100 years ago may be buried near the proposed access road.

Officials with the Connecticut Geological and Natural History Survey are working with repre­sentatives from Homart on how the site will be excavated.

The state is awaiting a response from Homart on proposals that would allow scientists to study the excavated area and continue inspection of the quarry area after the road is built.

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STATE & REGIONJal alal players strike

The first day of a strike by jai aiai players forced five of the nation’s 11 frontons that are in season to close including two in Connecticut, but some owners said they’ll try to stay open with non-striking players and amateurs.

The walkout, which began Thursday at frontons in Florida, Connecticut and Rhode Island, is in protest of working conditions and harassment the players say they’ve endured since organizing a union earlier this year. Protons affected by the strike in Connecticut Thursday included those in Hartford and Bridgeport.

Aaron Carbone, publicity director for the Hartford fronton, said management signed about six players Thursday night and expected to have between IS and 20 players ready for today’s program. The fronton planned to ask the state Division of Special Revenue for permission to open with a reduced program, Carbone said.

CAD drafting center opensPLAINVILLE — Students at Plainviile High

School have become the first in the nation to use a computer network to design and draft mechanical and architectural plans.

’The school’s computer-aided design and draft facility, funded in part by the state, was put into operation ’Thursday. Officials said the high school if the first secondary school in the nation to have such a facility.

With the networking link, computers are electronically connected to each other. Because of the networking aspect, students can print out copies of their work onto paperwithout tying up a computer.

Messages can be sent between computers, and Greenier also can send tests and corrected work to a student's computer, and students can send messages to each other.

Crafts showed no emotionNEW LONDON — ’The sister of Richard Crafts

says the suspended airline pilot showed no emotion when he was told his wife had disappeared.

Helle Crafts, a 39-year-old stewardess for Pan American World Airways, was last seen on Nov. 18,1986 when sh& was dropped off at her home in Newtown folIownig,a flight from West Germany.

Crafts, 50, is charged murder in the death of his wife. Police have alleged he killed her and ran her body parts through a wood chipper to cover up the crime.

Karen Rodgers of Westport testified that the signatures on a receipt for a wood chipper and a sales receipt for a Stihl chainsaw purchased in 1981 were Crafts’ . The jury has not seen the receipts, which have not been introduced as full evidence in the trial.

In other testimony, a carpet cleaner said kerosene could not have caused the dark stain the housekeeper who worked for Crafts claimed to have seen on the rug of the Crafts’ bedroom, a carpet cleaner testified Thursday.

Stolen funds repaidSTAMFORD — An attorney who pleaded

guilty to embezzling $517,000 from a Brookfield woman was spared a prison term after friends, relatives and former law partners agreed to help repay the stolen money.

Warren K. Rosen was sentenced Thursday to a program of probation, community service and psychiatric treatment and forever banned from the practice of law.

Superior Court Judge Harold Dean had denied Rosen’s request for accelerated rehabilitation which would have allowed the first-degree larceny charge to be wiped from his record after two years.

The prosecutor, David I. Cohen, said Rosen took the money in October 1986, but the theft was not discovered until April 1987.

, ^ s .

" A R M

H o u s e e x p e c te d to v o te o n $ 6 .3 b illio n b u d g e t

AP photo

ANTI-DRINKING PROTEST - Univer­sity of Massachusetts at Amherst students hold up signs and a giant liquor bottle during a raiiy Thursday night to protest the school’s new anti-drinklng policy which has met with resentment by the studnets.

Man faces murder trialWATERBUR Y — A Superior Court judge has

found probable cause to try a Waterbury man in the brutal murder of a roommate whose butchered body was found along a Watertown roadside last December.

Judge Bernard D. Gaffney Wednesday found probable cause to try Armando Soto, 39, for murder in the killing of 30-year-old Vidal Salceiro on Dec. 23.

Soto was arrested along with Luis Contresas. 32. on Feb. 17, nearly two months after Salceiro’s body was found cut into nine pieces and dumped in plastic garbage bags along a Watertown roadside, about seven miles from where the three shared a Waterbury apartment. Contresas was also charged with murder.

Contresas testified Thursday that it was Soto who killed Salceiro.

Boat speed limits proposedHARTFORD — The state Department of

Environmental Protection has proposed summertime weekend speed limits for boats on the Connecticut River at 30 mph, down from the previously proposed 50 mph.

The boat speed limit would he 25 mph at night throughout the year and 45 mph on weekdays.

The 30 mph speed limit would apply on weekends between Memorial Day and Labor Day, said DEP Commissioner Leslie Carothers on Thursday.

Millstone 3 leakWATERFORD — Workers found a leak of

reactor cooling water inside the containment building at the Millstone 3 nuclear power plant, a Northeast Utilities official said.

Plant workers closed a leaky valve but it could not be determined whether it was the cause of the leak, NU spokeswoman Barbara Luce said Thursday.

The leak was slightly greater that allowed by plant technical specifications. Luce said.

No radioactivity was released and ho dange^ was posed to the public or plant workers. Luce said.

By Judd Evurbart The Auociqted Press

HARTFORD — After weeks of haggling, a |6.S billion budget requiring a 12 pem n t spending increase but no ne,w taxes is ready for action in the Democrat- d o m i n a t e d H o u s e o f Representatives.

‘The Democrats finally woriced out differences on balancing the budget Thursday, and a vote was expected today.

Republicans planned a series of amendments aimed at limiting spending increases and eliminat­ing what they see as gimmicks being used to balance the budget that will mean significant tax increases next year.

The Democrats, who won’t even disciiss tax increases in this legislative election year, say the package is sound.

Although they had been saying for weeks that they wouldn’t, they decided to take an extra $20 nnillion from the budget reserve, or “ rainy day’ ’ fund, to help in co m e m a tch p ro p o se d spending.

They also boosted estimates of tax revenue beyond what their own budget office said they could expect to take In. Instead, they went primarily with estimates from the governor’s budget of­fice, whidh were $63 million higher.

In addition, they planned to trim the budget by about $32 million, although none of the leaders would say Thursday where those cuts would be made. Rep. Janet Polinsky. D- Waterford, co-chairwoman of the Appropriations Committee, said only that they would not come in human service areas.

Finally, they decided to accept the governor’s Office of Policy and Management estimate that a new program to collect taxes owed by out-of-state companies would bring in $90 million. The legislature’s Office of Fiscal Analysis had estimated $61 mil­

lion in collections.The budget for the year begin­

ning July 1 is about 12 percent higher than this year’s. The only tax increase is another penny on the gas tax, to 20 cents a gallon, 'blit that is part of schedule approved four years ago.

In all, $73.8 million will be taken from the rainy day fund, which is supposed to be u s^ only to guard against future budget deficits. The law governing the fund is being changed this year to allow the additional use, which the Republican minority calls "raid­ing” the fund.

House Speaker Irving J. Stol- berg, D-New Haven, said it waif possible some of the plans would change before the budget actu­ally hits the House floor today.

For example, he said, it’s possible that not all of the $73.8 million from the rainy day fund will be used. Other money might be taken from the $70 million local property tax relief Rind set up last year, he said.

There was some difference of opinion among the Democrats on the revenue estimates being used to support the budget.

Rep. Ronald L. Smoko, D- Hamden, co-chairman of the Finance Committeee, voted against the revenue estimates, saying they were too optimistic.

"I think we’re stretching too far," he said after his committee voted 19-16 to adopt the estimates, which must accompany the budget when it’s acted on in the House. "This is a year when we should’ve been exraordinarily conservative."

He also said that “ dipping into the rainy day fund" was “ very unfortunate.”

But his co-chairman. Sen. Wil­liam A. DiBella, D-Hartford, said it was a matter of “ judgment calls” that were reasonable.

Sen. James H. McLaughlin, R-Woodbury, said the Demo­crats’ numbers were "a little generous, a little padded.”

Republicans say using the

rainy day fund and other “ one- shot” revenue sources will result in a big hole to be filled in next year’s budget deliberations, re­quiring major tax increases.

There remained a question Thursday over whether a prop­erty tax relief bill approved this week in the Finance Committee would survive in itspresentform. Stolberg said he thought it would.

But Gov. William A. O’Neill, who has a long record of getting what he wants out of the le^sla- ture on tax bills, opposes the measure and repeated Thursday that he “ more than likely" would veto it.

He objects to the “ homestead exemptions” in thfe bill, which would exempt $25,000 of a home’s value from taxation. The gover­nor says that’s another form of tax classification: the idea of allowing towns to tax residential property at lower rates than commercial property and an idea O’Neill has consistently opposed.

The tax-relief bill, which would cost about $18 million in the coming year, applies only to those towns undergoing revaluation^

A new indication of the desper­ate straits in which the Demo­cratic leaders found themselves surfaced Thursday afternoon when Senate President Pro 'Tem John B. Larson said they might go after an estimated $5 million to $10 million in unclaimed bottle deposits held by beer and soda distributors.

That idea was rejected later in the day in Smoko’s committee, but Stolberg said it may be revived.

Patrick J. Sullivan, a lobbyist for the Connecticut Beer Wholes­alers Association and the Connec­ticut Soft Drink Association, said if such a bill were passed, it would be immediately challenged in court as unconstitutional. He said it amounts to “ confiscating prop­erty” because the state "cannot prove the non-existence of those containers.”

State auditors say GOP move on surplus ‘exercise in futility’By Brent Laymon The Associated Press

HARTFORD — Republican legislators are correct in assert­ing that state law requires use of last year’s budget surplus to pay off debts early, but trying to force the treasurer to comply with the law is an exercise in futility, state auditors say.

In a letter to House Minority Leader Robert G. Jaekle make public Thursday, Auditors Henry J. Becker Jr. and Leo V. Donohue explained that if the legislature decides to raid a pot of money earmarked by state statute for other purposes, it need only pass another law nullifying the statute — even if only temporarily.

Leaving last year’s $63 million surplus sitting in a special account while the legislature is looking for money to solve a severe budget crisis is “ the

Widespread drug testing ‘unwarranted’

equivalent of putting dope in front of a dope addict or alcohol infront of an alcoholic," Becker said.

“ You can’t just leave any sum of money out ttere protected by a statute,” Becker said.

Eight Republican lawmakers filed suit Wednesday to force Treasurer Francisco Borges to use last year’s $63 million surplus to pay off state bonds early in order to save on interest pay­ments, as required by a 1957 state law creating the Bond Retire­ment Fund.

Borges said it was not mandatory that the money be used for debt retirement. The money is now earning interest in a short-term account and Gov. William A. O’Neill has proposed using it to help balance the 1988-89 budget. The state’s financial condition is shakier than when O’Neill proposed his budget in February.

Although Jaekle did not join the Republican lawsuit, he had sought an opinion from the auditors on the law.

The 1957 General Assembly, controlled by Republicans, created the Bond Retirement Fund to prevent Democratic Gov. Abraham Ribicoff from using a surplus to pay for a one-time election year tax cut, Donohue said.

“ The legislative intent of Sec­tion 4-30a (of state statutes) is clear, that these funds be used for ... debt reduction,” the auditors wrote.

But they also noted that the budget bill already approved by the Appropriations Committee specifically- suspends require­ments of state law so that the $63 million can by used to help balance the 1988-89 budget. The money will be used to pay off bonds that come due next year.

Bv Larry Rosenthal The Associated Press

NEW HAVEN - Random or mandatory drug and alcohol testing for workers who are not in high-risk or safety-sensitive jobs is an unwarranted intrusion into their lives, a task force has concluded.

The task force, made up of experts in the field of medicine and the law and representatives from management and labor, said Thursday that in most cases, “ traditional methods of supervi­sion, including careful observa­

tion of the behavior of employees at work and close monitoring of job performance, are adequate.”

While saying mandatory or random testing is "entirely ap­propriate” for workers in certain narrowly defined fields, a task force report said those employees should also be afforded the opportunity to receive help with­out suffering disciplinary action.

“ We see alcohol and drug testing as a path for treatment, not as the quick way out the door,” said Dr. David F. Musto, a Yale University psychiatry pro­

fessor and chairman of the task force.

Implementing drug testing in the workplace to detect off-the- job illegal activity by employees is inappropriate because it turns employers into policemen, the panel said.

The task force was formed by The APT Foundation, a not-for-

profit private organization in­volved in the treatment and prevention of substance abuse. The foundation said the report by the broad-based task force re­presented a consensus of opinion among the major interest groups involved in workplace testing programs, and was the first of its kind.

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D uke leads polls; K o ch helps G o reBy Donald M. ROthberg

'The AMOcloted Pres*M

NEW YORK — Michael Duka- : kiS; his position as front-runner In the New York presidential prlm-

r ary confirmed by three new polls, was meeting with Gov. Mario

-> Cuomo while Sen. Albert Gore Jr. > was hoping an endorsement from ..Mayor Edward Koch would lift !him into contention.

Democrats Dukakis, Gore and 9 Jesse Jackson held a low-key - debate Thursday night, the only j clash occurring when Gore con- i tinned his criticism of DukaUson rthe issue of use of nuclear

weapons.t Republicans George Bush and I Pat Robertson — their presiden- -tlal rivalry reduced to a pro­forma contest Bush is certain to

’ win — were addressing the ^annual Washington convention of I the American Society of News- . paper Editors today.

Senate GOP leader Bob Dole, once Bush’s bitter rival for the

‘ presidential nomination, was hosting a reception at the Capitol for the vice president.

Cuomo has refused to endorse . any of the three Democratic contenders, saying he will wait

, until after the last primaries on , June 7., Earlier in the week, Jackson , met with Cuomo and the governor was generous in his praise of the former civil rights activist.

On Thursday, however, Cuomo said Jackson’s lack of experience in elective office could hurt him if he won the nomination.

“ I could make a better case for him if he had been a public official,” Cuomo said.

Before Cuomo decided to hold off any endorsement, Dukakis had been considered the odds-on favorite to win the governor’s backing.

The Massachusetts governor also had hoped to get the support of Koch, but the New York City mayor surprised many observers by announcing his backing of Gore, whom he described as "a man of intellect, courage and integrity.”

Koch said that on the issue of support of Israel, Gore was “ head and shoulders” above the other two Democrats.

The mayor said Jackson was never in contention for his endor­sement, but that he would back him if he became the party nominee.

Jet engine blows up in the air

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - Passengers fainted and some oxygen masks didn’t work after a Piedmont jetliner engine ex­ploded at 31,000 feet, its turbine blades puncturing the pressur­ized cabin, authorities said.

The twin-engine Fokker F-28, carrying 56 passengers and four crewmembers, made an emer­gency landing at 10 a.m. Thurs­day at Charleston’s Yeager Air­port. Two flight attendants were treated for minor injuries.

I The explosion shot engine de- I bris through the rear of the cabin, ripping a 6-foot gash in the plane’s

I right side and a 2-foot hole in the • left side, narrowly missing the ! other engine.; "It began with a wearing noise (and loud vibrations about five or i 10 times straight, and then there was an explosion in the back of us,” passenger Rafael Gonzalez of Charlotte, N.C. said.

Gonzalez, who was sitting three rows from the rear of the plane when the cabin depressurized,

,said a woman traveling with two .children passed out in the seat behind him.

“ She fainted. I turned around and she was blue. The baby was blue. And her 3-year-old was blue,” Gonzalez said. "I grabbed her and put a mask on her, gave the baby to a woman who was sitting next to her and I took the 3-year-old up with me.”

Investigators from the Na­tional Transportation Safety Board made initial checks of the plane Thursday and planned to begin their detailed study of the incident today, airport manager Jeff Bubar said.

“ Just looking at the amount of N^amage done, the investigation

will probably continue for several days,” Bubar said.

Flight 486 was en route from Charlotte, N.C., to Columbus, Ohio, when the right Jet turbine exp ired about 9u^&a.m„ Pied­mont officials said. '

“ It blew a big hole in the plane,” passenger Fred Hinton of Raleigh, N.C., said. " I ’m 240 pounds, and it was big enough that I could crawl through it. One of the turbine blades came right through the bathroom. We’re lucky no one was in it.”

He added however that his support of Jackson would be based “ not because of his posi­tions but because he would be less destructive of the country than George Bush.”

Gore needed all the help he could get in New York, which holds its primary next 'Tuesday with 285 delegates at stake.

Dukakis led Jackson by 45 percent to 28 percent in a CBS News poll, 46 percent to 34 percent in a Marist College poll and 49 percent to 34 percent In an ABC News-Washington Post poll. Gore had only 8 percent support in two polls and 7 percent in the third.

“ Gore’s numbers are flat across the board," said Marist pollster Lee Mirlngoff. While things can change before Tues­day’s vote, “ certainly nothing much moved this week except for solidity to the front-runners.”

“ I only believe polls that show me way in front," Gore com­mented after the debate.

The latest confrontation of­fered no sign of a breakthrough.

Gore pressed Dukakis once again on his statement to the New York Daily News that he would consider use of nuclear weapons in the event of a Soviet invasion of Europe.

“ This is a serious mistake” said Gore, referring to the Dukakis statement.

NATION & WORLDAid sanctions OK’d

WASHINGTON - Senators voted overwhelmingly to impose aid sanctions on Mexico for its shortcomings in the war on drugs, ignoring warnings that the move would damage relations with the United States’ third-largest trading partner.

“ This may be just the signal Mexico needs to wake up before it is too late,” said Sen. Alfonse D’Amato, R-N. Y., a leader of the effort to slap penalties on drug-producing and transit countries that fall short in their enforcement efforts.

But in Mexico City, the Foreign Ministry released a statement condemning the Senate vote as “ foreign interference.”

In voting 63-27 Thursday for the sanctions, the Senate ignored vehement Mexican objections and a plea from President Reagan.

Reviving oil industryWASHINGTON — The state of Texas is

talking with the folks wao brought you the oil embargoes of the^O s, looking for ways to cooperate with the OPEC cartel in a bid to revive its ati-uggllng oil industry.

By Itself, Texasis still the seventh largest producer in the world, but its oil, real estate and banking industries have been devastated since a 1986 oil price collapse.

Texans "cannot continue to bury our heads in the sand and hope everything is going to be OK,” says Kent Hance, one of the three members of the Texas Railroad Commission, which regulates oil production in the state.

AP photo

SURRENDER — Hotel chain owner Harry Helmsiey and his wife, Leona, leave the New York State Supreme Court building In Manhat­tan Thursday.

Innocent plea enteredNEW YORK — Billionaire real estate

baron Harry Helmsiey and his "hotel queen” wife Leona underwent.fingerprint- ing and mug shots, then quietly sat with other alleged wrongdoers before pleading innocent to tax evasion.

The Helmsieys, one of the world’s wealthiest couples, were released on their own recognizance Thursday after their arraignments on state charges that they hid about $4 million in renovations to their Greenwich, Conn., mansion as business expenses.

"Not guilty! ” both replied in strong voices while appearing in State Supreme Court in Manhattan.

Midnight tax deadlineWASHINGTON - The first return-filing

season under the broadest U.S. income tax overhaul in history closes out at midnight. But the average American will have to work 20 more days to keep federal, state and local tax collectors at bay for another year.

“ Tax Freedom Day” will come May 5. the latest date since the Tax Foundation began counting a half<entury ago. If the government took every penny you earned until your share of the total tax burdens were paid, the foundation reckons, you would have to work the first 126 days of 1988 just to meet those obligations.

Thirty years ago. Tax Freedom Day fell on April 10.

Several million Americans didn’t have time to fret about such fanciful calculations. They were working up to the eleventh hour on their 1987 returns, and many were sure to be standing in line in front of mail drops as the midnight filing deadline approached.

Arab protests declineJERUSALEM — The Israeli army’s

chief of staff said the number and scope of Arab protests in the occupied lands Is declining, so that when soldiers fire on rioters those hit are usually ringleaders.

Lt. Gen. Dan Shomron made the comment Thursday, the day his troops killed two Palestinians and wounded four others. Including a 12-year-old boy who lost an eye, in clashes in the occupied West Bank.

A general strike called Thursday to protest the arrest of nearly 5,000 Palestinians since the anti-occupation uprising began Dec. 8 brought commerce to a virtual standstill in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

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- 5» - MANCHESTER HERALD. Friday, April 15. 1988

I

AP

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OPINIONMANCHESTER HERALD, Friday, April 15, 1988 — 7

Coventry’s appointment encouraging

Coventry residents should find some com fort in the fact that Republican members of the Town Council have gone on record clearly endorsing the choice o f a new town manager despite the fact that he is enrolled in the Democratic Party.

They should also find encouragement in the knowledge that the new manager, John Elsesser, accepted the post knowing of past bad relationships between a long succession of managers and council members in which partisanship seems to have had a role.

John Sullivan, one of only two Republican members of the seven-member council, put it unequivocally. He said, " I want you to know that this is not a Democrat choice or a Republican choice. I t ’s a council choice.”

Elsesser said he took the job knowing of past con b ^ers i^ s . But he said, “ The council exhibited a desire for professional government and I feel they are ready to move forward with that.”

The remarks were made imm ediately after E lsesser’s appointment to the post, the time when the honeymoon spirit prevailed.

But Coventry’s past history does not provide much evidence that the town’s leaders are prepared for the kind o f political m arriage between a council and a manager that is necessary If the government is to work effectively.

That kind o f m arriage recognizes that while the partners have many common goals, there are clear differences in the roles each partner plays in attempting to achieve those goals.

Some o f the differences are spelled out in the Town Charter; some are, or should be, accepted tacitly.

I f the m anager is to be effective, he has to operate as a professional administrator shielded from partisan political influences. And he has to recognize that he must carry out the policies set by the Town Council, which may or m ay not establish those policies according to the party affiliation of its members.

I f the manager and the council each respect the role of the other, the marriage will last longer than Coventry’s previous ones.

PARDON ME

1BOX

IS THAT THE CHATTANOOGA

CHOO CHOO.../

■ l,y N f A Inc

JackAnderson

v m > AND GOUMH (KVtSQ))

Open Forum

H ig h w a y killers are backTo the Editor:

Would you hand a loaded gun to someone who was obviously intoxicated ? Allowing that same person to drive a car is just as lethal!

From 1982 to 1985, there was a decline in alcohol-related deaths on our roads due to an increased public awareness and passage of tougher drunk driving laws, in large part because of the efforts of such groups as Remove Intoxicated Drivers and Mothers Against Drunk Driving. Since 1985 the number of alcohol-related accidents have again increased. In Connecticut, the number reached a total of 5,575 in 1986, resulting in 3,863 injuries and 164 deaths. These figures do not reflect the emotional toll on someone permanently disabled, or on the family of someone who is permanently disabled or killed. Nor does it reflect the financial burden facing the family of someone disabled or killed.

Drunken driving claims more victims than merely the persons involved in the accident. It is time once again to use every resource to fight the devastation left by thedrunken driver. Someone dies on our roads almost every other day due to drinking and driving.

A recent poll conducted by the University of Connecticut Institute for Social Inquiry reported that 68 percent of respondents labeled drunken driving a very serious problem in the state. Automatic license suspension for driving under the influence was favored by 72 percent of the people polled. Our citizens want us to act, and act now, to remove these drivers from our roads.

Proposed legislation is now being considered by the General Assembly. Referred to as the "administrative per se” bill, it provides for immediate action when a motor vehicle operator’s blood-alcohol concentration is determined to equal or exceed 0.10 percent or if the driver refuses to submit to a chemical test.

Under these circumstances, an arresting police officer, acting on behalf of the commissioner of motor vehicles, would serve notice of license suspension to be effective 31 days later. The officer would take possession of the operator’s regular license and issue a 31-day temporary license on the spot.

Statistics show that confiscation of a driver’s license is one of the most successful deterrents in keeping drunken drivers off the roads. The National Transportation Safety Board reports that about 20 states have such a law and it has proven effective in reducing highway fatalities. Minnesota was the first state to pass ‘‘administrative per se” over 10 years ago and it now boasts the lowest highway fatality rate in the United States. The number of drunken drivers after midnight have been reduced by 60 percent.

In addition to saving lives, the law works to reduce the time and cost of court proceedings. Critics of the bill claim that the procedure is unconstitutional, but in fact a U.S. Supreme Court decision supported this type of law by weighing the public interest in removing unsafe drivers vs. the personal right to

SarahI picked a tall reed from the pond and wove it with my hand;I spent some time in yonder field and lay there with a man.

In months I grew round as the sun.He left this new life we’d begun;And when she came; I was at home, through pain and fear, I birthed alone.

Then one so small was born to me I longed to keep her safe and free,I held the dear thing to my breast — but there was nothing left to give —

and so I laid her to her rest.

I picked a tall reed from the pond and with my hand I wove a cross. The sky was dark with winter winds I had no comfort for my loss.

Susan Betko Wit and Wisdom Writers’ Club

The thorough vindication of Ed MeeseIt must have been hard cheese indeed for

Attorney General Ed Meese’s critics when special prosecutor James McKay called a press conference the other day.

After all, the liberal media’s long campaign to force Meese out of office had been going pretty well. A steady barrage of innuendoes had kept Meese busy defending himself for years; and while none of the charges had stuck, it was becoming possible to add up the man-hours Meese had devoted answering them and to argue that he couldn’t have enough time left over to do his job at the Justice Department.

In addition, special prosecutor McKay was known to be looking into Meese’s association with one of the chief defendants in the Wedtech investigtion, and it seemed entirely possible that Meese might be indicted for some misdeed involving that individual.

Finally, two high-ranking officials of the Justice Department, angry because Meese had disregarded their wishes in making certain department appointments, chose this deadly moment to submit their resignations. Seldom have stabs in the back been better timed or more exquisitely delivered. Neltter man uttered a public word about his reasons for resigning, but the media swiftly filled in that blank, quoting "sources” (they are no longer described as anonymous — that’s assumed) as saying the officials were disturbed over Meese’s widely advertised problems.

And then that wretch McKay, who had only to

W a iia mRusher

remain silent to play an equally dishonorable and effective part in the drama, had to go and ruin everything by announcing that, while his investigation would continue, he had thus far found no grounds for indicting Meese!

The best the liberals (who of course still hold many of the lesser but important Jobs In every executive department) were able to do by way of response was stimulate an obscure cell in the Justice Department, charged with an overview of ethical misconduct, to launch an internal • investigation of the attorney general’s role (if any) in the Wedtech matter.

Aasuming this turns out as planned, it will play Into the hands of Meese’s liberal critics rathw nicely. For, faced with McKay’s disagreeable news that no indictment of Mepse is imminent, they have fallen back to a second line of defense. Ah, they say, but it’s not enough that an attorney general is not charged with any criminal wrongdoing. He should be held to “ a high standard.’ ’

Now, that sounds perfectly plausible at first blush. But then one begins to wonder exactly what that "higher standard” ought to be, and immediately the difficulties become obvious.

In the first place, as George Will has pointed out, it must be a standard applicable to high-ranking officials in general. We can hardly design a standard exclusively for Ed Meese and discard it when it has served the purpose of destroying him.

What, then, shall our "higher standard” be?Shall we insist that all high officials must be, like Caesar’s wife, literally "above suspicion” ? A moment’s thought will serve to convince any reasonable person that such a standard is a sheer, impossibility in a brawling democracy like ours, where politicians are forever loudly casting suspicion on each other.

Then what? Shall we proclaim that a prolonged record of friendly association with Rubious Individuals, together with evidence of technically legal but valuable services performed for them, is enough to require a high-ranking official to resign? Even assuming there were some forum competent to apply such a vague and gausy standard, how many members of Coafrau would b eM tia Oielr seats eftsplbluM doibseo? Does anyskmimigliie Ibr a moment that Speaker of the House Jim Wright, for example, would escape?

No, Ed Meese Is well on his way to becoming the most relentlessly Investigated and thoroughly vindicated public official in recent American history. He should stay right where he is.

If you can’t say anything nice about ■ ■ ■

retain driving privileges. The availability of a prompt appeal process following license revocation was a key to the ruling.

Under the proposed Connecticut law, an arrested driver could make a request for an appeal hearing within seven days of receiving thelicense suspension notice. The hearing would have to take place within two weeks of the request. If a driver showed at the hearing that he was not the actual driver, there was not probable cause involved in the arrest, or that the test was taken and the blood-alcohol count did not exceed 0.10 percent, no suspension would take effect.

Critics also contend that people who drink and drive will continue to do so even under a suspended license. That is all the more reason to make our laws tougher and to deal harshly with repeat offenders. The inconvenience of a suspended driver’s license cannot be compared to losing a family member or friend in an accident caused by a drunken driver. A suspended license is only temporary; a loss of life is forever.

History shows that for tougher drunk driving legislation to be successful, it must be supported by the public. Organizations such as Remove Intoxi­cated Drivers and Mothers Against Drunk Driving have spearheaded the fight to get tougher la ws on the books and continue to fight the battle against drunken driving, but now it is time for you, your family and friends to Join the war. We are all responsible for the fight against this real and growing threat to our safety!

I urge you all to call or write your state representative and state senator in support of the "administrative per se” legislation which will greatly advance the effort to make our roads safer again.

Rep. Edith Prague 8th Assembly District

Columbia

WASHINGTON — Judging by all the shouting, we struck a nerve with two Reagan Cabinet members when we asked them to give us some insight into Vice President George Bush. We surveyed 33 past and present members of Reagan’s Cabinet in February when Bush and Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., were slugging it out for the nomination.

Education Secretary William Bennett and Transportation Secretary James H. Burnley scold^ us for asking about Bush. Bennett complained widely in the media about our bad form.

We thought the gentlemen did protest too much. Knowledgeable sources at the White House, in the Cabinet and elsewhere tell us that Bennett and Burnley were closet Dole supporters and, at the time they got our survey, were considering coming out of the closet with public endorsements of Dole.

Bennett and Burnley sent us the most inflamed of the written responses from the Cabinet. We thought our request was an easy one: Give us "examples of policy decisions or actions in which the opinion or work of Mr. Bush made a difference over the past seven years.”

Bennett wrote a searing, five-paragraph letter that reminded us of a trip to the principal’s office. His letter was released to The Associated Press and created a controversy about our survey.

In our letter, we said we thought Geoi^e Bush was a mystery to the voters, so we were asking the advice of people who had worked with him. Bennett responded: "This is nonsense. George Bush has been an active vice president for seven years and a vigorous candidate for the presidency for several m^ths. Voters meet him and see him and read ablest him every day. The public is quite capable of deciding what kind of president George Bush would be without the aid of yet one more column based on a few selected, and, it appears, perhaps unattributed remarks.” (We had offered anonymity to the timid.)

Bennett said the president had asked his Cabinet to remain neutral. And, he added, "... most incredibly, you threaten that you will construe a refusal to accede to your demands as sending a negative message about Mr. Bush.’ I cannot believe anyone will credit such a perverse interpretation and I am confident that the American people will Judge the vice president’s distinguished record of public service on its merits.”

After we did penance by pounding erasers, we got Burnley’s dressing down; " I have received your letter of Feb. 16, which threatens to draw a negative conclusion if I do not respond to your demand for information concerning the vice president.” (It wasn’t a demand, it was a request, with a caution that a dearth of examples about Bush’s accomplishments could "send a negative message about Mr. Bush that may not be warranted.” )

Burnley continued; " I am writing to inform you that I have no intention of responding to your demand. Furthermore, if you attempt to ‘interpret’ my failure to help you write a column, such interpretation will be a complete fabrication on your part and without foundation in fact.”

A more temperate private supporter of Dole was Energy Secretary John S. Herrington. He gave us a statement calling Bush "an excellent vice president... in furthering the Reagan agenda.” He called Bush “ easy to work with, and forceful when necessary.”

But, along with 27 other present and past Cabinet members, he provided no examples of what Bush had done in the last seven years.

Labor Secretary Ann McLaughlin was also reported to be a quiet Dole backer. Her press aide, Chriss Winston, wrote to us: "As a member of President Reagan’s Cabinet, it would be highly inappropriate for the secretary to comment on any candidate seeking the Republican nomination. This is particularly true in light of the fact that the president himself has remained steadfastly neutral.”

"Inappropriate” must have been the word of the day over at the White House.

Secretary of Health and Human Services (5iis R. Bowen; " It would be highly inappropriate for me to single out any of these well-qualified Individuals by responding to your request. Any inclination on your part to read anything into this decision other than the principle of neutrality would be a serious mistake.”

Secretary of the Interior Donald Hodel: "... I feel it is inappropriate for me to respond to the question in your letter at this time. The American people will have ample opportunity to approve the qualifications of the Republican nominee after the convention.”

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THE W. J. IRISH INSURANCE AGENCY

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"Pul 01 To Work For You" Joyce Q. Epstein, Owner-Broker

543 North Main Street Manchester • 647-8895

99 East Center Street Manchester • 643-2692

Route 83Vernon • 649-2883

"II Honda Makes It — We Sell 8 Service It" 24 Adams Street

Manchester • 646-3515

CLYDE CHEVROLET BUICK, INC.

MORIARTY BROTHERS315 Center Street

Manchester • 643-5135

JOHN H. LAPPEN, INC. CARDINAL BUICK, INC.Route 83

Vernon • 872-9111

164 East Center Street Manchester • 649-5261

"A touch above first class.81 Adams Street

Manchester a 649-4571

J. GARMAN CLOTHIER

TED CUMMINGS INSURANCE AGENCY

887 Main Street Manchester • 843-2401

CUNLIFFE AUTO BODY"Quality Service At It's Best"

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BROWN’S FLOWERS346V2 Middle Turnpike West

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MANCHESTER STATE BANK

"Your Local Hometown Bank" 1041 Main Street

Manchester • 646-4(X)4

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SCRANTON MOTORS, J. D. REAL ESTATEINC.

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KRAUSE FLORIST & GREENHOUSES

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PHARMACY

"Your Quality Men's Shop" 903 Main Street

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"Largest Retail Qrowera In Manchester" 621 Hartford Road

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JAMES R.McCAVANAGH REALTY

"Prescription Specialists" 230 North Main Street Manchester * 646-4510

SAVINGS BANK OF MANCHESTER

ORLANDO ANNULLI & SONS, INC.

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CANDIDS BY CAROL'Photography'

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MANCHESTER COUNTRY CLUB

"Bridal Specialists” 145 Main Street

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BUSflvlESSCounselor opens practice

Anna Shells But­terfield recently announced the op­ening of a counsel­ing practice at 7 Meadow Road in Bolton.

Butterfield holds a master’s degree in marriage and family counseling from Central Con­necticut State Uni­versity and com- p I e t e d a n internship at Ca­tholic Family Ser­vices in New Britain.

She is a regis­tered nurse with several years ex-

A n n a S . B u t t e r f ie ld

perience in counseling, cardiac care nursing and rehabilitation.

In her new practice, Butterfield will provide counseling for adolescents and adults in individual, couple, family and group therapy.

KAL picks P&W,enginesEAST HARTFORD — Korean Air Lines has

selected Pratt & Whitney’s new engine to power six Boeing 747 aircraft It will add to its fleet.

Korean Air selected Pratt & Whitney’s PW4000. The airline’s order for 30 installed engines and spares is worth about $150 million to Pratt & Whitney, a unit of United Technologies.

Korean Air has also taken options of four 747-400S. If all orders and options are exercised, the order is worth $325 million to Pratt k Whitney.

The airline will take delivery of its new aircraft beginning in March 1990.

Last summer, Korean Air ordered PW4000 engines for three different types of aircraft including the 747-400, the McDonnell-Douglas MD-11 and Airbus Industrie A300-600.

PW4000 orders this year total about.$750 million.

Butler named to bank postIsabella Butler of Manchester was recently

promoted to assistant vice president at the Connecticut Bank and Trust Co.

Butler, who joined the bank in 1971, is manager of retail products-system services.

Butler coordinates data entry functions to JET-BIN systems and analyzes system problems that affect demand deposit accounts. She is also responsible for product development and system conversions and is the DDA liaison officer to project support services and community banking.

Big trade gap triggers huge seiioff in marketBy P«t*r CoyTh« Associated Press -

NEW YORK — The report of a rising U.S. trade gap knocked Wali Street's iatest rally for a loop, triggering a $100 billion seiioff and leaving Investors even more cautious about the nation's eco­nomic outlook.

The Commerce Department's report Thursday that the trade deficit rose to $13.8 billion in February sparked a 101.4«-point decline to 2,005.64 in the Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks.

In foreign exchange, the dollar fell about 2 percent against the Japanese yen and West German mark despite central bank purchases aimed at bolstering the dollar. Bond market interest rates rose to their highest levels since January.

The trade report raised concerns that the dollar would remain under pressure despite a months-old agreement by major Industrialized nations to support it. That agreement was reaffirmed Wednesday by the United States, Japan, West Germany, Britain, France, Canada and Italy at a meeting in Washington.

Investors worried that the Federal Reserve might try to support the falling currency by pushing interest rates higher.

On Wall Street, declining stocks out­numbered advancing ones nearly 11 to 1 in the worst day since the widely-followed Dow Jones average fell 140.58 points on Jan. 8.

The Dow industrials had climbed nearly 130 points from April 5 through Tuesday, largely on anticipation that Februttiry’s trade news would be favorable.

The value of U.S. stocks fell by $99.7 billion in Thursday’s plunge, according to a 5,000-stock index measured by Wilshire

Trade setback undercuts upbeat finance messageBy Martin Crutsinger The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The world’s top financial leaders came to town at the beginning of the week riding high, but they’re leaving bruised and battered.

Biefore the ink had dried on their joint communique claiming success in stabiliz­ing the dollar, financial markets went into a tailspin Thursday, stunned by a disappointing $13.8 billion U.S. trade deficit for February.

The dollar plunged on foreign exchange markets, the Dow Jones Industrial Aver­age fell by more than 100 points and interest rates in the United States rose sharply on renewed fears of inflation.

The pressure on the dollar continued today. 'The dollar opened sharply lower in early trading in Tokyo, although it regained some lost ground later following reports that the central bank of Japan was intervening to buy the greenback.

To put it mildly, the dollar’s plunge was not the result being sought by the finance leaders of the United States, Japan, West German, Britain, France, Canada and Italy, who were holding their firsthigh-level talks since. Oct. 19 stock

arket plunge. >Treasury Secretary James A. Baker III,

who hosted the group’s meeting, had carefully orchestrated the discussions to demonstrate the resolve of the United States and its allies to work together to keep the global economy growing at a healthy pace during this presidential election year.

The communique issued after a daylong meeting Wednesday reaffirmed the na­tions’ commitment to keep the dollar from falling further through the use of interven­tion if necessary, the process by which

governments spend their currencies to buy dollars.

That pledge was put to the test Thursday when the trade report triggered panic selling on currency markets around the globe.

Even after Thursday’s market turmoil, the finance ministers were looking for a silver lining, noting that the massive intervention, while costing substantial sums, had kept the dollar from going into a free fall.

"T h e Group of Seven is not daunted by this,” said Canadian Finance Minister Michael Wilson late Thursday.

German Finance Minister Gerhard Stoltenberg said the hectic dollar trading was "not threatening” as the economic leaders let it be known they stood ready to spend more sums If necessary to stabilize the dollar.

“ I think what you see today is a very good example of international cooperation because there has been concerted Inter­vention in support of the dollar involving a very large number of countries,” Nigel Lawson, the British chancellor of the exchequer, told reporters.

Baker, the prime architect of the three-year effort to manage the dollar, said the markets were wrong to read so much into one month’s adverse trade report.

He said the overall trend was toward a lower U.S. trade deficit and this develop­ment was being aided by the efforts of Japan and West Germany to stimulate their domestic demand, something the administration has long urged.

“ Monthly trade flgures are by their nature erratic. What is important is that we are continuing along the general path of reduced imbalances,” Baker said Thursday in a speech.

Adviser forced payment of gains distribution tax

QUESTION:My accountant forced me to pay income tax on the $460.25 capital gains d i s t r i but i on credited to my mutual fund account lastyear. When I _______________say “ forced,” Imean it. He said if I didn't agree to pay that tax. he wouldn’t sign my return and would never do one for me again.

I ’m still mad at the Internal Revenue Service about this. Here’s why.

The day before the capital gains distribution, my fund ac­count was worth $7,045.22. The next day, I owned more shares, but my account was still worth exactly $7,Q45.22. Why did I have to pay tax on $460.25, which did not change the value of my holdings even one cent?

ANSW ER : Because that $460.25 was your portion of the mutual fund’s net capital gains for 1987. That mutual fund does not pay tax on the capital gains It realizes. Like most other mutual funds, yours acts as a “ conduit” and passes those gains along to fund shareholders. That gets rid of one layer of what would have been double taxation, but it does

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Associates of Santa Monica, Calif.In the bond market, the yield on the

Department’s benchmark 30- year Treasury bond Jumped to roughly 8.86 percent Thursday, the highest since Jan^uary, from 8.73 percent late Wednesday.

The trade report also battered major mreign markets. In London, the Financial Time^Stock Exchange 100-stock index fell 1.3 percent on Thursday..

In Tokyo, stocks fell sharply at today’s opening but later recovered much of their losses. The key Nikkei Stock Average of 225 issues, down more than 250 points at one time, finished the morning session at 26,967.83, doWn 143.52 from Thursday’s record close.

The dollar opened a sharp 1.7 percent lower against the Japanese yen In Tokyo but later stabilized on reports of heavy dollar-buying by the Bank of Japan.

Some economists called the markets’ fears an overreaction.

“ The quality (precision) o f the numbers obviously leaves something to be de­sired,” said Raymond Worseck, econo­mist at A.G. Edwards & Sons Inc. in St. Louis.

The trade report indicated consumers ■ were continuing to spend strongly, suck­ing up imports, Worseck said.

The trade deficit was the highest since the record gap of $17.6 billion in October. It was up from January’s $12.4 billion gap, but was down from a deficit of $14.4 billion in February 1987.

“ It ’s just one of those glitches that keep the financial markets interesting. The trend is stili for improvement in the trade deficit,” said James Soiioway,'director of economic research at Argus Research Corp. in St. Louis.

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Z \ 647-8895 E P S T E I N R E A L T Y

WHERS: THE INDIVIDUAL G E T S A T T E N T I O N Each office indepentJently owned and operated

Coventry •14000HOM EY, W ELL M A IN TA IN ­ED Cope In rural lettlno. 1st floor laundry and V» both on first floor. Cozy den and great yard for kids, picnics and vegetable garden. It's home.

Mancheeter *134,000NEW TO TH E M A R K ETI Com­fort you can afford In this at­tractive 3 bedroom Cape. Lo­vely dining room with bullt-ln hutch, garage and more. Coll for details.

Santiy Real Eatate Is Proud to Foaturo If s Homo of the Week.

Manchester *147,900Charming six room maintenance free Cepe In sought after family neighborhood. Screened patio, very private backyard foday Call our office for your exclusive showing

— FREE HOME EVALUA TION —

l leppseiMNifR E A L E S TA TE SER VIC ES

63 East Center St., Manchester. 643-4060

Fiano Realty Co. 646-5200 'y/u: QaC^lu

Of- / homes / a

Open House — 12-4 PM Sunday, April 27

144 Hebron Rd., BoltonSpacious 3 bedroom, 7 room Ranch on

IV4 private acres. *232.900

Lot 4, Valerie Rd., BoltonDistinctive 4 Bedroom, Custom Coniemp.

w/m iny extras in an excluaive subdiviaion. Featurea include wet ber,

Jecuiii, central air and much more! •335,000

Lot 28, Kim Rd., BoltonBrend new Garrison Colonial, 4 large

bedrooma, 2M batha, central air, *279,000.

not eliminate tax.on the gains.

In the normal course of its operations, a mutual fund sells stocks, bonds and or other securi­ties it has held as investments. Some of the sales result in profits; some in losses. When the fund has more profits than losses, it has a net capital gain to pass on to shareholders as a capital gains distribution on which you and other shareholders are required to pay tax.

You seem to be ignoring one important point. You had your choice of either taking your capital gains distribution by check or of reinvesting that distribution to buy more shares. Obviously, you reinvested.

As far as the IRS is concerned, this is just the same as if you had taken the check and used it to purchase more fund shares. Don’t be madjst your accountant. Be happy thatnp’s keeping you on the straight and narrow — and out of trouble with the revenooers.

c o m p a n yCSV 643-2656

Kiernan Realty649-1147

E S T A B L I S H E D 1 8 8 2

SWARMING

TERMITESAct quickly; avoid additional damage. B liss

term ite experts - plus our technical staff -p ro v id e over a centuiy of trainedexperience TheyH check your entire house

and help you avoid additional problems.

REFINANCINGFHA • VA • (X} IVE^HK)NAL • M()R1GAGE INSPEfJTHlNS

ASK FOR A COMPUTE HOIK SURVEY - NOMfl

357 East Center Street

Manchester, C T 06040

M A N C H IS T IR 009,900ImmocuW* end tpeclout UAR auallty-boitt 94reem Ronch. Many •xtrat. Includine 2 flreplacM, woodateve, custom window trool- monls end btcNittfullv menicurod ereunds sritti an Inerownd pool.' Convonlont location for oosy com- muto. Mustsootooporoctotol Don't

Featuring:

MANCHE STE R d i s t i n c t i v e D U P L E X T O W N H O U S E S

V "

PHONE: 649-9240BUSS

I

j j .

I L1 1. r r r , rrrr&T

rrrrK r r*rrrri.

THE SALTBOX - $159,900

* 1414 sq. ft of living area* 16’ X IS’ Living Room* Kitchen - Custom Cabinets • Dishwasher,

Refrigeraior, Microwave Oven, Range* 10 1/2’ X 10 1/2' Dining Room* Libraiy - with French Doors on 1st floor* 16’ X 12 1/2’ - Master Bedroom* Two other bedrooms

B M R E A l [STATEAM y o o n eed lo know m R eal E&laie '

EACH U N IT HAS: A lliched gerage, fireplace, IV^ batha, Anderaen Permaahield Thermopane windowa, vinyl coaled aluminum aiding, 2 air conditioning aleavea, pluah wall lo wall carpeting, full

private baaementa with laundry facilitiea, mullisone oil baaeboard heat.^ enveloped by Blanchard & Roaaelto Conalruclion Inc.

4S:DIRECTIONS: Rt. 84, Exit 63, Right on Deming Street, Left on Tolland Tpk., Left on Union Street, Right on Roaeetto Drive, Mancheaier.

Blanchard & Rossetto& 646-2482 FREE MARKET ANALYSIS

SENIOR CiM^EN OISCOUNTS

1H9 W E S T C F N T F R S T C O R N E R O F M c K E E S T M A N C H E S T E R

Century 21 Lindsey Real Estate

O m u Q ^JifZI■ <

L I N D ^ Y REAL E S TA TEl lW mm U bMigiiWizfli eew

519 Center St. Manchester

649-4000

Put Number 1 To Work For You.^Call for your "FREE HOME VALUE ANALYSIS

OUUILE* C UNUEY •ROKEIVOmER

todayl

MANCHESTER - One of the best buys Is this lovely 8 room Colonial situated on Tuck Road here In Manchester. Large 1st floor family room, enclosed sun room, front to back living room, 3 bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, VA baths, many nice features, quick occupancyl Only *232,900.

U&R REALTY CO.643-2692

Robert D. Murdock, Realtor

OPEN AND SPACIOUS

MANCHESTER >288'"FO R E S T H ILLS ” Boautiful ox- pandod Ralaed,^Ranch, approx. 2800 aq. ft., 9 rooms, 4 bMtrooma, poatibla In-law suite, huge family room, plus In-ground pool, ca­bana, awning covered patio, nice view, quiet street and much morel Call now for appointmentll

VERNON *200.000"BRAND NEW " Spacious and nice Qarrlaon Colonial, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2V6 baths, beautiful family room with huge stone fire­place, vaulted celling, sliders to deck with terrific view plus 2 car garage and walk out baaamant.

-<

Immaculate vinyl-sided Cape in fam ily neighborhood. Newer roof, insulation, and furnace. 3 bedrooms, VA baths, garage with breezeway. Very private, landscaped lot. *168,900.

‘Putting You 1st Is 2nd Nature To U s!”

STRANO REAL ESTATE156 E. CENTER ST...MAi^CHESTER. CTC A L L TO D A Y - 647-“ SOLD”

R E A L ESTATE647-8000 985 Main Street, Manchester

I

COUNTRY KIMOAIteB Fabulous 2 story Ralsad Ranch with dailghtful brook. Boautiful upkeep, on a full acre, s h a r e d by hillside. FIraplaoo charm, Ssj|R/3 batha, fin­ished basement. Inground pool w/shed, 1000 Qal. Oil Tank Plus new kitchen.

D.W .FISHTHE REALTY COMflkNY

%B e t t e r

D

OPEN HOUSESATURDAY, APRIL 16 — 1-4 PM 873 Bush Hill Road, Manchoator

PRICE REDUCED •1W.000Full Oormered Cape with contemporary Flair, 7 rooms, 4 badrooms, 1V6 baths, 2 cor ovaraizad garage, MBR with double closet. Profeealonal landscaping — A Qraat Volua.DIrectlona; 384 to Kaaney St. oxit. South on Ksanay

to right on Buah Hill Rd. House on rloht.

I H o m e s,I -S A . and G a rd en s ' MANCHESTER MflU-KEPT MNltOO

Vlnvl aldod Capo In vary good condition. Brand new bath room, 3 badrooms, beautiful formal dining room, firaplaead living room with now paint and wallpaper throughout. Located In sought after area of Manohaator.

643-1591871-1400

243 Main S t , Manchester, C T 06040 Vernon Cr., Vernon, CT 0 6 0 M

omeciMMRnDally ft0&«:00 Sol. eoo-s.oo

- 6

Manchester „ Colonial - *182,900.Perfect home for large family!! Spacious 8 room home with huge 4 bedrooms, 1 full plus 2 half baths, garage. 1st floor lamtly room with woodstove, living room with fire­place. Beautiful yard!

Manchester Colonial - *219,900

Irresistible home! t Lovely tradi­tional Colonial with 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, I'/ii baths. Large first floor family room 18x34 with fire­place. Bright k sunny llvingroom with fireplace. Ideally located in Porter Street area. Displays ever­ything you could want in a home, including 3 car garage.

D.W.FISHCommerclal-lneeilmenI Company I

E LL IN G TO N — *235,000.Free house tor conversion to offloea or raeiden- tlal us# wtth the purohasa of the 3.16 acres of land on which It stands •67,000 par acre in a prime Industrial area abutting the Ellington air­port. The house la a sound 1600 Colonial with commercial potantlol.' The property can be davaiopad far beyond Ha present eovarage. Ideal for coiistructlon co., ato.

VERNO N — *210,000.The location end C-10 zoning of this property, ]uat one block from Hartmann’s SuparmWkol, on buay RL 83, moke this site Ideal for protasal- onl/ralall use. A homs/businoaa with additional Income from one apartment m.lght be porfaot for the family just starttng a nawoualnoea. Small nursery would do wall hare.

643-4616

R EA LTY W O R LD(203) 645-7709 73 W*9t Center Street

Benolt/Frechette AiioclBtes Mancheiter. C T 06040

W E GET RESULTS’“A DIVISION OF THOMAS A. BENOIT ENTERPRISES’'

ManchtsUr *95,900Beautiful 1 bedroom converalon In BEACDN HILL c o m ^ x . Located on top floor. Carpet waa upgraded whan oonvarted. All appllanoas in­cluding microwave oven remain. Fas Includsa haatl Call lor a ahow- Ingl

Manchastar *108,600Baaulllul 2 bedroom oonvortlon In BEACON HILL complax. Carpet was upgraded whan oonvarted. All oppllanoaa Inoluding miorowava oven and air oonditlonar are In- oludsd. Inground pool and picnic area avallaMa for owners uss. Fss Includss hssti Call for an appolnt- msnt.

( 203) 646-7709

• y M i^ Real Estate

647-8400168 Main Street, Manehester

' * * ■ ' h i

BRAND NEW LISTING!!!Not very handy? Great! ’niia beautiful Ranch doesn’t need a thing! Move-in condition — 3 bedrooms, epedoua traditional living room with fireplai enormous kitchen-dining room with pantry closet, gorgeous new bathroom. Plush wall lo wall carp throughout, full baaemenl. A must.lo eee! *146,9

O PEN S U N D A Y 1-4 PM •1 Plymouth Lan*

Elegant 2600 aq. ft. cuttom home 29' first floor master bedroom iuH#. 2F kHehen breakfaet rpomi 3 full baths, gorgeous iarraoed rear yardi Raduced lo *254.900 for Immediate aaiel

Oir Eaat Center to Plymouth Lane,Call S4S-24S2 “WE’he SELLINO HOUSESI”

O P EN SUN O AV 1-4 193 S I t s Hawthorns 81.

Stunning 2 6 3 bedroom lownhouael Fabuiouo 30* otfica or studlol Each unK has 1H batha, and 2 oar Undem garaga *144,600 A *164.900-

Dir: Main it. to Woodland 8t. to Hawthorn# St. Call 646-2462 ‘'WCRE SELLING HOU8E8T*

AP

5

98

188 - 9

<yi

•288*ful ex- pprox. room*, family3l, c«- 9, nice morel

00.000IS and room*, lautlful neflre- ler* to * 2 car ment.

AP

ster

0.mlly!! huge 4 baths, m with ;h flre-

Iiradl- ns, 3 first

I (Ire- room ed in ever- ome. 5000>n In aled■ded* in- naln.10W-

sooin In irpet I. All save I In- onlc Fee

9lnt-

98

l> - MANCHESTER HERALD, Friday, April 18,19M

WEEKEND M ‘

Onstage controversy“ Master Harold and the Boys,” the

award-winning piay by South African Athol Fugard, will be prsented tonight through Sunday at Christ Church Cathedral, 45 Church St., Hartford. The drama centers around the friendship between Hally, a white South Africa school boy, and Sam, a black employee in the tea room owned by Hally's parents. The work is presented in cooperation with Wesleyan University,. Performances are at 7:30 p.m., and tickets are $3.

A soldier’s lifeYou’ll have an opportunity to step back into the

era of the American Revolution at Sunday’s “ Day in the Life of a Continental Soldier," presented at the Connecticut Historical Society, 1 Elizabeth St., Hartford. The program will feature the Nathan Hale Ancient Fifes and Drums. Inc., a Revolutionary re-enactment group headquartered in Coventry. An encampment of tents and camp fires will open to the public at 2 p.m.. and a performance — including a simulated attack — will begin at 3 p.m. Admission to the program is $2 for adults. $1 for children under 12. Reservations are required. Call 236-!5621 on Saturday.

Catch the brass ringThe Bushnell Park Carousel will open for the

season on Saturday, with a festival that starts at 11 a.m. There will be food vendors, clowns, free balloons and carousel rides for 25 cents each. There will also be a circus with a ringmaster introducing magicians, mimes and jugglers, while volunteers paint children’s faces. 'The fairends at 2 p.m.. but the carousel will run until 5.

It’s sleazy dancing!Ever hear of ’ ’sleazedancing?’ ’ Proponents call

it a sensuous form of partner dancing which uses improvisation, dips, sways and other similar moves. Stefan Gornick and Jayne Goldberg will offer demonstrations and instruction of ’ ’sleazedancing” . Saturday from 6:30 to 8:15 p.m.. at Mason Hall, 11S. Main St .. West Hartford, The class is part of a series called New Waves in Dance, co-sponsored by Dance Hartford and Dance .Services Network.

After the class, participants are welcome to a freestyle dance from 8:30 p.m. to midnight at the same location. Free non-alcohol refreshments are served, and no smoking is permitted. ’Tuition for the class is $8 per person, which covers the dance that follows. Advance registration is requested, by calling 241-0616, 523-4.305 or 666-5144. Admission to the dance, alone, is $2 before 9 p.m., $3 thereafter.

To o tin ’ his ow n hornThe children’s concert piece, "Tubby the Tuba,’ ’

will be presented Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Wadsworth Atheneum, 600 Main St , Hartford. The selection will he played by the Soni Fidelis Quartet in the mu.seum’s Avery Theater. Tickets are $5 each, and pre-registration is requested. Call 278-2670,

Bee a quilterMarjorie Knight of M a i^ester will give a talk

called “ Making a QuilC^n Sunday afternoon at 1 at the Manchester Historical Museum, 126 Ce^ar St. The speech is presented in conjunction with an exhibit called "Quilts and Flowers," which ^ features 60 quilts and numerous fresh flower arrangements. The museum is open Thursdays and Sundays, 1 to 5 p.m. Admission is free to Historical Society members, 61 for others.

Something old. . .

REACH O U T AND TO U C H SO M EON E — Pilobolus Dance Theatre is known for its highiy originai approach to dance. A Piioboius performance combines acro­batics, theater, mime, comedy and

more. They will be at Jorgensen Auditorium at the University of Connec­ticut in Storrs oh Saturday at 8 p.m. For tickets, cail 486-4226.

M usical Interlude on S und a y A ro u n d the w orldThe Johns Family Ensemble, a group made up of

professional musicians who are members of Manchester’s Johns family, will present tjieir annual concert on Sunday at 3 p.m. at the Community Baptist Church on East Center Street The concert is free and open to the public. For information, call 643-0537.

G o fly a kiteKite enthusiasts, young and old, are invited to the

7th Annual Kite Flying Contest, sponsored by the Savings Bank of Manchester to benefit the Lutz Children’s Museum. The concert will be on Saturday from noon to 3 p.m. at Wickham Park, with kite flying demonstrations, contests and prizes. Contest entry is free and parking is $1 per car. Both store-bought and homemade kites are welcomed. The rain date is Sunday. For information, call the museum. 643-0949.

Dancers get a square dealThe Manchester Square Dance Club will have a

dance on Saturday at the Bentley School on Hollister Street, A round dance workshop will be held from 7:30 to 8 p.m,, followed by a dance until 11p.m. Bruce McCure will call the squares and Joan and Armand Daviau will cue the rounds. Admi.ssion is $6 per couple

CinemaHARTFORDCinema City — Weekend Schedule

Unavailable.

EAST HARTFORDEastwood Pub A Cinema — Broadcast

News (R ) FrI and Sat 7, 9:70; Sun 7:15.Poor Richards Pub and Cinema —

Masauerade (R ) FrI and Sal 7:30, 9:30, 17: Sun 7:30, 9:30.

Showcase Cinemas 1-9 — Bright Lights, Big City (R ) FrI 1:70, 7:70, 9:45, 11:55; Sat 17:70, :35, 4:50, 7:70, 9:45,11:55; Sun 17:70, 7:35, 4:50, 7:70,9:45. — Love At Stake (R ) FrI 1:10, 7:30, 9:35, 11:35; Sat 17:10, 7:15, 4:70, 7:30, 9:35, 11:35; Sun 17:10, 7:15, 4:70, 7:M, 9:35. — The Seventh Sign (R ) FrI 1:40, 7:45, 10:10, 17:10; Sat 17:40, 7:40, 4:40, 7:45, 10:10, 17:10; Sun 17:40, 7:40, 4:40, 7:45, 10:10. — Bod Dreams (R) FrI 1:40, 7:15, 9:30, 11:30; Sot 17:50, 7:50, 4:50, 7:10, 9:30, 11:30; Sun 17:50, 7:50, 4:50, 7:15, 9:30. — Beetlelulce (PG ) FrI 1:30, 7:75, 9:40, 11:40; Sat 17:30, 7:35, 4:40, 7:75, 9:40, 11:40; Sun 17:30, 7:35, 4:40, 7:75, 9:40. — Biloxi Blues (PG-13) FrI 1, 7:35, 10,17:10; Sat 17, 7:154:30,7:35,10,17:10; Sun 17, 7:15, 4:30, 7:35, 10. — Stand and Deliver (PG ) FrI 1,7:40,10:05,17:10; Sat 17, 7:10, 4:70, 7:40, 10:05, 17:10; Sun 17, 7:10, 4:70, 7:40, 10:05. — Snowv River Part 7 (PG ) FrI 1, 7:70, 9:50, 17; Sot 17:40,7:50,4:55, 7:70, 9:50,17; Sun 17:40, 7:50,4:55,7:70,9:50.

MANCHESTERUA Theaters East — Johnny Be Good

(PG-13) FrI 7; Sot-Sun 7:15, 4:15, 7. — D O.A. (R ) FrI-Sun 9:70. — Three men and a Babv (PG ) FrI 7:15, 9:40; Satond Sun 7, 4:30, 7:15, 9:40. — Police Academy 5 (PG ) FrI 7:30, 9:45; Sot and Sun 2;70, 4:30, 7:30, 9:45. — Rocky Horror Picture Show (R ) FrI and Sot midnight. — Heavy Metal (R ) FrI and Sat midnight. — Kentucky Fried Movie (R ) Friond Sot midnight.

D«p«ndablt htip wanlad.

Apply lodayl

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*9.99I «tlh

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VERNONCine 1 a 7 — Johnny Be Good (PG-13)

FrI 7, 9:15; Sat and Sun 1:30, 3:15, 5, 7, 9:15. — D.O.A, (R ) Frl7:10,9:40; Satond Sun 7, 4:30, 7:10, 9:40.

WEST HARTFORD^Elm t a 7— Broadcast News (PG-13) FrI 7,9:30; Satond Sun 7,4:15, 7,9:30 — Police Academy 5 (PG ) FrI 7; Sot 7, 7; Sun 7. — D.O.A. (R ) FrI 9:30; Satond Sun 4:15, 9:30.

W ILLIMANTICJlllson Square Cinema— Bad Dreams

(R ) FrI 5, 7, 9,11:45; Sot and Sun 1,3,5,7, ?' (PG-13) Frl5:15,7:30,9:45,17; Sot 17:45,3,5:15,7:30,9:45, 17; Sun 17:45, 3, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45. — Eteetlelulce (PG-13) FrI 5:15, 7:30, 9:45, ?'■ V 12; Sun

— Bright Lights, Big City (R ) FrI 5,7:15,9:30,11:45; Sat 5, 7:15,9:30,11:45; Sun 5, 7:15, 9:30.— The

Fox and the Hound (G) Sat and Sun 1, 3. — The lost Emperor (PG-13) FrI 4:15, 8, 11; Sot 1, 4:15, 8, 11; Sun 1, 4:15, 8.

Rating guideG — General audiences. All ages

admitted.PG — Parentol guidance suggested.

Some material may not be suitable (or children.

PG-13 — Special parental guidance strongly suggested for children under 13. Some material may be Inapprop­riate for young children.

R T f . Restricted. Under 17 requires a ccom pan y in g paren t or adult guardian.

X — No one under 17 admitted. Some s ta te s m ay ha v e h i g h e r ag e restrictions.

. World Fest’88, a multi-cultural fair, will be held Sunday at the University of Connecticut. It will feature ethnic foods and crafts booths, sponsored by more than 18 organizations. Admission is free The fair will be In UConn’s ROTC Building, Hillside Road, Storrs, from noon to 6 p.m.

Som e fancy dancin’Two programs of new dance works will be

presented this weekend, as Real Art Ways puts on the Connecticut Choreographers Showcase. Saturday’s show, at 8 p.m., features improvisations by Sandra Kopell of New Haven and Sonia Plumb of Hartford. Tonight at 8 and Sunday at 7 p.m., the show features improvisations by Bonita Weisman of Glastonbury and excerpts from work by Anne-Alex Packard of New London. Performances are in the Hartford Arts Center, 94 Allyn St., Hartford, Tickets are $8. Reservations may be placed by calling 52.')-5521.

A crafty tag saleWhat’s better than a good craft sale? A good yard

sale. Combine the two. and you’ve got an event that can’t be beat. That’s why the Connecticut Guild of Craftsmen is sponsoring its first Artists and Craftsmen’s Swap Meet, on Sunday at the V.F.W. Hall in New Britain. In 40 booths, members of the guild will offer crafts merchandise not normally seen at shows. Including excess stock and “ factory seconds” The sale isopen from 9a.m. to 5p.m. at 41 Veterans Drive.

Flow ery speeches plannedLooking for some gardening tips? The Arbors at

Hop Brook, a retirement community at 385 W. Center St ., will present a program on perennials at 3 p.m. on Saturday. Edwin Carpenter, a professor of ornamental horticulture at the University of Connecticut will be the guest speaker. Admission is free, but reservations are required. Call 647-9343.

The Connecticut Spring Antique Show will be open this weekend at the Broad Street Armory in Hartford. There will be 89exhibitors showing Early American furniture and accessories. Free parking is available in the garage behind the armory. The show is open tonight. 7 to 10; Saturday, 1 to 9 p.m.; and Sunday, l to 6 p.m. Admission is $5, which Mnefits the Haddam Historical Society’s restored Thankful Arnold House.

Flicks are freeYou’ ll meet Curious George and the Man with the

Yellow Hat on Saturday at the Andover Public Library. The librarians are showing two films starring George, starting at 1 p.m. Children are encouraged to bring pillows to siton during the films. For information and directions, call 742-7428.

Som e ’Prairie’ alum niThe Butch Thompson Trio, for 12 years the house

band of public radio’s popular “ A Prairie Home Companion,” will perform tonight and Saturday at 8 with the Hartfortl Pops Orchestra at Bushnell Memorial Hall. The program is primarily ragtime and jazz. Thompson plays stride piano, in a style made popular by Eubie Blake and Jelly Roll Morton. Tickets are between $9 and $27, and are on sale at Bushnell, 246-8742.

A rose Is a roseWant to know more about roses? There will be a

rose planting workshop on Saturday, in the Knox Parks Foundation Horticulture Center of Elizabeth Park. This park, at the border of Hartford and West Hartford, has extensive rose gardens — which will not, of course, be blooming at this time of year. The free workshop will begin at 10 a m. For more information, call 523-4276.

Fishing for com plim entsAs every angler knows, Saturday is the opening

day of the fishing season. Various towns are organizing special events for the occasion, including a fishing derby, from 6 to 9 a.m., in Countryside Park, Huckleberry Hill Road, Avon.The new Patio Restaurant, which Just opened at 250 Hartford Road, will serve special fishermen’s breakfasts starting at dawn, and will be packing box lunches for all who plan to take to the streams. No reservations are required.

Fact or fiction?A new star show, “ Fact or Fiction," explores the

realm of science fiction and outer space. It is shown daily at the Gengras Planetarium, at the Science Museum of Connecticut, 950 Trout Brook Drive,West Hartford. Showtimes are Monday through Friday,3:30p.m.; Saturdays, 11:30a.m., 12:30,1:30 and 3:30p.m.; and Sunday, 1:30 and 3:30p.m.

Another program, called “ Skylights," shown Saturdays and Sundays at 2:30 p.m., is designed for very young children. Also for the smallfry is the mini-zoo, with animal demonstrations Mondays through Fridays, 2 p.m.; Saturdays, noon, 1 and 2 p.m.; Sundays. 2 p.m.

I J i\ a t V I T T N E R o d i s c o v e r t h e f

Special!. . .This weekend at

Papa Qinoenjoy ''THE WORKS" Pizza with 7 Toppings $ ^ 7 9

Lg. Kitund

R E A L P L E A S U R E O F P L A N T SN O W IS T H E T IM E F O R

P A N S IE SBEAUTIFUL

G IAN T FLOWERS ONLY$ J 6 0

TRAY

PcpperonI • Sausage • Hamburg Mushroom • Peppers • Onions and Cheese lopper

- 4 PM 'T i l l C l o s in g -

PERENNIAL PLANTSW E HAVE OVER 10.000 P LA N TS

T O C H O O S E FROM M O S T P LA N TS ARE

orThick Pan

Nrw Hdutb:

C W c K e n

$4.99MMh

Scrod

EACH or 3 FOR

DEHYDRATED COW MANURE

SALE PRICED A T

25 lb. — * 3 ® ®

40 1 b . - ® 4 ® «

HERB PLANTSO VER 70 V A R IETIES T O C H O O S E FROM

R E A S O N A B LY PR ICED A T

PELLETIZEDLIME

THE EASY WAY TO DO A DIRTY JOB.

EACH BAG COVERS UP TO 4,000 SO. FT.

EACH or 3 FOR

HiiiDY RHODODIENDRON

REAL NICE VARIETY OF NEW HARDY, LOW GROWING

RHODODENDRON

WE HAVE A NICE VARIETY OF INEXPENSIVE SILKS. ALSO,

YOU WILL FIND READY MADE CENTERPIECES, WALL AND

DOOR PIECES.

WE HAVE THEGREENPRO - 4 SEASON

LAWN PROGRAMSALE PRICED

A T$ 4 g 9 S P »r

5,000 Sq. Ft. Covrtg*

BURPEE SEEDS 40% OFF

WE HAVEBLUEBERRY P U N TS

OPEN 7 DAYS SUNDAY UNTIL 4

I VITTNER’S GARDEN CENTER x^ 1 TOLLAND TURNPIKE • MANCHESTER-VERNON TOWN UNE • 6 4 9 - 2 6 2 3 £

MANCHESTER HERALD. Friday. April 15, 1988 - 11

Comic Stove Landesberg amuses M CC audience

Jiyns KssdIs/MinchMtar Hsrald

STA N D -U P COM EDY — Steve Landesberg, voted as the Campus Comedy Star, brought his dry humor to Manchester Community College Thursday night. Best known for his role as Sgt. Dietrich on "Barney Miller”, Landesberg talked about his career and background durihg the show.

School offers arts classA performing arts program

for students in grades 8 through 12 will be offered this summer at Manchester High School.

Mary L. Walsh, director of music at East Catholic High School, and David A. Welch, a professional performer since 1962, will teach the four-week session, which will touch on acting, directing, set construc­tion and character prepara­tion. Exercises will also be offered on stage fighting, playv/riting, writing a resume.

handling auditions and im­proving diction.

The course will begin June 27 and end July 23. It will meet from 8 to 11 a m. daily. No auditions are required. The fee is $100 per student. A deposit of $25 is due before June 10, with the balance due by June 17. Checks should be made paya­ble to the Summer Enrichment Program, and be sent to the Performing Arts Series, Man­chester High School. 134 E. Middle Turnpike, Manchester 06040.

Patti, Harris given top Dove Awards

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Sandi Patti was named artist of the year for the fifth time since 1982 and Larnelle Harris received three honors, including top male vocalist, at the Dove Awards for gospel music Thursday night.

Miss Patti also was named top female vocalist for the seventh straight year and shared the song of the year award for “ In the Name of the Lord,’ ’ written with Phil McHugh and Gloria Gaither.

“ I do very much want to thank the Lord .... for being with us in the valleys and in the moun­tains,” Miss Patti said. She won artist of the year In 1982,1984,1985 and 1987.

Harris earned male vocalist of the year, top inspirational album for “ The Father Hath Provided” and songwriter of the year.

“ It has been a great year,’ ’ said Harris, who won his fourth Grammy Award in February. “ A lot of things have happened.”

Soul music pioneer Aretha Franklin won the traditional black album of the year for “ One Lord. One Faith. One Baptism.” She was not at the three-hour awards presentation at the Ten­nessee Performing Arts Center.

Cliff Barrows, veteran music director for the Billy Graham Crusade, was inducted Into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame.

The Winans. a brother and sister duet, were double winners, earning contemporary black gos­pel album for “ Decisions'’ and the Horizon Award for rising performers.

^jrst Call, a trio, was voted

By Jayne Keedle Manchester Herald

Steve Landesberg, perhaps best known as Sgt. Arthur Die­trich of the TV show “ Barney Miller” , brought his dry sense of humor to Manchester Commun­ity College Thursday.

Recently voted the campus comedy star by the National Association for Campus Activi­ties, Landesberg treated an au­dience of 700 people to more than an hour of standup comedy, filled with cracks concerning his Jew­ish background and anecdotes from his career.

Landesberg encouraged au­dience participation, frequently asking if anyone had any ques­tions. But he objected to being videotaped.

"You ’ve got to pay me a lot of money if you’re going to tape this,” he said half-joking, when he noticed that someone from the college was taping the show.

The momentary tension was soon alleviated by Landesberg’s self-deprecating crack, “ what’s educational about this?” — a response to the camera opera­

tor’s defense that the film was for educational purposes.

Landesberg started his career as a comedian in 1969 at the age of 18, performing in comedy clubs in Greenwich Village, N.V. From there, the Bronx native Joined an improvisation group called "The New York Stickball Team” which he toured with for 1>A years.

It was when Danny Arnold, executive producer and major writer of Barney Miller saw him on the “ Paul Sand Show” , thathis career began to take off. Arnold hired him to play a crook on the police comedy show, and the guest appearance led to his role as Sergeant Dietrich, which he played for 5Mt years.

Nominated for an Emmy award three times for his part on the show, Landesberg said that he felt “ Barney Miller” was the best thing he had done to date. "Most of my fame and notoriety comes from Barney Miller." Landes­berg said. ‘T v e been getting scripts for six years and nothing even comes close.”

Although he recently finished a movie called “ Leader of the Band,” Landesberg said that the

film would not be released. He said that the film, which he described as “ low budget,’ ’ was not very successful, although he said “ some of it worked.”

He does not seem too disap­pointed about it, however. During his comedy routine he told the audience. “ You’ll never see it unless you’re in Belgium! It was fun to do though!"

For the most part, Landesberg tours, playing college campuses and some conventions. He tapes all his routines to find out what works and what doesn’t and to remember any good improvisa­tions that come as a result of the audience participation.

“ In the beginning you must try out new stuff,’ ’ Landesberg said.' “ If something amuses you and amuses someone else then you try it. You can get stuck after awhile, but a great audience helps.”

“ Stand up is fun. but I think of it as a part-time job.” Landesberg said. “ I ’d like to always do it. but do less traveling.”

Landesberg said he is consider­ing scripts. Now that he has a 15-month-old daughter. Eliza­beth, he doesn’t like to be away

from home for more than two days at a time.

“ Traveling knocks you out,” Landesberg said.

He said he found that “ high­ways and planes are tiring" if he has to travel all the time.

“ I don’t like to go on the road all the time, especially with the baby,” he said.

He spends as much time as possible with his family in Cali­fornia, where most of his jobs arc located and where his wife works producing commercials. The two of them met when he was doing a Ryder truck commercial, one of the many advertisements he has worked on. As far as commer­cials go. Landesberg said he could ad lib the dialogue for many of them, as long as the basic m e s s a g e was in t h e r e somewhere.

Landesberg also keeps busy with appearances on talk shows and has been a guest on the Johnny Carson show more than 60 times.

But although his career is based in California, he said he still prefers New York to the West Coast. "New York is home.”

Student opens for LandesbergBv Javne Keedle Manchester Herald

Manchester Community Col: lege theater student Stacey Ma- thewson said he had been afraid of “ messing up” when he opened for comedian Steve Landesberg during a performance at the college Thursday.

But his comedy routine, which consisted of convincing imperso­nations of Robin Williams and Rodney Dangerfield. and several skits, went over well with the audience. Mathewson, who had recovered from a cold he caught last week, said he had spent a lot of time and energy getting ready for his routine.

He had approached the cultural

programs committee organizing the event to see if he could open for Landesberg some time ago. and after auditioning and clear­ing it with Landesberg’s agent. he finally got the go-ahead.

Although his first experience before a crowd was as emcee at his high school Senior Night, and in a bobcat suit as a pep rally mascot, Mathewson. who is from South Windsor, landed the lead in the musical “ Whoopee” at South Windsor High School, which was his first experience acting.

Since then, Mathewson has appeared in open mike nights at several clubs, and has performed in three plays at Manchester Community College. The second- y»>ar liberal arts major is a

member of the Industrial Strength Comedy Company and Improv 10.

Mathewson intends to follow his mother’s suggestion that he be­come an actor, and based on his performance Thursday, the col­lege has expressed an interest in having him perform his comedy routine at another up-coming event.

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group of the year for a second straight time.

Gospel superstar Amy Grant, whose music has crossed over into the pop field, won for short form video of the year for “ Stay For Awhile.”

Winners were chosen by 3,200 members of the gospel associa­tion. The awards presentation, broadcast the past few years by the cable station CBN. were not telecast this year because the station cut back production costs.

The awards are named for the bird in the biblical account of the baptism of Christ.

Chinese paintings at the Metropolitan

NEW YORK (AP) - The exhibition, ” 19th and 20th Cen­tury Chinese Painting; Selections From the Robert Hatfield Ells­worth Collection” is on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art through Sept. 25.

The show is made up of about 200 of the 471 paintings Ellsworth collected over a 35-year period and donated to the museum in 1986. The works represent the period 1800 to 1950.

The museum says, “ They illus­trate the momentous political and social change that ushered China into the modern world and they provide Westerners with the first opportunity to formulate a criti­cal history of Chinese painting from this tumultuous period.”

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IN BR IEFHazaTU effort needs staff

Code work costly In Bolton

Two new town employees will haye to be hired, at a cost of about $32,000, to itafeet state and federal requirements for reporting hazardous materials, said Ronald Kraatz, Manchester health director.

One full-time employee would be hired by July, Kraatz said. A part-time employee would be hired later to help administer the information, he said.

Kraatz made his comments at a meeting of the Manchester Local Emergency Planning Committee Thursday. The committee, composed of business, town, police and fire officials, are preparing an emergency response plan.

The request for the employees is part of Town Manager Robert B. Weiss’s $64 million budget, which will be voted on by the Board of Directors next month.

B O L TO N — A Hartford architectural firm has estimated it will cost $200,000 to $280,000 to fix code violations at Bolton Elementary School, school officials said during a Board of Education meeting Thursday,

Design Group One Architects also has estimated that It will cost $500,000 to $780,000 to correct code violations at Bolton Center School,

The board was notified of the costs in a April 13 letter from Jack M. Kraftjack. one of three partners in the firm. Kraftjack said the cost m ay rise because preliminary figures do not include maintenance or housekeeping items, or allow for extra space to correct some violations.

A March 30 inspection of the two schools revealfed several violations-

Store incident brings arrest

Credit card theft aiiegedA Manchester man was charged Wednesday

in connection with the break-in of an automobile in March in which two credit cards were stolen, police said.

Donald P. King. 37, of 689 Main St , was charged with third-degree burglary and two counts of theft of a credit card, police said.

Police said the arrest stemmed from the burglary of a car parked at Main and Bissell streets on March 24 or 2,5.

King was held on a $2,500 cash bond. He was to appear this morning in Manchester Superior Court.

A East Hartford man was charged with breach of peace and sixth-degree larceny in connection with an incident at the Sears, Roebuck & Co. store at the Manchester Parkade Wednesday afternoon, police said.

Carl B. Anderson, 57, was accused of leaving the store with a gym bag he did not pay for-. Anderson elbowed a store detective who followed him from the store, police s,^id.

Anderson^as held on a $1,000 bond.

Machell presents papers

Program set at hospitalA half-day seminar on infertility will be

presented by Resolve of Greater Hartford on Saturday morning at Manchester Memorial Hospital.

The free program, from 8:30a.m. to 12:30 p.m., will be in the Ruddell Auditorium. Most of the program will be aimed at couples who suspect they have an infertility problem, said Melissa Smith, co-president of Resolve. y'

Regi.stration is at 8:30 a.m. Refreshmen^will be served. For more information, call 872-1440.

David F . Machell. formerly of Manchester, presented a soon-to-be published paper, “ The Recovering Alcoholic Police Officer and the Danger of Professional Emotional Suppres­sion,” to the April 6 annual meeting of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences in San Francisco.

Another of his soon-to-be published documents. “ The Lethality of the Professional Image to the Recovering Chemical Dependent Physician.” was delivered in a workshop at the March 30 annual meeting of the National Council of Community Mental Health Centers in Boston.

Machell is associate professor of justice and law administration at Western Connecticut State University and an addiction psychotherapist and consulting community psychologist with a practice in Watertown.

He is the son of M r. and Mrs. Ernest Machell of Manchester and was a 1968 graduate of East Catholic High School.

Too early to make decision on $100,000 cut, board saysBy Andrew J , Davis Manchester Herald

B O L TO N — Members of the w a rd of Education have d e c id ^ It is too early to decide where a Pt’oposed $100,000 cut should be made in the M,6 million school budget for 1088-89.

The school board decided to take no action on the proposed cut at its Thursday night meeting at Bolton Center School.

No matter what is finally removed from the budget, the proposed cut will cause hardship for the school board because there is no padding in the budget, said board member Michael Parsons.

“ I guarantee we’re going to cut programs that are going to hurt this town," Parsons said.

The Board of Finance has recommended the cut in order to keep taxSs down. Even with the proposed cut, Bolton residents face a 9.05-mill tax increase if the school budget and the $3.7million g e n e ra l tow n b u dge t are

approved.Resitfents will vote on the

blidget in May .at Uie Annual Town Meeting. '

The current tax rate is 35.78 mills. Finance board chairman Ray Ursin has said the tax rate would increase another mill if the $100,000 cut were not made.

Though Parsons recommended that the board make up a p re lim in a ry cut list, board members John Muro and Thomas Manning did not agree.

Both said it was too early In the budgeting process to make the cuts. Also, board members did not want to start a reduction list at Thursday night’s meeting because board members Barry Stearns, Pamela Z. Sawyer and David Fernald were absent.

The full board has seven members.

“ I don’t feel compelled to take out a laundry list,” Muro said. “ I agree, we need to wait.” He suggested that board members begin thinking about possible cuts, though.

While other board meipbers would not comment on where cuts might be madd. Parsons said possible cuts might come from proposed coaches’ stipends. He' said since the stipends a rf not mandated, they should be consi­dered for cuts.

Parsons and School Superin­tendent Richard E . Packman said the “ five-figure” coaches’ stipends have yet to be nego­tiated. Parsons and Packman refused to comment further be­cause it is considered a personnel matter.

Parsons added that he did not agree with the finance board’s recommendation to cut from the school budget $35,000 for a snowplow, $20,000 for an exten­sion to a school equipment garage, and $42,000 for a new teacher and teacher’s aide. While the finance board can recom­mend cuts, it is up to the school board to make a final determina­tion as to where the cuts will be made.

Building plans needed by JulyContinued from page 1

Husbandpleadsguilty

adding on to either the Municipal Building or Lincoln Center, is that there would be no disruption of business going on in those two buildings. Assistant Town Man­ager Stephen R. Werbner said.

Anwar Hossain. a partner in The Lawrence Associates, said that another advantage is that the administration would not have to make do with renovated buildings that do not provide the most efficient use of space.

S u b c o m m itte e m e m b e rs agreed that another option could not be considered seribusly be­cause it would have required the purchase of land. That proposal called for continued use of the Municipal Building and an addi­tion to the rear of Lincoln Center.

A third proposal called for a three-story addition to the rear of the Municipal Building and con­tinued use of Lincoln Center. The last proposal was for continued use of the two existing office buildings and construction of a

third, three-story, 21,800-square- foot building north of the parking lot behind the municipal building.

All of the proposals would have provided a total 65,000 square feet of office space.

In reaching a consensus to get further details on the proposed new building, subcommittee members agreed with a sugges­tion by Town Manager Robert B. Weiss that the other proposals be pursued if the cost estimate was prohibitive.

Continued from page 1

and attempted to run a police roadblock. Brown will face var­ious motor vehicle charges in New Jersey. He also was charged with possession of cocaine.

Red Bank police told Williman- tic police that Brown confessed in a post-arrest interview to stab­bing his wife, according to a search warrant affidavit filed at the Superior Court. The affidavit .said that Red Bank police also told W illim antic police that Brown had attempted suicide while in custody, but was stopped by Red Bank police.

Scis.sors with bloodstains on them, a piece of glass with a bloody palmprint and a piece of white paper with a white powdery substance on it were among items found in Browns’ apartment and listed in the search warrant affidavit

Brown was originally .sche­duled to appear in Superior Court March 18. but Judge Richard C. Noren granted a motion from Kelley to have Brown transferred March 19 from the Brooklyn Correctional Center to the Insti­tute of Living in Hartford to undergo p.sychiatric examina­tion.

Susan Brown was a 1981 gradu­ate of East Catholic High School. Th o m a s B row n, a form er member of the Eastern Connecti­cut State University baseball team, worked as a c'oun.selor of retarded children at various facilit ies, including the Mansfield Training School, according to family members.

Brown pleaded under the A l­ford Doctrine, whereby a defend­ant does not adm it guilt but concedes the state probably has enough evidence to get a conviction.

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Police Lt. Weldon Stinson said three of the victims were nude.

Officers were unable to deter­mine whether they had been sexually assaulted.

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Officers were called to the mobile home in the Villa Grande Mobile Home Park at 3 :27 a.m. by a person who said a girl was fighting with her boyfriend, Stin­son said. When police arrived at 3:55 a.m., Stinson said, officers found the bodies.

Reporters were being kept about one-quarter mile away,

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Section 2, Page 13

Friday, April 15, 1988

Whalers sent home for the summerBy Jim Tierney

■Manchester Herald

I H A R T F O R D — The names of 'Stephane Richer and Brian Hay­ward will haunt the hearts and minds of the Hartford Whalers and their fans during the ensuing long, hot summer nights.

Richer, Montreal’s 21-year^ld sharpshooting right-winger, tal­lied two first-period goals while Hayward stopped 24 of 25 Whaler shots which highlighted a master­ful overall defensive effort by the Canadiens.

The gallant efforts by the never-say-die Whalers tested Montreal and Hayward down to final horn. After Hartford goalie Richard Brodeur was pulled with 1:17 left, there was time for one last-gasp attempt by the Whale to gain the equalizing score.

Following a Whaler timeout with 34 seconds remaining. Syl- vain Turgeon (the inserted sixth man) took a pass in the middle from Ron Francis and fired a

;15-footer on Hayward. ’Turgeon ;then back-handed his own re­bound which Hayward stopped again. With Chris Chelios in the crease with Hayward, Francis

.fired the last Whaler shot heard in 1988 which caromed off Chelios.

The Whaler season was over. Montreal held on for a 2-1 victory .in Game 6 and took the best-of- seven series, 4 to 2, before a sellout crowd of 15,223 at the Civic Center. The Canadiens will meet Boston for the Adams Division championship. The Bruins de­feated Buffalo, 4 to 2.

“ Tonight was an outstanding defensive ga m e ,” Montreal Coach Jean Perron said. “ It was

the only way to win this hockey game. We were sharp all night. It ’s all over and I ’m very happy.”

Whaler Coach La rry Pleau first reflected on the game-ending sequence. “ (Carey) Wilson took the faceoff trying to draw it back to Ronnie. It worked perfectly,” he said. “ Sly (Turgeon) just went to the middle and they didn’t react to him. I felt we had two or three good chances.”

Perron was worried during the final 34 seconds. “ I pulled m y hair (when Turgeon got the puck), ’’ he said. “ That’s what thegoaliesare paid for though.”

Richer scored the first goal of the game midway through the opening period when he floated a wrlster past Brodeur’s glove side. As poorly as the Whalers were playing, a 1-0 deficit wouldn’t have been so bad after the first 20 minutes.

However, the 6-foot-2. 200- pound Richer intercepted a cen­tering pass and sped down ice with 2:01 left in the period. Richer hesitated for a split second and rocketed a 30-footer high into the back of the net.

“ It ’s the hardest shot I ’ve faced so far in my career.” the 35-year-old veteran Brodeur said. “ Maybe with the exception of Bobby Hull. This guy (Richer) can shoot it stationary or on the move.” Respondingtoa Montreal journalist, Brodeur said, ” I don’t know if it’s a heavy shot. I know it’s damn fast.”

The Montreal defense suffo­cated the Whalers in the first period in which the Whaler.s had only six shots, five of those coming from defensemen. ’’The

AP photo

SAVE FOR HAYWARD — Montreal goalie Brian Hayward deflects a shot by Hartford’s Kevin Dineen (11) during

first-period action Thursday night at the Civic Center. The Canadiens won, 2-1, to eliminate the Whalers.

first 20 minutes could’ve been our worst 20 of the series.” Pleau said, “ We weren’t relaxed We

were trying to do too much.” Francis knew his team didn't

.start crisply. ” We came out and

played very tentatively,” Fran­cis said. ” We let them dictate the first 20 minutes in our own

building which we shouldn’t have done. I think, if anything, we overworked.”

The Whalers’ best chance in the first period came when they were short-handed. Brent Peterson stole the puck in the Canadiens’ end and fed a streaking Dave Tippett who misfired wide to the right.

’The Whalers finally got their game going the final nine minutes of the second period. With only 1:03 remaining, and four seconds on its power play, Hartford got on the board when Ray Ferraro deflected home a Mike McEwen slapper.

Kevin Dineen, who led the Whalers with eight playoff points (4goals. 4 assists) waseffectively shadowed by Ryan Walter. “ Wal­ter did an outstanding job (on Dineen),” Perron prai.sed. ’ ’The depth really gave us the series,”

A Whaler power play with 6:58 to go in the game went astray. “ There was ju.st a lack of consistency this year.” Dineen said. “ Obviously, it’s a frustrat­ing year. We showed the way we can play. I guess it wasn’t enough,”

W H A LER N O TE S - Whaler scratches were Neil Sheehy, Mike Liut, Charles Bourgeois. Adam Burt, Mike Millar. Mark Reeds, Scot Kleienendorst. John Ander­son, Gord Sherven. Tom Martin and Lindsay Carson. . .For , Montreal, the scratches were Serge Boisvert, Mats Naslund. Bob Gainey, Shayne Corson and Larry Trader. , , Tippett. Ulf Samuelsson. Peterson and Tu r­geon were point-less in the series,. . This was the first Whaler playoff series loss which didn’t go into overtime in the final game.

Devils, Bruins find their way into the second roundB y B a rry W llner

-The Associated Press

The New Jersey Devils and Boston Bruins have found the second round of the Stanley Cup playoffs. The Washington Capi­tals seem to have found their second wind, which might blow them right into the next round, too.

The Devils, who were in the N H L playoffs only once in fran­chise history — when they were the Colorado Rockies and were swept out of the first round — made good on their first appear­ance while living in New Jersey. They stunned the New York Islanders in six games, finishing off their neighbors 6-5 Thursday night.

The Bruins, losers of their opening series the last four years, eliminated Buffalo in six games with a 5-2 victory, and will meet Montreal in the Adams Division final. The Canadiens ousted Hart­ford 2-1.

Detroit also moved on with a 5-3 verdict at Toronto. The Red

Wings, who won all three road games in the Norris series, next play St. Louis.

But one series is undecided because the Capitals have shown more resilience than ever before. After they fell behind 3-1 in games to Philadelphia, the Caps seemed dead: they had never won in seven games when they faced elimination.

But Washington has won two straight, including a 7-2 road rout of the Flyers that sent the Patrick series back to the Capital Centre

NHL Roundup

for Game 7 Saturday night, ........................... IfirThe otherdivisional fonal. inthe

Smythe, has defending champion Edmonton against Calgary.Patrick Division Capitals 7, Flyers 2

Washington knows all about trying to put teams away when up 3-1 in games. The Capitals couldn’t do it to the Islanders last year and now they’re trying to stage their own rally.

“ It ’s tough when you have a team down 3-1 to win that clinching game,” defenseman

Garry Galley said after the Caps scored four power-play goals.

“ I think last year’s Seventh game with the Islanders helped, ” defenseman Scott Stevens added, referring to a four-overtime loss. “ We've now been there before. We all know what we have to do.”

They have to continue taking advantage of man advantages, as they did Thursday night.Mike Ridley scored on a power play in the first period and, after Dave Christian’s goal 25 seconds into the second made it 2-0, Washing­ton put the game away with goals by Bengt Gustafsson and Kevin Hatcher 38 seconds apart while Dave Brown served a five-minute fighting penalty.

Flyers goalie Ron Hextall. winner of the Conn SmytheTrophy as playoff M VP last vear

“ nicontinued to struggle. He has a 4.79 goals-against average in seven games.

” I just wasn’t sharp,” he said. ” I didn’t play a good game.”Devils 6, Islanders 5

The Devils feel great, natu­rally, after taking care of the Islanders despite getting a scare. New Jersey led 6-1 with 13:42 left before the Islanders strung to­gether four goals.

Patrik Sundstrom scored twice and added an assist as the Devils, who made the playoffs for the first time since moving to New Jersey from Cktiorado in 1982 and only the second time since entering the N H L as the Kansas City Scouts in 1974, finished off the Patrick Division regular- season champions.

” It was scary,” Devils forward Aaron Broten said. “ They wer­en’t playing that well, but the shots were ju.st falling In for them.”

New York’s comeback featured shorthanded goals on the same power play by Dale Henry and Steve Konroyd. Brad ~l,auer’s second goal of the game and a score by Randv Wood made it 6-5.

but that was all the Islanders could get,

“ The gates were opened, but we came up one short,” Pat LaFon- taine said. “ The puck started bouncing our way for a change, but we just couldn’t get the tying goal.”

Islanders defenseman Denis Potvin ended his career watching from the press box. He missed the game due to a back injury. Potvin, thehighest-scoring defen­seman in N H L history, an­nounced his retirement before the season.Adams Division Bruins 5, Sabres 2

Three goals in the first period blew open the game as the Bruins became the only road winner in the series. Boston had lost in the first round of the Adams the last four years to Montreal and hasn't beaten the Canadiens in 18 straight postseason series, dating back to 1943.

Boston killed off two early penalties, then got first-period goals by Bob Sweeney. Bob Joyce

and Willi Plett. The Sabres were ll-for-29 on the power play In the first five games, but went O-for-8 in Game 6.

" I ’m sure the whole city of Boston feels that beating Mont­real would be like winning the Stanley Cup,” said Bruins center Ken Linseman, who had two goals. "Hopefully, we can do It this time.”

Norris Division Wings 5, Maple Leafs 3

The Red Wings were expected to handle the Leafs with ease after finishing 40 points in front of them during the season. But Toronto extended Detroit to six games.

The Wings won all three games in Toronto, using three power- play goals and clutch relief goaltending from Greg Stefan on Thursday night.

Mel Bridgman, Bob Probert, Dave Barr, Shawn Burr and Darren Veltch scored for Detroit. AI lafrate, Tom Fergus and Todd Gill scored for Toronto.

Bosox don’t waste Clemens’ effortBy Dave O 'H ara The Associated Press

BOSTON — Second baseman Marty Barrett of the Boston Red Sox says Roger Gemens puts more pressure on teammates while making things easier for them.

Barrett made the unusual as­sessment Thursday after Cle­

mens scattered six singles and struck out an American League season high 13 in a 2-0 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers.

“ Believe it or not. there’s a little more pressure on days that Roger pitches,” Barrett said. “ You don’t want to waste one of his performances by not scoring runs.

“ At the same time, he makes it

/

I ■r .JAFplwM

HAPPY B A TTER Y M ATES — Boston pitcher Roger Clemens, right, is congratuated by catcher John Marzano after the Red Sox beat Miiwaukee, 2-0, Thursday at Fenway Park.

a lot easier for us. You know he’s going to hold them to three run.s or less and they’re only going to get about five hits. If they don’t string them together, th e y’re in trouble.’.’

Clemens dazzled the Brewers in 44-degree weather the same as he did in a two-hit, 12-strikeout 4-0 victory last October. With his 20th victory, seventh shutout and I8th complete game, the big right­hander clinched a second consec­utive American League Cy Young Award in a frigid 1987 finale.

Clemens, 2-0 in three starts which have included 33 strikeouts in 26 innings, didn’t walk a batter in outduelling hardluck Bill Weg- man. 0-2, who allowed Just four singles but was victimized by poor support.

“ Wegman pitched a great game against me today,” Cle­mens said after lowering his earned run average to 1.08 with his 11th career shutout. “ The way he was going I knew I had to hold on to what the guys got me. In games like that, I can’t make any mistakes.”

Two errors, a passed ball and R B I singles by Ellis Burks and Wade Boggs accounted for two unearned runs that were enough for Clemens.

"Clemens was the name of the game today,” Boston Nianager John McNamara said after Bos­ton, 6-3, went three games over .500 since winning the pennant in 1986. ” He was dominant. They didn’t earn a runner to second base. The two they got there were on balk calls.”

“ He had command of all his pitches and he had them off stride all day," Boston catcher John Marzano said when asked about Clemens

Confident Yanks soaringTO R O N TO (AP) — In the long and successful

history of the New York Yankees they have never started 8-1.

“ Confidence breeds confidence,” said Dave Winfield after the Yankees beat the Toronto Blue Jays 7-3 Thursday. Winfield, batting .515 with seven consecutive multiple-hit games and a nine-game hitting streak, drove in four runs with a homer and a triple.

After the 17-9 beating by the Blue Jays on Monday, the Yankees got strong pitching in winning the next three games. Toronto has dropped six of its last eight and is 4>A games behind the first-place Yankees.

“ Broadcasters and media people say the pitching is suspect,” Winfield said. “ But you tell me who in baseball has a pitching staff with three 20-game winners on it.

(Wednesday), a forkball we were throwing intentionally for a ball. It was six inches outside and he hit it for a double."

With the Yankees leading 4-3 in the fifth, Winfield hit a two-run homer, his third.

"We came back (after the Yankees’ two-run first) today, but then Winfield’s home run got us," Toronto Manager Jim y Williams said.

So did Lelter, who picked up strength as the game progressed.

“ People shouldn't expect strikouts,” Leiter said. “ I throw the ball hard so, whatever, but I just want to go out and win”

In the first. Toronto shortstop Tony Fernandez booted a grounder and Gary Ward singled. Winfield then hit a two-out triple on a 3-0 pitch to right-center.

“ You can’t point to a ball club before the season and say who is going to win 20 games, so who determines what a great pitching staff is?”

It’s not a question of who, but what. Pue like the one Thursday by AI Lelter, for example. The rookie struck out 11, including six straight in retiring the side in the sixth and seventh innings. He allowed just four hits over eight innings.

“ He was tough, he had command of all his pitchers and he backs you off the plate once in awhile to keep you loose,” said Toronto catcher Pat Borders, who hit his first major-league homer. “ He’s got a good fastball, a slow ’slurve’ and a slider he throws where he wants.”

Rickey Henderson, also on a nine-game hitting streak, had three hits, stole his 10th base and hit a solo homer along with a sacrifice fly off starter Jim m y Key, 2-1.

Henderson went lO-for-19 in the series and improved his average to .487. Winfield hit 9-for-18 in the series.

“ The whole lineup is tough to pitch to,” Borders said. “ Theyjust don’t give you a break.

“ They’re so hot they were hitting everything we were throwing at them. Winfield hit a pitch

Williams said he did notconsiderwalkinghim. despite the count.

” I know he’s a pretty good hitter but Jim m y’s a pretty good pitcher, too,” Williams said. ” By walking him I think you create a negative situation at the outset.”

In Toronto’s first, Lloyd Moseby walked, moved to second on a balk and scored on George Bell’s single.

Henderson led off the third with his solo homer, his third.

Toronto rookie Sil Campusano ended an O-for-15 slump by lining a solo homer, his first in the majors, into the left-field seats in the bottom of the inning, making it 3-2 Yankees.

“ It was a bad pitch to Campusano, a slider against (catcher Don) Slaught’s call,” Leiter said.

Pitching to the bottom of the Yankees order, Key loaded the bases with one out in the fourth but New York scored just once on Henderson’s sacrifice fly.

Toronto came back In the bottom of the Inning when Borders led off with his homer, bringing Toronto within 4-3.

“ He tried to sneak a fastball past me, up and away in the strike zone,” Borders said.

AP

5

9

By Ed The A

LASStarlir to laui Mark] profei August

Satu the L i will di Associi

New YorClevelorvBostonDetroitTorontoMllwoukiBoltlmor

Konsos COoklondColltornliSeattleOilcoooMInnesotTexos

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Texos (I 1:05 p.m.

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Phllodeli St. Louis PIttsburt Clnclnno Atlonto c Son Fror

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Yankees

N EW YOF

RHndsn If Rndiph Tb Mtngly 1b GWorddh WInneld rf Wshgtn rt Kelly cf Pglrulo3b Slought c Mechm ss TototsNgw VerK Tgronte

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5

98

Is anxious for rematch with StarlingLAS VEG AS. Nev. — Marlon

Starling was the opponent picked to launch 19M Olympic medalist Mark Breland’s golden reign as a professional cham pion last August.

Saturday night, in a rematch at the Las Vegas Hilton. Starling will defend the World Boxing Association welterweight title he

won when he knocked out Breland in the 11th round last Aug. 22 at Columbia, S.C.

Breland was the fifth flghter to suffer his first pro defeat against the 29-3war-old Starling. The others were Ttimmy Ayers. Lupe Aquino, Simon Brown and Jose Baret.

As he was in the first fight. Starling was a solid underdog with Breland favored 2-1.

In his first defense. Starling

looked unimpressive in scoring a 12-round decision over F ^io Ozaki of Japan on Eeb. 5 at Atlantic City, N. J.

Mort Sharnik, Starling’s advi­sor, said the champion had the flu and 10 days before that fight had checked himself into the emer­gency ward at a hospital in Las Vegas, where he was training.

Starling said he weighed 142 pounds, five pounds u ^ e r the welterweight limit, for the fight

and that after the match weight was 137.

Breland, of New York, who will be 25 on May 11, said there were too many distractions for him at Columbia, where his family lives, and that be went into his first defense with torn rib cartilage.

“I Just couldn’t pick myself up for the fight,” he said. "In the fight I had no motivation at all.

"I was beating him on natural ability,” said Breland, who had a

commanding lead after 10 rounds. ‘T m up for dils fight. I know he’s going to try to throw me around.”

“The worst thing that can happen for him is to get into a f ig h t,” said Starling, who wrestled Breland to the floor several times in August. "I like to fight. He doesn’t like to fight.

“I think he’s going to do som ething foolish and get knocked out early.”

Starling has a 43-4 record, with 26 knockouts. Breland’s record it 20-1, with 13 knockouts.

The fight will be the second hal of a championship doubleheader, which will be televised by HBO.<

Julio Cesar Chavez of Mexlctb will defend the WBA lightweight championship against Rodolfp Aguilar of Panama in a schedul^ 12-round fight beginning about i p.m. EDT. The Starling-Brelang match' could start about 8 p.ip;

SCOREBOARDBaseball

RM lSox2.B riw inO

American League etendinge

Eo«l Olvltion w L ref. OB

New York a 1 SS7 —Clevelond I 2 SCOBoston « 3 M7 2Detroit 4 4 .SOO 3 '^Toronto 4 6 .400 4'/jMilwaukee 2 6 .250 5'/iBaltimore 0 9 000 a

West DivisionW L ret. OB

Konsos City < 3 667 _____Ooklond 6 3 667 —Californio 4 4 SOO 1'/Seottle 4 5 .444 2Ollcooo 3 5 .375 2'/jMinnesota 3 5 375 2'/jTexos 3 5 .375 2'/j

Thursday's Oamcs New York 7. Toronto 3 Boston Z MllnMiukee 0 Texos 2, Detroit 1 Qilcaoo at Collfomlo, pod., roln Konsos City 4, Baltimore 3 Clevelond 3, Minnesota 1 Ooklond 5, Seattle 4

m d o y's OomesTexos (Hough M ) ot Boston (SellersO-t).

1:05 p.m.o* Mllwoukee

(BIrfcbeck 0-1), 2:35 p.m.Konsos City (U lbrondt 1-1) at Detroit

(Atexonder 0-1), 7:35 p.m.Minnesota (Viola 1-1) otToronto (Stottle-

myre 0-1), 7:35 p.m., . 5 ^ l o n d (Yett 1-0) ot Boltimore (McGregor 0-1), a:05 p.m.

Colltomla (M .w m 0-1) ot Seattle (M.Moore 1-1), 10:05 p jn .

Oilcogo (Horton 1-1) ot Ooklond (Welch 1-1), 10:35 p.m.

_ Saturday's GamesTexos of Boston, 1:05 p.m.Konsos City at Detroit, 1:35 p.m. Minnesota ot Toronto, 1:35 p.m New York at Milwaukee, 4:05 p.m Chlcogo ot Oakland, 4:05 p.m.Cleveland ot Baltimore, 7:35 p.m. California at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.

Sunday's Games Texos of Boston, 1:05 p.m.Cleveland ot Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.Kansas City of Detroit, 1:35 p.m. Minnesota ot Toronto, 1:35 p.m New York at Milwaukee, 2:35 p.m Chlcogo ot Oakland, 4:05 p.m Californio ot Seattle, 4:35 p.m

M ILW A U K R Bo B rl iB i

Molltordh 4 0 2 0 YountctSurhoff c Brock 1b Deer If Braggs rf Riles 3b Gontnr 2b Sveum ss Totals

4 0 0 0 4 0 10 4 0 10 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 3 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0

a s « o

BOSTON

Burks cf Jo Reed ss Boggs 3b Ricedh Groenwt If DwEvn 1b Barrett 2b M o m n o c BAndsnrf Totoli

aMiwoukee on aiaoston on Si. .

Gome Winning RBI — Burks (1).E— Gontner, Braggs. DP— Mllwoukee 1.

LOB— Mllwoukee 6, Boston 4._ IE H R ER BB SO

MUwouhoeWegmon \ .M S 4 2 0 2 3

BostonClemens W,2C 9 6 0 0 0 13

BK— Clemens 2. PB— Surhoff. Umpires— Home, Evans; Rrst, Ford;

Second, Clark; Third, Hendry.T — 2:36. A— 15,693.

Rangers 2, TIgerel

TEX A S

McOwel ct Fletchr ss Sierra rf Incvgllo If Espy If OBrIen 1b Porrishdh MStonly c Buechle3b Browne %

Totals

o b r h M5 0 0 0 3 1 2 0 5 1 1 1 3 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 11 3 0 0 03 0 1 04 0 0 0 3 0 10

32 3 a 3

D E TR O IT

Pettis cf Whitokr 2b DaEvns 1b Trom m I ss Nokesc Herndnph Morrsn dh %er(dan If Lemon rf Brokns 3b Brgmn ph Morris p Totals

a b r h M4 1 1 03 0 0 04 0 0 0 4 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 10 2 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0

31 1 4 1

National Leegueetandinge Royals 4, Orioles 3East Division

Plttsburohw L Pet. GB

6 2 750Chlcogo 5 3 .425 1New York 5 3 .425 1Philadelphia 3 5 .375 3St. Louis 3 5 .375 3Atontreal V * *West Division

.250 4

HoustonW L Pet. OB

7 1 .875Los Angeles 5 3 .447 V/7Cincinnati 5 4 .554 2V7Son Francisco 5 4 .554 2'/2San Diego 3 6 .333 4V7Atlanta 0 8 .000 7

KANSAS C IT Yo b r h bl

WWIIsn ct Seltier 3b Brett 1b Trtabll rt Elsnrch dh FWhlte2b BJacksn If Quirk c Stilwll ss

4 1 0 0 4 1 0 03 0 0 14 0 11 4 2 2 0 4 0 10 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 10

Totals 33 4 5 3Thursday's Games

New York 1, Montreal 0 San Diego I Los Angeles 0 Pittsburgh 4, Philadelphia 2 Houston 9, Cincinnati 3 Only games scheduled

Friday's GamesPittsburgh (Smiley 0-0) at Chlcogo

(Sutcliffe (M)), 2:20p.m.Philadelphia (Rawley 0-2) at Montreal

(Youmans 0-1), 7:35 p.m._St. Louis (Mathews 1-0) ot New York

(Gooden 2fl), 7:35 p.m.Cincinnati (R.Robinson 0-1) at Houston

(Scott 2-0), 0:35 p.m.Atlanto (Glovlne 0-1) at Los Angeles

(Hershlser 2-0), 10:05p.m.San Francisco (Reuschel 1-0) at Son

Diego (Grant 0-1), 10:05 p.m.Saturday's Games

CIncInnotl at Houston, 1:20 p.m.St. Louis at New York, 1:20 p.m. Pittsburgh at Chicago, 2:20 p.m.Atlanta at Los Angeles, 4:05 p.m. Philadelphia at Montreal, 7:35 p.m.San Francisco at San Diego, 10:05 p.m

Sunday's GomesPhiladelphia at Montreal, 1:35 p.m St. Louis at New York, 1:35 p.m. Pittsburgh at Chlcago,j7:20 p.m. Cincinnati at Houston, 2:35 p.m.Atlonta at Los Angeles, 4:05 p.m.San Francisco at Son Diego, 4:05 p.m.

American League results

Yankees 7. Blue Jays 3

B A LTIM O R EO b rh bl

Orsulak rf BRIpkn 2b CRIpkn ss Murray lb Lynn ct Sheets dh Lndrm ph Kennedyc Nichols ph Schu 3b Dwyer ph Stone It Totals

4 12 0 4 1 1 1 4 0 0 0 4 0 10 4 12 1 3 0 10 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 10 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0

34 3 a 2

Kansas City 0I2 000 001— 4Baltimore ooo 012 000— 3

Game Winning RBI — None.E— BRIpken, Murray, Seltier, Stone.

DP— Konsas City 1. LOB— Kansos City 3, Baltimore 5. 2B— Tartabull, BRIpken. HR— Lynn (1). SB— Elsenrelch (2), Seltier (3), Orsulak (2). SF— Brett.

IP H R ER BB SOKansas City

Sabrhgn W,1-l a 7 3 2 0 5Black 2-3 1 0 0 1 2Garber S,2 1-3 0 0 0 0 0

BaltimortBoddicker L,0-3 9 5 4 1 0 10

BK— Boddicker 2.U m p ire s — H om e, M c K e a n ; F irs t,

Reilly; Second, Young; Third, Shulock.

Indians 3,«Twlns 1

M INNESOTAo b r h b l

Bush rf Gagne ss Puckett ct Hrbek 1b GaettI 3b Larkin dh Brnnsky If Lowry c Lm brdi 2b Loudnrph Newmn pr Totals

5 0 2 0 4 1 1 0 4 0 0 03 0 2 14 0 2 0 2 0 1 03 0 0 04 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

321 a I

C LEV E LA N D _ Ob r h blFranco 2b Upshaw 1b Tabler dhCarteret Hall If Jacoby 3b Snyder rf Bandoc JBell ss

Totals

4 0 103 2 2 04 0 0 1 4 12 1 3 0 11 3 0 0 0 3 0 10 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0

29 3 7 3

N EW YORKab r h bl

4 13 24 0 0 05 2 2 0 5 2 3 0 5 12 4 0 0 0 0 4 13 13 0 0 04 0 10 3 0 0 0

37 7 14 7

RHndsn If Rndiph 2b Mtngly 1b GWarddh WInneld rt Wshgtn rt Kelly ct Pglrulo 3b Slought c Mechm ss Totals

TO R O N TO

LIrlano 2b Mosebv If Fernndiss GBelIdh Borders c Barfield rt Gruber 3b Leach ph McGrIft 1b (^m psn cf Totals

o b r h b l3 0 0 0 1 1 0 04 0 10 4 0 11 4 1 1 1 4 0 0 03 0 0 0 1 0 0 04 0 0 0 3 1 1 1

31 3 4 3

»taw York 101 110 100-7Terenfe ioi loo ooo—3

gom e Winning RBI — Winfield (3)._ E — ftrnondei, Slought, Borders. DP__Toronto 1. L O ^ N e w York 7, Toronto 5. 2B— M o ttln g ly . 3B— W infie ld . H R — n ^ h d e rio n (3), Compusono (1), Borders

— Mosebv (4), Kelly (1), RHenderson (10). SF— RHenderson.

N ew Yort,U lte r W,2-0 a 4 3 3 2 11Gopnte 1 0 0 0 0 1

TorontoKey L,2-l 4 1-3 9 6 4 1 4DWord 2 4 1 1 0wells 1 2-3 0 0 0 1 1H w ke 1 1 0 0 0 0. HBP--M oseby by Lelfer, LIrlano by Lelter. BK— Lelter.

Radio, TVT O D A Y

1 p.m. — Rangers at Red Sox, N ESN 1 p.m. — Tennis: Bousch & Lomb

Championships, ESPN 4 p.m, — Golf: Heritage Classic. USA

Cable7:30 p.m. — Cardinals at AAets,

SporlsChonnel7:30 p.m. — Celtics at Cavaliers,

Channel 61, W K H T 9 p.m. — Boxing: Donald C urry vs.

Sean Mannion, ESPN

M l n n ^ a ooo 001 000-1» 000 102 OOk-3

Game Winning RBI — Carter (1).DP— Cleveland 1. LOB— Minnesota 9,

Clevelon^d 5. 2B— Gagne, GaettI. 3B— Upshaw. SB— Carter 2 (5). 'Jpshow (2), Hall (1). S— Larkin, Bando. SF— Hrbek.

MInnMata M R ER BB SOfVlinfmoYQ6 7 3 3 2 2

Atherton 2 0 0 0 1 3Oevelancl

Condlottl W,24) 9 8 1 1 3 6BK— Condlottl. PB— Bando,Umpires— Home, Voltogglo; First, Pa­

lermo; Second, Morrison; Third, Phillips. T — 2:42. A— 5,570.

National League results

Meta 1, Expos 0

M O N TR E A LO b r h b l

Raines If Webster ct Brooks rf Wallach 3b Galarrg 1b Rtigerld c Rivera ss Candoel 2bEngle ph Foley 2b AAai WJh McGl To

ortlnei p 2 0 0 0 Jhmn ph 0 0 0 0 cGIton p 0 0 0 0 itaM 31 • 2 0

4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 3 0 10 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0

N EW YORKO b r h M

Dvkstra cf Teufel 2b AAogodn 1b Strwbryrf McRyIds If Carter c HJohsn 3b EIsfer ss Oledap

4 12 1 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 10 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0

Canadlena 2, Whalers 1

2 •0 1

» - 4 Basketbafl

Rec Ocpenment photo

INTER M ED IATE CHAMPS — The Lakers won the Intermediate League title this winter. Team members, from left, front row: James Harris. Kurt Potter, Troy Payne. Back row: Coach Bill Hoyt, Greg Geer, Bryan Colletti. Missing: John Linberg, Lucas Cosgrove

Texas on ooo 000—2Detroit m ooo f i l^ l

Game Winning RBI — Sierra (1).DP— Detroit 1 LOB— Texas 12, Detroit 4.

2B— AAorrlson, Sierra. SB— Fletcher (1), Browne 2 (3).

_ IP H R ER BB SOTexas

Guimon W,1-1 a 4 1 0 0 4Williams S,3 1 0 0 0 1 0

DetroitMorris L,2-1 9 a 2 2 9 10

Guimon pitched to 1 batter In the 9th. W P — W illia m s . B K — M o rris . P B —

Nokes.MStanlev.

Umpires— Home, McClellond; Rrst, Denktnger; Second, McCoy; Third, Coble.

Padres 2. OodgeraO

LOS A N G ELSO b r h b l

Sax 2b Heepph Griffin ss Gibson If Guerrer 3b MarshI 1b MIDavIs rt Shelby cf Scloscia c Andesnpr

.Valenilap Stubbs ph

Totals

3 0 0 0 10 0 04 0 10 2 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 10 4 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 10 0 0 0 0 3 0 10 1 0 0 0

32 0 6 0

SAN DIEGOO b r h M

3 1 1 04 12 03 0 1 0 2 0 114 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 10 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

31 2 8 1

HockeyJeffersnef Gwvnnrf Reodv 2b Kruk 1b Moreind If McCllers p Santiago c Brown 3b Thonss JJonesp Ma Davis p CM rtniph Abner rf Totals

Los Angeles aoo (XL — ___ _* * ? “ * ^ « . » 800 MO MX— 2Game Winning RBI — None.

E — Scloscia, Guerrero. DP— Los An­geles 1. LOB— l.os Angeles M, Son Diego 9. 2B— Gwvnn, Scloscia SB— MIDavIs (1). S— Sax.

, . . IP H R ER BB SOLos Angeles

Valenilo L,1-2 a 8 2 2 4 3Sfm Diego

J Jones W,1-l 6 2-3 5 0 0 4 3AAoDavIs 1-3 0 0 0 0 0McCllers S,2 2 1 0 0 0 4

Umpires— Home, Wendelstedf; Rrst, Rennert; Second, Marsh; Third, DeMuth.

Plratead.PhlllleaZ

P H ILA

Samuel 2b M Thm pcf Brodley If Calhoun p Frhwrfh p Parrish oh Dernier pr Schmdt3b Haves 1b ejames rf Daulton c Jelti ss Carmon p MMaddxp GGross If Totals

ob r h bl5 0 0 04 13 0 2 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 05 0 0 1 3 0 11 3 0 103 0 0 04 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 10

33 2 4 2

P ITTSB U R G HO b r h M

Bonds If Lind 2b VanSlykct Bonilla 3b Coles rt Hostetir lb Breom 1b O rtlic LVIlrec Pedriau ss Walkp RRyIds ph JRobnsnp

5 2 2 2 4 0 1 03 1 1 04 0 1 03 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 2 12 2 0 0 0 04 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Totals » 4 9 4

002 000 0 0 0 -2 111 000 MX— 4

PhiladelphiaPlttsburoh . . . __

Gome Winning RBI — Bonds (1).E— Walk. LOB— Philadelphia 11, Pitts­

burgh 9. 2B— Bonilla, Bream 2. HR— Bonds 2 (4), Ortli (U . SB^ySomi^l j y

Philadelphia

NHL reaulta

Capitals 7, Flyers 2

Washington i 4 2— 7Philadelphia o 2 0— 2

Rrst Period— 1, Washington, Ridley 2, 5:12 (pp). Penalties— PIvonka, Was (hold­ing), 2:52; Tocchet, Phi (holding), 3:40; Hunter, Was (holding), 7:06; Poulin, Fhl (hooking), 11:38; Stevens, Was (hooking), 15:20.

Second Period— 2, Washington, Chrlstlon 1 (PIvonka.Gustafsson), :2S. 3, Washington, Gustofsson 4 (PIvonka, Stevens), 2:39 (pp). 4, Washington, Hatcher4 (GaUery, Hunter), 3:17 (pp). 5, Philadelphia, Slnlsalo4 (Howe, Ekiund), 12:44. 6, Washington, PIvonka 4 (Christian), 16:10 (pp). 7, Philadelphia, Tocchet 1 (Propp, Kerr), 17:17 (pp).

Penalties— Miller, Was, malor (fighting), :36; Samuelsson, Phi, molor (fighting),

:36; Hatcher, Was (roughing), :36; Tocchet, Phi (roughing), :36; Brown, Phi, malor (fighting), 1:17; Poulin, Phi (cross­

checking), 4:32; Murphy, Was (hook­ing), 6:27; Langway, Was (Interfer­ence), 10:38; Brown, Phi (slashing), 13:07; Tocchet, Phi (cross<hecklng), 15:10; Hatcher, Was (tripping), 17:12.

Third Period— 8, Washington, Gould 3, 2:37 (sh). 9, Washington, Miller 2 (Ridley, Gartner), 10:02. Penalties— Hatcher, Was (cross-check ing), 1:36; Sm yth, Phi, mlnor-malor-misconduct-gross miscon­

duct (unsportsmanlike conduct, fight­ing), 12:25; Adams, Was, mlnor-malor- mlsconduct (roughing, fighting), 12:25; L e d y a rd , Was (In te rfe re n c e ), 13:48; Hatcher, Was, double minor (slashing, hIgh-stIckIng), 17:20; Brown, Phi, double

minor (slashing, hIgh-stIckIng), 17:20; Hunter, Was, malor (fighting), 19:03;

Tocchet, Phi, mlnor-malor (roughing, fighting), 19:03.

Shots on goal— Washington 5-11-12— 28. Phllodelphia 8-11-7— 26.

Power-ploy Opportunities— Washington 4 ot 9; Philadelphia 1 ot 8.

Goalies— Washington, Peeters (26 shots- 24 saves). Philadelphia, Hextall (28-21).

A— 17,423,R eferee— A n d y v a n H e lle m o n d .LI nesmen— Swede Knox, Jerry Potemon.

Rrst Period— 1, Atontreal, Richer 5 (Ludwig, Skrudland), 9:15. 2, AAontreal, Richer 6, 17:59. Penalties— Smith, Mon (hooking), 1:56; MePhee, AAon (unsports- monllke conduct), 3:25; MacDermld, Har (unsportsmanlike conduct), 3:25; Samuels­son, Har (holdino), 4:16; Skrudland, Mon (tripping), 12:41.

Second Period— 3, Hartford, Ferroro 1 (M cEwen), 18:57 (pp). Penalties— Wolter, Mon (Interference), :34; DIneen, Har (cross-checking), 5:15; Samuelsson, Har (holdino), 7:34; Walter, Mon (roughing), 17:01.

Third Period— None. Penalty— Svoboda, Mon (tripping), 13:02.

Shots on goal— Montreal 7-14-4— 25. Hartford 6-7-7— 20.

Power-ploy Opportunities— Montreal 0 of 3; Hartford 1 of 5.

Goalies— Montreal, Hayward (20shots-19 saves). Hartford, Brodeur (25-23).

A— 15,223.Referee— Kerry Fraser. Linesmen—

Randy MItton, Ray Scoplnello.

Red Wings 5. Maple Leafs 3

Detroit 2 1 1—5Toronto 1 0 2— 3

Rrst Period— 1, Toronto, lafrote 3 (Gill, ftrgus), 4:00 (op). 2, Detroit, Bridgman 2 (Zombo, Kocur), 6:16.3, (Tetrolt, Probert 3 (Norwood, Veltch), 9:34 (pp). Penalties— Probert, O t (elbowing), 2:24; Blols- dell. To r (roughing), 2:34; Higgins, Det (r e in in g ), 2:34; Ihnacok, To r (holding), 4:00; (tallont, O t (hIgh-stIckIng), 4:00;

Curran, Tor (tripping), 4:49; Zombo, Det (holding), 10:19; Yarem chuk, T o r (un ­sportsmanlike conduct), 14:46; Chlasson,

Det (unsportsm anlike con duct), 14:46; Zombo, O f , double mimtr (hold­ing, roughing), 17:04; DeGrav, Tor (roughing), 18:01; Salming, To r (Interfer­ence), 18:45.

Second Period-^, Detroit, Borr 2 (Nor­wood, Dotes), 14:29 (p p ). Penalties— Yaremchuk, Tor (sloshing), 3:27; Cur- ron. To r (holding), 6:30; Salming, Tor (tripping), 13:49; H alw ard, O t (high- sticking), 17:20.

Third Period— 5, O tro lt, Burr 1 (O lo rm e ), :40.6, Toronto, F>rgus2(GIII),

6:27 (sh). 7, Detroit, Veltch 1 (Probert, Kllm a),7:27 (pp).8, Toronto.Gllll (lafrote), 16:59 (pp). Penalties— ^la ss o n , O t

(holding), 1:17; Halward, Det (slashing), 2:50; Olciyk, Tor (slashing), 2:50; Higgins, O t (hooking), 3:27; Secord, Tor (hooking), 6:00; Burr, O t (holding),9:31; N IIL O t

(holding), 15:16.Shots on goal— O tro lt 11-10-7— 28.

Toronto b6-15— 29.Power-ploy Opportunities— O tro lt 3 ot

6; Toronto 2 of 9.(Soalles— Detroit, St. Laurent (7 shots-6

saves), Stefan (10:19 first, 2Z20). Toronto, Bester (28-23).A— 15,668.Referee— Bill McCreary. Linesmen—

Mark Vines, Gerard Gauthier.

NBA standings

E A S TER N C O N FEREN C E Attaiitic DIvMen

v-BostonW L Pet. G $55 21 .734

New York 35 41 .455 19'AWoshlnoton 35 42 AS5 20'A

21 'Philadelphia 34 42 .447New Jersey 18 97

Ctntral DIvftlon.234 37'yl

x-Detrolt 50 25 .558 __,x-Atlanta 47 29 .518 3 ;x-Oilcogo 45 » .505 4 ,Milwaukee 40 35 .525 10 .Cleveland 3S 40 .487 13 •Indiana 35 42 .455 15',

W ESTER N C O N FEREN C E Midwest DivWen

W L Pel.x-Dallas 50 25 .558x-Denver 50 27 .549x-Houston 44 32 .579x-Utah 42 35 .545San Antonio 29 47 .312Sacramento 22 55 .285

Pacific Divisiony-L.A. Lakers 57 19 .750x-Portlond 48 2S .532x-Seottle 41 35 .539Phoenix 25 50 .342Golden State 19 57 .250L.A. Clippers 17 50 .221

'/t

x-clinched playoff berth y<llnched division title

Thundav's Games Chlcogo 116, Indiana 110 Houston 123, Sacramento MS •Portland 128, Utah 123

Friday's (2ames ’Chicago at New Jersey, 7:30 p,m. ;Atlanta at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m. Boston at Cleveland, 7:M p.m. *Milwaukee at Detroit, 8 p.m. Washington at New York, 8:30 p.m. ",Sacramento at Son Antonio, 8:30 p.m. • Houston of Denver, 9:30 p.m.Phoenix at Los Angeles Lakers, 10:30

p.m. ,Golden State at Portland, 10:30 p.m. iDallas at Seattle, 10:30 p jn .' >

Saturday’s GamesNew York ot Atlanta, 7:30 p.m. ;New Jersey at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Indiana, 8:30 p.m. 'San Antonio at Utah, 9:30 p.m. 'Seattle at Phoenix, 10:W p.m. ILos Angeles Clippers at (talden State, l l

p.m. .

Bowling

Home Engineers

Bruins 5, Sabres 2

ti). SB— Samuel (l ) . i . .IP H R E R B B s o Devll86,lslandersS

Carman L,1-l 2 2-3 5 3 3 3 2MMaddux 31-3 2 0 0 0 6Calhoun 1 1-3 2 1 1 0 1Frohwirth

Pittsburgh83 0 0 0 2 0

Walk W,1-l 5 4 2 2 4 5JRoblnson 5,3

WP— Walk. BK-3 2

-W alk .0 0 3 2

Umpires— Home, Froemming; Rrst, Tota; Second, Davis; Third, (tarllng.

Astros B, Rada 3

C IN CIN N ATIOb r h M

Larkin ss Tredwy 2b Daniels If EDavIs cf ONelll rf BDIozc McGrIff c Esosky 1b Sabo 3b Rasmsn p FWIIIms p LGarcl phP Perryp Collins ph Rllo p Totals

4 0 3 1 4 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 4 1 1 0 4 0 103 0 10 10 1 0 4 0 114 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0

35 310 2

HOUSTON

GYoung cf BHotchr If Doran 2b GDavIs 1b CRnIds 1b Bossrf Puhlrf Ashbyc Ramirz ss CJcksn3b Darwin p Camochp

O b r h M5 12 04 2 105 2 2 2 4 13 5 0 0 0 03 0 10 1 0 0 04 1 1 0 4 1 1 03 0 114 1 1 1 0 0 0 0

Totals 37 913 9

000 080 012-3

Totals 2 6 1 a 1

NOW York 880 801 00k— 1(tame Winning RBI — O ^ s tra (2).E— Oledo. LOB— Montreal 4, New York 5.

2B— Galarraga. H R — Ovkstra (3).IP H R ER BB SO

MontreolAAartInei L,1-2 7 2 1 1 3 2McGffgan 1 0 0 0 1 1

New YorkOledo W ,2« 9 2 0 0 1 5

BK— Martinez.U m pires— H om o, M ontague; F irst,

Brocklander; Second, Wevor; Third, MeShorry.

T — 2:17. A — 19,612.

CincinnatiHouston — w .

(tame Winning RBI — GDavIs (1).. . •'Oi'l'l'’ - DP— Houston 2.L O B — Cincinnati 5, Houston 6. 2B__DoJY' ' ' ’ - „ Z , Sobo, CJackson. HR— G D ovIs (5). SB— BHotcher (2), LarKln (8).

ancbHtatl "• « « « « « >Rasmusen LJkl 3 2-3 7 7 9 2 0FWIIIIams 1.J 1 0 0 0 0PPerrv 3 3 2 1 0 2Rllo 1 0 0 0 0 1

HoustonDarwin W,l-0 81-3 10 3 3 0 5Comacho 2-3 0 0 0 0 0

BK— Rasmussen, Darwin.

Thursday’s heme runs

ByThoAMOdotadPross American Looauo

Henderson (3), Winfield (3), Yonkees; Compusono (1), Borders (1), Blue Jays;

Conseco (5), McGwire(4),Athletics.

N.y. Islanders o 1 4—sHowJorsoy 2 3 Ho

Rrst Period— 1, New Jersey, Brown 2 ^ New Jersey,

Verbert 1 (MocLeon, Driver), 19:54 (pp). Penoltles— Konroyd, N Y (holdino), 12;

Wolpnln,NJ (elbowlno),7:15; JonsSSn, N Y (holding), 10:10; Lolselle, NJ (hooking),

JS?’'" ' H J (Interference), 17:27; LaFontalne, N Y (Interference),18:18.

Second P e rio d ^ , New Jersey, Johnson4 (Sundstrom, AAacLean), 2:16 (pp) 4

t ^ York, Louer 2 (Jonsson), 4:03. 5, New Jersey, Driver 3 (Broten, Kurvers), 6:22 (pp). 6, New Jersey, Sundstrom 1 (Johnson, AAacLean), 12:23. Penalties— R nlev, N Y (holding), 1:19; Jonsson, N Y (Interference), 4:58; Wolanin, NJ, malor (elbowing), 14:55.

P e rio d -7, New Jersey, Sund­strom 2 (Johnson, AAacLean), 6:18 (pp). 8, N e v^o rt,H e n rv l (Sutter),7:38(sh).9,New

i (Lauer, Bassen), 8:46 (sh). 10, New York Lauer 3 (LaFontalne,

York W ood!( L e l ^ ) , 12: ^ Penottles— (Sllberf, N Y

DIduck, N Y (roughing). Suits'- N Y (sloshing), 12:50; Wolanin,

N J ( ^ ^ I n g ) , 12:50; New Jersey bench, s e i ^ by AAacLean (too many men on Ice),

Shots on goal— New York 9-10-8— 27 New Jersey 187-7— 32....P o '^ -P la v Opportunities— New York 0 of 5; New Jersey 4 of 7.

G ® » 'l « ; -H « u York, Hrudey (32 shots-26 N»w Jersey, Burke (27-22).

A— 19J)96.A R®f5j®*"rG®® Kohorskl. Linesmen— Ron Asselstlne, Leon Stickle

Boston 3 1 |_<Buffalo 0 1 1I 4

Pltsf Period— 1, Boston, Sweeney 2 (Crowder, LInseman), 6:28. 2, Boston,Joyce 2 (Kluiak, Middleton), 13:13 (pp). 3, B o sto n , P le tt 1 (B u r r ld g e ) , 13:40. Penalties— Kluiak, Bos (cross<hecklno), :M ; LInseman, Bos (hooking), 3:42; Tucker, But (holding). 7:00; Reekie, But

(ro u g h in g ), 7:00; M c C a rth y , Bas (roughing), 7:00; Crowder, Bos (hlgh-

Huff, But (hIgh-stIckIng), 11:18; Housley, But (tripping), 11:18;

PrlMtlay, Buf (roughIng),13:52; Kluiak, Bps (slashing), 14:16; MIddletpn, Bos (tripping), 16:03; Krupp, Buf (elbowing),

I8!l6.S ^ n d Perl®d-H(, Buffalo, Andersson 1

(Fpllgnp.ltauttu), :44.5, Boston, Unseman3 OCluiak, Sweeney), 12:19. P e n a ltie s - Thelve n, Bos (h o ld in g ), 2:36; Bouroue, Bos (roughing), 3:09; Tucker, But iroitahing), 3:09,-Housley, Buf (hook-

Buf (elbowing), 13:57. Third Perlod-6, Buffalo, Ruuttu 2

(ftlig n o ), U :M . 7, Boston, LInseman 4 (Bauraue), I ^ M (en). Penalties— Wesley,

'< i81; (Browder, Bos(holding), 17:03.

Shots on goal— Boston 1588-31. Buffalo 5811— 24.

Fta i^-ploy Opportunltles-^Boston 1 of 5; Buffalo 0 of 8.

Goalies— Boston, Moog (24 shots-22 M ^ ) . Buffalo, Borrasso (3826). A__

R e f e r e e — O e n I s M o r e l . L in e s m e n — W oyne B o n n e y, Dan

Schachte.

T ransactions

Roxanne Spencer 187-459, M arie De- Lusso 197, Denise Randolph 188520, Alyce M cArdle 179-W, Martha Grant 178188522, Donna Hardesty 188486, Bette Dufralne 208203-541, Francine Turgeon 181-456, Shirley Eldrldge 191- 191-179-561, BobbI Greco 208492, Linda Skoglund 193-191-520, Lois Hager 183-450, TrudI Zuldema 268567, Renee Ellis 178495, Phyllis Walcosk1175, KIm Lutz177- 476, M arlys Dvorak 472, Beverly Morin 462, Alice HIrth 489, Celia Sampedro 452, Toni Robertson 468.

Nits OwlsSondra Champagne 188199-495, Cindy

Dadson 178193-505, Sandy Goouette 177; Anita Shorts 183-474, Kathy (ierzenskj 178516, Debbie Ruoglana 218203-551, Merlon Smith 192-187-545, Cheryl Doll178- 213-553, Bea O 'Connell 188456, Karen Tracey 208208531, Linda Lued451, Kenlyn Strelber 453, Betty Hussey Hussey 461.

Cunllffs Auto Body

Dykstra (3)', AAMs^B m ^ i? (4), Ortiz (1), Pirates; Da yis (5), Astros.

ScholasticMH8 JV girls

The Manchester High girls' lunlor varsity softball team ran Its record to 3-0 with a 23-10 victory over Hartford Public Thursday at Charter Oak Park. M a ry Tsokalas, Melanie Hanley, and Michelle Thram each collected three hits for Manchester while Patty Sumls- loskl, Linda Hewitt, and Julie Shrlder odded two safeties apiece.

Hanley, Tsokalas, and Throm com­bined for the pitching win. Manches­ter's next game Is Monday at Rockville at 1 p.m.

B ASEB ALL American League

-g O S T O N R ED SOX-SIgned Rick ^0 o one-veor corv

irS f!; Joseph P. Helvar director of ticket operations.

CHICAGO W H ITE S O X -Tra d e d Tim Huleft, Inflelder, to the AAontreal Expos for cosh orforaplayertobe named loter.

Notloftol Leo0ue

M l , third baseman, on the 18doy E L Hecalirt Lloyd M cO w v

<tan, third boseman, from Nashville of the Americon Association.

Recoiled Erale Camacho, pitcher.from Tuscon of ttie Pacific Coast LeJogue.

Starts LsofueM AR LIN S«^loned Ed Lynch

pitcher.

lntetiwtloi£fBSSM^Mi*A«iocta(ton_ Y O U N GSTOVyN M ID E -S lS iIS c ita to n Ronsev, Oyde Vougfian, Lester Rowe ond Roy Hall, guards. Named Bob Patton OBSIstant coach.

C O LLEG EM C T T O A T H L E T IC C O N FEREN C E—

Named Dole Smith assistant director.*.R.*^QNA-7Wowtad Jen ie Evans men’s

assistant basKMball cooch.B IO IA — A n n o u ^ the resignation of

H o w y d U o n , head basefcball coach, .,jESStSfVf? ® *B® «emester.N o f ^ Dove Holmaulst head basketball oooch.

D ELA W A R E STATE-Announeed It would not offer a contract to Marshal E n ^ , head basketball cooch, and Dwight Freemon, assistant basketball cooch.— fif'^?!.^.?f3U*~^"®unce<l tae reslg- ^ ; y ,®f williams,assistant oosketboll cooches.

W H ITW O R TH — Named Jullene B. Slmp-J21?ilXSTffJ!5?*'‘®"” ''®®®'*'®«*o»Hstant othletic director.

Brad Cabral 152-481, Rick Johnson 134, Frank McNam ara 193-423, Bill M cKinney 167-451, Mike Loppen 181, Steve Wlllloms 178452, Paul Rlchardl 151-422, Joe Goodfleld 178424, Ton y Marinelll 159-168455, La rry Novella409, Pete Woltyna 168450, John DeAngells 163, Chris Plumley 161, Lee P rior 158. ,

High team single; Purdy Corporation 494, high team triple; R&G Auto 1309, high Individual single: Rick Jahnson 223, high Individual triple: Frank Calvo' 519, high average; Ton y Marinelll Sr.. 141.55 ,

ElksRalph Doyer Sr. 147-146-424, Joe.

Cataldl 365, Fran Chartler 141-138386,- Ralph Doyer J r . 368, John RIeder- 137-369, M ax Welch 136-402, Dan Vlg- none 361, Je rry Ridel 141-389,’ T o n y ' Desimone 144-365, Joe Desimone 140-, 138401, Bill Palmer 138366, Joe Tw o ro - nite 137-149-400, Joe Dworok 1481S89M,i> Charlie Whelan 156-375, To n y Salvatore!151- 369, Paul Ford 1 6 ^ 4 , Bernier Gudeohn 148391, Ernie Pepin 147-390,4 Rick Burnett 168424, Travis Cook Sr.152- 406, Bill Preston.

AABPStan Kallnowski 203-539, Dick Colbert

208549, Norm Lasher 211-522, Russ ’ Charpentler 206, Russ Smyth 500, F ra n k . Fody 504, Phil Dupont 534, Cothy- RIngrose 183-460, Marge Patrick 178484, Yolanda Burns 183-490, Kay AAoroz 198500, Hot Giordano 489, Teddy U s - croort 477, Rita M cAllister 479, Sue- Purnell 472, Gert Andrews 460, VI PuKord.

C alendaraai

T O D A Y

Cheney Tech ot VInol Tech, 3:30 Coventry of R j i ^ ^ 3 ;3 0

R H A M ot Coventry, 3:30....... M ys Tennla

Manchester, 3:30 R H A M at Cheney Tech, 3:15

Girls TetmlsManchester at Wethersfield, 3:30

SATURDAY

Northwest Catholic at East Catholic ' (M o rlarty Field ), 11 a.m .

Newington at Manchester, 1 p.m.Truck

Manchester (boys and g irls). E a s t ' boys at Eastern Relays,

EastCathollcglrlsatUdyardRelays,'9 a.m . V

IN BRIEFByron, Coons win doubles

8"^! Warren CoonsHtta Tournamenttitle at the Manchester Racquet Club lastMonday with a 6-4,3-6,6-3 win over the team of Mort Lelberman and Sam Crispino

Coons and Byron beat Bob Ahiness and ^ o r g e Waezkowski 6-1,6-3 in the semifinals while I^lberman-Crisplno defeated Pete

' r^*l®* *®®"‘***°®*MacLean in the other semi,0-2, 6-1.

The team of former Herald sports editor Earl Yost and Roger Bagley captured the consolation crown with a 6-2,6-4 win over Bob Frankling-Fred Becker.

Graf, Martina In semisA M E L IA IS LA N D , Fla. — Top-ranked Steffi

Graf and No. 2 Martina Navratilova scored straight-set victories Thursday to advance to the quarterfinals of the Bausch & Lomb Championships.

Thirt-seeded Gabriela Sabatini of Argentina also won her third-round match in the $300,000 clay court tournament.

Graf beat Donna Faber of Bradenton, Fla.,6-1,6-1 to move into Friday’s quarterfinals against sixth-seeded Katerina Maleeva of Buglaria. Navratilova eliminated No. 9 Sandra Cecchini of Italy, 6-0,6-3 and will meet Kathleen Horvath of Largo, Fla., on Friday. t

Budd pleads her caseLO N D O N — South African-born runner Zola

Budd was to face the top brass of world athletics over a technicality that threatened to ruin her international career or open the door to a boycott of the Olympic Games.

Budd, who became a British citizen four years ago but has been plagued ever since by anti-apartheid demonstrations and accusations that she has returned too often to her homeland, was hoping to save her competitive future by pleading today she had not broken any rules.

Her case depended on how the 23 members of the International Amateur Athletic Federation Council interpreted their own rules.

McEnroe, Edberg winT O K Y O — American John McEnroe scored a

hard-fought 7-6 (10-8), 7-6 (9-7) victory over Japan’s Shuzo Matsuoka Friday and, aiong with top-seeded Stefan Edberg, advanced to semifinals of the men’s singles in the $752,500 Japan Open championships.

Sweden’s Edberg, ranked third in the world, romped over Australian Brad Drewett 6-4, 6-3 in an earlier match on the hard courts of Ariake

Je n n is P a rk .McEnroe, ranked No. 1 in the world for four

years starting in 1981, is competing in his first m ajor tournament since the U S. Open last September.

Ap photo

J U S T MISSES — Qreg Norman raises his putter as his birdie putt misses during first-round action Thursday in the Heritage Golf Classic. Norman was at 6-under-par 65 to share the lead.

Red Sox sign CeroneBOSTON — Catcher Rick Cerone, released by

the New York Yankees at the end of spring training, was signed to a one-year contract Thursday by the Boston Red Sox.

General Manager Lou Gorman said that Cerone would be in uniform for the Red Sox’s game with the Texas Rangers Friday.

Norman, Azinger In frontH IL T O N H E A D ISI^AND. S.C. - Greg

Nonnan and Paul Azinger each put oh a fast finish and matched 65s to share the first-round lead Thursday in the $700,000 Heritage Classic.

Sandy Lyle, however, found it difficult to follow up his Masters triumph and had to birdfe. the last two holes to break par.

“ A bit of an effort,” Lyle said after his 1-under 70 on the tough, tight Harbour Town Golf Links.

\

Penguins hire EspositoP ITTS B U R G H — Form er All-Star goaltender

Tony Esposito was named director of hockey operations for the Pittsburgh Penguins Thursday in a front-office shakeup that demoted General Manager Eddie Johnston and Vice . President Paul Martha.

The decision to bring in Esposito, 44, was made by Edward J . DeBartolo Jr., owner of the N F L ’s San Francisco 49ers and son of Penguins’ owner Edward J . DeBartolo, who has taken a greater role in the Penguins’ operations in recent months.

DeBartolo said the status of botlRfohnston and Coach Pierre Creamer will be determined by Esposito.

Robinson looks at bright sideB v Th e Assocloted Press

Frank Robinson tried to find some good signs in Baltimore’s ninth straight defeat after left fielder Jeff Stone lost a ball in the lights to lose the game.

With the score tied 3-3, Jim Eisenreich came around from first base when Stone lost Frank White’s drive in the lights with two outs in the top of the ninth inning as the Kansas City Royals beat the Orioles 4-3 Thursday night.

The 1904 Washington Senators and the 1920 Detroit Tigers lost 13 games from the start of the season and the 1968 Chicago White Sox lost 10. Four other teams have opened with nine consecutive losses.

" I like the way we battled back tonight against a good pitcher like (Bret) Saberhagen,’’ Robinson said. " It was a good effort and hopefully we’ll be able to build on this.”

Robinson is 0-3 since taking over for Cal Ripken on Tuesday.

After blowing a 3-0 lead, the Royals scored the winning run after starter Mike Boddicker had retired 18 consecutive batters. Eisenreich snapped that string

AL Roundupwith a single and then White hit a fly to left that Stone misplayed.

“ I tried to block it with my body,” Stone said. “ I saw it come off the bat, but I lost it at the last second.”

Saberhagen, M , allowed three runs and seven hits over eight innings. Bud Black got two outs in the bottom of the ninth and Gene Garber got the final out for his second save.

In the nine losses, the Orioles have been outscored 62-14 and have scored only five runs in their last 32 innings.

Rangers 2, Tigers 1Jose Guzman combined with

Mitch Williams on a four-hitter as Texas beat Jack Morris at Tiger Stadium

Guzman, l -l , allowed all four Detroit hits, struck out four and didn’t walk a batter in eight innings.

The Rangers scored two runs in the second inning on Ruben Sierra’s R B I double and Pete O ’Brien’s run-scoring single.

O’Brien has hit in eight straight games.

Morris, 2-1, struck out 10 but hurt himself with nine walks. Morris also was called for a balk, his fourth of the season.Indians 3, Twins 1

Tom Candiotti pitched his se­cond straight complete game and Willie Upshaw scored twice as Cleveland beat visiting Minne­sota for its eighth victory in 10 games. It ’s the Indians’ best start since they went lO-O in 1966.

Candiotti, 2-0, allowed eight hits, walked three and struck out six. The complete game was the Indians’ fifth, and lowered their E R A to 2.02.Athletics 5, Mariners 4

Jose Canseco and M ark McGwire hit consecutive home runs in the eighth inning as Oakland beat Seattle at the Kingdome.

Starter Mark Langston held the Athletics hitless over five in­nings, and allowed two hits in seven, before yielding to reliever Jerry Reed, 1-1.

Trailing 4-2, Carney Lansford doubled with one out in the eighth off Reed and Canseco tied the score with his fifth homer.

_MANCHESTER HERALD, Friday. April 15, 1988 — 15

Bulls not a one-man gangIN D IA N A P O LIS (AP) - M i­

chael Jordan, the N B A ’s scoring leader, believes he doesn’t have to carry his Chicago Bulls into the playoffs.

"Anyone who figures we’re a one-man team is going to be surprised,” said Jordan, who had a rare off-night shooting and still scored 35 points as the Bulls beat Indiana 116t110 Thursday, deal­ing a serious blow to the Pacers’ playoff hopes and boosting Chica­go’s hopes of catching second- place Atlanta in the Atlantic Division.

" I really couldn’t get anything generated offensively. I missed a lot of easy shots,” said Jordan, who was four of 14 in the first half and 12 of 28 for the night as he topped the 30-point mark for the S2nd time this season.

" I really wanted to come out and get everybody off to a good start. I was sending m y shots a little long. That tells me I was over hyper,” Jordan said.

Chicago had six players in double figures as it moved to within one game of Atlanta with six gjimes to play.

NBA Roundup

“ The guys really came through when it counted. Horace Grant played excellent. Brad Sellers played excellent and Charles Oakley gave us a lift when we needed,” Jordan said.

Grant came off the bench to score 18 points and had a game-high 13 rebounds, playing 31 minutes. Ja y Vincent also scored 18.

The Pacers are on the verge of being eliminated from playoff contention after their eighth loss in 10 games. Indiana is tied with Washington for the eighth and last Eastern Conference playoff spot with five games to play. The Bullets won the season series between the teams and would qualify for the playoffs on that basis. Philadelphia, which plays at Indiana on Saturday, trails Indiana and Washington by a half-game.

V

Blazers 128, Jazz 123At 6alt Lake City, Clyde

Drexler scored 16 of his 42 points in the ^ r t h quarter and Te rry Porter added 25 points and a team-record 19 assists. Portland scored the final six points.

Karl Malone led the Jazz with 39 points, Thurl Bailey added 33 and John Stockton handed out a team-record 26 assists and scored 17 points. Kevin Duckworth added ra points for the Trail Blazer?/Rockets 123, Kings 105

Akeem Olajuwon led six Rockets in double figures with 20 points and pulled down 10 re­bounds as the Rockets handed the Kings their 11th straight road loss.

The Rockets wore down the injury-plagued Kings, who suited up Just nine players in their llth consecutive setback at Houston.

Rbdney M cCray added 11 points, 13 rebounds and six assists, Robert Reid IS points and Pruvis Short 14. Otis Thorpe led Sacrainento with 20 points, and Harold Pressley bad 19.

M HS gills pound Public, baseball team still winless

The bats of the Manchester High girls’ softball team finally came alive Thursday afternoon with 19 hits as it routed Hartford Public, 26-4, in CCC East Division action at Fitzgerald Field.

Karen Harley led the Indian offense with a home run. a sacrifice fly and three R B Is. Barb O ’Brien and Paula Hollis each tripled. Manchester is 1-1 in the CCC East and 1-2 overall. The Indians’ next game is Monday at Rockville High ot 1 p.m. Hartford Public is 0-2 in the league and 1-2 overall.

Leading, 4-1, the Indians ex­ploded for 11 runs on eight hits in the third inning. Hollis’ triple led off the frame which was by Harley’s home run. Manchester added six more runs in the fourth and led, 21-1.

Lisa Moriconi was the winning pitcher for Manchester. She hurled four strong innings, strik­ing out four and walking five. She only allowed one unearned run in the second inning. "She was real sharp today. She was more consistent than in the first two gam es,” Manchester Coach Mary Faignant said.

Chris Rovegno, Tina Stone, Dana Hensley. Hollis, Pam Du- guay, Michelle Moz7.er and Erin Twible each collected two hits for the Indians. "What was encou­raging, is that Hartford wasn’t making a lot of errors. If was that we were making good contact.” Faignant added.

H.S. Roundup

BaseballOwls top MHS

H A R TF O R D - The hitting and defense seemed to come around a little bit Thursday afternoon for the, Manchester High baseball team. Buf pitching continues to be a sore point as the Indians bowed to Hartford Public, 11-6, in CCC East Division play.

The Indians are now 6-3 overall 0-2 in the CCC East, while the Owls are 1-1-1 overall. Public won all of one game against CCC East opposition a year ago. "They (Hartford) have a pretty good team. They played errorless ball,” Manchester Coach Don Race said.

Manchester, which is back in action Saturday at 1 p.m. at Kelley Field against Newington High, rapped 14 hits. Kejth DiYeso and Aris Leonard each had three hits and Leonard and Eric Rasmus each had three RBI. The defense, except for two miscues, also played well.

But Public, led by shortstop Luis Baez who helped turn two double plays, played errorless ball. And the Owls took advan­tage of nine bases on balls offered

by Manchester pitching, turning that into a six-run sixth inning that erased a 6-5 Indian lead.

"W e’ve got to get better pitch­ing,” Race said. "Hopefully (Jim ) Kitsock will give us that on Saturday. We had 14 hits which was a major improvement and the defense except for one play was good.

"O ur defense and hitting are coming, now we have to get the pitching to get it all together,” he added.

Manchester took a 5-3 lead in the top of the third, scoring four times. Aris Leonard and Rasmus each knocked in two runs with singles. But the Owls tied it with single markers in the fourth and fifth, and won it with the sixth­inning uprising.

Rasmus started on the mound for Manchester but gave way after four innings. “ His arm was a little weak and sore after four innings,” Race explained. Frank Savino, who relieved in the fifth, absorbed the loss,

H A R TF O R D P U B L IC (11) — Flores C 3-1-1-0, Mercodo cf 881-1, AAlrondo Jt>2- 7-0-0, L.Boei ss 2-2-2-2, Oorclo lb '3- 8 M ,B o e i3 b 3 -1 -8 0 , Fournier p 81-1-0, Harrlgan p 1-1-81, Albert rf 2-2-1-2, Proft If 2-1-1-0. Totals 24-11-87

M A N C H ES TR R (4) — J. Leonard 2b/p4- 81-0, Savino c/p 881-0, DIYeso Ibn 4-2-3-0, Gancorz If 1-1-80, B arry ss 4-81-0, A.Leonard cf 81-3-3, Joyner rf 4-2-1-0, Burg 3b 4-81-0, Rasmus p 882-3, Lourlnltls c 2-81-0, Boraue 2b 8804). Totals 34-5-14-5Manchester 0)4 001 0— 8182Hortford Public 120 115 x— 11-80

Rasmus, Savino (5), J.Leonard (5) and Savino, Lourlnltls (5 ); Fournier, Horrlgon (3) and Flores.

WP- Horrlgon; LP - Savino.

M CC rallies to top MitchellThe Manchester Community

College baseball team rallied for a 9-6 victory over Mitchell College Thursday afternoon at Cougar Field. M CC’s record is now 6-3 while Mitchell falls to 5-4.

M CC’s next game was today against Massasoit CC in Brock­ton, Mass.

The Cougars jumped to a 4-0 lead thanks to doubles by Troy Thornton and Mike Charter

(R B I). along with singles by Todd Mercier and Scott Shaw (R B I). Mitchell stormed back and took a 5-4 lead in the fifth inning.

MCC regained the lead in the seventh when Thornton tripled and scored on a single by Mercier. A wild pitch let in M CC’s second run of the frame. Mitchell tied the score at 6-all in the eighth before MCC tallied three times in the bottom half of the inning to

assume a 9-6 advantage.Steve Criscuolo tripled in two

runs and scored on a sacrifice fly by Thornton. Mercier had three hits for MCC. Thornton, in relief of starter Roberto Cruz, picked up the win while Bob McHugh suffered the loss,

M CC 400 ooo 023-9-11-4Mitchell 010 040 010—8182

Cruz, Thornton (7), and Charter. McHugh and Miranda.

W P-ThorInon. LP-M cHugh.

Bonds and Davis sizzling for red-hot Bugs, AstrosNL RoundupBy The Associated Press

The two hottest teams in the National League have, not sur­prisingly, have the two hottest players.

Barry Bonds and Glenn Davis are off to torrid starts, and their blistering bats have lifted the Pittsburgh Pirates and Houston Astros to the top of their divisions.

Bonds had two homers, includ­ing one leading off the game, the seventh straight game he has hit safely in his first at-bat, as the Pirates beat Philadelphia 4-2. Pittsburgh completed a three- game sweep of the Phillies and is 6-2 overall.

Davis drove in five runs with a three-run homer and a pair of singles, leading the Astros to a 9-3 victory over Cincinnati. Houston is 7-1 and Davis leads the N L with five home runs and 15 runs batted in.Pirates 4, Phillies 2

The Pirates won 27 of their last 38 games in 1987. And they’ve continued to win this year. Junior Ortiz also hit a homer and drove in the tie-breaking run with a bases-loaded walk in the third inning.

Bonds gave the Pirates an insurance run in the seventh with his second homer, the third multiple-homer game of his ca­reer. Bonds is batting .411 — he usually is a slow starter — and his last nine hits have been for extra bases.

"Have I ever had a streak like this? I haven’t been up here long enough to do that,” said ,Ronds, who has less than two full years of major league experience. “ I haven’t thought too much about it because it’s a long time between now and October. I just want to stay quiet, keep doing my job and keep m y attitude right.”

All of the Pirates apparently have the right attitude.

“ I don’t preach getting off to a good start because it’s such a long season, but there’s always that suspense early In the season about what’s going to happen,” Pirates Manager Jim Leyland said. "Anytim e you win you feel fortunate, no matter what time of the year it is. Rightnow we’re just trying to keep everything in perspective and keep it on a daily basis.”

Bob Walk allowed four hits and two runs in six innings before Jeff Robinson i^orked the final three innings for his third save.Astros 9, Reds 3

Davis' three-run homer in the

AF photo

O JED A HEATER — Mets’ pitcher Bob Ojeda fires a pitch en route to a two-hit, 2-0 shutout win over Montreal Thursday afternoon at Shea Stadium.

first inning started Houston’s rout and he also drove in runs with singles in the fourth and seventh innings. He is batting .375 and equaled a career high with his five runs batted in.

” I feel the same way as I did in ^spring,” Davis said ” I just feel

more patient at the plate and things are starting to fall forme.”

Davis certainly impressed Reds Manager Pete Rose.

"You could have brought back Cy Young and he still would have gotten a home run,” Rose said, ” He’s on a lot of pitches.He’s going good. He won’t go like this all year, but he’s hot nowand he’s knocking in a lot of runs and that’s what good hitters do,”

Danny Darwin, taking the place of injured Joaquin Andujar In the rotation, allowed three runs in 8 1-3 innings. Until Cincinnati scored in the eighth, Astros pitchers had gone 24 innings without allowing a run Meta 1, Expos 0

Both teams got only two hits, but one was Len Dykstra’s leadoff homer in the sixth inning off Dennis Martinez. Bob Ojeda made the run stand up.

The shutout was the second straight by New York over Montreal and Ojeda beat the Expos for the second time in as many starts this season.

Ojeda allowed a one-out double to Andres Galarraga in the second inning, then retired 18 straight before Mike Fitzgerald

singled in the eighth.Dykstra, who singled with one

out in the third for the Mets’ other hit, homered on the first pitch in the sixth from Martinez, who was 4-0 against New York last year.

Ojeda, who underwent elbow surgery last May 23, pitched his first shutout since June 30, 1986.

"A t the time of the operation, I thought my career might be over,” said the 30-year old left-hander. "This game was important to me. But I still have some doubts about my elbow. Even though I was able to come back and pitch last season, I was still concerned.

"Maybe after I pitch all this season, I won’t have any more doubts. Right now I ’m totally drained, both physically and emotionally, and I can’t appre­ciate what I just did.”Padres 2, Dodgers 0

Jim m y Jones, Mark Davis and Lance McCullers combined on the shutout. Jones, 1-1, won his fourth game in as many lifetime appearances against Los Angeles and lowered his lifetime ER A against the Dodgers to 0.63.

Davis got the last out in the seventh inning, and McCullers worked two scoreless innings, allowing one hit and striking out four for his second save.

Fernando Valenzuela, 1-2, yielded eight hits and four walks and struck out three as he lost to San Diego for the first time since 1985

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16 — MANCHESTER HERALD.

FOCUS r\

M obile hom e park stirs neighbors’ ire rp F .o p i ^ f?

DEAR BRUCE: The owner of a piece of property about two miles from us is trying to open a mobile home park. All of the neigh­bors are opposed to it, and there have been petitions and a lot of talk, but little action.

The application has been put off for a couple of months, so we have time to formulate our attack. If you were faced with this type of problem, how would you proceed?

NO NAME, NO TOWN

DEAR READER: There are many gaps in your story and I ’ ll have to fill In some of them on a speculative basis. Does the project truly presents menace to you, or do you object to it just because the residents may have relatively low incomes? It’s worth examining your motives. Youdon’t give your town, but in many places, two miles away is not exactly next door.

If the property is zoned for mobile- home-park use and the applicant meets the zoning rules, there’s very little that you can do about this project. Should he need to obtain a

S m a r t M o n e y

Bruce Williams

1

variance from zoning laws, however, you can fight your battle.

You might form a collective pot and hire an attorney to represent you and the other neighbors when this matter comes before the board of adjust­ment. You can be certain that the applicant will be so represented, and if you go in there individually, your strength will be severely diluted.

You also may want to hire experts if it can be shown that the project will add an undue burden on the road system, utility system, etc. Your opponent probably will do the same.

One thing to bear in mind is that most of us who are opposed to a particular project in our area tend to be emotional about it and, while understandable, your emotion can work against you in a hearing. This is why I urge you to hire an attorney.

DEAR BRUCE: I recently inher­ited a diamond ring that belonged to my mother. My dad told me during his lifetime that the ring was worth about 660,000. While there is a certain amount of sentimental value here, my growing family could use the money.

What is the best way to dispose of this ring to ensure that we receive as much money as possible?

R.N.PORTLAND, ORE.

DEAR R.N.: I ’m not sure there is “ best way,” but there are several ways for you to consider. The first thing to do is to get an accurate appraisal of the ring and determine its value in today’s marketplace. Be certain that the appraiser under­stands the reason for the appraisal (i.e., resale), and be sure you know whether you are receiving a whole­sale or retail appraisal. Wholesale will generally be slightly less than half of the retail price.

If you choose to wholesale It, you may take your ring to any number of jewelry buyers in your area, offer it for sale, and find out what they will ask for it. Don’t let them know the price you want. It ’S up to them, not you. to provide the price because they

are the experts in this transaction.• II you'choose to sell it retail, you can advertise the ring in local publica­tions and nneet potential buyers on neutral turf—in a bank or some other similarly secure environment — as opposed to in your home.

A third possibility is to broker your Jewelry. This means leaving the jewelry in the care of a retailer, who will attempt to sell it for you and take a commission, usually amounting to 10 or 18 percent of the sale price. If

, there is no sale, there is no commis­sion due.

Over the long haul, the latter option could net you the most money w ltt the least inconvenience. If you must sell the ring instantly for cash, you’ll probably have to sell wholesale, and that will give you the least return.

Bruce Williams, America’s top radio talk host. Is heard each week night on NBC stations. NQs column appears every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Write to Williams lacare

,of the Manchester Herald, P.O. Box 591, Manchester 06040. Letters of general interest will be answered in the column.

D r . G o t t

Peter Gott, M.D.

Girl’s grip on her gifts is stronger than grip on guy

Illness could cause sleepiness

DEAR DR. GOTT: My husband is very sleepy. He gets plenty of sleep, but get drowsy the minute he sits down. Is this due to the prednisone he takes or something else?

DEAR READER: Prednisone, a form of cortisone, does not usually cause drowsiness. I ’d be more concerned that your husband’s sleepiness is due to the underlying disease for which he is taking prednisone. For example, prednisone is sometimes used to treat asthma. I f the asthma is not brought under control with the medicine, it — rather than the drug can make a patient sleepy because of an inadequate supply of oxygen to the lungs.

I suggest that you share your concerns with your husband’s doctor and ask the physician to address the problem.

DEAR DR. GO’TT: What can you tell me about oligohydramnios? I lost a baby at 27 weeks because of a lack of amniotic fluid. My doctor admits she’s not that familiar with the condition.

DEAR READER: Oligo (sparse) hydramnios means a lack of amniotic fluid, the liquid in which the baby grows before birth. This fluid protects the unborn child and usually totals about 1500 cc at birth. Oligohydramnios is defined as less than 300cc of amniotic fluid. This condition is associated with stillbirth or difficult delivery.

DEAR DR. GOTT: Is there anything to make chloasma go away?

DEAR READER: Chloasma are brown patches on the face, seen primarily during pregnancy and in women taking birth-control pills. These harmless blemishes are accentuated by exposure to sunlight. ’They tend to fade after pregnancy or when birth-control drugs are discontinued. Treatment can be difficult and prolonged: 2 percent hydroqui- none in an alcohol glycol base applied twice a day (with a No. 15 sunscreen, when needed) for several weeks or months.

D E A R A B B Y : Myson, “ Steve,” was to be mar­ried in June. He broke off the e n g a g e m e n t last December when he real­ized that "An­gie” was not the g i r l he wanted to spend the rest of his life with. Angie's parents refused to pay for any thing having to do with the wedding, so I bought Angie’s wedding gown. My mother made a beautiful bedspread for Steve and Angie, and gave it to Angie when they became engaged.

After the engagement was broken, I called Angie and asked if I could please pick up the wedding gown and bedspread. I explained that I wanted to save the wedding gown for my own daughter, and the bedspread would be considered a family heirloom since it had been handmade by my mother. She said she had no intentions of giving anything back. I was shocked and hurt, but I suppose I should be glad Angie’s true colors came out before it was too late.

Was I wrong to ask for those things back? What else can I do? She reads yourcolumn faithfully, so maybe if she sees this she will realize how wrong she is.

HURT AND DISAPPOINTED

DEAR HURT: The wedding gown and bedspread were given to Angie in anticipation of a wedding that was canceled, so you were justified in asking her to return them.

You could sue her, but it might be costly (and messy) and not worth it in the long run. If I were you. I ’d settle for learning An­gie’s true colors before it was too late.

DEAR ABBY: lama student in a small Colorado high school.

D e a r A b b y

Abigail Van Buren

Recently, a girl in our school was killed instantly in a car accident, and the Monday after her death, we came to school to see the American flag flying at half- mast!

Abby, according to the rules of flag etiquette, the American flag can be flown at half-mast only with the consent of the president of the United States. I was appalled to find that the principal of our school did not know proper flag etiquette.

Am I overreacting, or are my feelings justified?

APPALLEDDEAR APPALLED: Accord­

ing to the World Book Encyclope­dia; “ By tradition, the national flag flies at half-mast only when the entire country is in mourning. If local flags are flown at half-mast, the national flag must be flown at full mast with them.”

But I do think you’re overreact­ing. Even though your principal did not follow “ flag etiquette” to the letter, he or she deserves high marks for showing compassion and respect for a student whose life ended so suddenly and tragically.

DEARABBY: Wheneverisend a card to someone who’s in a hospital or nursing home, instead of putting my own name and address in the upper left-hand comer of the envelope, I write the home address of the person I ’m sending the card to. That way, if he has been discharged, the card will reach him at home instead of being returned to me.CLAIRE BROWN, CICERO, ILL.

D E A R C L A I R E : Good thinking.

DEAR ABBY: My fathet* and I have been debating about an issue for a while dealing with AIDS. I ’m a IS-year-old girl and want to get my ears pierced. However, my dad seems to feel that I can receive AIDS from having this done, and insists that I go to a doctor to have a sterilized procedure done. But this is impractical and isn’t worth the trouble and cost. I ’m convinced sterilized earrings at the shop­ping mail are just as good as a sterilized needle. What do you think? Can I get AIDS from ear piercing?

NAKED LOBESDEAR NAKED LOBES: As

long as sterilized studs are used in the ear piercing, there shouid be no risk of getting AIDS.

DEAR ABBY: I noticed with interest the line, “ It ’s not over until the fat lady sings,” which appeared in your column. It had to do with a sporting event.

You might be interested In knowing that the expression originated in connection with opera, and the “ lady” referred to was a heavy-set female soprano who performed in Richard W a g n e r ’ s o p e r a “ Gotterdammerung.”

CHARLIE E. MILTON WAGONER, OKLA.

CONFIDENTIAL TO YOU: Seen on a California bumper sticker; Don’t Buckle Up — Send a Doctor’s Kid to College.

Wedding bells? Wedding bills! Who pays for what and every­thing else you need to know if you’re planning a wedding can be found in Abby’s booklet, “ How to Have a Lovely Wedding.” Send your name and address, clearly printed, plus check or money order for $2.89 ($3.39 in Canada) to: Dear Abby, Wedding Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, 111. 61054 (postage and handling are included).

Executor makes tax choices on estatesIt's amazing how a

soap opera can spin out of a poorly executed will. Mistakes and over­sights in estate planning can cause anguish for those beneficiaries the will was intended to protect. And yet reluc­tance to dwell on the topic of death often prevents individuals from making sound judgments and planning prudently. Wills, as a result, tend to get short shrift.

Some families can be suddenly faced with complex decisions, partic­ularly issues regarding taxes, after a member’s death. Appointed' execu­tors, often friends and associates, are often presented with a major job they are unprepared to handle. Careful planning, however, can ease the burden.

The executor is the person desig­nated in the will to handle assets, taxes, debt payments and any other necessary functions in settling the decedent’s will. This is by no means an honorary role, but instead a resopnsible, often complicated posi­tion. For a simple estate, it is typical to select a spouse, close friend or relative as executor. In any case, it must be a person who is capable and

S y l v i a

P o r t e r

willing to manage the task.If the estate is more complex, you

will need a professional. Selecting an experienced executor can be the most valuable planning tool of all.

In recent years, there have been substantial tax changes. Since 1981, fewer and fewer estates have been subject to federal estate taxes; now in 1988, estates worth less than $600,000 are exempt. The rate has also changed, from the hefty top rate of 70 percent in 1981, to a maximum of 55 percent through 1992, and 50 percent in 1993 and thereafter. Of course, state inheritance and estate taxes still apply.

Changes in federal income tax laws have had an impact on estates. Certain types of trusts and property transfers have had their income tax benefits removed, as has a wide range of shelters available to beneficiaries.

More than ever before, planning — with built-in flexibility — is required if you want your wishes carried out.

For some specific points I have consulted with Patrick A. Naughton, vice president. Trust & Estates/Pri- vate Banking at New York-based Chemical Bank.

a While an estate is being settled the government views it as a taxpayer with a life of its own, for income tax purposes. A surviving spouse is not taxed on estate income unless he or she receives the distributions from the estate. Depending on the tax bracket of the beneficiaries, it may make sense to retain the first year’s earnings within the estate rather than immediately distributing it. Note: A typical estate remains open for three years, permitting a considerable amount of flexibility for planning.

a The establishment of trusts In a will increases the ability of an executor to lessen the tax bite. If the entities paying taxes on lower amounts of income and therefore a t " lower tax rates.

■ An executor can use administra­tion expenses to reduce taxes. For instance, a decision might be made to use these expenses as income-tax deductions on the estate’s Income-tax return — if the estate-tax bracket is lower than the income-tax bracket. If

^ ■

the executor pays medical expenses for the decedent within one year of death, they can be taken either as a medical deduction on the estate-tax return or on the decedent’s final income-tax return. In each case, a correct decision can result in lowered taxes.

■ Assets such as bands may be handled so that total taxes are minimized. Say the estate holds Series E or EE bonds. The executor determines whehther it is more advantageous to have the interest taxed on the decedent’s final return, to redeem them over a period of years, or to convert some of them to Series H or HH bonds.

Efficient timing is one of the executor’s most Important contribu­tions to the tax-effective distribution of an estate. In addition, careful evaluation of propert/^ must not be underestimated, particularly when items such as artwork or real estate holdings are involved. Professional appraisals should be sought and, though values may vary, the worth that is finally a g re^ upon must hold up to IRS scrutiny.

Bottom line: Careful planning now can avoid leaving a legacy of problems for loved ones.

T o u r T h e Ultim ate E ve n fLOS ANGELES - The "Rat Pack” tour has

become “ The UlUmate Event,” as Frank Sinatra and Sammy Davis Jr. Joined forces with Liza Minnelli for an 18-concert, IS ^ ty U.S.tour.

Sinatra and Davis had begun a recent singing tour with rat-pack buddy Dean Martin, but Martin had to drop out after six concerts when an old kidney problem flared up.

“ We miss Dean and we love him— he’s like a brother to me and Sam,” Sinatra said Thursday. “ Liza is the greatest female performer of our time. She is a great lady and it is always a privilege to share a stage with her.”

The tour, dubbed “ The Ultimate Event,” will debut at Houston’s Summit Arena on Sept. 17 and end at the Chicago Theater on Oct. 16, said Susan Reynolds, vice president of entertainment, marketing and publicity for Burson-Marsteller.

Princess D l loves to shopST. ALBANS,

England — Being a princess is not all it’s cracked up to be, says Princess Diana, who added that she enjoys an occasional shop­ping trip to a supermarket, local workers reported.

Diana, the wife of Prince Charles,

Princeaa Diana British throne, wasin this city 19 miles outside London to open a big new shopping mall Thursday and told workers she enjoys buying tea-time treats for her young sons, Harry and William.

“ We spoke to her about it not being an easy life. She said it was not all that it’s made out to be,” said pet shop manager Judy Straton. But, “ She said she’d rather not say anything about that.”

Selling all-plastic weaponsWINTER PARK, Fia. — Former Texas

Gov. John B. Connally, who filed for personal bankruptcy earlier this year, has been hired to help a designer of all-plastic weapons try to sell its technology to the U.S. military.

Redeye Arms Inc. has developed a process that could be used for weapons ranging from hand guns to howitzers, the company’s chief operating officer, John Floren, said Thursday.

“ Based upon my understanding of this technology, it represents an opportunity to revolutionize conventional armaments and defense systems,” said Connally, a former Navy Secretary, during a meeUng in Houston with company officials. The terms of the contract were not disclosed.

S n yd er hides In hotelMIAMI BEACH,

Fla. — Jimmy “ T h e G r e e k ” Snyder, fired as a CBS sports com­mentator earlier this year, says he’s been “ hiding” in a posh hotel since then. To add to his troubles, he’s back in the hospital for chest pains.

The 70-year-oldoddsmaker was in good condition and undergoing tests and observation, Miami Heart Institute spokeswoman Esther Saporito said Thursday.

Snyder, dismissed from “ NFL Today”J if January because of his controversial remarks about black athletes, said he woke up in his hotel room here Wednesday with chest pains.

“ I don’t take any chances, the sooner they can do something for you the better,” he said from his hospital bed. “ They (doctors) are just looking to see what they find.”

Ripley to write sequelNEW YORK — Alexandra Ripley, a writer

of historical novels, has been selected to write the long-awaited sequel to “ Gone With the Wind,” according to Life magazine.

The magazine’s May issue reports that Ripley, 54, was selected from a dozen finalists two years ago by the WilUam Morris Agency, which is handling the project for the family of GWTW author Margaret Mitchell.

Ripley, the author of “ Charleston,” “ New Orleans Legacy” and two other historical novels, has written an outline and two chapters of the sequel, which will be shown to publishers on Monday.

The auction for hardcover rights could fetch as much as $6 million, with most of the profits going to Mitchell’s two nephews, the magazine said.

Ta lk -sh o w host clearedSECAUCUS, N. J. — Morton Downey Jr., the

ultra-conservative talk-show host known for his confrontational style with guests, has been cleared of charges that he assaulted a gay rights activist during a program.

Judge Emil DelBaglivo found Downey innocent of assaulting Andrew Humm, a 34-year-old spokesman for the Coalition for Lesbian and Gay Rights.

DelBaglivo watched a videotape of the show and listened to testimony during a 4W-bour trial Wednesday before issuing his decision.

Jimmy Snyder

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Don’t be afraid to get luckyBy James Jacoby

I hope Willy Nilly has better luck with his tax return than he did with the heart slam, which came up in a region­al tournament In Portland in Febru­ary. The slam is certainly no bargain, since any three-card heart holding

Lwith West gives the defenders two tricks. Still, when you get to an ambi­tious contract, you have to give your­self your best chance to make it. As usual, Willy Nilly knew how to botch it.

Willy won the ace of clubs, played to his spade' ace and ruffed a spade, played a heart back to his ace and ruffed another spade. Now he was ready to play a second heart, but first he had to get to bis hand. So he played the king of clubs. East raffed with the queen, and the slam was set.

At another table, Careful Charlie could tell that with this hand, it was right to throw caution to the winds. If hearts split badly, he was down, and it wasn’t going to matter if he ruffed his spade losers first. So he won the ace of clubs and immediately played ace and a heart. Making six.

Is there a lesson? You bet. If you’re in a contract that needs a good break, play for it. Don’t dawdle around and go set because you were afraid to get lucky.

James Jacoby's books “Jacoby on Bridge" and “Jacoby on Card Games" (written with his father, the late Os­wald Jacoby) are now available at bookstores. Both are published by Pharos Books.

The Work Incentive Program (W IN) has placed more than 350,000 persons, mostly women, in private- sector jobs.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " I want to shock people Into awareness. I don't believe there s any virtue in understatem ent." — Ken Russell.

I THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAMEby Henri Arnold and Bob Le^

Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

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WHAT ALCOHOL CAUSES PEOPLE TO S IV E W HEN T H E Y LOSE

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Answer here: ^ A . A A ^

Yesterday's(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles; JUDGE QUASH BLAZER CHARGE Answer: Something you gel by using It—"A HEAD"

Now b«eh In 810011. JwmbI* Seok No. S 1$ ovillBblt for S2.M. which Inciuttot poilaa* and handling, from Jumbla, cfo (Ma nawapapor, p.p. t o i «3M, Orlando, FL 32S03>4M6 Ineludo your nama. addraaa and tip coda and maha your ehach payabit to Nawapaparbooha

5 :0 0 P M [H B O ] Schoolboy FathorBased on Jeannetifi Eyerty't rK>vel My Baby N ow /' th^drama features Darta Plato (“ Drff'rent Strokes") as an unwed mother and Rob Lowe as a yourtg father who insists on raising Ns infant son by himself. <60 min.)

5:30P M [ESPN] speedway America [MAX] A Gospel Sessfon: EverybodySay Yeahl A celebration of American gos­pel music, -with host Paul Simon, featuring performances by Andrae Crouch. Jennifer Holliday. The Oak Ridge Boys and Luther Varidross. (60 min.) fin Stereo)

6 :0 0 p m ® d ) ® ® NawaCB Three's Company Part 2 of 2.CD Magnum, P.l.GD WebsterGD Rockford Files (1$ A-Team (^ jN e w s (Live)® ) Doctor Who Part 2 of 4.® T.J. Hooker^ $1} Family TiesGI) Noticlas@ Auction 8B[C N N ] Showbiz Today[D IS ] Young People's Concert w ithRaftI The Canadian folk singer performs asing-slong concert for children and theirparents. (60 min.)[E S PN ] SportsLook.[H B O ] MOVIE: 'The Boy Who Could Fly' (CC) A 14-year old boy who has never spoken a word believes so strongly in magic that he becomes an inspiration to all those around him. Jay Underwood. Lucy Deakins, Bonnie Bedelia 1986. Rated PG. (In Stereo)

, [U S A ] Cartoons ^ : 3 0 P M (T) CBS News (CC).

CD Family Ties CD ABC News (CC)Gl) Jeffersons (CC).(22) (30) NBC News (CC).C24) Nightly Business Reportf ^ l Bosom Buddies(41) Noticiero Univision(61) Love Cpnnection[C N N ] Inside Politics '88[ESPN ] Sports Trivia[M A X ] MOVIE; 'Damnation Alley' (CC)Survivors of the nuclear destruction of theU S. struggle to make a now beginning.Jan-Michael Vincent. George Peppard,Dominique Sanda 1977 Rated PG.

7 : 0 0 P M CD Entertainment Tonight In­terview: actress Mary Stoenburgen (“ The Attic: The Hiding of Anno Frank"). (In Stereo)lD NewsCD (2^ Wheel of Fortune (CC).CD SI 00,000 Pyramid (11) (38) Cheers (18 Kojak (20) M 'A*S*H(24) MacNcil / Lehrer Newshour:26) Barney Miller(30) (40) Win, Lose or Draw(41j Rosa Salvaje(iBI) Family Ties[C N N ] Moneyline[D IS ] MOVIE: 'The D iaiyof Anne Frank'The true story of a Jewish family's life in hiding from the Nazis as seen through the eyes of a young girl Melissa Gilbert, Maxi­milian Schell. Joan Plowright 1980

[ESPN] SportsCenter (T M C ] MOVIE: 'Boy in Blue' Near the end of the 19th century, young oarsman Ned Hanlan rises from a life of bootlegging to become an international rowing hero Nicholas Cage. Christopher Plummer Cyn­thia Dale 1986 [U S A ] A irwolf

7 : 3 0 P M (CD PM Magazine Processing tax forms at the Internal Revenue Service; John Houseman(.D Current Affair CD (22) Jeopardy! (CC).CD (26) ( ^ Barney M illert it) INN News(2b; M*A*S*H(30) Newlywed GameC4p) Hollywood Squares'61; NBA Basketball: Boston Celtics atCleveland Cavaliers (2 hrs,, 30 min.)(Live)[C N N ] Crossfire [ESPN] Target Shooting

8 : 0 0 P M 0 3 Ringling Bros, andBarnum 8i Bailey Circus (CC) The 118th edition of the circus features the Peters Brothers performing aboard the Whirling Wheel of Death, aerialist Miguel Vazquez and the African Safari Fantasy. Hosts; Na­omi and Wynonna Judd. (60 min.)(D Denver, the Last Dinosaur A group of Southern California kids meet an extraordi­nary friend, a dinosaur. (60 min.)CD '4p) Perfect Strangers (CC) Larry gets lealous when Balki and Jennifer appear to be sneaking around behind his back. (R)CD Evening Magazine (11; Hill Street Blues (18j McCloud

M)MOVIE: -It's*Mad. Mad. Mad. Mad ■ VVond A group of travalera moot on the

way to Las Vegaa and end up in a madcap race for a forturre in tainted money. Spen-

Tracy' Milton Barte, Ethel Merman. i963.

® ® Highwayman (CCl The Highway- man and a policewoman team up to Inves­tigate a series of mysterious disappear­ances. (60 min.) (In Stereo)® VVasMngton Weak in Ravlaw (CC). ® MOVIE: ’FooTs Parade' A prison guard and a bank preiktent plot to kill and rob three men who were relMsed from pri- son and possess a large check. James Ste- w rt^ George Kennedy, Anne ^x te r .

® WOVIE: 'The Rsincamation of Pater rroud A man, who dreams of his own nwrdor in a previous life, falls in love with a gin who was his daughter in that life. Mi­c h e l Sarrazin, Jennifer O'Neill. Margot Kidder. 1975.9i) CUiirtceertera [CNN] PrimeNews[ESPN] Wieatling: U.S. va. U.S.S.R Amataur Freestyle Chsmplonahip From Miami. (60 min.) (Taped)[H B O ] MOVIE: 'Police Academy 3: Beck in Training' (CC) Saving the Aca­demy is the newest and toughest chal­lenge for the members of the original grad­uating class. Steve Guttenberg. Bubba Smith. David Graf. 1986. Rated PG. [MAX] MOVIE: 'The Stepfather' A teen-ager becomes suspicious of her mother s new husband, a man whose idealized vision of the perfect family leads to violence. Terry O'QuInn, Jill Schoelen Shelley Hack. 1987. Rated R. (In Stereo) [USA] Alfred Hitchcock Presents

8:30P M ( D ® FuII House (CC|CO Entertainment Tonight Interview: ac­tress Mary Steenburgen ("The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank"). (In Stereo)® WaM Street Week [USA] Ray Bradbury Theater

8:40P M [D IS ] DTV® * ^ ^ P M CO Dallas (CC) J.R. prepares

to assume control of Weststar Oil; Nicho­las reveals his whereabouts to Sue Ellen; Laurel confides in Clayton about J R 's blackmail plot. (60 min.)CO Baseball Fever (60 min |CO ® Mr. Belvedere (CC)CO Morton Downey Jr.(31) MOVIE: 'Endangered Species' Thediscovery of mutilated farm animals leads a retired detective and a female sheriff to a dangerous germ warfare operation. Job- eth Williams, Robert Urich, Hoyt Axton 1982.(2s) (1§) Night Court (CC) Christine as- sumes her new role as a judge; Harry pre­pares to launch his incredible stunt. Part 1 of 2. (R)

Connecticut Newsweek GD Tal Como Somos ®Z) Auction Continues (2 hrs., 30 min.) [C N N ] Larry King Live [D IS ] MOVIE: The Queat' An American orphan living in Australia is drawn into a mysterious legend with lake monsters and an unusual Aboriginal mystic. Henry Tho­mas, Tony Barry, Rachel Friend. 1985. Rated G.[ESPN ] Top Rank Boxing: Donald Curry vs. Sean Mannion Super welterweight bout scheduled for 10 rounds, from Atlat.- lic City, N.J. Curry is 29-2, 20 KOs. Man­nion Is 38-8-1, 14 KOs (2 hrs., 30 min.) (Live)[T(VIC] MOVIE: 'Gung Ho' (CC) A mansets out to lure a lucrative Japanese auto plant to his financially faltering small Amer­ican town. Michael Keaton. Gedde Watan- abe. George Wendt 1986 Rated PG-13. [U S A ] PGA Golf: MCI Heritage Classic (2nd Round) From Hilton Head, S C. (2 hrs.) (R)

9 :30P M QD ® FamHy Man (CC)® OddCouptt® ® Bavarly HIDa Buntz (CC) A weal­thy eheik hirea Buntz to find out wtio'a van­dalizing hit prize atatuet. (In Stereo)® Fourth Estata[HBO] MOVIE; 'PoHca Acadanly 4; Cl- tizana on Patrol' (CC) Police academy graduatea are put to work training local ci- tizana in a crime-fighting progrem. Steve Guttenberg, Bubba Smith, Michael Wins­low. 1987. Rated PG.[M A X ] MOVIE: 'Roeenury's Baby' A pregnant woman raalizes Irer husband is invAved with a coven of witches who have designs on her unborn )>sby. Mia Farrow, John Cassavetes, Ruth Gordon. 1968.

10:00P M CS) Falcon Crest (CC) Mag­gie is the only person who brieves Ri­chard's story about his involvement with tire "Thirteen"; Eric discusses business with Madame Malec. (60 min.) ( £ 3 ) ® NewsCS ® 20 /20 (CC) Scheduled: an exclu­sive. behind-the-sc^es look at what Andy Warhol left behind/(60 min.)(31 MOVIE; 'Empire o f the Ants' A co- tony of ants, grown to enormous size, de­vour the clients of e reel estate swindler In the Everglades. Joan Collins, Robert Lan­sing. 1977.® (E) M iami Vibe (CC) Thagirtfrlend of a notorious narcotics kingpin «criticBlly wounds Crockett during a drug bust. (60 min.) (In Stereo)@) Great Performances: The Silents: Our Hospitality In this 1923 comedy, a young man (Buster Keaton), heading south to claim an inheritance, encounters a woman (Natalie Tatmadde) whose farniiy has been feuding with his clan for years. (90 min.)GD Noticiero Univision $1) Star Trek [C N N ] Headline News

10:10P M (S) Honeymooners Part 2 of 2 .

1 0:3QPM ® INN News Odd Couple

GD Tree Qeneraciones Debut1 1 :00PM CD CD @) ® News

CD ® M*A*S*HCD The Street Runyon's frustration builds when an investigation into Cooper's shooting incident goes awry. (In Stereo)

(!!) INN News® Tales From the Darfcside A young man (Robert Rothman) moves into an apartment that later takes on frightening characteristics whenever he breaks the landlady's (Marie Windsor) rules. (R)@) News (Live)

SoapG5 El Show de Johnny Canales Debut GD Love Connection [C N N ] Moneyline[D IS ] Missing Adventures o f Ozzie and HarrietII? Neceeserily the News of theWorld The news team reports on the inter­national scene - from Rio to Reykjavik and Moscow to Managua. (60 min.) (In Stereo) ^ M C ] MOVIE: 'The Allnighter' Five Southern California students have a series of misadventures over the course of their last day and night before graduation. Su­sanna Hoffs, Dedee Pfeiffer. Joan Cusack 1987, Rated PG-13. (In Stereo)[U S A ] Atomic TV

11:30PM SD mStereo)GD ® Nightline.(CC).( £ Simon 8i Simon CH) Honeymoonera ® Foliplex® ® Tonight Show (In Stereo)® Racing From Plainsfield

Late Show (In

® The Street Runyon's fnjstration bullda when an investigation into Cooper's shooting incident goes awry. (In Stereo) (St Aucthm 88[CNN] Sports Tonight Anchors; Fred Hickman, Nick Chartee.[DIS] Adventures of Shaiioch Holmes [ESPN] SportsCenter

1 1 :35PM (£ Magnum, P.l.1 1 :50PM [M A X ] MOVIE; 'WoiWng

Oiris' The erotic adventures o f some lad­ies of the evening. All Moore, Sheri St. Claire, Ron Jeremy. 1986. Rated NR.

12 :00A M (T) Hit Squad (ID Star Trek ® Twin Star Productione

. ® To Be Announced.® PoUca Story ® Hogan's Heroes ® Friday tfie 13th; The Ssrise Ryan, Frank and Mick) travel back to 19th- century London after they tangle with a snarling vampire. (60 min.) (R)(ii) PEUCULA: 'El Qavilan Pollero' LeftIn Pn rsaa Dos alagres rancheros tratan de huir Juntos da las mujerea qua quieron

- casarse con ellos. Pedro Infante, Lilia Prado.[C N N ] Newsnight[E S PN ] SpeedWorld: American RacingSeries From Phoenix. Ariz. (60 m in) (Taped)[HBO] MOVIE: 'The Tracker' (CC) AnArizona rancher sets out to bring back a religious fanatic and his two female hos­tages. Kris Kristofferson, Mark Mosas Scott Wilson. 1988. (In Stereo)[U S A ] Night Flight

1 2 :30A M ( £ w k r p In Cincinnati ( £ America's Top Ten C5) Entertainment Tonight Interview; ac­tress Mary Steenburgen ("The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank"). (In Stereo)(31 Wendy and Me(E) MOVIE: 'Outsiders' The conflicts of rival youth gangs explode into tragedy when a greaser falls for a rich girl. Matt Dillon, C, Thomas Howell, Ralph Macchio 1983. (R)(3 ) ® Late Night W ith David U tta r-man (In Stereo)

Alfred Hitchcock Presents *@ Gene Scott

T t) IS ] MOVIE: 'K it Carson and the Mountain Men' A young man is thrilled to join Kit Carson and his campaign for state­hood for Texas and California. Christopher Connelly, Robert Reed, Gary Lockwood

[U S A ] Night Flight: Night Flight Goes to the Oscars • Snubs

12:35A M CD Love Boat 1:00AM CD AII in the Family

CD Pan Club Scheduled; Stryper, country singer Gary Morris, pro basketball player Dominique Wilkins, actor Tristan Rogers

CD Joe FranklinGD Runaway W ith the Rich and FamousDeborah Shelton in Thailand; Larry Manetti in Hawaii; Ireland's Ashford Castle; vaca­tions on the island of Bali. (R)GD Matchmaker (ID Feed My People (M) Tw ilight Zone GD W hat a Countryl [C N N ] Inside Politics '88 (R)[ESPN] SpeedWorld: Gold Coast 300 Off-Road Championship From Las Ve­gas, Nev. (60 min.) (Taped)[T M C ] MOVIE; 'Nomads' An anthropol­ogist is driven mad by a supernatural Es­kimo myth, the 'Innuats,' nomadic, hostile spirits who assume human form. Pierce Brosnan, Lesley-Anne Down. Adam Ant. 1986. Rated R.[U S A ] Night Flight; Video Profile; Jody

"Watley

Astrograph

% u rbirthday

Apr)) 16,1988Ways can be found in the year ahead to get greater benefits from a venture in which you've been long involved. Rapid progress will be made on your estab­lished framework.AR)ES (Marclt 21-Apri) 19) Use your Initiative today if you see an opportunity to advance your interest where your ca­reer Is concerned. It may be of a fleeting nature, so you'll have to move fast. Ma­jor changes are ahead for Arles In the coming year. Send for your Astro- Graph predictions today. Mail $1 to As- tro-Grapti, c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44104-3428. Be sure to state your zodiac sign! TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Something good that you have going for you can be expanded on and made into something

better. Devise ways to reap its fullest potential.GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You're likely to be luckier today In ventures others originate than you will be in things you conceive yourself. Trade on their strengths.CANCER (June 21-July 22) Lady Luck will be using broad strokes today, and you could be more fortunate than usual in both your commercial involvements and in your social ones.LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Substantialstrides can be made today where your primary ambitious objective is con­cerned. Don't waste time and effort on minor projects.VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapl. 22) This could be a rather lucky day (or you In ways that are difficult to describe. Chance will play a prominent ro|e in your affairs. Hope for the best.LIBRA (S«pl. 23-Oct. 23) There will be a big change In conditions that had a neg­ative effect on your material security. The transition will be sudden and

secret.SCORPlb (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If It comes down to push and shove today, trust your judgment above the suggestions offered by advisers. Your perceptions are likely to be more accurate. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) The ways and means can now be found to get something rather expensive that you want. Don't let up on your expectations.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Your or­ganizational and managerial skills will be your two best assets today. There will be several situations where you may be able to put them to good use. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) If you have done all of the proper spade work, don't be overly concerned about the outcome of an Important event. Your expecta tlf^ should be realized. PISCES 20-March 20) Dealings you have'M a friends should work out happily for everyone involved today. You'll be lucky for them, and they'll be lucky for you.

CLASSIFIED ADVEBTISINfl 643-2711EmploymentNotices

As a condition precedent to the placem ent o f any odver- fls lno In the Manchester He­r a ld , A d v e r t is e r h e re b y agrees to protect, Indem nify and ho ld harm less the M an­chester H era ld , Its office rs and employees against any end a ll lia b ility , loss or expense, Inc lu d ing a t to r ­neys' fees, a r is in g fro m c la im s o f un fa ir trade p ra c ti­ces, In fringem ent of trade­m arks, trade names o r pa t­ents, v io la tio n o f righ ts of p riva cy and In fringem ent of cop y righ t and p rop rie to ry righ ts , u n fa ir com petition and libe l and slander, which m ay resu lt fro m the p ub lica­tio n o f any odvertlsm enf In the Manchester Hera ld by advertise r, Including adver­tisem ents In any free d is tr i­b u tio n p u b llc o llo n s pub­lished by the M anchester H e ra ld . P e n n y S le f fe r f , Publisher.

Il m t_I AND FOUNDFOUND. Near Bower's

School. All white, mole cot. Coll 646-1032.

LOST. Light blue man's locket. Keys ond eye­glasses In pockets. Vic­inity of Friendly's, Moln Street. 646-8330.

l in iP A R T TIME HELP WANTED

DENTAL Hygenlst. Port time, 2-3 doys per week In small established practice. Coll 643-6528.

PART Time- 10om-2pm dolly to relieve sote deposit clerk. Please apply; Savings Bonk of Manchester. 923 Main Street. Manchester, CT. 646-1700. EOE.

LIQUOR PHRMIT NOnCH OP APPLICATION

This It to give notice that I, NANCY ANN RlVOSA Of 1194 C-1 MIDDLE TURNPIKE, MANCHESTER, CT 06040 have filed on oDpllcatlon pla­carded APRIL 0,1900 with the Department of Liquor Con­trol g CAPE for the sale of al­coholic liquor on the pre­mises 305 SOUTH MAIN STREET, MANCHESTER, CT 04040. The business will be owned by THE MANCHES­TER COUNTRY CLUB IN- CORPGRATRO Of SOS SOUTH MAIN STREET, MANCHESTER, CT 04040 and will be conducted by NANCY ANN Rl VOSA at per­mittee.

NANCY ANN RIVOSA April 13 ,19SS

04S4I4

PART TIME [HELP WANTED

NOON-TIME AIDES

The Manchester Board of Education Is seeking noon-time sldea lor Ro­bertson School. 2 hours per day. •4.76/hr. Inter­ested applicants should contact

M rs. Abraitit 647-3 3 71

W A N T E D . M a t u r e woman to work part time In daycare taking care of Infants. 1 lob available 7am-1pm. 2 lobs available 1pm- 6pm. Call The Child­ren's Place Inc, Man­chester. 643-5535.

PART Time Motel Desk C le rk to w ork 1

, weeknight-4pm to mid­night. Saturday-8am to 12 noon and Sunday-12 noon to 4pm. We con be f le x ib le . P leasan t working atmosphere. S6 per hour to start. Call Connecticut Mo­tor Lodge for appoint­ment. 643-1555.

PART TIME l i U HELP WANTEDPART Tim e Service

Clerk, 15-20 hours per week. Flexible. $4.50 to start. 643-5135 Sonya or Fellclo._____________

PART Time nights- Help, wanted to load trucks. Approxim ate hours 5pm to 9 : 30pm . Monday-Friday, apply In person. Peauot Spring W ater Co., Spring Street Exten- tlon. Glostonbury.

ACCOUNTS Payable- Office Clerk. Tuesday- Thursday, 9am-5pm. Will troln. 646-0103.

HAIR Stylists- Mom's hours, to suit your needs. Afternoons, ev­enings and Saturdays. Good pay, benefits and Incentives. New shop. Join our teami Call Yvonne at 1-800-247- 7267.

MUNSON'S Chocolate's, Route 6 Bolton Is now accepting appUcoNona tor port time refoM salespersons. Hours ore Mondoy-FrldOy, 4- Bpm. Approximately 8 hours on Saturday or Sunday, averaging 20 hours per week. Coll 647-8639.

LH JLP WANTEDDRIVER. Immediate op­

ening. Manchester He­rald route Coventry area. Short hours, good pay. Coll 742-8867 or 647-9946 and leave name and telephone number and I will coll you bock.

WANT ADS ore the friendly way of finding o cosh buyer for applian­ces, musical Instruments, cars and a host of other Items.

GROWTH Company look- Ino for future manage­ment. Offers profit shoring and manage­ment potential. Ambi­tious Individual needed to learn Industry from ground up. 649-4563.

CHILD Core provider wanted to core for our V/2 year old son In our Manchester home. 3 or 4M«Dooitt atr w«sfc

HI ttild -M o v.

LOVING woman needed to core for o toddler, full time In my Man­chester home. Excel­lent pay. Coll 646-1216 otter 6pm.

IHEIP WANTEDSCHOOL bus drivers

needed for town of G lasto n bu ry . W ill train. Drive os monyor os few hours os de­sired. Bonus plan and earned days. 1(X) per­cent paid medical Insu­rance availab le to driver, family plan also ovolloble. Save cost of daycare bring your 4 or 5 year old with you. AppJIcotlons available from Glastonbury Pub­lic Schools. Glaston­bury, Ct. Phone 633- 5231 ext. 4XI^EOE.

R E S T A U R A N T B or- tender, borbock, food s e rv e rs , b a n q u e t servers, hostess, dis­hwashers. Apply In person: The Gallery, 141 New London Turn-

_ plkei^lostonbury.MACHINIST. Immediate

opening for 1st doss Mochinist to setup and

Dr. Crane’s AnswersQuiz on Page 2

1. Ganges2. Plate (Baseball)3. Polllwog (Frog legs)4. Filly (Horse)5. Buckeye (Ohio)6. (a) Palomino — Whinny (x)(b) Hereford — Moo (y)(c) Orpington — Ouck (v)(d) Cliester White — Oink (z)(e) Bourbon Red — Gobble (w)

EDHELP WANTED GDHELP WANTEDMAKE Money of home

assembling electron­ics, drafts, others. M o re In fo rm a tio n (5IM)641-0091 ext 1390. Open 7doys. Coll Howl

RESPONSIBLE Person to core for Infant and toddler In our home, T uesdoy-Thursdoy. Light houskeeplng, ref­erences. Coll 647-7411.

DENTAL Assistant. Full time position available Im m ediately. Expe-

Mocninisttqsatupond rv.ii'iStixlSa'’*'Floral Designer. Full or port time with some experience preferred. A pp ly In person; Krause Florist, 621 H a r t f o r d R o o d , Manchester.

AIR CDNNTIDNINB INSTALLERS

Ing Centers. Liberal overtime, fully oir con­ditioned shop. Apply of: Paragon Tool Com­pany. Inc., 121 Adorns Street, Manchester. 647-9935.

i N i wmU r i

NUTMEBMECHANICAL

648-1042

Data Processing Operatioas Assistant

RMpoadbaitlMfarlhii tonpotaiy, put-time poekion include; Auiitin cpeiation of adminiitiitive

Rroceuint lyMemi, praceiiing joix uiin( Duatriewe, Centred Hlei, VAX VMS, end vuiani edilinf proceduicf; monitor equipnieal opeiMion; monkor priMing; nuinuin nipply of nock; auitt with (im-Une maintenance. Quallflcatians: Aiiociate Degree in Data Proceiiing or the eqnivalenL . AppUcanu may ftate in writing any equivalencies to the aboro qualifleations and provide itfeiences. Salary: $8.44 per hour,17 1A hours per week. Approximate starting dale: May 1988. To apply, send resume to:

Marie D. Salamcn Director of Personnel

Manchester Community Ccdlege

60 Bidwell Stieel Msnehester, CT 06040Applicaliocu mutt be

postmarked no later than April 22,1988.

M O C b m « | u t o|ipanimlly/stUnnnh. idkii m fiycr oVt

tYnn rli i l gw iq , mtu ibui. . . a n e d y m o o w ia k i to ipply.

MAINTENANCE Person, 40 hours with benefits. Apply In person; Solva­tion Army, 385 Brood Street, Manchester.

WANTEDI Would you like o .1 or 2 week's stay at the beoch In ex­change for driving for errands, etc. Referen­ces exchanged. Details to be discussed. If In­terested reply to: Box U, C/O The Monches- ter Herold.__________i

RECEPTIONIST. Bloom­field area. Individual must posess good typ­ing skills, pleasant phone manner, compu­ter experience helpful. Full time position, com petitive sa lary with company paid be­nefits. Coll for Inter­view: Mather Corpora­tion, 21 West Dudley Town Rood, Bloom­field, CT. 242-0743. Ask for JoAnn. EOE.

AUTO Ports D river wanted. Experienced preferred but not ne­cessary. Good driving record o must. Coll Steve at 647-9712.

TEA C H E R R.esource room (.5 position) Ele­mentary level for May and June 1988. Special Education Certificate required. Coll Dr. John MocLotn, Coventry Public Schools. 742- 8913._______________

SPECIAL Event Coordi­nator. East of the River area. Some travel. Good benefits. Salary negotloble-ln teens. Send resume to: Devel­opmental D irector, Easter Seals Society of CT., P.O Box 100, Hebron CT. 06248.

CABINET Maker. Grow­ing a rc h ite c tu ra l w oodworking com­pany Is In need of lourneymon-level ca­binet maker. Good pay and benefits. Coll R&R W oodw orking. 645- 6149.

(!;LER K -Tvp lst. P ort time. 4 hours per day. Needs good telephone skills. Easy highway access Hortford-West Hortford line. Coll 233- 4471 ask for Harriet.

AIR CONDITIONINB S HEATING MECHANIC

LIn i m a m si Otari baRaflla. Track.

caailMtNlM calary.NUTMEB

MECHANICAL043-2D42

m m nteim iicea CLUNIN8 CUSTOOUN

wMh light carpentry, •iROtilcal and

plumbing knowledge helpful. Please apply between 9-3pm to fill

out employment application.

ECONOMYELECTRICSUPPLY

4 2 tT fa « < T p lw .. C T

■01

WANTED Truck Drlver- /loborer. Closs 11 li­c e n s e r e q u ir e d . Insurance benefits. Profit shoring plan. Applications at Upton Construction, 537 Stot- ford Rood (Route 32) Mansfield Center. 742- 6190. _________ .

C^USTODIAN- Night shift. Contact Dr. Michael Bloke, Principle. Tol­land High School. 872- 0561, application dead­line April 15th. Position to begin April 18th. EOE._______________

EXPER IEN C ED Con- crete Floor Finishers and Form Builders. Ex­cellent pay, medlcol- /dentol benefits. Must be experienced. 742- 1053.

SALESExod. only. Solicit odv. & renewals for est. local hotel direc­tories. Oppty to start extremely lucrative long term career. Tro- vel with occommodo- tions at leading hotels. $1,000-$1,500 Wk Com­mission Expenses. Re­ferences and back­g ro u n d w i l l be thoroughly checked. Interviews arranged. (201) S84-9200 - Mr. Green - or resume to

OXFORDPUBLICATIONS

9 Whlppony Rood Whlpponv, N.J. 07981

P A R T T IM ESafe DRIVERS /

needed to drive our children to and from

■chools In Manchester.

Free training. Ideal for college etudents,

homemakers (you can bring a child), retirees

and others.Call - 6 4 3 ^ 1 2

TYPIST- We need on Individual with good typing skills, policy typing preferred but not required. The posi­tion also requires strong clerical skills. We otter o pleasant office environment In Glastonbury with free parking. If you ore Intererested please coll Joy or Gerry at 659- 3561. Crum & Forster.

HAIRSTYLIST ond As­sistant Hairstylist tor busy shop. Please coll Days 643-2103 evenings 647-9385.____________

AIR Conditioning and Re- f r l g e r o t l o n S ervicem on- Must hove a minimum of o D-2 license. Coll Oster- lund Refrigeration In Bolton, 649-2655.

FLORAL Designer. Expe- rlenced In weddings and all kinds of floral arrangements. Greens & Things Florist, 296 W. Middle Turnpike, Man­chester. Ask for El VO. 643-1635.

ESTIMATORfor

Constnictlon WorkBackground helpful but not necettary.

Immediate opening. Apply to:

The MAK Co.6 4 3 - 2 6 5 9

SALES and Service Re­presentatives. We ore looking for persons who hove the ability to coll on our present customers and service oureoulpment. Income opportunity S300-S600 weekly. Management opportunity for right person. Coll 646-3875. EOE.

HELP WANTEDOne bright, hard­working, fastideous, intelligent, young person to assist the dally running of a large business. Must be willing to learn and dedicated. Long term position for so­meone willing to work their way upt Send resume or let­ter, salary desired, etc. to;

BoxTTc/o Manchester Herald

P.O. Box SSI Mancheater.CT 06040

'^'^'^AineficaliRiwrite Store

Wanted — Night crewLooking for a 6 person team to stock shelves on the night shift, Monday through Thursday, 9:30 p.m. to 7 a.m. Competitive wages and bene­fits. For mature responsible indi­viduals. Interested applicants apply to:

MANCHESTER K MARTPersonnel D e p t., 2 3 9 Spencer S t.

Manchester6 4 3 -5 12 2

EOE

“ " X o t o m o b i u e

mechanicsIMMEDIATE EMPLOYMENT

Import experience helpful, but not necessary as we will train. Salary based on experience, good benefits, uniforms

provided, excellent working conditions —

For interview call Tom Dell or Dave,8 am to 4 pm, Monday thru Friday.

M A N O E S T t R H O N L A

JJ

TYPIST. Full time with IBM PC knowledge perferobly with Multi- mote Advantage ll, H e w le t t -P a c k a r d Loser Jet Printer. Cus­tomer contact-other oenerol/varled office duties. Full benefits program Including dental paid. Coll 528- 1815.

A u is ta n t Project Manager

Immediate opening for office/aita

aaalatant to manage construction projects.

Apply to:

The-MAK Co.6 4 3 - 2 6 5 9

PLASMA Sprayers or mechanically Inclined Individuals to learn Plasma Spray opera­tion. $7 per hour to start. Excellent benef­its. Apply between 9om-2pm or coll 633- 9474. C o n n ec ticu t Hordfoce. 911 New London T u rn p ik e , Glastonbury.

X-RAY Technician for busy orthopaedic prac­tice In Storrsoreo. Full time. Experience ne­cessary. Excellent starting salary and be­nefits. Reply to: Box RR, C/O The Manches­ter Herald.

FAST Growing Import Auto Dealership de­sires Reconditloner. Some experience pre­ferred, but will train hard working, punc­tual, enthusiastic Indi­vidual. Excellent pay plan Including com­mission, Insurance, m edlcal,dentol,pald vocation. Apply In per­son to Randy Edinoer. Suburban Subaru, 14 H artford Turnpike, Vernon, CT. 649-6550.

REAL Estate Agents- Op­portunity awaits In on expanding agency. Coll Nancy Hopkins at 488-2529.____________

MECHANIC- Reputable paving co n tra c to r seeks qualified person for oil phases of equip­ment and truck repair and molntence. Com­pany benefits, excel- lent pov. 633-0543.

LABOR Type work ovoll- oble In Coventry. Will troln. Coll 74^7308. Ev­enings 742-9277.

SW IMMING Pool In­staller. Must hove 2 year's experience with In-ground vinyl pools. 742-7803. Evenings 742- 9277.________________

ASSISTANT Managers and Manager Trainees tor tost growing plzzo- rlo. Opening 20 stores In Greater Hartford area. Great advance­ment opportunities. Little Caesar's, 646- 4300._______________

M EDICAL Secretory- Medlcot experience preferred but not ne­cessary. Windsor Phy­sician, 4 or 5day week. 8om to 5pm. Coll Cathy 04 688-0076.

COUNTERHELP

NEEDED!!Nights and Weekends. No experience neces­sary. Will train. Stop in or call

Hartford Road Dairy

Queen 647-1076

Ask for Mr. or Mrs. Veil

SHIPPING/RECEIVING

Full time position at Manchester Plastics Manufacturer on first shift - 8 am to 4:30 pm. Individual to coordin­ate and record all In­coming and outgoing shipments, and perform various warehouse du­ties. Experience pre­ferred. Dependability / flexibility necessary. Competitive wages and full benefit package of­fered. Call 647-9938 for appointment.

E X P E R I E N C E D Wrecker Driver- All company benefits. Coll Stan Ozimek ot Mor- lorty Bros. 643-5135.

EXPERIENCED Siding Installer tin ted . Full time. 643j9633 or 742- 5406. __________

'^ELP-M/onted. Apply In person: Pero's Fruit Stand, 276 Oakland Street, Manchester. 643-6384.

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE

• Cashiers • Sales Associates • Management Trainees

Positions are immediately available at Bur­lington Coat Factory Warehouse. We are one of the nations leading off price companies with over too Stores nationwide and expanding rapidly. If you are aggressive and highly motivated, build your future with us NOW! Management training positions are also avail­able. Apply in person to:

Burlington Coat Factory Warehouse820 Silver Lane • East Hartford, CT

M A N A G E R U p T o $25,0004-

X ’T R A M A R T la aaeking an exparl- encad, highly motivated Individual to man­age our high volume convenience atore located In Aahford, CT.X -T R A M A R T la one of the faataatgrowing convenience atore chalna on the Eaat Coaat and la offering to the qualified candidate a chance to grow with ua.W E O F F E R :• *400* a week • Quarterly Bonus Program

• Qasolln# Bonua• Major Medical / Dental Plan *401K Program

• Opportunity tor Advancement

Apply In peraon or aand reaume to:Terry TenEyck, Area Marketing Rap.

KENYON OILP.O. Box 866, No. Qroavanordala, CT 06255

CONSTRUCTION- Repu­table paving contrac­tor seeks qualified truck d rivers ond equipment operators. Company benefits, ex­cellent poy. 633-0543. ^

S A L E S C L E R K / C A S H IER S

and Department Ma­nager wanted at'once In modem pharmacy In Manchaotof'a lar- goat ahopping canter. Fringe bmfita, excel- lent aalarlas. Daya only. Ptaaaant work­ing conditlona. Not the usual retail store. Apply at once to Ann, Office manager or pharmadst.

Llggatt Pirkid o Pharmacy

Mancheeter Parkade Manchester

IHELP WANTEDTervIceT^I^Ra ve

openings for full and port time positions In our Cleon, modern fa­cility. Positions vary from the assembly and

- pockoglng to our ^ homemade foods to

meat slicing and moln- tenonce. Super benef­its tor full time posi­tions. Weekdays only. No nights or weekends. Ask about our flexible hours for days. Glas­tonbury. Coll for de­tails at 633-7656 ask tor Dove.______________

HOME Health Aide re­quired tor private duty In Manchester home. Pleose coll 649-4635.

SECRETARY-"Terrlflc working condition" and nice surroundings In leading real estate office! Applicant needs nice a p p e a ra n c e , pleasing personality, g o o d te le p h o n e manners ond office skills I Coll 649-4000.

l if e g u a r d s needed tor Formlngton, Mer­iden, Manchester ond Bloomfield condomini­ums. Senior lifesaving certificate required. Must be ovolloble storting M em orial Day- Labor Day. Coll 278-2960.____________

RETIRED Person take notel Ideal outdoor work. Approximately 10 hours per week. 3-4 days Inspecting and cleaning parking lot area. Top wooes. Coll 646-0131, 9om-2pm.

GROWING Property ond Casualty Agency seek­ing port time Customer Service Representa­tive. Experience pre­ferred but will train. Salary commensurate with experience. Right Individual could lead Into full time position. Coll Linda, 649-0016. UrbonettI Insurance Agency.

MOTHER'S Helper. Por- ent seeks responsible female who has expe­rience with Infants to assist In the core ot her child. Non-smoker. Flexible hours. Coll 646-4683.

Growing office needs capable individual to

join staff.GOOD ATTITUDE

ESSENTIAL. Modest typing skills, data entry experience helpful. Will train

person with ability and willingness to learn. Competitive wages, full benefit

package, and supportive

atmosphere. Call 647-9938 for appointment.

Rworile Store

Now hiring Proceaalng Clerka. Full time poai-tlona available. E x r" '-----------EMPLOYEE ben#

Exj^rlence not noceMry'.'MANY EMPLOYEE benafita. Apply In parson dally 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday.

MANCHESTER K-MART PtraMiiai D«|it

239 SptHctr Si. ManciwttM' M3-5122

eoE

CAREER O P PO R TUN ITYWe are presently seeking the

following positions;

- f Q U A LIFIED COUNTER SALESPER­SO N familiar with Eiectricai Suppiies.

• ENERG ETIC individuals for our warehouse — 1st & 2nd shift...

• ORDER PUT UP - 1st shift...

• SH IPPIN G & RECEIVING — 2nd shift part time

• DATA ENTRY CLERK - 3rd shift

• LOADER/STOCKER

• CLASS II Licensed Truck Driver

• A C C O U N TS PAYABLE CLERK with primary responsibility to process invoices.Please forward your application or

apply to:

Economy Electric Supply428 Tolland Turnpike, Manchester

loe

A U TO M O TIV E

Service W riter/A dvisorF U L L T IM E

*)Immediate opening, experience

preferred, but not necessary as we wiii train the right individuai. Many benefits

inciuding vacation with pay, paid hoiidays, etc.

Appiy at once to:TO M DELL

Service Manager

M A N O - E S T E R H O N C A

Real Estate

X

onHDME8 FDR SALE

A ll real estate advertised In the Manchester Herald Is subject to the Fa ir Housing Act o f 19M, which makes It Illegal to advertise any p re f­erence, l im ita tio n o rd lsc rlm - tnotlon based on race, co lo r, re lig io n , sex o r no tiona l o rig in , or on Intention to moke any such preference, lim ita tio n or d iscrim ina tion . The Herald w ill not know ­ing ly occept ony odvertlse- ment which Is In v io la tio n of the low.S O U T H E R N New Eng-

lond closslfleld ods reach nearly 800,000 homes In Connecticut and Rhode Island. The price for o basic 25 word ad Is only $55 and will appear In 43 news- popers. For more In­formation coll Classi­fied, 643-2711 ond ask for detolls.n

BOLTON. Lot 28 Kim Rood. Brand new Gar­rison Colonial, 4 large bedrooms, 2'/ baths, central olr. $279,000. Flono Realty 646-5200.

CONSTRUCTION Inspec­tor. Need on Inspector with experience In building construction. This person should hove experience In me­chanical, electrical, heating and ventilat­ing, sprinkling sys­tems, site work and drainage. Comprehen­sive benefits package and competitive sa­lary. Submit resume to: Storch Engineers, 161 Main Street, We­thersfield, CT 06109. EOE. M/F.

PRICE Reduced. $199,000. Full dormered Cope with contemporary flair, 7 rooms, 4 bed­rooms, I'/i baths, 2 cor oversized g arag e . Master bedroom with double closet. Profes­sional landscaping. A great value. D.W. Fish Reolty, 643-1591.0

BOLTON. Country ele- oonce. Fabulous 2 story Raised Ronch with delightful brook. Beautiful upkeep on o full acre, sheltered by hillside. F irep lace charm, 3 bedroom, 3 baths, finished base­ment. Inground pool with shed. 1,000 gollon oil tonk plus new kit­chen. $230,000. D.W. Fish Realty, 643-1591.0

^ N C H E S T E R . Well kept vinyl sided Cope In very good condition. Brand new bathroom, 3 bedrooms, beautiful formal dining room, flreploced living room with new point and wollpoper throughout. Located In sought otter area of Manchester. $139,900. D.W. Fish Realty, 643-1591.0

MANCHESTER. Colon- lol, perfect home tor large fomllyl Spacious 8 room home with huge 4 bedrooms, 1 full plus (2) Vz baths, garage. 1st floor family room with woodstove, l iving room with fireplace. B e a u t i f u l y a r d . $182,900. Anne Miller Real Estate, 647-8000.O

MANCHESTER. Colon- lol, Irrestible home! Lovely traditional Co­lonial with 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1'/z baths. Large 1st floor family room, 15x24 with fire­place. Bright and sunny living room with fireplace. Ideally lo­cated In Porter Street area. Displays every­thing you could wont In o home. Including 2cor garage. $219,900. Anne Miller Real Estate, 647- eooo.D

MANCHESTER. Elegant 2600 sQuore foot cus­tom home. 25' 1st floor master bedroom suite! 28' kitchen breakfast room I 3 full baths, gorgeous terraced rear yard! Reduced to $254,900 tor Immediate sale I Blanchard 8i Ros- setto Realtors," We're Selling Houses" 646- 2482.0

SIZZLING 3000 square foot 8 room Contem­porary I 3'/i baths , family room, library, marbletloors, let block master bedroom bath with double lacuzzll Reduced for ! nr e- dlote sole $429,900. Blanchard & Rossetto Realtors," We're Sel­ling Houses" 646-2482.0

MALLARD View- Quality constructed 3 bedroom attoched single fomlly homes (you own your own lot), flreploced liv­ing room, I'/b baths, Anderson permoshleld termopone windows, range, refrigerator, dishwasher and win­dows, range, refrigera­tor, dishwasher and microwave oven, cor- petlng, full basement and even on attached oarage. $149,900. Blan­chard a, Rossetto Real­tors," We're Selling Houses" 646-2482.0

M A N C H E S T E R lust listed. Charming 3 bed­room, 2 bath Cape on lovely lot on Hackma­tack Street. Numerous e x t r a s . $187,900. Bornett-Bowmon, Tib­bies. 633-3661.

BOLTON. 144 Hebron Rood. Spacious 7room,3 bedroom Ranch on 1% prlvote ocres. $232,900. Flono Realty 646-5200.

BOLTON. Lot 4, Valerie Road. Distinctive 4 bedroom custom Con­temporary with many extras In on exclusive subdivision. Features wet bar, lacuzzi, cen­tral air and much more. $335,000. Flono Realty 646-5200.

MANCHESTER. One ot the best buys Is this lovely 8 room Colonial situated on Tuck Rood here In Manchester, large 1st floor family room, enclosed sun room, front to bock llvino room, 3 bed­rooms, 2 fireplaces, IVz baths. Many nice fea­tures, quick occu­pancy. Only $232,900. U 8, R Realty. 643-2692.D

COVENTRY. Homey, well maintained Cape In rural settin. 1st floor laundry and '/i both on 1st floor. Cozy den ond great yord for kids, picinics and vegetable garden. It's home. $144,900. Century 21 Ep­stein Realty, 647-8895.a

MANCHESTER. New to the market I Comfort you can afford In this attractive 3 bedroom Cope. Lovely dining room with bullt-ln hutch., garage and more. Call for details. $134,900. Century21 Ep­stein Realty, 647-8895.n

8 8 - IS

$199,000. d Cope (porarv , 4 bed- hs, 2cor la ra o c, sm with

Protes- iplng. A •W. Fish 1.0try ele- ilous 2

Ronch I brook. « p on a fored by eploce

room, 3 d base- id pool0 flollon lew klt- I. D.W. 3-1591.0!. Well1 Cope In nditlon. iroom,3 (ootltol

room, 10 room nt and uohout. iht after rhester.. Fish.DColon-

me forDOClOUSth huge ull plus age. 1st )m with liv in g eploce. y a r d .

Miller'-8000.OColon- home!

nal Co- )om$, 3

baths, family

th flre- t and im with lly lo- Street eyery-

want In 10 2 car I. Anne ite, 647-

Elegant ot cos- it floor 1 suite I fokfast baths,

edrear ed to ledlate 8i Ros- We're

" 446-

square intem- oths , brary, t black 1 bath icuzzll nr e-

29,900. issetto e Sel- -2482.0iooilty droom family 1 your red lly- baths, ishleld idows, rotor,I wln- Igero- r and I, car- ement ‘ached Blan-

I Real- ielllng .o

lust 3bed- ipe on ckma- lerous ,900., Tlb-

ebron room, ch on cres. lealty

olerle Ive 4

Con-manyluslyeitures

cen-TiuchFlono

no ofI this lonlol Rood ester, imlly

sun bock bed­

's, IV2 ) fea- iccu- 100. U92.0mey. Cape floor ith on n and kids, table ome.II Ep-1895.0w to nfort I this ■com Ining It-ln and

lolls. lE p -195.0

AP

5

98

M ANCHESTER. Ideal lo- cotton, next door to everyttilng, shopping, schools, public trans­portation, recreation, plus on easy commute. 3 bedroom Cape, m baths, tlreplaced living room, spacious eot-ln kitchen and hardwood floors, the perfect blend of comfortable living and affordable price! 8149,900. Kler- non Realty 649-1147.0

M A N C H ESTE R . Sentry Real Estate Is proud to feature It’s home of the week. Charm ing 6 room m aintenance free Cape In sought after family neighbor­hood. Screened patio, very private backyard and 1 car gargge. Call our office for your exclusive showing to­day. $147,900. Sentry Reol Estote, 643-4060.Q

ONWARD & UpwordU- Growlng out of your starter home? This beautiful property can solve that problem I Priced right at $209,900 features Include 3 bed­rooms, 2 full baths, family room with fire­place, stylish Euro­pean fully oppllanced kitchen, formal dining room, attic fan, attrac­tive landscaping, situ­ated In the Forest Hills section of Manchester. Jackson 8< Jackson Reol Estate, 647-8400.D

BRAND Spank'n new!! Exciting 7 room Gam­brel Colonial In Bolton slated for completion In early May. 3 spa­cious bedrooms, 2</2 b a th s , 1st f lo o r laundry, m udroom , large kitchen with din­ing area that overlooks a beautiful wooded rear yard. Exceptional oak cabinetry, choose your own floor cover­ing and colors. 2.3 acres suitable for horses! $264,900. Jack- son 8t Jackson Real Estate, 647-8400.D

REST Easy II Empty nes- ters looking for a smaller home with lust the right set-up? This Is your "Golden Oppor­tunity"! Impeccable condition throughout, this 5 room Ranch on Lakewood Circle in M anchester boasts gracious one floor liv­ing. Large master bed- raom with many bullt- Ins, comfortable den, spacious living room with fireplace, formal d in in g ro o m and c h a rm in g c o u n try style kitchen, perfect size yard for manogeo- ble m a in te n a n c e . $198,000. Jackson & Jackson Real Estate, 647-8400.O

IM M A C U L A T E v T n ^ - tided Cope In family neighborhood, newer roof, Intuloflon and

irnoce. 3 bedrooms, Iw baths, garage with breezeway. Very pri­vate, landscaped lot. $168,900. Strano Real Estate, 647-76S3.D

M ANCHESfER . "Forest Hills" Beautiful ex­panded Raised Ranch, approxim ately 2800 square feet, 9 rooms, 4 bedrooms, possible In­law suite, huge family room, plus In-ground pool, cobono, owning covered patio, nice view, quiet street and much morel Coll now fo r a p p o in tm e n ti $289,900. Century-21 Lindsey Real Estate. 649-4000. o

VERNDN. "Brand new". Spacious and nice Gar­riso n C o lo n ia l, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2'/> baths, beautiful family room with huge stone fireplace, vaulted cell­ing, sliders to deck with terrific view plus 2 car garage and walk out basement I $200,000. Century-21 Lindsey Reol Estate. 649-4000.O

R. Michael QuishR«il Eititi Brokir °

Serv/ce With Integrity

cell 649-0676M ANCHESTER. Raised

Ranch, 4 bedrooms, 1 '/2 baths, fireplace, above ground pool. Conve­niently located near schools, shopping. $219,900. Call 643-9095 or 649-2276.

CO VEN TR Y. Under con­struction. 7 room Co­lonial on over 1.8 acres of spectacular view. Call for all the great details. Rosalie Z. Bru- neHI/RE/MAX,Eastof the River. 647-1419 or 643-7014.

M A N C H E S T E R . Tw o family, 5 room each level. Very attractive. Great location plus 2 car garage. $191,900. Call now. Rosalie Z. BrunettI at RE/MAX, East of the River. 647- 1419 or 643-7014_______

M ANCHESTER. Immoc- ulate and spacious U & R quality built 9 room Ranch. Many extras. Including 2 fireplaces, woodstove, custom window treatments and beautifully manic­ured grounds with an Inground pool. Conve­nient location for easy commute. Must see to a p p re c ia te ! D o n ’t wait I $209,900. Klernan Realty 649-1147.0

FOR SALE BY OWNERUnique Colonial/Cape in established area. Three or (our bedrooms, new paper, paint,

carpet and appliances, heated garage.35 Lakewood Circle, North Manchester.

•234,900 647-9976

HOUSES FOR

I LIVINGby theZINSSER A G E N C Y ,/

646-1511

MANCHESTER*152,900.

Price has been reduced on this charming 6 room, alum, sided Cape with detached garage.

Fireplace. 3 or 4 bedrooms. Offers invited.*159,900

Older 4 bedroom home with large family sited kitchen, large living room, l>/4 baths.

COVENTRY*138,900

I New Listing - Charming 5 room Cape set on treed | lot awaits your inspection. Wall-to-wall carpet,

walk out basement.*155,000

Immaculate 7 room Split Level set on large I landscaped lot. Wall-to-wall carpet throught- out,

(ireplaced living room, panelled family room, garage. Offers Invited.

I *259,500Brand new 4 bedroom Colonial with 2 car garage

I set on 1 acre wooded lot, (ireplaced family room, thermopane windows, large kitchen with walk in

pantry.

EAST HARTFORD*154,900

Outstanding 6 room alum, sided Cape with breezeway and garage. Fireplaced living room,

wall-to-wall carpet. Mint condition.

To see any of these fine homes call the

ZINSSER AGENCY 646-1511

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d ^ L iE rt fiafinlsftlng„i! andrsaforaftenafvoui' kitchen cobtnata. Free ' asttiymtes. Call Supar- lor. 647-37I5.

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743*7931ffi:;• ru a m ' *P*"*****4f»»^*Wto' ■■TMIS SPACE 444-241 litoae»ai$inr

f e r d o w n s . 37mraColl 443*2711 expartonaa. < nursing aorotce,\ torddioils 871f739Q. tmwwbio.

M AN CH ESTERHere’s the home you’ve always wanted. Four bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, 2H baths, a beautiful family room with a gorgeous ceramic tile floor that’s Just right for entertaining. There’a a spa­cious 2 car garage and a beautiful Inground pool with a unique concrete fence surrounding the pool. If you have a family this house hat every­thing you’d like and more. Situated on a cul-de- sac which adds to the private setting.

•255,000J A C K L A P P E N R E A L T Y

164 East Center Street • Mancheater, C T 06040

643-4263

•''I**'-

B O LTD N - New listing. D a llgh tfu l 7 room Ranch offart 3 bad- rooms, lorga kitchen, 2 full baths and more. Dack off kitchen, full w a lk -o u f baaem ent with ample shelf space. Located on attractive 1% acre lot. $23X900. Call today for appoint­ment. Flono Realty. 646-5200.______________

m A n c HESTI^R. Lo'velv3 bedroom Cape, 1 baths, dining room, g o ra o e , In -g ro u n d pool, beautiful neigh­borhood I Sellers relo­cating. $169,900. Cen­tury 21-Homeseekers Reoltv 623-9044.

w i l l i n g TDW. i room Raised Ranch oh 1.4 Acre. 2 cor garage. 3 bedrooms, V/i baths, Fleldsfone fireplace In living room. $169,900. Coll 429-1213._________

BDLTDN. Exquisite new Conterhporary aneh, featuring formal din­ing room, spacious family room with field- stone fireplace, sun- room, skylights, |o- cuzzl and much, much morel Custom quality throughout! $349,900. Klernan Realty 649- 1147.0________________

M ANCHESTER. $209,900. Immaculate 9 room U 8i R Built Ranch Inoreo of fine homes. Lovely yard with In-ground pool. Must seel Kler­nan Realty. 649-1147.

M A N C H E S TE R - Hlgh- wood Drive. See this desirable 8 plus room. Rolsed Ranch type home. 4 bedrooms, m ain flo o r fa m ily room, plus o finished re c re a t io n ro o m , cathedral celling living room, 2'/2 bathrooms, stone fireplace. Just reduced to $225,000. U 8>R Realty, 643-2692.

MANCHeSTBR Opodous 2 bedroom Townhouse, 116 baths, large kit­chen, basement In s m a l l c o r r t b le x . $119,900. By owner. 643- 7930.

M A N C H E S f if l . Sfun- nlng 2 and 3 bedroom Townhousel FObulous 20' office or studtol Each unit has 116 baths and a 2 cor tandem garage. $144,900 and $164,900. Blanchard ft Rossefto Realtors," We're Selling Houses" 646-2482.0_______ .

M ANCHESTER. Beauti­ful 1 bedroom conver­sion In Beacon Hill complex. Ldcatod on fop floor. Carpet was upgraded when con­verted. All appliances Including microwave oven remain. iFeo In­cludes heatl Call for a s h o w in g l $95,900. Realty World, Benoit, Frechette Associates, 646-7709.O

~~|L0T8AAM0___ IforsaleM A N C H E S TE R - Level

cleared lots. About % acre. CItv sewer and woter. 646-720X

LARGE, Wooded build­ing lots In Southwest- e r n p o r t o f Manchester. $102,000- $125,000. 563-1413.

O D M0RT6ME8DO N O T GO BANKRUFTI Stop Foreclosure! Home­owners, consolidate your bills, pay off your credit cards, your cor or busi­ness loan, your mortgage and save, save your homel I NO P AYM EN TS UP TO 2 YEARSI Bad credit. Iota payments or unemployment Is not a problem. Foreclosure os-

KNnWr v n u w . . . 0 4 3 .2 7 1 1

CONDOMINIUMS ___I FOR SALEM ANCHESTER. Beoutl-

ful 2 bedroom conver­sion In Beocon Hill complex. Corpet was upgraded when con­verted. All appliances Including microwave oven and olr condi­tioner ore Included. In­ground pool and picnic area ovolloble for owners use. Fee In­cludes heotl Coll for on appointment. $108,500. Realty World, Benoit, Frechette Associates, 646-7709.O

W E L L S W E E P Condo. Immaculate end unit, 2 bedrooms, I'/a baths, oppllanced kitchen, finished room In base­ment. $124,900. Coll be­fore 8om or evenings and weekends 643-8421 or 646-4409. .

M A N C H E S TE R North- f l e l d G r e e n Tow nhouse- 3 bed­rooms, 2 full and 2 (</i) baths. Finished base­ment, A/C, carport, pool and te n n is . $142,900. 649-3101 or 529- 5683.

slstonce available for the DIVORCED and SE ~ EM PLO YED .

Swiss Censervqtivo Group at MMM^1SI6

or 281 M4I668S.'

Rentals

E l ROOMS FOR RENT

F E M A L E S Preferred. Furnished roorh, $60 a week, 1 week security and references. Call 649-9472, M o n d a y - Frldoy 3:30 to 8:00pm. Ask tor Eleanor:

CLOSE To buslines and downtown. $80 per week. Coll 643-2659.

I APARTMENTS ___IFOR RENTM ANCHESTER, 2 bed-

room, heat, hot water, appliances. $550. Ref­erences, lease and se­curity. No pets. 647-9876 evenings.____________

3 Bedroom Duplex, West side. $700 per month plus utilities. Security and references re­quired. 643-1082.

191 JCARSFOR SALECARS FOR SALE OD

CARS FOR SALE

■CARS FOR SALE

CARDINAL BUICK INCA N N O U N C e S

USED CAR SALES BLITZFeaturing "A Touch Above F in t Claaa" RacondItlonad ft Quarantaad Cara

TUESDAY, APRIL 12th — SATURDAY, APRIL 23rd

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, APRIL 17, 1-4

36 G R IS S O M R O A D

MANCHESTER •227,500

Thia gracloui, 8 room Colonial has 2300 sq. ft. of living space, 3 bedrooms, 2H baths, first floor family room plus a lowar laval family room. Mastar badroom pulta with drasaing room and bath. 3 zona hast and 2 car garaga. Brokars protactad. ,

Dbeollona: S«oa Drive to Kenrwdy ftoed to M l on Hemlllon Drivo to M l on Ortteom Road.

1988 Buick SkyhawkLaw MNat. Air OandMontng, wiiH*

1987 Buick CenturyCurtom. Ak OondWonlna SfBClBl *8990

1987 Chevrolat ”Jat Force” OmvanlonVM S|Melal *14,999.

***"* 1987 Buick SemeraetOoupa, Uka Naatl Low AMaa, Owk Oappar

1986 Buick SomartetCoupa. 8 Spaad Trtimxlwon. ikvaf

1986 Buick LeSabre■•MaWtton.8uyVW8iAOrtvalt IgBClal *10,980

1986 Dodge CoH Pramiar Stdan.OnaatOur8tMI SgBClal *5980. 1986 Oldtmebile Calais

Odm#, Om Owfiar, Ortal Ow« Oait Otm

1986 Buick SomaraetOaupti MiiM 8. SatNI Oorgaeia WbH. 1985 Buick Semeraet

Ceupa. AutemaPo. U «w tggclll *99951985 Buick Park Ave.SadML LMdM «|M< IxMra. Owk dray -*•'* 1985 Buick Skylark

8a4tn.V88Bvtr SgMiol *5990■•'*’* 1985 Buick Regal LimitedOoupai Om OvmtfS UM Ntal Broan/Tin

1984 Pentlac SunUrdOauM A Oiaal Buyll SfBClal *4480

1985 Buick SkyhawkBMm. Lew Wm, AulpaiWe, 8»wr

1984 Buick SkylarkSadm, Om Owmt. Onm Oiadiomi U Mm1984 Buick Riviera

Ooupa, Sborty and Uxurtaut. Swfundy

1984 Mercury TepazCOUPA A» OondWMing. Sun Root. Oarti Bioan

1983 Buick Ragal^Oevpa, Ab OanMUmn,. V y — rp. oa. enmt

1982 Buick RegalOoMpa. V8 Om tl Oar ■ml aMN

WssaalMliMtafsa bassM I

» i m .MC.

1711

FREE GIFT With Every PurchaseCARDINAL BUICK INC.

A TOUCH AfiOVC riRST CLASS

fll ADAMS STRffT MANCHCUEK JL >■ f t >| C V 1lOpon ttfPi Mondoy thru Thunday' J / |

M A N C H ESTE rT 2 bed- room Townhouie with flraploea. Haat, car­peting, A/C, oil op- pllancat. NIca loco- Non. Coll 647-1995.

i Room apartment, 2nd floor with gas, gas stove and a rafrlgera- tor. $500 par month

. with 2 months aecurlty.Telephone 645-6773.

i Rooms portly furnished, heat. Working single

. mole preferred. No

. pets. Leose. 643-2880. M A N C H E S T E R . F o r

rent. Big 3 bedroom on - busline. $575 plus utili­

ties. Security and ref­erences required. 643- 1577.

M ANCHESTER. 454 Main Street. 2nd floor, 3 room heated. No op- pllonces. Security. $480

- per month. 646-2426, weekdays 9om-5pm.

A T T R A C T IV E 3 bed- room, 2 baths, bio liv­ing room and sun porch. $750 plus utili­ties and security. 649- 4343.

M AN CH ESTER - Large 3 bedroom. Wosher/D- ryer, nicely decorated. $625 per month plus utilities. 647-0593.

M A N C H E S T E R - Spo- clous 1 bedroom, op- P l l o n c e s p l u s m icrow ave. Fenced yard, small pet al­lowed. $550 per month plus utilities. 647-0593.

R D C K V ILLE -3 bedroom, wosher/dryer hook-up. Large vord, $650 per month plus utilities. Coll 647-0593._________

ICONDOMINIUMS __I FOR RENT^ Ia NCHESTER. 2 bed-

ro o m T o w n h o u s e Condo. Heat/garoge. Good location. Avolol- ble Immediately. $700 per month. 646-3339 or 649-8638.

HOMES FOR RENT

M ANCHESTER. 3 bed­room Colonial, stove, re frig e ra to r. Quiet street. $975 per month. 646-3339 or 649-8638.

BRICK Cope Cod- 3 bed­rooms, 2 baths, garage, washer-dryer hook-up. Large yard, referen­ces, security deposit. Available May 15. Rent $625. 643-6452.

STORE AND OFFICE SPACE

H A R T F D R D - Wetherstleld Avenue. Business zoned. Newly renovated 2 family house. 1200 square feet. Forking In tront/reor. $1,000 per month. 229-9340 otter 5pm._______

SUITES Available. 1000 square feet per unit. Utilities additional. 1 mile to 1-84. Petermon Building Com pany. 649-9404.

Now Ottico Spoeocorner Manchester Rd. ft Hebron Ave., Glas­to n b u ry ., Available June let, 420 aq. ft.. Utilities Included. Call Savinga Bank of Man­chester, 646-1700, ask for Mr. Matrick

ElRESORTPROPERTY

RHODE Island, Montu- nuck Beach. Qceon view. 3 bedroom Con- t e m p o r o r y . F u l l equipped, 'h mile to beach. 644-9639 otter5pm._________________

M A R T H A ’S Vineyard South Beach- 3 bed­room home fully fur­nished, terry tickets a v a i l a b l e . J u n e - September, 643-8557 ev­enings and weekends.

M A N C H E S TE R - Shore condom inium with owner. Mole or female nonsmoker. Qwn bed­room and both. Pool, sauna, more. Busline. $350 plus '/2 utilities. 522-6103 ext. 261 or 646- 4921.

APARTMENTS FOR RENT

F E M A LE non-smoker to shore Townhouse. $360 per month plus utlll- tles. 646-6267._________

Merchandise

FURNITUREQ U EEN S IZ E Woterbed

complete. Dork pine, 4 drawer base, omtchlng nlghtstand and chest of drawers. $500 or best offer. Coll otter 4pm. 568-1903.

M ATCH IN G Couch and love seat. Dark Green with floral design, also brown lounger choir. Excellent condition. 649-3329 otter 4pm.

Q UEEN Size woterbed. Double drawer pedes­tal, padded rolls and seat, fancy headboard. $150. Coll 646-4646.

CARS FOR SALE

LYNCHIf this name is

not on your car, you

probably paid too much!!

88 Salerl wood wagon, tpx. 3500 87 Trant Am, black S gold, TPI 87 Pontiac Grand AM 4dr, gray 87 Pont Sunbird 4 dr aadan 87 Chavy Nova 4 dr, AT, AC 87 Trana Am QTA, rad 87 Toyota 4x4 PU, blua 87 Toyota PU, alandard, rad ae Calica QT LB, 5 apd., AC as Toyota 4x4, rad, 19K 86 Nova 4 dr, AT, PS, 16K M Pontiac STE 4 dr, blua Se QMC Safari Panar van, 12K 86 Cuttaaa Suprm. cpa., maroon 86 Buick nagal Cpa, V6 66 Chavy Cavallar CL wagon 66 Toyota DIx Paaa Van, 5 apd 66 Toyota 4x4 longbtd 66 Toyota Extra Cab Pick-up 86 Toyota MR2, 14K ml 86 Olds Calais 4dr, gold 86 Toyota Corolla 4 dr 66 Qrand Prix, V6, Buckets 66 Chav C20, 5.7 P/U, red 65 Flero Q T, V6, AT, AC 65 Toyota Forerunner A T 85 Olds Delta 88 Royala 85 Toyota Tercel 3 dr, AC 85 Toyota Tercel 4 dr, AC 85 Dodge Lancer ES turbo 85 Mazda deluxe 4 dr QLC 85 Corolla LE, AT, AC 85 Ford Ranger 4x4 P/U 85 NIaaan DIx P/U, 5 apd 85 Toyota SR5, 4x4, plow 85 Olds Cutlaes Clara LS 85 Bonne. 4 dr, apx. 26K ml 85 Caprice CLatsIc 4dr, V8 85 Corolla SR5, LB, AC 85 Pont. T1000. 16K 84 Honda Accord, 4 Dr. A T 84 Tercel Wag. B Pass 84 Parlalanne Wgn., 9 paaa.64 Calica Q T, Cpa, 5 Spd.84 Mte. Carlo. WhVbluetop 84 Flero Spt coupe, A T 84 Buick Century Ltd., 34K 84 Buick Skyhawk 4 dr, A T 84 Toyota Corolla LE 84 Toyota Camry DIx, 4 dr.84 Trana Am, blua, T-tpa 84 Pont. Flaro SE, 4 apd.83 Pontiac 8000 LE 4 dr 83 Subaru GL, 4 dr AT 83 Chevetta 4 apd., AC 82 Corolla SRSSpt. Cp„ AC 82 Bonne. Wood Wgn.82 Pont. 8000 LE. 4 dr.82 BK. Regal LTD , Sunroof 79 Mustang 4 cyL.'AT, PS

Ml VehlelM Wirragtietl

LYNCHPONTIAC-TOYOTA 500 W. CBBter St

MaBcliBBtBr

646-4321

lofAPARTMENTS» I forrent

THE OLCOTT40 O lcott St. ■ M a nch e ster, C T 06040The Olcott'is now managed by the Beacon Man­agement Corp. We are now accepting applica­tions (or our 1 and 2 bedroom un^s, starting at *500 (or our 1 bedroom units and *SS0 (or our 2 bedroom units. Fully appllanced kitchens, pri­vate parking, near schools and shopping malls, swimming pool, wall to wall carpeting, resi­dent paid utilities, no pets.

Reiptal 0((ice is open daily,9-S, Monday thru Friday

Please call 643-0612 OF 643-6432

Equal Housliig Opportunity

M OVING- Living room set and fireside choirs. Excellent condition. Coll 649-9334,

IMOSICM.___llTEIWA M PEG Amplifier with

4-12" speakers. Excel­lent condition, $300 must sacrifice. Coll Bernie, 649-5119.

IMI8CELLANE0U8Iforsale

R ESU LT of 0 renovation. We hove 15 doors, 80’’x30" and 90’’x42". Some ore fire-rated. Colors ore white and mahogany. For more Information coll Man­chester Manor. 646- 0129.

TAO SALES

T A G Sole. Saturday, April 16, 9-2. Rain or shine. 74 Arnott Rood, M anchester. M anychoice Items._________

TA G Sole- April 16 ft 17, Saturday and Sunday. 9om to 3pm. 73 HortonRood.________________

TA G Sole, April 16 ft 17, 9am-4pm. 15 South F o r m s D r i v e ,Monchester._________

3 Family, Saturday April 16, 9-5pm. Rain dote April 23. 153 Maple Street, Monchester.

TA G Sole- Bunk beds, sailboat, old wood stoves, toys and books, miscellaneous house­hold Items. 14 O’Leary D rive , Manchester. Soturdoy and Sunday,April 16-17.___________

M U LTI Family too sole- Soturdoy, April 16. 9-3. Furniture, toys, books and mi s c e l l e n o u s household Items. 35-37 B e n t o n S t r e e t ,Monchester._________

G IA N T Tog sole- Satur­day April 16, 10am- 2pm. Furniture, toys, clothes, books, much miscellenous. 151 Birch Street, Manchester. Roln or shine.________

M OVING. Gas dryer, wo- terbed, miscellaneous. Saturday 9-2. 60 Coo- p e r H I I I S t r e e t , Monchester.,

CLASSIC Ford Falcon 1964. Runs, needs some work. $200. Coll Gene

^ e r 5:30pm. 6|33-6164.a ^983 Chevy C avalier

Wagon, 4 speM, power s t e e r l n o , / p o w e r b r a k e s , / A M / F M Cassette. /$3200. 742- 5459.

SUBARU D L Wagon 1981. New clutch, new axels. Good condition. $1300 negotiable. Coll 649-7494 offer 6pm._______

P L Y M O U T H H orizon 1980. ^ o d condhion, 4 cylinder, 4 door, 4 speed. $1500 or bestottaf. 649-3692.________

A M C /Eogle 4x4 1981. SIAXO miles. Good run- ntog condition. $1200 yegotloble. 646-6173.

D ^TSU N 210 1980- Excel- lent running condition. Automatic, A/C, ra- dlols. $1200. 649-5121.

OLDS Sierra Brougham 1983. Ful l power , cruise, olr, AM -FM , 4 cylinder. Excellent condition. $4195 or bestoffer. 871-7202.________

HONDA Accord 1979. Air, 5 speed, 12 valve, 4 cylinder, 3,000 miles on professionally re-bullt engine. New point. $1950—-Of— best offer. 871-7202.

1979 BUICK Le Sobre. Excellent condition. Loaded. 60,000 miles. $4500 or best otter. 647-8351.

HONDA Civic 1978. New engine. $700. Con be seen at AAorlnelll Gar­age, 878 Hartford Rood, Manchester. 647- 9552. Ask tor Tony.

SUBARU 1986 G L Wagon, 5 speed, excellent con­dition, $7&000 or best otter. 742-6561.

LIPM AN #1V0LKSWA6EN

57 Buick Regal, Immaoulata Loaded. 'lASSOse Subaru G L 3 dr, Sllvar, 8 ap.4 WO, AC. AM-FM, 'TSSS

SeVWQTI«8SW se Trana Am, BIk, MI.SSS S6 Toy. Taioal.2 dr, rad, *8198 se (2) Taroals 4 dr, AT, •69M58 Chav Cavallar Type lA *3296 S8 Guttata Clarra brn, TSeSS4 Audi 4000, quarto. *8486 84 Volvo OL 4 dr. bm, AT. rzato 84 VW GLI <8788 88 VW Camper AT, *7988 84 VW Rabbn, 48K. *4298 82 Bulok Skylark, •3288 78 BMW 3201, <4798

24 TeHanft Tugk, Me. S3 VenwB, CT e 649-2S3S

C H EV ELLE 1973, Rebuilt 3504BDL 4 speed, post. Very good condition. $2800 or best otter. 647-9925 Otter 3pm.

OLDS Sierra Wagon 1984- Power steerlno, power brakes, A/C, AM -FM stereo. $5500,646-6168.

VW Convertible 1982. 5 speed, white, looks and runs great. 65K. $6795. 646-1485._____________

b^ORD LTD 1976- 4 door, V-8, A/C, 7300 miles. Excellent running con­dition, $500. 649-4109.

C L Y D EC H E V R O L E T -B U IC K , INC. R O U T E 83, V E R N O N

82 Regal coum *569584 Camaro Cp» *799584 Century LTD 4 d, *829584 Citation 4 d,.85 Spectrum 4 d,85 Old! Calls a di.8S Chav. Aalro Van 85 Century 4 dr.85 Cavatlai C8 4 o,68 Canlury 4d>86 Camaro Oa*88 Olds Oalta Oa*87 Caprioa maon 87 Chav. Calabrity 4 d,87 Pont. 8000 4 dr.87 Century 4 dr.

872-9111

*4995*3995*7995*9695*5995*5995*9995

*10,795*11,295*12,595

*6995*9995*9995

C L Y

HDGARS FDR SALE

TO Y O TA Corona 1972- 4 speed, runs well. $300 or best otter. 647-9013.

DATSUN Pickup 1972- Runs well, ports or tlx up, $250 or best offer. 647-9013.

SPECIAL PURCHASE PRE-OWNED

'87 CHEVY NOVAS, CAVALIERS

Er SPECTRUMS

. . 5vtoeti to Sale fa. h Regmiraixm laneP T , 4 P u n . , p o n . , Povy.1

T„*:, "eS

l-D o o r Sedans & HatchbacktAikiLikiAiftiSiftAftiftMiftiftift A

PRICED $ FROM 6995

CLYDE CHEVRO LET Rl 63 V^ntJ’. r S vr 872-91 1 1BUICK, INC f lock / i l ' r fV c ( " o n ^ 1, 1 M 1

SUN LINE 1987- 20 toot Travel Trailer with owning and T V on-

-te nn o . Used twice, J g J 0 0 J 7 L 0 6 7 2 ^ _ ^

IMDTDRCYCLE8/ ___ ImiDPEDR ;y Am AHA 1980 250 Exitl-

ter. Runs good. Needs minor repairs. Asking $250. 646-4704.

"EASY DOES IT " Is the\ wav to describe placing a want od. Just call 643-2711 ond we do the rest!

m aom aaam auim m ^^a

IMOTDRCYCLES/Imdpedr

H O N D A V-65 Mogno IIOOcc 1985. Very low miles. Excellent condi­tion. $2900 or best otter.Coll 643-9918._________

KAWASAKI GPZ 550. Ex­cellent condition, low mileage, many extras. $1800 or best otter. 645-6822.

Wont to sell your cor? For quick results, use a low- cost Classified ad. Call 643-2711 today to place your ad.

SPRING USED CARSALE!!

We are offering - at no charge - a one year or 12,000 mile power train warranty (whichever

expires first) on the following used cars and trucks.This offer good thru Sat., April 23, 1988

SUPER SPECIAL 1987 CHEV. SPECTRUM 'CL'

4 Door, 4 Cyl., Auto, Air, PS, PB,

” 295Rear Delogger, Remaining New Car Warranty. Was *7995 NOW

it USED CARS ★87 CHEV *7885Cavallar, 2 Dr., 4 Cyl., Auto. AC. PS. PB. Starao, Ratr Dafog, Low Mllaiga

86 NISSAN *8295atanza XE Wg„ 4Cyl„ Auto, PS, PB, CrulM, Staiao CaH. Sun Root. Alum Whaalt, Ratr Dafog

85 PLY. *5295Reliant, 4 Dr., 4 Cyl., Auto, PS, PB, Radio, Low MUaaga

88 FORD *8495Tempo, GL , 2 Dr., 4 Cyl, Auto. AC. PS. PB. Starao. Rear Dafog

85 PONT. *5285Sunbird Cpt„ 4 Cyl. 6 Spd, St«r«o. Sun Roof

85 CHEV ^.*6585Calabrity, 4 Dr.,-*^Cyl, Auto, AC. PS, PB, P ( 5 r . Lka, CrulM. P Saata, Tilt Wheal. RMr Dafog

87 CHEV *10.405Baratta Cpa., V6, Auto, AC, PS, PB, Starao. RMr Dafog

85 PONT <7795Grand PrIx Cpa., V6, Auto, AC, PS, PB, Starao Cau. TlltwhMl, RMr Dafog, Lan­dau Roof

84 BUICK *6095Regal Cpa.. VS. Auto, AC. PS. PB. P W.. CrulM, Till Wlwal, Starao CtM.. RMr Dafog

85 CHEV *5895citation XII Cpa.. VS, Auto. AC, PS, PB. PW & Dr.Lka.. Starao Caaa. Alum. Whaela

86 FORD *7505Muatang Cpa.. 4 Cyl.. Auto. Starao, CrulM. P. Dr. Lka.

87 CHEV •14.095Camaro IROC Cpa., VS, Auto. PS. PB. PW & Dr. Lka.. Starao CaM, Tlltwhael. RMr Dafog. Glaaa Roof

08 CHEV *4205Cb«v«tt« C8 4 Dr. 4 Cyl., Auto, AC, Sttrto

86 0L08 •0285Clora 8U. W a. Woodgnin,

0. PS. PB. Storoo,

87 CHEV *7095Spactrum ‘CL' 4 Dr., 4 Cyl., AuUT, AC, PS. PB. RMr Da- log. Only 2,000 mllM

VS Auto, AC TIH Whaal

85 VW *8795GOLF DTI Cpa , 4 Cyl , 8 Spd, AC. Starao Cau, RMr Dafog

★ USED TRUCKS^87 00D9E *12.085Caravan, 4 Cyl., Auto, AC. PS, PB, Starao Caaa, R u r Dafog

88 CHEV *11.485Aatro 'CL' Pau Van., V8, Auto, AC, PS. PB. Starao

88 CHEV. *8795CIO Plokup aw, VB. Auto, PS, PB. AM/f m . Ratr Slap Bumptr

88 DODBE •7995D100 8' Plokup. 8 Cyl. 4 Spd., PS, PB. Starao Caaa, Plokup Cap

85 FORD *12.005Bronco II Wg.. 4x4, V6.5 Spd. OD. PS, PB. Moroo

86 FORDFI so 8' Plokup. PS. PS. Radio, Bumpar

•7005e Cyl, Sid.,

R u r Slap

CARTER "A Good Place to Buy A Car"

CHEVROLET CO., INC."O ver 50 ye a rs o l Selling ft Servicing Chevroleta"

12X9 Main StzMt., Manchester - 646-64A4OPEN EVENINGS TIL B - FRI. TIL S

AP

YOUR CHOICE APRIL TRUCK SALE

5B R A N D N E W 1 9 8 8 T O Y O T A

4 Wheel Drive, Standard Bed, 5 Speed, White

stock es-331

• 9 9 9 5 ’ 6 9 9 5Special Prioaa Ends 4-2l-ea

THE CHOICE IS YOURS at NO EXTRA CHARGE:Special Prioa Ends 4-21-88

PLUSNO CHARGEOPTIONSBELOW

B R A N D N E W 1 9 8 8 T O Y O T A2 Wheel Drive, Standard Bed, 4 Speed,

stock es-zas

PLUSNO CHARGEOPTIONSBELOW 9

CHOOSE O N E OF THESE OPTIONS OR□ Black Sport Bar with Lights [

I

Chrome Wheels, JSpoke or Nugget Type i

Aluminum Camper Cap i

n Cargo Bed Liner iYou must present either coupon before order is !

written and take delivery before 4-30-68. ■

CHOOSE T W O OF THESE OPTIONS

□ Brush Guard□ Running Boards□ Rear Sliding Window□ Stripe Package□ Bug Guard□ Bed Ralls □ Ultra Mirrors□ Tool Box □ Cargo Mats

r r

^ 1 ^ LYNCHM A N C H E S T E R , C O N N .

500W EST CENTER

S TR EET

If this sticker Is not on yo u r cor, you probably paid too m uch. 646-4321

M a o n o erv low it condl- st offer.

550. E x ­on, low extras,

f offer.

or? Fo r 0 low-

d. Coll I place

I28Sgrain,larao.

ISpd.Mog

.N6. AC. RMr

17959. PS, su p

.905Spd.

'505SId..sup

n - MANCHESTER HERALD. Friday, April 18.^1^

SSa o u t h T w c .

r e b a t e s ? * 2 > 2 2 2

AS I OW AS

Huge Selection

1988 V oyager’sDiscounted like never before!! Sample Buy!! Automatic, Air, 7 Passenger SE Model, Rear

Defroster. »1711

3.0 L i t e r V 6 E n g in e

$AVE *1590! ns,999stock P1551 Equipped with: Leather-Interior, Compact Disc Player, Handling Package, Air, Cruise, Tilt, Tubro Engine, Power Door Locks, Automatic Transmission, Power Seats, Mag Wheels and much more!

1988 ChryslerLeBaron Premium Convertible!

Market Value Cash Allowance Scranton Discount

»21,796 1,250 2,547 $17,999

CHRYSLER

LeBARONGTS750C ash ILeBaron GTS

n3,731 750

1,682

Market Value Cash Allowance Scranton Discount

Equipped with: Convenience Pkg., 2.5 EFI Engine, Rear Wiper, Air, Tilt,

Cruise, Graphic Red PH136S

ni,299

CHRYSLER

LeBARONCDUPE-

l iZ S O ^ ^W - 0

Equipped with: Turbo, Coupe Package, Premium Interior, Auto Trans, Air, 2 Tone Pw it, Rear Defroster, AM/FM stereo cassette,

mag wheels, power seats, power windows. Tilt, Cruise & much more!Stock S1398

Market Value Cash Allowance Scranton Discount

»17,6151,2502,666 $13,699

More Brand New Winners:88 Horizon America, Auto, PS, EFI Eng. it more, Stk. #1686 .............^6999Sundance 1 Dr., Turbo, Pop. Pkg., Auto, AC, Cass.,Console.....^9699Colt E, 4 Dr., Sedan, 5 Spd., Rear Defroster & More.......... ^689988 Fifth Ave., Loaded, Wire Whls., & More #1648.... $15 ,999

aPECIAL PHICES EXPIRES 4-21-ai

rid c O '

.AttJ

Vake a\S r£ :l

M l1988 JETTAS

Feel what a fuel-injected l^valve V6 does for this all-new high-performance luxury sedan.

COMPARE MAZDA 929 TO EUROPE'S B EST - AT *20,000 LESS.SOME WITH LEATHER, ANTI-LOCK BRAKES, MOONROOF, COMPACT DISCS AND MORE.

SEVERAL TO CHOOSE FROM.f e a t u r e s INCLUDING: Powerful fuel Injected V6 engine, 4 ipeed automaUc oveidrive

tranimlaiion, electronically controlled power aiiU t ateerlng, power aailstcd 4-wheel dlac brakea, power * Mtomatlc climate control with AC, cruiae control, theft deterrent lyatem, AM/FM

atereo caiaette with graphic ^ u a llie r booster with 6 ipeakeri, front and roar mud guardi, 15' aluminum wbeeli and steel belted radials and much, much more!!!

A G R E A T V A L U E . . . YOU MUST DRIVE THIS CAR! *17,168 S TO C K #2-9007

(D E M O )

r

msmssgsa&i

Don't mess with this sensible small sedan at a traffic Ueht:

0-60: 8.0 seconds.N E W ]

S M A L lI D A 323 GT GIVES "T H E ROAD CA R O F

^RS" A TURBO-POW ERED PU N C H .

SPECIAL323 GTX

Turbo, S Speed, 4 W D, #3062

O N LY

$ 13,683NOW

AVAILABLE R X 7 CONVERTIBLE, redBRAND NEW 1988 MAZDA B 2200 SE 5 PLUS 7

U ~ J ~

■ ■<' /AiStock #2075 + 20 More

llXPIMES 4-21-M

Inoludee: 2.2 Liter 4 Cyl. Engine, 8 Speed Trane., Front Olao BrtkM, WhIteSpokerWhMia. DoubI Intermittent WIndahlaid Wipara, Carpet Floor Covering, Rear Step Bumper, Fuel Door Releeee, AM/FM Ra­dio, Cloth Saata, Dual Callfomal MIrrora. Offer apipilea to all In atook, non plua 7 pkg. truofca.

YOUR CHOICE:A. 7.9% FINANCING orB. FREE AIR CONDITIONING orC. NO PAYMENT UNTIL JUNE

THE MAZDA WAY & THE MORIARTY WAY HO GIMMICK5, JUST A GREAT DEAL

All Negotiated Prices Include

SPRING SPECIALS

ON ALL 1988 VW

CABRIOLETS...6 to choose from

SAVE1987 SCIROCCO

Executive DemonstratorMetallic paint, cruise control, rear wiper and washer, air, power steering, stereo cassette

and more. Stock #3603 Was *13,442

SPECIAL PRICE

n i , 8 5 01987 GOLF GT

Executive DemontratorAir conditioning, split rear seat, power steering

and more. Stock #4482.Was *12,140

SPECIAL PRICE

*10,6501 Tax & Registration Extra

3) HAND WASH AND WAX4) 3 YR. 50,000 MILE BUMPER

TO BUMPER WARRANTY5) PROFESSIONAL SALES - NO HIGH PRESSURE

1) ALL DEALER PREP2) AUTO ARMOUR UNDERCQATINQ

That's Why I'm OoimatuyMv

m ia mM O R I A f d P V B R O T H K R S Esh40O Hl-M

Houfs:Optff EvBftinBi '819 pjn. Fri. G Sol.'« A ikin. 301-315 a N T H STREH 1

MANCHESTER. CONNECTICUT 0 4 0 * 3 1

* 1 VOLKSWAGEN' WHERE OUR CUSTOr.lERS A R E ALWA YS e i WITH US

24 Tolland Tpke., (Rt. 83) Vernon, CT 649-2638

iQ k in q y o u f ir s tm a k e s u s f ir s t

MANCHESTER HERALD. Friday. April 18. 1988 — 23

1987 PONTIAC 6000’s

HURRY ONLY 9 LEFT!4S/45 Saat W/Armraat, Raar Dafoggar, AC, Conaola, Cruiaa, Tilt Whaal, Alum.-Whaal, Lamp Croup, AM/FM Stereo.

MSRPDIacount

•13,908. -2,257.

You Pay 11,649. Caah or Trade 2,000.

Finance $ 9 ,6 4 9

eo M ONTHS A T

‘21S“f2.S% APR

85/45 Notchback Saat, Front & Roar Carpota, Mata, Roar Dafoggar, AC, Cuatom MIrrora, Accent Stripe, Cruiaa, 2.5 Liter V6 Eng., TIN Whaal, Lamp Croup. AM/FM Staroo. stock tH-5135

MSRPDIacount

•15,873. -3,226.

You Pay 12,647. Caah or Trade 2,000.Bal. to Finance $ 1 0 , 6 4 7 .

00 M ONTHS A T

12.6* APR

45/45 Seat w/armraat, Raar Dafoggar, AC, Cuatom MIrrora. Conaola, Cruiaa, Tilt Wheel. Alum. Whaal, Lamp Croup,AM/FM Stereo. Stock •H-5113

MSRPDIacount

•14,391. -2,704.

You Pay 11,667. Caah or Trade 2,000.

Finance $ 9 , 6 8 7 . ,

00 M ONTHS A T

$219®?.12.5* APR

45/45 Seat w/armraat, Raar Dafoggar, AC, Cuatom MIrrora, Conaola, Cruiaa, Tilt Wheel, Alum. Wheel, Lamp Croup, AM/FM Starao. Stock #8-8126

MSRP DIacount

You Pay Caah or Trade Bal. to Finance

•14,176.-2,500.11,676.

2,000.

•9 ,6 7 6 .

00 MONTHS A T

$219®®t2.6* AF"

Sunroof, AC, TIM Whaal, Lamp Croup, AM/FM Stereo. Stock *H-8064

MSRPDIacount

•13,676.-2,141.

You Pay Caah or Trade

11,535.2, 000.

Bal. to Finance $9,535.

^ m onths A T

$ 2 1 9 0 0iro% APR

Front & Raar Carpet, Mata, Raar Dafoggar, AC. Cuatom MIrrora, Cruiaa Control, Tilt

Whaal, Lamp Croup, AM/FM Starao, ' ' Stock #H-S270

MSRPDIacount

•13,605. -2,132.

You Pay 11,473. Caah or Trade 2,000.Bal. to Finance $ 9 ,4 7 3 .

^ m o n t h s A T

$24100^•■•*a p r

45/45 Saat W/Armraet, Raar Dafoggar, AC, Cuatom MIrrora, Cruiaa Control, Till Whaal,

Lamp Croup, AM/FM Starao, , Stock #H-8115

MSRPDIacount

•14,245. -2,556.

You Pay 11,667. Caah or Trade 2,000.

S is . *9,687.

* 2 1 9 0 0

45/46 W/Armraat, Raar Dafoggar, AC, Cuatom MIrrora, Conaola, Cruiaa Control.

TIM Wheel, Lamp Croup. AM/FM Starao.Stock «H-S120

•14,176.-2,800.

MSRP DIacount

You Pay Caah or Trade Bal. toFinance $ 9 ,6 7 6

11,676.2, 000.

100/*•* APR

45/45 Seal W/Armraat, Raar Dafoggar, AC. Cuatom MIrrora, Conaola, Cruiaa Control,

TIM Whaal, Lamp Croup. AM/FM Staroo, Stock #H-ai20

MSRPDIacount

•14,245. -2,556.

You Pay 11,687. Caah or Trad# 2,000. Bal. toFinance $ 9 ,6 8 7 .

^ O N T H s ^ r

* 2 l $ 0 0

All Above Paymantt DO NOT Include Tax 6 Registration.Al Ctn SubiBct To Pnor Soto - Not RBOponoMt For TypogrBohcil Errors

Oidsmobiie, Cadillac, Pontiac, C M C Trucks M OTORS, INC. Rt. 83, Vomon - 872-9146

Hours: Mon., T u b s ., Wed. £r Thurs. 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Fri. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Sat. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

AP

i

5

9

1 4 - h

ForPoweThis t

camstia liming i arms, n pushroc covers, luel dell rotor sei all oihe

convertr

^ 4 ^univers;

I StandiCovera plus th

torsion I shock al bushing spirtdie

drag lini

2A

« — *s

AP

5

98

( 8

n.;

i

U - MA ;cCHESTER HERALD, Friday. April 15,1988

MANO€S7By-|OND\

\>l

INCLUDED;AT NO ADDITIONAL CHARGE...

ContinuousSatisfaction

i s mPianFor Your U sed C ar!Powertrain CoverageThis basic coverage includes:

Engine System: All internally lubricated parts including pistons, piston rings and pins: crankshaft and mam bearings, connecting rods

_______ and rod bearings, harmonic balancer: oil pan,camshall. cam chain(s), guides, tensioners and bearings: timing chain, gear and/or belt, timing chain cover^ecker arms, rocker shafts, rocker bushings: valves, valve b r in g s , pushrods, lifters, loHowers, retainers, guides and seats: valve covers, intake and exhaust manifolds: oil pump: water pump, fuel delivery pump, Ian and Ian clutch, engine mounts, rolots>rotor seals, rotor chamber, eccentric shaft and bearings and all olher internally lubricated p a ftro l a rotary engine.

Automatic or Standard Transmission/ Transfer Case System: All internally lubricated parts contained within the trans­mission case, transfer case, and/or torque

converter case, flex piale, transmission mounts, oil pan

n Drive Axle System (Front and Rear): Allinternally lubricated parts contained within the

i drive axle housing (front and rear), drive line(s) iS0 (Iron! and rear) and constant velocity or

universal loints

Standard CoverageCoverage of Powertrain Components is included plus these additional components;

Suspension System (Front and Rear):Upper and lower control arms, control arm shafts and bearings or bushings, upper and lower ball lOints, king pins and bushings:

torsion bars, McPherson shut housing (does not include shock absorber cartridge insert or spring), strut bar and bushings: stabilizer bar, links and bushings: spindle and spirtdie support, wheel bearings

Steering System: All internally lubricated parts contained wilhin Ihe steering box: power steering pump and pulley: power cylinder assembly: pitman arm and idler arm, lie rod,

drag link: steering column shall and coupling.

Air Conditioning System: Condenser, compressor, compressor clutch and pulley, evaporator, receiver-dryer: accumulator, idler pulley, idler pulley bearing

1 Y E A R or 12,000 M ILE S E R V IC E

A G R E E M E N TON ANY CAR LISTED

IN THIS AD...

V

A

CJ rJ~

I 'Wv -a 'H '

• k - T ' '

N

1984 HONDA CIVICHatchbick, Btu*. Air, Radio, W u *5805

1986 MERC LYNXWagon, Aulomatio, Waa *4005

1984 HONDA CIVICHatchback, 4 Spaad. AC, Staiao, Waa *6085

1985 PLY. HORIZON4 Dr., Rad, St. Trana, AC. Radio, Waa *3486

1985 HONDA CIVICHatchback, AC. Waa *5885

NOW <5495 k.w<3995 NOW <5495 n. w < 2 9 9 5

NOW <5495 k.w<5495

1984 HONDA ACCO R D5 Sp6*d. AC, 8t«r«o. Wm *7905 NOW ■

1984 FORD EXP ^ 3 4 9 5Coupa. Turbo. Std. Trana, Starao Caaa, Waa'388S H O W ^ 0

1984 BUICK SKYHAWK4 Dr, AT, PS, PB. AC, Tltt, Caaa. Waa *4888 M O W

HOW <5495

1984 OLDS C U TLA SSClarra, 4 Door. 6 Cyl, Auto, Air, Starao, Waa 'S886

1984 VW J E T T A4 Door, Auto, AC. Starao, Waa 'S885

1987 CHEV CAVALIER < 7 4 9 5Cpa., Whita, AT. PS. PB. AC. Radio. Waa >7885

1984 ASTRO VANStarcraft Convaralon, fully Cuatomixad, Waa *8886 NOW

1983 HONDA ACCO R D4 Door, Your Choica • Tan or Blua, Automatic, Air, Starao. Waa >6488

< 7 9 9 5

Nmv<59951985 BUICK CEN TUR YRad, AT, PS, PB, PW, AC, Caaa. Waa *8188 NOW ■ W W W

1986 HONDA CIVIC < 8 4 9 5HB-SI, Rad, 8 Spaad, AC, Starao, Sunroof, Waa <8888 NOW

1987 HONDA DX CIVICHatchback, Ookf, Only 8000 mllaa, Waa '8400 NOW

1986 S-10 BLAZERPickup, AT, PB, AC, TahoaPkg, Waa *11,888 NOW

1986 HONDA CRX-SIBlack, 8 Spaad. AC. Starao. Waa *7888 NOW

1985 HONDA CRXSunroof, 8 Spaad, AC, Starao, Waa *8486

< 7 9 9 5

< 1 1 , 5 0 0

< 7 5 0 0

N O W ^ 5 3 3 31983 MAZDA RX7starao, Excallant Condition, Waa *8888 NOW < 6 4 9 51986 PO NTIAC FIERO G T $ 7 ^ 0 58 Cyl , Auto, Paarl Black, Waa *7888 NOW ■

«a/e you

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! ? 4 9 5

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/ V o i vis .o 6 i) p ) / / e .

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* 7 9 ^ 5

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ALL VEH IC LES S U B JEC T T O PR IO R SALE... N O T R ESPO NSIBLE FOR TYPO G R A PH IC A L ERRORS. PR IC ES D O N O T IN C LU D E TA XES O R R E G IS TR A TIO N .

MANQfSreRHONCA •24 ADAMS ST. MANCHESTER, CT (EXIT 62 OFF 1-84) 646-3515

S a tu rc

m

I

^an

Hanrlipatpr KpralJiSaturday, April 16, 1988

“SAVEManchester, Conn. — A City of Village Charm

POST OFFICE30 Cents

■ Jf 1C.

N

m i

IFOUR SLAIN — Police in San Antonio, Texas,

above, restrain the father of four teen­

agers found slain in their trailer early Friday

morning. At right, police escort a 20-

year-old man taken into custody in

connection with the stabbing deaths. The unidentified suspect

was described as a former boyfriend of oneof the victims.

Story on page 2.

AP photot

Downtown‘storefront’suggestedBv Nancy Concelman Manchester Herald

State and local agencies have joined the town Board of Direc­tors in pressuring the U.S. Postal Service to keep a centrally located "storefront” post office open for downtown-area resi­dents and merchants after the proposed Sheldon Road office is built.

The state Office of Policy and Management, which is the inter­governmental review agency for the post office project, the town Planning D epartm ent, the Greater Manchester Chamber of Commerce and the Downtown Merchants Association have writ­ten letters supporting a resolution adopted by the Board of Directors April 4 to maintain a centrally located office.

“Everybody is of the opinion that we ought to keep that (a central office) there,” Planning Director Mark Pellegrini .said Friday.

In an April 14 letter to postal service officials, Pellegrini said the Postal Service’s plans not to maintain a central office would be a "poor decision” and would "create problems for its custo­mers,” including residents and downtown-area businesses.

Pellegrini said he met with Charles Vidich and Charles Pierce of the U.S. Postal Service and officials of the state Gffice of Policy and Management on March 31 to discuss an environ­mental assessment of the project. Officials also talked about open­ing a downtown "finance office.” which would sell stamps, allow customers to send and pick up packages and get registered mail, among other things.

In his letter. Pellegrini sug­gested ( oening the finance office in the ci -rent main office, which he' said the town has always

Please turn to page 3

Dr. Crane’s Quiz

Connecticut WeatherManchester and vicinity; Saturday, a little

morning sun giving way to lots of afternoon clouds and scattered afternoon showers, a few with some thunder or wet snow. High in the middle 40s. Chance of precipitation 50 percent. Saturday night, partly cloudy and chilly with the low 30 to 35. Sunday, morning sun then afternoon clouds with a 30 percent chance of rain or snow showers. High in the middle 40s.

Lottery WinnersConnecticut dally Friday: 257. Play Four: 7922. Connecticut “Lotto” Friday: 4, 8. 9, 15. 28.38.

IndexBusiness___Churches__Classified__C o m ics____Connecticut. Focus______

.33-34

. 14-15

.34-40

.23-25 __ 8-0

Local news. Obituaries— Opinion.Senior Citizens. Sports .

. 17-32 U.S./World..41-48. 10-11

Manrbrstrr llrralbUSPS 327-500 VOL. CVII, No. 160

Penny M. Sleffert, Publisher

Q .o rg . T. Chapp.llEditor

Danlaa A. RobertaAdvartlaing OIraetor

Marti r. AbraHIaBualnaaa Managar

Shahlon CohanCompoaing Manager

Robert H. HubbardPraaaroom Manager

Jaanna Q. FrotnarthClrcutatlon Manager

Publlahad dally axcapt Sunday and oartain hoHdays by the Manchaatar Publlahing Co.. 16 Bralnard Plaoa, Manehaalar. Conn. 06040. Second daaa poataga paid at Manchaatar. Conn. Poatmaalar Sand addraaa ohangaa to the Manchaatar Herald. P.O. Boa 861, Manchaatar, Conn. 06040.

If you don't rsoahra your Herald by 6 p.m. weekdays or 7:30 a.m. Saturdays, please Mephona your carrier. H you're unaMa to reach your carrier, call aubaerlbar sarvlae at 647-6046 by 6 p.m. wsakdaya for dalhiery In Manohealar.

Suggaalad carrier ratsa are $1.60 areakly, $7.70 for one month, $23.10 tor three months. $46.30 tor ala months and $02.40 for one year. Senior olUisn rates and mall ratsa are avallabla on raqusat.

To plaoe a ctaaalflad or diapisy adverdsement, or to report a news Hem, story or picture Idea, call 643-3711. Office hours are 6:30 a.rh. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday.

The Manehaalar HaraM Is a member of the Aaaoclaled Praaa, the Audit Bureau of OrouMlona and the Now England

1. The “Bay of Pigs" was a serious blunder by which president?

KENNED Y JOHNSON WILSON EISENHOWER

2. Yams are considered a first cousin of BROCCOLI RUTABAGA SWEET POTATO

CAULIFLOWER

3. The sum of gross, pius a baker’s dozen, totals127 144 157 183

4. Which one of these is inappropriate in this general grouping?

PALFR EY BARROW GELDING PALOMINO

5. Which one of these is not linked with the color "red” ?

F IR E PLU G BULL POLICEMAN COMMUNIST

6. Match the Bible characters at the left with the entries at the right which are inked with them.(a) E sau ............................................... (v) Figs(b) Noah............................................(w) Honey(c) A d am ........................................... (x) Lentils(d^ Sam son........................................ (y) Apple(e) Hezekiah . , ................................... (z) Grapes

Answers in Classified section.

AP pholo

S E N TEN C E D — Robert Chambers, right, appears in a New York court Friday for sentencing in the strangulation of Jennifer Levin. Chambers was sent to jail for five to 15 years for the Central Park slaying.

Chambers apologizes for ‘preppie murder*

NEW YORK (AP) - Robert CHiambers apologized for the first time Friday for the “preppie murder” case death of 18-.year- old Jennifer Levin as he was formally sentenced to five to 15 years in jail for manslaughter.

“The Levin family have gone through hell because of my actions, and I ’m so r ry ,’ ’ Chambers said. “Whoever said time heals all wounds is definitely wrong, because how can these wounds heal?”

Despite his statement of re­morse, the 21-year-old Chambers repeatedly shook his head as if to say “ no” to his plea and sentenc­ing, and Miss Levin’s uncle said afterward the apology carried ’ little weight. V I

Chambers stood silently while state Supreme Court Justice Howard E. Bell handed down the sentence, which was agreed to by lawyers for both sides when Chambers entered the guilty plea to a reduced charge of mans­laughter March 2ji.

The plea came after the Jurors in the highly publicized case reported they were deadlocked on the murder charge in their ninth day of deliberations. Chambers began his sentence the day after the plea was entered.

Miss Levin’s partially nude body was found in Central Park early in the morning of Aug. 26, 1986, a few hours after they had left a fashionable East Side bar together.

Chambers had claimed that the death occurred by accident when Miss Levin hurt him during “ rough sex.” By pleading guilty to manslaughter. Chambers ad­mitted he intended to hurt Miss Levin.

Miss Levin’s father, Steven, who had also asked to address the court, was not allowed to. But he later released a statement, say­ing that (Cambers’ “outrageous lie” had defamed “the memory of our lovely child.”

Chambers sighed deeply before starting his remarks. He apolog­ized to his fainily and friends, as well as Miss Levin’s, and thanked more than ISO supporters for letters he said he has received since being jailed on his guilty plea.

“Jennifer’s looking down on us now at this circus arena, looking and wondering why it all hap­pened and I don’t know,” Chambers said. “I never wished any of this to happen.... I wish to apologize to the family and to her friends for all the trouble they have gone through.”

Mari in slayirigs of 4 teens

SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) — A 20-year-old man was arrested Friday in the slayings of a boy and his three teen-age sisters found mutilated in their home and stabbed so hard with steak knives that the blades broke, police said.

The suspect was taken into custody after being treated at a hospital for a stab wound to his thigh and a cut on the hand, said police spokeswoman Sandy Perez. Ms. Perez said he wiii be charged with four counts of capitai murder.

The man was not immediately identified. Police earlier said they were seeking to question the girls’ boyfriends.

“We figure he either surprised them in their sleep or there’s a possibility that more than one person was involved, which would have kept them from running out or anything like that. We can’t tell for sure,” said homicide Lt. Albert Ortiz.

Ortiz said a girl called the 911 emergency number about 3:27 a.m. and said “one of my sister’s boyfriends is beating us up and has killed my sister.”

Police were able to trace the call and found the bodies at 3:55 a.m., Ortiz said.

Police said at least five steak knives were used in the slayings and that more could have been carried off from the five-bedroom mobile home.

“It’s unbelievable. All of them were savagely stabbed. There are knives broken off in their necks,” said Sgt. George Wilson, a 28-year member of the depart­ment. “ It’s a slaughterhouse.”

Ortiz said police wanted to question the three girls’ current or former boyfriends, especially one who was named in two complaints filed by their father.

Ortiz identified the victims as Jennifer Mann, 19; Shannon Mann, 17; Martha Mann, 14; and Ernest Mann, 13.

Mary Mireles, who lives across from the trailer park. Said there have been numerous robberies there and that she heard a commotion early Friday, and thought she heard gunshots.

" I heard a lot of screams,” Mrs. Mireles said. “They were screaming, ‘Help’ and they were crying and screaming and I toid my husband and he said, ‘No, let’s not get involved.’”

Ex-chief charged in 1978 kiiiingCONCORD, N.H. (AP) - The

former police chief of Marlow was charged Friday with second- degree murder, a month after authorities dug up the remains of his wife’s first husband in his yard after his father made a deathbed confession.

Robert Chambers, 36, ap­peared relaxed but said nothing as be surrendered at the state police station in Keene and sat

through two court appearances in the 1978 killing of Russell Bean, a close friend. Unable to post the $200,000 bail, he was taken to the Cheshire County Jail.

Chambers was not handcuffed during his arraignment in Keene District Court and bail hearing in superior court. He entered no plea, but his attorney, MarkSisti, said his client will plead innocent to the charge, which he called a

mistake.Bean was 25 when was last seen

in 1978. His wife, Sylvia, moved in with Chambers and married him soon after her husband disap­peared. After Bean’s remains were found last month, she and Chambers separated.

Authorities dug for three days in a spot that once was a pig pen tefore finding Bean’s remains 25 feet down.

Updated ’86 Grand List rises 6.7 percentBy Andrew Yurkovsky Manchester Herald

The updated 1986 Grand List completed by the town assessor’s office Friday afternoon totals $803,811,319. an increase of 6.7percent over the 1986 Grand List used to calculate tax bills last vear.

1

For the tax bills that come due this July, the town will use the updated 1986 Grand List instead of the 1987 revaluation Grand List. The town administration got permission from the state to scrap the 1987 revaluation Grand List last month because of the number of appeals made of the increased assessments.

No figure was available on what tax rate would be needed to support the town manager’s proposed $64 million General Fund budget. The tax rate last year for the adopted $56 million General Fund budget was 48.59 mills.

Assessor J. Richard Vincent, who began a two-week vacation April 8, appeared at the Municipal Building Friday afternoon especially to sign the Grand List. Vincent has been criticized by the town Board of Directors and some members of the public for problems related to the revaluation.

Friday was the self-imposed dead­line of the assessor’s office to complete the update.

The $803 million total for the updated 1986 Grand List does not take into account any decreases in assess­ment that may be agreed upon by the Board of Tax Review.

The Board of Tax Review will hear appeals of increased assessments April 26 through 28.

The updated 1986 list includes the same totals for personal property and motor vehicles as the 1987 revaluation Grand List. Values for real property on the updated list, however, are taken from the 1986 Grand List and increased only for those properties on which there have been additions or modifications.

The value of real estate property

ixjcrea.sed by 3.8 percent in the u^tated list over the regular 1986 Grand List, from $566,096,962 to $587,375,342. Motor vehicle assess­ments increased bv 19 percent, from $96,9.36,974 to $115,436,662. Personal property increased by 12 percent, from $89,793,202 to $100,999,315.

The 1987 revaluation Grand List that was s c r apped t o ta l ed $989,447,000, an increase of 31.2 percent over that of all classes of property on the regular 1986 Grand List.

The value of real estate on the 1987 Grand List increased 36.5 percent over the regular 1986 Grand List, to $773,011,000. Most of that increase was due to the revaluation.

Many had a taxing day racing those deadiines

V Lt.i\ iii

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David Kooi/Mancheater Harald

LAST M INUTE — Patrick Delany of East Hartford is one of many who did some last-minute work on taxes Friday at the the H & R Block office in the Manchester Parkade. Helping Delaney is Dot Trusch.

By Anita M. Caldwell Manchester Herald

The rush to meet the Friday midnight deadline to file federal and state tax returns produced a “ zoo” at the local H & R Block office.

And some last-day tax filers found their rush complicated by the l-to-2 p.m. daily closing of the post office caused by federal budget cuts.

" I think it’s outrageous,” one Manches­ter woman said at the Broad Street post office. “ (Postal workers) are working a six-hour day.”

“ After rushing around all day, I can’t even get in there,” said a woman from Andover also waiting in line.

But for others, the delay to mail was a waiting game.

” I like doing this,” said Bill Stanley of New State Road- “ This is how I did my term papers, too.” he said with a chuckle at the Borad Street office.

Stanley, a sales representative for Bloom’s Business Systems in East Hart- fo(rd. said he jilotikept putting off preparing his tax return. When he finally did it. he discovered he’s only getting $18 back.

Alison Caxide, of Briarwood Drive, had another reason for procrastinating.

“ I want to ke#p my money as long as I can.” said CaxI’de. a data analyst at the Travelers Insurance Cos. in Hartford. Besides, she adc^d jokingly. ” it’s all my husband’s fault.‘fle didn’t have time.”

For others, waiting until the last minute was beneficial.

” I ’m in the process of trying to buy a

house, ” said Mark Frizzell of Love Lane. ” I submit estimated taxes and held off as long as possible to see what I could save. It paid off. I saved $6,000.”

But Frizzell, who is an educational consultant in the area, still has doubts about being able to buy a house.

“ The interest rates just went up. I ’m still not sure if I could afford a house.” he said.

Meanwhile, the H it R Block office on Broad Street was hopping.

Elaine Brown, office manager, said Friday was “ a zoo.” Most of the customers were filing extensions. Others were just trying to find forms, she said.

Brown said 'that the banks and post offices may not have been issued enough tax booklets and forms because so many people stopped in at the last minute.

Submitting tax returns late is not uncommon, according to Brown.

’ ’You don’t do things you don’t like to do, especially if you’re going to owe,” she said. Others resent the fact that they have to pay the government in each paycheck and then at the end of the year also file a return, she said.

Though April 1 begins the crunch and “ panic.” Brown said February is the busiest month. “ The first two weeks are absolutely unreal,” she said.

But this year was even more of a headache for many people because of the new tax laws and forms.

Even the tax experts were burdened with the complexities of tax simplification.

H & R Block. Brown said in an embarrassed whisper, also had to issue corrections for their employees.

OPM , business groups press fbr post officeContinued from page 1

expressed an interest in buying. If the town were to buy the current main office, he said, it would “ allay concerns over possible damage” to a historical building. Pellegrini also said a long-term lease on a location in the central business district may be available at reasonable rents.

The OPM supported the idea of a finance office and postal officials said they would investigate the possibility, Pellegrini said.

In his letter, Pellegrini listed

several factors that ’ ’militate” against the Postal Service’s plans not to operate a downtown office.

For example, he said the current post office provides services to government offices and the Central Business District, which requires a range of counter services.

Also, the current office is also located within walking distance of 16,000 residents within a 1-mlle radius. The Sheldon Road area is not as well-suited for pedestrians, Pelle­grini said.

Pellegrini also disagreed with the Postal Service’s claims that the new

office, located 1.9 miles from the main office, would be almost as convenient as the main office. North-south travel is “ notoriously difficult” in town because the limited number of direct routes already carry high volumes of traffic, he said. Forcing one or two trips daily on Main, Oakland and North Main streets for 440 businesses could further aggravate traffic, he added.

Bernard Apter, president of the Downtown Merchants Association, and Steven H. Thornton, chairman of the board of directors of the chamber of commerce, also submitted letters

opposing the Postal Service’s plans.Thornton said in a letter to Pelle­

grini that chamber members are “ most concerned” about the plans to abandon a central office and possibly the Broad Street station.

The recent reduction in hours at the post office will make it especially difficult to serve the downtown and Broad Street areas, Thornton said.

The reduction in hours was caused by the same federal budget cuts that have delayed construction of the $5 million Sheldon Road facility and proposed new post offices nationwide.

*

Police Roandnp

Cocaine sales chargedTwo men were charged Thursday by the Tri-Town

Narcotics Task Force in connection with the sale of cocaine from the Custom Carte Commissary Inc. at 131 San Rico Drive, police said.

Douglas K. Bassett, 25, of Vernon, was charged with possession of cocaine with the intent to sell, possession of cocaine, and possession of drug paraphernalia, police said.

William D. Marshall, 29, of 23 West Middle Turnpike, was charged with possession of cocaine with the intent to sell, possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of marijuana.

Bassett was released on a $10,000 non-surety bond to the Vernon Police Department, which held a warrant for him for possession of cocaine. Marshall was released on $10,000 cash bond.

Bassett and Marshall are to appear in Manchester Superior Court on Wednesday.

Drug charges lodgedA Manchester woman was arrested Wednesday

on drug charges in connection with an investigation that began last year, police said.

Tracy Phillippi, 30, of 58V4 School St., was charged with possession of cocaine, possession of marijuana and sale of marijuana, police said.

Phillippi was released on a $1,000 surety bond. She is to appear Monday in Manchester Superior Court.

Sexual assault arrestManchester police have arrested a man they have

identified as Stephen Gillis in connection with a sexual assault that occurred Thursday.

Police said they had no information on Gillis’ age or address. He was arrested Friday.

Gillis is charged with second-degree sexual assault and risk of injury to a minor child in connection with an incident involving a child. His bond has been set at $25,000. No other information was available.

Coventry questioning value of the state’s Mastery Tests

Celebrity bingo event kicks off big week

By Jacqueline Bennett Manchester Herald

COVENTRY — Members of the Board of Education and school administrators questioned the validity of the Connecticut Mas­tery Tests Thursday night despite their agreement that the town did well on those tests.

"We can’t get too myopic, using just one test in one state to determine how well our kids our doing, how well we are preparing them. If we do, we may be preparing them for the needs of the dominate businesses - and industries in the state and maybe not for overall needs," said Dennis Joy, principal at Coventry High School, during the meeting at Coventry High School.

Joy’s remark was one of several critical of the Connecticut Mastery Tests and standardized exams in general.

Among those present at the meeting were all members of the Board of Education except Patri­cia Soltys. Also present were Superintendent of Schools Na­than Chesler, all principals from the town’s four schools, and John MacLean, director of pupil and staff services.

The tests were given to students in grades 4, 6 and 8 last fall.

Board vice chairwoman Judy Halvorson took aim at math scores that show an escalating

weakness among students, espe­cially fourth-graders in the areas of decimals and fractions. Forty percent more from all grades tested in town scored lower, in 1987 than in 1986, a trend mirrored statewide.

“Some of the material on those tests is not even taught in most third grades in Connecticut. If it’s not taught, not addressed in the curriculum, how meaningful are the results?" said Halvorson, an elementary teacher in Chaplin.

A similar downward trend appears in the area of degrees of reading power. Town students are especially weak in evaluative and inferential reading, but doing well on the literal level.

Ed Mahoney, principal atCapt. Nathan Hale Middle School said Friday that “we’re not sure if it is the design of the test or the curriculum. “If scores continue to drop next year, he said, the board will likely change the curriculum.

At the meeting, however, some warned against building a curric­ulum to suit the test, saying the test may be flawed.

Mark Wollman, assistant prin­cipal at CNH and Coventry High School, attacked the criteria for development of such exams.

“The standard may have been developed on unrealistic expecta­tions. based on ideal desires without sufficient knowledge of

24 share in scholarshipsTwenty-four Manchester students have

been awarded scholarship grants of $100 for elementary school and $200 for East Catholic High School from the two trust funds created by the will of the late Helen M. Fitzpatrick, a former member of the town Board of Directors.

Fitzpatrick created two trust funds. The Martin Raymond and Helen M. Fitzpatrick Memorial Fund, in memory of herself and her husband, and The Anthony, Rose and Edward Tumiensky Memorial Fund in memory of her father, mother and brother.

According to the terms setting up the memorial funds, any student who is a parishioner of a Roman Catholic Church in Manchester is eligible to apply, with some preference given to parishioners of St. Bridget’s Church.

The recipients attending St. Bridget Church are as follows;

Debra Em anuele, a studentat St. B ridget School, daughter o f M r. and M rs . E rnest Em anuele, S3F Rachel Rood.

M arvanna F itzgera ld , a student at St. B ridget School, daughter of M r. and M rs. Edward F itzgera ld , 15 C u rry Lone.

Kev in F itzgera ld , a studentat St. B ridget School, son of M r . and M rs . Edvrard F itzgera ld , 15 Cu rry Lane. . js r

K e lly G ov, a student a t St. B ridget School, daughter of M r. and M rs . Gov, 92 H o llis te r St.

M e lissa M azu r, a student at St. B ridget School, daughter of M r . and M rs . Thom as M azu r, S7 Cam bridge St.

Cd rlssa F ie ld , a student at St. B ridget School, daughter of M r. and M rs . Edw ard F ie ld , 25 O rcha rd Sf.

Jan ice Yann izze , a studenf a t St. B ridget School, daughter o f Debra Yannizze, 142 Homesfeod St.

Rob in AAelodv, a student at Bowers School, daughter o f M r . and M rs . RIchord M e lody, 121 H o llis te r St.

Helena Choponls, a studentat St. Bridget School, daughter o f Sy lvester Choponls J r ., 3 Burnhom St. Ext.

Steven Choponls, o student a t Robertson Schoo l, son,of M r . and M rs. Sy lvester, 3 Burnhom St. Ext.

T ina Lev ick , a student a t St. B ridget School, daughter of M r. and M rs. Douglas Lev ick , 129 Rache l Road.

Christopher Gov, a student a t East C atho lic High School, son of M r. and M rs. Jam es Gay, 92 H o llis te r St.

N ancy W engertsmon, a student at St. B ridget School, daughter o f M r. and M rs. John Wengerts- m on, *2 Haw thorne St. tr-

Edw ard F itzgera ld , a student m E as t Ca tho lic 'T H igh Schoo l, son of M r. ang^ M rs. Edward . J F itzgera ld , 15 Cu rry Lane. ■■ ■

The recip ients attending St. Jam es Church a reas fo llow s;

Debra Dalesslo , a student at East C a tho lic High School, daughter of M r. AN D M rs . Joseph Dalesslo , 71 Goodw in St.

L isa Co ta ld l, a student at East C a tho lic High School, daughter o f M r. and M r i . Joseph Cata ld l,39 Norm an St.

Jonathon T r ip le t , a student a t St. Jam es School, son of M r. and M rs . Leland T r ip le t , 258 Hackm atack St.

The recip ients attending St. Bartholom ew Church a re as fo llows:

Leonard FenockettI, a student at East Catho lic H igh School, son of M r. and M rs. Leonard FenockettI, 3$ Leo J . Lane.

Nancy FenM kettI, a student at lllln g Ju n io r H igh School, daughter of M r. and M rs. Leonard FenockettI, 32 Leo J . Lane.

The recip ients attending the Church of the Assum ption a re as fo llow s;

Steven Donnelly, a student a t East C a tho lic H igh School, son of M r. and M rs . Terrence Donnelly, 40 Ja rv is Road.

Raym ond Gagnon, a student a t Assum ption Ju n io r H igh School, son of Stephen Gagnon, 12 P ro c to r Road.

Sean Donnelly, a student a t Assum ption Jun io r H igh School, son of M r. and M rs . Terrence Donnelly, 40 J a rv is Road.

Josephv P ry tko , a student a t St. B ridget School, son of M r. and M rs . John P ry tko , 224 Saddleh lll Road.

M a rc Forsch ino , a student a t St. B ridge t School, son of M r. and M rs . M ichae l Forsch ino , 44 L itch f ie ld St.

Se lections fo r these aw ards were m ade by the Scho larsh ip Com m ittee consisting o f Rev. W illiam Charbonneau, p resident o f Eas t C a tho lic H igh School, Rev. E m ilio P . P ade lli, co-postor o f St. B ridge t Church , and W esley C. G rvk , trustee of the m em oria l funds.

those subjects.” said Wollman.Having been involved in the

development of standardized tests himself, Wollman said he has seen it happen.

However MacLean, who pres­ented the results of hte Mastery Tests to the board, said one purpose of the exams is to influence curriculum.

“This type of instrument is meant to drive curriculum deci­sions,” MacLean said.

Holistic writing is an area of overall strength among students including written development, detail and organization.

MacLean stressed the exams should be used as a diagnostic tool, “a place to begin not end,” he said.

Identifying problem areas pro­vides the groundwork for imple­mentation of a remedial pro­gram, said MacLean.

Latin America exportsExports among the member

countries of the Latin American Integration Association rose by 7.2 percent in 1986 over 1985. from $7.05 billion to $7.55 billion, says the Inter-American Development Bank. The pick-up reversed a downward trend in intra-regional trade, evident since the banner year of 1981 when such exports had risen to $11.7 billion.

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Editor’s note: This column is prepared by the staff of the Manchester Senior Citizens’ Center.

By Joe Dlmlnlco Activities Director

Manchester Mayor Peter DiRosa has proclaimed the week of May 9 as Senior Citizens Week. In observance, the Senior Center has devised the following schedule of activities.

Monday: Celebrity bingo from 10 a m. to noon. Members of the Town Board of Directors will serve as callers. Grand prizes awarded.

Military whist and setback at 7 p.m Mary and Ed McKeever will conduct the games. Prizes, door prizes, refreshments. Tickets are $1 and will be on sale April 25.

Tuesday: Las Vegas Day will be held from 10 a .m. to 3 p.m. with blackjack tables and wheel. Admission is free. Participants will be aTlotted “fun money” . Prizes will be auctioned at the end of the day.

Wednesday: Trip to Plainfield dog track. The trip will cost $15 and registration will be taken on April 20 at 9:30 a m.

Thursday: Mr. and Mrs. Senior Citizens Pro­gram. Mayor DeRosa will read a proclamation. P ian ist Sally M ueller will provide the entertainment.

Awarding of Mr. and Mrs. Senior Citizen plaques.Friday: Ninth annual fishing derby at Salters

Pond from 6 a.m. to noon. Funds for the derby were donated by Savings Bank of Manchester.

Notes of interestObservation of National Volunteer Week begins Sunday. The Senior Center will host the IRS Volunteer Recognition Program on Monday. During the program the AARP TCE group will be recognized for a job well done.

Volunteers are constantly needed to assist with various tasks at the Senior Center.

Currently, volunteers are needed to help with the Big Week in May. We plan to have another Las Vegas Day and need people to man tables, distribute money and help with the auction. If interested, leave your naine in the office.

Men golfers are reminded that the opening date for the golf league is this Monday at Manchester Country Club. If you have any inquiries, call league secretary Gene Enrico at 646-2903 or Art Randall 644-1327.

Lady golfers are also reminded that their league will begin May 2 at the Manchester Country Club. Participants may direct inquiries to league Secretary Gert Andrews at 643-2019.

There are still openings for the May 6 stencilling class. The class project is a bib apron and will cost each student $9. The class begins at 9:30 a m. If

'interested, please contact the center.Just a reminder, there will be no meals or

Thursday program due to school vacation.The Connecticut Association of Senior Citizens

Personnel again will be sponsoring a statewide arts contest. The categories are painting, drawing, photography and sculpture. Participants must be 60 years of agg->or older and a non-professional. Inquiries’fo r the above contest may be directed to the ^ n io r Center.

The Connecticut Department of Aging will be sponsoring an essay contest for older adults entitled, “Memories of Connecticut Life.” Essays will be selected for a commemorative booklet to be issued on Governor’s Day, Oct. 10. Manchester seniors are encouraged to participate. Interested individuals should address Inquiries to the Senior Center.

Seniors interested in attending the performance of “Oklahoma,” by the Gilbert & Sujlivan Players, are reminded of the matinee on April 23. The fee is$4

Also the Manchester Community College Theatre will present “Spoon River” by Edgar Lee Masters April 20-23. A special matinee is planned for seniors on April 23. Matinee tickets are $2.50.

Finally, best wishes to Dominick Anastasio and Edith Albert who are home recuperating.

Senior Citizens

TripsRegistration for the Hawaiian trip is going well.

We still have a gentleman who is looking for the same to share a cabin. The agency will make every attempt to match you with a suitable person if .you do not have a traveling companion. The trip is scheduled for Oct. 22.

A trip to the “Barnum & Bailey” circus is planned for May 20. The cost is $15 which includes

transportation and admission. Register on April 27 at 9:30 a.m.

Registratio® for the Atlantic City trip on May 15 will be held on May 4 at 9; 30 a m. "The trip will cost $99 which includes transportation, overnight lodging at Showboat, $10 rebate and a meal.

Seniors will view “Singing in the Rain” on June 1 at the Coachlight Dinner Theater in East Windsor. Tickets are $21 and includes transportation and dinner. Registration will be held April 20 at 9:30 a.m.

Those interested in the Wildwood trip June 5-9 should call the Senior Travel at 875-0538/The cost of the trip is $204. v

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Local News in Brief ' Gay discrimination opposed Hbspitai rates finaiiy get state’s approvaiCollege case Is upheld

The state Supreme Court has upheld a decision by a Hartford Superior Court judge to dismiss a case in which a Manchester Community College professor requested that the college grant him tenure and a salary increase.

In a decision released Tuesday,. the Supreme Court unanimously ruled that Hartford Superior Court Judge Richard C. Noren was correct in dismissing the case because the court had no authority to require the college to grant tenure to accounting professor Robert E. Barde, who had served as a dean for six years before his status change.

Barde’s request for tenure and a $45,304 salary was denied in 1986 by the executive director of the Board of Trustees of Regional Community Colleges, who told Barde his maximum salary would be $39,585 and said he wasn’t eligible for tenure.

Barde charged that the board violated his due process rights by denying tenure and salary increases that had been granted to other adminis­trators who had been transferred, but the board told Barde other administrators had reached tenure before transfer.

The Supreme Court decision said that Barde’s claims that his due process rights had been violated were inappropriate and that the trial court was correct in dismissing Barde’s appeal because Barde failed to challenge the board’s refusal of tenure and salary increase when he was informed of the board’s decision in 1986.

Fire Department celebratesANDOVER — In celebration of its 50th

anniversary this year, the Andover Volunteer Fire Department will hold a dinner-dance May 14 at Vito’s Birch Mountain Inn in Bolton.

An anniversary parade will be held May 21 in Andover.

The department elected new officers at its annual meeting last month.

The new officers are: Curtis Dowling, chief; Wallace Barton, deputy chief; Jay Linndy, president; Robert Danek, vice president; Judith Willard, secretary; Melinda Hegener, correspond­ing secretary; Henry Parkington, treasurer.

Students art on exhibit ^D & L ’s Mancjtester store is currently hosting an

art exhibition for all public school children. The exhibition, located in the store’s front window, will be on display until April 26 and features art from students in grades kindergarten through grade 12.

RHAM team places firstRHAM High School had eight award winners and

placed first overall at the American Industrial Arts Students Association conference held earlier this month. The competition was held in East Hartford April 6-7.

Award winners include; Mark Beyerly, first place, industrial bowl written examination and second place in graphic logo; Andrew Gorski. first place, electomics and technical writing; Brian Johnson, first place, graphic logo; Abby Krist, first place, mass line production; Karen LaFountain, first place, extemporaneous speaking; Michael Steele, second place, bridge building; Ben Wilson, first place in drafting and computer aided design and third place in industrial bowl written exam; and Corey Wilson, first place, prepared speech and second place. Industrial bowl written exam.

Corwin to attend seminarLuene H. Corwin, dean of academic affairs at

Manchester Community College, has been selected as one of 30 national community college leaders to attend the Executive Leadership Seminar to be held June 19-24 in Newport Beach, pallf.

The seminar is sponsored by the League for Innovation in the Community College in cooperation with the University of Texas at Austin and the University of California at Berkeley.

in survey in 55th DistrictBy Andrew Yurkovskv Manchester Herald

Early results of a survey of voters in the 55th Assembly District show that most respond­ents oppose discrim ination against homosexuals but are not in favor of legislation to guaran­tee rights for homosexuals, state Rep. J. Peter Fusscas said.

A questions on gay rights is included in the annual question­naire Fusscas sent to some 10,000 voters in his district last week.

The 55th District encompasses Voting District 3 in the northeast section of Manchester and all of Bolton, Andover, Hebron and Marlborough.

Fusscas said early this week he had received about 900 responses so far and expected to receive

between 1,500 and 2,000.One question on homosexual

rights asks whether legislation to prevent discrimination would provide preferential treatment to homosexuals. On that question, opinion has been about split so far, Fusscas said. On the related question of whether a law is needed to protect homosexuals from discrimination, the re­sponse has been about 2-1 against such legislation.

Fusscas said he interprets responses to those two questions as indicating that voters are opposed to. d iscrim ination against homosexuals hut feel legislation is unnecessary.

There were^ several questions related to drug testing on the questionnaire. Fusscas said he didn’t have a tabulation on all

Ellen J. BuckleyEllen J. Buckley, 94, of 560 E.

Center St., died Friday at a local convalescent home.

She was bom in Manchester and was a lifelong resident. She was an active member of the Manchester Garden Club and had been known throughout the state for her floral designs. She also was a member of the Manchester Historical Society.

She was predeceased by a brother, William E. Buckley, a prominent educator and Man­chester historian who was the first president of the Manchester Historical Society. He died in January 1987.

She is survived by two ne­phews, Richard Buckley of Bol­ton and Walter Buckley of West Hartford; two ;pi«ces. Maril f i Langrill of Hingham, Mass., and Elizabeth Miller of West Spring- field. Mass.

The funeral is Monday at 10:30 a.m. from the John F. Tierney Funeral Home, 219 West Center St., followed by a Mass of Christian burial at 11 a.m. in St. Maurice Church, Bolton. Burial will be in St. Bernard’s Cemetery in Rockville. Calling hours are Monday from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m.

Hattie A. PeaseHattie A. Pease, 89, formerly of

Adelaide Road, died Friday in New York.

She was bom in Stafford Springs on Feb. 7, 1899, and she lived in Springfield, Mass., most of her life and in Manchester for 11 years before moving to New York two years ago.

Before retiring in 1965, she was a bookkeeper with Forbes and Wallace Co. in Springfield, Mass., and had been employed there for 20 years.

She is survived by a nephew. Clifford Leslie of Clifton Park. N.Y.; a niece, Marilyn King of San Jose, Caiif.; and several grandnieces and grandnephews.

She was the daughter of the late Wendell and Mary (Tupper) Pease. She was predeceased by two sisters, Estelle Carpenter and Marian Leslie; and a brother, Clifford Pease.

f- A graveside service will be held Monday at 1 p.m. at the West Stafford Cemetery in Stafford. There are no cailing hours.

Memorial contributions may be made to a charity of the donor’s choice.

The Hoimes Funeral Home, 400 Main St., is in charge of arrangements.

Paul MeyerALPINE, N.J. (AP) — Paul M.

Meyer, a concert pianist who played as an accompanist with Metropolitan Opera and the New York City Opera, died Wednes­day. He was 96.

Pawnshop mummy had brain abscessMEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — An

ancient mummy found in a pawnshop is likely the body of a man who died at the age of 35 and would have had a longer and more comfortable life in the age of antibiotics, university scient­ists say. ^

Memphis State University paid a Detroit pawnbroker $40,000 for the 2,300-year-old mummy two years ago and asked the Univer­sity of Tennessee, Memphis, to

mn a battery of tests.The medical school set up a

“ mummy team’ ’ in 1985 to conduct similar tests on an ancient head acquired by Mem­phis State’s Institute of Egyptian Art and Archaeology.

The team tested tissue and hair samples and took hundreds of X-rays, and announced Thursday that the Egyptian apparently died of a brain abscess caused by an ear infection.

questions, but most respondent.*; believe drug testing is permissa- ble when there is cause for such testing. Also, most respondents believe testing is necessary for those who hold Jobs where the public safety is at risk.

On AIDS, most respondents in the early tally were in favor of allowing children with AIDS to attend public schools, and most respondents also in favor of making it a criminal offense to kn o w i ng l y donat e AIDS- contaminated blood.

Fusscas said he hopes to have a complete tabulation of the results of his questionnarie within 30 days.

“ These (questions) are all controversial,” he said. “ A lot of them are moral issues, and I just want to get an idea of how my constituents view them.”

Fusscas, who has been a representative for nine years, said he has sent out a question­naire to voters from his district every year except for last year, when he was ill. The number of responses have ranged between 1.000 and 3,000.

Fusscas said he paid the $1,000 cost of mailing the questionnaire out of his own pocket. The printing was carried out as a service to the House Republicans, he said.

Fusscas said the responses to his questionnaire could alter his stands on some issues.

“ It might encourage some legislation to introduce. It may encourage me to vote in certain ways,” he said. “ Again, I ’ve been here long enough to know that no decision is cast in concrete.”

In MemoriamIn sad and loving memory of Ernest DeCioccio, Jr., who passed away on April 17, 1961.Your memory is as dear today.

As in the hour your passed away.Sadly missed.

Mother, Brothers & Sisters

In MemoriamJames D. Meacham

In loving memory of Grandfather, who passed away April 16, 1983.You are loved and missed dearly

as the days have turned into years. You are always in my

thoughts.Love. Lisa

In MemoriamIn sad and loving memory of James D. Meacham, who passed away on April 16,1983.

Always smiling, happy and content.

Loved and respected wherever he went.

Years will not darken or shadows dim.

The beautiful memories we have of him.

Sadiy Missed,Wife. Children, Grandchildren

By Andrew J. Davis Manchester Herald

The stateXommission on Hospitals and Health Care unanimously ap­proved a new rate order for Manches­ter Memorial Hospital Friday, more thanjive-and-a-half months after the order was originally scheduled to be approved.

The action came at a special commission meeting in Hartford at which seven other hospitals also had rate orders approved.

Manchester Memorial will increase inpatient rates to an average of about

$4,330 fot the remainder of the year. The rate order is retroactive to April 1.

The hospital was actually voted an increase of $3,960, but the figure was increased by the commission to allow the hospital to recoup losses caused from the failure to have a permanent rate order in effect since October, when this fiscal year began.

The hospital’s fiscal year runs from^ Oct. 1. 1987 through Sept. 30, 1988.

The decision ends a more than five-month drama. The hospital was originally ordered to cut inpatient rates about 45 percent — or.^,625.21

per patient from an average per patient bill of $3,711.52 during the last fiscal year.

* The hospital reached a tentative agreement with the hospital last month to increase inpatient rates to $3,990, but the figure was decreased $30 Monday at a commission meeting.

The $3,960 rate order represents an increase of $248.48 in the average inpatient bill over the last fiscal year.

"The $4,330 figure being allowed is an increase of $618.48.

The final order will increase inpa­tient rates more than 7 percent, and overall hospital rates, including out­

patient and psychiatric services about 9 percent. The rates will only be in effect until October, when new rate orders are expected.

Rate orders, on which inpatient charges are based, are set by the commission each year to determine hospitals’ charges to, patients for various services during the following year.

George Roy, hospital vice president and chief financial officer, and Andrew A, Beck, director of public relations, attended the meeting. Roy said after the meeting that he was pleased with the decision.

Calendars

ManchesterMonday

Eighth Utilities District, Mayfair Gardens, 7 p.m. Planning and Zoning Commission, Lincoln Center

hearing room, 7 p.m.Tuesday

Human Relations Commission. Municipal Build­ing coffee room. 8 p.m.Wednesday

Commission on the Handicapped, Senior Citizens’ Center. 7:30 p.m.

Housing Authority. Bluefield Drive. 7:30 p.m.

ThursdayBoard of Directplrs comment session. Municipal

BuildjbgTersS'prrn.Building Committee. Municipal Building coffee

o ^ . 7:30 p.m.Advisory Parks and Recreation Commission.

Lincoln Center gold room. 7; 30 p.m.

AndoverMonday

Planning and Zoning Commission. Town Office Building, 7:30 p.m.

TuesdayBoard of Finance, Town Office Building, 7 p.m.

’Thursday . . . . _Library Board. Andover Public Library. 7:30

p.m.

Bolton’Tuesday

Board of Selectmen, Community Hall, 8 p.m.

WednesdayZoning Commission, Community Hall, 7:30 p.m. Planning Commission. Community Hall. 8 p.m.

CoventryMonday

Town Council. Town Office Building. 7:30 p.m.

’Tuesday „' Zoning Board of Appeals, Town Office Building,7:30 p.m. „

Water Pollution Control Authority. Town Office Building, 7:30 p.m.

Town Hall Space Committee, Town Office Building. 7:30 p.m.

Wednesday .School Building Committee, Coventry High

School, 7:30 p.m. ,Conservation Commission, Town Office Building,

7:30 p.m.Parks and Recreation Commission. Patnots

Park, 7:30 p.m.

Thursday „Womei) Infants and Children, Town Office

Building, 1-2 p.m.

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State & Region

[taw asks Kaman about reportHARTFORD — State officials will meet with

Kaman Aerospace Corp. representatives Monday to discuss allegations that the company discharged polluted water into a Bloomfield aquifer and dumped cans containing poisonous chemicals at a landfill.

Kaman has denied the allegations raised in a report published Sunday by The Hartford Courant.

The state Department of Environmental Protec­tion asked lor the meeting. The DEP said Thursday it would attempt "to clarify the situation and correct any existing or potential problems.”

The DEP said it also would ask the Courant for information it collected in its story about Kaman.

Courthouse expansion plannedHARTFORD — A congressional subcommittee

has been asked to approve a $12.7 million expenditure to expand the federal courthouses in Bridgeport and Hartford.

US. Rep. Nancy Johnson, D-Conn., Thursday told the House Subcommittee on Treasury, Postal Service and General Government meeting in Washington, D.C.,that the courthouses in Bridge­port and Hasrtford are among the busiest in the nation.

The General Services Administration has asked for $7.7 million to expand the Hartford courthouse and $5 million for the Bridgeport building.

24 hurt as school buses crashMIDDLETOWN — Two school buses collided

Friday setting off an accident that sent 24 people to area hospitals including 22 students, police said.

A school bus carrying students from Wilson Junior High School rammed into the back of another one from the same school that had slowed to allow a car to make a turn around 3 p.m. Friday, Lt. George K. Lang said.

None of the injuries appeared serious, and the 24 people were taken to area hospitals for treatment, Lang said.

The impact forced the first bus into a pickup truck, which struck a car that had stopped to make a left turn, Lang said.

No charges had been filed against the driver of the second bus, Jody B. Hickman, 23, of Middletown, pending the results of an investigation, Lang said.

Millstone shutdown continuesWATERFORD — The sjitff^wn of the Millstone 3

nuclear power plant wiUxontinue forat leasta week as workers repairs water leak, a Northeast Utilities spokesman said.

"W e found a valve leaking and to repair the valve we must bring it to a cold shutdown," NU spokesman Anthony Castagno said.

Castagna said work will begin Saturday afternoon to repair the leak which was discovered in a valve near a pipe leading to the plant’s reactor. He said work is expected to be complete within three to four days.

A leaky valve discovered Thursday was fixed, but plant workers discovered that it wasn’t the only source of the water leak.

FBI agent held In shopliftingGUILFORD — An FBI agent who allegedly

switched price tags on a calculator to save himself $50 has been charged with shoplifting, police said.

Edmond P. Gavin, 36, of Madison, an FBI agent based in New Rochelle, N.Y., is scheduled to appear Monday at Superior Court in West Haven on a charge of sixth-degree larceny, according to police.

Gavin, a former Madison police officer, was allegedly spotted changing price tags on a calculator at a Bradlees department store here April 6, police said.

Gavin was detained by the security officer after purchasing the calculator for $50 less than its actual price, police said. He identified himself as a FBI agent and then asked the security guard not to press charges, police said.

y> t » » tm m »> • » i * f , i f

99-48 vote sOnds budget to Senate

Woman surrenders after siege in office

AP photo

BUDGET PUSH — Rep. Janet Polinski, D-Waterford, co-chairwoman of the Ap­propriations Committee speaks Friday in an effort to push the Democrats' $6.29 biiiion budget for 1988-89. Repubiicans objected, but a 99-48 vote sent the spending plan to the Senate.

HARTFORD (AP) — Demo­crats pushed their $6.29 billion state budget for 1986-89 through the House of Representatives Friday over the objections of Republicans who said it was balanced by gimmicks that would require huge tax increases next year.

The budget, which now goes to ' the Senate, was approved on a 99-48 vote after 8‘/4 hours of ^bate. One Democrat voted qgainst it, while 12 Republicans voted for it.

Republicans predicted the budget would cost Democrats at the polls in this legislative elec­tion year. Democrats said they wei«5happy to run on the budget.

’F p m ^ e income match spend­ing, the Democrats took $73.8 million from the budget reserve, or “ rainy day” fund, which was only supposed to be used to pay off future deficits.

They also depleted a $70 million property tax relief fund set up less than a year ago that was supposed to provide local relief in the coming years. Just $18 million of the fund will be used for prof»rty tax relief. Another $32 million goes into next year’s budget and the other $20 million is being set aside to avoid a deficit in this year’s budget.

The Democrats, who control the House 91-60, said they had little choice, especially with predictions of a downturn in the economy in the coming year.

“ Our high-flying economy is beginning to recede,” said Rep. Janet Polinsky, D-Waterford, co­chairwoman of the budget­writing Appropriations Commit­tee. “ We knew it couldn’t go on forever.

“ Yet, our responsibilities to the needs of so many does not diminish with the currents of the economic forecasts. Good year or bad, this all takes money, lots of money.”

Deputy Minority Leader R.E. Van Norstrand, R-Darien, called the budget “ garbage.”

“ It doesn’t work^ it doesn’t balance, it’s a fraud,” Van Norstrand said. “ If you vote for it, you ought to be indicted.”

House Minority Leader Robert G. Jaekle, R-Stratford, said the problem with the budget was simple: “ We’re just plain spend­ing more money than we’re going to bring in next year.”

A year from now, said Rep. Craig P. Taylor, R-Bristol, “ we will have no other alternative than a tax increase.”

Republicans offered several amendments, aimed at limiting the growth in spending and eliminating the so-called gim­micks employed to balance the budget.

Democrats, who control the House 91-60, said the budget was as lean as possible. Itcallsfora 12 percent increase in spending over the current year.

Polinsky noted that her com­mittee had trimmed the package by $35 million, compared with the budget submitted by Democratic Gov. William A. O’Neill. Some of the reductions were achieved by delaying the start of programs. And there were scores of posi­tions eliminated from the gover­nor’s budget.

The budget contains money for about 1,100 new state employees. Polinsky said.

Federal indictments expected soon in New England mob investigation

WASHINGTON (AP) - Thg entire leadership of the New England branch of La (3osa Nostra is under grand jury investigation and subject to in­dictments in the "relatively near future,” a top FBI official said Friday.

James F. Ahearn, the FBI agent in charge of the Boston regional office, said after testify­ing before a Senate subcommit­tee that the federal probe in­cludes Raymond J. “ Junior” Patriarca, the reputed head of the New England mob, and his 10 top lieutenants in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut,

Ahearn declined further com­ment on the investigation or who may be indicted.

An FBI report submitted to the Senate Governmental Affairs in­ves tiga tion s subcom m ittee backed up Ahearn’s contentions. It said, in part, “ The new leadership is subject to indict­ment in the near future,”

Meanwhile, other FBI docu-

ments submitted to the Senate panel said that reputed Connecti­cut mobster William Phillip Grasso has emerged as the No. 2 figure in the Patriarca crime family, filling a vacuum created by convictions of Boston mob chief Gennaro Angiulo.

Grasso is now considered "un- derboss” of the New England o r g a n i z a t i o n , s e c ond- i n - command to Patriarca of Provi­dence, R.I.

Angiulo had been the underboss in the Patriarca organization until his 1986 racketeering convictions.

Ahearn, in an interview follow­ing his Senate testimony, said the conviction of Angiulo and his top lieutenants has left the lucrative Boston branch of the Patriarca family without a clear leader.

FBI documents identified six “ caporegimes” sharing power in Boston. They are Charles Quin- tina, Robert Francis Carrozza. Biagio DiGiacomo. Vincent M.

Ferrara. Salvatore Giglia and Joseph Anthony Russo.

Other capos, according to the FBI. are Nicholas Louis Bianco and Edward J. Romano, both of the Providence, R.I.. branch, and Angelo laconi of Worcester. Mass. Grasso allegedly controls the sections of Connecticut that are in the Patriarca organization.

Ahearn described the new hierarchy since the conviction of Angiulo and the death of Ray­mond L.S. Patriarca, the long­time head of the New England organization, as filled with weak leaders. Patriarca’s son al­legedly took over the organiza­tion following his father’s death in July 1984.

“ They certainly don’t have the respect of the (New York) families, or that of their soldiers, not like the old guys had,’ ’ Ahearn said. ’.’Conviction of experienced ieaders has forced less capable into leadership roles for which they are not prepared.”

NEW BRITAIN (AP) — A distraught constituent carrying a shotgun burst into U.S. Rep. Nancy Johnson’s district office Friday and held a pregnant staff aide hostage for about 90 minutes before surrendering, police said.

The Republican congresswoman was not in the office during the episode and none of the four female staffers present when the siege began about 9:30 a m. was injured, police said. The 16-gauge pump shotgun wasn’t loaded, police said.

Donna Mullen, the office manager, walked out soon after the gunwoman arrived, telling her she was going to get Johnson. Mullen then summoned police. Two others scrambled out a window 15 minutes later while the gunwoman talked through a closed door to a police negotiator in the hallway.

The pregnant staff member, Nancy Andrews, 24. of Unionville, locked herself in an inner office midway through the incident, police said.

Johnson talked to the gunwoman over the telephone and convinced her to surrender by pronrf ising to meet with her about her complaint that she tiad been hypnotized against her will, said ’Thomas McLaughlin. Johnson’s .district director.

The gunwoman was identified as Elizabeth Hill. 39, of Burlington, a rural town in the southwest corner of Johnson’s 6th District.

“ She came through the door ... and said to my staff people. T m not going to use it, you don’t have to be afraid. But I want to See the congresswoman. You won’t make an appointment, you won’t let me see her, so I ’m going to see her.’ ” Johnson said.

Johnson, who went to police headquarters alter being reached while traveling in the district, said that during their telephone conversation. Hill

Rights activists recali struggies

HARTFORD (AP) — Dressed in a dark business suit and sitting on a stage Friday, Bernard Lafayette recalled a summer night in Alabama nearly 25 years ago when he was beaten for being a civil rights activist.

The attack occurred on June 12. 1963, in Selma, where Lafayette had been assigned to register voters for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.

He was attacked outside his home and struck three times on the head with the butt of a gun. Each time after he was struck and knocked to the ground, he stood to face his attacker, who eventually became frightened and fled.

Lafayette was hospitalized and received 11 stitches. The FBI later told him that he had en one of three activists slated to be killed that night, but two of them survived. The sole victim was Medgar W- Evers, a field secretary for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, who was gunned down by a sniper in Jackson, Miss.

“ As a result of the experience, people really began to rally (to the cause,” Lafayette said. “ There was no turning back once people internal­ized the movement.”

About 400 people listened as Lafayette and other original members of SNCC talked about their experiences during a panel discussion on voter registration in the South during the 1960s.

Their dialogue was part of a three-day conference at Trinity College, called: “ We Shall Not Be Moved. ’The Life and Times of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee 1960-19M.”

The conference began Thursday and was to end Saturday. It is the largest gathering of former SNCC members in 20 years. Many former SNCC members have gone on to hold top positions in government or other organizations, while retaining their interest in advancing human rights.

Among those attending were: Julian Bond. James Forman and Tom Hayden. Bond is a state legislator in Georgia, while Hayden serves in the California legislature. Also expected to particpate Friday was Kwame Toure, formerly Stokely Carmichael, who split from SNCC to join the Black Panthers. He now lives in Guinea.

rambled incoherently about having written to her two years ago about her complaints without getting any satisfaction.

'"There’s a whole picture in her mind about how she has been used and abused,” Johnson said. “ She

'^thinks she must have some rights and I ’m the government and ... she wants me to do something to protect her against being hypnotized against her will.”

Johnson told Hill they could meet face-to-face, but only after she relinquished her weapon. Johnson then donned a bullet-proof vest and went to the converted factory building that houses her district

office. By the time she arrived. Hill had surrendered to police.

“ I just wanted to talk to the congresswoman,” Hill told reporters as she was escorted from the building to a waiting patrol car.

Hill was admitted to the New Britain General Hospital for psychiatric evaluation, Lt. James Ahern, a police spokesman, said. She faces charges of threatening and unlawful restraint upon her hospital release, he said.

“ I ’m going to meet with her face to face because I told her I would,’; Johnson said. “ I ’m anxious she get to some appropriate help.”

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SpeaKes quit* Merrill LynchNEW YORK — Former White House spokesman

Larry Speakes quit as chief spokesman for Merrill Lynch & Co. on Friday, days after he created an uproar by admitting he twice concocted quotes for President Reagan.

Speakes said in a statement that his resignation was “ the best course of action for Merrill Lynch and for me personally. Merrill Lynch Is a great firm and the industry leader, and I ’ve enjoyed being part of

The announcement reflected intense pressure on Speakes to resign as head of communications at the Wall Street investment giant because of his disclosures in a book about his tenure as White House spokesman. He said in the book that he had attributed to Reagan comments the president never made.

Mob, Teamsters link claimedWASHINGTON — The former underboss of the

Cleveland mob testified Friday that organized crime played a large role in Teamsters union affairs, including the elections of former president Roy L. Williams and current president Jackie Presser.

Angelo Lonardo, 77, told senators he was part of a 1981 effort to line up organized crime support for Williams' successful candidacy.

And when it became clear that an indictment against Williams would force him to step down, Lonardo said he traveled to Chicago to obtain organized crime’s backing of Cleveland native Presser.

Presser, who currently is under indictment, was the “ protege” of a man affiliated with the Cleveland mob, and It was felt his election “ would increase the Cleveland family’s prestige and respect,” Lonardo said.

Settlers walk near Arab townJERUSALEM — Dozens of Israeli settlers,

guarded by as many soldiers, marched Friday near the Arab town where 15-year-old settler Tirza Porat and two Palestinians were killed in an exchange of gunfire and rocks last week.

Their purpose was to demonstrate that Jews could walk freely in the occupied West Bank. Army radio said they objected to the large army guard for the mass re-enactment of the hike by Miss Porat and a group of .friends.

Israeli troops wounded two Palestinians in scattered violence Friday after midday prayers on the Moslem sabbath, hospital officials reported. The army deployed hundreds of soldiers and surrounded major mosques to keep order in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Fetus research called offWASHINGTON — A decision to temporarily bar

federal researchers from implanting brain Ussue from aborted fetuses into patients with Parkinson’s disease focused renewed attention Friday on ethical questions involving the emerging technique.

The first reported use of the experimental procedure was in January when surgeons in Mexico City said they had injected tissue from a miscarried fetus into the brains of two Parkinson’s sufferers. The researchers said the results were promising.

Researchers in Sweden also have reported using a similar technique, but there have been no documented instances of it being done on humans in the United States.

Phllly gangs starts retreatPH ILAD ELPH IA — Eighty young people

boarded buses Friday to escape — at least for the 10 days of their mountain retreat — the turfs of the gangs that bring violence and drugs to their urban neighborhoods.

“ The thing I want to get out of this is to better my life,” 15-year-old Michael Williams said as he waited to board one of the three buses going to the Pocono Mountains in northeastern Pennsylvania.

Nearly all the 15- to 20-year-olds taking part in the "Youth at Risk” program have been suspended from school at some point.

W If f

r .V

BOMBING AFTERMATH — Cars outside the USO club in Napies, Itaiy, are burned and damaged after Thursday night’s

photo

bomb attack. Five peopie, including an American servicewoman, died in the explosion.

Terrorist sought in USO biastNAPLES, Italy (AP) - Police

said Friday they believe a Japa­nese terrorist accused of attack­ing Western embassies around the world parked a car bomb outside the Naples USO that killed an American servicewo­man and four Italians.

Two Arab groups claimed responsibility for the explosion Thursday night in a narrow street that runs past the the club, where a party was being held to welcome destroyer USS Paul to port. Seventeen people were wounded, including four U.S. sailors.

All five people killed last were just outside the USO. They included Angela Santos, 21, of Ocala, Fla., who held the rank of radioman 3rd class and was based at the Navdl^GOmmunica- tions Area Master Station in Naples. '

A man speaking accented Eng­lish telephoned a French hews agency office in Rjime on Friday and said the bomb pas planted by a group called Organization of Jihad Brigades, “ fh e American imperialists must die today, two years after their barbarous at­

tack against the Libyan Arab state,” he said.

His reference was to the U.S. bombing of Libya on April 15, 1986, which was intended to punish the radical Arab nation for alleged sponsorship of interna­tional terrorism.

In Beirut, a statement signed by a group calling itself the Islamic Jihad Organization for. the Support of the Oppressed on Earth said it “ claims responsibil­ity for the attack launched by our brethren holy warriors in Italy apinst American targets in the city of Naples in which several imperialist soldiers were killed or wounded.”

The typewritten statement, in Arabic, was delivered to the Beirut bureau of the Italian news

^‘''agency ANSA. Its language indi­cated the group was made up of Vri>-Iranian Shiite Moslems.

Libya’s ambassador to Italy denied involvement in the bomb­ing by Col. Moammar Gadhafi’s government.

Italian investigators said Fri­day that Junzo Okudaira of the Japanese Red Army, which has links to terrorists in Lebanon,

was the prime suspect in the Naples attack.

Romano Argenio and Ansoino Andreassl of Italy’s anti-terrorist police said they believed Oku­daira, 39, had accomplices and both claims of responsibility were being taken seriously.

In December, Okudaira was charged in Italy with bomb and rocket attacks on the U.S. and British embassies in Rome last June during the annual summit of Western leaders in Venice. Sev­eral people were wounded.

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IN TOW — A Kuwaiti minesweeping tug tows the crippled U.S. frigate Samuel B. Roberts toward Dubai on Friday, a day after the U.S. ship struck a mine. The incident injured 10 sailors and damaged the hull and engine room.

H o s t a g e s p le a d fo r th e ir lives

ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) — Two hostage passengers on a hijacked Kuwait Airways jet pleaded for their lives via radio Friday and urged the Kuwaiti government to give in to the demands of the Shiite Moslem gunmen.

Algerian mediators shuttled between the booby- trapped jet and Kuwaiti officials on Friday, the 11th day of the crisis.

The masked gunmen who commandeered the jumbo jet on a flight from Bangkok to Kuwait on April 5 want Kuwait to release 17 terrorists, convicted of bombing the U.S. and French embassies in Kuwait in 1982.

“ In the name of God the merciful, I greet my family and my friends and I ask the Kuwaiti authorities to free the 17 prisoners held in Kuwaiti prisons,” said Soleiman Mohammed Soleiman al-Mashari, one hostage, in a message totfce control tower, “ In the event of refusal, they are going to kill us.”

In a second message, a man identifying himself as Mohammed Ahmed Al-Ajem said; “ I am one of the hostages from the Boeing. I greet my family, large and small and I ask the Kuwaiti authorities to free the prisoners in the prisons. Without that, the kidnappers have decid^ to kill us.”

An estimated 31 passengers and four crew members were being held in grim conditions by eight hijackers, armed with guns and grenades.

One hostage, the male cousin of the emir of Kuwait, shook continuously, could not speak and “ just cries all the time,” a released captive said.

The Boeing 747, which had 112 passengers aboard when it began its journey, was diverted to Mashhad in northeastern Iran, then to Larnaca, Cyprus. Fifty-seven passengers were released in Iran and another 13 in Cyprus. Two passengers were killed in Cyprus.

The air pirates have threatened to kill the remaining hostages and blow up the plane if their demands are not met.

By The Associated Press

Michael Dukakis slammed the Reagan administration Friday for putting “ drug-peddling” Pan­amanian strongman Manuel An­tonio Noriega on the U.S. payroll, but Vice President George Bush retorted that it is Libya that has been propping up-N«riega with millions of doll^s.

Jesse Jackson made Ton of efforts by fellow Democrats Dukakis and Sen. Albert Gore Jr. to claim leadership in the fight against drugs, saying they are captains and lieutenants while “ I ’m the general in this war.”

As the presidential campaign moved into the final weekend before the pivotal New York primary on Tuesday, the rhetoric was tamed.

For Republicans, it was a day for unity.

Democrats aimed their fire mostly at the Reagan administra­tion, drug pushers and the owners of Eastern Airlines — not at each other.

Democratic front-runner Du­kakis talked to Brooklyn junior high school students about drug abuse, using wife Kitty’s 26-year dependence on diet pills as an example. The Massachusetts governor used the low-key ap­proach of a talk-show host in discussing drug abuse, such as crack, the potent cocaine derivative.

“ Crack can kill you, right? Who was killed by crack — Lenny Bias, right?” Dukakis said of the former University of Maryland basketball star. “ In about four minutes, that young man’s life was snuHed out.”

Dukakis tossed aside a pre­pared speech on drugs, in which he criticized the Reagan adminis­tration for paying Noriega money through the Central Intelligence Agency before he was indictedJoF drug-running. •ni?

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against drugs? And why did you pay $200,000 a year to a dope­peddling, gun-running Panaman­ian dictator?” Dukakis’ speech said.

Then he flew to Albany to meet with Gov. Mario Cuomo.

For his part, Jackson continued his attack on drugs at the South Jamaica housing project in Queens, where he compared drug dealers to members of the Ku Klux Klan, who harassed and killed blacks while wearing white hoods.

“ Ropes, sheets and hoods re­present death,” Jackson told a cheering crowd. “ We never lost as many lives to Southern rope” as to drugs.

“ The dope pusher does not wear sheets and hoods, the dope pusher is the hood who lives in the neighborhood,” said Jackson.

Bush, in a speech before the American Society of Newspaper Ed itors, said D em ocratic

charges that the administration had propped up Noriega are “ demagogic statements.”

“ It is this administration that has brought Noreiga to justice, or at least taken the first step,” Bush said. “ Noriega should go and Noriega will go.”

Bush added that Noriega has resisted the U.S. economic pres­sure because of outside help.

“ Several reliable sources indi­cate that he is receiving millions of dollars in support from Libya,” Bush said. He did not elaborate on his sources.

Otherwise, the Republican nominee-to-be talked of pulliM the party together for the fall general election.

Bush had lunch with van­quished rival Sen. Bob Dole In his Capitol office, standing together for the cameras as Dole pro­claimed, “ We’re ready to go to work for (George Bush.”

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OPINION Your Neighbors’ Views

Open Fomm

Thoughts on Bennett’s IdeaTo (he Editor:

Re;\ The April 7 comment by U.S. Education Secretary William J. Bennett on his proposal, “ Pco,iect Voluntas.”

Parochial schools are urged to enroll the toughest public school students and ask for partial compensation from the government.

Reading this statement, my first thought; “ Wherefore art thou come?” I can't believe what I read.

“ Challenge is simple,” said the secretary. “ Show educators around the country what works.”

Beautiful oratory. I just love it and recognize the facts as true, but why the suggested bargain prices for something that is considered the Cadillac of the education field? Not three-quarterpayment, not full payment, “ but half what it would cost to teach the students in public schools.”

What is the planned consideration to be used as guidelines in the placement of the public students?

What are the present estimated numbers of so-qualified 5 to 10 percent of public school students in the state of Connecticut that would be eligible for this suggested enrollment?

What has happened to separation of the church and the state?

I came from a geperation of parents who believed and taught us to pay, pray, obey — church and school— and passed on this faith through the Catholic schools with lots of sacrifice — no assistance but belief and,action.

I realize, as I reminisce today, how privileged I was to have been a graduate of St. Joseph’s School. This is the same school where my dreams and goals of hairdressing and cosmetology originated — and where my Catholic values were instilled.

Mass and Rosary gave me the strength when I needed help, through the tough times in the high-paced business world for 30 years. My European exposure and education led to my expertise as a hair colorist, developing my teaching and consulting career throughout the northeastern states. I was also privileged to attend the Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland, where my Polish heritage became a reality.

My special thanks and gratitude to the Felician Sisters of St. Francis, who devoted their lives to the students, and to this day hold this hbnored position in our field of Catholic education and tradition. God bless. You are wonderful.

All in all. boiled down, the "Catholic education” can be called and referred to as the learning of the faith from our parents’ generation, and then sharing the faith with our generation, and then passing of the faith to our children’s generation.

Our Catholic educators must not drop their scholarly pursuits. Elbert Hubbard said, “ ’There is no failure except in no longer t^ ing .” Lose your scholars, you eventually lose your students. Lose your students, you eventually lose a generation of the Catholic leaders. And youth and leadership is our future life and existence.

“ Lots of doors will be opened to you — and you will open lots of them for others. I will pray for you.”

That was said by Sister Bonaventa on graduation day June 1932. Thanks. Sister Bonaventa.

Teii Ivaniski 20 Eric Circle

Vernon

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PENNY M S IE F F E R T............................................. PublisherG EO R G E T C H A P P E L L ..................................................... EditorD O U G LA S A B E V IN S ....................................................Executive EditorMARIE P G R A D Y ......................................................................City EditorALEXANDER G IR E L L I....................................................Assoclete Editor

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Tipping point’ for JacksonBy Chuck Stone

That Jesse Jackson has earned the right to be on the Democratic Party ticket in November should no longer be a debatable issue. Sweat equity is a powerful reason.

If further legitimacy is needed, a Roper poll for U.S. News & World Report confers it by showing a Dukakis-Jackson ticket beating a Bush-Any Running Mate You Name ticket, 47 to 42 percent. It’s a new Ameifca.

Yet racism can still destabilize legitimacy.

Peel away the layers of argu- mentsagainst Jesse Jackson, and they come back at variations of a theme — Jackson’s skin color.

Their subtlety is multi-colored; the venomous attacks on Jack­son’s positions, the protests that he lacks elective experience, the “ separate but equal” treatment given Jpckson by the press, a winking at Albert Gore’s outrage­ous pandering to ethnic divisive­ness, the argumenum ad homniem.

Example; Sen. Paul Simon’s wife compared Jackson’s oratori­cal skills to Adolf Hitler’s. Colum­nist Charles Krauthammer com­pared Jackson’s “ power and passion” to Benito Mussolini’s and Juan Peron’s, and called J a c k s o n ‘ ‘ c h e a p ’ ’ and “ dangerous.”

Example; Marvin Kalb, *0 former “ Meet the Press ’’ modera­tor and the current director of a Harvard press-government pro­gram, interviewed all of the presidential candidates for PBS. Jackson was the only candidate whom Kalb asked, “ Would you drop the bomb?” Not once, but twice. In another interview, Ben Wattenberg accused Jackson of embracing Moammar Gadhafi,

when Jackson had never even met Gadhafi.

Example; Columnist Paul Greenberg indicted Jackson for “ rendering the black vote mean­ingless by appropriating it for himself.” In the ghetto, that kind of Nordic tripe is known as racism. Jackson hasn’t reduced black voters to non-cognitive robots. They’re supporting him because of their pride in his presidential-like conduct. Other ethnic groups assiduously prac­tice ethnic fidelity at the ballot box. (Shall I name them?) Why can’t blacks be just as American?

Example; “ Misgivings” about Jackson’s lack of previous elec­tive experience are repeatedly cited. Dwight Eisenhower had no previous elective experience, and nobody raised that issue. Ronald Reagan had “ previous elective experience,” yet he has presided over the biggest budget deficit in American history. His adminis­tration is the sleaziest ever, and has set a record for the most officials under investigation and indictment.

Example; Jackson’s deplora­ble canard, “ Hymietown,” his earlier embrace of Yassir Arafat and Louis Farrakhan, and his praise for Fidel Castro still plague him. They were mistakes. He admits it and has tried to distance himself from his egregious indis­cretions, just as Lyndon B. Johnson moved away from his earlier segregationist record. Se­nate Majority Leader Robert Byrd wasonce a member of the Ku Klux Klan, an organization that lynched blacks. He shrugs ifo ff as a “ youthful indiscretion.” Butnot one of the groups or individuals criticizing Jackson have ever denounced Byrd for his former

KKK embrace. (That applies especially to Gore.)

Enough examples. They’re only the tip of racism’s iceberg.

Jackson’s real problem is the “ tipping point.” Whenever a neighborhood or a school exceeds a certain percentage of blacks (it varies with the region), that tipping threshold sets in motion a white flight that accelerates segregation.

Jackson’s “ tippingpoint” came on March 26, when he won Michigan. That’s whenhe became not just a serious candidate, but a serious threat.

Despite the compassion and fairness of those white Americans who are voting for Jackson, he is still being vetoed by the media, the vast majority of whitecolumnists, and the Democratic Party’s power structure.

Their tipping point has already tipped.

Chuck Stone is a senior editor for the Philadelphia Daily News.

Letters to the editorThe Manchester Herald wel­

comes original letters to the editor.

Letters should be brief and to the point. They should be typed or neatly handwritten, and. for ease in editing, should be double­spaced. Letters must be signed with name, address and daytime t e l e p h o n e n u m b e r ( f o r verification).

‘The Herald reserves the right to edit letters in the interests of brevity, clarity and taste.

Address letters to; Open Fo­rum, Manchester Herald. P.O. Box 591, Manchester, CT 06040.

What’s your opinion on the increase in the price of postage stamps?

I

“Well, tXguess it was coming. Elverything else is going up. You have to get into the crowd and get your stamps.

— Ann Runde Adelaide Street

Retired

“It doesn’t bother me. I don't use it much." — Barbara Parsons

Pine Street Not working

“ I think it’s ridiculous because every time they need money they think of these new ways to go about it and to me it just seems l ike they ’ re spending all the money

. on themselves and they’re not doing any­thing for us as you can tell by looking at these streets. They say it’s benefiting us but I don’t see how it is.”

— Cynthia Reed Homestead Street

Waitress and mother

tf “ Well, I went in to mail something the other day and just made it right before the deadline when they close from 1 to 2. When they let me out of the door I saw a whole lot of people coming in. They wanted just to buy stamps and I could hear them growling. A lot of people can’t make it until their lunch time. It’s a pain in the neck.”

— Elaine Wandych Irving Street Homemaker

“ I look at it this way. You can’t go anywhere else for 25 cents. It's still the cheapest means of transportation, and own­ing a business in town it's I still the cheapest way to get iTly^ills out to my customers. You couldn’t go to Hawaii for 25 cents.”

— James Orfitelli Warren Street

President, Royal Ice Cream

“ I don’t see any prob­lem with it. You have to pay for the service you get.

— Rev. James Meek Ferguson Road

Pastor of Community Baptist Church

U.N. refugee chief bowed to pressureW ASHINGTON-Re­

fugee experts are re­signing from the United Nations because they say the office charged with protecting refu­gees is bowing to coun­tries that refuse to ac­cept their fair share.

The discontent inside the office of the U.N.High Commissioner for Refugees flared in January when High Commissioner Jean-Pierre Hocke burned almost all the 138,000 copies of the agency’s official maga­zine “ Refugees.”

Hocke’s official reason was that a story on evolving refugee policy in West Germany was out of date. But others inside the agency told our reporter Sally Dinkel that Hocke was afraid the story would embarrass West Gemany because it revealed that the country had effectively closed its borders to all but a trickle of refugees.

According to a copy of the magazine that escaped Hocke's fire) jWest Germany now requires visas Of all refugees who want to enter the country, but West German embassies abroad have been ordered not to issue visas unless the refugee will serve the immediate interests of West Ger­many. The number of deportations from West Germany is also on the rise.

^ ,lJa c k

Anderson

There is no U.N. requirement that member nations accept a certain

written by Yefine Zarjevski, Who had been the agency’s representative to that country.

Other officials, who spoke on the condition that they not be identified, cited Hocke’s controversial reorgani­zation plan as another reason some employees are leaving the agency. He has appointed several highly paid consultants to reorganize the agency, ignoring objections and advice from longtime staffers.

Workers also reportedly have been alienated by Hocke’s plan to keep a low profile when it comes to protect-

we flew to Geneva, where his office is located.

Old secrets are outSome of the most in-demand files in

the National Archives, according to archivist John TayloT, are documents from the old Office of Strategic Services. Thousands of them were ordered declassified by the late William Casey while he was director of the Central Intelligence Agency.

While poring over some of these records, author Chris Simpson found the details of Operation Bloodstone. Under Bloodstone, American officials recruited large numbers of Nazis and Nazi collaborators to work for the U.S. intelligence network after World War IT. One early recruit was Reinhard Gehlen, Adolf Hitler’s senior military intelligence officer on the eastern front. Gehlen fed the American information about the Soviet Union in exchange for protection. William Casey was a member of the OSS branch that had a direct liaison with Gehlen.

In another Cold War operation, the United States took imoney that was confiscated fromrthe Nazis and gave it to Roman Catholic leaders to help them turn an election in Italy that communists were predicted to win. Some of the money rightfully be­longed to Jews, from whom the Nazis had confiscated it.

R o n ^ mellow a$ bishops begin their visitsBv George W The Assocli ed

^rnellPress

NEW Y O R i^ U.S. bishops making obligatory trek^to Rome are finding that Pope John Paul II is happier with their church than some had supposed.

Nevertheless, their representatives have been summoned for a special meeting next year with him about the whole situation.

Indications had arisen in several recent diciplinary cases of strains between the Vatican and this coun­try’s Catholicism, including John Paul’s rebuke to dissent on his visit last year.

But as the bishops began their once-every-five years “ ad limina’ ’ visits, the pope was said to seem highly upbeat about the state of the American church.

He “ seems to have a very strong, postitive estimate of the church in the United States since his trip,” says Archbishop John May of St. Louis, president of the Natibnal Conference of Catholic Bishops.

“ I got the impression he was a little irked by people who had filled him with all kinds of warnings and apprehensions,” May said.

He said the bishops welcome a special meeting with the pope next year, an unusual summit session John Paul announced last month to 21

Midwestern bishops at the close of their group’s visit.

They were the first a series of such callers to continue through October in which all the U.S. bishops, in rotation, visit the pope.

In interviews with the initial return­ing group from Kansas, Missouri, Iowa and Nebraska, the National Catholic Reporter said they were elated by the “ open and warm atmosphere” of the meetings.

“ Several said they were apprehen­sive going in but left with a far greater sense that the pontiff supports the thrust and direction of U.S. Catholi­cism,” the paper summarized.

They “ said the pope left them with the distinct impression he thought he had been ill-served by some in Rome who had painted a dire image of Catholic life in the United States...

“ To the contrary, John Paul said he found an energetic and faithful church ... committed to serving the needs of the poor.”

His announcement of the 1989 meeting came as no surprise, as it had been suggested by U.S. bishops last spring.

At the time, various concerns about relations with the Vatican had been brewing, including its ouster of a Washington, D.C., theologian, the Rev. Charles Curran, and restric­tions, later lifted, on battle Archbi­

shop Raymond Hunthausen.’Those issues have quieted, how­

ever, and May said the summit meeting was not focused on any crisis in the church, as have been some such sessions with bishops in Brazil and Holland.

He said the pope never mentioned the rift that has developed among U.S. bishops over a statement issued in December by their 50-member admi­nistrative board on AIDs, but that it was discussed with Vatican doctrinal officials.

They expressed “ concern about the apparent disagreement” among bi­shops about the document, he said. The document emphasized pre­marital chastity and fidelity in marriage, but some bishops objected to its tolerating information about condoms in public education about AIDS.

Meanwhile, with the number of active U.S. cardinals down to three, speculation rose that the pope may soon appoint new ones in mis country and elsewhere. Worldwide) there are only 98 cadinals younger than 80, the maximum age for eligibility to vote for a pope, while the minimum number set for that task is 120.

Among the leading prospects for “ red hats” in this country are Archbishops James Hickey of Wa­shington, D.C., Roger Mahoney of Los

Angeles, Edmund Szoka of Detroit and May.

However, retired cardinals still are living in Detroit, St. Louis and Los Angeles, and the usual custom is not to name another in their sees in their lifetimes.

Philadelphia also has a retired cardinal, John Krol, but he stepped down only last year, and his replace­ment, Archbishop Anthony J. Bevilac- qua, is likely considered too new on the job for elevation now.

Other possibilities are Minneapolis Archbishop John R. Roach and Baltimore Archbishop William D. Borders, although their progressive leanings may be against them, and Archbishop Patrick Flores of San Antonio.

Modest recoveryA modest recovery in gross domes­

tic investment begap in Latin Amer­ica in 1984 and continued in 1985, reaching nearly $130 billion that year. The rise, however, failed to continue in 1986, says the Inter-American Development Bank. Increases re­corded in 1986 in Argentina, Chile, Peru and Venezuela were offset by a significant decline in Mexico, a smaller drop in Colombia, and virtu­ally no change in Brazil.

Church Bidletiii BcMird

First Baptist Church’The following events are scheduled for this week

at First Baptist Church of Manchester;Sunday — 9:30 a.m., Sunday school classes; 11

a.m.. worship with Dr. Bill Scott, pastor, preaching “ The Way; ” nursery care provided; 5 p.m.. Music Council; 7 p.m., Manchester Community College will present a program of sacred music, followed by refreshments. '

Monday — 1 p.m.. Overeaters Anonymous. Tuesday — 1 p.m., O.A.; 6:30 p.m., church

visitation.Wednesday — 1 p.m., O.A.; 6 p.m., graded choirs;

Weekly Workers/Outreach ’ITaining; 7 p.m., prayer meeting, Bible study; G.A.; R.A.; Mission Friends; 8 p.m., adult choir.

Thursday — 8 p.m., O.A.Friday — 1 p.m., O.A.

St. Mary’s Episcopal ChurchHere are the activities scheduled for the coming

week at St. Mary’s Episcopal Church;Sunday — 7; 30 and 9:30 a.m., holy eucharist; 11

am., adult forum; 6;30p.m., PRISM; 7p.m., youth group.

Monday — 7:10 p.m., evening prayer; 7:30 p.m., vestry: chorale rehearsal.

’Tuesday — 9:15 a.m., staff meeting; 5 p.m., Capelia Choir; 7:30 p.m., adult inquirer’s class.

Wednesday — 10 a.m., holy communion; 10:45 a m., Biblib study; 7:30 p.m.. Senior Choir.

Thursday — 11 a m., Ladibs’ Guild; 7:10 p.m., evening prayer; 7:30 p.m., Bible study.

Friday — 8 p.m.. A.A.Saturday — 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.. Outreach

Committee’s rummage sale; 1:30 p.m., Alanon; 7:30 p.m., A.A.

Emanuel Lutheran Church’The following events are scheduled for Emanuel

Lutheran Church in the coming week:Sunday — 8:30 a.m.. worship, holy communion;

9:45 a.m., Sunday church school; nursery; “ Focus on the Family” film; 11 a.m.. worship; baptism;

nursery: children’s chapel; 6p.m.,youthmovVeand pizza.

Monday — 7 p.m., Gaudia Circle; 7:30 p.m.. Rebecca Circle.

Tuesday — 10 a.m., CCC; Beethoven Chorus; 11 a.m., Lydia Circle; 4 p.m., staff meeting.

Wednesday — 10 a.m., mothers’ morning; noon, lunch for secretaries and clergy; 6 to 9 p.m., CRC; 7:45 p.m., Emanuel Choir.

Thursday— 10a.m., A.A.; prayer service; 7p.m., Belle Choir.

Saturday — 9 a.m., spring clean-up; 10 a.m. to 3p.m., pledge car wash; 8 p.m., A.A. “

• >ni

North United Methodist ChurchMeetings and events scheduled next week at

North United Methodist Church include;Sunday — 9 and 10; 30 a.m., worship with the Rev.

William Trench preaching, “ Everyone Has a Stone;” 9 a.m., adult Bible group; nursery; 10:30 a.m., church school; nursery; 11:30 a.m.. Young People’s Choir; 2; 15p.m.. United Methodist Women spring meeting; 5:30 p.m., Methodist Youth Fellowship; Fellowship/Study; 7 p.m., sacred dance; ecumenical prayer.

Monday — 7:30 p.m., administrative council. ’Tuesday — 6:30 p.m., T.O.P.S.; 7:30 p.m.,

ecumenical prayer.Wednesday — 7:15 p.m., choir rehearsal. Thursday — 4 p.m., visitation team.Next Saturday — 9 a.m., church clean-up.

Church of the Nazarene’The following is a schedule of activities at the

Church of the Nazarene for the coming week: Sunday — 9:30 a.m., Sunday school; 10:45 a.m.,

morning worship; 6 p.m., evening service.Wednesday — 6:30 p.m., youth program;

Wednesday night for kids; 7 p.m., evangelistic service with the Rev. E. Verbal Williams, evangelist.

Thursday — 9 a.m.. women’s Bible study at the parsonage. 232 Main St., nursery provided; 7 p.m., evangelistic service with the Rev. E. Verbal Williams, evangelist.

Friday — 7 p.m.. evangelistic service with the Rev. E. Verbal Williams, evangelist.

Next Saturday — 8 a.m., men’s breakfast at Howard Johnson’s, guest speaker to be the Rev. E. Verbal Williams; 7 p.m., evangelistic service with the Rev. E. Verbal Williams, evangelist.

Concordia Lutheran ChurchActivities scheduled for the coming week at

Cohbordia Lutheran Church include;Sunday — 8and 10:30a.m.,holycommunion; 9:15

a.nl.', church school; adult education; confirmation forum.

Monday — 7 p.m., Stewardship/Evangelism Committee; 7:30 p.m., agoraphobia support.

Tuesday — 11 a.m., clergy study; 7:30 p.m.. Concordia Church Women.

Wednesday — 10:30 a.m.. agoraphobia support: 7:45 p.m., Concordia Choir.

Thursday — 9 a m., Bible study; 6:30 p.m.. Ecumenical Choir School: 7:30p.m., women’sA.A.

Friday — 7 p.m., A .A>s^Saturday — 6:30 p.m.,\potluck supper and

fellowship.

Center Congregational ChurchEvents scheduled this week at Center Congrega­

tional Church include;Sunday — 8 and 10 a.m.. worship; 9 a.m..

breakfast; Bethel Bible series; 10 a.m., baptism; nursery and toddler care; church school; 11:15 a.m., social hour.

Monday — 7:30 p.m., Grace Group dinner.Tuesday— 9:30 a.m., mothers’ group; 3;30 p.m..

Pilgrim Choir; 6 p.m., confirmation.Wednesday — 8:30 a.m., healing prayers in

church library; 10 a.m., Bethany group; 7to9p.m., sibling rivalry course; 7:30 p.m.. Center Ringers; Chancel Choir.

Thursday — 10a.m.. 6; 30and 8 p.m.. Bethel Bible: 6:30 p.m.. Center Ringers; 7:30 p.m.. Bethel teachers.

Church BuHetin Board ' Many help fill our pantryw with the tuna) and c<Trinity Covenant Church

The following events are scheduled at^Trinity Covenant Chiirch for the coming week:

Today — 8:25 a.m.. missionS^nference., Sunday — 8 and 11 a.m.. morning worship services, ‘ ‘More Than a Ghost,” wTth the Rev. Norman E. Swensen: 9:30 a m.. Sunday Bible school; 10:15 a.m.. coffee and fellowship: 4 p.m.. Inquirer’s Class.

Tuesday — 6 a m., men’s prayer breakfast at LaStrada Restaurant: 9:30 a m. to 11:30 a.m.. Tot Garden Playgroup.

Wednesday — 6:30 am., women’s prayer breakfast at LaStrada Restaurant: 6:30 p.m.. P ione^ Club: 7 p.m.. senior high youth group: men’s and women’s seminars: choir practice.

^ Thursday — 4 p.m.. confirmation class.Friday — 7 p.m., junior high youth group.

Church of ChristHere are the activities planned for the coming

week at Church of Christ:Sunday — 9a.m., Bible classes; 10 a.m., worship,

sermon on “ The Philosophy of Worship:” noon. Bible Bowl practice: 6 p.m.. worship, sermon “ Struggling With Sin: ” Manchester. South Windsor and East Hampton life groups; 7:30 p.m., Vernon life group.

Monday — 7:30 p.m.. Manchester Bible study group.

Tuesday — 7 p.m.. East Windsor Bible study; 7:30 p.m.. East Hartford Bible study.

Wednesday — 7 p.m.. Bible classes: Vernon and Enfield life groups.

Thursday — 7 p.m.. Colchester Bible study.'

Second Congregational ChurchBea Starrelt, Secretary for Local Church Finance

Advisory Services of the Board of Homeland Ministries of the United Church of Christ, will speak at Second Congregational Church on Sunday. She has been serving as advisor to the church, as it planned a campaign to renovate the facilities in honor of the 100th anniversary of the sanctuary. Starrett will speak at 10 a.m. A service of thanksgiving will be held at the church at 7 p.m. Sunday, following an afternoon canvass of members and friends.

South United Methodist ChurchThe choir of South United Methodist Church,

under the leadership of David Morse, ,wiH participate in a Festival Evensong with nine qther church choirs, on April 24 at 7:30p.m. Theservicfrof worship and music will be presented at Central Baptist Church. Hartford. Pamela J. Perry, assistant professor of choral music and director of choral activities at Hartt School of Music will conduct. The 90-voice choir will present selections by Scarlatti, Haydn and others, and will be accompanied by brass, tympani. flute and organ.

Other events scheduled for the coming week atSouth Church include; u , «

Sunday — 9 a m., nursery through adult school: 9 and 10:45 a.m.. wor.ship with Dr. Shephard S. Johnson preaching. “ Times of Refreshing: 10: 4.5 a m sacrament of baptism. Chancel Choir: 12.15 pm.! pot luck luncheon: Adjourned Charge Conference: 5 p.m . confirmation class: 6:30 p.m.. Christian Youth Fellowship. j

Monday - 10 a m.. A.A.: 7:30 p.m . United Methodist Women, speakers, the Rev. Cynthia Good Kathy and Barry Giroux.

’Tuesday — 10 a m.. Vineyards Study Group: 7 p.m..^Boy Scout Troop 47; 7:30 p.m.. property

^°Wednesday — noon. Clergy Cluster; 4:30 P_ua-. Junior Choir; 6:30 p.m.. Wesley Bell Ringers; 7:30 i r Chancel Choir; Bible study, 277 Spring St,

Thursday — noon. Senior Methodists, 7.30 p.m.. Board of Trustees; Membership/Evangelism Com­mission; Christian Outreach Commission; Wor- ship/Music Commission.

Friday — 10 a.m., Al-Anon.Next Saturday — 8:30 a m. to 2; 30 p.m., aH-church

clean-up.

Editor’s note: This column is prepared by the staff of the Manchester Area Conference of Churches

By Nancy Carr Executive Director

Without running a readers’ poll, I would guess that probably 90 percent or more of the readers of the MACC column have at one time or the other helped fill the shelves in the MACC Emergency Pantry — brought non-perishable foods to a church or club food collection — given cans of tuna and green beans to a youngster at the door — mailed check to the Pantry.

The Emergency Pantry is a community affair, supported by community donations and staffed by community volunteers. Estab­lished in March of 1975 with a canned food drive sponsored by the Manchester Collegiate Civ- itan Club (Steve Cassano, advi­sor) and MACC, the food bank has been so weli supplied by a caring community that we have never, in 13 years of operation, had to send anyone away hungry be­cause our shelves were empty.

Thirty churches and organiza­tions cooperate in a calendarized food collection schedule that puts fresh supplies on the shelves each month of the year. The following churches and organizations col­lect food on a monthly ongoing basis; Second Congregational. Emanuel Lutheran, South United Methodist, Presbyterian Church, St. George’s Episcopal of Bolton, Concordia Lutheran of Bolton Congregational, Bolton United Methodist. St. Maurice of Bolton and Manchester Junior Women.

The following churches and groups sponsor major food drives once a year: St. Bartholomew, Democratic Town Committee and Women’s Club, Assumption Church, Republican Town Com­mittee and Women’s Club, Tem­ple Beth Sholom, Bennet Junior High. Illing Junior High, Army and Navy Club, Trinity Church. Church of the Nazarene, St. Bridget, Community Baptist. First Baptist. North United Meth­odist, Stl Mary’s Episcopal Church WiJmen. St. James, Cen­ter Congti^ational, Unitarian- Universalist Society. Early Childhood Learning Center and

MACC NewsSalvation Army.

THE RESULTS ARE IN - Last year these organizations, along with other generous donors in Manchester and Bolton, brought us an estimated $20,000 in non- perishable food donations. Over $10,000 poured in during Seasonal Sharing, due in part to the very successful collections run by public and private schools in Manchester and Bolton.

An additional $1,772 was re­ceived in 1987 in cash donations. Now I know that d o ^ ’t sound like many dollars, butwACC is a member of Food Share and carj.^ purchase food at 12 cents a pound (and sometimes less), so the dollars go a long, long way.

With the staff shortage in the Department of Human Needs this year, we asked for additional volunteers to help us run the Pantry. Last month. Food Coordi­nator Roxanne Feeney, Volun­teer Emergency Pantry Coordi­nator Lucy Desmond and the pantry team met together for a training and sharing session. Volunteers are now on duty 10 i.m. until noon every day and not only sort and shelve food dona­tions but prepare advance food orders for clients.

Our thanks to the Pantry team; Heien Caven, Eleanor Cotten, Dottie Custer, Diane Long- champs, Debbie Duff. Ann Fidler. Andrea Franklin, Fran­ces Gutbrod, Ann Jackson, Leona Lavary, Rita Lombardi, Lorna Moyer, Doris Stoltenberg. and particularly. Lucy who also or­ganizes and monitors the pantry inventory and coordinates the monthly food drives.

The result of this community effort? Last year we provided 7,335 meals to 570 Manchester- /Bolton households. Nice job. Manchester.

PANTRY NEEDS; always in short supply at the Pantry are peanut butter, the great all­purpose protein food (jelly is a lovely treat to go with the peanut butter but a luxury item), canned meats (beef stew, spaghetti, hash), and small jars of mayo (to

T h o u g h t s

They tell the story about a preacher who, out of inattention or fatigue, misquoted a gospel passage in one of his sermons. He said; “ He who humbles himself shall be exhausted!” Maybe l)e was speaking more of the truth than he realized, because, if humility means service, as Christ tells us. then true humility can often be truly exhausting. And yet it will always remain true that he who humbles himself shall be exalted!

How will we be exalted if we live lives of humble service to our neighbor? If we strive to follow

cereal.The Pantry will be moving to

the ground floor of the Samaritan Shelter as soon as the renovations are complete, hopefully by June. No more struggling up a long flight of stairs with boxes or heavy canned goods and jye should have extra storage^pac^

NOTICES — A Benefit Concert for MACC will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday at Emanuel Lutheran Church by Harry Carr, baritone and Joan Niiler, pianist. The program will include songs by Brahams, Vaughn Williams, Ros­sini, American Spirituals and Broadway selections. An offering will be taken for the benefit of the Conference.

PEACE VIGIL - The Peace Vigil will be held this month atSt. James Church, 896 Main St. on Friday at 12:35 p.m. directly following afternoon Mass.

’THANK YOUS - Our thanks to January, February contributors to the Pantry;

The Sunday School at Trinity Coven­ant Church who roltod $329.56 for the Pontrv, to South Methodist Church who takes up a monthly collection overao- Ing about $55 a month, to members of AARP who also take up o monthly collection and our dear Sarah Stephens from Bolton Methodist, another regular contributor.

Food donors: Mrs. A. M. McWilliams, St. Maurice of Bolton, South United Methodist, Bolton United Methodist, Temple Beth Sholom, Joan Landry, Bolton Congregational, Second Con­gregational, Roy and Pat Goltlng, Ed Bushnell, Bernadette Skeldlpg, Martin School, Frances LIbbey, Presbyterian Church, Betty Dzlodus, Mary Tevlln, Mrs. William Trench and Trinity Covenant.

Girist who came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as redemption for all? We shall be exalted because there are many who will pray for us because our mercy to others will gain mercy for ourselves. One day we will hear the Lord say: “ Because you did it to one of the least of my brothers or sisters, you did it to me!” Come, you have my Fa­ther’s blessing. ^

Rev. Robert T. Russo St. Bridget Parish

80 Main St. Manchester

T H E B IBLE

SPEAKSby

Eugono Brower

In an old spiritual hymn the opening verse begins: "This world Is not my home. I'm just a- passlng through.” Truly these words accurately represent the Christian conception.

While this world holds much that Is dear to us, we are aware of Its transiency. At best we will en­joy this abode for little more than fourscore years. And by the time we are mature enough to think these things through we have used up a large portion of this time.

There Is so much sorrow and pain In this disoriented world. There must be a time when jus­tice will ‘be realized perfectly. Qod “has set a day when he will judge the world with justice" by Jesus Christ, confirming this by raising him from the dead (Acts 17:31). Paul felt this tug between departing to be with Christ and remaining In the body (Phil. 1 ;23- 24).

CHURCH OF CHRISTLydall ft Vamon Straata

Phonr. 64>.2aoa

Engagements

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Lisa Perzanoski

Perzanoskl-ShawMr. and Mrs. Edmund Perzanoski

o f West Hartford announce the engagement of their daughter, Lisa Jane Perzanoski to Patrick Matthew Shaw, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Shaw of 91 Overlook Drive.

The bride-elect is a 1981 graduate of Hall High School and a 1985 graduate of the University of Connecticut. She is employed by the West Hartford Board of Education as a Grade 1 teacher at Duffy Elementary School.

The prospective bridegroom is a 1979 graduate of East Catholic High School and a 1983 graduate of Central Connecticut State University. He is employed by Scientific Devices in Teaneck. N.J.

A June 25 wedding is planned.

Weddings

Hafker-LauderJudith Carey Lauder, daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. William B. Lauder Jr. of Marstons Mills, Mass., formerly of Manchester, and William A. Hafker Jr., son of William A. Hafker of West Chatham, Mass, and the late Florence Hafker, were married March 26 at the home of the bride’s parents.

Thomas J. Dowd, justice of the peace, officiated, Margaret L. Goulet, sister of the birde, was matron of honor and Katherine L, Wilson, also a sister of the bride, was bridesmaid, Ehmily L, Wilson, niece of the bride, was flower girl,

John Hagan was best man. Daniel P. Wilson, nephew of the bride, was ring bearer.

After a reception at the Daniel Webster Inn. Sandwich. Mass, the

Marcella Gessay Anthony M. Maselll Jr.

Gessay-MaselliDonna L. Gessay of 32 Carpenter

Road and Noel E. Gessay of 157 Deer Run Trail, annoimce the engagement of their daugnter, Marcella Ann Gessay to Anthony Mark Maselli Jr., son of Anthony and Dorothy Maselli Sr. of 593 W. Middle Tpke.

The bride-elect is a graduate of Manchester High School and Man­chester Community College. She is employed by Connecticut Bank & Trust Co.

The prospective bridegroom is a graduate of Manchester High School and Manchester Community College with an associates degree in science. He is attending Central Connecticut State University working toward a bachelor's degree in industrial technology.

A June 2,1989 wedding is planned at St. James Church.

couple went on a weekend trip to Martha’s Vineyard. ’They plan a delayed honeymoon to Prince Ed­ward Island in August.

The bride is a 1974 graduate of East Catholic High School and a 1978 graduate of Springfield College with a bachelor of science degree in physical education. She is a master of science degree candidate at Northeastern University in Boston.

The bridegroom is a 1972 graduate of Chatham High School, a 1975 graduate of Cape Cod Community College and a 1980 graduate of Fitchburg State College with a bachelor of science degree in communications.

They are making their home in West Dennis, Mass.

Joanna Martiska

Martiska-DerbyMr. and Mrs. John Martiska of New

Milford announce the engagement of their daughter, Joanna Mary Mar­tiska to Michael Edmund Derby, son of Thomas Derby of Camden. Me., formerly of Manchester, and the late Margaret B. Derby.

The bride-elect is a graduate of the University of Connecticut and is employed by Fidelity Investments of Boston, Mass.

The prospective bridegroom is a regional sales representative with the American Home Foods Corp., Boston.

An Aug. 20 wedding is planned.

Blette-BrownRita Sherwood of Hartford and

Joseph Blette, also of Hartford, announce the engagement of thbir daughter. Faith Anne Blette, to Jeffrey Alan Brown, son of Mary and Donald Brown of Kalamazoo, Mich. The bride-elect is the foster daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Stepanski of 42 Otis St.

The bride-elect is a graduate of Manchester High School. She at­tended Rensselaer Polytechnic Insti­tute and Hartford State Technical College and received an associate’s degree in architectural technology. She Is working on a bachelor’s degree in computer science at Central Connecticut State University. She is employed by Russell Gibson Von Dohlen Inc. as a CADD systems manager.

The prospective bridegroom re­ceived a master’s degree in architec­ture from the University of Michigan. He is an associate member of the American Institute of Architects. He is employed by Raphael & Charney

' Architects of Hartford.A July 9 wedding is planned in

Norwich.

Smokers want to quitNEW YORK (AP) - About 90

percent of the estimated 53 million smokers in the United States would like to stop smoking, according to Health Magazine.

Ba|-StapletonMr. and Mrs. Robert J. Baj of

Agawam, Mass., announce the en­gagement of their daughter, Susan Marie Baj, to Mark John Stapleton of Hartford, son of Thomas Stapleton of Moore, S.C., formerly of Manchester, and Mary Stapleton of Chicago. 111., formerly of Enfield.

The bride-elect is a graduate of Agawam High School and received a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Harding University, Searcy, Ark. She is employed on the editorial staff of the Manchester Herald.

The prospective bridegroom is a graduate of Manchester High School. He received a bachelor’s degree in political science from the University of Connecticut and served in the U.S. Air Force. He is employed as a brake specialist with Speedy Muffler King, Hartford.

An Aug. 19 wedding is planned.

"buitadamo-EmbacherLaura and Frank Quitadamo of 115

Cushman Drive announce the engage­ment of their daughter, Lynn Jane Quitadamo. to Brian Embacher. son of Gloria and Henry Embacher of Harwinton.

The bride-elect is a 1977 graduate of Manchester High School, a 1981 graduate of the University of Connec­ticut with a bachelor of fine arts degree, and a 1986 graduate of Central Connecticut State University with a master of science degree in art education. She is a teacher at the Longview Middle School. Ellington.

The prospective bridegroom is a 1977 graduate of Lewis S. Mills High School and a 1979 graduate of Hartford State Technical College with an associate degree. He is a senior systems programmer at Baystate Medical Center, Springfield. Mass.

A July 16 wedding is planned.

Gateiy-HaightMr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Gately of 90

Cider Mill Road. Bolton, announce the engagement of their daughter, Susan Jean Gately to Thomas F. Haight, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Haight of West Springfield, Mass.

The bride-elect is a 1981 graduate of Bolton High School and a 1985 graduate of Salva Regina College. Newport, R.I. with a bachelor of science degree in nursing Cum Laude. She is a registered nurse at the Maine Medical Center, Portland, Me.

The prospective bridegroom at­tended Holyoke Community College and served in the U.S. Air Force. He is employed by the State of Maine.

A Feb. 18 wedding is planned in Portland, Me.

Physicians’ academy up to 60,000 members

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Dr. Kari Ann Miller of Woodbury, Minn., has become the American Academy of Fam ily Physicians’ 60,000th member, according to the organiza­tion with headquarters here.

The academy, which celebrated its 40th anniversary in 1987, is the national association of family doc­tors. Miller, S3, does eveiything medically from delivering babies to caring for the elderly.

iH a u flirs Irr H rralft1 ^ __________J

FOCUS P u llo u t S e c tio n — P a g e 17

S a tu rd a y , A p ril 16, 1988

Tinkerer’ builds first-class setsBy Anita M. Caldwell Manchester Herald

IF YOU NEED to build a porch or the deck of a ship or even a dungeon, you'd proba­bly want to call Pierre Marteney.

Unless, of course, you want.it to last more than a couple of weeks.

Since the early 1970s. the 56-year-old Hackmatack Street resident has been building sets for the Manchester Gilbert & Sullivan Players. Though his repertoire includes more per­manent pro.iects such as adding on a room in his house and "a couple of harpsichords.” an in­strument which he plays fre­quently. he’s had as much fun with creating the almost-real .structures that are needed forthe musicals.

‘T v e always been a tinkerer.” Marteney said.

But he’s had no special train­ing. said Marteney. a research .scientist at United Technologies Corp, in East Hartford since 1961.

And often that’s the challenge. For example, building a set

tree, he said, has been his toughest assignment.

’ ’There’s no way to make it stand up,” he said with a hearty laugh. “ Platforms and housing are easy.”

Marteney said that in this year’s production, “ Oklahoma,” which will be performed the weekends of April 22, 23 and April 29.30. one of the scenes calls for a fence that someone has to jump over. Tickets for the show, to be performed at East Catholic High School, are $8 general admission and $4 for children and senior citizens, available by calling 528-8595.

Marteney said the fence has to be secured, but he hasn’t quite figured out how to construct it,

For another show. Marteney said he had to create “ waving grass” to illustrate the wind was blowing. To do that, the builders used cut blades of pressed hard­wood, stuck them on sheets of plywood and painted them green.

“ I think the green paint is still on the floor,” he said.

And all the creating and con­structing is done in a building other than where the perfor­mance will be. he said. The set won’t be raised on the perfor­mance stage until a week before the show.

Marteney, who searches annu­ally for a site to build the sets, is working this year at a town- owned building at the former Nike site on Garden Grove Road.

The fences, walls, gazebos, bedrooms, living rooms and anything else that is part of a stage set has to be moved like a kid’s erector set. The set is built in parts, largely because it must be moveid to the performance stage

OavM Kool/ManohMMr Herald

TF hHAD A HAMMER — Pierre Marteney of Hackmatack Street works on the stage set for the Manchester Gilbert & Sullivan Players’ production of "Oklahoma," to be

performed at East Catholic High School the weekends of April 22 and 23 and April 29 and 30.

in a rented truck and because, depending on the building, parts may not fit through the doors.

So far. Marteney said, he hasn’t lost any pieces.

Among other considerations, Marteney said, is getting the set constructed in time for the dates of performance.

” It’s always hectic, ” he said.Even though the show is

selected in the spring, a year before the performance, rehear­

sals don’t begin until the follow­ing January and the support people — the set builders, lighting technicians and props people — begin work at that time or sometimes even later.

Making sure everything comes together on time is “ a matter of coordination,” he said.

But Marteney doesn’t mind the jigsaw-puzzle life he leads during the months of preparing for the shows.

“ It’s good therapy.” he said.

“ It ’s creative in a sense. Some­times you have to be a little inventive to interpret what the (set) designer wanted.”

How a stage set looks is usually determined by the ideas of a set designer and the director of the show. The set builders follow something like a blueprint and often a miniature stage set provided by the designer.

But set building is not the only connection to the show Martefeey has. , . , ®

When he’s not building sets on the weekends, he’s rehearsing with the show’s chorus during the week.

Marteney has been a member of the G & S chorus since 1970 and a percussionist with the Manches­ter Symphony and Chorale since 1962.

"Fortunately, there Isn’t any percussion part in the (Manches­ter) Symphony or I ’d be trying to get that in, too,” he said.

18 - MANCHESTER HERALD, Saturday, April 16, 1988

FOCUS/HomeI t < « T ; - •

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MANCHESTER HERALD, Saturday. April 16. 1988 — 19

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L IV IN G R M 13* M A S T I R M O I M M*. 12*

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H « i« * T W O C A R C A R A C I

H D R M13* .« 0 ®

H O U S E O F T H E W E E K — This ranch house features a h igh-ce iling foyer that is enhanced by a skydom e. The rear w ail o f th e living room has three large glass panels, one of w hich is a sliding door leading to the terrace. Plan H A 1464H has 1,405 square feet. For m ore inform ation, w rite to H om es fo r Living, 363 Seventh Ave., N ew York, N.Y. 10001. Enclosed a self-addressed, stamr envelope.

Here’s the Answer

QUESTION: We have a retain­ing wall at the back of our property made of concrete. There is one sppt in it where the water leaks through when there is a heavy rain. I intend to fix it but want to know whether everything must be dry when this is done. There is a cracked area in the wall where the leak is. Is there some product that will permit the patch to be made whether the wall is wet or dry?

ANSWER: Yes. Hydraulic ce­ment can be applied even when water is coming through. Follow the directions on the container. They will tell you to shape the cement Into a plug and push it into the opening, holding it there for a certain number of minutes. The cement expands and thus holds even though the opening is wet. In fact, a repair can be made even when the leak - is occurring.

W haf s new on the market?B v A n d y Lang T h e A ssocia ted Press

What’s new on the market?

THE PRODUCT — A one-step wood finishing product designed to produce a hand-rubbed oil finish.

Manufacturer’s claim — That this finish combines a penetrat- .ing stain with a protective Danish oil finish ... that it is wiped on with a cloth and dries in two hours ... that It comes in a squeeze bottle... that it has a thicker consistency than traditional stains, will not drip or spill and so is easy to control... that it is available in six colors plus natural to match any decor ... that the depth of color can be controlled — two coats for a lighter color and low sheen; for a deeper color and sheen, leave on the excess after each application ... and that it can be used on any bare interior wood surface.

THE PRODUCT - An elastic chinking material for preventing cracks and other openings in log houses.

Manufacturer’s claim — That this material expands and con­tracts with the expansion and contraction of logs ... that it is a blend of elastic adhesives and sealants and creates an insula-

Sometimes you may have Ito enlarge the gap in the wqll a b|i so the plug can be pushed into'it.

QUESTION: I plan to refinish our attic. I had planned on doing only the actual construction work, leaving the plumbing to a plumber and the electricity to an electrician. But I have learned something about electricity and would like to try my hand at it. Is this permitted?

ANSWER: Probably not. Local building codes ordinarily will not permit anybody but a licensed electrician to handle such pro­jects. The easiest way to find out is to contact your local authori­ties . Once in a while, you can get a permit for certain kinds of electrical work, ut even in such a case, the completed job must be inspected and approved.

On the Hbuee

tion value equivalent to that of the logs themselves ... that it is a water clean-up product and is compatible with most stains, preservatives and sealers ... that it can restore older log homes without the need to remove the old chinking... that a professional appearance can be achieved by applying the material directly over the old chinking... and that it is the only chinking with a one-hour UL classified fire rating.

THE PRODUCT - A new scraping tool that facilitates the removal of old flooring.

Manufacturer’s claim — That this tool comes with a 58-inch, heav]2:duty welded steel handle and two separate blade attach­ments ... that one of the blades is for heavy removal jobs involving asphalt, ceramic tile, glued-down parquet flooring, slate and sludge ... the second attachment is ideal for inlaid linoleum tile and wall-to-wall carpeting ... that the tool is used like a pushbroom ... that it delivers a force of up to ISO pounds through a sliding hammer

action... that it allows access into tight corners and underneath suspended cabinetry... and that it can also be used for the removal of tar and shingle roofing as well as lawn and garden maintenance.

THE PRODUCT — Special hardware for bifolding doors, pocket doors and sliding doors.

Manufacturer’s claim — That the slot adjust sliding door hardware and dial adjust type are recommended for closets or storage areas where wood trim is used ... that one kit can be assembled to create sliding panel doors for closets and storage areas and for creating a wall, being especially suitable for remodeling projects and addi­tions ... and that the pocket door frame and hardware set allows the user to frame and stud an opening for a pocket door.

The wood finishing product is manufactured by Minwax. 102 Chestnut Ridge Plaza, Montvale. N.J. 07645; the chinking material for log homes by Sashco Sealants, 3800 E. 68th St., Commerce City, Colo. 80022; the scraping tool by Red DeviL..?400 Vauxhall Road. Union.^.J. 07083; and the hard­ware line by The Stanley Works. 195 Lake St.. New Britain, Conn. 06050.)

Farms produce instant lawnB v E a r l A ronson T h e A ssocia ted Press

/Instant lawn is available for

im p a tien t hom eowners or farmers, land owners or supervi­sors of office building projects who are in a hurry.

Newly sodded grass, available to measure, should be planted in sunny areas and watered ade quately, says Elmer Kirkland, who produces sod on nearly 1,000 acres on two farms in Samsula, Fla.

Kirkland is assisted by his wife; his son Ward, who works as the chief mechanic; his daugh­ters Gloria and Fay, who work in the office, and two sons-in-law. He raises only warm-weather, southern St. Augustine grasses such as Floratam, Floraiawn, Raleigh, Bitte^ Blue and Jade.

Jade is a new grass that will be available this fall. Bitter Blue and Jade, Kirkland says, will stand some shade.

St. Augustine is planted from plugs, sprigs or runners that take 9 months to one year to develop to harvest stage. St. Augustine is propagated only vegetatively; seed of this variety is sterile.

Kirkland shapes sod beds with crowns o that the water will run off, improving drainage. He showed me his intricate, sophisti­cated irrigation system, includ­ing overhead and underground apparatus.

Only fresh sod is shipped, under the watchful eye of Stefan Floyd.

Machines lift sod pieces, which measure 16-by-24 inches (2V«

Weedera Guidesquare feet). piling pellet stacks of 500 square feet. The machines leave a 2-inch wide strip that is pressed down by a concrete roller that weighs 18,000 pounds. The fleld is ready for cutting again in 9 months to one year, depending on weather and growing conditions. The area is fertilized monthly from March to September.

The fields, laid out in blocks of 50 acres, renew themselves for many years. Some areas are used to produce turf for new plantings. Birds and herbicides help rid the sod of damaging cinch bugs and other pests such as web and army worms.

To start a new field, hay grass is killed and the ground is plowed to improve drainage. Stumps are removed.

Kirkland interrupted our tour to proudly show a hydraulic sod-planting machine designed by his son Ward.

He explained ' that because Florida, now the third most populated state, needed a fast growing grass because of de­mand, the University of Florida developed Bitter Blue, an attrac­tive blue-green grass with me­dium texture, good density and internode length. Bitter Blue is resistant to the cinch bug.

Jade, another new grass, was developed by O.M. Scott A Sons. Jade has a rich green color, compact growth with short inter­nodes, and iow temperature color

retention. It is also resi.stant to the cinch bug.

Kirkland says no turf grass will grow under heavy shade.

In Florida and other warm climate areas, sod may be laid any time of the year. Use a Rototiller or spade the soil to a depth of 4 inches. Remove sticks, large stones, old grass or other debris. Fill in low areas, smooth and level soil by ra^jng.

Install sod the day of delivery. Moisten soil well before laying sod. Start at a straight line, such as a driveway or walk. Lay out sod as you would a rug or tiles, B e sure the joints are butted to­gether, without overlapping or spaces between strips of sod. Stagger joints in each new row. like rows of bricks. Use a large, sharp knife to shape the sod at trees, at flower beds, or along borders. Water sod well at planting and keep moist.

Mow 6-7 days aher installation. Never remove more than one- third of leaf blade during a single mowing. Mow when grass height reaches 2‘/i-3 inches^^t mower at cutting height of 2-V/! inches.

For a copy of Earl Aronson’s “ AP Guide to House Plants,” send $1.50 to House Plants, AP Newsfeatures. 50 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N.Y. 10020.

EMERGENCYFire — Police — Medical

DIAL 911In Manchester

FOCUS / Money

IT VA R IE S — The cost of a hospital

stay depends upon how much the

hospital charges per day and how long

the patient is required to remain

hospitalized.

HOSPITAL COSTSWhere an average stay costs the most the least

Avarag* charga par slay

San Jose. | Calif

Las Vegas, I Nevada I

San Francisco. I Calif.

Birmingham.! A la .'

Riverside,] Calif. I

Philadelphia. I Pa. I

Miami. Fla.Iowa City. I

Iowa I Los Angeles. I

Calif. 1Vallejo, Calif.

$8,697

$7,852$7,575$7,481

$7,267$7,248

$6,696$6,634$6,595

Niagara Falls, | N.Y. I

Yuba City, I Calif. I

Avarsg* charge par atay

Eugene, Ore. $2,506" ^ $ 2 , 4 0 7

I $2,380 Houma. La. Pgi $2,362

Waterloo, Iowa HI $2,247 Lawrence, Kan. ggi $2,206

■’"'’wls Hi $2,059Brownsville,

Lake Charles g g j g S S

$1,855

NEA graphic

You’ve probably waived right to sue your broker

VCR market is for buyers with competition, technologyBy the E d ito rs of C onsum er Reports

The current VCR market is a buyer’s market, thanks to intense competition and rapidly evolving technology.

First-time buyers as well as those looking for a second ma­chine will find an array of inexpensive models like the 19 recently tested by Consumer Reports’ engineers. Ranging from $250 to $420, these VCRs all have remote controls and one- touch recording. Most' include on-screen programming and other features that not long ago were found only on models costing $1,000 or more.

While the testers didn’t find large differences in performance among these low-end VCRs, the differences they found in using them were considerable. Some are sensibly, thoughtfully de­signed. ' Others are bound to confuse a user. Overall, though the ease of using a VCR has ..steadily improved over the years.' A telling factor in VCR’s convenience is how readily the machine responds to the often- repeated. often-confusing chore of making delayed recordings, commonly called time-shifting.

The complexity of the task increases in direct proportion to the features on the machine. The very simplest VCRs can handle only two events over a seven-day span. Models of the sort the engineers tested typically let you record from four to eight events over 14 days. Some models even

ConsumerReports

let you program events over 365 days.

The best VCRs make the task of programming self-evident. You do it without constant reference to the instruction book. Such machines typically use prompts — that is, the machine signals your next move.

There are two basic types of on-screen programming. The best found on the RCA VPT391 and Sanyo VHR 3350 tested, gently lead you through the ritqal of providing the necessary infor­mation of date, time and channel. (The RCA’s prompts appear on a blank screen, the Sanyo's over the show you’re watching.)

Less convenient is the type of on-screen system such as that found on the Quasar VH5371, which restricts your taping to 15-minute increments. The Qua­sar also suffers a defect common in systems less thoughtful than the RCA and the Sanyo. It lacks a “ date stamp” — an internal calendar. Programming, instead of becoming a .straightforward matter o f ‘T il record this on April 11 ” becomes mired in questions of "Is April 11 the Monday of the

first or second week?”Another sign of a well-designed

system is a numbered key pad for directly entering dates and times. Most of the tested models still use the primitive count-up and count­down sort of control.

A remote control is standard equipment these days, even on the most basic VCR. The best remotes sport large control but­tons that are generously spaced, clearly labeled and logically arranged. A numerical key pad arranged in the familiar tele­phone style is helpful, as is a body narrow enough for single-handed operation.

Of the models tested, the RCA VPT391 and the Sanyo VHR 3350 are top-rated. Their picture qual­ity is among the best, their on-screen programming is easy to use, and their controls are well-designed. ’The RCA costs about $330, discounted; the Sa­nyo, about $315. For monophonic VCRs, their sound is decent. If you want higher-quality sound, you’ll have to move up to a hi-fi VCR.

Current shoppers can benefit from the collective experience of thousands of Consumer Reports readers. The six Matsushita brands — Panasonic, Quasar. Magnavox, GE, Sylvania and J.C. Penney — have proved less trouble-prone than virtually any of the other brands surveyed. RCA’s track record was average; Sanyo, which recently made the switch from Beta to VHS, doesn’t have enough history for Consu­mer Reports to make a j udgment.

You may be one of the many individual in­vestors who suffered signif­icant losses d u r i n g the market crash last October.

If you’re still boiling mad at your broker, mad enough to sue, you’ve got plenty of company all over the country. But taking your broker to court is probably out of the question, since most of you waived that right when you s i g n e d y o u r b r o k e r a g e agreement.

You may be able to get some financial satisfaction, however, by filing a claim against the broker with an exchange arbitra­tion panel.

At some exchanges, arbitration caseloads are up dramatically. The National Association of Se­curities Dealers, whose members trade stocks over the counter, says it expects a 50 percent increase in claims in 1988. Un­authorized trading and failure to execute sell orders are among the common complaints.

As studies of the crash roll in, we've heard dozens of stories about how individual investors were ignored, shunted aside or locked out of the system at a time when access was crucial to staunching losses.

Six months after the October fall, little if anything has been done to assure individual inves­tors that they won’t suffer un­fairly in a future market sell-off like that of Black Monday.

'The scoreboard;■ The American Stock Ex­

change an the Chicago Board Options Exchange have agreed to refund $2 million to some custo­mers who traded index options during the tumult.

■ The New York Stock Ex­change has imposed mild braking action on program trading.

■ In a move designed in part to calm investor, Goldman Sachs. Merrill Lynch and Shearson Lehman Hutton have stopped program trading for their own accounts.

■ The Chicago Board of Trade has increased the margin for trading its Major Market Index from 10 to 15 percent.

For individual Investors, none of this means much directly. Individuals are not majorpartici- pants in the index futures and options markets.

Market makers on the major exchanges ducked for cover during the October sell-off, but the Over-the-Counter market sys­tem broke down completely. OTC dealer telephones were jammed or off the hook. The OTC compu-

SyK^aPorter

ter system could not keep up with changes in price quotations.

You should be encouraged, however, by the strong response of the NASD. It has come up with a series of reform ideas that deserve attention:

■ OTC market makers would be required to have more capital:

■ They would also beTe^ulred to hook up to the automated order execution system (optional now);

■ Market makers who choose to leave the system would be forced to stay out for 20 days;

■ Dealers’ automated execu­tion and customer service sys­tems would be updated to handle record volumes of small orders

Such ideas represent progress, if they are vigorously enforced. Some on Wall Street contend that enforcement of already existing rules would have preventetTthe inequities suffered by small in­vestors six months ago.

The point is to make sure that access to the markets is never again denied to the small investor.

With the markets dominated by giant institutions. It’s easy to lose sight of how crucial a role individual investors play in the system, be assured, however, that your everyday participation is of more than academic concern.

Millions of small investors supply billions in capital to large and small American enterprises. You also supply the market with a vital degree of liquidity that It Would not otherwise have.

Your confidence and optimism can help boost the market. Your pessimism can dampen it. Your state of mind can also influence the attitudes of consumers, whose purchases of goods and services derive two-thirds of the U.S. economy.

Unless the markets themselves are willing to step in and protect the rights of small investors, ultimately the government will have to do it. The market system's fairness should be a given, net a maybe.

Checker mountainIf all the checkers sold in 1987

alone by just one manufacturer could be stacked atop one another, they would make a tower 56 miles high, or more than 10 times taller than Mount Everest.

80 — MANCHESTEl^ April. 16, 1988

FOGUS / AdviceI . 1 , , J - ' 'f • I.'. »■> V 1 .1 i > r

MANCHESTER HERALD. Saturday. April 16, 1988 - 81

Tell dentist you’re pregnantDEAR DR.

R E IN IS C H :I’ve just read that it’s dan­gerous to have y o u r te e t h w o r k e d on when you ’ re pregnant. Is that true?

D E A R READER; Only partly. There has not been research on the effects of dental anesthetics on the fetus, but several manufac­turers state that theiranesthetics should be used on pregnant women only if absolutely necessary.

To be on the safe side, most pregnancy experts suggest that dental procedures requiring anesthetics or X-rays be post­poned until after the baby is born. It is also wise to avoid the stress commonly associated with dental work.

But this does not mean that a pregnant woman should not see her dentist at all. In fact, the hormone changes of pregnancy can alter'^the soft tissues of the mouth, making it even more important to have the teeth and gums checked and cleaned thoroughly.

A woman who thinks she may be pregnant should mention this to her dentist so that the safest choices can be made about her dental care.

DEAR DR. REINISCH: Please answer this letter because I am too embarrassed to talk to a doctor or anyone else about this. I’m 19 and have been sexually

Kinsey ReportJune M. Reinisch, Ph.D.

involved with my boyfriend for about six months.

It’s to the point where I dread sex. I’ve never had an orgasm. At first I thought it was just inexperience, but I don’t feel anything and now foreplay is just frustrating because all I feel is a letdown.

I don’t think it’s an emotional problem because he’s the most wonderful guy in the world, and I love him. I’ve become good at acting, because I don’t want to hurt him.

Could I have a medical prob­lem? I just don’t want to miss out on what I’m sure is an incredible experience.

DEAR READER: Ask your gynecologist about this at your next appointment. When a woman is having sex, she must have regular pelvic examina­tions. This is part of accepting responsiblities of becoming sexu­ally active.

There are also other responsi­bilities involved. What are you using for contraception? If you are not ready to raise a child, you must use a reliable method. Moreover, you should be taking steps to protect yourself against sexually transmitted diseases:

The emotional problems that can block orgasm are much broader than you may think. Any intruding thought (Will I have an orgasm this time?), worry (I hope I don’t get pregnant), or doubt (If my mom finds out, she’ll kill me) can interfere with sexual functioning.

'Sven though feelings of love cair be quite powerful during youth, trust and shared commit­ment area also of great impor­tance to relationships. It’s more difficult to function sexually if one is not absolutely convinced that having sex with a particular person is exactly the right thing to be doing.at this particular point in one’s life.

Personally, I feel you should find someone to talk with about whether having sex now is right for you, y«ur goals in life and your personal values. If you don’t know a counselor or clergyman you feel comfortable talking with, go to a family planning clinic.

Most clinics are staffed by people sensitive to helping young women clarify the Issues involved in being sexually active. They also offer pelvic exams, informa­tion about contraceptions and sexually transmitted diseases, and referrals to a sex counselor who can talk with you about women’s orgasms, if you decide to continue having sex. It takes some women more time to become familiar with their own responses and learn to communi­cate them to a partner.

If you decide having sex is not right for you just now, a counselor can practice with you how to explain this to your boyfriend in ways that don’t hurt his feelings.

Where to Write1 Dear Abby

Dr. Gott

(Insey Report

Abigail Van BurenP.O. Box 69440Los Angeles, Calif. 90069

Peter M. Gott, M.D.P.O. Box 91428 Cleveland, Ohio 44101

Dr. June M. Reinisch P.O. Box 48Bloomington, Ind. 47402

Travelers: The buck stops at the border

Tests reveal bladder problemDEAR DR.

GO’TT: When I was 5. I had some kind of s u r g e r y b e ­cause I had problems uri­nating. Then, in college, I couldn’t hold it. e s p e c i a l l y wh en g o i n g from hot to cold temperatures and vice-versa. Ditropan helped for a while. I’m now 32 and for the past eight months, nothing helps. Two uriogists have been unable to find the problem. Have you ever heard of this? I’m female, and this is embarrassing.

DEAR READER: We humans are able to control urination through a complex series of nerve pathways that contract and re­lease the muscles at the bladder outlet. Much of this .muscle contraction is under voluntary control: some is due to automatic reflect action. Incontinence re­sults when the voluntary muscles are weak and the voiding reflex is prominent.

Such a weakness can be due to structural anomalies present from birth; other types develop

Dr. GottPeter Gott, M.D.

D E A R ABBY: As the tourist season a p p r o a c h e s , may I offer a few travel tips to our Ameri­can f r iends who plan to va- c a t i o n i n Canada?

1. All pur­chases in Canada (this includes hotel, food, souvenirs, etc.) are in Canadian funds! It can be very trying to hear (at least 10 times a day): “ Is this in American money?” When in Italy, use lire: in Japan, use yen: in the States, use American; and in Canada, use Canadian.

2. If you cannot get to an exchange house or bank to change money to Canadian funds, most places will take your American monfey and convert it to Canadian for you upon pur­chase. Only a bank or some such

avi institution=ehhnlegally exchange - your money°'WUhout purchase,

urinary-tract surgery that you.>r,This goes for" exchanging yourCanadian money back to Ameri-

Dear AbbyAbigail Van Buren

not know the nature of the

as we age because of neurological disease, trauma to the nerves supplying the bladder or injury from surgery. Many women, after multiple pregnancies, expe­rience incontinence because of a loss of the bladder/urethral an­gle: Pregnancies cause sagging of the uterus, which pulls the bladder down with it, stretching and flattening the urethra so that muscular tone is lost. This common ailment, called stress incontinence, can often be cor­rected surgically by resuspend­ing the b ladder and re­e s t a b l i s h i n g the p ro per orientation of the abdominal organs.

From the scarcity of informa­tion in your question, I cannot draw any conclusions about your incontinence. For example, I do

had as a child and whether it — or some underlying condition — is the cause of your disorder! In addition, I don’t know what tests your urologists have performed.

In general, women with inconti­nence need at least three tests: a urine culture to rule out infection, cystoscopy and cystometries. In the last two tests, a urologist looks into the bladder with a lighted instrument to check for abnormalities aiid measures the flow characteristics of urine when your fuif bladder contracts. These tests are usually sufficient to define the problem. If, in your case, they have been normal, I think that you should request a referral to the urology clinic in a teaching hospital where special­ists are trained to use sophisti­cated techniques to determine the more unusual causes of incontinence.

For more information, I am sending you a free copy of my Health Report, “ Bladder and Uriqary Tract Infections” Other readers who would like a copy should send f 1 and their name and address to P.O. Box 91369, Cleve­land, Ohio 44101-3369. JBe sure to mention the title.

can before you go home. Please, do not get mad at the waitress, desk clerk 'di* cashier if they cannot do itfbr you. You can still convert it batk to American when you get back home, right?

3. Do not say, “ Give me that in ‘real’ money. None of that ‘funny money’ (or Monopoly money), now!” It is true, our money is worth “ less” than the American counterpart, but this is to your advantage.

AfewfinaTnotes: Remember to buckle your seat belt in British Columbia. This is the law!

The speed limit is as follows: country, 50 mph; city, 30 mph.

Declare any weapons in your car or baggage at the border. Retrieve them later. 'Try to smuggle them in, and, if caught (a lot are), you will lose your weapons permanently and face a very stiff fine.

I know this is a long letter, Abby. but I hope that it will help some Americans to enjoy their trip to Canada a little bit more. Happy holidays, eh?

A.L.K., VICTORIA, B.C..DEAR ABBY: I’d like to

respond to the lady who had so many holiday cookies and goo­dies she didn’t know what to do with them. Has she ever con.sl- dered arranging for an afternoon^ tea at a rest home for the aged?' How they „ would enjoy some homemade goodies and the touch of the outside. She doesn’t know what sweetness there is in shar­ing in this special way.

ROSIE FOWLER, SEATTLEDEAR ROSIE; Obviously you

do. Thanks for sharing. You're a sweetheart.

DEAR ABBY: I’ve read you for years, but this is my first letter to you because I just have to answer that Ohio woman who asked why baseball managers and coaches wear baseball uniforms when they look ridiculous with their potbellies hanging out.

I think I can help her. Wearing the team uniform has not always been a universal practice for managers. In the early days of baseball. Connie Mack, the Hall of Fame owner-manager of the old Philadelphia Athletics, al­ways wore a business suit and straw hat. Later on. the manag­ers began wearing the team uniform because it was more practical and comfortable.

A uniform allows them freedom to pitch batting practice and otherwise instruct the players on the field. Dugouts are often dusty and windy, and the hazards of tobacco juice are ever-present.

More important, the manager doesn’t want to ruin a good suit when he kicks dirt in the umpire's face. Semper fi!

LT. WILLIAM F. REYES, USMC, OKINAWA

The British warship Vanguard exploded in 1917 at Scapa Flow, killing 800.

FOCUS / TV, Comics & PuzzlesSaturday, April 165 :0 0 A M d i) U S. Farm Report

Home Shopping Overnight Service Continues (2 hrs.)[C N N ] Crossfire[D IS ] Walt Disney Presents A collection of cartoons including "Mickey and the Seal,” "Dude Duck," "Corn Chips.” "Mickey’s Delayed Date, ” "Donald's Di­lemma, " •’’Lend a Paw ” and "Boe on Guard". (60 min.)[E S P N ] High School Hockey; M inne­sota State Tournament (90 min.) (R) [U S A ] Night Flight: Video Profile: Jody Watley

5:1 0 A M [HBO] MOVIE; Police Aca demy 3: Back in Training' (CC) Saving the Academy is the newest and toughest challenge for the members of the original graduating class. Steve Guttenberg, Bubba Smith. David Graf 1986 Rated PG [M A X ] MOVIE: 'Defense of^]»e Realm A British loumalist uncovers a link lie tween a member of Parliament and a Com inunist agent Gabriel Byrne. Greta Schacci. Denholm Elliot* 1986 Rater! PG

5 :3 0 A M I Love Lucy 11 INN News [C N N ] Showbiz Today [T M C ] MOVIE; 'M y Undercover Years With the K K K ' An FBI undercover man infiltrates an Alabama Ku Klux Klan klavern and becomes a key witness when klans- man vicilate civil rights Don Meredith, James Wainwnght, Clifton James 1978 [U S A ] Night Flight: Take OH To Big Bucks

6 :0 0 A M C33 Young Universe (R1 To Be Announced.

^9. Headline News 11 Christian Science Monitor Reports 20; New Zoo Revue 61' Popeye [C N N ] Daybreak [D IS ] You and Me, Kid [U S A ] Night Flight: Cartoon Carnival

6:1 S A M CD Davey 81 Goliath

6 :3 0 A M CD Captain Bob v D World Tomorrow CD Flintstone Kids (CC).GD Comic Strip •11/ Planet of the Apes (16) Headline News

Sylvanian Families (4j] Follow M e[C N N ] International Correspondents [D IS ] Mousercise [E S P N ] SpeedWeek

6 :4 5 A M [HBO] Platypus Cove Set in Australia, an orphaned 16-year-old, in­volved in crime, is given a second chance by a tugboat owner and his family, al­though he may not be ready to surrender his present way of life. (75 min.)

7 :0 0 A M CD Young Universe CD Sylvanian Families - CD Great Weekend (60 min }GD BraveStarr (CC).(3® MOVIE: ‘Gunsmoke in Tucson' This is the story of brother against brother, one an outlaw, the other a marshal in Arizona Territory. Mark Stevens, Forrest Tucker, Gale Robbins. 1958. d® Starcom

Muppets

C h a n n e l sWF88 Hartfbrd. CT (XWMYW N aw YsflcM Y (Dv ftm NvwHm m CT (XWON Nm v Y « ^ NY (X:wFfx Nsw rorti. NY ODWHCT Hartford. CT ' <mWTXX WatsvtMiry, CTWWLP Springfield. M A 0WEDH Hartford. CT gaWTW8 New London. CT mwvrr Hertford. CT mW S M Boeton. M A mWOQB Springfield. M A mWXTV Peteieen, NJ 0WGBY Springfield. M A mW TIC H ertf^ . CT •fiCNN A— At —--rwws iw i. (CNN]DISNEY Dteney Chennel (M)ESPN Sports Network (88PW1HBO Home Box Ofllee (HeO)CINEMAX a iw n w (MAX)TMC Movie Chennel (TMOUSA USA Networic lO M I

DaktariG® Ring Around the World dl) A M Boston

Natural Weight Loss (ID Aventuras del Pequeno Principe rs.D Addams Family [C N N ] Daybreak [D IS ] Welcome to Pooh Corner [E S P N ] SportsCenter [M A X ] MOVIE: 'The Last Day' An ex- gunfighter defends his town against the Dalton gang Richard Widmark, Robert Conrad. Barbara Rush, 1975 [U S A ] Paid Programming

7 :3 0 A M CD Popeye and Son CD Star Commanders .11) BraveStarr (CC)'201 Popeye 22 Muppets 30 Foofur (CC)38 It 's Your Business40 Abbott and Costello41 Princesa Caballero [C N N ] Sports Close-up [D IS ] Dum bo's Circus [E S P N ] Thoroughbred Digest [T M C ] MOVIE: 'A Place in the Sun ' An ambitious young man's liaison with a fac tory girl threatens hts romance with an hei­ress Montgomery Clift. Elizabeth Taylor, Shelley Winters 1951[U S A ] Where There's a Will There's an A

8 :0 0 A M CD Hello Kitty 's Furry Tale TheaterCD Focus on BritainC 8 (40. Little Clowns of Happytown (CC)11 Hee Haw 20' Porky Pig2?' (30' D isney 's Adventures of the Gummi Bears (CC)'24' Sesame Street (CC) v26) Kidsongs (In Stereo)(38) Wall Street Journal Report (41) Remi(57' Rod and Reel Streamside [C N N ] Daybreak [D IS ] Good Morning Mickey![E S P N ] Tom Mann Outdoors [H BO ] MOVIE: 'Honkytonk M an ' With hopes of performing at the Grand Ole Opry. an aging country singer travels the back- roads of America with his nephew. Clint Eastwood. Kyle Eastwood, Barry Corbin 1982 Rated PG.[U S A ] Changing Lifestyles: Two Years to Financial Fretfttom

8 :3 0 A M CD JimN^Jenson's Muppet Babies (CC).CD Get SmartCD ® Pound Puppies (CC).CD America's Top Ten GD Puttin' OQthe Hits G® Interrw rti^l Championship W res­tling (60G® Tom and Jerry

G® Smurfs (CC).(S ) MOVIE: 'M an or Gun' A cowboy re­leases townspeople from the dictatorship of a powerful family Macdonald Carey, Audrey Totter. James Craig 195B.^ Bottomline (3D Maquina del Tiempo (5?) W oodwrighl's Shop [C N N ] Big Story[D IS ] New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh[E S P N ] Fishing: Best of Bill Dance

9 :0 0 A M CD McCreary Report CD ® M y Pet Monster (CC).CD Superman GD Solid Gold in Concert G® Mighty Mouse G® Sesame Street (CCi (y) A sk the Manager GD Capitan Centella

La Plaza[D IS ] Donald Duck Presents [E S P N ] Fishin' Hole [M A X ] MOVIE: Morgan Stewart's

. Coming Home' Fresh from boarding school, a teen-ager uncovers a smear cam­paign aimed at his father s political career Jon Cryer. Lynn Redgrave. Nicholas Pryor, 1987. Rated PG-13.

r

THE H ID IN G OF ANNE FRANK — Mary Steenburgien (I.) andXisa jacobs star in “ The Attic: The Hiding oi Anne Frank," a CBS movie about M iep Gies, who hid the Franks from Nazi persecution. It airs Sunday.

[U S A ] Search for Beauty ''

9:1 0 A M [C N N ] Healthweek

9 :3 0 A M CD ® uttle w izards (CC)CD SupermanG® Amateur Duckpin Bowling (60 min.) G® Bugs Bunny

VegaSGD Isla del Tesoro (ID Say Brother GD Addams Family [C N N ] Moneyweek [D IS ] Raccoons[E S P N ] Fishing: Arthur Smith K D W Tournament of the Palm Beaches From Florida. (R)[T M C ] MOVIE: Making Mr. R ight' A New Wave publicist is hired to teach a life­like android some social graces before he goes public. Ann Magnuson, John Malkov- ich, Ben Masters. 1987. Rated PG-13. (In Stereo)[U S A ] Keys to Success

1 0 :0 0 A M CD Pee-wee's Playhouse ( D Wrestling: W W F Superstars of Wrestling ^CD ® Bool Ghostbusters (CC).CD Great Weekend (60 min.)Cn) Soul TrainG® GLOW: Gorgeous Ladies of W res­tling( g )® A L F ( C C ) .

What is Family Day Care? Let's Plan (g) W W F Wrestling Spotlight GD El Tesoro del Saber @ Tony Brown 's Journal i D WoHd Wide Wrestling [D IS ] Kaleidoscope Concert (In Stereo) [E S P N ] Truck and Tractor Pull [H B O ] MOVIE: 'Blind Date' (CC) A blind date pairs an overworked yuppie with a beautiful woman who reacts to alcohol in a strange way. Bruce Willis, Kim Basinger, John Larroquette. 1987. Rated PG-13 (In Stereo)[U S A ] Perfect Diet

10:1 0 A M [C N N ] Showbiz Week

1 0 :3 0 A M CD Mighty Mouse: The

New Adventures (CC)G® EssenceG® G® Alvin and the Chipm unks (CC) G® What is Family Day Care? Let's Play G® Batman GD ConanGZ) Adam Sm ith 's Money World [C N N ] Style W ith Elsa Klansch [E S P N ] Sports Trivia [M A X ] MOVIE: 'P laying for Keeps' Three high-school graduates attempt to transform a run-down country hotel into a rock-and-roll resort for teens. Daniel Jor- dano. Matthew Penn, Leon W. Grant. 1986. Rated PG-13. (In Stereo)[U S A ] Love Your Skin

1 1 :0 0 A M CD American Bandstand CD Dukes of Hazzard CD T and T (CC) A teen-ager, accused of arson, seeks revenge on the person she believes framed her. (In Stereo)CD W W F Wrestlirtg Spotlight GD Star Search (60 min.)G® Eborty / Jet Showcase

W W F WrestlingJim Hanson 's Fraggla Rock (CC).

G® American Adventure Greatest Sports Legends

(M) Three StoogesBugs Bunrry & Tweety Show (CC).

GD PEUCULA: 'B lue Demon contra los Cerebros Infemeles' Un cientifico se do- dice a matar a luchadores alcoholicos y a otros cientificos, para extraerles el cerebro y obtener sus conocimientos. David Rey­noso, Ana Martin.GZ) Washington Week in Review (CC) (R )

GD Fall Guy[D IS ] Unicom A young boy purchases a goat, mistaking it for a unicorn.[E S P N ] Scholastic Sports America [U S A ] Jimmy Houston Outdoors

1 1 :3 0 A M QE) W a Oot it M a ^ O a v idprepares a videocassette for a p rS^ ^ t ive client, but mistakenly takes M ic ke y 's^ ly - dancing tape to the meeting. (R)G® How To Buy A Car Wholesale

(3® New Archies (CC)G® American Adventure G® This Week in MotorSports

Flintstone Kids (CC)GD Wall Street Week (R)[C N N ] Baseball '8 8 [D IS ] Grim m 's Fairy Tales [E S P N ] QameDay[T M C ] MOVIE: 'K lute ' A detective's in­vestigation into the disappearance of a prominent businessman leads him to a Manhattan prostitute. Jane Fonda, Donald Sutherland, Charles Cioffi 1971. Rated R [U S A ] Where There's a Will Thera 's an A

1 1 : 4 5 A M [H B O ] MOVIE: T h * Allnighter' Five Southern California students have a series of misadventures over the course of their last day and night before graduation. Susanna Hoffs, Dedee Pfeiffer, Joan Cusack. 1987. Rated PG-13. (In Stereo)

1 2 ; 0 0 P M ® Puttin' on the Hits (R) (In Stereo)(D Charlie's Angsls ( D World Wrestling Federation Cham ­pionship Wrestling (D Black Sheep Squadron GD G.L.O.W. Wrestling G® Bullwinkis( ^ MOVIE: W .W . and the Dixie Dancekingt' An easygoing con-artist loves country music, robbing gas stations and a singer celled Dixie. Burt ^ynolds. A n Car­ney. Jerry Reed, 1975.(g) Foofur (CC). 'G® Growing YearsG® MOVIE: Hot S tu ff Miami s light- fingered underworld is being pursued by a trio of_gpiikelv burglary detectives Dom DeLuise, 'Suzanne Pleshette, Ossio Davis 1979G® Black Perspective G® MOVIE; 'Hardcase' Soldier of fortune at the turn of the century is determined to regain what is his after he returns to Texas to find his life in chaos Clint Walker. Ste­phanie Powers, Alex Karras. 1971.

ContInuMi...

t t — MANCHESTER HERALD, Saturday, April 16, 1988« 4 - i ,.ti h - i ) , . v - f t i i i i f '

MANCHESTER HERALP/SatUrt^ April 16. 1988 - t3

Saturday, Continued(4$ Candlepin Bow ling (60 min.)

@ ) So sam e Street (CC).' d D M O V IE : T h e Return of Frank Can- fMKi' Frank Cannon investigates the suicide of a friend. William Conrad. Arthur Hill, Di­ane Muldaur. 1980.

[ C N N ] N ew sdav [ D IS ] M y Friend Flicka [ E S P N ] C B A Basketbatl: Cham pion­sh ip Series G am e O ne (2 hrs.. 30 min.) (Live)[ U S A ] Dance Party U S A (60 min.)

1 2:30PM (3D m o v i e ; R acs for YourLife. Charlie Brownt' Charlie Brown and the entire Peanuts group are packed off to summer camp. 1977.

(H) Top Catt'm Tellingl (CC).Grow ing Years

C ® W hat About W om en [C N N ] Evans & Novak [ D IS ] Zorro

[ M A X ] M O V IE : M ak ing Mr. Right' A New W ave publicist is hired to teach a life­like android some social graces before he goes pdblic. Ann Magnuson, John lyialkov- ich, Ben Masters. 1987. Rated PG-13. (In Stereo)

1 :00PM (ID M O V IE : T h e Young Run- aw ays' An executive's daughter runs away from home and accepts the invitar tion of two seemingly nice girls to share their apartment. Brooke Bundy, Devin Coughlin, Lloyd Bochner. 1968. d D Grow ing Pains |CC) Mike heads for New York City to audition for the lead role in a Broadway revival. (R)

d D Haw aii Five-0

d D M O V IE : 'Cauldron of Blood' A blind sculptor molds his sculptures on skeletons obtained by his wife. Boris Karloff, Viveca Lindfors, Jean-Pierre Aumont. 1968. d D Josie and the Pussyca ts

® M ajor League Baseball: St. Louis Cardinals at N e w York M e ts or C incin­nati Reds at Houston Astros (3 hrs.) (Live)

I D M iste r Rogers Talks W ith Parents About Day Care Fred Rogers talks with parents who have children in day care and others who have chosen to stay at home with their children.

M O V IE : 'The M issouri Breaks' A free-lance lawman is hired by a Montana rancher to corral a horse thief and his gang. Marion Brando, Jack Nicholson, Kathleen Lloyd. 1976.

d S Let's G o Bow ling (60 min.) d D N e w Jersey Hispano

@ W onderw orks: H ow to Be a Perfect Person in Ju st Three Days (CC). (R)

[ C N N ] N ew sday[ D IS ] M O V IE : 'Sam son and Delilah' Ce­cil B. DeMille's colorful account of biblical strongman Samson and the scheming woman who betrayed him, Victor Mature. Hedy Lamarr. George Sanders. 1949. [ U S A ] Hollywood Insider

1 :30PM d D Haad of the C lass (CC) Taking Charlie's lesson on the rebellious '6 0 s to heart, Dennis organizes a sit-in for better food in the cafeteria. (R)Cip Rocky and Friends

Bodyw atch A look at psychologists' use of dream therapy to reach a mental balance in the waking lives of their pa­tients.

d D ReirK> Salvaje [ C N N ] New sm aker Saturday [H B O ] W hich Mother Is M ine? Melissa Sue Anderson stars as a 16-year-old who's about to be adopted by her foster family when her natural mother arrives and tries to reclaim her Marion Ross co-stars. (60 min.)

[ T M C ] M O V IE : 'F /X ' A special effects expert becomes the fall guy for govern­ment agents when he arranges a m obs­ter's fake assassination. Bryan Brown, Brian Oennehy, Diane Venora. 1986 Rated R (In Stereo)

[ U S A ] Cover Story

2:00PM (3D M O V IE : The Great M uppet Caper' The Muppets travel to London, whore Kermit and Fozzie investigate a jewel robbery and M iss Piggy is romanced by a dashing con man. Charles Grodin, Diana Rigg, Jack Warden. 1981. dD Road to Seoul An in-deph look at the athletes as they prepare physically, men­tally.and emotionally for the intense com­petitiveness of the 1966 Summer Olym­pics in South Korea.

dD Hawaii Five-0 (1$ Underdog

M O V IE : 'S itting Target' A convict plots a daring escape when he learns that his wife is expecting a baby. Oliver Reed, Jill St John, Edward Woodward. 1972

TOUR OP DUTY

(S ) A rt of W ilUwn Moxander (S ) M O V IE : 'The S h M k ’t C m ' Gangs­ters find their undersea quest for a lost shipment of drugs ham per^ by a mystical idol and the local shark population. Arthur Kennedy. Janet Agren, Andres Garcia. 1978.

® Greatest Sports Legends (S ) Luche Libre (60 min.)

(SZ) Collectors

d D M O V IE : 'Daughter of the M in d ' A scientist seeks the aid of a psychic when the spirit of his deceased daughter begins communicating with him. Ray Milland. Gene Tierney, Don Murray. 1969.[ U S A ] M O V IE : 'Terror of Frankenstein' This literate, well-made adaptation of the classic is a must for horror buffs. Leon Vi- tali. Per Oscarsson, Nicholas Clay. 1975.

2:10PM [ C N N ] Healthweek

2:30PM (3D (S) swing: W orid ProCham pionships Over 70 of the world's top skiers compete, from Aspen, Colo. (Taped)

(l8) K idsongs d D Hom etim e (CC).[ C N N ] Sty le W ith E lsa Klensch

[ E S P N ] W om an ’s Tennis; Bausch and Lomb Cham pionship Sem ifinals From Amelia Island. Fla. (3 hrs.) (Live)[HBO] M O V IE : 'Sum m er Cam p N igh t­mare' After taking control of a summer camp from its dictatorial director, a coun­selor puts the place under paramilitary rule. Chuck Connors, Charles Stratton. Adam

! Carl. 1987. Rated PG-13.[ M A X ] M O V IE : 'A Place In the Su n ’ An ambitious young man’s liaison with a fac­tory girl threatens his romance with an hei­ress. Montgomery Clift, Elizabeth Taylor, Shelley Winters. 1951.

2:45PM dD m o v i e : The AndromedaStrain ' A remote spot in New Mexico is contaminated when a satellite crashes there releasing a deadly bacteria. Arthur Hill. David Wayne, James Ofson. 1971.

3:00PM CE) ® Pro Bowlers Tour: Seagram 's Coolers Open From Atlantic City. N.J. (90 min.) (Live)( D Knight Rider(31) Soul Train(4p Santo Dom ingo (nvita

® Motorweek A road test of the FordProbe, Sait Flats speed king Gail Banks;hot and cold engine problems; cellularphones.

[C N N ] Your M oney g*

3:10PM [ D IS ] W ilderness Bound: World of the Beaver Cinematographer Des Bartlett captures the life cycle of one of nature's most industrious builders, the beaver. Narrated by Henry Fonda.

3:30PM (3D w orld w id e W restlingM icrow aves Are for Cooking

dZ) Art of W illiam Alexander and Lowell Spears[ C N N ] International Correspondents

[ T M C ] M O V IE ; 'O u t O f Africa' (CC) A Danish writer's unhappy marriage to a wealthy landowner is brightened when she falls in love with a dashing adventurer. Robert Redford, Meryl Streep. Klaus Maria Brandauer. 1985. Rated PG. (In Stereo)

4:00PM (3D P G A GoM: M C I Heritage C lassic From Harbour Town Golf Links at Hilton Head. S.C. (2 hrs.) (Live)

Knight Rider ( ID Pow er Pro W restling d D M O V IE ; 'The Projected M a n ' A la­boratory experiment goes awry, turning a scientist into a madman with the power to kilt. Mary Peach. Ronald Allen, Bryant Hali- day, 1967.

(S ) d D Major League Baseball: New York Yankees at M ilw aukee Brewers or Atlanta Braves at Los A ngeles Dodgers(3 hrs.) (Live)^.^d D French Che?: Brochettps, Kebabs and Skew ers

(2D M usica l Special; Tony and Lena (60min.)

( ^ M O V IE : 'Our M an Flint' An organiza­tion plots to take over the world by con­trolling the weather. James Coburn. Gila. Golan, Lee J Cobb. 1966 d D Embajadores de la M usica Colom- biana($7) Julia Chil<^ and Com pany -

(6j) M O V IE ; 'The Hunted Lady' An un­dercover police woman is framed in the slaying of her partner when her investiga­tion into the connectiori between a presi­dential aspirant and organized crime fi­gures gets too close to the truth Donna Mills, Alan F^ ste in , Roben Reed 1977

[DIS] K o ^ d A computer error sends perfect ^ e a r -o ld Konrad (Huckleberry

womoti (Polly Hollidayl who meet the ''birth" factory's stan.

On "Tour of Duty," airing SAT- URIMY, APRIL16 on CBS, Pvt. Taylor (Niguel A. nunez Jr., c.) serves as media­tor for Pvt. John­son (Stan Pos­ter, 1.) and another soldier (Mark Rolston) after a ra­cial incident turns nasty.

CHECK IISTINGS ' FOR EXACT TIME

Fox) t9

doesn

dards. Ned Beatty costars. (2 hrs.) [H B O ] M O V IE ; Oxford Blues' (CC) A rough-edged student pursues a girl, and at the same time, tries to improve his charac­ter by joining the school's rowing team. Rob Lowe, Ally Sheedy, Amanda Pays. 1984. Rated P(3-13. (In Stereo)[ U S A ] Cartoons

4:10PM [ C N N ] Sports C lose-up

4:30PM (3D (9) wide W orld of SportsScheduled: Grand National Steeplechase, a 4 1/2 mite event with 30 jumps over 16 fences, from Aintree. England; Baja 1000 Off-Road Race, from Ehcenada. Mexico. (90 min.) (Taped)

Q D Charles in Charge (CC) Charles serves as the mediator in a feud between Walter and Lillian.(3 ) Frugal Gourmet: Noodles, D um ­plings. B iscu its and Scones (In Stereo) ® Lo Mejor de la Sem ana Noticias sobre el besibol.S ?) Victory Garden (CC).[ C N N ] B ig Story[ M A X ] M O V IE : 'Sorry, W rong Number' An invalid tries to get help after she over­hears a murder traing planned. Barbara Stanwyck, Bua Lancaster, Ann Richards. 1948.

5:00PM CID M iss io n Im possible

d D A-Team(ID T and T (CC) A teen-ager, accused of arson, seeks revenge on the person she believes frampd her.

(J i Kojakd D Great Chefs of Chicago ( P Saint d D Topo G igio

Frugal Gourmet (In Stereo)

[ C N N ] Democrotic Debate [U S A ] Double Trouble

5:30PM (3D Bustin ' Loose Rudey's ex­citement over joining a club is short-lived when he.learns it's actually a gang d D Victory Garden (CC) d D Chespirito (60 min.) d D This Old House

[ E S P N ] Horse Racing: Lexington Stakes One-and-one-sixteenth miles race for three-year-old Thoroughbreds, from Lexington, Ky. (Live)[ U S A ] Check It Out!

6:00PM C S d D ® N e w sd D W h a t 's Happening Nowt! Dwayne buys a magic shop after being fired from his job. (R)

(dD A-Team(3D Star Trek; The Next Generation (CC)

' Riker becomes the major player in a deadly game masterminded by the dangerous and powerful 'Q ' entity. (60 min.) (R)(31} Blue Knight .

d D Friday the 13IB: The Series Ryan, Frank and Micki travel back to 19th- century London after they tangle with a snarling vampire. (60 min.) (R)

(24) OeGrassi Junior H igh (CC)C26) Record Guide

d D Jeffersons Part 1 of 2.

di?) Auction 88(iD It 's a Livipg Everyone's surprisedwhen Howard proposes to Nancy

[C N N ] New sw atch[ D IS ] M iss in g Adventures of Ozzie andHarriet[ E S P N ] Horse Racing: Oak Lawn H an­dicap One-and-one-eighth miles race for three-year-old and up Thoroughbreds, from Hot Springs, Ark. (60 min.) (Live) [H B O ] M O V IE ; 'Breaking A w ay ' (CC) Oscar-winning tale of four high-school graduates who ponder their future while preparing for a grueling bicycle race. Den­nis Christopher. Dennis Quaid, Barbara Barrie. 1979. Rated PG.

[ M A X ] M O V IE : 'Nothing in Com m on'

(CC) A young executive develops a better understanding of his parents after they de­cide to end their 34-year marriage. Tom Hanks, Jackie Gleason, Eva Marie Saint. 1986. Rated PG.

[ U S A ] A irwolf

6:30PM ( J ) C B S N e w s (CC)(dD Sm all W onder (R)

dD Siske l & Ebert Scheduled; "Above the Law " (Steven Seagal, Pam Grier); "Time of Destiny” (William Hurt, Timothy Hutton); "The Moderns" (Genevieve Bu- jold, Keith Carradine).

(ID Motorw eek A look at the latest Corv­ette; race car driver Bob Bonderant; the world's largest automotive flea market. (S ) W h a t 's Happening Now!) Dwayne buys a magic shop after being fired from his job.

(M) Alice® A B C N e w s (CC).(3D Noticiero UnIvision

(6D Throb Zach tries to raise funds to keep an old nightclub from closing down Guests; Nicolette Larson. Emma Samms. Tirriothy B. Schmidt, the Byrds.

[ C N N ] Pinnacle [ D IS ] Here 's Boomer [ T M C ] Short Film Show case

7:00PM d D Lifestyles of the Rich and Fam ous Jill St. John and Robert Wagner; Annette Funicelto, actor Gil Gerard; author Janet Dailey; Louis X IV 's palace at Ver­sailles. (60 min.)'(R)( B Too C lose for Comfort

dD W heel of Fortune (CC) d ) It 's a Living ti i^fi^one's surprised when Howard proposesSp Nancy Part 2 of 2. (R)

G D CheersG i) Charles in Charge Bti6dy and Charles try to prove that Jamie's modeling school IS a fraud

(ID M a m a ’s Family iola and Mama set out to prove that Vint isn't Raytown's serial burglar. (R)

d D Outward Boun^/Homeward Bound Profiles a group of troubled Vietnam veter­ans as they attempt to regain a greater sense of self-worth during a mountain climbing experience.

d D Hee H aw (R)( ID N e w s

It 's a Living Ginger's in trouble when a newspaper photo shows her sitting on a married senator's lap

G D D C. Follies

G D Sabado G igante Programs de vane- dades con juegos, conlpetencias, enirev- istas y musica y bajo la animacion de Don Francisco. (3 hrs.. 30 min.)

G D Star Trek: The Next Generation Pi­card and the away team face deadly com puterized weapons on. the planet Minos as they investigate the disappearance of the U.S.S. Farragut. (60 min.)[ C N N ] Crossfire Saturday

[ D IS ] M O V IE : Son of Flubber' An inven­tive professor creates an anti-gravity va­por called flubber. Fred MacMurray, Nancy Olson. Keenan Wynn 1963. Rated G [ E S P N ] SportsCenter

[ T M C ] M O V IE : 'M aking Mr. Right' A New W ave publicist is hired to teach a life­like android some social graces before he goes public. Ann Magnuson, John Malkov- ich, Ben Masters 1987 Rated PG-13, (In Stereo)

[ U S A ] New M ike Hamm er (60 mm.)

7:30PM CID Family Ties

dD Jeopardy! (CC).

d D N B A Basketball: New York Kn lcks at Atlanta H aw ks (2 hrs., 30 min.t (Live)

(3D Tales From the Darkaide A young man (Robert Rothman) moves into an apartment that later takes on frightening characteristics whenever he breaks the landlady's (Marie Windsor) rules. (R)

G D M ork and M indy

(E ) D.C. FoNies(E ) A s Schools M atch W its: Waheonah vs. Lee H igh

d D Challenge(E ) Countdow n to 88: The Seoul Gam es d D M a m a ’s Family The Harpers hope to cure Mama of her addiction to home­shopping TV shows. (R)

® Fight BackI W ith David Horowitz [ C N N ] Sports Saturday [ E S P N ] Truck and Tractor Pull

8:00PM (35 Gift of Tim» Profiles of 12 Americans who've started programs to enrich the lives of young people. Host: Alan Thicke. (60 min.)

d ) d D Family Double Dare d D ® Conversations W ith the Presi­dents (CC) President Reagan and former Presidents Carter and Ford answer ques­tions from a cross section of America's youth. (60 min.)

(3D M O V IE : 'N ew York, N e w York' A saxophone player and a singer bring out the aura of romance from the big band era. Liza Minnelli, Robert DeNiro. 1977.

(3D M O V IE ; ‘Avalanche Express' A train, carrying a top Soviet defector, is the target of agents out to stop his mission. Robert Shaw, Lee Marvin. Linda Evans. 1979.

d D M O V IE : ‘Gray Lady Dow n ' A nuclear submarine becomes trapped deep beneath the sea after a collision with a freighter. Charlton Heston, David Carradine, Stacy Keach. 1978.

® (E ) Facts of Life (CC) Jo 's father takes an immediate dislike to his daugh­ter's irresponsible boyfriend. (R) (In Stereo) ( ID W ild America (CC) A profile of i..e wild mink.

d D M O V IE : 'Trigger Point'(E ) M O V IE : 'W h ite Lightning' An ex-con makes a deal with federal authorities to break up a moonshine ring in exchange for his freedom. Burt Reynolds. Jennifer Bil­lingsley, Ned Beatty. 1973.[ C N N ] Prim eN ew s

[ E S P N ] Stanley Cup Playoffs; Division Sem ifinal Gam e Teams to be announced and starting time is tentative. (3 hrs.) (Live) [H B O ] M O V IE ; 'B lind Date' (CC) A blind date pairs an overworked yuppie with a beautiful woman who reacts to alcohol in a strange way. Bruce Willis, Kim Basinger. John Larroquette. 1987. Rated PG-13. (In Stereo)[ M A X ] M O V IE : 'M organ Stew art's Com ing Hom e' Fresh from boarding school, a teen-ager uncovers a smear cam­paign aimed at his father's political career Jon Cryer, Lynn Redgrave. Nicholas Pryor 1987. Rated PG-13

[ U S A ] M O V IE : 'Demonoid, M essenger of Death’ An American couple working a mine in Mexico uncover a small, 300-year- old silver casket holding a disembodied hand, Samantha Eggar, Stuart Whitman 1981

8:30PM ® C6i Boys W ill Be Boys Booch learns of his father's death after a fight at home causes him to move into an apanment with Chazz. Part 1 of 2. |R) {In Stereo) ,

922) I.3P] Storyteller (C6| A pesant lad be­comes the unwitting target of an evil king who fears that the bov will someday usurp his throne. (In Stereo)

Q D This Old House (CC)

8:45PM [ D IS ] DTV

9:00PM (3 ) Tour of Duty (CC) Racial conflicts on the battlefield result in Pvt Johnson being charged with the murder of a bigoted white soldier. (60 min.) (R)

( B (SD W erew olf (CC) Thinking he will end the werewolf curse. Eric finally tracks down Skorzeny and prepares to kill him (60 min.) (R) (In Stereo)

CID G D Ohara (CC) Ohara and Shaver track down robbers who have terrorized the family of a Russian immigrant. (60 min.) (R) (In Stereo)

(22) LiD Golden Girls (CC) Rose, con­cerned about the nuclear arms race, mails a letter to Soviet leader Gorbachev. (R) (In Stereo)

S D M O V IE : 'Under the Volcano' An al­coholic ex-British Consul living in Mexico tries to improve his status while getting on with life, Albert Finney, Jacqueline Bissei. Anthony Andrews. 1984 CST) Auction Continues (2 hrs )

[ C N N ] N e w s Update [ D IS ] M O V IE : 'To Find M y Son ' A sin­cere, loving man tries to adopt a child, and finds himself embroiled in a bitter battle because of the unprecedented circumst­ances of his situation. Richard Thomas, Justin Dana, Steve Kanaly. 1980.

[ T M C ] M O V IE : Tai-Pan' Based on James Clavell's best-selling saga of co­lonial Hong Kong and the bitter power struggle between an opium dealer and his competitors. Bryan Brown, Joan Chen. John Stanton. 1986. Rated R. (In Stereo)

Continued...

SNAFU by Brue* Baaitto KIT 11'CANLVLE by Larry WrigM

Saturday, Continued9:30PM (E ) Am en (CC) After winning a

car in the church raffle, Amelia catches gambling fever. (R) (In Stereo)

d D The N e w Honeymooners [ C N N ] Th is W eek in Japan [ M A X ] Cinem ax Com edy Experiment: Autobiographies: The Enigma of Bobby Bittman (CC) Eugene Levy, portraying the most successful (and least talented) star in show business, lands a role in the sitcom "Over M y Dead Bobby", (In Stereo)

1 0:00PM QD W est 57th (60 min )

([ID QD N e w sQD G D Spenser; For Hire (CC) Hawk and Spenser come to the aid of an alcoholic clergyman facing a murder charge. (60 min.) (R)C18) Headlines on Trial

d D U.S. M an of the Year From Atlantic City, N.J.. 51 men representing every state and Puerto Rico compete in personality and appearance categories. Hosts; Bert Parks, Cathy Lee Crosby. (60 min.)E ) ( ^ Hunter Suspicions are aroused when a Bel Air housewife balks at identify­ing the man who stole her million-dollar necklace. (60 min.) (R) (In Stereo)

j E Combat!(ID Murder: Live Frorh Death Row Ger- aldo Rivera looks at mwder with a panel of criminologists before/a New York studio audience. Scheduled/^n addition to a taped interview with convicted killer Charles Manson, are segments on serial killers, un­solved murders and the portrayal of mur­der in movies and on television. (2 hrs.) (R)

[ C N N ] Headline N e w s [H B O ] Boxing Julio Cesar Chavez (55-0, 46 KOs) vs. Rodolfo Aguilar (19-1,9 KOs) for the W B A lightweight title and Marlon Starling (43-4, 26 KOs) vs. Mark Breland (19-1, 13 KOs) for the W B A welterweight title, both scheduled for 12 rounds, from Las Vegas. Nev. (2 hrs.) (Live)[ M A X ] M O V IE ; M aking Mr. Right' A New W ave publicist is hired to teach a life­like android some social graces before he goes public. Ann Magnuson, John Malkov- Ich, Ben Masters. 1987 Rated PG-13. (Iri Stereo)[U S A ] Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1 0 : 1 5 P M ® M O V IE : Gator' Amoonshiner takes on a corrupt political boss. Burt Reynolds, Lauren Hutton, Jerry Reed 1976,

10:30PM QD 9 to 5 Marsha s de­pressed when Don announces plans to marry.QD M a m a 's Family Iola and Mama set out to prove that Vint isn't Raytown's serial burglar. (R)

(3D IN N N e w s (3D C lassified 18 G D Especial con [ U S A ] Ray Bradbury Theater

1 1 :00PM (J ) Q ) ( P G D Now s

QD Taxi(7 ) M ort After Dark (33) M O V IE : ‘The Day of the Locust' This adaptation of Nathaniel W est's explosive novel lo ^ s at the seamy side of Holly­wood in me thirties. Donald Sutherland. Karen Black. William Atherton 1975

(3D Tw in Star Productions S D You Can 't Take It W ith You Essie, Penny and Alice look in the wrong "little black book " as they try to find a love inter­est for Grandpa. (R)

(E ) N e w s (Live)E Butterflies

E Barney Miller d D Auction 88

[C N N ] Pinnacle[ D IS ] M O V IE : 'Sunday Dinner for a S o l­dier' A man and his granddaughter invite a soldier to share their Sunday dinner. Anne Baxter, John Hodiak, Charles Winninger 1944.[E S P N ] SportsCenter [U S A ] M O V IE : Juvenile Jungle' Two young thugs mug a workman after ho cashes a paycheck at a liquor store Corey Allen, Rebecca Welles. Joe Conley. 1958

11:30PM QD Sh e 's the SheriffQ ) M O V IE : Lady S in gs the Blues'Based on the life of Billie Holiday, the 1920s jazz singer whose rise to fame was hindered by her drug addiction. Diana Ross Billy Dee Williams. Richard Pryor 1972,(3D Don K ing 's Only In America Promo ter Don King presents a talk-variety special from Las Vegas featuring singers Freddie Jackson and Randy Travis. Bruce Willis, comic Louie Anderson, modeling agent John Casablancas and a tribute to Muham­mad Ali. (60 min.)

(3D Topper E D.C. Follies

(E ) Saturday N ight Live (90 min.) (In Stereo)E Racing From Plainsfield GD M O V IE : 'Packin ' It In' An L A. cou­ple, struggling to cope with big city prob­lems. follow their neighbors to the world of wilderness living. Richard Benjamin. Paula Prentiss, Tony Roberts. 1983.G3) PELICULA: 'Tarahumara' Confronta- cion enire la civilizacion moderna y antig- uas costumbres indigenas. Ignacio Lopez.

[C N N ] Sports Tonight Anchors: Fred Hickman, Nick Charles.

[E S P N ] A W A W restling [ T M C ] M O V IE : 'F /X ' A special effects expert becomes the fall guy for govern­ment agents when he arranges a m obs­ter's fake assassination. Bryan Brown, Brian Dennehy, Diane Venora. 1986. Rated R. (In Stereo)

1 1:45PM [ M A X ] M O V IE : -W isdom ' (CC) A young man becomes a folk hero when his crusade against the institution leads him to commit a string of unusual bank robberies. Emilio Estevez, Demi Moore. Tom Skerritt. 1986. Rated R. (In Stereo)

12:00AM (D so lid Gold in Concert (R) (In Stereo) ^E N ew Grooves W ith M e g Griffin E Runaway W ith the Rich and FamousSt. Croix in the Virgin Islands; Jamaica; health and beauty spas; Denver's Rattles­nake Club restaurant.E M O V IE : Fists of the W hite Lotus' The evil Pro-Manchu Lotus clan wages war against opponents from Shaolin. Liu Chia Hu, Lo Lieh 1981.E Saturday N ight Live (60 min ) (In Stereo)^ Star Hustler

M O V IE : 'Terror on the Beach' A va­cationing family's camping outing on the beach turns into a nightmare. Dennis Weaver. Estelle Parsons. Susan Dey. 1973.[C N N ] New snight[H B O ] M O V IE : Band of the Hand' Five teen-age criminals become unwilling vol­unteers in an unconventional program de­signed to undermine Miami's drug trade. Stephen Lang. Michael Carmine, Lauren Holly. 1986. Rated R. (In Stereo)

1 2:30AM (3D star search (60 min )E Hogan 's Heroes

E M O V IE ; 'Charlie Chan in the City of Darkness' Supernatural events lead Chan into a maze of murder and foreign intrigue. Sidney Toler, Lynn Bari. 1939.[C N N ] Evans & Novak [ D IS ] M O V IE : 'Sam son and Delilah' Ce­cil B. DeMille's colorful account of biblical strongman Samson and the scheming woman who betrayed him. Victor Mature. Hedy Lamarr, George Sanders. 1949. [E S P N ] Golf: Hall of Fame C lassic From Panama City, Fla. ^90 min.) (R)[ U S A ] N ight F ligfiil'take Off to English Bad B ^ s of Ro^;,.^. ''

1:00AM (3 ) N e w s |R|(3D M O V IE : 'Fighting Back' Based on the true story of Rocky Bleier, who overcame near-crippling war injuries to star with the Super Bowl champion Pittsburgh Steelers. Robert Urich. A n Carney, Bonnie Bedelia. 1980.E Pro W restling This W eek

E Bizarre [ U S A ] Snub

1 : 1 0A M [C N N ] Travel Guide

L:30AM CD M O V IE ; -stunt Seven- Ateam of stunt experts attempt a daring air, sea and land rescue of a kidnapped movie star Christopher Connelly, Christopher Lloyd. Bob Seagren. 1979.G D Tales From the Darkside Heeding the advice of a fortune teller, a woman from a small Iowa town sets out to find the Sagit- tarian of her dreams.E Dating Gam e

C4D A B C N e w s (CC)

G3) Multitrim [C N N ] Crossfire Saturday [ T M C ] M O V IE ; 'Quiet Cool' A New York police officer battles murderous mari­juana growers in the rugged wilderness of Northwestern California James Remar, Adam Coleman Howard, Daphne Ash- brook 1986. Rated R [U S A ] N ight Flight: Comedy C u ts IV

1 ;40AM [ M A X ] M O V IE : Pray for Death' A former ninja vows revenge on the American crooks who've been terroriz­ing his family and business. Sho Kosugi. Donna Kei Benz. James Booth 1985 Rated NR

2:00AM (3D IN N N ew s

E Jim m y Sw aggart

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"Is that it?! ‘Hemlines will go up...then down...then up...then down...then....'”

ON THE FA8TRACK by Bill Holbrook

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D ID Y O U KNOW' t h a t LIS C E R M S

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psopfs. past and prasant. Each lanar in tha d p fw stands for anothar. Todty't d u t: U *qval$ J.

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— S B A N O K F O U .

Y O J O N .PREV IO US SOLUTION; "The trouble with being a breadwinner nowadays is that the government is in for such a big slice." Mary McCoy.

SERVING AMERICA FROM THE

BEGINNING!643-2711

. rrs A SURE THING!

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U - MANCHESTER HERALD. Saturday. April 16, 1988

THE 0RIZZWELL8 by Bill tchoir

MANCHESTER HERALD. Saturday. April 16, 1988 — E5

ha? PEfN A 10U6H YEAR ON \WAU ?T.

TELLME.'l A ^ T

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W E L L , IF P M G O N N A [ Y E A H , 1 I G O O D L U C K ,,DO THIS, 1 B ETTER / G U E S S V ALLEY.' THAN G E T ON W ITH IT.' A Y 'B ETTER !

IS H E O U T A S IG H T Y E T ?

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YES, W E 0\0l THANK I. - L GOaNESS, ALLEY'S WE D ID ^ NO LONGER O U R

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Paul _9 Diving bird

12 Bushy hairdo13 Straight____

arrow14 56. Roman15 Boggy

wasteland16 Indication17 Roman bronze18 Helps20 Musings22 Poetic

contraction23 Collection of

sayings24 Territories27 Like a pig31 Nursemaids32 Operates33 Boxer

Muhammad _34 Misdeed35 Hockey player

Gordie _36 Weekend,

welcoming abbr.

37 Ideal39 Ruth's

companion40 Paintings41 Contemporary

painter42 Horselike

mammal45 Heed49 Exist .50 Make cloudy52 Wavy (var.)53 Kitchen vessel54 Leslie Caron

rola55 Mrs. Charles

Chaplin56 Swift aircraft

(abbr.)57 She (Fr.)58 Construction

beam (comp, wd.)

DOWN

1 Papa's wife

2 Flying saucers (abbr.)

3 Silk fabric4 Term In logic5 Ship parts6 Information

agency (abbr.)7 Horse (si.)8 Baseball game

divisions9 Wings

10 Layer of eye11 Smoochl a u d ’s sibling

Hammarskjold23 First-rate (2

wds.)24 Actress Pitts25 Leave out26 One-billionth

(prof.)27 Actress Goldie

28 Villain in "Othello"

29 Not fat30 Phonograph ma­

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(Answers Monday)Jumbles: BELIE CIVIL EX TENT SCHOOL Answer; What alcohol causes people to give when

they lose their Inhibitions— EXHIBITIONS

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R E A D Y P O R YOUR L I T T L E L E A G U E S E A S O N , E L M O ?

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WHAT A OUY by Bill Heatl

" l WISH YOU’ O THROW THOSE

DP2AiWINQS AWAV, MOM. THEY REPRESENT

MY EARLY PERIOO.”

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‘ B i r t h d a y ' ^

V April 17,1988The aspects indicate that you may make some Important changes In your life in the year ahead. You could either move Into a larger living space or redec­orate your present abode.ARIES (March 21-April 19) Be careful today that you are not jockeyed Into a position where some of the obligations of another are foisted on you. Protect your position. Major changes are ahead for Aries in the coming year. Send for our A stro -G raph predictions today. Mall $1 to A stro -Graph, c/o this news­paper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, O H . 44101-3428. Be sure to state your zodi­ac sign.TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Be a bitmore selective than usual regarding com panions with whom you pal around today. T ry to avoid one who has a knack for causing complications.GEMINI (May 21-Juna 20) Give prompt attention to matters that require Imme­diate action today. If they are Ignored, they will be much more difficult to con­tend with later.CANCER (June 21-July 22) Friends will resent being Imposed on today, even those you've gone out of your way to help In the past. Keep this In mind If you're in need of a special favor.LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It will be a seri­

ous mistake today to try to shift the blame to others lor your own shortcom ­ings. It you err In some manner, admit It openly, without excuses.VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapl. 22) You're a bit nore touchy than usual today. Be a

goodrtsfqner, or else you may lake o l- lense at something another says where no ill will was mtended.LIBRA (Sept. 2S^ct. 23) Som eone who is noted for h ls/h ^K ^ilily lo use or ma­nipulate others m im t select you tor his/her pigeon today. Dax L L -- be victimized.SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Tact and logic are your two greatest tools lor success today, yet, lo your detriment, you might not use either of them prop­erly and fail to achieve your alms. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) Try not to take on any assignments or tasks that are loo strenuous tor you either physically or mentally. If assistance Isn't available now. wait until It Is. CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) Usually you're a rather prudent and cautious person, but today, there are Indications you might become Involved in some­thing that has too many elements ol chsncGAQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19) Your rep­utation could suffer at this time II you fall to com e through on a commitment you made recently that concerns others as well as yourself.PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Don't yield to peer pressure today It there Is some­thing others want you to do that Is op­posed by your own better judgment. Be strong and firm.

Bridge

N O R T H 4 -U -ia♦ A J 6 5 V 7♦ A K 7 3 A K 10 6 4

W E S T E A S T

♦ - - - ♦ 10 9 3

V Q J 9 4 3 2 ¥ A K 84 Q J 4 2 ♦ 10 9 8 5

♦ Q 9 3 ♦ J 8 2

S O U T H♦ K Q 8 7 4 2

♦ 10 6 5♦ 6♦ A 7 5

V u ln e r a b l e : N e i t h e r D e a l e r : N o r t h

W es t N o r th E a s t S ou th1 ♦ P a s s 1 ♦

P a s s 3 ♦ P a s s 4 ♦

P a ss 4 ♦ P a s s 4 ♦

P a ss 5 ^ P a s s 6 ♦

P a s s P a s s P a s s

O p e n in g l e a d : V Q

Pinpointing the controlsB y Ja m e s Jacoby

Easley Blackwood, a great teacher and player, is best known for inventing the four-no-trump ace-asking conven­

tion more than 50 years ago. But Eas­ley himself would be the first to agree that many slams are better bid with­out asking for aces. Notice the logic of the bidding sequence in today's deal.

North's opening bid took on added luster when South responded one spade, so North jump-raised spades, but only to three, since it was possible that South might hold only five or six points and only four spades. With his good six-card suit and an outside con­trol, South immediately smelled the possibility of more than game, so he showed the ace of clubs. North dutiful­ly cue-bid the A -K of diamonds, but South bid only four spades. Now what? Since South had shown Interest in slam when he bid four clubs. North rea­soned that South had stopped at four spades because he had heart losers and no heart control. So North took a chance and showed his heart shortness with a further bid of five hearts. That was all dauntless South needed — he jumped to six spades, which was cold.

Lesson: It's fine to ask for aces when you know you have enough general strength to play slam and are worried only that the opponents might have two aces. But when controls in specific suits are needed for slam, cue-bidding is more elective.

James Jacoby's books “Jacoby on Bridge" and “Jacoby on Card Games" (written with his father, the late Os­wald Jacoby) are now available at bookstores. Both arc published by Pharos Books.

Wtien you need to advertise, nothing works like Classified!

Dial 643-2711

W - 'W lA l^ E S tE R HERALD. Saturtalr/X jtrti'iy.'lW g

Sanilav, April 17 ANNE FRANK

5:00AM [CNN] Sports Review [D IS ] Best of Walt Disney Presents (60min.)[U S A ] Snub

5; 20AM [HBO] Behind the ScenesAuthor Jay Mclnerndy discusses the mak­ing of "Bright Lights. Big City," a film based on his novel, starring Michael J. Fox.

5:30AM CH) l Love Lucy(X) Best of Saturday Night Live (B) INN News^ Home Shopping Overnight Service Continues (90 min.)[C N N ] Moneyweek [ESPN] Thoroughbred Digest [T M C ] MOVIE: Out Of Africa' (CC| A Danish writer's unhappy marriage to a wealthy landowner is brightened when she falls in love with a dashing adventurer. Robert Bedford, Meryl Streep. Klaus Maria Brandauer. 1985. Rated PG. (In Stereo) [U S A] Night Flight: Comedy Cuts IV

6:00AM (X) We Believe dD Gilligan's Ikland dD Headline News QD Christopher Closeup ^ InsightdD Connecticut: Now [D IS ] You and Me, Kid [ESPN] SpeedWortd (60 min.)[H B O ] M O VIE: 'Short Circuit' (CC) A bolt of lightning transforms a high-tech warrior robot into a likeable little creature who thinks he's human. Ally Sheedy. Steve Guttenberg, Fisher Stevens. 1986. Rated PG. (In Stereo)[U S A] Night Flight: Night Flight Goes to the Oscars - Snubs

6:1 0AM [CNN] Healthweek 6:1 5AM QD Davey & Goliath 6:30AM CEvista

dD Oral Roberts d) It's Your Business QD Christian Science Monitor Reports QD Headline News

DiscoverRing Around the World

dD Defenders of the Earth (CC).[CNN] Style With Elsa Klensch [DIS] Mousercise[ M A X ] MOVIE: 'Stone Boy' (CC) A mid western farm family must face emotional adjustment after a member accidentally kills his older brother. Robert Duvall. Glenn Close, Jason Presson. 1984. Rated PG. [U S A ] Night Flight: Night Flight Gets Outrageous

7:00AM d ) A t the Movies dD Robert Schuller dD 8th Day dD Point Of View QD Larry Jones QD Divine PlandD Art of Looking Young and Beautiful

James Kennedy What's Happening Nowll

® It's Your Business (M) Kenneth Copeland

Jimmy Swaggart dD Popeye [C N N ] Daybreak [D IS ] Welcome to Pooh Comer [ESPN] SportsCenter [U SA] Calliope

7:30AM (X) Wall street Journal Re­portd) Breakthrough dD Sunday Mass QD World Tomorrow QD ® Day of Discovery

Miracle Faith Outreach Dr. James Kennedy

® Celebrate with Rev. David Mellon QD Can You Be Thinner? dD Flintstones [C N N ] Big Story [D IS ] Dumbo's Circus [ESPN] World Sport Special

8:00AM CD New England Sunday d) Sunday MassdD High School Bowl: Canton vs. Litch­fielddD ®D Funtastic World of Hanna- BarbaraQD Frederick K. Price QD Living the Word

Porky Pig

dD Sunday Todayd l) Sesame Street (CC).dD Oral Roberts^ World TomorrowQD Robert SchullerQD Nuestra FamiliaS7) Sesame Street (CC). (R)[C N N ] Daybreak[D IS ] Good Morning Mickeyl '[E S P N ] NBA Today[HBO] Adventures of Tom Sawyer Tomfalls in love with Becky Thatcher.[M A X ] MOVIE: 'Karate Kid Part Tw o' (CC) While visiting Okinawa, Daniel is forced to defend his mentor and himself against bitter foes determined to destroy them. Ralph Macchio, Noriyuki 'Pat' Mor- ita, Nobu McCarthy. j1 986. Rated PG. (In Stereo) ^[U S A] Cartoons

8:30AM dD woody woodpecker dD World Tomorrow Q i David Paul (8) Tom and Jerry ® Natural Weight Loss (3p Robert Schuller (M) AliceQD Forgotten Children of the 80's (60min.)

[C N N ] Crossfire[D IS ] New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh[ESl*N] Inside the PGA Tour [HBO] Seabert[TM C ] MOVIE: 'Return of the Jedi' (CC) Third installment of George Lucas' "Star W ars" trilogy reunites Luke Sky- walker and his comrades for a final battle with the evil Galactic Empire. Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford. Carrie Fisher. 1983. Rated PG. (In Stereo)

9:00AM dD Sunday Morning (CC) (90min.)dD D.J. Kat dD Boat Show QD Visionaries QD Kenneth Copeland

Bugs Bunny(|D Q?) Sesame Street (CC).(3D Charlie's Angels (S) Maude ® World Tomorrow [C N N ] Daywatch [D IS ] Donald Duck Presents [ESPN] Motorweek Illustrated [HBO] MOVIE: 'Legend' (CC) A demon threatens the forces of good in this lavish fairy tale from director Ridley Scott. Tom Cruise, Mia Sara, Tim Curry. 1985. Rated PG. (In Stereo)

9:30AM dD Century 21 Home Show (jD Captain Power artd tbs' Soldiers of the Future

Visionaries(g ) Meet the Pt jss (CC). ^® Adelante ■(g ) Sea Hunt Jenny faHs in love with a greedy man who uses Mike in a get-rich- quick scheme. (R)

Rev. David Paul QD La Santa Misa [CNN] Your Money [D IS ] Raccoons[E S P N ] M agic Years in Sports: High­lights 1 9 4 7 Look at baseball pioneer Jackie Robinson in the year 1947.

1 0:00AM dD variety Charity Tele­thon '88 Live from the Philadelphia Civic Center. (3 hrs.) dD Natural Weight Loss dD Steampipe Alley QD New Gidget QD Jimmy Swaggart dD Buck Rogers (g) Chalice of Salvation (Live) dD Mister Rogers ® Rin-Tin-Tin ® Sacrifice of the Mass ^ T and T (CC) A teen-ager, accused of arson, seeks revenge on the person she believes framed her. (In Stereo)

. QD Love Your SkinQD America en la Culture QD Learn to Read

. QD Fame (60 min.)[D IS ] M OVIE: 'Dot and the Koala' Ani­mated A small Australian town serves as the setting for this tale of the adventures shared by a young girl and a talking koala bear. 1983.

Miep Dies (Mary Steenburgen, I.) com bs the ha ir o f Anne Trank (Lisa Jacobs), the young g ir l she is h id in g from the Nazis, In "The A t­tic : The H id ing o f Anne Trank." The CBS m ovie a irs SUNDAY. APRIL 17.

CHECK IISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME

[ESPN] Lighter Side of Sporte Host: Jay Johnstone.[M A X ] MOVIE: 'A Fine Mete' (CC) Two losers inadvertently win $10 ,000 in a fixed horse race. Ted Danson, Howie Mendel, Richard Mulligan. 1986. Rated PG.

1 0 : 1 0 A M [C N N ] On the Menu 1 0 : 3 0 A M dD inside Washington

dD Beazley Showplace of Homes QD Love Boet dD This Old House (CC). (R)(g) Space Kidettes ® Batman® Conversations With QD Para Gente Grande (90 min.)@) Learn to Read [CNN] Newsmaker Sunday [ESPN] This Week in Sports (60 min.) [HBO] MOVIE: Every Time We Say <3oodbiye' A clash of cultures threatens the developing romance between an injured American pilot and a Sephardic Jewish woman in 1942 Jerusalem. Tom Hanks. Cristina Marsillach, Benedict Taylor. 1986. Rated PG-13.

1 0 : 4 5 A M ® Jewish Life1 1 : 0 0 A M dD Entertainment This

Week Interview: actress Mariel Heming­way. (60 min.) (In Stereo) dD Discover dD Knight RiderQD Art of Looking Young and Beautiful (g) Captain Power (g) Real to ReeldD Frugal Gourmet: Noodles. Dum­plings, Biscuits and Scones (R) (In Stereo)(g) It's Your Business ® Connecticut-Real Estate Showcase (g) Three Stooges (g) Business World ^^ffopkSchoolQD MOVIE: 'Blue Fire Lady' A handsome student helps a young girl achieve her dreams. Cathryn Harrison, Mark Holden. 1978.[TM C ] MOVIE: The Trip to Bountiful' (CC) An elderly woman who seeks to re­capture a piece of her past returns to her hometown. Geraldine Page, John Heard, Carlin Glynn. 1985. Rated PG.[U SA] Cartoons

1 1 : 1 0 A M [CNN] Travel Guide [D IS ] Animated Haggadah AnimatedClaymation characters illustrate the child­ren of Israel's liberation from slavery. Voices: Leo Friedman. Evlon Geva and Avigdor Hertzo.

1 1 : 3 0 A M QD IS) This weak With David Brinkley (CC).QD At the MoviesQD (g) Hallmark Homesg ) TV Open HousedD French Chef: Brochettes, Kebabsand Skewers(g) Wall Street Journal Report (g) World Tomorrow QZ) DeGrassi Junior High (CC) (R) [CNN] Sportscene [ESPN] GamaDay[M A X ] MOVIE: Hoosiers' (CC) A former college coach faces resentment when he takes over as head of an Indiana high-school basketball team. Gene Hack- man, Dennis Hopper, Barbara Hershey 1986. Rated PG. (In Stereo)

1 1 : 3 5 A M [D IS] Grimm's Fairy Tales 1 2 : 0 0 P M (D Out of This Worid

Donna prepares for an upcoming date with her alien husband. (R)(XD Greatest American Hero QD MOVIE; 'Corvette Summer' When a customized Stingray is stolen, the owner

takes a wild chase through the Nevada de­sert to get his car back. Mark Hamill, Annie Potts. 1978 (JD Classified 18dD MOVIE: Shaft's Big Score!' Detec­tive Shaft tries to find the killer of a friend and a large sum of money hidden before the killing occured. Richard Roundtree. Moses Gunn. 1972. g Muppets (2D McLaughlin Group dD Police Woman (M) Meet the Press (CC)QD Temas y Debates (5^ Modem Maturity (CC)[CNN] Newsday [D IS ] My Friend Flicka [ESPN] Drag Racing: IHRA All-Pro Winter Nationals From Darlington. S.C (60 min.) (R)[U SA] All-American Wrestling

1 2:30PM (T ) Marblehead Manor Ran­dolph's jealous when Hilary invites a hand­some actor to their home. (R) dD Jefferson Awards QD Headline News g Muppets g On the Record QD Connecticut Newsmakers g This Week in Baseball Highlights of Major League action are shown.QD spotlight on Government QD PELICULA: M i Heroe' En una man­sion antigua, un escritor y su esposa viven las mas aterradoras experiencias. Julio Aleman, Angelica Maria.QD Computer Chronicles [C N N ] International Correspondents [D IS ] Zorro[HBO] MOVIE: The Sea Wolves' A group of British soldiers attacks German ships hiding in neutral waters. Gregory Peck, Roger Moore, David Niven. 1980. Rated PG.

1 :00PM CD NBA Basketball: Los An- geies Lakers at Houston Rockets (2 hrs., 30 min.) (Live)dD Variety Charity Telethon '88 Live from the Philadelphia Civic Center. (2 hrs.) Continued.(XD Sea Hunt Jenny falls in love with a greedy-fitQnwho uses Mike in a get-rich- . quick yschemb) (R) 0

This Week in Baseball Highlights of Major League action are shown.QD MOVIE: 'Indict and Convict’ A prom­inent public official is suspected of murder­ing his wife and her lover. George Grizzard, Reni Santoni, Susan Howard. 1974. g g Major League Baseball: Boston Red Sox at Texas Rangers (2 hrs., 30 min.)g Connecticut Newsweekg MOVIE: 'X. Y, & Zee' The love-hate relationship betvyeen a husband and wife explodes when he discovers that they have the same extra-marital lover. Eliza­beth Taylor, Michael Caine, Susannah York. 1972.g Major League Baseball: Texas Ran­gers at Boston Red Sox (3 hrs.)(g) Let's Go Bowling QD Firing LineQD MOVIE: 'Darby's Rangers' TheAmerican Ranger's part in the assault on North Africa during World War II is drama­tized. James Gafrner, Etchika Choreau, Jack Warden. 1958.[C N N ] Nowaday[D IS ] MOVIE: 'Brighty of the Grand Canyon' A burro s adventures load him to perilous encounters with mountain lions, the Colorado River and a murderer. Joseph Cotten, Pat Conway. Jiggs. 1967.[ESPN] Auto Racing: NASCAR First Union 400, from No. Wilkesboro, N.C. (3 hrs.) (Live)

[TM C ] MOVIE; 'Some Kind of Wonder­ful' (CC) While pursuing the most popular girl in school, a shy teen-ager overlooks the tomboy that truly loves him. Eric Stoltz.Lea Thqmpson, Mary Stuart Masterson 1987 Rated PG-13.[USA] MOVIE: Deceptions' Based on Judith Michael's novel. Identical twins, one unhappily married and the other a glamour­ous jetsetter, impulsively decide to switch roles for a week. Stefanie Powers. Barry Bostwick, Gina Lollobrigida. 1985. Part 1 of 2,

1 :30PM CD High School Basket ball: All-American Game (2 hrs., 30 mm )(Live)(XD Major League Baseball; St. Louis Cardinals at New York Mets (3 hrs t(Live)(24) Tony Brown's Journal [CNN] Moneyweek [M A X ] MOVIE; 'Times of Harvey Milk'(CC) The political rise and death of San Francisco politician Harvey Milk, the first openly gay official elected to the city's Board of Supervisors is chronicled. 1984

2:00 PM 03 m o v ie : 'Skateboard'Backed into a corner by his bookie, a man * hits on the scheme of fielding a profes­sional skateboard team. Allen Garfield. Leif Garrett, Kathleen Lloyd. 1978. g MOVIE: 'The Roaring Twenties'Three World War I buddies clash in a boot­legging racket. James Cagney, Humphrey Bogart. Jeffrey Lynn. 1939.[ g Voices & Visions (CC). Part 8 of 13 (&D Mystery!: Rumpole of the Bailey (CC) Guthrie Featherstone is reluctant to preside over a massage parlor case: a young barrister plans to modernize Cham­bers. making both Rumpole and Henry un comfortable. (60 min.) Part 5 of 6.[CNN] Week in Review

2:30PM QD Copa Marlboro Match de soccer desde San Antonio. Texas. (2 hrs )[DIS] Animals in Action A study of how animals maintain their body temperatures in hot and cold climates.[H B O ] And the W inner Is... Hosts Jack Lemmon, Steven Spielberg and Anielica Huston examine the activities of the Aca­demy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, including film preservation and student Os­cars.

3:00PM (X) MOVIE: 'Movie Movie’ In this spoof of 1930's movies, "Dynamite Hands ' tells of a young man's struggle to become a boxer, and "Baxter's Beauties of 1933" lampoons lavish screen musicals George C. Scott, Trish Van Devere, Eli Wallach. 1978.QD Super Chargersg Wonderworks: Almost Partners(CC). (R)g Charlie's Angels • .>QD Masterpiece Theatre; David Cop- perfield (CC) Upon corriploting his studies in Canterbury. David journeys to London where he begins an apprenticeship with the lawyer Spenlow. (60 min.) Part 3 of 5 [CNN] Larry King Weekend [D IS ] Maricela A 13-year-old girl from El Salvador tries to fit into her new surround­ings in Califronia while keeping her His­panic ancestry intact. Linda Lavin and Car- lina Cruz star. 160 min.)[HBO] MOVIE: 'Dear America; Letters From Vietnam' (CC) Archival footage and | songs from the '60s underscore this por­trait of the Vietnam conflict. 1987. Rated NR. (In Stereo)[M A X ] MOVIE; 'Holiday' A fun-loving young man wants to marry a wealthy woman and begin a perpetual holiday but her father has other ideas. Cary Grant, Ka­tharine Hepburn. Lew Ayres. 1938.[TM C ] MOVIE: 'Reuben, Reuben' An alcoholic Scottish poet on the lecture cir­cuit indulges in drinking and romance on college campuses in New England. Tom Conti, Kelly McGiltis, Roberts Blossom.1983. Rated R. ^[USA] MOVIE: 'Deceptions' After one of the twins dies, the survivor struggles to make a decision about revealing her true identity and risks her life to bring her sis- ^ ter's killer to justice. Stefanie Powers,Barry Bostwick. Gina Lollobrigida. 1985 Part 2 of 2.

3:30PM (D PQA GoH: MCI Heritage Classic (Final Round) From Harbour Town Golf Links on Hilton Head Island,S.C. (2 hrs., 30 min.) (Live) g Spectacular Worid of Guinness Re­cords Scheduled; the tallest man and the shortest man, the person with the most Guinness records. (R)

, g Hogan's Heroes QD NBA Basketball: Boston Celtics at Washington Bullets (2 hrs., 30 min.)(Live)

4’l00PM (XD Auto Racing: Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach (2 hrs.) (Live)QD MOVIE; 'Brainstorm' A scientist creates a machine enabling one human

Continued...

MANCHESTER HERALD, Saturday. April 16, 1968 - 27

Saturday, Continuedbeing to experience every sensation exper­ie n c e by another. Louise Fletcher. Chris­topher Walken. Natalie Wood. 1983.Q® N W A Pro W rastling g M OVIE: 'The Thomas Crown Affair' A mdtti-millionaire executes a daylight bank robbery and gets away with two mil­lion in cash. Steve McQueen, Faye Duna­way, Paul Burke. 1966. g CHIPS Patrolg Nova (CC) The continuing quest of a new generation of physicists to formulate a single unifying theory to explain the univ­erse. (60 min.) (R) g Police Storyg Sportsworid Scheduled: Superstars Final Competition, from Miami. (2 hrs.) (Taped)g Don King's Only in America Promo­ter Don King presents a talk-variety special from Las Vegas featuring singers Freddie Jackson and Randy Travis, Bruce Willis, comic Louie Anderson, modeling agent John Casablancas and a tribute to Muham­mad Ali. (60 min.) g W ild Kingdom

Joy of Painting[D IS ] M OVIE: 'The Peanut Butter Solu­tion' After losing his hair, a boy creates a concoction that restores it too well. Ma­thew Mackay, Siluck Saysanasy, Alison Podbrey. 1985. Rated PG.[E S P N ] W om en's Tennis: Bausch and Lomb Final Round From Amelia Island, Fla. (2 hrs.) (Live)

4-: 30PM QD Kiner's KomerQ6) BensonQD El Mundo del Box Campeonatos y lu- chas entre boxeadores imernacionales. Comentaristas: Jorge Berry y Luis Moreno. (90 min.)QD M adeleine Cooks [C N N ] Evans 8i Novak [H B O ] Survival: Killers of the Plain A study of the big game animals living on the Serengeti Plains of East Africa. (60 min.) [ M A X ] Ccazy About the Movies; Cary Grant - The Leading M an (CC) Reflec­tions on Grant's career by Stanley Kramer, Richard Brooks, Stanley Donen, Eva Mane Saint and more. (60 min.)

5:00PM (XD Colombo (XD A-Team Q® Simon 8i Simon g W restlingg Frontline (CC) Sexually abused as a child, Shirley Turcotte returns to her child­hood home to confronithose who failed to protect her. (60 min.) )C2® The Saintg MOVIE: 'Amelia Earhart' The lifestyle of the famed 1930's flier and champion of women's rights is dramatized. Susan Cla'ik, John Forsythe. Jane Wyatt. 1976 t40y Star Search (60 min ) iS7' Lap Quilting: Review of Assembly and Finishing [CNN] Newswatch [TM C ] MOVIE; 'Haunted Honeymoon' A radio star, planning to marry his co-star at his family's ancestral mansion, is sud­denly plagued by phobias. Gene Wilder, Gilda Radner, Dorn DeLuise 1986 Rated PG. (In Stereo)[U S A ] Airwolf

5:30PM (ID Creative Living [C N N ] Newsm aker Sunday [p IS ] Danger Bay (CC) Gram and Jonah argue over the best way to save the valley when a watershed is scheduled to be used for logging.[H B O ] M OVIE: The W raith ' An Arizona gang leader is challenged to a drag race by a mysterious stranger driving an unearthly car. Charlie Sheen, Nick Cassavetes. Randy Quaid. 1986. Rated PG-13 (In Stereo)[M A X ] MOVIE: 'Mr. Mom' (CC) A rising young executive trades places with his wife when he is fired Michael Keaton. Ten Garr. Martip Mull. 1983. Rated PG

6:00PM CD CBS News (CC)( p a s (30) (4bi News CC) MOVIE; Exodus' A horoic Israeli un­derground leader spirits a group of Jewish refugees out of British internment ramps on Cyprus, taking them to Israel Paul New man, Eva Marie Saint, Lee J Cobb 1960 iTi) MOVIE; 'Grace Quigley' A cbmpas sionate senior citizen enlists the aid of a professional hit man to provide an unusual service for her elderly friends. Katharine Hepburn. Nick Nolte, Elizabeth Wilson 1984.(i® Runaway W ith the Rich and Famousg Bustin' l ^ s e Rudey's excitement over joining a club is short-lived when he learns it's actually a gang, g Feces of Japan

g Outer UmitaQD Asi va el Beisbol Resumen semanal sobre la Liga Nacional y Americana.QD Auction 88 ,QD Star Trek: The Next Generation Pi­card and the away team face deadly com­puterized weapons on the planet Minos as they investigate the disappearance of the U.S.S. Farragut. (60 min.)[CNN] Newswatch [DIS] MOVIE: 'How the West Was Won' Three generations of pioneers parti­cipate in Western expansion in the 19th century. George Peppard, Debbie Rey­nolds, Carroll Baker. 1963. Rated G. [ESPN] Skiing: New Hampshire Men's Cup From Loon Mountain, (Taped)[USA] Tales of the Gold Monkey

6:30PM (XD News (XD Oom DeLuise Show g Private Benjamin 0 ® Tales From the Darkside Heeding the advice of a fortune teller, a woman from a small Iowa town sets out to find the Sagit- tanan of her dreams (R) g g NBC News g Artsweak ( g ABC News (CC).QD Univision en el Deporte Comentarios y resumen del acontecer deportivo por Jessi Losada y Jorge Berry. (60 min.) [CNN] Inside Business [ESPN] Skiing; Powder 8 Worid Cham­pionship From British Columbia, Canada. (R)[TM C ] MOVIE: 'Return of the Jedi' (CC) Third installment of George Lucas’ "Star Wars" trilogy reunites Luke Sky- walker and his comrades for a final battle with the evil Galactic Empire. Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher. 1983 Rated PG. (In Stereo)

7 :00PM dD 6 0 M inutes (CC) (60 min.) dD QD 21 Jum p Street Officer Hoffs falls in love with a drug kingpin while working undercover to gain his confidence. (60 min.) (In Stereo)(XD g Disney Sunday Movie; Bigfoot (CC) Rescued from certain danger by the legendary Sasquatch, two children try to save the mysterious creature from cap­ture. A "Disney Sunday Movie" presenta­tion. (60 min.) Part 1 of 2. (R) g Charles in Charge Charles serves as the mediator in a feud between Walter and Lillian. (R)g Friday the 13th: The Series Ryan. Frank and Micki travel back to 19th- century London after they tangle with a snarling vampire. (60 min.) (R) g g ) Our House (CC) In the aftermath of the earthquake, David's caught in a massive explosion and fire. (60 mm.) Part 2 of 2. (R) (In Stereo) g Disegveries Underwater The first of eight programs exploring the world of mar­ine archaeology examines the ethics of treasure hunting. Narrator: Scott Glenn. (60 min.) (R) g WWF Wrestling [CNN] Worid Report First Run [ESPN] Sp(OftsCenter [H B O ] MOVIE; Short Circuit’ (CC) A bolt of lightning transforms a high-tech warrior robot into a likeable little creature who thinks he's human. Ally Sheedy. Steve Guttenberg, Fisher Stevens. 1986 Rated PG. (In Stereo)

[M A X ] MOVIE: 'Karate Kid Part Tw o' (CC) While visiting Okinawa, Daniel is forced to defend his mentor and himself against bitter foes determined to destroy them Ralph Macchio. Noriyuki 'Pat' Mor- Ita, Nobu McCarthy 1966. Rated PG (In Stereo)[USA] Riptide

7:30PM 0 ® Mork and Mindyi41j Noticiero Univision [CNN] Sports Sunday Barry Moroz re caps the weekend of the world of sports [ESPN] Lighter Side of Sports Host Jay Jolmsrene.

8:00PM Q J Murder. S)ie W rote (CC) Jessica poses as a dead woman.'s sister to investigate her murder (60 mm.) |R) fSP America's Most W anted CSj v40( Supercarrier (CC) On liberty in home port, Sierra and Anzac are lured into a dangerous situation by two attractive women (60 min.)111) Star Trek: The Next Generation Pi­card and the away team face deadly com­puterized weapons on the planet Minos as they investigate the disappearance of the U S S Farragut (60 min.)01) It's Showtime at the Apollo This week's host; Bill Cosby. Scheduled: music acts E U. and Michael Cooper, comics Dan Hankins and Rick Aviles. (60 min.)

g MOVIE: 'Adam's Rib' A husband and wife team of lawyers have a courtroom battle involving a woman on trial for shoot­ing her husband. Katharine Hepburn, Spen­cer Tracy, Judy Holliday. 1949. g ( g Family Ties (CC) Mallory's embar­rassed when Nick's made an honorary sorority sister. (R) (In Stereo) g Nature (CC) A look at the creatures of decay which move in when a garden is left untended, including moss, ivy, wolf spi­ders, lizards and bats. (60 min.) (R) (In Stereo)g MOVIE; 'Days of Glory' During World War II. Russian guerillas play a heroic role in holding off the Nazis. Tamara Touma- nova, Gregory Peck, Maria Palmer. 1944. g One Day at a Time (S) Mias Venezuela (2 hrs.)QD America's Most Wanted Scheduled: Jacqueline Edmqnds, wanted in connec­tion with a ring of women hustlers; es­caped murderer Joseph Kindler; Alex Kelly, accused of sexually assaulting two teen-age girls.[C N N ] PrimeNews[ESPN] College Baseball: Louisiana State at Mississippi State. (3 hrs.l'ttnve)^ [USA] New Mike Hammer (60 min.)

8:30PM d ) ® Married... Wit)iChildran (CC) Al wrecks the house white at­tempting to catch an elusive mouse. (R) (In Stereo)g g Day By Day Kate and Eileen's react differently to Brian's decision to become a part-time stockbroker again. (In Stereo)® Alice

8:40PM [DIS] DTv9:00PM CD m o v ie : 'The Attic: The

Hiding of Anne Frank' Premiere. (CC) Miep Gies' book inspired this account of her efforts to hide Anne Frank's family from the Nazis In Amsterdam during Wodd War II. Mary Steenburgen, Paul Scofield, Eleanor Bron. 1988.(XD QD It's Garry Shandling's ShowGarry steps into his flashback booth to find out why everyone is mad at him after the Schumakers' parents' anniversary parly. (In Stereo)CD Si MOVIE: 'Franit Nitti: The Enter- car' Premiere, (CC) Based on the events surrounding mobster Frank Nitti's rise to power during Al Capone's imprisonment Anthony LaPaglia. Vincent Gustaferro, Trini Alvarado. 1988 QD Lifestyles of the Rich ertd Famous Jill St. John and Robert Wagner; Annette Fun- icello; actor Gil Gerard; author Janet Dailey; Louis XIV's palace at Versailles. (60 min.)g MOVIE: 'Grace Quigley' A compas­sionate senior citizen enlists the aid of a professional hit man to provide an unusual service for her elderly friends. Katharine Hepburn, Nick Nolte, Elizabeth Wilson 1984.

g Q® MOVIE: 'Home Is Where the Heart Is' (CC) Yearning for independence, a 13-year-old leaves rural Texas and her ornery grandfather to spend a summer with the mother she barely knows. Jane Alexander, Jason Robards, Rob Lowe. 1987 (In Stereo)g Masterpiece Theatre: David Cop- perfield (CC) Steerforth mystorio'rfsly de parts for foreign shores; David's courtship of Dora Spenlow is opposed by her father. (60 min.) Part 4 of 5. g It's a Living Everyone's surprised when Howard proposes to Nancy. Pan 2 of 2. (R)(^ ) Auction Continues (2 hrs.)[C N N ] W eek in Review [D IS] Adventures of Sherlock Holmes [HBO] MOVIE: 'E v e ^ Time We Say Goodbye' A dash of cultures threatens the developing romance between an injured American pilot and a Sephardic Jewish woman in 1942 Jerusalem. Tom Hanks. Cristina Marsillach. Benedict'Taylor 1986 Rated PG-13.[M A X ] MOVIE: 'Hoosiers' (CC) A former college coach faces resentment when he takes over as head of an Indiana high-school basketball team. Gene Hack man, Dennis Hopper, Barbara Hershey 1986 Rated PG (In Stereo)[T M C ] MOVIE: 'Some Kind of Wonder­ful’ (CC) While pursuing the most popular girl in school, a shy teen-ager overlooks the tomboy that truly loves him. Eric Stoltz. Lea Thompson. Mary Stuart Masterson '1987 Rated PG-13 [U S A ] Cover Story

9:30PM CD f t ilo u e t (cc) Richard asks,Laura to throw a baby shower for Linda (R) (In Stereo) g M am a's Family [U S A ] Hollywood Insider

10:00PIVI (XD (6D Tracey UllmanShow Sketches: Francesca's estranged mother returns from Tibet; a popular '60s disc jockey ig reduced to doing airport traffic reports. (R) (In Stereo)(XD Newt QD Perry Mason

g Jimmy Swaggart QD Good Neighbors g World Vision g 38 on SportsQD Siempre en ’Dojningb Left in Pro­gress Programa de variedades con mu­sics, entrevistas y artistas invitados bajo lo animacion de Raul Velasco. (2 hrs.. 30 min.)[CNN] Headline News[DIS] Prairie Home Companion WithGarrison Keillor (In Stereo)[USA] Robert Klein Time

10:30^M (XD Current Affair C S Sunday Sports Scene Weekly sports highlights and features with host Steve Al­bert and feature reporter Carl Gherkin, g Yes, Prime Minister g Ask the Manager QD New Gidget Danni and Gail believe their chemistry teacher (Elinor Donahue) is

' using their love potion. (In Stereo)

1 1 :00PM (XD (ID (XD g g NowsXD Entertainment This Week Interview: actress Mariel Hemingway. (60 min.) (In Stereo)g INN rlews Q® Feed My People g Insight / Out g News (Live) g Fresh Fields g Drawing Men to Christ Q® AM Boston QZ) Auction 88QD Connecticut: Now (In Stereo)[CNN] Inside Business [ESPN] SportsCenter (60 mtn )[HBO] MOVIE: Wildcats' (CC) A feisty girls' track coach is chosen to coach a rough and rowdy inner-city football team. Goldie Hawn, James Keach, Swoosie Kurtz. 1986. Rated R. (In Stereo)

[M A X ] Crazy About the Movies: Cary Grant • The Leading Man (CC) Reflec tions on Grant's career by Stanley Kramer. Richard Brooks, Stanley Donen, Eva Mane Saint and more. (60 min.)[TM C ] MOVIE: 'The Trip to Bountiful' (CC) An elderly woman who-seeks to re­capture a piece of her past returns to her hometown. Geraldine Page, John Heard, Carlin Glynn. 1985. Rated PG. * [USA] Keys to Success

1 1 :30PM (XD George Schlatter's Co­medy Club(XD XD Sports Extra (60 min.)QD Honeymooners g Day of Discovery g Christian Children's Fund g Sports MachineQ® Amen (CC) After winning a car in the church raffle, Amelia catches gambling fever. (R) (In Stereo) g Christian Ufestyle Magazine (4® MOVIE: 'Arabian Adventure' A young, handsome prince tries to win the hand of a beautiful princess by retrieving a magic rose. Christopher Lee. Milo O' Shea, Oliver Tobfas. 1979.(§D Spirftuai Life Crusade ^[CNN] Sports Tonight Anchors: Fred Hickman, Nick Charles.[D IS ] M OVIE: 'The Bible' John Huston's epic adaptation of the first 22 chapters of the Book of Genesis. George C Scott, Pe­ter O'Toole, Ava Gardner. 1966.[USA] Focus on Success

1 1 :45PM (XD Howard Cosell: Speak­ing of Everything (R)

1 2:00AM (D At the Movies (R)(XD Dallas g Star TrekQ® Two Hundred for the Next Twenty Years(^® Runaway With the Rich and FamousSt Croix in the Virgin Islands; Jam^ca; health and beauty spas. Denver's Rattles­nake Club restaurant (22) Hogan's Heroes (2® CombatlQ® Saturday Night Live (In Stereo) t g Twilight Zone (9i) Gene Scott[C N N ] World Report First Run [E S P N ] Women's Volleyball: Chicago Breeze at Los Angeles Starlites (90 min j(Taped)[M A X ] MOVIE: 'The Friends of Eddie Coyle' A crook who wants to spend the rest of his life out of jail finds that every body wants to bo his friend, for a price Robert Mitchum, Peter Boyle, Alex Rocco 1973 Rated R [USA] Look at Me Now

12:30AM QD ufa tty iM of the Richand Famous (60 min.)XD Keys to Success g PorrH>graphy: An American Tragedy

g Hart to Hartg Home Shopping Overnight Service(3 hrs.)QD Love Your Skin

-<[USA] Search for Beauty (R) ^

1 2:45AM (XD New Generation 12;50AM [HBO] m o v ie : Black

Moon Rising' (CC) A profes,>ional thief working for the government stages the daring theft of a futuristic automobile Tommy Lee Jones, Linda Hamilton, Robert Vaughn. 1966. Rated R.

1:00AM (XD Worldvlslon (XD Dallas g Odd Couple[TM C ] MOVIE: 'W arrior and the Sor­ceress' A holy warriorbecomes involved in a clan rivalry. David uarradine. Maria So- cas, Luke Askew. 1964. Rated R

• [USA] Changing Lifestyles: Two Years to Financial Freedom

1 :1 5AM XD ABC News (CC)1 :30AM. XD New England Sunday (R)

g INN News g That's the Spirit g ABC News (CC)[ESPN] 1987 Boston Marathon High­lights

1:45AM [M A X ] M OVIE: Black W i­dow' (CC) A complex series of seductions and murders puts a Justice Department in­vestigator on the trail of a mysterious woman. Debra Winger, Theresa Russell,Sami Frey. 1967. Rated R. (In Stereo)

2:00AM QD m o v ie : 'Last Four Days'Benito Mussolini falls at the hands of the antl-Pascist underground. Henry Fonda, Franco Nero, Rod Steiger. 1977.XD Home Shopping Overnight Service(3 hrs.)QD At the Movies Bill Harris and Rex Reed look at great movies and performances that haven't won Academy Awards.[CNN] Moneyweek[ESPN] SportsCenter[USA] Conversation With Fred Lewis(R)

2:30AM XD News (R)(XD Freedom From Fat g MOVIE: 'It Happened One Christ­mas' A small-town banker is dissuaded from suicide by a guardian angel who shows her how much she has done for her town. Mario Thomas. Wayne Rogers. Or­son Welles. 1977.[CNN] Sports Latenight [DIS] MOVIE: 'How the W est Was Won' Three generations of pioneers parti cipate in Western expansion in the 19th century. George Peppard, Debbie Rey nolds. Carroll Baker. 1963. Rated G.[ESPN] Women'» Tennis: Bausch and Lomb Final Round From Amelia Island,Fla (3 hrs ) (R)[USA] One Thousand Dollars Every Five Hours

2:35AM [HBO] m o v ie : 'Codenama:Wildgeese' A group of ihternational mor- conarios raid drug depots in the jungles of Thailand. Lewis Collins, Lee Van Cleef, Er­nest Borgnino 1986 Rated R (In Stereo)

3:00AM XD Nlghtwatch Joined inProgress(XD Mission Impossible [CNN] Evans & Novak [TM C ] MOVIE: 'Haunted Honeymoon'A radio star, planning %p*marry his co-star at his family's ancestral mansion, is sud­denly plagued by phobias. Gene Wilder.Gilda Radner, Dom DeLuise. 1986. Rated PG. (In Stereo)[USA] Program Yourself for Success

3:30AM ( g Home Shopping Over­night Service Continues (2 hrs., 30 min ) [CNN] Crossfire[M A X ] MOVIE: 'Chopping Mall' Teen­agers trapped inside a shopping mall are terrorized by malfunctioning security ro­bots. Kelli Maroney, Tony O'Dell, John Terlesky 1986 Rated R

4:00AM (XD m o v ie : 'Bowery Buefca-root’ The Bowery Boys head west lo track down a murderer and clear the malt shop owner’s name Loo Gorcoy. Hunt/ Hall 1947(USA) Robert Vaughn Discovers (R)

4:10AM (CNN] Showbiz Week 4:20AM [HBO] m o v ie : 'Oeer Amer

ice: Letters From Vietnam' (CC) Archival footage and songs from the '60s under score this portrait of the Vietnam conflict 1987 Rated NR (In Stereo)

4:30AM (CNN) Big story[USA] Robert Vaughn Discovers (R) ^

4:45AM (TMC) m o v ie : Orend Prix' IThree champion race car driver^ encounter personal problems as they compete in the Grand Prix. James Garner. Eva Mane Saint,Yves Montand. 1966. (In Stereo)

n - MANCHESTER HERALD, Saturday. April 16, 1988

FOCUS / Movies

Farm struggle becomes sweet and picturesqueTHE MILA-

GRO BEAN- F IE LD WAR(R ) Dirctor Ro­bert Redford sank a lot of tim e, money and love into this adaptation o f John N i­chols’ book of t h e s a m e name. But this portrait of a New Mexican Chicano farm communi­ty’s struggle to resist a vast development project is, at best, sweet and picturesque.

Redford is obviously address­ing a subject that he cares very much about, and, to his credit, he has been careful to leaven his film ’s message about callous high-business interests with touches of folk humor and mo­ments of "magic realism.’ ’ But Bedford’s directorial gentleness

° puts a wet blanket on the material: The movie ends up seeming almost complacently small-scale.

Beyond the charming, grizzled Carlos Rioquelme as a whimsical old codger who carries on conver­sations with an angel, the movie’s cast and characters don’t regis­ter as much. The central figure — a Mexican-American handyman (Joe Mondragon) who channels commercially owned water into his beanfield — is little more than a working-class mechanism to get the plot going. And it’s almost perverse for Redford to have a cast that strapping Brazilian beauty Sonia Braga in the unre­warding role of a salt-of-the-earth activist who, joined by a people’s- lawyer type (John Heard), leads a community fight against a rich developer (Richard Bradford).

FilmeterRobert DlMatteo

Christopher Walken turns up (to little effect) as the developer’s hired gun. and singer-songwriter Ruben Blades plays an all-too- bumbling sheriff. GRADE: ★ ★

A NEW LIFE (PG-13) Sporting a dreadful perm, and trying to act less than 100 percent nice for a change, Alan Alda stars as a middle-aged workaholic whose neglected wife (Ann-Margret) leaves him. Alda soon marries a beautifu l doctor (Veron ica Hamel) who wants to have a child of her own. Though Alda’s own daughter is fully grown, he’s forced to start parenthood all over again.

Meanwhile, Ann-Margret has fallen for a younger man — a puppy-doggish sculptor (John Shea) who’s attentive to her every need. The problem is she feels smothered by him. Watch­ing their friends build new lives and make new mistakes are Alda’s womanizing buddy (Hal Linden) and Ann-Margret’s sup­portive girlfriend (Mary Kay Place.)

If this all sounds a bit familiar, that’s because it is. Alda wrote and directed the picture, and it has his Ms. Magazine-level amia­bility, humanism and open- mindedness. Alas, the one excep­tion to this open-mindedness is a

CinemaHARTFORDCliMfiio C ity — Weekend Schedule

Unavailable.

HAST HARTFORD ■esiweed Feb 6 Cleerne— Broadcast

Newt (R) Sot 7,9:20; Sun 7:15.Feer R ld io rd f Fub and Cinema —

Masquerade (R) Sot 7:30,9:30,12; Sun 7:30,9:30.

Sbowcota anofflos 1-9 — Bright

WRST HARTFORDRim 1 B 2 — Broodcost News (PG-13)

Sot and Sun 2, 4:15, 7, 9:30. — Police Academy 5 (PG) Sot 2, 7; Sun 7. — D.O.A. (R) Sot and Sun 4:15,9:30.

W ILLIM ANTICJ lllta n le o a ra Cinema— Bod Dreams

(R) Sat and Sun 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11:45; — B iloxi Blues (PG-13) Sot 12:45, 3, 5:15, 7:M , 9:45, 12; Sun 12:45, 3, 5:15, 7 :» ,

L leh ts ,B leC lty (R ) Sat 12:20, .:35,4:50, 9:45. — Beetlelulce (PG-13J Sot 1,3:30,7 :» , 9:45, 11:55; Sun 12:20, 2:35, 4:50, S:15, 7:30, 9:45, 12; Sun 12:45, 3, 5:15,7:20, 9:45. — Love A t Stoke (R) Sot 12:10, 2:15, 4:20, 7:30, 9:35, 11:35; Sun 12:10, 2:15, 4:20, 7:30, 9:35. — The Seventh Sign (R) Sot 12:40, 2:40, 4:40, 7:45, 10:10, 12:10; Sun 12:40, 2:40, 4:40, 7:45,10:10. — Bad Dreams (R) Sot 12:50, 2:50, 4:50, 7:10, 9:30, 11:30; Sun 12:50, 2:50,4:50,7:15,9:30.— Beetlelulce (PG) Sot 12:30,2:35,4:40,7:25,9:40,11:40; Sun 12:30, 2:35, 4:40, 7:25, 9:40. — Biloxi Blues (PG-13) Sat 12,2:15 4:30, 7:35,10, 12:10; Sun 12,2:15,4 :» ,7:35,10.— Stand and Deliver (PG) Sot 12,2:10,4:20,7:40, 10:05, 12:10; Sun 12, 2:10, 4:20, 7:40, 10:05. — Snowy River Port 2 (PG) Sat 12:40,2:50,4:55,7:20,9:50,12; Sun 12:40, 2:50,4:55,7:20,9:50.

MANCHHITRRUA TBeoters Hast — Johnny Be Good

(PO-13) Sot-Sun 2:15, 4:15, 7. — D.O.A. (R) FrI-Sun 9:20. — Three men and a Boby (PG) Sot and Sun Z 4:30,7:15,9:40. — Police Academy 5 (PG) Sot and Sun 2:20, 4:30, 7:30, 9:45. — Rocky Horror P icture Show (R) Sot midnight. — Heavy Metal (R) Sot midnight. — K e n tu cky F r ie d M o v ie (R ) Sot m idnight.

VHRNONClog 1 B 2 — Johnny Be Good (PG-13)

Sot and Sun 1:30, 3:15, 5, 7, 9:15. — D.O.A. (R) SotandSunZ4:30,7:10,9:40.

7:30,9:45. — Bright Lights, Big City (R) Sot 5, 7:15, 9:30, 11:45; Sun 5,7:15,9:30. — The Fox ond the Hound (G) Sot and Sun 1, 3. — The last Emperor (PG-13) Sot 1, 4:15,0,11; Sun 1,4:15,8.

Rating guide

bit in which Alda and Linden both date the same "woman,” who turns out to be a transvestite mugger; as handed, the bit is a dirty-old-man stab at hip humor.

Otherwise, the movie is enter­taining, reasonably well-acted and totally synthetic. GRADE:

New home videoTHE LOST BOYS (R ) Warner.

$89.95. For some reasons, this 1987 horror comedy got bad reviews and iittle audience. It’s schlock, all right, and indulges in a bit of gory overkili toward the end. but it’s also funky and fun.

The movie — about a band of adolescent vampires in a coastal community — is told with a seif-mocking, adolescent playful­ness — and with sneaky, rude dialogue (plus one of the funniest closing lines in recent movies).

Dianne Wiest brings her woozy warmth to the role of a quirky divorcee who moves home to live with her even quirkier dad (Barnard Hughes), thereby ex­posing her teen sons (Corey Haim and Jason Patric) to the indigen­ous seaside blood-sucking popula­tion. GRADE:

THE PICK-UP ARTIST (PG- 13) CBS/'Fox, $89.98. Writer- director James Toback ("F in ­gers,” "The Gambler” ), made this curious little romantic comedy. It has aimost none of Toback’s feverish imagination, though it’s pleasank^nough, and may seem more substantial if watched with reduced expecta­tions at home on the small screen.

’The story concerns a lusty Manhattan grade-school teacher (Robert Downey) who’s always

NEA graphic

REDFORD DIRECTED — Richard Bradford plays a rich developer and Melanie Griffith is his wife in Robert Redford’s "The Milagro Beanfield War."

on the make. After an endless string of pick-up attempts (and successes). the guy meets his romantic match in a self-assured redhead (Molly Ringwald). She’s

.busy fending off mobsters while trying to pay off te r drunken dad’s gambling debts. Dennis Hopper co-stars as the burned-out dad. GRADE: * *

MAID TO ORDER (PG ) IVE, $79.95. Most critics were very hard on this 1987 version of one of those old Hollywood, Depression- era comedies. It’s a contempor­ary satirical fairy tale about a

spoiled rich girl (Ally Sheedy) who learns the value of money when she loses her read identity, and has to work as a maid for a gauche wealthy couple (Valerie Perrine and Dick Shawn).

The movie is really quite pleasant and features some tasty supporting turns by Beveriy D’Angelo (as Sheedy’s fairy godmother), Perrine, Shawn and, as the cook with the soulful singing voice. Merry Clayton. GRADE: * '/ t

(Film grading: excel­lent, ww* good, Irk fair, k poor)

M otion P le tu rt A noc lo tlon o f Amor- Ica ra ting donnltlen t:

Q — Oanoral audltneot. A ll a g tt oOmlttod.

PO — Parantal ouidonca lu e g ttt td . Somt m otorla l may not b# (u lta b lt to r children.

FO-13 — Sooclal parental ouldonct ttro n o lv luggattad fo r e h lld rtn undtr 13. Soma motarlol may b * Inaporop- rlo ta fo r young children.

R — R ^ r lc ta d . Under 17 raaulro f a c c o m p a n y in g p o ro n t o r a d u lt guardian.

X — No on* undar 17 odmlttad. Som* t t a t e t m a y h a v e h ig h e r age reetrlctlone.

A railway accident in 1918 at Nashville, Tenn., killed 101 people.

1

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i

FOCUS / Books &< MANCHESTtiiR HERALD. StituiWaV, Ap'Hl'liBr 198#- t%

^ .4, ^

MEDALS — A reproduction of the famed HIgley copper, left, was made for the

*1927 convention of the American Numismatic Association in Hartford,

Ru m M i^andrick/Spaoltl to Ih , Hwcid

and the potpourri'medal, right, was contrived for the 1971 Hartford confer­ence of the New England Numismatic Association.

‘Did you know the ANA met in Hartford in 1927?’ I

Rolls or

Some living- right person in the boondocks of Granby, Po- quonock or points north is just bound to come up with an u nd isco­vered coin like the one on the left. It should be worth a Caddy,Maserati.

This one isn’t real — it’s a repro of the rare fourth appearance of the famed Higley copper. The other side reads: “ AMERICAN NUMISMATIC ASSN., HART­FORD, 1927.” It carries a sculp­ture of the Old New-Gate Prison inrGranby.{The potpourri medal next in

lime was contrived in antiqued sftyer for the 27th Conference and Cmvention of the New England Numismatic Association, at Hartford in 1971.

There were many garlanded Auctori Connec heads looking eastward, but don’t expect to find one with a modem ’Tugboat Annie face like this. The artist did not have a feel for the past.

CoUectors*Corner

Russ MacKendrick

The Fugio ("time flies” ) cent seen opposite was the first coin issued with the authority of the United States. Benjamin Frank­lin has been credited with the wording. On the other side it says “ We are one.” The “ Mind your business" just means "take care," and was not to be enun­ciated with a snarl and (expletive deleted) as might be taken noivadays.

'Then there's a Higley again, but note it reads "V ALU E " and not "VALVE” as in the super- rare piece. A real Hig with this' more-common spelling is listed at $4,000 to $8,000 in the 1988 Red Book.

The Higleys were^never official pieces. They were (levised by Dr. Samuel Higley in 1737 to make use

Nahr 4 1

Yarn crafts stretch wardrobeGASTONIA, N.C. (AP) - Knit­

ting and crocheting part of a wardrobe can dramatically re­duce a family’s clothing budget, says Joseph R. Kinsey Jr. of the Craft Yarn Council of America, with headquarters in Gastonia.

"Considering the high cost of clothing, the amount of money people spend to dress attractively can get out of hand." says Kinsey. “ By knitting a sweater, a woman can create a garment for under $20 worth of yarn that would cost

$75 to $125 in a store.”An estimated 25 percent of

American women now are knit­ting and crocheting some of the items their families like to wear, according to Kinsey.

"This is increasingly true this year as the trend toward sweat­ers and knitted fashions con­tinues to grow," he says.

The most frequently knitted and crocheted items in America are classic women’s sweaters, children’s and infants’ wear and afghans, he reports.

Civil War researcher tells Shenandoah story

of copper from his own diggings. The hrst ones were marked''for three pence, but when the local demand was exceeded the third issue was inscribed “ Value me as you please’ ’ although it kept the Roman numeral III to give the idea. The design you can just make out at the left of the numeral is a hand with pointing finger.

The Red Book ("A Guide Book of United States Coins” ) states that there were “ seven obverse and four reverse dies.” (This lingo is a confection for numisma- tologists. Try "front" apd “ back” — same thing and you don’t have to stop and puzzle out which is which).

These coppers do not come up at auction as often as might think because of theirexiieptional purity. Jewelers weiK always after them for their alUjhng pots.

The pieces shown J ir e were brought in by a Mancqjegter coin buff; "Did you know tlM ANA met in Hartford in 1927?’ ’a(

Bv Matt Miller Harrisburg Patriot-News

/xpARLISLE, Pa. — Americans had learned to be merciless to each other by the Civil- War’s fourth summer.

For the armies of the Union, slash-and-bum assaults on South­ern territory had become stand­ard practice.

Northern leaders saw total destruction of the South’s ability to make war — even to feed itself — as the quickest, and perhaps only, way to throttle the stubborn Confederacy.

It was under this theory that the Shenandoah Campaign was born.

Jeffry D. Wert, a Centre Ckiunty schoolteacher, chronicles the military, political and personal patchwork that made up that decisive struggle in a new book, "From Winchester to Cedar Creek; The Shenandoah Cam­paign of 1864."

The 324-page volume. . pub­lished by Carlisle’s South Moun­tain Press, is the Centre Hall man’s first effort at a full-length book. And it is something Wert thinks is long overdue.

"There was jujt not a good study of the campaign,” Wert said. " I felt that an evaluation of the campaign. especially one that treated both sides fairly, was needed.”

The Shenandoah battles have largely been overlooked by histo­rians, who generally treat the actions as a sideshow to Sher­man’s March to the Sea and the bloody slugging match between Gen. Ulysses S. Grant and Gen. Robert E. Lee in northern Virgi­nia. he said.

Yet, he added, the Shenandoah campaign was one of the last great offensives of theJDivil War.

IifW wwks beginnlifgiti August 1864, Northern forces under Gen. Philip Sheridan cut a swath of destruction through Virginia’s rich -Shenandoah Valley. When

they were done, the breadbasket of the Confederacy was a smol­dering ruin.

The efforts of Confederate Gen. Juba! Early, who was charged with (he futile task of keeping Sheridan's overwhelming Union host out of the valley, may even have prolonged the war, he said.

At the same time, the battles ce lyovided astrong backdrop

■vital presidential election 1864. in which Abraham

poln was challenged by one of Erstwhile generals. George B.

IbClellan.Wert’s analysis of the Shenan­

doah struggle covers the large and the small pictures.

His narrative moves from the councils of generals and politi­cians to the campfires of tired- and. often, terrified private soldiers.

To get that kind of background, he spent seven years poring over manuscripts written by famous officers and obscure foot soldiers. His search was aided by an advanced research grant from the U.S. Military History Insti­tute at Carlisle Barracks.

As is always the case, it was the private soldier who paid for the successes and follies of the generals, he notes. Some paid more dearly than others, a point that is clearly outlined in a passage in Wert’s book.

The section deals with the fate of a group of Union soldiers captured by the Confederates and made to pay for the earlier executions of s e v e r a l Sou­therners who had fallen into Union hands.

The Northern captives were made to draw lots to see which of them would be killed in reprisal. One of the unlucky ones was a drummer boy.

The other Union soldiers then huddled together and. with the permission of their captors, drew lots again so one of them, and not the boy, would have to die.

Best-SeOers

every’-’TjJte a look at this!'” Ydtil -learn something

day.□ □ □

To stamp enthusiasts:Keep next weekend open for the

MANPEX ’88 stamp show at Manchester High School. Hours are Saturday from noon to 5 and Sunday from 11 to 6.

There’ll be a post office substa­tion and special show cancella­tion, plus a 20-dealer bourse and an auction both days. Admission is free.

Rngf MacKendrick It a Man- chetler resident who It an author­ity on many types of collectibles. Write to him In care of the Manebeoter Herald, P.O. Box $91, M ^hester 09040.

Fiction1. "T h e Icarus Agenda.’’ Ro­

bert Ludlum2. “ King of Murgos,” David

Eddings3. “ Treasure,” Clive Cussler4. "The Bonfire of the Vani­

ties.” Tom l^ lfe5. "Hot Mo'ney.” Dick Francis6. " In h er itan ce ,” Judith

Michael7 "The Last Princess,” Cyn­

thia Freeman8. "The Tommyknockers," Ste-

*phen King9. "2061: Odyssey Three,”

Arthur Clarke10. “ Patriot Games,” Tom

Clancy

(Courtety of Waldenbooka)

Nonfiction1. "The 8-Week Cholesterol

Cure," Robert Kowalski2. "Trump: The Art of the

Deal," Donald Trump3. "Swim With the Sharks

Without Being Eaten Alive,” Harvey Mackay

4. "The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers," Paul Kennedy

5. "Elizabeth Takes Off” Eli­zabeth Taylor

6. "Michael Reagan; On The Outside,” Michael Reagan j ,

7. "Unforgettable Fire," Ea"'^ mon Dllhphy

8. "Love, Medicine and Mira­cles.” Bernie Siegel

9. "The Prize Pulitzer," Rox­anne Pulitzer

10. "Controlling Cholesterol,’’ Kenneth Cooper

io MANCrtggWk'ttfettXLib; Satiii lr? Xprt\ 16,1988

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FOCUS / Music BUSINESSMelt’sa Morgan is running her own show

AP photo

IN CONTROL — While she’d be the first to admit that she’s not a one-woman band, singer Meli’sa Morgan feels that she’s In control of most aspects of her career.

By Stephannia Cleaton The Associated Press

NEW YORK - Mell’sa Morgan has taken control of her own show, but she would be the first to say that she’s not a one-woman band.

On her debut, "Do Me Baby,” she co-wrote and co-product most of the material. She did the same on five songs on her new album, "Good Love” : two singles from the album — "L o v e Changes,” her duet with Kashif, and “ If You Can Do It: ICanToo” — are climbing the charts.

Still, she says, " I feel there are a lot of things around me that I do handle and I have control over certain situations, but I ’m not in total control because I can’t do it alone.”

By c o -w r it in g and co ­producing, Morgan feels she has “ more control over my creativity which is important in establish­ing a new artist and getting your sound across.

" I f someone is controlling your creativity then you feel limited and you’re not letting all that you can be come out,” Morgan said.'

The result, “ Good Love,” is a little more romantic than her last LP, which turned out the hits “ Do You Still Love Me” and “ Do Me Baby.”

“ I feel on this album, whether I told a sad story or a happy story, it was just more romantic,” she said.

“ On the last album I was

definitely more rebellious as a writer, not only professionally but just in the struggle of being in this business — trying to get a deal and get people to listen to me. Now I don’t think I ’m as hungry as I am anxious. I ’m anxious to get to that next level to prove that I can handle that, too.”

Inspiration came to the per­former — bom Joyce Meli’sa Morgan — at a very young age. As the youngest of three brothers and a sister, she enjoyed singing along to the tunes on the stereo in her mother’s living room in Queens.

At age 9, she started singing with a gospel community choir, the Starlettes of Corona. The choir broke up when she was 13.

“ Right then and there, I real­ized I could either hang out with the girls and party every week­end or I could start auditioning for bands. So that’s what I decided to do,” Morgan said.

She sang with local bands until her high school graduation at age 16. Then she took on secretarial jobs during the day, sang at night in small Manhattan clubs and studied music theory at the Juilliard School of Music in NeV York.

In 1983, Miss Morgan toured with Chaka Khan. She began to work with Kashif, singing on his albums and those of Whitney Houston and Melba Moore, which he produced, and signed with the same management company that had signed K ash if, Hush Productions. '

She also began her continuing partnership with keyboardist- composer Lesette Wilson. Hush Productions had established wri­ters but Morgan thought that she and Wilson could write better songs.

"You ’re always a bit skeptical when there’s some one brand new and you don’t know what she can do,” said Wayne Edwards, a Capital Records vice president. "She was signed through Hush Productions, and Hush was confi­dent in her abilities. If they feel that confident, we said, let’s take a shot.”

“ Because Lesette has had some experience already producing — and our stuff (songs) was better — that’s how I.got to write the majority of the material on my first album,” Morgan said.

"A fter the success of the first album. It was natural that I write again for this one.”

“ What surprised me was the •fact that she could be in such

control of her career at such an early age and have such a defined direction.” Eklwards said. “ She walked in prepared. I knew we had the goods.”

Now she’s eitJoying the fruits of her labor. For the first time, when she goes out on tour, she will be the headliner.

“ I think I ’ve had a lot of success and I ’m very thankful for that, but I think that there’s just so much more. I ’m just anxious tb get there. Sometimes I just have to lay back and be cool,” she said.

Beirut hears ‘Oriental jazz’ bie rg..By Haion Mrou*The Associated Press

BEIRUT, Lebanon — Ziad Rahbanl has put the chaos and insanity of war-battered Beirut to music in an attempt to blend Arabic music and jasz into a new form.

He calls it “ oriental Jazz,” describing It as “ something like a hamburger that tastesof felafel,” a popular Arab snack made of spicy minced chickpeas and beans.

The sop of Lebanon's most popular singer, Fairouz, Rahbani has come under fire from Arab traditionalists for his pioneering efforts to bridge the gap between Arab and Western culture with music.

“ Just as automobiles replaced donkeys, traditional music must develop to reflect the times,” Rahbanl said in an interview. “ Everything has to evolve.”

His mother, who since the death of Egypt’s revered Umm Kal- thoum, is the Arab world’s leading singer, has performed some of his compositions at her sell-out concerts, blending I^ba- nese folklore with Western synco­pation and phrasing.

Rahbani, 32, has been working on his concept since the 1970s and gave his first OrienUl jazz concert in war-tom Beirut in 1988.

One of the fundamental sim­

ilarities between AraMc and occidental music, he said, is that both rely on improvisation: “ In jazz, the same basic<4«ine is playetNn a different ItatBfpreta- tlon by,each of the musletams.”

Orlentpl string and windlnstru- ments. Ouch as the oud, a sort of lute, the zlther-Ilke qanoun and the nay, a reed flute, are associated with an improvisation type of music called “ taqssim.”

Classical Arab singers, such as the legendary Kalthoum, are famous for often stretching one song for more than a hour. The style is called “ tafrid,” repeating one couplet over and over, but each time subtly different.

“ It ’s this personal element or subjectivity that creates the alteration, although the message is one,” Rahbani said. “ Another common factor Is the similarity between blues and classical Arabic songs. Both are melan­cholic and dragging types of music.”

Always unconventional, Rah­bani plays jazz standards on the oud, knoWn In the Arab world as the “ king of instruments,” giving them unusual harmonies.

He has adapted well-known jazz compositions, such as Thelo­nius Monk’s “ Round Midnight,” with an Oriental interpretation, often using Arabic harmonies and rhythms to give the songs a unique tonal color.

“ I admire the music of compos­ers like Charley Parker, Stan Getz and Dizzy Gillespie,” he said. ’ ’But my music is not WelftMini it’s Lebanese,’ with a diffetont way of expression. This interaction between Oriental and occidental Instruments comes out in a natural harmony.”

Many Arab purists claim Orieniaf jazz is an illigitimate form that has planted alien seeds in classical Arabic music.

To bevsure, Rahbani’s music reflects the hybrid heritage of Lebanon, which until the d vil war erupted in 1978, was a cultural melting pot where East inet West. But it also is deeply rootpjl In the traumatic events of the w ^ r ia n strife, the bloody stre^.battles between rival militias and three years of violent Israeli occupa­tion after the 1982 Invasion.

A leftist Greek Orthodox, Rah­bani also writes plays and satiri­cal radio shows centered on his violent environment that mock the sectarian divisions of his country and the traditional politi­cal thinking that has taken Lebanon to the very brink of catacylsm.

His latest record, “ Ana Mush Kafer,” or “ I ’m Not an Athiest,” was hailed by most Lebanese — Christians and Moslems alike — as an expression of their misera­ble political, social and economic situation.

Hot singles1. “ Where Do Broken Hearts

Go” Whitney Houston (Arista)2 . " D e v i l I n s id e " In xs

(Atlantic)3. “ Get Outta My Dreams, Get

Into My Car” Billy Ocean (Jive)4. “ Wlshing Well*’ Terence

Trent D’Arby (Columbia)8. “ Girlfriend” Pebbles (MCA)6. “ Angel” Aerosmith (Geffen)7. “ I Saw Him Standing There”

liffan y (MCA)■ 8.“ Anything For You” Gloria Estefan k Miami Sound Machine (Epic)

9. “ Plnk Cadillac” Natalie Cole (EMI-Manhattan)

10. “ Prove Your Love” Taylor Dayne (Arista)

Top LPs1. ’ ’ ’D irty Dancing’ Sound­

track” (RCA)2. “ ?Bad“ Michael Jackson

(Epic)3. "M o re 'D irty Dancing’

Soundtrack” (RCA)4. ’ ’Faith’ ’ George Michael

(Columbia)8. “ Kick” INXS (Atlantic)6. “ Tiffany” Tiffany (MCA)7. “ Intro. The Hardline Accord­

ing to Terence Trent D’Arby” T e r e n c e T r e n t D ’ A r b y (Columbia)

8. “ Now and Zen” Robert Plant (Esparanza)

9. “ Appetite for Destruction” Guns k Roses (Geffen)

10. “ Out of the Blue” Debbie Gibson (Atlantic)

Country singles1. ’T I I Always 0>me Back”

K.T. Oslin (RCA)2. “ It ’s Such a Small World”

Rodney Crowell k Roseanne Cash (Columbia)

3. “ Cry, Cry, Cry” Highway 101 (Warner Bros.)

4. “ The Last Resort” T. Gra­ham Brown (Capitol)

8.“ I ’m Gonna Get You” Eddy Raven (RCA)

6. “ Young Country” Hank Willi­ams Jr. (Wamer-(^rb)

7. “ Baby I ’m Yours” Steve Wariner (MCA)

8. “ Americana” Moe Bandy (Curb)

9. “ The Factory” Kenny Rogers (RCA)

10. “ Old Folks” Ronnie Milsap 8c Mike Reid (RCA)

EM ERG ENCYFire — Police — Medical

DIAL 911In Manchester

Wholesale inflation rate shakes marketsBy M att Yancey The Associated Press

WASHINGTON - The nation gotiU first big dose of ipflation this year as wholesale prices rose at an annual rate of 7 percent in March, the government said Friday. The report sent new tremors through financial markets already shaken by a worsen­ing U.S. trade deficit.

The Labor Department’s producer price index rose 0.6 percent last month, marking the biggest increase since April 1987 and more than erasing a 0.2 percent decline in February.

Falling energy and food prices that had been keeping a lid on inflationary pressures shot upwards in March, as did wholesale prices for a wide marketbasket of other consumer goods and capital equipment.

The price data provided the fol­lowup blow in a one-two punch that government statisticians delivered on the state of the economy.

On Thursday, the Commerce De­partment reported that the nation’s trade deficit expanded by $1.4 billion or 11 percent to $13.8 billion in

, February when all predictions ha^ called for it to narrow.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average of 30 blue-chip stocks dropped 101 points on the news Thursday — its v , fifth biggest decline in history — but the market stabilized Friday and the Dow closed up 8.29 points.

“ I don’t know that the markets are going to digest two doses of really quite bad medicine too quickly,” said Donald Straszheim, chief economist for Merrill Lynch brokerage.

“ The trade number is easier to explain away because it bounces up and down, but not the price figures,” Straszheim said. “ The 2 percent and 3 percent inflation we have been enjoying — we probably will no longer.”

White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said the administration was disappointed by the increase in wholesale prices and the trade deficit.

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“ We think the market has over­reacted to a one-time report, and we l(ope this thing will stabilize,” he said.

But analysts aaid upwaM pressure on prices is only going to worsen In the months ahead, stirring speculation that the Federal Reserve Board might tighten credit to both prevent the dollar from losing further value and dampen inflation.

The Fed last raised the discount - rate it charges for loans to banks in September 1887. A month later the stock market collapsed with the Dow Industrials dropping 818 points, partly in reactioh to higher interest rates from the credit tightening.

Lawrence Hunter, an economist for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, expressed fears Friday that the Fed will “ overreact to perceived inflation­ary pressures that some see in the recent data” and stymie economic growth

“ Oversteering in the face of monthly price swings can only feed fears of inflation,” Hunter said, referring to figures that show the annual wholesale price increases of

just 3.1 percent when averaged over the past three months.

However, Donald Ratajczak, a Georgia State UniversUy economist who specializes in whmesale price trends, said increases in April will match, if not exceed, those in March.

’ ’This isn’t a one-month aberra­tion,” Ratajczak said. “ Strong in­creases in raw material prices that have been going on for six months are widening and spreading. It ’s not runaway inflation, but it’s a little worrying.”

Wholesale energy prices, which had dropped at an annual rate of 17 percent since last August, shot up 0.9 percent in March. Gasoline prices climbed 1.5 percent last month after dropping about 9 percent since November. And home heating oil prices jumped 2.6 percent.

Food prices, after dropping 1.1 percent in February, advanced by 0.7 percent ia March. For the firs t three months oL the year, beef and veal prices have climbed 43.6'percent.

Reflecting the broad nature of March’s price gains, the Labor

APgrapMo*

Department said its index of whole­sale prices for consumer goods other than food and energy rose 0.4 percent, compared with a 0.3 percent increase in February.

For the first three months of 1088, those non-energy, non-food wholesale prices are up at an annual rate of 8.7 percent.

Automobile prices were up 1 per­cent last month, restoring them to the level they had been at in November before manufacturers began offering rebates and other incentives.

Prescription drug prices rose 1.3 percent, over-the-counter drugs were up 2 percent and the price of newspapers climbed 1.4 percent In March. Other goods showing 1 percent or greater price increases one step slfort of the retail level Included carpeting, draperies and jewelry.

Capital equipment prices rose 0.4 percent, double the increases of January and February. The biggest price gains — above 1 percent — were in metal-cutting machine tools and office and store equipment.

Highlights of the week

Bv The Associated Press 7■'/

m An unexpected swelling of the February trade deficit frightened the financial markets and resurrected fears of a weakened dollar, inflation and higher interest rates. Stock prices fell sharply, erasing much of their recent gains.

■ Oil prices leaped to the highest level of the year, reflecting speculation that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting (kiuntries would be able to recniit help from outside producers to constrict world supplies.

■ The government said retail sales surged 0.8 percent in March, suggesting consumer spending has recovered from a post-crash decline. Other economic indicators from the government showed wholesale prices jumped in March, suggesting higher inflation, and growth of both inventories and industrial production slowed.

■ Federal officials began an unprecedented probe into heavily indebted Texas A ir Corp., the nation’s largest airline company, to determine whether it was financially sound and committed to running safe planes.

■ Finance ministers of the seven major industrialized reaffirmed their commitment to stabilize the dollar. But the pledge by the United States, Japan, West Germany, Britain, France, Canada and Italy had little effect.

■ A poll of more than 1,000 top executives indicated their confidence in the U.S. economy is recovering in the aftermath of the stock market’s collapse six months ago. The Conference Board business research concern said its measure of business confidence rose to 81 after falling to a five-year low of 47 in the final quarter of 1087. The measure reflects a scale of 0 to 100.

■ New York real estate mogul Harry Helmsley and tifs wife Leona, one of the world’s wealthiest couples, pleaded innocent to charges they engaged in a $4 million tax evasion scam.

■ A truce was declared between entertainer Merv Griffin and developer Donald Trump in their much-publicized battle for casino conglo­merate Resorts International Inc. The deal called for Griffin to bqy Resorts and most of its

properties, while Trump will get the Taj Mahal casino.

■ Among other takeover developments. Occid­ental Petroleum Corp. agreed to acquire plastics maker Cain Chemical Inc. in a deal valued at $2.2 billion; French publisher Hachette S.A. agreed to buy U.S. consumer magazine publisher Diaman- dis ciommunications Inc. for $712 million, Hachette’s second U.S. acquisition this month; Manufacturers Hanover Corp., agreed to sell its consumer finance unit to American General Corp. for $688 million; textile giant J.P. Stevens k Co.’s management recommended shareholder accep­tance of a $1.22 billion takeover bid by investor group Odyssey Partners; and Italian financier Carlo De Benedetti failed to win shareholder support in his takeover battle for the massive Belgian holding company Societe GenPrale de Belgique SA.

■ A detailed assessment of the nation’s business schools found widespread complacency, poor planning and a lack of contact with the business world. The 372-page report released at a national convention of business schools was criticized by deans and corporate officials.

s

BilUdhaire buys utility stockBRIDGEPORT (AP) - Texas,

billionaire Sid Bass and his longtime money manager, Ri­chard Rainwater, are partners in a New York firm that recently bought 5 percent of the stock of the Bridgeport Hydraulic Co.

Bass and Rainwater are listed on a Securities and Exchange Commission document as direc­tors of Metro Mobile CTS Inc., a company that purchased the Bridgeport Hydraulic stock in January for $6.5 million.

Metro Mobile is now the largest single stockholder in the water utility, which has some 460,000 customers in 18 Connecticut communities.

Although Bass and Rainwater

declined to run for re-election to the Metro Mobile board in Febru­ary, both retain their 12 percent and 2 percent ownership shares, respectively, in the New York company, Metro Mobile officials said.

Analysts said they think the billion^re could only have been attracted to the company by the potential for sale of some of the company’s land in booming southwestern Connecticut., Neither Bass nor Rainwater returned calls made to their Fort Worth, Texas, offices this week. A secretary to Bass said it is his policy not to comment on his business investments.

Bridgeport Hydraulic officials

have indicated that they may sell as much as 2,200 acres of excess land over the next 10 to 20 years. At an average of $49,000 an acre, the total value of that land could reach $100 million, according to some estimates.

But William'S. Warner, chair­man of The Hydraulic Co., the utility’s parent company, re­cently said he wanted to “ put to rest ill-founded concerns that we plan a massive land sell-off.”

Bridgeport Hydraulic officials have insisted that they wouldn’t sell any land essential to water supply quality, and have strongly study*^ public ownership

_______ _______ L _Area code splits

BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP) - About 2.1 million telephone numbers from Boca Raton to Orlando carry a new 407 area code beginning Saturday because Florida’s exploding growth has overwhelmed the 305 code.

The 305 code will now cover the southeastern comer of the state, including Miami.

Southern Bell will give customers a two- month grace period during which calls with either code will work in the 407 area. i

Cellular phones have to be reprogrammed to accept the new area code.

BellSouth Mobility and Cellular One, which nave about 13,000 cellular customers between them in Palm Beach County alone, said that despite warnings about reprogramming the phones, less than half their customers have come in for the adjustment.

Southern Bell begad notifying customers about the switch someMS months ago.

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISINf; 643-2711NoticesLo$t/Fovfl4.............................. Q1P t r to n o lt .....................................................01Anneunc«m«ntt......................... 03Auction*...................................04Plnonciol..................................0$

Employment a EducationPort Tim* H*lp Wonf*tf....... ......10H*lp WontoO..............................11Sltuotlen.WonftO........................ i iButin*** Opportunitl**................ i iInttructlen............................... 14emolovm*nt S *fv lc **..................is

Real EstateHorn** for So l*.......................... 11Condominium* for So l*................n

Lott/Lond for S o l* ... Inv**tm*nt Prop*rty Bu»ln**s P r o p * ^ ....P**ort Prop*rtv.....Mortpop**.............tffont*d to Buy........

RentalsBoom* for R *n t........Aoortmont* for ftont... Contfomlnlum* for PontHorn** for Pont........Stor*/Offlc* Spoc*....^ e r t Proporty.......rntfvttrtot Proo*rty...Ooropo* ond Storopo.. Peommot** Wontod... Wontod to P*nt.........

. Spccio lia^D tfft! |

S A T I S : 1 to S d o y t : SOcontt ppr lino por day. 7 to 19 days: 70 contt por lino p«r day.

10 to IS d o y i: SO conti por llnp por doy.16 or m oro doyt: 50 coots por Moo por doy. M in im u m clio rfp : 4 linos.

NoticesAs a condition precedent to the placement of any adver­tising In the Manchester He­rald, Advertiser hereby agrees to protect. Indemnify and hold harmless the Man­chester Herald, Its officers and employees against any and all liability, loss or expense, Including attor­neys' fees, arising from claims of unfair trade practi­ces, Infringement of trade­marks, trade names or pat­ents, violation of rights of privacy and Infringement of copyright and proprietary rights, unfair competition and libel and slander, which may result from the publica­tion of any advertlsment In the Manchester Herald by advertiser. Including adver­tisements In any free distri­bution publications pub­lished by the Manchester Herald. Penny Sleffert, Publisher. ___________

ILOST_ _ I AND FOUND

FOUND. Near Bower's School. All white, mole cot. Coll 646-1032.

LOST.' Light blue man's locket. Keys and eye­glasses In pockets. Vic­inity of Friend ly 's,

^^^^AJoln^Sti^eLMM^^

1 PART TUNE _ _ I HELP WANTED

D E N T A n T y o S H s t^ o r t time, 2-3 days per week In small established practice. Coll 643-6528.

ACCOUNTS Payable- Office Clerk. Tuesday- Thursdov. 9am-5pm. Will from. 646-0103.

PART TIME HELP WANTED

Today Is great day ... and Classified Is a great way ... to sell something!

M U N SO N 'S Chocolate's, Route 6 Bolton Is now accepting applications for part time retail salespersons. Hours are Monday-Friday, 4- 8pm. Approximately 8 hours on Saturday or SunddVT' averaging ISi 20 hours per week. Call647-8639.____________ ;

W A N T E D . M a t u r e woman , to work part time In daycare taking care of Infants. 1 lob

ASSISTANT DIETARY

MANAGERSMeadows Manor, a long term health care facility Is seeking Assistant Dietary Managers for nights and weekends. Knowledge of quantity cooking, thera- peoutlo diets, and super­visory skills hsipful. The starting salary for this 24 hour position Is *9.80 per hour with pro-rated holi­day, vacation and sick time pay. Interested ap­plicants please contact:

Mrs. BurdickMatdowt Manor

333 Bidwell St. Manchester, CT 06040

047-8IBt

S t r v I C D t

Child Cor#.........................CI#onln#.S#rvte#*...............

...... 51

...... 51

RoefIno/SIdlii#...............Pleorlfio........................ei#ctr1eol......................Heotlno/Plumbln#...........

...........57

.......^...51

.......... 5t

...........4#

Boekh*##lnt/lflcem# T o s .....Corp#fttrv/R#mod#llft#.........Pointino/Pooarin#...............

..... M

...... 55

...... 54

MI»c*llontoM Servlet*.....S#rvlc#* Wont#d..............LondKopIn#...................Cencrat#.......................

...........41

...........41......... 43

...........44

SUPER SAVINGS WITH OUR SPEC IAL MONTHLY CASH IN ADVANCE RATES...

Call 643-2711 for mors Information!

PART TIME HELP WANTED

PART TIME HELP WANTED

W ANTED- Strong, relia­ble young man to do yard work and odd lobs In the North End area. Part time. 649-7743.

SECRETARIAVC L $ 9 I$ 8 L

Meadows M «n v a long term Health'Cara Facil­ity has a 20 hour part time position available for clerical subport In our admlssloiM depart­ment. The quallfled can­didate will poMsss ex­cellent typInsiL-: phone and InterpersorTal skills. This position offers a pro-rated holiday, vaca­tion, and sick time pay as well as $6.50fier hour tb start. Intere^d ap­plicants please contact Mrs. Terry at;

Maadowa Manar333 Bidwell St.

Manchester, CT 06040647-8191

SOS

GROUP Home. Part time position open to work with adults with mental retardation. Various shifts available In Man- c tY e ste r/E IIIn g ton . D rive r 's license re­q u ire d . E x c e l le n t w o rk in g cond itions and competitive sa­lary. Call M ARCH, Inc to Manchester. 646^4446 between 12-4pm.

MerchandiseHolltfov S*o*ertol.................Antlou** and Coll*ctibl**.......Clottiind............................Furnitur*..........................TV/St*r*e/APDllone**..........Maehin*ry ond Tool*............Gordonint...........................Good Thing* to Eot...............Fu*i OM7Cool/F1r*wood..........Form Suppll**ond equlomont.,Offlc*/R*»oii Edulomont........R*cr*otlonol Equlpmont........Boot* ond Morin* Equlom*nt....

® * A D L IN 1 S : F o r clossiflod odvortltm ontf to bo Dubllthod Tuosdov through Soturdoy, th * dood iin t I i noon on th# dov bofor# publico* tion. For odvortliom onti to b * pubilshod M ondov, th# doodlln# l i l:30 p.m. on Fridov.

M ulled it*m *.......................Comoro* and Fhoto Equlpmont..F*t«ond Sopoll**..................MI*c*llon*ou* for So l*............ .Too S o l* *................. ...........wontod to Buv/Trod*..............

AutomotiveCor* for S o l* ...............TriKk*rVon* for Sol*.....Como*rs/Tron*r*.........MotorcvcIOB/Mopod*.....Auto $«rvle«i..............■Autos tor R*nt/L#oi#......MlKollonooui Autometlv* Wont*d to Buy/Trod*.....

PART Time Motel Desk C le rk to w o rk 1 weeknight- 4pm to mid­night. Saturday-8om to 12 noon and Sunday-12 noon to 4pm. We con be f le x ib le . P le a sa n t working atmosphere. $6 per hour to start. Call Connecticut M o ­tor Lodge for appolnt-meht. 643-1555._______

PART Time nights- Help wanted to load trucks. Approx im ate hours 5pm to 9 ;3 0 p m . Monday-Friday, apply In person. Pequot Spring/ W ater Co., Spring Street Exten- tlon. Glostonburv.

H A IR Stylists- M om 's hours, to suit your needs. Afternoons, ev­enings and Saturdays. Good pay, benefits and Irtuentlves. New shop. Join our team I Call Yvonne at 1-800-247- 7267.___________'

N O-nCI TO CRIDITORS ESTATE OF

LAURA BELL The Hon. William E. n ti-

Oerold, Judge, of the Court of Probate, District of Mon-' Chester at a heoring held on April 12, IfM ordered that oil claims must be presented to the fiduciary at the address below on or before July 14, 1*M or be barred as by law provided.

Johanna Bruder Roy, Assistant Clerk

The fiduciary Is:Jaseph T. Bell Executor11K Ambassador Drive Moncheeter, CT 0«MO

0S0O4

R B A D Y O U R A D : C In i l l s d o d v m ilM in sn ls o r * token by te lipbont o i o convtnlonct. The M onchosttr H tro ld l i respontlble tor only ono Incorrect In iertlon ond then on ly for the sice of theorlolnol Insertion. E rro rs which do not lessen the yolue of the odyertlsem ent will not be corrected by on odditlonol Insertion.

Dw e C r a n e ’s A n s w e r s

Quiz on page 2.1. Kennedy2. Sweet potato3. 157 (144 plus 13)4. Barrow (Hog vs. horses)5. Policeman6. (a) Esau — Leptils (x) (Genesis. Ch. 25)

(b) Noah — Grapes (z) (Genesis, Ch. 9)(c) Adam — Apple (y) (Genesis, Ch. 3)(d) Samson — Honey (w) (Judges. Ch. 14)(e) Hezekiah — Figs (v) (II Kings, Ch. 20)

PART TIME HELP WANTED

PART Time- 10am-2pni dolly to relieve sate deposit clerk. Please apply: Savings Bonk of Manchester. 923 Main Street. Manchester, CT. 646-1700. EOE.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS ESTATE OF

SALVATORE A. BARTOLOTTA

The Hon. William E. Rtz- Gorald, Judpo, of the Court of Probate, District of Mon- chottor at o hoorlno hold on April 12, IfW ordorod that oil claims must bo prosonted to tho fiduciary at tho address below. Failure to promptly present any such claim may result In tho less of rights to recover on such claim.

Johanna Brudor Roy, Assistant Clerk

Tho fiduciary Is:Francos M. Bartolotta Administratrix c.t.o. c/o John D. LoBallo, Eso. 29S Bast Centar Stroot P.O. B oxS Il Monchostar, CT OMMO

643-2711

NOTICB TO CRBDITORSESTATE OF

JANE F. CORRIGAN, oka JANE FRANCIS

CORRIGANTho Hon. William E. Rtz-

Gorald, Judpo, of tho Court of Probata, District of Mon- chostar at a hoorlno hold on April 12,19M ordorod that all claims must bo prosantad to tho fiduciary at the address below. Folluro to promptly prosont any such claim may result In the loss of rights to recover on such claim.

, Johanna Bruder Roy, Assistant Clerk

The fiduciary Is:Undo C. Elliott Executrixc/o Robert M. Elllett, Esq. • E Hebron Rood Morlbarouoh, CT 06447'

HELP WANTED

DRIVER. Immediate op­ening. Manchester He­rald route Coventry area. Short hours, good pay. Call 742-8867 or 647-9946 and leave name and telephone number and I will call you back.

RECEPTIONISTBloomfield area. Indi­vidual must possess good typing skills, pissssnt phone man­ner, computer experi­ence helpful. Full time position, competitive salary with company paid benefits. Call for interview.

MATHERCORPORATION

21 Wait Dudley Town Rd. Bloomfield, CT

242-0743Ask for Jo Ann

jHELP WANTED

M D T H E R 'S Helper. Par­ent seeks responsible female who has expe­rience with Infants to assist In the core of her child. Non-sm oker. Flexible hours. Coll 646-4683._________

CDNSTRUCTIDN Inspec-. tor. Need on Inspector with experience In building construction. This person should hove experience In me­chanical, electrical, heating and ventilat­ing, sprinkling sy s­tems, site work and drainage. Comprehen­sive benefits package and competitive sa­lary. Submit resume to: Storch Engineers, 161 Main Street, We­thersfield, CT 06109. EDE. M/F.

P L A S M A Sprayers or mechanically Inclined Individuals to learn Plasma Spray opera­tion. S7 per hour to start. Excellent benef­its. Apply between 9om-2pm or call 633- 9474. C o n n e c t ic u t Hardface. 911 New L o n d o n T u rn p ike , Glastonbury.

M EC H A N IC - Reputable p a v in g c o n tra c to r seeks qualified person for all phases of equip­ment and truck repair and molntence. Com­pany benefits, excel- lent pay. 633-0543.

NEED EXTRA GASH? HAVE A PHONE?WANT TO WORK

EROM HOME?Straight Commlaslons — Income UnllmItedI Call me for an appoint­ment between 3:30- Spm Onlw Ask for

Dennis Santoro 643-2711

You can make excellent dish cloths from the mesh bags In which oranges, potatoes, onions, etc. are sold. Just boll for 15 minutes In water to which chlorine bleach has been added. Put still good but no-longer needed furni­ture and appliances back Into use by selling them with a low-cost Classified. 643-2711.

ROOFERS & ROOFERS HELPERSInexperienced help. *8 per hour^etartlhg pay. Qood^orklng

conditions. Call

EASTERN ROOFING CORP.

282*0711

people read classified

Flpd the Item you need

Mancli*tt*r H*rold 643-2711

PART TIME

N EW S STAND DEALERManeheatar area, dalivar only to Honor Boxas and atorsa. EBtabllshad route. Work approxi­mately 6 hours per week - get paid (or 10. Must be available at Prase Time (12:30 pm) dally and Friday avaning at 12:30 a.m. Dallvary of papers takes approximately 1 hour, Monday thru Saturday, dependable car a muet. Call Bob at 647-B946.

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTEDOne bright, hard­working, fastideous, intelligent, young person to assist the daily running of a large business. Must be willing to learn and dedicated. Long term position for so­meone willing to work their way upl Send resume or let­ter, salary desired, etc. to:

BoxTTc/o Mancheater Herald

P.O. Box 591 Manchaatar.CT 06040

A IR Conditioning and Re- f r l g e r o t l o n S e rv ic e m a n - M o s t hove o minimum of a D-2 license. Coll Dster- lund Refrigeration in Bolton, 649-2655.

REA L Estate Agents- Dp- portunlty awaits In on expand ing agency. Coll Nancy Hopkins at 488-2529.

M E D IC A L Secretary- M ed ica l experience preferred but not ne­cessary. Windsor Phy­sician, 4 or 5 day week. 8om to 5pm. Call Cathy at 688-0076.

Assistant Project Manager

Immediate opening for offlce/ette

aeelstant to manege construction projecta.

Apply to:

The M A K Co. 643-2659

R EAL Estate Salespeo­ple. Top commission paid especially for good listers. Call 643- 4263 ask for Jack Lappen In the Lappen Building.

BEAUTiCiANMaadowa M anor a long term health care facility la currently seeking a full time beautician. The auc- ceasful candidate will posaete a current Ct. license and Insurance. This position will be Monday-Friday end is on e commission bo- ala. Qualified appli- centa pleaae contact:

Karen WilsonMeadows Manor

333 Bidwell fe Menehoeter, CT 06040

647-0101■01

L IF E G U A R D S needed for Farmington, Mer­iden, Manchester and Bloomfield condomini­ums. Senior lifesaving certificate required. M ust be ova llob le s ta rt in g M e m or ia l Day- Labor Day. Call 278-2960.

HELP WANTED

CDNSTRUCTIDN- Repu tdble paving contrac­tor seeks qualified truck d r iv e rs and equipment operators. Company benefits, ex­cellent pay. 633-0543.

E X P E R IE N C E D Siding Installer wanted. Full time. 643-9633 or 742- 5406.

M A K E Money at home assembling electron­ics, crafts, others. M o re In fo rm a t io n (504)641-0091 ext 1390. Dpen 7 days. CflH Nowl

D EN TAL Assistant. Full time position available Im m ediately. E xpe ­rience or training re- qulred. Call 643-6528.

F L D R IS T Shop work. Floral Designer. Full or port time with some experience preferred. A p p l y In pe r son ; Krause Florist, 621 H a r t f o r d R o o d ,Monchester._________

GRDWTH Company look- Ing for future manage­ment. Dffers profit shoring and manage­ment potential. Ambi­tious Individual needed to learn Industry from ground up. 649-4563.

COUNTERHELP

NEEDED!!Nights and Weekends. No experience neces­sary. Will train. Stop In or call

Hartford Road Dairy

Queen 647-1076

Ask for Mr. or Mrs. Veil.

R E T IR E D Person take note I Ideal outdoor work. Approximately 10 hours per week. 3-4 days Inspecting and cleaning parking lot area. Top wages. Coll 646-0131, 9om-2pm.

GRDW ING Property and Casualty Agency seek­ing part lim e Customer Service Representa­tive. Experience pre­ferred but will train. Salary commensurate with experience. Right Individual could lead Into full time position. Coll Linda, 449-0016. UrbanettI Insurance Agency._______

LABDR Type work avail­able In Coventry. Will train. Call 742-7308. E v ­enings 742-9277.

SALES CLERK/ CASHIERS

and Department Ma­nager wanted at once in modem pharmacy In Mancheetsf's lar­gest shopping center. Fringe benefits, excel­lent salarlsa. Days only. Pleasant work­ing condKiont. Not the usual retell atore. Apply at once to Ann, Office manager or phermadat.

L Igg itt P ir k id i P h irm ie y

Manchester Parkade Manchester

I HELP WANTED

FDDD Service. We have openings for full and port time positions In our Cleon, modern fa­cility. Positions vary from the assembly and p a c k a g i n g to our homemade foods to meat slicing and main­tenance. Super benef­its tor toll time posi­tions. Weekdays only. No nights or weekends. Ask about our flexible hours tor days. Glas­tonbury. Coll tor de­tails at 633-7656 ask for Dove._______________

e x p e r i e n c e dWrecker Driver- All compony benefits. Coll Stan Dzimek at Mor- lorty Bros. 643-5135.

H A IRSTYLIST and As­sistant Hairstylist tor busy shop. Please call Days 643-2103 evenings 647-9385.

AIR CONDITIONIND A HEATING MECHANIC

Lleiim I lautL Gold banelltt. Truek, eaiapatlUw saliry.

NUTMEDMECHANICAL

043-2042W ANTED Truck Drlver-

/loborer. Class II li­c e n s e r e q u i r e d . Insurance benefits. Profit sharing plan. Applications at Upton Construction, 537 Staf­ford Rood (Route 32) Mansfield Center. 742- 6190.

CUSTDDIAN- Night shift. Contact Dr. Michael Blake, Principle. Tol­land High School. 872- 0561, application dead­line April 15th. Position to begin April 18th. EDE.__________ '

E X P E R I E N C E D C on­crete Floor Finishers and Form Builders. E x ­cellent pay, medlcol- /dental benefits. Must be experienced. 742- 1053 _________________

PART TIM ESafe DnVERS ^

needed to drive our children to and from

cchoole In Mancheater.

Free training. Ideal for college studente,

homemakara (you cen bring a child), ratireea

and othera.Call - 6 4 3 -B 9 1 2

FLD RA L Designer. Expe­rienced In weddings and all kinds of floral arrangements. Greens & Things Florist, 296 W. Middle Turnpike, M an­chester. Ask for Elva. 643-1635.

TYPIST. Full time with IB M PC knowledge perferably with Multi­mate Advantage II, H e w l e t t - P a c k a r d Laser Jet Printer. Cus­tomer contact-other generol/vorled office duties. Full benefits p ro g ram In c lu d in g dental paid. Coll 528- IBIS.

HELP WANTED

S W I M M I N G Pool In­staller. Must have 2 year's experience with In-ground vinyl pools. 742-7803. Evenings 742-9277.________________

A S S I S T A N T M anagers and Manager Trainees for fast growing plzza- rla.-Opening 20 stores In Greater Hartford area. Great' advance­ment opportunities. Little Caesar's, 646- 4300.

SHIPPING/RECEIVING

Full time position at Mancheater Plaetlca Manufacturer on tirat shift - 8 am to 4:30 pm. Individual to coordin­ate and record all In­coming and outgoing thipmanta, and perform various warahousa du- tlaa. Exparlance pre­ferred. Dependability / flexibility nacetaary. Competitive wages and full bsnatit package of- tarad. Call 647-9638 for appointment.

SECRETARY-"Terrlfjc working condition" and nice surroundings In leading real estate office I Applicant needs n ice appea rance , pleasing personality, g o o d t e l e p h o n e manners and office skills I Call 649-4000.

TH E Town of Bolton Is seeking applications tor the position of Building and Grounds Maintalner. Working knowledge of buildings and grounds molntaln- ance required. Expe­rience In building con­struction, plumbing, heating, electrical or landscaping desired. Requires flexible hours Including some even­ings and weekends. Ap- p llcatlons accepted through April 22, 1988. Apply Center CT.

rouon Mpni £it ivm i. )ply at 222 BoltonN inter Road. Bolton,) r. or phone 649-87437— '

Supp ly C lerkMeadows Manor Is currently seeking a part-time supply clerk to deliver sup­plies to nursing sta­tions. The 16 hour position will be Fii- d a y - M o n d a y , 4 hours per day, hours negotiable. Starting salary l s_$7/Hr. Knowledge of medi­cal supplies and computers helpful, but will train. Please C o n t a c t M r s . Bouchard at:Meadows M a^ n : 333 Bldwoll St^ Maiicliattor, CT.

647-9191

\

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTEDTYPIST- We need on

Individual with good tvDino t|cllls, policy typing pftferred but not reaulnid. The posi­tio n aliro requires strong clerical skills. We offer a pleasant office em^onment In Glastonmj^ with free parking. .If you are IntererestMpleasecall Joy or j m r y ot 659- 3561. Cruoi A Forster.

HELP Wanted. Apply In person: Pero's Fruit Stand, 276 Oakland Street, Manchester. 643-6384.

ESTIM ATORConttracUon Work

Background helpful but not necessary.

Immediate opening. Apply to:

The MAK Co.643-2659CABINET Maker. Grow­

ing a rc h ite c tu ra l w oodw ork ing com­pany Is In need of lourneymon-level ca­binet maker. Good pay and benefits. Call R 8, R W oodw orking. 645- 6149.

M A IN T E N A N C E & C L E A N IN G C U S T O D IA N

with light carpentry, electrical and

plumbing knowledge helpful. Please apply between 9-3pm to fill

out employment application.

ECONOM YELECTRICS U P P LY

428 TellaiNl Tphe. Mmchester, CT

eoe

TSTSSTmcTlervIc^^e-presentotlves. We ore looking for persons who have the ability to call on our present customers and service our equipment. Income opportunity $300-8600 weekly. Management opportunity for right person. Call 646-3875. EOE.______________

C LE R K -T yp Is t. P a rt time. 4 hours per day. Needs good telephone skills. Easy highway access Hartford-West Hartford line. Coll 233- 4471 osk for Harriet.

CHEFS, Cooks, Manag­ers. Are you ready fora change? Positions a v a ila b le now fo r chefs, cooks, manag­ers j t c . In hotels. Inns, restoyfants and re­sorts. National Culi­nary Registry. 1-800- 443-6237.

HELP WANTEDEXTERMINATOR. 3 Im­

mediate openings with growing pest control company. Will train Inexperienced Individ­uals. Salary Is negotia­ble. Advancement op­portun ity available. East Hartford based. 527-9449.

AUTO P arts D rive r wanted. Experienced preferred but not ne­cessary. Good driving record -a must. Colln* AiCT.cnin

D A R I - F A R M SICE CREAM

Has Immediate Openinos'# CLASS II ROUTE DRIVER

• FREEZER SELECTORS lis t a 2nd shift)• PHONE ORDER CLERKS

• KEY PUNCH OPERATORS e ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE

A pply In Person -

DARI-FARMS ICE CREAM40 Tolland Stage Rd., Tolland, CT

Mon.-FrI., 8:30am-5:30pm / Sot. 9am-lpm Paid Medical, Prafit Sharing and Pension Plon, EOE.

MACHINIST. Immediate opening for 1st class Machinist to set up and operate: Lathe Bridge­port and CNC Machin­ing Centers. Liberal overtime, fu lly air con­ditioned shop. Apply at: Paragon Tool Com­pany, Inc., 121 Adams Street, Manchester. 647-9935.

Growing office needs capable Individual to

loin staff.GOOD ATTITUDE

ESSENTIAL. Modest typing skills, data entry experience helpful. Will train

person with ability and willingness to learn. Competitive wages, full benefit

package, and supportive

atmosphere. Call 647-9938 for appointment.

MECHANIC To work on m iscellaneous con­struction equipment and trucks. Must have 2 years experience. Full time employment and benefits. Call 742-5317, 8am to 5 pm.

AIR CDNDITI0NIN8 INSTALLERS

868d pay. Knawladpa of 8h88l iNsm, duct wark.

6aod wcrking eand.NUTME6

MECHANICAL643-2042

TEACHER Resource room (.5 position) Ele­mentary level for Mov and June 1988. Special Education Certificate required. Call Dr. John MacLaIn, Coventry Public Schools. 742-8913._____________

SPECIAL Event Coordl- nator. East of the River area. Some travel. Good benefits. Salary neootlable-ln teens. Send resume to: Devel- opmentqj D irecto r, Easter Seals Society of CT., P.O Box 100, Hebron CT. 06248.

X-RAY Technician for busy orthopaedic prac­tice In Storrsarea. Full time. Experience ne­cessary. E xce llen t starting salary and be­nefits. Reply to: Box RR, C/0 The Monches-ter Herold.—_______

RECEPTIONIST-TvpIst. 15.6K plus DOE. Conge­nia l East H artford sales office needs plea- sant, p ro fess io na l phone personality with light accurate typing, take messages and greet clients, some f i l­ing and other general office duties. Excellent benefits, fee paid. Call Hilary Cutts, CPC, Bus­iness Personnel Asso-> dotes. 6W-3511. /

RESTAURANT Bdr- tender, barback, food s e rv e rs , b a n q u e t servers, hostess, dls- hwoshers. Apply In person: The Gallery, 141 New London Turn­pike, Glastonbury.

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE

• Cashiers • Sales Associates • Management Trainees

Positions are immediately available at Bur­lington Coat Factory Warehouse. We are one of the nations leading off price companies with over 100 stores nationwide and expanding rapidly. If you are aggressive and highly motivated, builcL.your future with us NOW! Management training positions are also avail­able. Apply in person to:Burlington Coat Factory Warehouse

820 Silver Lane • East Hartford, CT

V ^A m ericals Rnorile Store

Wanted — Night crewLooking for a 6 person team to stock shelves on the night shift, Monday through Thursday, 9:30 p.m. to 7 a.m. Competitive wages and bene­fits. For mature responsible Indi­viduals. Interested applicants apply to:

M A N C H E S T E R K -M A R T Personnel Dept., 239 Spencer St.

Manchester 643-5122

EOE

(. .

O

Full TImu.automobiue mechanics

IM M ED IA TE EMPLOYMENTImport experience helpful, but not > •

necessary as we will train. Salary based on experience, good benefits, uniforms

provided, excellent working conditions —For interview call Tom Dell or Dave.8 am to 4 pm, Monday thru Friday.

MANOfSTERHONCATHE PROFESSIONALS

24 ADAMS STREET MANCHESTER. CT 06040

646-3520

" AUTOMOTIVE ■

S e r v i c e W r i t e r / A d v i s o rF U L L T IM E

Immediate opening, experience preferred, but not necessary as we will train the right individual. Many benefits

including vacation with pay, paid holidays, etc.

Apply at once to:

’ TOM DELLService Manager

m an c i-esterhonca24 Adams Street

ManchesterExit 62 of 1-84 0,

HELP WAHTED DPPORTUHltlESMAINTENANCE Person,

40 hours with benefits. Apply In person: Salva­tion Army, 385 Broad Street, Manchester.

WANTED I Would you like a 1 or 2 week's stov of the beoch In ex­change for driving for errands, etc. Referen­ces exchanged. Details to be discussed. If In­terested reply to: Box U, C/0 The Manches­ter Herald.,

HELPING PEOFte sa­tisfy their needs opd wants ... that's what want ads are all about.

HELP WAHTED

V'^America s Fawrite Store

Now hiring Processing Clerks. Full time posi­tions available. Experience not necessry. MANY EMPLOYEE benefits. Apply In person dally 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday.

MANCHESTER K-MART PersoNHfl D«pL

239 Spencer St, Mancheeter 643-5122

EOE

MANAGER Up To $25/000X -TR A M A R T is seeking an experi­enced, highly motivated Individual to man­age our high volume convenience atore Ipoated In Ashford, CT.X-TR A M A R T Is one of the fastestgrowing convenience store chains on the East Coast and Is offering to the qualified candidate a chance to grow with us.WE OFFER:• *40O» a weak • Quarterly Bonus Program

• Gasoline Bonua• Malpr Medical / Dental Plan • 401K Program

• Opportunity for Advancementt

Apply In person or send resume to:Terry TenEyck, Area Marketing Rep.

KENYO N OILP.O. Box 860, No. Qrosvenordale, CT 06255

COR

C A R E E R O P P O R T U N IT YWe are presently seeking the

following positions;

• QUALIFIED COUNTER SALESPER­SON familiar with Electrical Supplies.

• ENERGETIC individuals for our warehouse — 1st & 2nd s^ift...

• ORDER PUT UP — 1st shift...• SHIPPING & RECEIVING — 2nd

shift part time• DATA ENTRY CLERK — 3rd shift

LOADER/STOCKER• CLASS II Licensed Truck Driver• ACCOUNTS PAYABLE CLERK with

primary responsibility to process invoices.Please forward your application or

apply to:

Economy Electric Supply428 Tolland Turnpike, Manchester

EOC

Real EstateHAIR Salon-$15,000Good

buy! 5 stations fully equipped. In bulsness for years. Central loca­tion. Miller Real Est- ote, 647-8000. A "

HOMES FOR SALE

All real estate advertised In the Manchester Herald Is sublect to the Fair Housing Act of IMS, which makes It Illegal to odvertlse any pref­erence, limitation or discrim­ination based on race, color, religion, sex or notional origin, or on Intention to moke onv such preference, limitation or discrimination. The Herald will not know­ingly accept onv advertise­ment which Is In violation of the low.SOUTHERN New Eng-

land classifleld ads reach nearly 800,000 hames In Cannecticut and Rhade Island. The price far a bosic 25 ward ad Is aniv $55 and will appear In 43 news­papers. Far mere In- farmatlan call Classi­fied, 643-2711 and ask far dftalls.a

BOLTON-''New listing. D e ligh tfu l 7 ream Ranch affers 3 bed- raams, targe kitchen, 2 full baths and mare. Deck etf kitchen, full w a lk-au t basement with ample shelf space. Lacated an attractive 1% acre lot. $232,900. Call today Tor appoint­ment. Flano Realty. 646-5200.

MANCHESTER. Lovely 3 bedroom Cape, 1V2 baths, dining room, garage. In -ground pool, beautiful neigh­borhood I Sellers relo­cating. $169,900. Cen­tury 21-Homeseekers Realty 623-5044.

WILLINGTON. 7 room Raised Ranch on 1.4 Acre. 2 car gorage. 3 bedrooms, V/2 baths, Fleldstone fireplace In living room. $169,900. Call 429-1213.

MANCHESTER. $209,900. Immaculate 9 room U & R Built Ranch In area ot tine homes. Lovely yard with In-ground pool. Must seel Kler- nan Realty. 649-1147.

PRICE Reduced. il99,000. Full dormered Cope w ith contemporary fla ir, 7 rdbms, 4 bed­rooms, V/7 baths, 2 cor overs ized garage. Master bedroom with double closet. Profes­sional landscaping. A great value. D.W. Fish Realty, 643-1591 .□

IHOMES FOR SALE

BRAND New Listing! Not very handy? Great! This beautiful Ranch doesn't need a thing! Move-In condition. 3 bedrooms, spacious traditional living room with fireplace, enor­mous kltchen-dlnlng room w ith pan try closet, gorgeous new bathroom. Plush wall to wall carpet through­out, full basement. A must seel $146,900. Jackson 81 Jackson Real Estate, 647-8400.D

MANCHESTER. "Forest H ills" Beautiful ex­panded Raised Ranch, approxim ate ly 2800 square feet, 9 rooms, 4 bedrooms, possible In­law suite, huge family room, plus In-ground pool, cabana, awning covered patio, nice view, quiet street and much morel Call now fo r a p p o in tm e n t! $289/900. Century-21 Lindsey Real Estate. 649-4000. □

MANCHESTER- High- wood Drive. See this desirable B plus room, Rolsed Ranch type home. 4 bedrooms, main f lo o r fa m ily room, plus a finished re c re o tlo n ro o m , cathedral celling living room, 7'h bathrooms, stone fireplace. Just reduced to $225,000. U 81 R Realty, 643-2692.

FOR SALE BY OWNERUnique Colonial/Cape in established area. Three or four bedrooms, new paper, paint,

carpet and appliances, heated garage.35 Lakewood Circle, North Manchester.

*234,900 , 647-9976

IHOMES FOR SALE

IHOMES FOR SALE

SIZZLING 3000 square foot 8 room Contem­porary! V/7 baths , family room, library, marble floors, letblock master bedroom both with double locuzzl! Reduced to r Imme- dlqta sole $429,900. BloTlchard 8, Rossetto Realtors," We're Sel­ling Houses" 646-2482.D

MALLARD View- Quality constructed 3 bedroom attached single family homes (you own your own lot), fIreploced liv­ing roony, I '/ j baths, Anderson permashleld termopone windows, range, re frigera tor, dishwasher and win­dows, range, refrigera­tor, dishwasher and microwave oven, car­peting, full basement and even an attached garage. $149,900. Blan­chard 8i Rossetto Real-, tors," We're Selling Houses" 646-2482.0

MANCHESTER. Colon­ial, Irrestible home I

- Lovely traditional Co­lonial with 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 '/j baths. Large 1st floor family room, 15x24 with fire­place. B rig h t and sunny living room with fireplace. Ideally lo­cated In Porter Street area. Displays every­thing you could want )n a home. Including 2cor garage. $219,900. Anne Miller Real Estate, 647-8000.0

MANCHESTER. Elegant 2600 SQuore toot cus­tom home. 25' 1st floor master bedroom suite I 28' kitchen breakfast room! 3 full baths, gorgeous terraced rear ya rd ! Reduced to $254,900 for Immediate sole! Blanchard 8, Ros­setto Realtors," We’re Selling Houses" 646-2482.0 _____________

EAST Hartford. Newly listed, won't lost long. 4 bedroom, 2 both Colon­ial, 1 acre profession­ally londscpoed lot. Large kitchen with cus­tom cabinetry, formal dining room, 4 car garage. Conveniently lo c a te d . $199,900. Sherry Hannon, 635- 2531. McCutcheon 8i Burr 278-5227.

VERNON.,"Brand new". Spacious and nice Gor- r lso n C o lo n ia l, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, T/i baths, beautiful family room with huge stone fireplace, vaulted cell­ing, sliders to deck with terrific view plus 2 car garage and walk out basement I $200,000. Century-21 Lindsey Real Estate. 649-4000.O

MANCHESTER. Raised Ranch, 4 bedrooms,'! '/i baths, fireplace, above ground pool. Conve­niently located near schools, shopping. $219,900. Coll 643-9095 or 649-2276: ______

COVENTRY. Under con­struction. 7 room Co­lonial on over 1.8 acres ot spectacular view. Coll for oil the great details. Rosalie Z. Bru- nettl/RE/MAX, East of the River. 647-1419 or 643-7014.

MANCHESTER. Two family, 5 room each level. Very ottroctlve. Great location plus 2 cor garage. $191,900. Coll now. Rosalie Z. BrunettI at RE/MAX, East ot the River. 647- 1419 or 643-7014

MANCHESTER. Immac­ulate and spacious U & R quality built 9 room Ranch. Many extras. Including 2 fireplaces, woodstove, custom window treatm ents and beautifully manic­ured grounds with an Inground pool. Conve­nient location for easy commute. Must see to a p p re c ia te ! D on 't woltl $209,900. Klernon Realty 649-1147.a

MANCHESTER. Ideal lo- catlon, next door to everything, shopping, schools/ public trans­portation, recreation, plus on easy commute. 3 bedroom Cope, IV1 baths, fireplaced living room, spacious eot-ln kitchen and hardwood floors, the perfect blend of comfortable living ond affordable price! $149,900. Kler- nan Realty 649-1147.D

WILLIMANTICOpen House, Sunday, 1*4 PM

410 PlMsant 8 t r # ^ -"Excellent Buy." Don't mies thia targe, beeutiful, 8 room Colonial, witti 4 BR’e, 2'/, bathe, walkup et- Uo. aeml-finlahed baaement, ancloaad porchaa, nice nraplaca, central vacuum, 2 oar garage, extra carport and a workahop. Only '140,W00.

DIR: Main 8t. (Rta. 32) to Bridge 81. to left on Plaaaant 8t.

Contury 21 • UndMy Rm I EsUrt* • 640-4000

OPEN HOUSE • SUNDAY A P R IL 17th/ 1-4 PM

97 Hackm atack Street

JUST LISTED - absolutely charming 3 bedroom, 2 full baths, Capa Cod home on a lovely lot. Fea­tures central vac, wolk-out rec room, excellent storage and much more. Offered at $187,900.

Dtr; Hackmatack runs betweon Kaenav St. A Sa.Main (Rte. S3)

TlBBLfcs i_T()|-r»L‘STH[ WALTYCOMIVVNV ■ I n X l . a , „ | ( tu r t l r r ts ”

136 New London Tpke., Glastonbury633-3661

. /

3 ,

I HOMES FOR SALE

BO LTO N . Country ele­g an ce . F a b u lo u s 2 s to ry Ra ised Ranch w ith delightfu l brook. Beautifu l upkeep on a fu ll acre/ sheltered by h i l ls id e . F i r e p la c e charm , 3 bedroom, 3 baths, fin ished base­ment. Inground pool w ith shed. 1,000 gallon o il tank plus new k it­chen. $230,000. D.W. Fish Rea lty, 643-1591 .□

M A N C H E S T E R . W e ll kept v in y l sided Cape In ve ry good condition. Brand new bathraom , 3 bed roam s, b eau tifu l fo rm a l d in ing room, firep laced liv ing room w ith new paint and w a llpoper throughout. Located In sought after area of Manchester. $139,900. D.W . F ish Rea lty, 643-1591.0

M A N C H E S T E R . Calon- la l, perfect home for la rge fam lly l Spacious 8 room home w ith huge 4 bedrooms, 1 fu ll plus (2) y-i baths, garage. 1st f la o r fam ily room with w o o d s to v e , l i v in g room w ith fireplace. B e a u f I f u l y a r d . $182,900. Anne M ille r Real Estate, 647-8000.D ^

M A N C H E S T E R . Sentry Real Estate Is proud to feature It’s hame of the w eek . C h a rm in g 6 ro o m m a in te n a n c e free Cape In sought a fte r fam ily neighbor­hood. Screened patio, v e ry p riva te backyard and 1 car garage. Call ou r o ffice fo r your

"exc lu s ive showing to­day. $147,900. Sentry

Sal Estate, 643-4060.a)LTO N . Lot 28 K im Road. Brand new Gar- rlsan Co lon ia l, 4 large bedrooms, 2'/> baths, centra l a ir. $279,000. F lano Rea lty 648-5200.

M A N C H E S T E R . One Of the best buys Is this lo ve ly 8 room Co lon ia l s ituated on Tuck Road here In Manchester,

%AS pecio li

I9t IHOMES■Z' Ifor sale

la r g ^ ls t f lo o r fam ily ro o im enclosed sun room , fron t to b a o i liv ing room , 3 bed­rooms, 2 firep laces, 1 ■/> baths. M any n ice fea­tu re s , a u lc k o c c u ­pancy. Only $232,900. U & R Realty. 643-2«92.a

C O V E N T R Y . H o m e y , well m ainta ined Cape In ru ra l s ftt in . 1st floo r laundry and bath on 1st floo r. Cozy den and great yard fo r kids, p ic in ics and vegetable g a rd e n . I t 's hom e. $144,900. Century 21 Ep­stein Rea lty, 647-8895.0

M A N C H E S T E R . New to the m arket I Com fort you can a ffo rd In this a ttractive 3 bedroom Cape. Love ly dining ro o m w ith b u llt - ln h u tc h , g a ra g e and

'^ ‘•'more. C a ll fo r details. $134,900. Century 21 Ep ­stein Realty, 647-8895.0

I M M A C U L A T E v ln y l- slded Cape In fam ily ne ighborhood, newer roo f. I n f la t io n and furnace. 3 'bedroom s,

baths, garage with breezeway. V e ry p r i­vate, landscaped lot. $168,900. Strano Real

.E s ta te , 647-7653.0

LAWN CARE a DCIMlSMIi/ R t IROOFINS/ REMODELING [O /J g|DINS EDGIIBERT UWN

SEMVICEF o r A l l Y o v r N o o d t lfiMMfMfeto • flW llllllM M t •AHMys A tfsoounl fof MAHlOf CNtMM • Alto, toueMug of lotm Mid tlOfM

C o l 4 4 7 .7 1 S 6eUSANO LANUCAnNfl

Profaeslonal Lawn Maintenanca

Wfwfworvm, nooraonpwComploio lofiMooopIfio Mooio^ Com

for your froo OMfOilo.

648-4075 (iMM iM Mu i) 487 5870

EASTERN ^ LAWNCARE

Ottflnp a Full UiM ot Lawn S Yard Sarrieaa

MM- . ^ A ---- •awnHnOi OTwnp, nRnwno • naomFuRy moiNOd • Rroo ttM m olti

e Sonlor CRtooo WtoourRo647-9710 Kandall Ksyw

Lam Mawliii. Edglni. HaOft Trlimalng,

Ll^ Trwklni. ate..P fo tm lonsHy Bquippad

• Dtpendabta

Ray Harfy, 646-7973L JS & SO N

Landscaping O MowingY a rd d ta n up, m o w ln t, fu ll lo n d K o p t M rv lc a o ira rad .

Free Estimates.

445*4412 Hm w nMnoaal

B00KKEEPIN6/ INCOME TAX

TAX ATTORNEY(NMlrad m m m s)

will advise end prepare all lax returns.WHITMAN

IBS Downoy Orhm.. Apt A Mmchoaler. Sas-ISSI

ENROLLED AGENT12 Ktort in s Enp9rt9nc9

Tax nroporollofi / ConouMno / Tax SomiRara

Cxpart In Now A Old Tax L m

M M B E R L E E D . (7 N E IL L646-6079

CARKIITRYa REMODELUM SERVICES

Com pMa home topalri and ro- modollng. Wa sp oo ltlln In bath­room* and kltehan*. Small *oal* Dommoielal work. R*okM*f*d, In- iurod, raforonoa*.

4 ^ 8 1 6 5

868 HomiImprovsinints 6 Repair

Complete, home care. “No Job Too Sm all”Free Eatlmates

646-1143FARRAND REMODELINGRoom addMona, doek*. roofing, oldlrxi, window* and gutlor*. Bookho* and buSdonr aorvlo* avaHabI*. C a ll Bob Fartand, Jr.

Bui. 847-8509 R ii 845-8840

KITCHEN & BATH REMODELING

From the smallest repair to the largest renovation, we

will do a complete job. Start to finish. F ^ estimates.

Heritaga Kitclian A Bath Canter

Come vr*lt our showroom at; 182 W. Middle Tpke.

Manchester. 649-S4001 ^ PAINTING/|S£J PAPERINGN A M E your own price.

Father 8, Son Pointing and Papering. Remo- vo l. 872-8237.________

D A B PAINTING—------ g bmmimm

Dependable and sxparlanead. Low Prioas and Fully Insurad.

FraaEatln

NEIL

MI8CELLANE0U8SERVICES

CARPENTRY/REM00ELIN6

I ^ r o o f iA r /SIDING

INCOME TAX PREPARATION

In Your Homo In loudlng: nenta l and Bo le ProprMorahIp. C a ll Jim Whaalar

" 742-1009

C O M P L E T E RefInIshIng and restoration of you r k itchen cabinets. Free estimates. Co ll Super­ior, 647-3785.

T H IS SPACE•59.47

for 24 InsartlonsCall 443-2711

for details

R.J. Roofing. No lob too big o r too sm all. W ill work 7 days, until lob complete. 10 percent discount fo r sen ior c it i­zens. Free estimates. Joe 649-9251. ^

PRESTIGEJtOOFINGRooBng of eS t y ^ ahtagl**,

flat roofing, roof ta p ^All work guaramaak

Call

742-7831

Consarvotlva amy to Install or repair your roof and savel Degl direct with

roofer. Wood and cador shake speclollttl Seal

downs. 37 vtor* experlance.

___ 871-7990.

— KENNAA6HOMB IMFROVaMaNT

SicHifo* O adta- Neofeeemant WHWlawa A Boon

No Jab J— B it Of Too fm oll 16% Sanlar O ttfan O ltcavnf AAambaf a f Mi# In fen ie tle iw l

B b fta f tvttam acaii72S-07B1 Anytlma

g g g g g « a g B « B B g g g g g g

HAR ROOFINGRasidantlal rooting of all WP**.

FREE ESTIMATES.10% Sanlor CH Inn OlacounL

A ll W oik Quarenlaod.

647-9289g g g g g g g g g g g g g g g g g g

When you co ll C lassified to place on od, o friend ly Ad-VIsor w ill answer your co ll and help you word your od fo r best response. 643-2711.

O D D lob s . T ru c k in g . H om e re p a irs . You name It, we do It. Free estimates. Insured. 643- 0304.

MRRONS • MINNORSBrtgMsn up your home

Rooaonebly ptleed, lafarenees, Insurad.

• Over 30 yoera oxperlano#.

ACCENT GLASS CO. 647-0146

POWER wiisiiiNGInterior 6 Extarlor

Malntanancs, RarKwatlons and Painting.

Inaurad * Sanlor DIaeounIaRenovations/Plus

646-22S3

FLOORINB

IHEATINB/PLUMBING

J.N.T. HEATINO A COOLINO

InatallaUon*. Rapali*, Burner, BoSeta, Water Heaters.

Claanine. Retraetory BervleeCa ll Tad: 7 4 2 -5 7 0 0

1-^312-4146

PJ’s Plumbing 6 HartlngBoilers, pumps, hot

water tanks, new and replacements.

Er ^ 'i t im a t e s

643-9649/228-9616

ELLANE0U8

FL00R8ANDIN6• Floors like new• Specializing In oldar floora• Natural & atalned floora• No araxing anymoraJohn VMMIIi - 8465750

PATIO DOOR GLASS Spoelil - *98aa.k

lo r iaal*s*m*M (alandard **>76) • Ovor 30 yaara axparloiw a.

ACCENT GLASS CO. 647-0146

Tag Soil Scraaaad LaamAny amount daNvarod. Alao, fill, graval. atona and bark, muleh. BobooL baekhoa a loador lantal.

DAVIS CONSmUCnON872-1400/659-9555

Don't m iss the many offer­ings In today's classified columns.

CONCRETEe e e e e e a e e e e e e e eCPS CONCRETEPatios, walks, floors, drlvs- wova, oddHIons a dacks, Jock Hommarlno a tow cuNIno.

FR EE ESTIMATES. f* « IX tcsw iI fa r Samar c n iim

447-9289

HAWNES TREE SERVICEBuekal, truck a ehippar. Stump

lamovaL Ffpoastlmate*. Spaelal eonaldaretlon tor sidsrty and haiulloapped.

647-7553H A N D Y M A NHem * Im pfovam ant • P atn tln *• Poaam anta F ln lsh a d - T llln e - U o h t C o rsan try - 0 0 0 JO B S -

IN SU RBO

BARRY SCANLON646-2411 fra* astimata*

R E T IR E M E N T L lv ln g - Eve ry th lng prov ided fo r your com fort even nursing service. Rotes reasonable. Co ll 649- 2358.

6AR0ENIN6

ROTOTILLINGA ll Site G arde if'ra ts

R o ta tllU ia at rtM anaM a.rataa. F R B B aaOmataa.

Call Clyde & Sons 447-8987 or 64S-2340

<laaT9 mMHfv)

MOVERS

D .J . W O O D S M O V IN GNanON/v AM Yow AfoWof NaadO

• C O M P L in MOMG • TRUOK A I M IN NOR H tAW IT IM i . •TRUCK AD M IM RAVAIiA ILI

• P R il PtRGONAL n tlM A T I 0

423 -4180PNaua Laava Maaaafa WM RMum CaN

T % S p e cio lia p lH itf!

O NW ARD 8. Upward!! G row ing out of your s ta r te r hom e? T h is beautifu l property con so lve that p rob lem ! P riced right at $209,900 features Include 3 bed­rooms, 2 fu ll baths, fam ily room with f ire ­p lace, s ty lish E u ro ­pean fu ljv oppllonced kitchen, form al dining room , a ttic fan, a ttrac­tive landscaping, situ­ated In the Forest H ills section of Manchester. Ja ckson & Jackson Reol Estote, 647-8400.D

BR AN D Sponk'n new!! Exc it ing 7 room Gam ­brel Co lon ia l In Bolton slated fo r completion In ea rly M ay. 3 spa­cious bedrooms, I 'h b a t h s , 1 s t f l o o r la u n d ry , m u d ro o m , large kitchen with d in­ing area that overlooks 0 b e au tifu l wooded rear yard. Exceptional oak cab inetry, choose your own floo r cover­ing and co lo rs . 2.3 a c r e s s u it a b le fo r horses! $264,^. Jock^ son 8i Jackson Real Estote, 647-8400.0

REST Eo sv l I Em pty nes- te rs lo o k in g fo r a sm a lle r home w ith lust the right set-up? This Is your “ Golden Oppor­tu n ity " ! Im peccab le condition throughout, th is 5 room Ranch on Lakew ood C irc le In M a n c h e s te r b o a s ts g racious one floo r liv ­ing. Large master bed­room with many buMt- Ins, com fortab le den, spacious liv ing room ^Ith firep lace , form al d i n i n g r o o m a n d c h a r m i n g c o u n t r y sty le kitchen, perfect size yard fo r monogeo- b le m a i n t e n a n c e . $198,000. Jackson 8, Jackson Real Estate, 647-8400.O

B O LT O N . 144 H ebron Rood. Spoclous7room , 3 bedroom Ranch on 1% p r i v a t e a c r e s . $232,900. F lano Realty 646-5200.

BOLTON. Lot 4, V a le r ie Rood. D is t in c t iv e 4 bedroom custom Con­tem porary with many extras In on exclusive subdivision. Features wet bar, locuzzt, cen­t ra l o lr and m uch more. $335,000. Flano Realty 646-5200.

(CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE

M A N C H ESTER . Beoufl- fu l 1 bedroom conver­sion In Beacon H ill complex. Located on top floor. Carpet was upgraded when con­verted. A ll appliances Includ ing m icrow ave oven remain. F=ee In­cludes heotl Co ll fo r o s h o w i n g l $95,900. Realty W orld, Benoit, Frechette Associates, 646-7709.0

W E L L S W E ’ e P C ondo . Immaculate end unit, 2 bedrooms, I'/j baths, o p p llo n ced kItcheA, fin ished room In base­ment. $124,900. Co ll be­fore 8om or evenings and weekends 643-8421 or 646-4409.

CDN00MINIUM8 1 ^InRSALE I^MORTSARES E 3 APARTMENTS R q I ROOMMATES

FOR RENT I22J WANTED ED/ M A N C H E S T E R spacious I 2 bedroom Townhouse,' V/2 baths, large k it­

chen , b a sem en t In s m a l l c o m p l e x . $119,900. By owner. 643- 7930.

M A N C H ESTER . Beoutl- fu l 2 bedroom conver­sion In Beacon H ill complex. Carpet was upgraded when con­verted. A ll appliances Includ ing m icrow ave oven and o lr condi­tioner ore Included. In- ground pool and p icn ic a re a a v a i la b le fo r owners use. Fee In­cludes heat! Co ll fo r on appointment. $108,500. Realty W orld, Benoit, Frechette Associates, 646-7709.0

M A N C H E S T E R . Stun- nlng 2 and 3 bedroom Townhouse I Fabulous 20' office o r studio!

, Each unit has 1 '/a baths r and a 2 co r tandem

garage. $144,900 and $164,900. Blanchard & Rosse tto R e a lto rs ," W e're Selling Houses" 646-2482.0

M A N C H E S T E R No rth - t l e l d G r e e n T ow nhouse - 3 bed ­rooms, 2 fu ll and 2 (</:) baths. Finished base­ment, A /C, ca rpo rt, p o o l a n d t e n n i s . $142,900.649-3101 or 529- 5683.

L0T8/LAND FOR SALE

M A N C H E S T E R - Leve l cleored lots. About % acre. C ity sewer and woter. 646-7207.

LA R G E , Wooded bu ild­ing lots In Southwest- e r n p o r t o f M anchester. $102,000- $125,000. 563-1413.

H O .LLA N D M assa ch u ­setts. Investment op­portunity, nine choice acres zoned, mostly garden oportmentsdls- tr lct. Various town ap­p r o v a l s a lr e a d y In place. Possib le survey Into 4 separate parcels of 5 apartments each. 2 m iles off ex it 74, 1-84. Country environment. Coll fo r details. John Kay Real Estate. 413- 245-7510._____________

I APARTMENTS FDR RENT

DO NOT GO BANKRUPTIStop Foreclosure! Home- owners, consolidate your b ills , pay off your cred it cords, your ca r o r busi­ness loon, your mortgage and save , save you r hom e ll NO P A Y M E N T S U P TO 2 YE A R S I Bod cred it, late payments or unemployment Is not a problem . Foreclosure as­sistance ava ilab le fo r the D IVORCED and SELF - E M P LO Y E D .

Swiss CoBsarvotlve Group at 208-4S4-1SM

or 20$-4S4-44a4.

I ROOMS FOR RENT

F E M A L E S P re fe r re d . Furnished room , $60 a week, 1 week security and references. Coll 649-9472, M o n d o y - F rldoy 3:30 to 8:00pm. Ask fo r E leanor._____

CLO SE To buslines ond downtown. '$80 pe r week. Co ll 643-2659.

I APARTMENTS ___ IFOR RENTM AN CH ESTER . 2 bed-

room Townhouse with firep lace. Heat, car­peting, A/C, a ll ap­p liances. N ice loco- tlon. Coll 647-1595.

4 Room apartment, 2nd floo r with gds, gas stove and a re frigera­tor. $500 per month with 2 months security. Telephone 645-6773.

3 Rooms partly furnished, heat. W orking single m ole pre ferred . No pets. Lease. 643-2880.

M A N C H E S T E R . F o r rent. B ig 3 bedroom on busline. $575 plus u t ili­ties. Security and ref­erences required. 643- 1577.

M AN CH ESTER . 454 M ain Street. 2nd floor, 3 room heated. No ap­pliances. Security. $480 per month. 646-2426, weekdoys 9am-5pm.

A T T R A C T I V E 3 b ed ­room, 2 baths, big liv ­ing room and sun porch. $750 plus u t ili­ties and security. 649- 4343.

M A N C H E S T E R - S p a ­cious 1 bedroom, op- p l l o n c e s p l u s m i c r o w a v e . Fen ced yard , sm a ll pet a l­lowed. $550 per month plus utilities. 647-0593.

THE OLCOTT40 Olcott St. ■ Manchester, C T 06040The Olcott is now managed by the Beacon Man­agement Corp. We are now accepting applica­tions for our 1 and 2 bedroom units, starting at *500 for our 1 bedroom units and *550 for our 2 bedroom units. Fully applianced kitchens, pri­vate parking, near schools and shopping malls, swimming pool, wall td^wall carpeting, resi­dent paid utilities, no pets.

Rental Office is open daily,9-5, Monday thru Friday

Please call 643-0612 OF 643-6432

Equal Housing Opportunity

M AN CH ESTER - Large 3 bedroom . W osher/D- ryer, n ice ly decorated. $625 per month plus utilities. 647-0593.

R O CKV ILLE -3bed room , wosher/dryer hook-up. Large yard, $6^ per month plus utilities. Coll 647-0593.

M A N C H ESTER , 2 bed­room , heat,'hot water, appliances. $550. Ref­erences, lease and se­cu rity . No pets. 647-9876evenings.___________

3 Bedroom Duplex, West side. $700 per month plus u tilities. Security and re fe re n c e s re ­quired. 643-1002.

3 Bedroom apartm ent In 1 year o ld Dup lex, 2 baths, appliances, wall to wall carpet. G reet fo r 3 singles. No pets. A va ilab le A p ril 15th. $750 plus u tilities. Ca ll Dan 649-2947 o r 646-9892 otter 6pm.

M A N C H E S T E R . M o ln Street . 1 b ed roo m a p a r tm e n t In c lu des heat and hot water. 529-7858 o r 563-4438.

I CONDOMINIUMS __I FOR RENTM A N C H ESTER . 2 bed-

r o o m T o w n h o u s e Condo. Heat/oarage. Good location. A va la l- ble Immediately., $700 per month. 646-3339 or 649-8638.

HOMES FOR RENT

M A N C H ESTER . 3 bed­room Co lon ia l, stove, r e f r i g e r a t o r . Qu ie t street. $975 per month. 646-3339 o r 649-8638.

^ R I C K Cape Cod- 3 bed- I rooms, 2 baths, garage,

washer-dryer hook-up. Large yard, referen­ces, security .deposit. Ava llab le -M dy 15. Rent$625. 643-6fg;i.>

STORE AND OFFICE SPACE

H A R T F O R D - Wethersf^ ld Avenue. Business zoned. Newly renova ted 2 f am i l y house. 1200 square feet. Park ing In front/rear. $1,000 per month. 229- 9340 otter 5pm.

SUITES Ava ilab le . 1000 square feet per unit. U tilit ies add itional. 1 m ile to 1-84. Peterman B u i l d i n g C o m pany . 649-9404.

RESORTIsSJPMreRTYRHO DE Island, Mantu-

nuck Beach. Ocean view. 3 bedroom Con- t e m p o r o r y . F u l l equipped, Vi m ile to beoch. 644-9639 after 5pm.

M A R T H A ' S V i n e y a r d South Beach- 3 bed­room home fu lly fu r­nished, fe rry tickets a v a i l a b l e . J u n e - September, 643-8557 ev­enings and weekends.

F E M A L E non-smoker to share Townhouse. $360 per month plus utlll-tles. 646-6267._________

M A N C H E S T E R - Shore c o n d o m i n i u m w i th owner. M a le o r fem ale nonsmoker. Own bed­room and bath. Pool, sauna, more. Busline. $350 plus </i u tilities. 522-6103 ext. 261 or 646- 4921._________________

Your assurance of quick response when you adver­tise In Classified is that our readers are ready to buy when they turn to the little ads. 643-2711.

M e r c h a n d is o

FURNITURE

MUSICAL ITEMS .

A M P E G Am p lif ie r with 4-12" speakers. E x ce l­len t c o n d it io n , $300 must sa c r if ice . C a ll Bernie, 649-5819.

n MISCELLANEOUS IFOR SALE

R ESU LT of a renovation. We hove 15 doors, 80"x30" and 80"x42". Some are fire-rated. Co lors are white and mahogany. Fo r more Information ca ll M an ­chester M anor. 646- 0129.

CO M PO UND Bow with dozen a r r o w s w i th brood heads, $200. 2 s te reo co mpon en t s , Rea listic tuner amp, $80 . T E A C V 3 1 6 casset te deck, $80. Te lsco e le c tr ic gu i­ta r,$100. 647^88 after 6pm. ___________

D RAPES , lined, co lors are beige and melon. 7'x19’ . $200. Please Telephone 647-9974.

FOR Sale. Lawn Boy 21" lawn mower. Asking $100. Please telephone 647-9974.

MISCELLANEOUS FDR SALE

AIR Conditioner. 18000 BTU . $150. Please tele­phone 647-9974.

TA6SALES

Q U E E N S IZ E W aterbed complete. Dark pine, 4 drawer base, amtehtng nightstand and chest of drawers. $500 o r best offer. Ca ll a fte r 4pm. 568-1903._____________

MOVING- L iv ing room set and fireside cha irs. E x c e lle n t co nd it io n . Ca ll 649-9334.

M ATCH IN G Couch and love seat. Dork Green with f lo ra l design, a lso brown lounger chair. E x c e lle n t co nd it io n . 649-3329 offe r 4pm.

Q U EEN Size waterbed. Double drawer pedes­ta l, padded ra ils and seat, fancy headboard. $150. Ca ll 646-4646.

Sm art shoppers shop C la ss ified !

IBOATS/MARINE I EQUIPMENT15' Seastor, no seats.

85HP Chrysler. $1500or best offer. 649-2530.

TAG Sale- Ap ril 16 a 17, Saturday and Sunday. 9am to 3pm. 73 HortonRood.______ _________

TAG Sale, A p r il 16 a 17, 9am-4pm. 15 South F o r m s D r i v e ,Manchester._________

3 Fan illv , Saturday A p ril 16, 9-5pm. Rain dote Ap ril 23. 153 M ap le Street, Monchester.

M ULTI Fam ily tag sale- Soturday, A p ril 16. 9-3. Furniture, toys, books a nd m i s c e l l e n o u s household Items. 35-37 B e n t o n S t r e e t ,Monchester._________

GIANT Too sale- Satur­day A p ril 16, lOom- 2pm. Furn iture, toys, clothes, books, much m iscellenous. 151 B irch Street, M an ch e s te r.Roln or shine.________

MOVING. Gas dryer, wo- terbed, m iscellaneous. Saturday 9-2. 60 Coo- p e r H I I I S t r e e t , Manchester.

AutomotiveCARS

___ IFOR SALE ^CLASSIC Ford Fa lcon

1964. Runs, needs some work. $200. Ca ll Gene offer 5:30pm. 633-6164.n

SUBARU D L Wagon 1981. New clutch, new axels. Good condition. $1300 negotiable. Ca ll 649- 7494 after 6pm.

P L Y M O U T H H o r i z o n 1980. Good condition, 4 cy lin de r, 4 door, 4 speed. $1500 o r best offer. 649-3692.________

A M C Eag le 4x4 1981. 57,000 m iles. Good run­ning condition. $1200 negotiable. 646-6173.

DATSUN 210 1980- E xce l­lent running condition. Autom atic, A /C , ra ­dial*. $1200. 649-5121.

'V W Convertib le 1982. 5 speed, white, looks and runs great. 65K. $6795. 646-1485.

FORD LTD 1976- 4 door, V-8, A/C, 73,000 m iles. Exce llent running con- d ltlon, $500. 649-4109.

OLDS S ierra Brougham 1983. F u l l p o w e r , cruise, o lr, A M -FM , 4 c y l i n d e r . E x c e l l e n t condition. $4195 o r best offer. 871-7202.

HONDA Accord 1979. A ir , 5 speed, 12 valve, 4 cylinder, 3,000 m iles on professionally re-bullt eng ine . New point. $1950 or best offer. 871-7202.

TOYOTA Corona 1972- 4 speed, runs well. $300 or best offer. 647-9013.

SUBARU G L Hatchback 1986. M in t condition, low m ileage, 14,000. Exce llent shape Inside and out. See to believe. $5700. 647-1924 o r 647- 1264.

LYNCHIf this name is

not on your car, you

probably paid too much!!

89 Safari wood wagon, apx. 3500 87 Trans Am, Mack 9 gold, TPI 87 Pontiac Qrand AM 4dr, gray 87 Pont Sunbird 4 dr sedan 87 Cfravy Nova 4 dr, AT. AC 87 Trans Am QTA, rad 87 Toyota 4x4 PU, blu*87 Toyota PU, standard, rad M Celica QT LB. 5 spd.. AC M Toyota 4x4, rad, 18K89 Nov* 4 dr. AT, P8,19K 99 Poptla^ 8TE 4 dr, blu* 99^iMC S4farl Psnar van, 1ZK

'99 Cutlaa* Suprm. op*., maroon 99 Buick Ragal Cp*. V9 99 Chavy Cavalier CL wagon 99 Toyota DIx Pas* Van, 5 spd

. 99 Toyota 4x4 longbad 99 Toyota Extra Cab Plok-up 86 Toyota MR2, 14K ml 86 Oldt Calais 4dr, gold 86 Toyota Corolla 4 dr 86 Qrand Prix, V6, Bucket*86 Chav C20, 5.7 P/U, rad85 Flefo QT, V6. AT, AC86 Toyota Porarunner AT 65 O ldt Delta 88 Royale 86 Toyota Tercel 3 dr. AC88 Toyota Tercel 4 dr, AC 85 Dodge'Lancer ES turbo85 Mazda daluxe 4 dr QLC86 Corolla LE, AT, AC 88 Ford Ranger 4x4 P/U 85 NIaaan DIx P/U. S apd U Toyota SR5, 4x4, plow85 Oldt Cutlaaa Clara LS 88 Bonne. 4 dr, apx. 26K ml 88 Caprice CLaaalc 4dr, ve86 Corolla 8R8, LB, AC 88 Pont. T1000, 18K84 Honda Accord, 4 Dr. AT 84 Tercel Wag. 9 Paaa 64 Parlalanna Wgn., 9 pats.84 Calica QT, Cpa, 8 Spd.84 Mta. Carlo, Wht/blua top 84 Flero Spl coupe, AT 84 Buick Century Ltd., 34K 84 Buick Skyhawfc 4 dr, AT 64 Toyota Corolla LE 84 Toyota Camry DIx. 4 dr.84 Trana Am. blue, T-tpa 84 Pont. Flaro SE, 4 apd.83 Pontiac 6000 LE 4 dr 83 Subaru GL, 4 dr, AT 83 Chavatta 4 apd., AC 62 Corolla SR8 Spt. Cp., AC 82 Bonne. Wood Wgn.82 Pont. 6000 LE, 4 dr.82 BK. Ragal LTD, Sunroof 79 MuaUng 4 cyl., AT. PS

All VablclM Warraiitlad

LYNCHPONTIAC-TOYOTA 500 W. Center St.

Mencheeter

646-4321★

3 .

o

s

CARS FOR SALE

CARS FOR SALE

CARS FOR SALE

1979 B U IC K Le Sabre. Excellent condition. Loaded. M.OOO miles. S4S00 or best offer.647-8351.____________

SU B A RU 1986 G L Wagon, 5 speed, excellent con­dition. S7500 or best offer. 742-6561.

LIPMAN #1VOLKSW AGEN

07 Bulok Ragtl, Immaeulata Loaded, MASOO

00 Subaru O L 3 dr, Sllvar, 0 ap.4 WO, AC, AM-FM, <7200

00 VW QTI *0000 OOTrana Am, BIk, >11,000 00 Toy. Tatcal, 2 dr, rad, >0190 00 (2) Taroala 4 dr, AT, >0000 00 Chav CavaMar Typa 10, >3200 90 Cutlaaa Clarra bm, >7000 04 Audi 4000, quarto, >0499 04 Volvo D L 4 dr, bm, AT, >7900 04 VW QLI >070603 VW Campar AT, >790004 VW Rabbit, 40K, >4290 02 Buick Skylark, >3290 79 BMW 3201, >4790

24 ToUaad TuRk, Rto. S3 VerBOR, CT • 649-263S

C H E V E L L E 1973, Rebuilt 3504BDL 4 speed, posl. Very good condition. S2800 or best offer. 647-9925 offer 3pm.

O LD S sierra Wagon 1984- Power steering, power brakes, A/C, AAA-FAA stereo. $5500, 646-6168.

C L Y D EC H E V R O L E T -B U IC K , INC. R O U T E 83, V E R N O N

04 Cantury LTD 4 dr. *829504Cltallon4dr. *3905OOOIdaCallstdr. *690500 Cantury 4 dr. *809500 Olda Dana cpa. *9005 00 Nova CL *5995OTCuttaaatdr. *10,99507 Pont 9000 ai« 4 dr *14,995 07 Cavallar idr. *790507 Pont Grand Am *0995 07 Spaotrum 4 Dr. *6495. 07 Monta Carto *10,995 07 Buick Ragal 2 dr. *10,995 07 Caprtoa tmgon *9995 07 Chav. Calabrlty 4 dr. *8995 07 Cantury 4 dr. *9995

872-9111

SPRING USED CAR SPECIALS87 SUBARU SAVE 85 SUBARU *8988

4 Or.. O U 4 WD. A C ,n XT, 4ii4 Turbo. 4 WO. AC. SRoof

86 SUBARU SAVE 85 SUBARU iSSSSRX, 4 Or. Tuibo. 4WD. AC. Mof« Brut. 4WO. 8 Roof. AM/FM

85 SUBARU *5888 84 SUBARU *5886.9L.4 0 r.A T .A M m M C aaaSh o o l 4 Dr.. OLIO, AT. AC, 0 Noot

S p r in g tim e t r u c k s p e d a l s ^HDATSUII r im MTJIVOT* <4)WKina Cah Aktm i. MUM Saal Makup A Oradt Oiiyl

83 SUBARU *3988 87HYNDAI *5988OL. 8 Or.. A a • Roof. RW KiootL • Robf. AM7PM Cm *

87ISUZU • m 84 MERC *4888I Marti. AT. AO, AM iraOaaa. Marqula. AT, PW, PB, POaaCAO

.UBURBAN 14 HARTFORD TPKE. VERNON, CT 0494550 llB'LMIIHJfl

C L Y D ESPECIAL PURCHASE

PRE-OWNED '87 CHEVY NOVAS.

CAVALIERS €r SPECTRUMS

SiAfKI To Pn« Son Toi B BepweMBRlaWB S A i m i 4 07836.637 Ei 630..AR E<M)p«d With AuiomMlc TrBnsifWtaiont. Pow«r

b PowBf BfBhtt, Air Coodhiofilng. Rbw OtfggQtr, AM /FM St«rM. Long Tiffn 60 Month FlntncinB AvBHablB. RtmiindBr Of PBCtory Worriniy.

I-Door Sedans &■ Hatchbacki................f f f

n V n F CHEVROLET 372.91 nL li I L it b u ic k , INC. ........ ,

D A T SU N Pickup 19f2- Runs well, ports or fix up, $250'or best offer.647-9013.____________

S IE ST A 1980- Needs o little work. $200 or best offer. Coll offer 5:00. 649-4615. '

I MOTORCYCLES/__ImopeosJ7oN D A"v^65Tw aona

IIOOcc 1995. Very low, miles. Excellent coiidly tion. $2900orbestofTer.

• a ia £ S a L I£ S IL a .a _ .CARS FOR SALE

MOTORCYCLES/ M0PED8

KAWASAKI &A2!f6.E?-cellenf condition, low mileage, many extras. $1800 or best offer.

CARS FOR SALE

MOTORCYCLES/ M0PED8

Y A M A H A 1980 250 Excl- ter. Runs good. Needs minor repoirs. Asking $2.50. 646-4704.

ICAR8 FOR SALE

NEW 1988 SPECTRUM ^500 FACTORY REBATEFRM T WHSL MOVE. S TR E I, D ffIG fia ,R ACX8nM m STEERIW ,M 0RE.N 5 II

♦7399NEW 1988 NOVA wn lZOO FACTIRY RERAEE AnmunciiAiBiiiBaM, m t a m m m m a

8895NEW 1988 BERETTA *500 FACmVREIAlE

izn MAM ST. • MAMCniB, O

w<PW^r»»WFWW6iae.B.*,e,9•* *• * p 8 » • t * \ f ^ I'T ¥ n ** ft t n » t$ 7 p p f f 1 1 , j

S P O R T SStarling defends title against favored Breland

AP photo

W INNING MOMENT — Marlon Starling raises his arms in victory after he defended his title against Fujio Ozaki on Feb. 6. Starling defends his welterweight title tonight against the man he took the crown from, Mark Breland.

Foreigners dominatelairrat

B y E d Schuyler Jr.The A ssociated Press

LAS Ve g a s , Nev. — Mark Bre­land, who has won 130 of 132 amateur and pro fights, will be in a must-win situation Saturday night when he challenges welterweight champion Marlon Starling.

‘T m not going into the fight thinking that, but I know it is,” the 24-year-old Breland said.

“ Losing back-to-back to the same guy would be bad ”

The 29-year-old Starling won the World Boxing Association welter­weight title when he knocked out Breland in the 11th round last Aug. 22 at Columbia. S.C.

Another loss wouldn’t necessarily end Bpjeland’s career, but it would badly hthi the 1984 Olympic champion as a gat^ attraction.

Dollars and cents are not at the heart of matter as Breland sees it.

" I t ’s a matter of pride.” he said.Breland was a 2-1 favorite Friday to

win the scheduled 12-round bout at the Las Vegas Hilton, which w i l l ^ the second half of an HBO television doubleheader.

Julio Cesar Chavez of Mexico, who has won all 56 of his pro fights, will defend his WBA lightweight cham­pionship in a scheduled 12-round bout against Rodolfo Aguilar of Panama.

The Chavez-Aguilar fight will start about 7 p.m. PDT. The Starling- Breland match could start about 8 p.m. and no later than 8:15 p.m.

Having to prove himself is nothing new for Breland despite an amateur record of 110-1, with 73 knockouts and a pro mark of 20-1, with 13 knockouts.

"People say ‘You haven’t fought anybody,” ’ Breland said. “ They look

for me to hit a guy once a»id have him fall. But if he does, they say. 'Who did you fight?” ’

Breland won the title with a seventh-round knockout of Harold Volbrecht of South Africa Feb. 6.1987, at Atlantic City, N.J. He lost it in his first defense.

He said he went into the fight against Starling with torn rib cartilege.

” It was just pride,” he said of his decision to fight with the Injury. "Sometimes you have to eat your pride.”

Breland grew up in New York, but he has family in Columbia and he said, ” I had a lot of distactions trying cater to my fam ily and other peoples I just couldn’t pick myself up for the fight. In the fight I had no motivation at all.

’ T m up for this one.”

It will be the second title defense for Starling, of Hartford, Conn., who has a 43-4 record, with 26 knockouts. One of those losses was on a 15-round unanimous decision to Donald Curry in a bid for the WBA 147-pound title

-^ F e b . 4, 1984.V T In his first defense. Starling won a

12-round unanimous decision over Fujio Ozaki of Japan last Feb. 5 at Atlantic City.

Breland has fought twice since losing to Starling. He scored a 10-round decision over Javier Suazo Dec. 5 at Atlantic’City and knocked out Juan Alonso Villa in the third round of a preliminary to Starling’s victory over Ozaki.

The 25-year-old Chavez, who has scored 47 knockouts, is a prohibitive favorite in his first defense of the 135-pound title.

B v Bert Rosenthal The A ssoc iated P re ss

BOSTON — With the leading U.S. runners absent, an avalanche of world-class foreigners has descended upon the Boston Marathon, setting up an intriguing race Monday

Not only will the field of more than 6,600 be racing for the top prizes of $45,000 plusa car valued at more than $35,000, for both the men’s and women’s first-place finishers, but many will be vying for berths on their national Olympic teams.

Kenya, Tanzania. Finland, Britain, Italy and Mexico will select all or part of their Olympic te from the 92nd running of the historic Bos^ Marathon.

The race will be devoid of recognizable Americans, except for four-time Boston winner Bill Rodgers, 40, and two-time women’s runner-up Patti Catalano. 35, because the leading U.S. marathoners are preparing for their Olympic Trials.

The men’s trials will be April 24 in the New Jersey Waterfront Marathon and the women's trials will be May 1 at Pittsburgh.

Leading the foreign invasion of Boston are Steve Jones of Wales, Ibrahim Hussein of Kenya, Juma Ikangaa of Tanzania, Geoff Smith of Britain and Gelindo Bordin of Italy.

In addition, there are Orlando Pizzolato and Gianni Poll of Italy. Suleiman Nyambui, Gidamis Shahanga, Filbert Bayi. Zakariah Barie, John Burra and Simon Robert of Tanzania, the unrelated Gomezes- Rodolfo and Jose- of Mexico, Tommy

stpn Marathon fieldEkblom a m ^ a r tt i VainSig^Finland, Joseph Nzau. Gabriel Kamhu, Wilson W ^ w a and Sam Sitonik of Kenya. Nechadi el Mustafa of Morocco, and Tomoyuki Tanaguchi and Hideki Kita of Japan.

The women’s field is not nearly as deep as the men’s, but it features two of the world’s best, defending champion Rosa Mota of Portugal and P risc illi l^ lc h , 43. of Britrin.

All ihoiCations are that with the heavy number of Africans, the race will be fast, provided the weather is good.

Last year, when rain and strong winds battered the 26-mile, 385-yard course that begins in the little town of Hopkinton, west of Boston, and ends in the middle of the city, Toshihiko Seko of Japan beat Jones by nearly two minutes in 2hours, 11 minutes. 50 seconds.

Jones had little at stake then. This time, the race has much more significance for him.

He and Smith, the Boston champion in 1984-85 and third last year, only five seconds behind Jones, will be vying for the third and final spot on the British marathon team. The other places will go to the first two British finishers in Sunday’s London Marathon.

Between the two British runners is Ikangaa. the world’s top-ranked marathoner in 1986, with a best of 2:08:10.

F ive others in the field have broken 2:10:00- Shahanga (2:09:39), Rodolfo Gomez (2:09:12), Poll (2:09:57), Nzau (2:09:45) and Rodgers (2:09:27).

" I ’m stunned by the terrific field,” said Rodgers, who is running his 52nd marathon— he has won 21 — and his 13th Boston. “ This is the best field

assembled in the 92 years of the race.“ I wish I was 10 years younger, and in some ways.

I ’m glad I ’m not.” said Rodgers, who will be running his first Boston as a member of the Masters Division — over 40 group.

Fred Lebow, race director of the New York City Marathon, agreed with Rodgers as to the potential of the field.

“ This is better than the (1984) Olympic Games and better than the (1987) World CTiampionships,” Lebow said.

"This is the greatest array of talent ever assembled at Boston.” said Dave D ’Alessandro, senior vice president of John Hancock Financial Services, the major sponsor of the race.

“ It should be a fascinating race. It shouldn’t be a strategy race. Certain runners . , , will have to do well time-wise to get a qualifier for their teams,

" I f they have a slow performance, they could get x ’d out,” D ’Alessandro .said. “ They can’t afford not to run fast,”

Unless the weather is bad, D ’Alessandro should have no worries about a fast race.

Generally. African runners like to push the pace and occasionally throw in some fast bursts, trying to disrupt the opposition.

Sometimes, their tactics work for en entire race, and an unknown African wins a marathon, such as Shahanga did in the 1978 (Commonwealth Games and Douglas Wakiihuru of Kenya did in last year’s World Championships.

3.

Sports in Brief

Hockanum canoe race SundayThe 12th annual Hockanum River Canoe Race will

take place Sunday beginning at 10 a.m. alongside the'Steak Club Restaurant Just south of the Vernon Shopping Center on Route 83 in Talcottville. Registration will be from 8:30 to 9:30 a.m.. The entry fee is $5 per person.

Awards will be given to the first three places in each of the 14 classes of canoeists. The finish line is behind the Powder Mill Shopping Center^n Burnside Avenue in East Hartford just past McDonald’s. For further information, call Lee Watkins at 742-6296. J

MH8, East baseball play todayThe Manchester High baseball team (0-3) will be looking for its first ^ n of the season today when it hosts Newington High School at 1 p.m. at Kelley Field in a non-conference game. The Indians are coming off an 11-6 loss to Hartford Public on 'Thursday.

Meanwhile, the East Catholic Eagles (3-1) will entertain Northwest Catholic in a non-conference affair today at 11 a.m. at Moriarty Field. The Eagles are coming off an 11-1 victory over South Catholic on Wednesday.

MHS, East boys’ track In actionThe Manchester High and East Catholic High

boys’ track teams will take part in the Eastern Relays today at_ Eastern Connecticut State University in Williinantic starting at 11 a.m. The Indians are 1-0 this season while the Eagles have yet to cpmpete.

Nichols, Brodle In frontHOUSTON — Bobby Nichols, who completed his

round in near-darkness, and forme)' NFL quarter­back John Brodie each shot 3-under par 69s Friday to share the first-round lead in the Doug Sanders Celebrity Classic.

Brodie and Nichols held a one-stroke lead over Arnold Palmer, Chi Chi Rodriguez, Haroid Henning and George Bayer and Joe Jimenez. s

Television and Railio

Scoreboard

BasebaD

American League etandingsEMt DIvMon

W L Pet. GBNew York 9 1 .900 —

Cleveland 8 2 .800 1Boston 6 4 .600 3Detroit 4 4 .500 4Toronto 4 6 .400 5Milwaukee 2 7 .222 6'ABaltimore 0 9

West Division.000 m

W L Fef. GBKonsas City 6 3 .667 —

Ookland 6 3 .667 —

California 4 4 .500 l'/3Seattle 4 5 .444 2Texas 4 5 .444 2Chicago 3 5 .375 2ViiMinnesota 3 5 .375 2W

Lot* Oaitwi Net tndudMl — ’ PMaov’s OamM

Texca 3, Boston Z 10 Innines Now York 7, MIlwciukoo 1 Kansas City at Detroit, pod., cold Minnesota at Toronto, ppd., cold Cleveland at Baltimore, (n)Californio at Seattle, (n)Chicago at Oakland, (n)

Saturday's GamesTexas (Jetfcoat 0-1) at Boston

(Ellsworth 0-1), 1:05p.m.Kansas a ty (GuMcn 2-0) at Detroit

(Robinson 0-1), 1:35 p.m.Minnesota (NIekro 1-0) at Toronto

(Flonoeon 1-0), 1:35 p.m.New York (Rhoden 1-1) at Milwaukee

(Hlouera 1-0), 4:05 p.m.Chicago (Reuse 0-1) at Oakland

(G.liavis 1-0), 4:05 p.m.Cleveland (Swindell 20) at Baltimore

(Morgan 0-2), 7:35 p.m.California (Fraser 1-0) at Seattle (Swift

1-0), 10:05 p.m.Sunday's Games

Texas at Boston, 1:05 p.m.Cleveland at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m. Kansas City at Detroit, 1:35 p.m. Minnesota at Toronto, 1:35 p.m.New York at Milwaukee. 2t35 p.m. Chicago at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. California at Seattle, 4:35 p.m.

American League reeultd

Rangers 3, Red Sox 2 (10 innings)

BASKETBALL CHAMPS — BCl won the National Division Adult Basketball League title and the playoff crown this winter. Team members, from loft, front row: Paul WIthee, Bob Morton and Mike Farley. Back row: Bernie Vogel, Gary Qrodzfcki, John Feeney, Bob Maroney and Kim Bushey.

„ ■ IF HNSW Yerii

John W,1-0 6 4(taonte 2 2Hudson 1 1'^Mltwaukee

BIrkbeck LJkl 1 1-3 5Stapleton 5 2-3 1Crim 1 1Clear 1 ' 0

R ER BB SO Bonilla 3b Bream lb

. Coles rf LVIlrec Bernard ss Smiley p Congels ph MGorcIa p Totals

3 0 0 0 Jackson rf4 0 0 0 JDavIsc 4 0 2 0 Law3b 4 0 10 Trillo 1b4 0 0 0 Palmeir It 2 0 0 0 DMrtnzcf 1 0 0 0 Sutcliffe p 0 0 0 0

34 0 < 0 Totals

10 103 0 0 04 1 1 0 4 0 10 3 0 0 1 2 2 11 2 0 0 0

31 410 6John pitched to 2 batters In the 7th, BK— BIrkbeck 3, Stapleton.T— 2:54. A -55,«7.Umpires— Home, Denklnger;

M cC oy; Second , Coble; McClelland.

National League standings

TODAYNoon — CBA championship; Wyoming at Albany,

ESPN1 p.m. — Rangers at Red Sox, NESN, WTIC

/ I; 20 p.m. — Cardinals at Mets, Channel 30 2:30 p.m. — ’Tennis: Bausch & Lomb Champion­

ships, ESPN3 p.m. — Bowling: U.S. Open, Chs. 8,40-

4 p.m. — Yankees at Brewers, Channel 30, WPOP 4 p.m. — Golf: Heritage Classic, C3iannel 3 7:30 p.m. — Knicks at Hawks, Channel 9 8 p.m. — Stanley Cup: Flyers at Capitals, ESPN 10 p.m. — Boxing; Julio Cesar Chavez vs. Rodolfo

Aguilar, WBA lightweight title; Marlon Starling vs. Mark Breland, WBA welterweight title, HBO

SUNDAY1 p.m. Rangers at Red Sox, Chs. 30, 38, WTIC 1 p.m. — Lakers at Rockets, Channel 3 1 p.m. — Motorsports; Northwestern Bank 400,

ESPN1:30 p.m. — High School All-America basketball

game, Chs. 8, 401:30 p.m. — Cardinals at Mets, Channel 0 2 p.m. — New Britain at Wiliimantic, WCNX

(1150-AM)2:30 p.m. — Yankees at Brewers, WPOP 3: iso p.m. — Celtics at Bullets, Chanel 61, WKHT 3:30 p.m. — Golf; Heritage Classic, Channel 3 4 p.m. — Tennis; Bausch & Lomb Championships,

ESPN4 p.m. — Motorsports: Grand Prix of Long Beach,

Cilis. 8 ,4 08 p.m. — College baseball: LSU at Mississippi St.,

ESPN

TEXAS

Espvct Retchr ss Sierra rf Incvglla If DBrIen 1b Seedh McDwl dh Pefralllc Buechle3b Browne 2b

Total*

TexasBetfen

BOSTONa b rh M

5 1 1 0 Burkscf 5 0 2 1 JoReed ss 4 0 0 0 BoggsSb 4 0 0 0 Rice dh 4 0 10 (Sremwl If3 0 10 D w ^ n 1b 1 0 0 0 Barrelt2b

4 0 0 0 M am noc 4 2 2 2 Homph3 0 0 0 SOwenpr

BAndsnrf 37 3 7 I Totals

a b r h M4 12 0 3 1 1 0 3 00 03 00 14 00 0 4 0

3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 04 0 0 0

31 3 3 1

Eosl Division

V U SMS0JL,-'-PM\ad n o Mgpfri

Chicago Pittsburgh New York St. Louis ‘ lllqddi lo

Rrst,Th ird,

GB

Pittsburgh ooo (MO ooo-oChicago 003 010 llx— «

Gome Winning RBI — Dunston (1).E— VanSlyke. DP— Pittsburgh 1. LOB—

Pittsburgh 0, Chicago 7. 2B— VonSIvke. HR— Dawson (3), Dunston (3), DMortlnez (2). SB— Dunston 2 (3), VonSlyke (1). S— Sutcliffe. SF— Palmeiro.

IPPittsburgh

Smiley LJ)-1 MCkircIa

Chicago Sutcliffe W,1-0

H R ER BB SO

6 0 0 1

Wesf Division

667 I— HBP— OMortInez by Smiley, DAAartInez■ OT e g / BKMGarda. WP— Sutcliffe. BK— Smiley .30 3 *•.333 3

GB

001 01020S 000 0 -4

Gome Winning RBI — Beuchele (l).E— JoReed. LOB— Texas 7, Bosfon 5.

2B— Burks. HR— Buechele 2 (2). SB— Espy (2), Incovlglla (1).

IP

10

H R ER BB SO

3 2 2 6 0Texas

Hough W,2-1 Nortnn

Sellers 7 5 2 2 1 8Gardner LJI-1 3 2 1 1 2 3

Sellers pitched to 2 batters In the 8th. WP— Hough.Umpires— Home, Cousins; Rrst, Roe;

Second, Kosc; Third, Barnett.T-3:03. A— 1Z369.

YankB8s7,Rr6wers1NEW YORK MILWAUKEE

o b rh b l o b rh b lRHndsn If 5 1 1 0 Atolltordh 4 0 10Rndlph2b 3 1 1 0 Yount cf 3 0 10Mtfiglv 1b 4 111 Felder cf 0 0 0 0JCIark dh 4 111 Surhoff3b 4 0 10PglruloSb 3 1 1 0 Brock 1b 3 0 0 0Winfield rf 3 10 1 Deer If 4 0 10WshoAnef 4 0 11 Braggs rf 3 12 1Slought c Mechmss

2 1 1 2 Schroedre 3 0 0 04 0 0 0 AdducI ph 10 0 0

Rllosss 4 0 0 0Sveum 2b 3 0 10

Tetato 11776 Total* 11 1 7 1

New York 518 818 818-7Mltwaukse •18 M l 8I8-1

Game Winning RBI — JCIark (1).E— Pogllarulo. DP— New York 3, Mil­

waukee 1. LOB— New York 6, Milwaukee 7.2B— Mattingly, Randolph, Braggs.

HR— Bragg* (11, Slought (1). S— SlaughtT

HCKiSton 7 2Lot Angeles 6 3 .667 1ClndnnoH 6 4 .600 1</tiSon FTandsco 5 4 .556 2San Diego 3 6 .333 4Atlonto 0 8 .000 6'/i

Late Games Not Induded FrMoy's Game*

Chicago 6, Pittsburgh 0 Montreal 6, Philadelphia 4 NewYork3,SI. Louls0,6lnnlngs Clnclnnafl4, HoustonZ lOInnIngs Atlanta at Los Angeles, (n)San Francisco at San Diego, (n)

Sotuntay’s GamesOnclnnotl (Soto l-0)atHouston (Kneoper

1-0), 1:20 p.m.St. Louis (AAopTone 04)) ot New York

(Fernandez 0-1), 1 :3 p.m.Pittsburgh (Drabek 1-0) at Chlcogo

(G.Moddux 20), 2:2(Lp.m.Atlanta (Mahler 0-1) at Los Angeles

(Belcher 0 ^ , 4:05 p.m.(K.Gross 0-1) of Montreal

(B.Smith OO), 7:35 p.m.Son Frandsco (Drovecky 1-1) at Son

Diego (Whitson 1-0), 10:05 p.m._ Sunday's Game*Philadelphia ot Montreal, 1:35 p.m.St. Louis ot New York, 1:35 p.m. Pittsburgh ot Chicago, 2:M p.m. Cincinnati at Houston, 2:35 p.m.Atlanta ot Los Angeles, 4:05 p.m.Son Francisco at San Diego, 4:05 p.m.

National Laagus results

CubsfLPIrstssOPITTSBURGH CHICAGO

I o b rh b l a b r h MP.ondBlf 4 0 0 0 Dunstonss 5 2 3 2Lind 2b 4 0 10 Sndbra 2b 4 0 10VanSlyk cf 4 0 2 0 Dawson rf 3 12 2

Umpires— Home, Dovidson; Rrst, Har­vey; Second, Pulll; Third, Crawford.

T — 2:56. A— 35,084.

Golf

LP9A-L0S Angeles scoresLOS ANGELES (AP) — Scores Friday,

otter the first round of the LPGA Los Angeles golf tournament on the 6,191- vord, par 37-35— 72 Rancho Pork Golf Course:Patti Rizzo Kelly Leadbetter Amy Alcott Shelley Hamlin Jull Inkster Lynn Adorns Marta Rgueros-Dottl Nina Foust LIselotte Neumann Nancy Lopez Barb Bunkowsky Hollis Stacy MIssle BerteottI Sandra Palmer Rebecca Ward Jane GeddOs Shirley Furlong AAarlene Hagge Nancy Brown Anne-AAarle Palll Debbie Massey Lauren Howe Cindy Rgg-Currler Atary Murphy Janet Anderson Deb Richard Susie McAllister Nancy Ledbetter f Muffin Spencer-Devlln Ok-Hee Ku

35-34-693230-693237— 6935-34-6935- 35— 7036- 34— 7037- 33— 7035- 35— 7037- 34— 71 34-35-7136- 35— 7138- 33— 7134- 35-7136- 35— 7137- 36-7137- 34— 7135- 34— 7138- 34— 72 35-37— 72 3547— 72 3444— 72 37-35-72 37-35— 72 40-32-72 3547— 72 37-35— 72 3 7 4 5 -^37- 35-72 3846-7238- 34— 72

Sports in

Alcott shares the leadLOS ANGELE^ — Amy Aicott, piaying on a

course where she learned the game as a youngster, shot a 3-under-par 69 Friday to share the first-round lead in the $400,000 Ai Star-Centinela Hospital tournament.

Kelly Leadbetter, Patty Rizzo and Shelley Hamlin also carded opening 69s to tie for the lead at Rancho Park.

Juli Inkster and Marta Figueras-Dotti of Spain were in a group at 70 after the first round of the 54-hole tournament.

Nancy Lopez opened the Los Angeles event with a 71, while Jan Stephenson struggled to a 76. Ayako Okamoto was in a group at 72. Colleen Walker and Great Britain’s Laura Davies had 73s.

Bell placed on disabled listCINCINNATI — Cincinnati Reds third baseman

Buddy Bell has reaggravated a knee he injured during spring training and is back on the 15-day disabled list for the second time this season.

, Bell, who had come off the disabled list Sunday, aggravated the left knee again while fielding a ground ball Wednesday in San Francisco.

Catcher-utility infielder Lloyd McClendon, who was sent down to the Reds’ Nashville farm team when Bell was activated Sunday, was recalled Thursday night and was rejoining the Reds in Houston for Friday night’s game, team officials said.

Fenner gets probationUPPER MARLBORO, Md. - Former University

of North Carolina tailback Derrick Fenner was sentenced to three years probation on cocaine possession charges Friday.

Prince George’s County Circuit (Tourt Judge Jacob Levin also ordered Fenner. 21, to pay a $1,000 fine. Fenner pleaded guilty in January to one count of cocaine possession, as part of a plea bargain in which prosecutors agreed to drop a weapons charge against him.

" I think you have the necessary talent, mentally and physically, to make something o f yourself.” Levin said in handing down the light sentence.

Reds rowdy on flightHOUSTON — Cincinnati Manager Pete Rose

apologized to Continentai Airlines officials after some of his players allegedly threw food, insulted flight attendants and were rowdy during a plane trip to Houston.

Continental spokesman Jim Brigance said that Rose helped quiet the piayers during the Wednesday flight from San Francisco to Houston and has apologized to the airiine.

Some piayers tore up safety instruction cards, grabbed at stewardesses and insulted stewards while using obscenities. Brigance said ’Thursday.

One passenger said the players were loud and disruptive even before the piane left San Francisco. The pilot threatened to stay on the ground until they calmed down, the passenger said.

Graf Sabatini in rematchAMELIA ISLAND, Fla. — Top-ranked Steffi Graf

scored a straight-set victory Friday at the Bausch & Lomb Championships to earn a chance to avenge her only loss to teen-age rival Gabriela Sabatini.

Graf, an 18-year-old West German, needed only 55 minutes to beat sixth-seeded Katerina Maleeva of Bulgaria 6-2, 6-0 in the quarterfinals. ’The third-seeded Sabatini, a 17-year-old Argentine, beat Michelie Torres of Chicago 6-1. 6-1 in 50 minutes.

Graf and Sabatini wili play in Saturday’s semifinais of the $300,000 clay court tournament. Friday’s other- winners, seconef-ranked Martina Navratilova of Fort Worth, Texas, and fourth-

“seeded Claudia Kohde-Kilsch of West Giermany, wiil meet in the other semifinal match. •

Navratilova beat Kathleen Horvath of Largo. Fla.. 6-3. 6-1 in 54 minutes. Kohde-Kiisch beat No. 5 Zina Garrison of Houston 6-3. 6-2.

Scoreboard

Hockey

N H L playoff picture

Fhst Round WALES CONFERENCE

Patrick Division Now Jtrsty 4, N.Y. tatandtrs 2

N.Y. Islanders 4, New Jersey 3, OT New Jersey 3, N.Y. Islanders 2 New Jersey 3; N.Y. Islanders 0 N.Y. Islanders 5, New Jersey 4, OT New Jersey 4, N.Y. Islanders 2 New Jersey 6, N.Y. Islanders 5

PMtadelpMa vs. Washington WsGsesdov, April 6

Philadelphia 4, Washington 2 Thursday, A i^ l 7

Washington 5, Philadelphia 4 SfltlirdBVe Asrti 9

Philadelphia AWOsMngton 3 Sunday; April io

Phllodelphia 5, WashInMon 4, OT Tuesday, Am H 12

Washington 5, Philadelphia 2 TVlim dov. JiArtI M

Washington Z ^ llo d H p h la Z series tied 34

SolurddVy April MPhiladelphia at Washington, 7:35 p.m.

Adorn* DIvislan Horttanl at Montrsal

a fw a ff fv iH % zMontreal 4, Hartford 3 Montreal 7, Hartford 3 Montreal 4, Hartford 3 Hartford 7, Montreal 5 Hartford 3, Montreal 1 Montreal Z Hartford 1

Boston A Buftale 2Boston 7, Buffalo 3 Boston A Buffalo 1 Buffolo 6, Boston 2 Buffalo 6, Boston 5, OT Boston 5, Buffalo 4 Boston 5, Buffalo 2

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Norrts Olvltlon

Detroit A Toronto 2Toronto A Detroit 2 Detroit A Toronto 2 Detroit A Toronto 3 Detroit 8, Toronto 0 Toronto A Detroit A OT Detroit 5, Toronto 3

St. Louis A Chicago 1St. Louis A Chicago 1 St. Louis Z Chicago 2 Chicago 6, St. Louis 3 St. Louis A Chicago 5 St. Louis 5, Chlcogo 3

Smytho Division Edmonton A WlmUpog 1

Edmonton 7, Winnipeg 4 Edmonton Z Winnipeg 2 Winnipeg 4, Edmonton 4 Edmonton 5>,Winnipeg 3 Edmonton '§ Winnipeg 2

Colgarv 4, Los Angelet 1 'Calgary 9, Los Angeles 2 Colgory 4, Los A n ^e s 4 Los Angeles 5, Calgary 2 Calgary 7, Los Angeles 3 Calgary A L<” Angeles 4

Second Round WALES CONFERENCE

Potrlch DivisionNew Jersey v*. WoMilngton-Phlladelphla

winnerMonday, April 18

New Jersey at Woshlngton-Phllodelphla winner

Wednesday, April 28New Jersey at Woshlngton-Phllodelphla

winnerPtidey, AprP 21

Washlngton-Phllodelphla winner at New Jersey

Sunday, Aprff MWashlngton-Phllodelphla winner at New

JerseyTuesday, AprP s*

New Jersey ot washlngton-Phllodelphlo winner. If necessary

Thundey, April 28Woshlngton-Phllodelphla winner at New

Jersey, If necessarySoturdoVr April 39

New Jersey at Woshlngton-Phllodelphla winner. If necessary

Adams DIvtsion Montreal vs. Boston

Monday, AprP M Boston at Montreal

Wodnosdey, AprP 28 Boston at Montreol

Friday, AprP 22 Montreal at Boston

Sunday, AprP M Montreal at Boston

Tuesday, AprP 26 Boston at Montreal, If necessary

Thursdoy, April »Montreal at Boston, If necessary

Solurdav, A p ril»Boston at Montreal, If necessary

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Norrft Division

Dolrelt V*. St. Louis Tuesday, April 19

SI. Louis at DetroitThursday, April 21

St. Louis at DetroitSaluntay, April 21 ,

Detroit at St. LouisMonday, AprP 25

Detroit at St. LouisWednesday, AprP 27

St. Louis ot Detroit, If necessary m doy, AprP 29

Detroit at St. Louis, If necessary Sunday, May 1

St. Louis at Detroit, If necessary

Smythe Division Caipcav vs. Edmonton

Tuesday, AprP 19Edmonton at Colgarv, 9:35 p.m.

Thursday, April 21 Edmonton at Colgarv, 9:35 p.m.

Saturday, April 21 Calgorv at Edmonton, 8:05 p.m.

Monday, April 25 Calgary at Edmonton, 9:35 p.m.

W9dnMdQV« Aaril 27 Edmonton at Catoorvr 9:35 p.m.. If

necessaryFrtdovr April 29

Caloory ot Edmonton, 9:35 p.m.r If necessary

Suntfoy, MOV 1Edmonton at Calpory, 8:05 p.m.. If

necessory

Baoketbafl

NBA standings

EASTERN CONFERENCE

v-Boston

Altantic DivMen W L Fet. OBSS 22 .714

New York 36 42 .462 ymWashington 36 42 .462 19’/*Phllodel^la1 34 43 .442 21New Jersey 18 60

Central DIvIslen.231 37'/j

x-Detrolt 51 26 .662x-Atlanta 48 29 .623 3x-ChIcogo 47 30 .610 4Milwaukee 40 37 .519 11Cleveland 39 40 .494 13Indiana 35 42 .455 16

WESTERN CONFERENCE Mktwost DIvIslen

W L Pet. OBx-Dallas 50 26 .658x-Denver SO 27 .649 ’/»x-Houston 44 32 .579 6x-Utah 42 35 .545 8’/*San Antonio X 47 .390 20’/Sacramento 22 56 .282 29

Pacific Divisionv-L.A. Lakers 57 19 .750x-Portland 48 28 .632 9x-Seorttle 41 35 .539 16Phoenix 26 SO .342 31(talden State 19 57 .250 38L.A. Clippers 17 60 .221 40</3

x<llnched playoff berth v-clinched division title

Friday’s Gome*Late Game* Net Included

Chicago 100, New Jersey 99 Atlanta 103, Philadelphia 101 OT, Cleveland \ 120, Boston 109 Detroit 92,'^llwoukee 91 Son Antonio 116, Sacramento 112 Washington 104, New York 97 Houston at Denver, (n)Phoenix ot Los Angeles Lakers, (n)

Golden State at Portlond, (n) Dados at Seattle, (n)

Saturday's Games New York at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.New Jersey at Detroit, 7:30 p.m: Philadelphia of Indlona, 8 :X p.m.San Antonio at Utah, 9:30 p.m.Seattle at Phoenix, 10:30 p.m.Los Angeles Clippers at Golden State, 11

p.m.$vndov*s Oomw

Los Angeles Lakers at Houston, 1 p.m. Milwaukee at Chicago, 1:30 p.m.Boston of Washington, 3:30 p.m.Oolkis at Denver, 4. p.m.Socramento at Portland, 8 p.m, ^

Golf

HarHaga Classic scoras

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. (AP) — Scores Friday Offer the second round Of the STOOXno PGA Herttoge Golf Oosslc

played on the 4457-vard, par 34-35— 71

Harbour Town (tall Llnksfi Fred Couples Dovid Frost Scott Hoch Curt Bvrum Greg Norman Gll Morgan Calvin Peete Chip Beck Jim Haltet Paul Azlnger David Ogrln Rocco AAedlale Tommy Nakallma Don Poolev Bernhord Longer Wayne Grodv Larry RInker Kenny Perry Leonard Thompson Mike R e ld ,_John Cqpk Oorence Rose D.A. Welbrlng David Conipe Peter Jacobsen Nick Fdido Mark McCumber Larry Nelson Brett Upper Denis Watson Bob Twoy Jay Haas David Peoples Lorry Mize Steve Jones

\

6865— 1336964— 1336866— 1346965— 134 6569-134

(9166— 1357865— 13567-68— 1357263-13565- 70— 135 6769-136 6869— 137 71-66— 1376968— 137 6869— 1377167— 138 67-71— 138 67-71-1386969— 138 67-71— 138 6969^13866- 73— 139 6871— 1397168— 1397869— 139 7869^139 7267— 139 69-78-1397870— 140 7367— 140 7870— 140 7870-140 6871— 140 6871— 140 7367— 140

TransactionsBASEBALL

American LeagueBALTIMORE ORIOLES— Recalled Jim

Traber, first baseman-outfielder, from Rochester of the International League. Placed J Im Dwyer, outfielder, on the 15day disabled list.

NEW YORK YANKEES— Activated Jack Clark ,flrstbaseman-deslgnatedhltter, from the disabled list. Opdaned Jay Buhner, outfielder, to Columbus of the International Leogue.

FOOTBALLNuttenel Foetbug League

MIAMI DOLPHINS-SIgnedArlc Ander­son, linebacker, ond Derrick Thomas, fullback.

COLLEGEA R IZO N A S T A T E — Announcedthot John Jerome, forward, will

tronsfer to the University of San Diego.

HOLY CROSS— Named Rod Baker men's assistant basketball coach.

MOUNT ST. VINCENT— Announced the resignation of Bob Annunziata, athletic director, effective May 15.

PENN S TA TE -B E H R E N D — Named Jenepher Crawford women's head basket­ball cooch.

WEST GEORGIA— Fired Roger Kaiser, athletic director, but onnounced he will remoln os men's head basketball coach. Named David Dugan acting athletic director.

Bowling

Powdar PuffMarv Lachapelle 198458, Nanev Hahn

203179-523, Joanne Desllet 476.

LaVaa InduatrlalDon Wilson 249-244-233728, Mike Vlg-

none 205, Dan Humiston 246-213222-681, Nick MarottI 223245668, Barry PInney 223223624, Mike Flellstead 223566, Dale Doody 208203555, Andy Michaud 208589, Ed Bachl 242-201-600, William Calhoun 203577, Roger MIeckowskI 201-554, Ray Rowett 221-213629, George Russell 213201-609, <3arv Cvr 551, Angus Plourde 551, Roger LoMce 209-211614, Gory Rawson , 233228257-721, Mork Mosley 218222-202-634, Mike Kopp 203 555, Joe Porker 207-218586, Dave.Howev 201-208577, Rich (tamer 207-223201-633, John Jenkins 247-232-659, Dove Neff 228213-596, mac Segar 238556, Dick Moonan 223577, Larry Kowolshvn 202, AI Senna 233201-574, Rich Higgins ^12-554, John Kozicko 563, Leon Bllo- leau 2^269-696, Pete Beoudrv 217-555.I

BOP WomanAlexis Donald 208457, Martha Grant

178181-188548, Cell Roy 181-212-542, Eleanor Berggren 183484, Lottie Kuc- zvnskl 182-496, Koren Paquette 191, Carolyn Wilson 183504, Gladys Hansen 181-465, FIroza SIvlee 178, Mary Mum- ford 463.

S

Rec softball begins April 25Action in the Manchester Rec

Department’s adult slow pitch softball leagues will get under way on Monday night, April 25. There are 80 teams in 10 leagues at six locations with 72 men’s and eight women’s teams.

League play runs through July 25. Teams that qualify will take part in postseason ‘A ’ . ‘B’ and ‘C’ division.tournaments.

League play is Monday through Thursday with Friday nights set aside for makeup games.

Teams in the West Side, North­ern. Dusty, Charter Oak, Rec and Women’s Rec leagues will play at 6 p.m. with games in the Pagani, Nike, ‘A ’ East and ‘A ’ Central leagues at 7:30 p.m.

The 10 leagues and the respec­tive team$ are:

West Side League — Thrifty Package Store. North United Methodist, Food for Thought. Cox Cable, Purdy Corp., Edwards 347. Rogers Corp.. Blue Ox.

Northern League — PM Con­struction, Dean Machine. Man­chester Police, L.M. Gill Manu- f a c t u r i n g . W i n i n g e r ’ s Gymnastics, Trash-Away, Man­chester Oil Heat. Gibson’s Gym.

Dusty League — Nutmeg Me­chanical Services. Ward Mfg., Center Congo. Sterling Uphols­tery & Supply Co., Hartford County Sheriff’s Assoc., Stephen­son’s Painting, Mainville Elect­ric. East Catholic Athletic Club.

Rec League — Army and Navy Club, Jim’s Arco, Elks, Manches­ter Pizza. MCC Vets. Nelson Freightways. Main Pub/MMH. Memorial Corner Store.

Pagani League — Nassiff Sports, Aldo Pizza, Keith Realty. Strano Real Estate. Allstate Business Machines. Mudville Nine, Zembrowski’s. B.A. Club.

Charter Oak — Tierney’s. Glenn Construction II. Postal Express. Highland Park Market.

- Acadia Restaurant. Conn. Bank &

Trust. Manchester P r o ^ ’rty Maintenance. Telephone Society.

Women’s Rec League — Strano Real Estate. D.W, Fish, Hungry Tiger Restaurant. Gorman Insu­rance. Main Pub, Century 21. DeCormier Nissan. Manchester State Bank.

Nike League — J.H.C. Con­struction, Reed Construction, Washington Social Club. J&M Grinding. Brown’s Package Store, Allied Printing. Evergreen Lawns, Elmore Assoc.

‘ A League Central — Main Pub, Farr’s. Manchester Cycle. The Outdoor Store. Pagani Cater­ers. Glenn Construction. Sports­man Cafe. Brand Rex Wire & Cable.

‘A’ League East — Gentle Touch Car Wash. J.C. Penney. Manchester Medical Supply. Bray Jewelers. Jones Landscap­ing. Cummings Insurance. La- throp Insurance. Mak Company.

AP photo

SWJNQS AN IRON — Fred Couples hits an iron on the 16th tee on the way to shooting a 9-under par 133 during second-round play of the Heritage Classic on Hilton Head Island, S.C. He shares the lead with David Frost.

Couples and Frost lead Heritage fieldBy Bob Green The Associated Press

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. — Fred Couples and David Frost led an attack on par and shared the lead after Friday’s second round of the $700,000 Heritage Classic.

■Tm really surprised. I can’t explain it," Frost, a South African, said of some of the lowest scoring ever achieved on the Harbour Town Golf Links, one of the PGA Tour’s most respected courses.

“ Maybe it’s because everyone is coming from Augusta (and extremely hard, fast greens) and all the putts look easy,” Frost said after he’d compiied a 7-under-par 64 that included neither a bogey nor a 5.

He and Couples, who shot a 65, were tied for the lead at »-under^r 133 at the tournament’s halfway point.

First-round co-leader Greg Norman, Scott Hoch and Curt Byrum were at 134. Hoch had a second-round 66 and Byrum a 65.

Norman had to work hard for a 69 that included six birdies and four bogeys.

The best round on a near-ideal day for golf belonged to Jim Hallet, a 26-year-old Tour rookie who last season led the Asian Tour Order of Merit.

Hallet. who hadn’t broken 70 in 21 rounds of official PGA Tour competition this season, tied Jack Nicklaus’ 1975 course record with an 8-under 63.

“ I ’m in good company,” Hallet said.But he had to get some breaks. His second shot on

the 11th hole hit a tree and dropped 40 yards short of the green. He got it up and down for a par. ^

He also preserved a share of the record by getting up and down from a marsh on the left of the 18th hole.

“ My kind of day. Everything went right for me,” said Hallet, who was two strokes off the pace at 135.

Paul Azinger, Dr. Gil Morgan, Calvin Peete and Chip Beck were tied with Hallet atT-under.

Morgan is on the mend from shoulder surgery and hasn’t finished lower than eighth this season. He had a 64. Peete shot a 65 and Beck a 68.

Frontons seek state aid duringBy Chris Dahl The Associated Press

With most jai alai players trading cestas for picket signs. Connecticut fronton owners on Friday scrambled to find replace­ments and asked the state to consider format changes that would allow their programs to proceed with fewer players.

Frontons in Bridgeport and Hartford remained closed on the second day of the strike by players in Florida, Connecticut and Rhode Island, who formed the International Jai Alai Players Association in early March. The Milford fronton doesn’t open until June 26.

There are about 550 jai alai players in the three states, said a ttt^ ey Richard Aries, who represents the players’ union. Hesaid atiput 90 percept^,, them have Joined the asi^ iation . Eleven ,9f the nation’a‘,14Jai alaifrontons are in season.

The ,jai alai industry, which currentljr signs individual con- ■tracts w U i _ i ^ players, has refused to recognize the union.

Forty NInerBy The Associated Press

As the last two Kentucky Derby winners prepare to meet in the rubber match of a series that stands 1-1, this year’s early Derby favorite. Forty Niner, is preparing to prove a point.

Ferdinand, winner of the 1086 Derby, and Alysheba, last year’s victor, were both entered Friday for the San Bernardino Handicap Sunday at Santa Anita, whose purse will be doubled to $530,000 if both run. The two have met twice, with Ferdinand winning last November in the Breeders’ Cup Classic and Alysheba winning by a nose in the Santa Anita Handicap March 6.

Forty Niner, meanwhile, has been entered in the $100,000

prompting the players to seek an election run by the National Labor Relations Board.

Union president Riki Lasa Sotil, a Hartford player, called the strike 'Thursday after a federal court struck down as illegal a clause in the Florida fronton contracts that called for 15 days notice before a strike.

"W e’ll get stronger each day as the strike goes on,” Lasa said, conceding that “ there’s no finan­cial pressure yet.”

Sotil, a United States citizen, charged that the frontons have tried to intimidate players for organizing and have threatened foreign -born p layers with deportation.

Picket lines were set up at the Hartford and Bridgeport frontons in Connecticut as well as the Newport, R.I., fronton, where

officials said all but six of U)e;,(^ players were supporting thq,8trike.j , A spokesman for the Newport fronton said that all performan- ce; yrere canceled until further nptipe, including F r id a y ’ s matinee.

L. Stanley Berenson. owner of the Hartford fronton, proposed that the Division of Special Revenue allow reductions in the minimum size of rosters from the current 40.

To compensate for fewer play- ep , Berenson also asked tlie division for permission to reduce the number of games per pro­gram from 15 to 10 and the number of post positions per game from eight to six.

Further, Berenson asked the division to allow programs con­sisting of all singles play instead of the usual 2-to-l mix with doubles.

“ They have the right to waive the rules. .1 don’t think that should be a stumbling block.” Berenson said after returning from the meeting. “ We hope to be able to play tomorrow.”

Striking players were con­cerned that the state — which stands to lose millions of dollars in revenue in the event of a prolonged strike — may side with the fronton owners.

to prove critics wrongLexington Stakes at Keeneland, where he will attempt to prove his stamina over 1 1-16 miles as a buildup for the UA-ipile Efierby. One of the main questions about last year’s 2-year-old champion has been his ability to go a distance.

“ There’s always been one question mark in people’s minds — how far will he go?” trainer Woody Stephens said of Forty Niner, who will be making his last start before the May 7 Derby.

“ I ’m beginning to think he’ll go as far as I want him.”

The Ferdinand-Alysheba mat­chup may be dependent on the weather in southern California, where it has been rainy this.week.

If there is an off track Sunday. Alyaheba is likely to be scratched, in which case the purse would be cut in half.

If they go, both Ferdinand and Alysheba will carry 127 pounds, with Alysheba picking up an extra pound following his half- length victory in their last meet­ing. Both will have their regular riders — Bill Shoemaker for Ferdinand and Chris McCarron for Alysheba.

Forty Niner, winner of seven of his 10 races and $900,750 in his career, will have four challengers in the Lexington — Buck Forbes, Risen Star, Fiery Ensign and Stalwars. Risen Star won the 1 l-16th Mile Louisiana Derby in his last start March 16.

Capitals look to oust Flyers

Bv Ralph Bernstein The Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA — After rallying from a 3-1 deficit, the Washington Capitals think they have the momentum to ground the Philadel­phia Flyers in the final game of their NHL playoff series.

“ It’s tough to stop a team that fights back after being down like that,” Washington center Mike Ridley said. “ That’s not to suggest that we have the seventh game won already, but right now we’re in the driver’s seat and we just have to keep on driving.”

The deciding game of the opening-round Patrick Division series will be played Saturday night at the Capital Centre in Landover, Md. If the Capitals win, they will become the fifth team in playoff history to overcome a 3-1 deficit.

Ironically, the Capitals were on the losing end last season when the New York Islanders overcame a 3-1 deficit and won the final game in four overtimes.

The Philadelphia-Washington series is the last opening-round series to be decided.

The second round opens Monday, with Boston at Montreal and New Jersey at the Washington-Philadelphia winner. Tuesday, Edmonton will be at Calgary and St. Louis at Detroit.

The Capitals hope to take advantage of slumping Flyers goalie Ron Hextall, who has given up 25 goals in his last six games.

“ We all go into a rut sometimes,” Washing­ton defenseman Rod Langway said. “ We all have stretches when we’re not feeling comfortable. In this league, one day you’re a zero and the next day you’re a hero.”

Hextall said he can’t explain the slump.“ I didn’t play a good game, ’ ’ he said after the

Flyers’ 7-2 loss in Game 6. “ I don’t know what’s going on. I feel awful.”

Philadelphia right wing Rick Tocchet said the Flyers still have confidence in Hextall.

“ Ronnie is struggling.” he said. “ But you have to go with him. There are only two goalies in the league who are good enough that you can go with them no matter what. Grant Fuhr (of Edmonton) is one and Ronnie is the other.”

The Flyers have also had problems on offense, scoring only four goals in the last two games.

“ We just have to beat them to the puck,” Tocchet said. “ There is no secret or magic on the chalkboard that’s going to win us the game.”

The Flyers’ five-goal loss margin in Game 6 was their worst defeat ever on home ice.

Asked if he felt shell shocked. Philadelphia Coach Mike Keenan said, “ I ’ve never been in a war, so I don’t know what it means to be shell shocked.”

Budd put on holdLONDON (AP) — Zola Budd’s future as a runner

and the possibility of an African boycott of the Summer Olympics hung in the balance after the ruling body for international track and field delayed until Saturday a decision on whether to ban her because of ties to her native South Africa.

“ We had a good discussion, a long discussion.” Primo Nebiolo, president of the International Amateur Athletic Federation, said Friday night after the organization’s 23-member Council had reviewed Budd’s case for nine hours.

Budd, who became a British subject four years ago, has been plagued by anti-apartheid demonstra­tions and accusations that she has returned too often to her homeland.

She was present at the hotel where the meeting took place, but was not called to give evidence.

Budd’s case depended Upon how the lAAF Council interpreted its own eligibility rules amid allegations that she ran in a South African race 10 months ago.

Victoiy painful to the DevilsBy Ken Rappoport The Associated Press

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — For the New Jersey Devils, winning their first Stanley Cup playoff series was almost as painful as it was pleasurable.

“ I ’m pretty numb,” center Mark Johnson said in the after- math of the Devils’ conquest of the New York Islanders in their Patrick Division semifinal series. " I ’m sort of disbelieving. I ’m happy because we won, but emotionally. I ’m drained. It’s almost like we lost.’ * -

That’s the way most of the Devils felt following their nerve- wracking 6-5 victory in Game 6 Thursday night.

After dominating the first 46 minutes, the Devils almost blew a 6-1 lead over the final 14 minutes in what many considered a frightening scenario.

“ It was very, very scary,” Devils forward Pat Verbeek said. “ It was almost supernatural the way they were scoring goals. Everything they touched went into the net. The clock would not tick fast enough.”

As the Islanders made their charge with four goals in a span of 5:02 to get back into the game, many of the Devils couldn’t help thinking about Game 4 at the Brendan Byrne Arena, when they led 3-0 late in the second period and lost in overtime.

“ You wouldn’t be human if you weren’t thinking about that game.” Johnson said. “ But giv­ing up all those goals was uncharacteristic of this team. I

.0.

AP photo

HAPPY DEVILS — The Islanders’ Bryan Trottler, left, eyes the scoreboard while New Jersey’s Pat Verbeek, center and John MacLean celebrate a goal during Thursday’s game. The Devils won the best-of-seven series, 4-2. '

wasn’t satisfied until there were three zeroes on the clock. Even after the game was over, I had a feeling that the Isiqnders were still going to score that sixth goal.”

The victory wasn’t secured until rookie goaltender Sean Burke, whose play led the Devils’ surge into the playoffs, blocked Pat LaFontaine’s 20-footer as time expired.

Fishing season opens todayHARTFORD — Dennis De-

Carli, deputy commissioner of the Departm^ht of Environmen­tal Protectionf issued a reminder to fishermOn that, with the exception of the trout manage­ment areas on the Willimantic. Farmington. Housatonic and Mi- anus Rivers, areas stocked with trout are now closed to fishing and reopen at 6 a.m., Saturday. Specific details on areas and fish species having a closed season can be found on page 28 and 29 of the 1988 Connecticut Angler’s Guide. These guides are availa­ble, at no charge, from town clerks’ offices, DEP district managers and some sporting goods stores.

“ Approximately 758,000 trout have been reared for the 1988 spring season,’ according to DeCarli. “ Sixty-five percent of these will be stocked, throughout the state, before opening day,” DeCarli continued. “ This sea­son’s allotment of trout consists of 949,000 adult brown trout, 144,000 adult rainbow trout, 72,000 adult brook trout, and 48,000 yearling brook trout. A limited number of trophy sized surplus brookstock fish will be included in the pre-opening day releases for an added bonus to the lucky angler.”

Regular stockings will continue through Memorial Day with major trout streams and the larger lakes receiving the grea­test numbers of fish. The Far­mington River will receive stock­ings between Memorial Day and Labor Day and a selected group of lakes will receive a fall stocking in October. A listing of these lakes will be released later in the season.

DeCarii also reminded fisher­men that a 2.7 mile stretch of the

West Branch of the Farmington River, from the Route 318 bridge (Pleasant Valley) downstream to the Route 219 bridge (New Hartford), was designated a Trout Management Area effec­tive January 1, 1988. “ This area will be managed under catch and release regulations which pro­hibit the harvest of any trout or charr” . “ All legal methods of angling will be permitted and there will be no closed season,” DeCarli added.

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Whalers gave honest effort against CanadiansOn opening night back in October at the Hartford

Civic Center, an ardent enthusiasm and'genuine anticipation was present when the Whalers took the ice.

Having garnered the Adams Division champion­ship the previous season, the former hopes and wishes of the Whaler fans became necessities and demands. The curtain for the 1987-88season went up for the Whalers In the form of the Adams Division championship- banner. The quest for the club’s first-ever Stanley Cup had begun.

On Thursday night at the Civic Center, the curtain came down on the Whalers’ season in the form of a 2-1 loss to the Montreal Canadians in Game 6 of the divisional semifinals. Those necessities and de­mands have, once again, been relegated to hopes and wishes.

After experiencing a dismal campaign on the heels of their best ever will be viewed by many as disappointing, to say the least. But, that’s old news. Everyone, including fans, media, management, and the players, knew this fact heading into the playoffs — the ’new season.’

Nothing can be taken away from the Whalers’ gallant postseason display against the powerful Canadiens after dropping the first three games of the best-of-seven series.

Honest is something the Whalers weren’t with themselves during much of the season until the departure'of Jack Evans and the arrival of Larrjr^ Pleau as coach in February. Unlike Btrans, Pleau was able to motivate his players a n ^ e t the most

Toland leads MHS In Easiern RelaysNEW BRITAIN — ’The Manchester High

boys’ track team took part in the Eastern Relays Friday afternoon at Willow Brook Park with senior Sean Toland leading the way for the Indians with a first-place finish in the two-mile run with a personal best clocking of 9:56.5. Senior Mike Sears placed second with a personal'best of 10:06.1.

Sophomore Pat Dwyer was third in the lOth-grade mile with a time of 4:58.1. Junior Todd Liscomb secured second place in the 5000 meters with a fine time of 16:08.8 while junior Craig Hempstead was fourth with a time of 16:26 with junior Zack Allaire seventh in 17:43. Liscomb, Hempstead and Allaire all set personal bests.

“ We had good performances despite the cold, rainy weather,’ ’ Indian Coach George Suitor said.

Massasoit gets by the Cougars, 7-6

BROCKTON, Mass. — The Manchester Commun­ity College baseball team dropped a narrow 7-6 decision to host Massasoit Community College Friday afternoon. MCC is now 6-4 while Massasoit moves to 9-3.

' The Cougars will play a double-header today against the Eastern Connecticut junior varsity team in Willimantic beginning at 1 p.m.

Massasoit scored the winning run on a Cougar mlscue in the bottom of the eighth inning. The winning pitcher for Massasoit was Dave Sheehan while Peter Frankovitch suffered the defeat.

Steve Criscuolo led the Cougars with a 4-for-% performance and one RBI while ’Troy Thornton smashed a two-run homer. Chuck Petchark also ripped a two-run homer. In the second Inning, Petcark was robbed of a home run when Massasoit center fielder Mike Weir hauled his blast in from over the fence.

Jim TierneyHerald Sports Writer

out of their talents with hard work and discipline.“ They showed that when they work together they

can accomplish things,” Pleau said after Thurs­day's loss. /I

This Whaler team, abundant with dormant talent, utilized their efforts during the final 10 games of the regular season and edged Quebec for the final playoff spot in the Adams Division. Down 3 games to 0 against Montreal, no one would have blamed the Whalers if they were swept in four games, especially considering the bleak regular season.

“ When we were down, 3-0, everybody expected us to pack it in and take a vacation,” Whaler captain Ron Francis explained. “ But, the guys showed a lot of character and pride and fought their way back.”

Following a 7-5 win incHartford in Game 4, the Whalers with Richard Brodeur In goal put forth their finest effort of the year in a brilliant 3-1 victory In Game 5 at the Forum in Montreal. Now. the Whalers and their fans could feel it. A win in Game 6

in Hartford would force a seventh and deciding contest. No team had ever beaten Montreal after trailing, three games to none. Only two teams (the 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs and the 1975 New York Islanders) had ever won after being down 3-0 in a best-of-seven playoff series.

Game 6 was dominated by the Canadiens for l>/i periods before Hartford began playing the way it can. The Whalers trimmed the deficit to 2-1 when Ray Ferraro deflected home a Mike McEwen shot with 1:03 left in the second period. Momentum and the raucous crowd was on the Whalers’ side heading into the final 20 minutes.

Ironically. Hartford’s best chances to gain the equalizer came in the final 34 seconds of the game. Following a timeout with an added man after Brodeur was pulled. Sylvain Turgeon raced down the middle and fired a shot on Montreal goalie Brian Hayward. ’Turgeon got the puck back on the rebound and his backhander was miraculously stopped by Hayward. Francis’ final attempt was knocked away by Chris Chelios in the crease.

“ There was just a lack of consistency this year,” Kevin Dineen said. “ That’s going to have to change for us to get back tq^being a first-place team.”

Whaler consistency wasn’t lacking during the playoffs. They gave an honest effort in each of the six games. They didn’t go down without a fight which they easily could have done. With Pleau at the helm, next year from Day 1, consistency will materialize with hard work required by Pleau and things will change — for the better.

Offense plagued the WhalersBy Chris Dahl The Associated Press

HAR’TFORD - While the Mont­real Canadiens continued in pur­suit of their 24th Stanley Cup, the Hartford Whalers were left to wonder what went wrong with their offense in the 1987-88 season.

ThS Whalers were considered one of the NHL’s up-and-coming teams after finishing first in the Adams Division a year ago.

Instead, however, they floun­dered all season, unable to find the team chemistry that had brought them to the top, and. most ipiportantly, unable to find the net. "ilobr

The 267 goals Harift^'allowed were the fewest in franchise history and the team led the league in penalty killing. But fhe Whalers also set team records for fewest goals (249) and fewest shots (2.519).

Ron Francis remained the team’s leading scorer, but his production dropped off from 30 goals and 93 points to 25 goals, 75 points. Kevin Dineen fell from 40 goals and 79 points to 25 goals and 50 points.

It was also supposed to be the year Sylvain ’Turgeon, finally healthy after missing parts of two seasons with a nagging abdomi­nal injury, fulfilled th^e?pecta- tions of the team that selected him second overall in the NHL’s 1983-84 entry draft.

Instead Turgeon will be haunted this summer by echoes of the crowd during the final se­conds .of the Whalers’ season­ending 2-1 loss to the Montreal Canadiens In the sixth game of their Adams Division semifinal series Thursday night at the Hartford Civic Center.

“ Trade B a it!’ ’ spectators

a 3 » .

AP photo

STOPPED — Montreal ^ a lie Brian Hayward stops a shot by Hartford’s Sylvain Turgeon (16) in the third period of Game 6 of the Adams Division semifinals Thursday night at the Civic Center. The Canadiens eliminated the Whalers. 4 games to 2, with a 2-1 victory.

heckled from the rafters when the soft-spoken left wing ventured after a loose puck along the boards.

’Turgeon didn’t have the 50-goal season the Whalers had been expecting. He had 23 goals and 26 assists.

Indeed, nobody on the Whalers scored 30 goals for the first time since the team joined the World Hockey Association in 1972.

“ It was a long, tough season,”

Francis said. “ It wasn’t a lot of fun because we didn’t play like we were capable of for a long time. It was frustrating.

“ When that happens you don’t sleep well, you don’t feel that well, ... you don’t want to go to work because you ’ re not excited.”

But for all the troubles the Whalers'had during the season, there were some signs of hope.

Daugherty leads Cavs past CeltsNBA Roundup

RICHFIELD, Ohio (AP) — Brad Daugherty scored 17 of his career-high 44 points in the fourth quarter Friday night as Cleveland overcame an early 17-point deficit and ended the Boston Celtics’ eight-game winning streak 120-109.

The victory was the Cavaliers’ eighth in their last 10 games and gave them a 3-2 edge over Boston in the season series, Cleveland’s first series win over the Celtics since 1977-78.

The Cavaliers also solidified theif'hold on the sixth Eastern Conference playoff spot. They started the night l ‘/i games ahead of the New York Knicks and 2‘/4 games ahead of the Washington Bullets.

Daugherty, whose previous high was 33 points, scored 19 in the first half to Cleveland in the game as Boston raced to a 50-33 lead early in the second period. ’The 7-foot-l center then scored eight points in the third quarter while teammate Ron Harper added nine to pull Cleveland within 87-86 going into the final quarter.

After Larry Bird hit two free throws to put the Celtics ahead 96-90 with 7:55 left, Daugherty scored 15 points during a 19-6 Cleveland run that gave the Cavaliers the lead for good at 109-102 with 2:25 to go. The Celtics got no closer than five the rest of the way.

Bird le<( ^ston with 30 points and reserve Jim Paxson hadi9.Bulls 100, Nets 99

EAST RUTHERFORD, N,J, (AP) - Michael Jordan scored 28 points, including a 15-foot jumper with 20 seconds to play, to lead the Chicago Bulls to their fourth straight victory, a 100-99 win over the New Jersey Nets Friday night.

Jordan, the NBA’s leading scorer with 34.7 points per game, had eight points in the fourth quarter. His game-winning basket came when he hit a shot over Nets center Tim McCormick.

Pistons 92, Bucks 91PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) — Reserve forward

Dennis Rodman scored 14 of his 18 points in the second half Friday night to lead the Detroit Pistons to their fifth victory in six games, a 92-91 decision over the Milwaukee Bucks., The Bucks, who were led by 28 points by Jack Sikma, have lost five consecutive road games and eight of their last 10 games.

Hawks 103, 76ers 101, OTPHILADELPHIA (AP) — Scott Hastings’ layup

off a Dominique Wilkins’ air ball with five seconds left in overtime gave the Atlanta Hawks a 103-101 NBA victory over the Philadelphia 76ers Friday night. ,

A 3-point basket by Philadelphia’s Gerald Henderson with five seconds left in regulation sent the game into overtime where the Hawks took a 98-92 lead on five points by Glenn Rivers and a three-point play by Wilkins. The Hawks increased their lead to 100-94 on a basket by Wilkins with 1:52 left.

Bullets 106, Knicks 97NEW YORK (AP) — Jeff Malone scored 1(1 of his

27 points in the fourth quarter and the Washington Bullets held New York to 11 points in the first 10 minutes of the final period to beat the Knicks 106-97 Friday night and tighten the Eastern Conference playoff race.

With the victory, Washington pulled into a seventh place tie with New York, a half-game ahead of Indiana. Eight teams in each conference qualify for the playoffs.

Spurs 116, Kings 112SAN ANTONIO. Texas (AP) — Jon Sundvold

scored 25 points and Walter Berry came off the bench to add 24 as the San Antonio Spurs held on to defeat Sacramento 116-112 Friday night, handing the Kings their 12th straight road loss.

'■f:.' . 1

AP photo

THAT’S THE GAME - Boston’s Marty Barrett is tagged out by Texas catcher Geno Petralli as he tries to score on a hit by Eilis Burks in the 10th inning of

Friday’s game at Fenway Park. Barrett was thrown out by Texas ieft fieider Pete Incavigiia for the final out of the game won by Texas, 3-2.

Buechele homer tops BosoxContinued from page 48

Dave Winfield walked to force in the second run and Claudell Washington’s single made it 3-0. With the bases still loaded, Birkbeck balked Pagliarulo home with the fourth run. The fifth scored on Slaught’s squeeze bunt.

“ It disturbs my rhythm. You get on the mound and you concentrate on stopping. I ’ve never been called for a balk in my career, from little league on up,” said Birkbeck,

Mattingly doubled in Randolph, who had walked and moved to second on a balk, with the sixth run in the top of the second.

Glenn Braggs first homer of the season off John, 1-0, accounted for Milwaukee’s only run in the second.Rangers 3, Red Sox 2

BOSTON (AP) - Steve Bue­chele hit a solo home run in the 10th inning, his second of the game, and Charlie Hough pitched

a three-hitter to give the Texas Rangers a 3-2 victory oyer the Boston Red Sox Friday.

’The Red Sox almost tied the game with two outs in the bottom of the 10th when Ellis Burks singled with men on first and second. But left fielder Pete Jncaviglla threw out Marty Bar­rett at the plate to end the game. „ Hough, 2-1, had walked Barrett and Sam Horn with one out before striking out Brady Anderson. The knuckleballer walked six batters in the game and struck out eight.

Buechele, who hit 13 homers last season, tied the game 2-2 in the eighth with a leadoff homer off Boston starter Jeff Sellers. His game-winning homer came off reliever Wes Gardner, 0-1.

After Burks doubled with two out in the second inning. Hough allowed only one more base- runper until the 10th inning. Jody Reed walked with two outs in the fifth, but was picked off.

Sellers pitched seven innings, allowing five hits and two runs.

He walked one and struck out eight. Gardner pitched the final three innings for Boston, giving up one run on two hits.

Texas first baseman Pete O’Brien singled in the second to extend his hitting streak to nine games.

’Three walks and wild pitch by Hough helped Boston take a 2-0 lead in the first inning. Hough walked Burks, gave up a single to Reed and then walked Wade Boggs and Jim Rice to force in a run. After Mike Greenwell foulsa out. Hough threw a wild pitch to Dwight Evans that allowed Reed to score.

’The Rangers made it 2-1 in the sixth when Cecil Espy hit a bloop single with two outs, stole second and scored on Scott Fletcher’s single.Royals, Tigers ppd.

DETROIT (AP) - Friday night’s scheduled baseball game between the Kansas City Royals and Detroit Tigers was postponed because of cold weather.

Sutcliffe blanks the B ugsContinued from page 48

second and moved to third on catcher Tony Pena’s throwing error. A fter Kevin E lster grounded out, Gooden lined a single to left to make it 2-0.

The Mets made it 3-0 in the fifth when Mookie Wilson singled to left, moved to third on two grounders and scored on a wild pitch.Expos 6, Phillies 4

MONTREAL (AP) - Luis Rivera’s first major league ho­

mer snapped a sixth-inning tie and the Montreal Expos beat Philadelphia 6-4 Friday night, sending the Phillies to their fifth straight defeat.

Rivera, who broke an O-for-10 slump with a run-scoring single in the second, homered off reliever Todd Frohwirth, 0-1, to snap a 4-4 tie.

Cubs 6, Pirates 0CHICAGO (AP) - Andre Daw­

son hit a two-run homer and Shawon Dunston drove in two

ninsrwJtb-a homer and a single to back the six-hit pitching of Rick Sutcliffe as the Chicago Cubs won their home opener 6-0 over the Pittsburgh Pirates Friday.

It was the 14th shutout of Sutcliffe’s career and his first since April 1987. The victory also ended his personal six-gOme losing streak against the Pirates.

Sutcliffe, 1-0, walked one and struck out four. Starter John Smiley, 0-1, took the loss for Pittsburgh, which had its four- game winning streak snapped.

Monday, /

iHanrbpstrr Hrralb

S P O R T SDaugherty p a^s Cavs past Celtics

~ story on page 47

IGNITES YANKEES

- ‘/yf-. m

,ig-'

.FIRST YANKEE HIT - Jack Clark watches the baseball after getting his first hit as a Yankee against the Brewers

AP photo

Friday afternoon in Milwaukee. The single drove In a run. The Yankees went on to a 7-1 win.

Mets, Gooden blank CardsNEW YORK (AP) - Dwight

Gooden pitched a two-hitter as New York beat the St. Louis Cardinals 3-0 in a rain-shortened game Friday, night for the diets’ third consecutive shutout.

With none out in the top of the seventh. Tommy Heirf was bat­ting with a 2-1 count when the rain started. vThe umpires waited 1 hour, 45 minutes before calling it.

Gooden, 3-0, struck out seven and walked none en route to his fourth career two-hitter and 17th

NL Roundup

shutout. He did not allow a Cardinal to reach base until Herr’s infield hit to deep short with two outs in the fourth. Ozzie Smith singled to right center in the sixth for the Cards’ second hit.

The shutouts, thrown by Ron Darling on Tuesday, Bob Ojeda on Thursday against Montreal

and Gooden, marked the second time in club history the Mets had three consecutive complete- game shutouts.

Gary Carter gave the Mets a l-o lead in the second inning when he hit his fourth homer off starter Greg Mathews, l-i. The Mets have homered in seven straight games and have 16 in nine games

Following Carter’s hi Howard Johnson walked,

homer, stole

Turn to page 47

AL Roundup

By Rick Gano The Associated Press

MILWAUKEE — Jack Clark joined the Yankee band on Friday and kept t|ie beat going strong.

After missing the first nine games, Clark joined New York in Milwaukee and delivered a flrst-iniNng single in his first American League at-bat to ignite a five-run first inning as the Yankees sent the stpgering Brewers to their seventh straight loss.

"This is a ball club that I know can hit so I guess I m where I ’m supposed to be. ’ ’ Clark said after the Yankees’ fourth straight victory and ninth in their first 10 games — their best start ever.

“ I missed opening day in Toronto and I missed opening day in New York, so I was happy to get a hit in my first at-bat.”

Clark, who was activated Friday, sent a looper nto center to drive in the first run off Mike Birkbeck

in a balk and argument filled first inning.“ It wasn’t the prettiest but I ’ll take it. ” said Clark

who began the season on the disabled list with a torn tendon in his left calf.

" It doesn’t matter if thgre are 50,000 or 50 fans in the stands. I ’m just out there trying to do my job ”

Clark s prowess as a hitter is established but the Brewers always have plenty of trouble with lesser-known Don Slaught, who had a squeeze bunt and his first homer.

® 83*"st the Brewers this seasonwith five RBIs.IT Just certain clubs you hit well against.Usually the Brewers just seem to catch me when I m swinging the bat well," he saidJ i!’® “ ''e-run first helped Tommy John

^ first victory of the season.The ^year-old left-hander allo\ved four hits

before he was replaced in the seventh by Cecilio "P ® Brock andsingle to Rob Deer.

Guante walked Glenn Braggs to load the bases but strack out Bill Schroeder and got Ernest Riles to hit

Yankees’ third of the ame. The Yankees victory came before the Brewers’

regular-season record crowd of 55,887 at County Stadium the biggest opening-day crowd in the majors this season.

Yankees 18runs in the first inning of their last five games.

Birkbeck who had not pitched since March 31 in spring training, committed three balks, walked three and surrendered five hits in his 11-3 innings on a gray, windy 40-degree day,

Rickey Henderson opened the Yankees first withfirct ” ” Birkbeck’sfirst balk. Willje Randolph walked and was forced at second on Don Mattingly's grounder.

‘^® another hit byMike Pagharulo loaded the bases.

Turn to page 47

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