Apple Harvest Festival starts Saturday; parade on Sunday, The Observer "" An Independent Newspaper -- Open To All Parties -- Influenced By None Volume 9, Number 44 own Counc,l taxes ill I IIUU ou m U m i, Um Class of '34 gathers Le•`.is tligh School class of 1934 had its 50th .,,ear reunion last '•.eek at the inn Chablis in Plainville. Tom iendela's story tells us it `.•as quite a class Memories flowed when Lewis High's Class of 1934 held its reunion h'. Toni %lendela ,.taff • tiler The Lewis High School class of 1934 celebrated its '501h reumon lasl Thursday. '14-strong at the Chablis Inn m Plamvdle exchanging tales of school-days gone by and comparing a diversity of hfetlmes Master of Ceremomes. Gene Pahmerl. also class president for the group's treshman, sophomore and ()t the 10 rnembers who lumor years, opened lhe could not come. most after-droner program ,.`.lth pleaded the great distance thesmgmg of the class song. bet•.een thetr heY, home then relurmng the group to a tov.n and Southlngton somber mood as the slatus of Some look the hme to wrote the omgmal 7.Sclassrnembers a short s.,,nopsts of lhew life '.`. as reported experiences The lasl fifty years sa'.`. 13 "'When I retired from classmates pass awa? The nursing tn 197•. I opened an • ,•hereabouls of four could antique shop m Tucson." not be found Another 16 v. role Jennie Szydlov, skl announcements received no Pepe ,.`.no now lives in reply Arizona Elanor McKenzle `.`.rote that she "lmght" be able to make •t depending upon prior comlnlttlnents She explained that she would "be back east at the hme of the reunion for a L•ons Club ('on,.enlton." and `.`.ovid tr.'. her best to get to the event , Coach Joseph Fontana and h•s •ffe sat al lhe head table, tcontinued on page 161 Southington Girls Club has new director bsq]eth t'tke staff `.`. riter Kelth Abrahamson is no stranger to working with youngsters Recently named the new Executive Director of the Southlngton Girls Club, he'll be working wi•h an age group that's interested him for the pasi twelve years From his early days as a camp counselor right through to his current position as a substitute Inside pages About the town 6 Be a winner 16 Bocce champ 14 Church news 4 Classifieds 15 Douglas, Bob • Editorials 6 HUG's van ....... - • •,3 Hart b•l• 3 Job Fair 2 Johnson. Nancy 6 Kezer honored 5 Legals 14 Letters 7 teacher in the Southmgton school system. Abrahamson has found the younger generation to be an •ntegral part of his life "I've been working with kids since I was fourteen years old." he explained :Tve always loved it and l've always seemed to be able to get along with kids fairly easdy - Since assuming duties as Executive Director, Abrahamson has been preparing [or the upcoming Meet our queen 8 Midget football 12 Military news 10 Obituaries 4 Observations 8 Out wlth crowd 11 PNA scholars . lfl Reunion-dinner 14 School news 10 Sports 11-14 Teenagers charged 2 Weddings 9 Young Republicans 3 Youth soccer 13 Keith Abrahamson fall session Most of his work has so far been organi- zational, but he'll get a chance to meet program participants next month. The club. which offers a ,,•,,ety- • proR•m• T6 youngsters age mx and up, follows the local school year calendar w•th courses held between .3 and 5 p m This time arrangement •s ideal for Abrahamson, who as a permanent substitute teacher at the high school wdl have ,unple t•me to complete his duties there and arrive at lhc Girls Club for the beginning of courses Wherever he deals with youngsters Abrahamson apphes an athtude which he feels promole', a good report between himself and students "1 lust t,b to be very posfl•ve `.`.dh kids at all times." he slressed "I try to be a happ3 person and hope that rubs oft on them and on me" "I lust `.• a nl to kind of show lhem that hcmg here •s a good thing " •ile Ab•,d•amson •s busy rounding up volunteers to leach some ol Ihe fall couses, he's also hu•y determ•mng ne• goal• and directions for the club Right now he's busy talking x•dh school and comm•tt• off totals to determine what interests local youth, where the grates{ need •s and how the club can cater to both Abraham•.m said he would hke to uhlwe some of the older kids to act as volunteer tcontlnued on page 31 tl`. Tolll Mendela ,,taffv. rjter The Board of F•nance calne under the To`.`.n t'ouncd's fire again Monday Ior not providing a "'corn plete" approprmtlons report, the ('ouncd sending back their Seplember 12 recoln mendatlons • tthout acllon Councd ('ha•rman l(obe(l ('usano to}d the Town Manager that he "'had a Ib,lo tilt' It'l),tlt II,•lll• Ib,ll '-,t•tt•+ll 71'I •t tilt' t h,trtt'l rl,llUUt'd ,I if'ford In' kt'pl ol all, I•,IIF tlrov('t'dHIl•" '• continued on page 51 Over 000 Festival fans expected for 16th Annual by Ken DiSlauro •ta•f writer More than ':l(xl.t}00 people from all over the Northeast are expected to converge upon Southmgton as the 16th annual Apple tlarvesl Festival is slated to begin on Saturda.',. September •9. m the downtown region The Festival ,sill begin Salurday. 11 a m. on the Town Green w•th •ls opemng cerem,gj•tes The event that has pu• the 'Ldtle Apple' on the map s sponsored b.,, the Greater Southtnglon The ('onm.ctwul Palrlol,, Fde and l)rum Corps %•ill (l• h,iod lot lhe o•em• planned i• -a (ledlcallo• to 'l'ro•poclor' AI Mithaud a prosper'lot died la•l }ear ()n Ihe •,lml, da), from 1 lo 5 p m the x•ellkno•n muMcal •roup Coconuts •dl enlerlam lhe Iolks m lhc do•nlo•n regmn Also M•ke Calzone •dl be fealured m a •mg along At 7 p m local konalilit's Tom ( h•lt' ,lod Blcenleamal %lldllOFitlin 1892-1984: Otto Reisch Was unsung hero b•, Ken I)i•,lauro staff • viler Otto H Relsch wdl be long- remembered by those m Southlngton Retsch. ,.`.ho hved at 496 Mare Streel. d•ed Friday Seplember 21 al the age of 92 He was one of the besl-kno'.`, n %orld War I veterans marching and riding m Soul hmglo,n's parades Retsch also was very aehve in the community, he was a forlner dlreclor of the local Red ('ross. a former volunteer fireman for Hose ('ompan.,, Number 2, an orgamzer of Southlngton lndustrnd Baseball. and a member of countless other CIIIC organizations Reisch ,,,,as at'hve m his church. First l,ulheran, serwng as supennlendent of lhe Sunda.', school aod as a teacher there Otto Relsch entered lhe War Io end all Wars World War I in .hllv 1918 In ao inter'.ie'.', wllh Relsch in The Observer of June 3, 1982. he '•a•d he ,.,.as ready to hght bul bv Ihe hme the govern- ment lramed h•s squad lhe Ito`.`.e`.er. even though overseas, he v, as ver2, ap prectattve of those who dld g•ve their byes tie became an active member of the KHtomc Po,,t American l,egton tn tov.'n tie never missed Ihe ceremonies for Flag Day. Veterans Day, and Memomal Day l,ater on. Rei,,ch became comlndnder ol the Kdtomc Post It x•,is ,AIIh the Kiltoni• post and the subsequent\ marches lhat Otto Relsch got hi be good" friends x•ith new, comer Adam Rac Otto H. Reisch ,.1
16
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Apple Harvest Festival starts Saturday; parade on Sunday,
The Observer ""An Independent Newspaper -- Open To All Parties -- Influenced By None
Volume 9, Number 44
own Counc,l taxesill I IIUU ou m U m i, Um
Class of '34 gathersLe•`.is tligh School class of 1934 had its 50th .,,ear reunion last'•.eek at the inn Chablis in Plainville. Tom iendela's story
tells us it `.•as quite a class
Memories flowed when LewisHigh's Class of 1934 held its reunionh'. Toni %lendela,.taff • tiler
The Lewis High Schoolclass of 1934 celebrated its
'501h reumon lasl Thursday.'14-strong at the Chablis Innm Plamvdle exchangingtales of school-days gone byand comparing a diversity ofhfetlmes
Master of Ceremomes.Gene Pahmerl. also classpresident for the group's
treshman, sophomore and ()t the 10 rnembers wholumor years, opened lhe could not come. mostafter-droner program ,.`.lth pleaded the great distancethesmgmg of the class song. bet•.een thetr heY, homethen relurmng the group to a tov.n and Southlngtonsomber mood as the slatus of Some look the hme to wrotethe omgmal 7.Sclassrnembers a short s.,,nopsts of lhew life'.`. as reported experiences
The lasl fifty years sa'.`. 13 "'When I retired fromclassmates pass awa? The nursing tn 197•. I opened an•,•hereabouls of four could antique shop m Tucson."not be found Another 16 v. role Jennie Szydlov, sklannouncements received no Pepe ,.`.no now lives inreply Arizona
Elanor McKenzle `.`.rotethat she "lmght" be able tomake •t depending uponprior comlnlttlnents
She explained that shewould "be back east at thehme of the reunion for aL•ons Club ('on,.enlton." and`.`.ovid tr.'. her best to get tothe event ,
Coach Joseph Fontana andh•s •ffe sat al lhe head table,
tcontinued on page 161
Southington Girls Club has new directorbsq]eth t'tkestaff `.`. riter
Kelth Abrahamson is nostranger to working withyoungsters
Recently named the newExecutive Director of theSouthlngton Girls Club, he'llbe working wi•h an age groupthat's interested him for thepasi twelve years
From his early days as acamp counselor rightthrough to his currentposition as a substitute
Inside pagesAbout the town 6Be a winner 16Bocce champ 14Church news 4Classifieds 15Douglas, Bob •Editorials 6HUG's van ....... - • •,3Hart b•l• 3Job Fair 2Johnson. Nancy 6Kezer honored 5Legals 14Letters 7
teacher in the Southmgtonschool system. Abrahamsonhas found the youngergeneration to be an •ntegralpart of his life
"I've been working withkids since I was fourteenyears old." he explained:Tve always loved it and l'vealways seemed to be able toget along with kids fairlyeasdy -
Since assuming duties asExecutive Director,Abrahamson has beenpreparing [or the upcoming
fall session Most of his workhas so far been organi-zational, but he'll get achance to meet programparticipants next month.
The club. which offers a,,•,,ety- • proR•m• T6youngsters age mx and up,follows the local school yearcalendar w•th courses heldbetween .3 and 5 p m
This time arrangement •sideal for Abrahamson, whoas a permanent substituteteacher at the high school
wdl have ,unple t•me tocomplete his duties there andarrive at lhc Girls Club forthe beginning of courses
Wherever he deals withyoungsters Abrahamsonapphes an athtude which hefeels promole', a good reportbetween himself andstudents
"1 lust t,b to be veryposfl•ve `.`.dh kids at alltimes." he slressed "I try tobe a happ3 person and hopethat rubs oft on them and onme"
"I lust `.• a nl to kind of showlhem that hcmg here •s agood thing" •ile Ab•,d•amson •s busyrounding up volunteers toleach some ol Ihe fall couses,he's also hu•y determ•mngne• goal• and directions forthe club
Right now he's busytalking x•dh school andcomm•tt• off totals todetermine what interestslocal youth, where thegrates{ need •s and how theclub can cater to both
Abraham•.m said he wouldhke to uhlwe some of theolder kids to act as volunteer
tcontlnued on page 31
tl`. Tolll Mendela
,,taffv. rjter
The Board of F•nancecalne under the To`.`.nt'ouncd's fire again MondayIor not providing a "'corn
Councd ('ha•rman l(obe(l('usano to}d the TownManager that he "'had a
Ib,lo tilt' It'l),tlt II,•lll• Ib,ll
'-,t•tt•+ll 71'I •t tilt' t h,trtt'l
rl,llUUt'd ,I if'ford In' kt'pl ol
all, I•,IIF tlrov('t'dHIl•" '•
continued on page 51
Over 000 Festival fansexpected for 16th Annualby Ken DiSlauro•ta•f writer
More than ':l(xl.t}00 peoplefrom all over the Northeastare expected to convergeupon Southmgton as the 16thannual Apple tlarveslFestival is slated to begin onSaturda.',. September •9. mthe downtown region
The Festival ,sill beginSalurday. 11 a m. on theTown Green w•th •ls opemngcerem,gj•tes The event thathas pu• the 'Ldtle Apple' onthe map s sponsored b.,, theGreater Southtnglon
The ('onm.ctwul Palrlol,,
Fde and l)rum Corps %•ill(l• h,iod lot lhe o•em•
planned i• -a (ledlcallo• to'l'ro•poclor' AI Mithaud
a prosper'lot died la•l }ear
()n Ihe •,lml, da), from 1 lo
5 p m the x•ellkno•nmuMcal •roup Coconuts •dlenlerlam lhe Iolks m lhcdo•nlo•n regmn Also M•keCalzone •dl be fealured m a•mg along
At 7 p m localkonalilit's Tom ( h•lt' ,lod
Blcenleamal %lldllOFitlin
1892-1984:
Otto Reisch Was unsung herob•, Ken I)i•,lauro
staff • viler
Otto H Relsch wdl be long-remembered by those mSouthlngton
Retsch. ,.`.ho hved at 496Mare Streel. d•ed FridaySeplember 21 al the age of 92He was one of the besl-kno'.`, n%orld War I veteransmarching and riding mSoul hmglo,n's paradesRetsch also was very aehvein the community, he was aforlner dlreclor of the localRed ('ross. a formervolunteer fireman for Hose('ompan.,, Number 2, anorgamzer of Southlngtonlndustrnd Baseball. and amember of countless otherCIIIC organizations Reisch,,,,as at'hve m his church.First l,ulheran, serwng assupennlendent of lhe Sunda.',school aod as a teacherthere
Otto Relsch entered lheWar Io end all Wars WorldWar I in .hllv 1918 In aointer'.ie'.', wllh Relsch in TheObserver of June 3, 1982. he'•a•d he ,.,.as ready to hghtbul bv Ihe hme the govern-ment lramed h•s squad lhe
Ito`.`.e`.er. even though
overseas, he v, as ver2, apprectattve of those who dldg•ve their byes tie becamean active member of theKHtomc Po,,t Americanl,egton tn tov.'n tie nevermissed Ihe ceremonies forFlag Day. Veterans Day, andMemomal Day l,ater on.
Rei,,ch became comlndnder
ol the Kdtomc PostIt x•,is ,AIIh the Kiltoni•
post and the subsequent\marches lhat Otto Relsch gothi be good" friends x•ithnew, comer Adam Rac
Otto H. Reisch
,.1
.. The Observer, Thursday, Sept. 27, 19842 FIeWS
7
Ilelping llU(; ,.+ ..... .,,•,I Ion'. ( lull pre,,nlent M•ke Bhuwhard. far right, presents a check for the purchase of a 12-passenger vanIm Ill (.•lh'lpts(,•oss• •tteplmgthecheckisllU(iexecutivedirectorEllenRusconi•shilellL'Gboardol du-evtoF• p•e•ndt, nt Ilank [ rhansk• Iook• on. On the left is Jerr) Arsenault of RI. 66 Motor CarsI muted, from %shom the %an %•a• purchased.
Two teenagers charged with robberyP.lter. Walter Peudl, Brmtol Supemor Court(,ar) Allard and George nn a vlolahonMongdlo apprehended Peter J Coppola, 17,lJefort and Wvtrzes m ol 41 Doug]asDrive, was
fined $90 after policecharged him withunreasonable speed
Thomas J DePaolo.34. of 36 Queen Terrace,x•as fined $100 forspeedmg
Samuel J Lyrics. 18,of 39 Sandra Lane, washned $80 for speeding
Paula E Mas.trlanm.20, of 83 Little FawnRoad, was fined $50 foroperating .a mqtor
•kl Ih the S23.000 cash bond
.\ccordnlg I. pohce.-,, "Fhe• remained m jail
l,ehu t and ++% % [r/e'+ and" x•ere arraigned in<illegedlx •+,ilkt'd into ciiuPt againIhe ,;tol-P •il lO 43 p m
and l.el(irl a Ih'14edl',dr+played a gun <11 lhP
h,nldh' clerk durlllg the
robhel'X
Pohee •,ud Ibex look
Court Dispositions
Nine Southln•gtonmotormts were fined fortraffic violahons on
yehlcle without in-surance
The court closed thehle on David ERaymond+ 21, of I•
Vermont Ave, for notappearing in court toanswer to a charoe ofoperating an unregmter-
appro\in•alel', $100 Supermr Court Another edmotorvehlcleh.m the slore The re,,•dent may not beableclerk called p(ihce on to register his motor Roland M Frazler II.Ihelhel'obber.• andtunr vehicle •hen the 18. of 385 Berlin St ,wasolhcer• were rm,hed lo present one expires for hned $,125 for recklesslhc',cene ()lhcer, John fadure to appear in driving
House raps Reagan record on toxic wastes%rtbur tl.u'.e purpuse nl cleaning up ,.implyunaeeeptable" stages of a clean-up.'
ion,tl ,'andidale m thei,th "The Reagan ad- ttouse stated that heI)r,lrwt, has crflLcued nnm,qrahon clmm thai supports the current "We Inust make a
the Reagan ad it ha', •,upported the legislation that would committment on theinmp, trat•dn for op Superfund at the mcreasefundmgforthe federal level to addresmpo,,mgahdllnCongress current level of funding Superfund from $16 this problemthat v.ould increase r, m)t credible." stud bdhon to $10 2 bdhon mediately+" House saidfunding for the ttouse "The EHA has "'In the6th Dmtnct. we '+[ hope +hat the SenateSuperfund. the lund cleaned up only mx of have two pnomty will not sacrifice ouradministered b,, the 332 pru)rfl.,, sties under Superfund sites m environment for theEnvironmental 15rotec - the Heagan ad- Soulhlngton, whlchha,,e sake of partisanlion Agency for the mmr, tratmn which is yet in see the begumulg politics "
A tty. Nugent named campaign voordinatorAttorne,. ,loire T (;affne,,,+ Chairman o[ general practice lay, Doctor ol LaY. degree
Nugenl of 184 ttnbart t'onnechcul P, eagan hrm of Abrams & from the Unlverslt,, ofSlreel ha,, been named Bush '64 and Andre• Nugent, received an Notre Dame in 198"1t'oorchnalor hit Reagan Mead. Chawman of the undergradute degree inBu',h '84 m the town ol Soulhlngton Repubbcan Pohhcal Scten, ''• from The cummdlee •sS.uthmgton The an- Town Commitlee At- lhe College of the Holy currently engage m anouncen•ellt "€,as made torney Nugent, a senior Cross in Worcester. massive wirer reglst-iomll.x Ii.• ,I Rr•an partner in the Menden Mass in 1968 and a ration drive
Job Fair for handicapped Tuesday
20%-50%Entire Stock of
Watches, Gold Jewelry,Diamonds & Precious
Stones
BUY NOW 1o, CHt, ISTMAS •t SAVEr
ROCHAMBEAU MALL • MILLDALE
A state-wide job fairv,+ll be held nextTuesday at the NationalGuard Armory onWoodruff St. offeringhandicapped workers
devoted her life to therehablhtatlon field"because there is somuch to be done "
The model LINKprogi'am, originating in
and supportive em- 1963, specifically ad-ployers a chance to. dresses the needs of the
underemployed andunemployed han-
.dlcapped worker,Dandrow. said
"CHOICE is offeringthis event free of chargeto all The public isurged to attend and
talk by job-placementspecialist TomizeneRice of Project LINK,centers in Washington,DC
A Mainstream }noprogram, LINK activelyseeks handicappedcandidates fromcolleges, vocationalrehabdltatlon programsand trannng programsto match .lob skills withemployment opportun-ities
The often-honoredspeaker said she has
Dandrow also said the"overwhelmingly suc-cessful" programcurrently only exists inthe Washington DC.area, though it isfederally funded.
"Why? Why' not NewEngland?" the chair-woman asked. "Theseare the questions we willbe asking and hopefullygetting answers.'--
Another speaker forthe 10 a.m to 4 p.m.program will be theassistant dis tr.kct
director of theManagement Assist-ance and InternationalTrade Office, Edward JJekot
A U S Small BusinessAdministration agency,MAITO counsels smallbusinesses •n forelngtradee
•, With over 26 years ofexperience in businessand government ad-ministration, Jekot is anadjunct facultymember of Asnuntuck
HartfordThe United Labor
Agency stationed inBristol will also bemanning a booth at thefair. offering their threeweek job-seekingprogram to both han-dicapped and non-
handicappedDirector Robin
Bugbee explained herprogram doubled lastyear's projected•lacement goal forandicapped " and is
already well above this
year's projections.The service, which
includes a job-skillevaluation of each in-dividual, workshops toteach job-hunting'skillsaod the agency'sfacilities to write, mail,phone and otherwisecontact potential em-ployers, accepts anyonewho is "job ready "
"Job ready" meansthat an individual has amarketable skill, is able
for atleast six months
She noted her nextprogram cycle beginson October 22
The ULA program, inits second year. placed76 percent of everyonewho went through it lastv•ar "This ,o•r'•
chents have all beenplaced." Bugbee said
Further job fair in-formahon can be ob-tained from Ann Dand-row at 621-5660. or ULAdirector Robin Bugbeeat 583-0751
Crean calls for extension of3 month session"During 1984, a three
tnonth General Assemb-I.s Session of the Houseof Representahves wascalled upon to vote 654hmes on many diverse
•ssues It is a pleasure toreport to the people .ofSouthington, thal I waspresent and voted 99percent of the tame.missing only fivevotes." S0uthmgtonState RepresentativeGerald P Crean Jr ID-81 i sald recently
Crean stated that oneof the lmporlantresponsibd•tles of astate representahve isIo be present and votingon Issues that his or herconstituents are in-terested m Represent-mg hm constituents is ofutmoq importanoe tohim, according toCrean
The Southlngtonlegislator cited anexample of a bill whichcame before theGeneral Assemblywhich called for thelengthening of thesecond legislative yearof a ter•n to be changedfrom three to fivemonths Crean alsosupported this issuewhen it came before theAppropriations Com-mittee also supported itin the Hall of the Houseof Representatives
$400
APPLEHARVEST FESTIVAL
SEPT 29 Et 30 AND OCT 4-7
,,.,,o,,+o, Festival of Food & Jaycee Carnival
I.i,,,c Arts & CraftsOCT 687
Weekdays 5 00 10 00 Free Admission
Sets 10 00 10 00 Free Parking
Suns 1200-1000
FREE SHU' LE BUSSATURDAY • SUNDAY+ SEPT 30. OCT 6th Et 7th. 12:00-6 O0
DIRECTIONS TO SOUTHINGTON FOllOW Direct=on= to Commuter ParkingHigh School and OePeolo Jr High and J F K Junior High School
For your convemence the section of Mare St bordering the
• green will be blocked off to create a large pedestrian walk way,
"I felt that three more hme to look into ,.•lll sponsor a bill tomonths is not enough various spending increase the threetime to re,earth and requeststo.lnsurewhlch lnonth Generaldigest all the complex are truly necessary." he Assemblysesslon tohvepieces of legislation that added lnonths xuthout an ln-are presented I can cite Crean continued, "'It crease In salary Ithe work el the Ap ls extremel) difficult It, bche•c that all ourpropriatmns Committee stay on top of cmzens •ould be'betterin putting together the everything in a short served by a longerstate budgel_ We n.eed three month session 1 •ession "
•Another-union endorses JohnsonThe Connecticut State
Construction andBuilding Trades Counciltook bold and contro-versial action •n endofsing the re-election bidof 6th Dmtrlct Congress-woman Nancy L John-son The labor organlza-hen msued the endorse-ment after a conventionof their statewlde dele-gates, held Sept 18 atthe Yankee Silversmithin Wallmgford The en-dorsement flies in theface of the recommen-dation of the AFL-CIOState Council that theDemocrat is to be en-dorsed
The Council'sSecretary-Treasurer,Pat Quinn. presented arepresentative ofCongresswoman NancyJohnson's campaignwith a 10fief outhnlngthe nature of the en-dorsement at the StateConvention of the AFL-CIO. m Hartford on Pet19 The unanimousendorsement came atthe requesl of umonrepresentatives in MrsJohnson's district, whorela.,,ed tnew satLsfact•on and pleasure •nareas of concern to thebuilding trades
Congresswoman Nan-,'y Johnson reacted b.•saying. "It is verysahsfylng to have thesupport of such as•gnlfieant portion of theAFL-CIO as the buildingtrades It is particularbre•arding to be sup-ported as a Repubbeanm a year when mostlabor "groups--like theparenl AFL-CIO--havenot been •llhng torecogmze lhe efforts ofRepubhcan legislatorsI congratulate theBuilding Trades on theirindependence andIo$ alt.x ""
Time to declare homes, propertyThe Southlngton
Assessor's office will bemailing PersonalProperty and MobileHome Owners Declara-tion cards to taxpayersthis week The cardsmust be completed.signed and returned tothe Assessor by Novem-ber 1st in order to avoid
paying a penalt.,, for de- sheep, poultry, farmhnquency Anyone not produce, commercialreceiving a declaratmn furniture, fixtures andshould contact the as- equipment, farm ma-sessor's ofhce as soon chmery, farm tools,as possible Personal mechamcs tools,property includes all craft, cables, conduits.non-registered motor p•pes of gas and electricvehicles and snow- companies, leased eq-mobiles, machinery, ulpment and machm-horses, neat cattle, cry
President Dan Massucciasserts h•s "'curt"d•smlssal from theYouth ImplementahonCommittee v`'•s inretahatlon forsuccessful efforts todefeat the coutroverslal"circuit breaker" or-dinance
Democrahc Tou, nCouncd ChairmanRobert Cflsano last
' week said he dismissedMassuccl from the
remarks" in a letter tothe editor published inthe August 23 Observer
"The circuit breakerhad nothing to do withit," the chairman said.noting that "numerouspeople" had called himto a•k how "we couldpossibly allow him tocontinue on the com-mittee when he has norespect for town of-flmal or the system
The YoungRepublican's lettercalled the tax-reliefprogram "unnecessaryand merely an attempt
by corrupt poht•clans togain popularity '"
Massuccl holed that aletter from TownCouncilman JamesKorenklev`'•cz, theoriginator of the or-dmance, ran alongsidehis which containedsimilar remarks
-Korenklewlcz's lel-term equal to what Isa•d. but he won't betreated the samebecause of which side ofthe table he ts sitting
position as CouncilChairman, using h•spower for pettyretribution whiledisrupting a worthwhileyouth program "
Korenklewlcz's letterdescribed anti-ordi-nance advert t•en-•entsas having "containednothing more than halftruths and whole lies-"He said debate shouldbe done on merit alone.""and not .the v`dd eyedspeculahons of a fev`misguided individuals "
Republican TownCommittee Chairman
Andrev` Meade said theaction was an "ob't.'lOU•retahatmn" againstMassucc•
-Untortunatel.• •t'stypical ol Bob'smethods." he said-E•ther you pla• Insway or ht• takes hm batand ball and goeshome "
Meade alsoquestioned the vahdltyof making this dec(stunbased upon "numerou•
the committee is that•nstead of doingsomething positive forthe co,mmunfly, youconlmue to providenegative and immatureattacks on elected of-hclals that disrupt andconluse the generali•bhc "
'hde admitting theterm "corrupt•ollcmans" might havesen used in a broader
sense than it shouldhave been. he did not
'The easmst answer some corrupt politiciansis. 'l have phone calls," m town," he saidbut whffn you ask. Massucet said he was'Who"" you ÷arely get "angr.'," that politicsnames. Meade said got involved in the youth"Are you going to make committee, and that ,hetown decisions based felt hecould lenda lot ofupon phone •-H 1,--" .... l•,h, into theThat's hardly a case of problems of an agemaking .,,'our ov` n group he had justdecisions " escalated fromCusanc;s letter said, Mpssuecl was ap-
"I nov,' fred •t difficult to pointed to the panel,communicate v,lth v, hlch is aimed at•ou. since the pobbsh prowdmg wholesomeedletter, noting that his activities for town"problem v,•th you youth, after askingcontinuing to serve on i?usanolast August
Hart blasts Johnson for House campaignby Tom Mendela•taff writer
Colorado SenatorGary Hart came toBristol last week to lenda hand to 6th DistrictRepresentative can-didate Art House's cam-paign while adding hisimpetus t6 the Mondale-Ferraro ticket
Chtdmg the press for"harassing" Mondale,Hart said the presiden-tial candidate is runningstrong, despite what thepolls say
"Polls are volatile,"Hart said, predicting aneven race by mid-October as definedpolls
Accusing thepresident of "making up
issues, using the WhiteHouse to "polarize" thenation instead ofbringing peopletogether, Hart said thepresident was "Waf-fling" on issues, Housetook over the" micro-phone at that point not-lng a similar charge hehad made about his op-ponent, Nancy Johnson(R-6•
"Strange how youshould use the word waf-fle," House said with asmile, repeating hisstatements made at an
Observer interview lastweek where he accusedJohnson of "w•ffling"on issues and refusing tolink herself to the na-tional GOP
The East Granby resi-dent said the Repubb-can incumbent has"waffled" over cam-paign financing limits.the MX mmsle, whereJohnson stated her op-posttion but failed tovote on a close ballot tokill the dewce, supportfor the Superfund toxicwaste cleanup programwhile voting for anamendment seeking tocut those funds, and aproposal drafted by theNew Britain politicianto study ways to cutfederal deficits whichcontained no figures m
House pointed out thatJohnson's cries that theTrident, currentlymanufactured m Con-necticut, was in dangerof being phased out, asituation he said wasnever a posstbthty
"The chairman of theSea.power Committeestud it was flever en-dangered," House said"It is the only means wecurrently have to deployICBMs Politically, it isthe single program with
the greatest support "He said the enhre con-
gress has no say onwhether the Tridentshould be cut, pemtmgto the Armed ServicesCommittee as the onefaction with any •n-fluence on the under-water craft
Supporting a strongSuperfund himself.House noted thatSouthington. with siteson the EnvironmentalProtection Agency's"'hot hst." •s a perfectexample of why the fundneeds to remmn
"The Reagan planwas for $1 2-bdbon," hestud, "and Congressraised that to $9-billion "'
The challenger's eam-pmgn trail has failed toinclude a series ofdebates, House explain-ed. because Johnsondeclined all offers
"The Waterbury andFarmmgton ValleyChambers of Com-merce, along w•th
WLAD radio m Danburyled a long list of debateoffers, all of which shedeclined," he said.
Endorsement by theNational Committee foran Effective Congress,aceompamed by acontribution to h•s cam-
paign,: was "a shot in thearm, House admitted.
"They do a review ofall races nationwide,recognizing an effectivedifference between thetwo candidates," Housesaid "It also meansthey think the race •swinnable "
The Chairman of theNCEC, Russel Hemen-way agreed that onlyviable races werechosen
"Art House has a verygood shot at unseatingthe incumbent," hesaid
Speaking to standingovations, House andHart r,epeatedly toldSunday s crowd aDemocratic victory waspossible in the state,noting that Hart carried168 of 169 towns in theDemocratic primarieslast June
Once again shruggingoff negative poll Pro-nouncements, Hartrem•nded the crowdthere was only one tm-portant factor
"If Harry Trumanwere alive today, he'dtell you there is only onepell that counts -- that'sthe one taken at thevoting booths on elec-tion day," he said to theapplauding crowd
Southington Girls Club has new director...
Icontinued from page I ) be to stress that fact tov` n"Maybe we'll get a He's also v`orked in
teachers for some of the few guys involved m the horticulture field.younger ones. and he this." he stud "We'd and ventured intomay try introducing never want to close it off business by taking anew courseofferlngs to ju,st girls, that's for sales training course in
()de 'concrete' course sure' Atlanta not long agohe might consider would "I do know there'll be Abrahamson admits thebe furmture refinishing, a couple of male lalterwasshortllvedff there were an mterest volunteers for the "I found sales wasn'tand an instructor with programs." for me and I foundtunetodonate Abrahamson earned myself missing working
Abrahamson is quick an educatron degree In wflh kids as soon as Ito point out that music from thealthough his orgamza- University of Con-tlon is the Girls (•lub. nectlcut in 1981 Sinceboys are not barred that hme. he's beenfrom participation An- working primarily as aother of his goals may substltule teacher in
started," he said 'Tvetried many other thingsbut I always come backtothls "
Girls (%0 reglstralion is s, for October 12 and o •etween 3 30 and5pm "• "' ,l's Ep•'-cop,a, •.nurch, whereclasses are held
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l-- -- -- -- -- -- "T ...... I I Stenciling 10•2o, 11 lS t20
news--3
Meeting the PresidentState Senate • 16th di,,trict) candidate Joseph Markle,,, I se•'ond from left ) ,,,,as on the dai., v, hie Pre%tdent
Reagan ,.isited •A a.terbur) last v`eek. (;reetiug the pre,,ident on the right is V•aterbur,, ma'• or Ed,•.trd l)Bergin.
HUG has its van, thanks to the Lions ClubThe imght.,, roar of
local Lions has againcome to the aid of acommun•t:, based
Recentl.', l,mns Clubpresident M•ke Blanchard made othcml thehmg-av` alh,d donatmnof a van to Help Us(;row IHU(;• lnc (seephoto on page 21
"We ',,.anted to dosomething major lot theLo,,•n." Blanchard stud"We got a request lromthem IHUG• looking fortransportation, and th•sv`a ¢, something sub-stantlal we could do "'
The 1980 van. v,llh aprice tag of about $7000,has the capacity tocarry twelvepassengers Lions Club
CIVIC mlprovemenl wagon. )', expecteO to hi, lhc •ork •du(h v`enlcommHtee members emblazoned •lh the mr. pr.vt(hng the •an
were responsible for olhcl,d Llon• ('lub
requtiMs troi• coin- b,lve retlaeMed per throoghoul the •ear.
muml• group• aod tn•on from thmr ulcludm• Ix•o p,mcake
making a recom h•erarch• h) (dkc
actmntolake u•uatl• gr,mh,d hwal Ihe Apph' llarxttU(;, a pmvale, non chapter• Fe•h•al, ate respon
proftl orgamzahop "•e've ne•er had. m •lt)lc hw geoerahngv`hlch of[er• v()catl()nal a long hme. a proje(q
training tohandlcapped Ihat •.t•
vehicle The l.mns {luh logo xupporhng l,mn• Club
-II'11 be used to travel v` dl be accompamed b• ex enlx Ihu• helping
sste." •asd Ellen •a• donated b• ca)oh hue •uch prolet'tsRuscon• Hue; members ()1 lhe rlub llU(;I)o,trdtffdweclorexecutive d•ctor "So ,Xc('ordmg 1o Blan pre•(tenl lhmk Ur-ge wall be m the corn- chard, ben l,oner Babe h,msk, called the IJonsmumtv, all around S•sh. Jr v`as m (hmalmn "another finetown. (•ve days a week •tru]ncnlal in cxdnlple el commuml3
The van. a •hlle club •pearheadmg much
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faith pageThe Observer, Thursday, Sept. 27, 1984
ObituariesRose .(Donia) Kendall Barbara Ann Zawisza
Rose •Donla• Ken- center Barbara Ann maculate Concept,onJail. 65. of 3 Darling St She ,s surv,ved by a Zawlsza. 35. of 264 Church. the Children ofd•ed Wednesday. son, George Kendall of Spring Lake Rd. dmd Mary. the New Horzzons
- New Britain.da:ug-hl.ex• •at New Br It a t.n_
Newmgton Benton of Wethersfield Memorial Hosl• Hor,zons was• A nat,ve of and Carol Kendall of A native of an av,d SCUBA d,ver
.-'• Southmgton. Mrs Ne•,ngton. three South,ngton. she was and member of theKendall was born April sisters. Loretta born July 17. 1949. Brmtold•vmgclub
• t 4 .1919. daughter of the G,rolamo of daughter of Chester and In add,hen to herlate Florentine and South,ngton. Fanny Angola •Gwara) parents, shemsurwved('arohne • Marrelh • Paternostro of" Zaw•sza Miss Zaw,sza bya brother. Chester W
-. Doma Or,or to her Newlngton. and Teresa was formerly employed Zaw•sza. Jr ofret,rement. Mrs G,ansanh of E Hart- w•thR,chardElllottand South,ngton. a smter.
. • Kendall was employed ford. and three grand- Sons lnsurance ,n town Mrs Emdy lndomemc•. by Travellers Insurance s.ons She was graduated m of Southington. several
•n Hartford She was a" , 1967 from South•ngton aunts, unoles, meces: €R1 member of St Domm,e Plantsvllle Funeral H•gh School She also andnephews
• /".+•'.€/ ,'•- "• parlsh and a member of Home was mchargeof ,,'as•raduatedfromth•= Della Veceh,aCalendar House sen,or arrangements University of Con- Funeral Home was m
JosephM Kiely .oc.cu, School of •.-charge Of bur,al• surance Miss Zawlsza arrangements
• • ,•as a member of lm-
Shinvapples ' '...... "l':unit'{; Ba'.,. I,oll.,he., apple'-, at thv (;rat',. t nited Methodist Fair last ,,eekend. •,pples ,..ere a popular Joseph M Klely. 85. or Church Mr Klely ,,'as a Thomas JItematthee'.ent. a.. the crov.d ,•et its ta.-.te buds for the fall .-.ea,.on. 85 Lawncrest Dr. died Navy veteran of World
Tuesday. September 18 War I Sebastmn. Flomda •Parulsk• Pep•Bradley, Memorial
Rene response overwhelming t,ospltal He was the Inaddthontohmw,fe. andtormerSor4th,ngtOnresldentThem,as J Oanc•olaAdaughter.ManOnofPlantswlleW husband of Agnes he survived by a Pep,. 71. d,ed Wed- ahd a brother. GeOrge
,Brandt• Kmlv daughter Maureen ne•da.•. September 19at Pep• of Southmgton areb) "•oreed •chumann white penan! At the of- •nnlh,ngton wa,• over- hold th•q month The A nahve o[: ttolyoke. Pallad•no of Plant- his home He ,,as the hstedamong Mr Pep,'sforThe'llbserver fertory of the Mass. a v, helm,ng blarv Our hrst was at St Mary'• Massachusetts. Mr _-.vdle •hree ",,in', husband of Lucy survwors
basket of scrolls was Queen. St Aloys•hs. and Church m New Britain Klely ,,as son of the late Joseph •I Kiely ofOn September 9. one presented bearing lhe St Domm,c all report Fac,htators were John and Mar• Kml.• Merlden. James F
hundred and ninety-five names of parmh Renev, that reglstrat,ons are reminded that Chrxs- He res,de'd ,.n Klely of Westbrook. and Hortense (Roderick) Mendespar,shes part•c,pated in team members far above those an- tmmtv was never sup- Southmgton for the last Ed,,ard K•el) ofthe Renewk•ck-offMass he*paled A., :t.rch posed" to be hved out seven xear,• moving Southmgton. •,lth ,,horn Ne,• Brttam res,dent Hospitalat St Joseph Cathedral September 16 was b,,,hop John F alone here f•'om Mer•den he made h,s home. a Mrs Hortensem Hartford More than S•gn-up Sunday m all of Whealon sa•d at the We need our Prmr ttl his retwement s•ster. Helen Le,,•s of •Roder,ck• Mendes. 65. A son. John Roder,ckone thousand seven hun- the par,shes k•ck-offMass. Renew,s parish commumty T.•e m1960 he was employed Massachusetts. 17 died Saturday. Sep- of Southmgton IS hsteddred persons, led by the Par•sh,oners heard ex- an *'exclt*ng event theme of the hrst six for 28.•ears b.', the John grandch,ldren, t,,o lember 22 at New among Mrs Mendes'Archd,ocese's three planat,ons from lay which will make the weeks of refleet•on ,s ttancocklnsuranceCo greal-grandchdd•en. Br*ta•,n GeneraF surv,vorsbr,hop.,,, joyfull.• sang members of the,r parish Church ahve m our "The Lord's Call " He ,,as a parishioner •everal nieces andand pra.•ed tot lhe suc about the small group hearts, in the hves of Facthtators will guide ,•1 Mer•den's St Mary's nephewscess of the three year activity They were then our ne,ghbors and ,n the the group members ,n Ott H. R h
recess Huge. colorful" asked to take a minute byes of the entire Con- readings, reflect,on and Marshall D Nolan o eisc ....•anners prayer how we can "reflecting the ,to fdl out a "reglstratmn nect,cut commumty onRenew theme hung in card for the smallgroup answer the Lord's call Marshall I) Nolan of Stanley Works Icontinued[rem page I) v.hen the committeethe sanctuary Each studms Training sess,ons for with renev,ed hope. as 358 l.amng St. died Mr Nolan leaves a durmg the parades Iold h,m "He was theparish brought to the The response to S,gn- the small group members of family. Thursdax. Seplember20 son. Ronald Nolan of RaczkowskL now 89. typical man to receP.'esanctuary a blue and Up Sunday here in facthtators are being parlsh, andcommumty at Bra'dlev Hospital Southmgton. three •,ho is gelhng read.,,, for it." Ross, sa,d. because
abet a lon• dlnes.• He grandchildren, several the Apple ttarvesl of Be•sch's involvement
Episcopalians dedicate Seabury vault ..vas74vearsold n,eces and nephews He I"estlvalParade. saldhe in ,he Snnth,ngtonA nfhve o• Vermont. .aas predeceased by his ,•fll think of hm f•'mnd Assoc,al•on for
Mr Nolan ,,'as born ,,fie. Gladys •Brooks• •hon he •s there "He Retarded t'tt•zens.Februr.lx 1. 1910 He Nolan ,,as a good person." tSARC'• and the Red
The historical needs for the nest 50 to bank vault spectf,ca- hclpants agreed, can res,ded •n Southmgton Raczkowsk• said "Otto Cross. among othersdocuments and rehcs of 75years t,ons, protect the,r con- and should mean dff- for the past 32 ,,,ears Plantsvllle Memorml Irled to help everyone. Soulh•ngton H,ghtheEp•scopal D•oceseo. Dr Cameron. whose tents w,th 18-inch walls ferent th,ngs when Prior lohls retirement a Funeral Home x•as ,n and never asked for School Prmc,pal JohnConnect,cut. collected name appears on a and two Mosler com- dmcussed throughout few years ago. he was charge of arrange- anvth•ngforh,mself "" Gaseck• is a formerand preserved fr,,m brass plaque at the at- bmatmn lock doors the Anghean Commu- employed by- The men,s Raczkowsk, exptained commander o+f the loeatover two centur,es, oh,yes, along with the wh,ch prov,de the only men's 400 d,oceses " there aren't very many Leg,on post He. Ioo.should safely see the names of h•s four access Dehumdffled spread over 165 coun- vets from World War I knox, Olto Re,sch wellcentur,es to come ln the predecessors, the Hey and kept at a constant 55 trms As one example. Helen (Chute) Truhan left He guessed that the "'He •,as very cw•c-protect,on of newly Dr E E Beardsley. the degrees, the new vault Walmsley noted. "it can roster ,s probably down lmnded, very •Cllve mdedicated archwes at Roy Samuel Hart. the •s wrapped m a v,nyl be hard for people m the Mrs Helena tChute• Britain. a brother, to about a dozen hm church." Gaseck•the Diocesan House m Rev Wflham Agur membrane and sur-" F•rst World to accept Truhan. 72. of 105 Plum Ed,,ard Chute of Betty Kroher. of the sa,dHartford Beardsley. and theRev rounded by a that people in theTh•rd Orchard lid . d,ed South•ngton two local Red Cross. said
As the Right Roy At- Arthur Adams. con- soph•shcated dra,nage World are going to Fr,daj. September 21 at s•sters. Mrs Bermce she knew Otto Remchthur E Walmsley. ducted tours of spec|al system that keeps percewethes,tuat,on m New Britain General Van of South,ngton and for many. many years Ted Frutcbey was
• . •mmed•ate past com-B•shop of the Epmcopal d,splays of Dmcesan mmsture away from the very different terms Hosp•talafteran dlness Mrs Mac McCandless "He was veryD,ocese of Connect,cut. memorabilia for the m- building The roof. The consensus that A nahve of Ne,• of New Brdaln. two ded,cated." Kroher manderoftheAmer,canobserved dur•ngdethca- wted guests The guest which extendsa few feet d,d emerge, however. Br,ta,n. Mrs Truhan grandchddrem several sa,d. nohng that for Leg,on Frulchev stud
that Re•sch" wastmn ceremomes. Sept hst ,neluded hbrar,ans, above grot•nd, has been was all the more tmpor- res,ded •n Southlngton nleces and nephews She more than 20 years, ded,cated to the post14. "fifteen to 2O years archtvmts, members of fmmhed off rote an at- tan, and encouraging for 29 years She was was predeceased by a unhl he was well mto hisago. all the D,ocesan the Hmtorlcal Seemly of trachvepatto becauseof the dmparate formerly employed by sonand a daughter 70s. Re,sch drove "'He was ver.• w,tty andrecords were in card- Connecticut. Mr Phdhp S,ymposium on mis- element involved As Landers. Frary. and New Br,ta,n patron,s back and forth frmndly "" Frutcheyboard boxes, today. Burton •des,gner and slons the cha,rman of the ClarkmNev. Br,tmn Memorial Funeral totbehosp•tal sa,d
Frutchev sa,d Remchthey are stored ,n one of eng,neer• and C J Consensus was not sympos,um planmng She leaves a son. John Home was m charge of But. Kroher ex- was one o•r a handful ofthe finest facthtms in Picard •contractor• necessarily expected, comm,ttee, the Rev E 'Jack:Truhan of Nov, arrangements plumed. Remch was anthe country " Of spec,al interest and httleconsensus was Phflhp Turner noted •t unusual man. because World War I vets left
In hmremarksdurmg were d•splays of the sur- reached ,n the week- was beartemng to be he shunned fanfare "He He ,,as the longest-the ceremony v,v,ng hbrary of the long "Pan-Anglican able to affirm the basic Robert J. Wichroski was shy. and very soft- serv,ng member of thereded•cat,ng one Rev Phdo Shelton. the Symposmm on M,ss,on assumphon "that the spoken." she sa,d KdtomcPostunderground vault hrst priest erda,ned by Theology" wh,ch con- church is called to par- Robert J Wlchroskl. Holy Trinity Pohsh Remch would often take In The Observerwh,ch was completed Connecticut's first venedmWestHartford, t,c•pato in something 38. of 161 Atwater St. National Cathohc clothes or supphes to arttclewtthRemchbackabout l0yearsago, and b,shop. Samuel Sept 1-8 The par- G•d•s up to. that ml•.- d•ed Saturday. Sop- Churchparmh needy famthes, and in 1982. he noted hededmatmg a new 29 by Seabury. m 1785 Alsoon t,opants. 20 scholars s,on ,s not a human tember 22 at Bradley In addd•on to hm drop the ,terns off looked forward to many31-foot addlhon. Bmhop d,splay were an alms and church leaders work" Memorml Hospital as a mother, he leaves h,s anonvmonslv th•ngs One was
" " becom,ng 90 He livedWalmsley praised the basin used for offertory from around the world. Perhapsanevenmore result of ,rutrr•es wife. Brenda tGerald) One of Otto's days ,n"extensive labors" of during the C,vll War. were drawn from the s•gmficant effecl of the received in an W•chrosk, of the sun came ,n 1974. untd 92 Another wasarch,v,st, the Rev sample letters of d,vers•ty of the symposium was that "•t automobile acodent on Southmgton. a stepson, when •1 was announced celebrating h,s 63rdCanon Kenneth Walter Seabury. a lock of h•s Angbcan Commumon to md•cated to us the pro- Awcraft Rd Friday James Emery of he would be 1973"s Umco ,•eddlng anmversaryCameron. •,ho "put hair. andh,s mitre, now discuss the d•vers•t•, of found fact that '•e are A nahve of New South•ngton: a step- 'Man of the Year' and w•th M,nme. the formerthese arch,yes m 200 years old. wh,ch ,s poss,ble approaches to all a famdv' Br,la,n. he ,,as born daughter. Dolores Sz- receive the coveted M,nme Weckworthperfect order " housed m a glass-front M•ss,on Indeed the image of May 13. 1946. son of rosier of Mer•den. a Gold Medal award Last month they
A bequest from the case. espeoally design- Not surprmmgly, the "famdy" sudacedand Josephine t M•halak• s,ster. Clare Strachel of At the hme. M,chael celebrated 65 yearslate Mrs Helen Blake of ed to filter out harmful 14 papers that were resurfaced throughout W•chrosk, of Southlng- South•ngton. a mece Ross• was pros,dent of together 'Farming,on funded the hght presented and dmcussed the week as the par- ton and the late Stanley and several nephews the local Umco club In additmn tohm wife.or,gmal vault as a The D•ocesan collec- reflected what the Right t,c•pants sensed the m- W,chrosk• "He was the perfect Re•sch ,s surv,ved bymemor,al to her first hen presents tremen- Rev Arthur E hmate ties wh,ch brad Mr W•chrosk• was Della Vecch,a man to rece,ve ,t." twosons. Robert Re•schhusband, the Roy Dr dous resources for Walmsley. Bishop of the the most did,art employed al Alpha Funeral llome was in Rossi stud. noting that of Hamlm. N Y andGeorge Lmsley. a research. Dr Cameron Ep,scopal Diocese of members of the Plat,ng ,n Pla,nvdle charge of bur•al Re•schwasachvemthe John Re•sch ofdevotee of church noted Around the walls Connecticut. closer,bed Angbcan Commumon He was a member of arrangements commumty and was an Doylestown. Penn-h,story As that space of the addition, file as strong centrifugal As frmndsh,ps that unsungbero sylvama, a daughter.began to be exhausted, cabinets orgamzed ac- forces at work ,n the transcended and even Ross, sa,d the corn- Lo•s Weber of Erm.the rema,nder of the be- cord,rig to the succes- Anghcan Commumon thr,vedonpersonald,f- Margaret (Maschi)Zanetti m,ttee dec,ded to go Pennsylvan,a. aquest was used to sup- stun of b,shops from It qmckly became clear, ferences grew. •t took ....... nveranrtarrformOttoof br_oIllelk the Roy Dr
_ pJement an anonymous . Sealmr•, to_ Walmsley Walmsley painted -out• ta+te-•magmat*orrforthe-'--• • "- their decm•on. "He was Harold Reiscli brdonafiori vThrch-er•veWed reflect the march of that "to try to force a sympostumparttc,ponls West Hartford Two sons. Charles eestahc He felt he Wales. Pennsylvania: amost of the cost of the history Top,cal hles consensus document to recognize themselves res,denl Mrs Margaret Zaneth and Rmhard d,dn't deserveit." Rossi sister. EtsmPlagemannnew vault The add,tion, meanwhde, contain, ac- was not in the life of th,s as a m,crocosm of the •Masch•l Zaneth. 88. Za neltl, bet h of sa,d of Plantsvflle. fivealso underground, more cord•ng to Dr Cameron. part,cular gathering, w,der famdy of the d,ed Wednesday. South,ngton. are hsted Ross, recalled "that grandchildren, s,xthan doubles the space "anythmgunder thesun, but that someth,ng was Anghcan Commumon. September 19 at St among Mrs Zaneth's Otto and h,s wde. great-grandchildren.avadable and should relatedtoth,sDmcese happemng •n a deeper and. ult,mately, of the Franc,s Hosp,tal ,n survivors M,nme. were •n the several nieces andmeet the Dmcese's The vaults, built to way " Mmsmn. the par- Chr,stmnChurch Hartford k,tchen of their home. nephews
he Observer, Thursday, Sept. 27, 1D84 news--51"
Over 300,000 expected at Festival ...°
t continued from page I
strutting their stuff Itshnuld be hits of fun
For K•o hours, from7 30 p m, the musicalgroup Ca•rtogn willperform hits ,$rom the1950's to today Thisevent wdl take placenear the Green
Sunday,. September30th Feshval achvihesbegin early, at 8 a m, asthe Llo_ns sponsor itspancake •I at_
•ral ElementaryA big draw to the
downtown region is theFeshval parade, whichis scheduled to begin atI tO pm This year'sparade theme m "AS,dule to the VolunteerCore " The 1984 paradealso is notable becausett ,.,.'ill be World War Iveteran Adam Rac-zkowskl's last paradeappearanceSouthmgton Adam hasbeen a crowd favoritesmce the parade beganIn 19Gq
The Southlngton ArtsCouncil will sponsor theUS Navy Band. Tpm.at Central Elementaryauditorium The bandplays everything, fromrock 'n roll to big bandsound And get this --the concert is free Getthere early for goodseat•
For the food andcrafts fanatics, thereare plenty of boothslocated in the downtownregion Some of thebooths will be openduring the weekdayperiod of October I to 3.
but the Apple Festivalitself officially shutsdown until Thursdayevemng, October ,t
Thursday, Oetobor 4,the festival reopens at 8p m . with theSouthington High StageBand, and the Kennedyand DePaolo JuniorHigh Bands playingfavorite tunes in thedowntown area Thisevon• 14• alw•y• ho,•npoladar •e•th l:•o•le ofall ages, and is touted as'Family Night.'
On Friday, October 5,at 6 pm in the down-town region, theSouthington Kiwanis•luh will sponsor its funevent, the Bed ,RaceThe race Is alwayscrazy, fast-paced andfurious.
At 7 p m , theSouthmgton YouthChorale will performThe chorale is under thedirection of JanetKrom
The St Thomas FolkSingers will entertainthe crowd downtown at8pm
The Festival reopensSaturday, October 6,with the huge draw forthe weekend, The NewEngland/New York
Arts and Crafts Show.sponsored by theSouthlngton Arts &Crafts Association.There will be plenty ofcrafts available,starting at 10 a m andrunning until sunset
The local HistoricalSociety will sponsor itsannual antique show at
Raczkowski's last parade
The venerable Wars Raczkowskl isWorld War I veteran, a natlveof NaugatuckAdam Raczkowskl. having moved towill appear in this Southlngton afteryear's Apple Harvest World War I andFestival parade on hying here everSunday It'll be a sincespecial occasion as The amiablethis will be Adam's veteran will make alast appearance in a speclalstopln front oflocal parade the reviewing stand
Tkc -•-yeav old to pr•scnt-a cor•agc
his full uniform with tahve Nancy John-all the medals and son, who wasribbons he has been responsible forawarded over the Raczkowskl gettingyears, including the his Purple HeartPurple Heart which after years of beingwas fmatty presented rgnoredto Raczkuw•kl within Check out page 7the past year for a photo of Adam
He will be driven in Raczkowskl as hea leep by members of looked back in 1980the Naugatuck marching in theVeterans of Foreign Feshvalparade
•lorth Center HighSchool, from 10 a m to 5p m Donation to enteris $175 This is a mustfor ,all the antique and,collectible buffs outthere
Merrill Lynch RealtyIs sponsoring Its freeclown makeup sessionfor the children. 1 to 4p m. downtown This isa favorite with the kids
Wrapping up Saturday, at 7 30 pro.ts the WHCN 'Dancingon the Green' party withDJ George. featuringdemonstrations by Mer-lden's 'MC Breakers'break dancers
The serious runner
and fun runner wilt nodoubt enjoy the AppleHarvest Festival five-mile road race. spon-sored Sunday. Oetobor7. by the RecordJournal This eventbegins at 10 a.mdowntown
The New England/New York Arts and('rafts Sho•`, continuesfrom noon to sunset,Sunda.•. October 7
And lastly, theSouthington High BandBackers sponsor itsBattle of the Bands at7 30 p m This is alwaysa popular event with theteenagers.
Town Council critical offinance board
I continued from page 1) The nev,' format is a• . result of a group effort
Welchsel explained" involving the wholethat the BOF was anelected board."responsible to thevoter "
"They are m no waysubordinate to you." hesaid. ans•`,enn• furtherarguments in favor ofmore-complete reportswith his dgrCement"You are preaching tothe convinced "
Whde the report wasreturned by an
Putala disagreed.noting that the BOF hasa liaison to the Board of
board and the Finance Education who reportsDepartment back "We know exactly
• 'I don't know what what's going on." hethe Council •s saidscreaming about " he At one point of thesaid "We showed it to discussion, councilmenthe whole board as well became confused overas the Town Attorney an item for two policeand thev all said it was radar units, mistakingOK He saw nothing an account number forwrong with it then " an expenditure
Putata sold the 'I havenoronfldenceCouncil receives copies in this report at all withof all the budget a $25,000 error,"Cusano
cndor•ement of thet'onnecttcut StateFederation of Teachers.and thank them for theirklod constderahonEducntlon ts one of themum imporlanl issues
`,•t. face m the GeneralAssemble and I ampleased to be recognizedlor m.'. efforts m sup-p,,rttng educationP,,•ues I plan tocontlnueto do all I can to insurethat all young peoplereceive thb best possibleeducahon "'
unanimous vote,Council MinorityLeader Cheryl Louns-bury explained it only
meant agreement with aneed for more report-ing. not with the
methods being used"The Council is
handling this the wrongway Both sides areright and wrong," shesaid "I don't think youbully another board Weshould not be fightingover who is the supremepower in town--we mustwork with otherautonomous boards "
The Council recom-mended Town AttorneyRichard . Krezelresearch the legality ofthe BOF reports ascurrently being done
Finance BoardSecretary JosephPutala explainedMonday evening he didnot understand theCouncil's concern
He explained the newreporting format was aresult of the Council'swarning last May for hisboard to comply withFreedom of Informationrequirements by filingthe report within 48hours of tllelr meeting
requests coming before said. pointing out item state payment or a Kezer will loin 49 otherhls board as well as the number 4 which was payroll, ttmustbypa,d d.lrectors,ln selhng zFOR •,', SpecialFallOffer I•hlll()NN•advantage of their denied The item bv law.' he said "If olrecttofi Ior 29 states •haison who ls present at !a.belled "Acct" read r•quests are not ap- aftertheconventmnthB ,.,al!.t,helrmeetlngs Rada.r, units proved, you create Octo.0,ber • •t•'•'•
They have Carbone 125,880) another problem .... t•elng .a, sked to. se..r'•e,at ou,r meetings He Putala explained on t,he• l•a.tlonal bwl ,.< Prime Rib I ==bl *Wgldoe,sn t even fill them rejected items did not While Armond feels Scout •oaro •s a v, on- . --in, 'hesald contain the amount the report contam• derful honorand fdlsme • Dinners
Councilman Robert requested because t enough information for with pride It is a unique •Carbone admitted he was duplicating in- his purpose, he admits volunteer responslbday * At The Hall Of Fame Restaurant/Lounge"did n,o.t take notes that formation on requests the Council might and I look forward to the • Southingtonnight, trusting his received by everyone require additional in- challenge." Kezer stud • •ith Purchase Of 200.00 Or Morememory, but insisted concerned, including formation Kezer, a sta,te
' he s it m ur representative from tne . • 'that was not his function the,c.ouncll ' T y u Y P , • • 4at,,B,,OFmeetmgs "Ive never seen a pose because I un 22nd dmlrlct, began
derstand them scouting as a Brov, nte , t,//•,• • •I m not g,o.mg to be council hke this They . ', * 'the reporter. ',he said should get down tb thoroughly I'm at all Assistant Troop •eaoer * ,"They lust don t !!ke to busin,e,ss and do their the meetings, too." Iw n 1.970. alsoserv[nga.sa •*•,FIH('•t Men' be toldwhat todo job. he said said maoer, trainer, olreclor
urn Us For A...
FREE IYOURLAWH 9 /CONCERT
4 Ji ij[[ South ngton Arts Counc,I. nnuxt
"It ( Bicentennial Audttor|um • -----: *
II . Doors open 6.30 p.m. II I I 723-0948J¢ II Ftrst•ome -- P,rst seateo ,, • •SouthenTNnwEngland •-
, NO tickets necessary
ol her 25 years of desire to create thatdevoted" service to experience tot others
area gcouts an adult volunteer "' Teachers endorse CreanWhile ad41tlonal T`,`, o South•ngton
names can be submltted Semor Girl Scouts Ltsn State ltepre,,enlah`,c-Carbone knm`,s that from the floor at the Dombro`,`,skl and GeraldP t're.m ,It ,I•represents the account national convention at Monlque Tureene. `,`,ill BI• has been endor,,ednumber Why does he `,•hlch nominations are attend the conventmn for re-electron b.', thecome to our meeting tf voted upon, baslcalb a `,`,lthKezer Connect.cut St.llche can't explain `,that single slate of can- McPhall sa•d thc Federatmn ol Teacher,goeson " d•dales is submitted for slrong community AFL-Cltl "l'hecxt,cuh`,c
Finance Department the three-year positron, support coimng from ('ouncd al a iCCClllDirector DanlelArmond •heexplained Southmgton is largeb meeting voled Io encautioned Tuesday that "Six years ago was the resull of the efforts dorse Repre,,enlahveconstant rejection ot the last time anyonegot of two "key" volunteers Crean and ha, offeredappropr•ations could submitted from the •n town its assistancecreate some serious floor." McPhad stud ('ommunlty AssOCl- campmgnproblems wflh bill "In essence tl is an orlon ('ha•rpersonpayments acceptance of the Deborah Zunmerman Representahve t'rean
nominating corn- and Service Unit stated, "'t am e\h'emel,•"if we have a bill w•th mdtee'sendorsement ' ('hamperson Mar.',' Jane happy to rece•`,e lhe
a deadhne on it. like a Failing competttmn.
Pauline Kezer ol ot Camp Carlson and Sno`,• lU'Oxl(h' c(.uncll e\pl,mled "I'hL,, ts the
Plalnvtlle has been various board and support hL lot,d troop hr•l hme •e have had
ser•e on the national bond bet•een •omcn thc ,lrc,t plH• ,in ad h,l• 4 •nn members, she
(hrl Scout Board of and girls m scouting," dHmnal IO2 legUMe'led •,11(I adding that some
lhrectors she said "'A t'om ,ulult• •bc•,Hd countd• go a• high as
Yankee Council monahty ot shdl'ed NOlnln.lt]Oll• hd lilP 7•llllO
Norton McPhafl stud for lhose of us fortunale Mtbmllled b• lot al htt•b,md Ken live m
•he was "plea•ed" In enough •o have enjn3ed Icader• and tn Plant•flh, •lh lhem
otfer Keze•'s name for (hrl Scout ex•erwnces •cMt•ated h• a council tbrce daugbler• and hertht•honormrecogmhon as children T ere t• a t.ommlttec MtPb•tl molher
Kezer nominated to serve on national GirlScout Board of Directors; 25 years service
Rotary's contributionRotar) Club president Dmtglas McLeod, middle, pre•,ent., a thet'k [oi $2.',,111 to co-chalrper'.,ons of the
Visiting Nurse Association Building Fm•d Drhe, Judge Sin,`, t,ll-V:lhotl •nd h•'m" Ihqahunt,,, The fund
drh e i,, ",till ,dlort of its goal and seeking contribution,•
opinion & comment6
The Observer, Thursday, Sept. 27, 1984
The Observeran independent newspaper, open to all parties, influenced by nonepubhshed by The Step Saver. Inc
Anthony L. Urillo, president Jennie M. Urillo, secretary/treasurer
James J. Senlch. editor
P O Box648, 132MalnStSouth•ngton. Conn 06489Telephone •203• 621-6751
P t) Box 548.21:1Spring St
Southmgton. ('onn 06489Telephone •203t 628-9645
Frustration of businessmanMan)' resident8 and businessmen fear
_ lacing-a-board-or eommmston m town. Oftimes their fears are substantiated whenthey are either treated rudely or decisionson their proposals are put off
When a business wants to locate in townor an exmtent business endeavors In ex-pand. they are put to the third degree -maybe much more thanes really needed
A local businessman wishing to Startanother location in town recently wentbefore the PZC He received his okay bulnot before he was grilled to the point of ex-haustion and questioned-why itas so dffhcultfor a resident to start a business or expandHe actually felt it was more difficult for aresident to face the commission than an out-of-towner
For a town that speaks of its interest mhrmgtng ,n ne• buslnPss or expanding thatwhich •t has. It has a funny wa.y of ap-'preaching the matter Obviously. there arelaws and regulations that must be met. but
A trip to Town Hall to face a board orcomm.u•slon •ouldn't be considered aS go-mg on trial It has become a frustrating ven-ture for many a hardworking businessmanand resident These same officials are thereto serve the town, they are public servantsWhen they become adversaries, there is -Funeralsomething wrong with the system, offices
About the town
Even the town itself faced the rough handof the PZC m its last session when the TownCouncil approached the commission forpermission to place two signs on 1-84 projec-tl•,.g, the image of Southlngton as a place tolocate a business or company The Councilwas skewered for not sending someone tothe meeting to sell the proposal Yet theidea had been told publicly m recent mon-ths Town Council chairman Robert Cusanohas been actively trying to get Southingtonoff its posterior andhustlo the companiesand businesses looking to locate in townsour size Yet the sign idea didn't-recewe afavorable response when the vote was
by Ken DiMauro
Why the mystery on North Main St. ?A deadlock at the Planning Bumne•s, Kelley and Flynn
attd Zu.l.g Colttmi•si•'l-•t•wld place a [u•[ food
temporarily, put on ice therequest of businessmanKevln Kelley and RobertFlynn to change some-property parcels on NorthMain Street near Mill Streetfrom •RO• to CentralBusiness ( CB )For the lasi couple of
weeks, the whole affair hasbeen shrouded in mysteryCalls to Kelle• from an Oh..,,,r,, r staffer x•eri• met witha terse "no comlnent "
• •/hym Kelley so..•ecr_et•e?Last week, Arty HenryForgione told the PZC thathis clients are interested inmaking the Atderson-Gould
Home into someKelley •s an ac-
countant and Flynn is arealtor Forglone explainedthe men wanted the zonechange because under thecurrent zoning laws a realtyoffice m not allo•,ed m Res-idential Office •.oncs
However, Forgionei•efused to rule out somethingelse.'•belng done with thep.•;operty in the future Howf'•ir in the future '• Next year'•Twenty years from now" Ifthe building were in Central
store on the property, and beperfectly well within theirrights
Mark Kopoc. chairman ofthe newly-created HistoricDistrict Study Cgmmittee.told the PZC the entu'eneighborhood is one of thosein town being activelyconsidered for a H,stoncDistrict
Kopec said thebusinessmen were go,ngabout obtaining office spacethe wrong .way 'qthere's more here thhn meetsthe eye," he said. noting if arealtor is not allowed in anRO zone. then amend thezoning regulations instead ofchanging those parcels
Kopec stressed •too, thatthe men could wmt to changethe building after the districtis in Then, the areaquestion would not be RO.and a realtor would beallowed II is emphasizedhere, though, that Kelley andFlynn may be planningextensive renovations to thebuilding, and under aHistoric District, suchrenovations would be stuntedand costly, because only
certain things could be done.
missioners the men werewaiting for financing on theproject, and it •ould bebeneficial ff the propertywere CB
James "Smlth. a local ac-countant, •ho has offlt•s at115 North Main. explainedthat he lelt an mshtuhonwould still loan the pair
the 6raiding is m" Smithstressed he borro• ed enoughmoney to purchase hisbmtdmg, and that •s •n an RO
For years, some oflicmlshave "feared that ff thedo•ntown area •ere toexpand, it •ould expandnorth on North Main Streettoward Queer• Street Th•s'megalopolis effect' •oulddestroy the character andcharm of North Mare. whichstill reminds many of o• oldNew England vdlage Thearea from Chapman Street toHigh Street •s full of 18th and19th ('entur) homes' andshould be preserved lr iswell-treed and lovely
VCe urge the PZt" to studythe Kelley/Fl..,nn proposalbefore making a decision
Kelley has not yet absolutely:,toted that he-plans tn putFlynn's real estate firm inthe building He has beenevasive and glib Thatworries US
It does seem a bit back-• ards that the men would notwant to change a law- thatdiscriminates against allrealtors Th•s way, with amere zone change, onlyFlynn benefits That isn'tfmr
One of the audiencepointed out there is no wantfor CB space in downtownS6u2hing•on MAny -lar•nffices In the region arevacant There are severalvacant lots m that area Ifthis is so, why alter a nearbyneighborhood'•
Another stressed that thearea of North Main south of- _High and Newell is usuallydeserted after 6 p m If thehomes in the other area wereconverted to office space.then that wogld happenthere, too
The PZC should be put onnotice Alter an unfair lawDon't change the zone Thecolonial era homes thereshould not suffer the samefate of St Thomas Rectory
the town should also bend over backwardsto do everything it can for the businessman•ho r, adding the tax. rolls, making thetov, n healthier financially, and more_,a!trac-live
taken
We are staying in the dark ages And woebe the local businessman who seeks to ex-pafl or build'
Sacking a RepublicanDan Massuccl fired off an emotional let-
ter to the editor and it cost him his seat onthe Youth Advisory Committee Massucci,a member of the Young Republicans, wastaken off the committee by Town Councilchairman Robert Cusano, a Democrat
Massuccl's charges in his letter werestrong, calling some of the Democrats onthe town's governing body "corrupt ""That's a pretty strong statement, but itmust be taken into consideration thatyouthIul exuberance can get one m hotwater at hmes
Massuccl shouldn't have been taken offthe Committee He worked hard on theCommittee and would ha,•e been a strongand good representative had he been allow-ed to stay To abruptly dmmiss the youngRepublican for remarks made in a letterwas a sign from the chairman of the,councilhe's theboss and only those who don t speakup remain Just because Messrs Massuccland Cusano have altering philosophies onhow the town should be run shouldn'tpreclude dialogue between the two whendiscussing the subject of makipgSouthmgton a better town for the youth
However. there were plenty of volleysfired from both Democrats andRepublicans during the last campaign con-cermng the Circuit Breaker proposalwhlchwas a Democratic idea highly criticized bythe Republicans. and ultimately vofed downby the voters m a referendum
On the contrary, those with opposingpoints of view can bring about better ideaswhen they place their opinions on the tableThus, for the council chairman to feel heand Massuccl couldn't have a dialogue afterthe letter to the editor doesn't wash.
Festival time againA sure sign of fall -- the Apple Harvest
Festival is here again Thousands of peoplewill converge on our town starting thisSaturday when the Festival commencest see page I story •
The 16th annual event has grown m m-credible proportions over the years It ishard to envision that those who came upwith the idea many years ago would see theFestival grow in leaps and bounds
The fruits of all the labor that goes into
the Festival goes to various service andchurch groups Plenty of profits for suchworthwhile organizations
Sunday's parade is a grand affair whichwill swell the populace in town by thousandsand thousands And the food in all thebooths m sogood
Southmgton's Chamber of Commerce hasdone itself proud with the Festival We canonly wish them good weather, and thanksfor the special fall ottermg
On and Off the Recordby Bob Douglas
Liberals gain ground among DemocratsIs the state Democratic
party' bending to the leftwhile President Reagan isperched to lead his con-servahve cause to anotherConnecticut victory inNovember"
Two veteran and con-servat•ve-thlnkmg staterepresentatives close to GovWilliam O'Neill lost to liberalchallengers m the Sept 11thparty primaries
Mdes Rapoport. formerdirector of the ConnecticutCitizens Action Group.defeated Rep JoanKemler--a five-term in-cumbent --in West Hartford's18th Assembly Distract TheKemler defeat was a shockerbecause politically she was aGeneral Assembly insider.and her legislative seat wasconsidered one of the safestIn Danburv's 109th District,Lynn Tab'orsak. a formerdirector of the state chapterof the Nahonal Organization
for Women. pulled off astunning primary upset bydefeating a ten-yearDemocratic incumbent, RepJoseph Walko•'ich
In another contest that hasDemocratic liberalssmiling. 23-year-oldJonathan Polio--whomanaged. Sen Gary Hart'sConnecticut primary vic-tory-defeated MansfieldMayor Jane Ann Bobbttt forthe Democratic nominationfor state representative inthe 54th District If all three/win in the general election inNovember, they. will prowdethe liberal wing of theDemocratic Party moremuscle in the statelegislature
That power may be dilutedif President Reagan'scoattails can gain a majorityfor the GOP in the GeneralAssembly
But the victoriesengineered by liberals
Rapopl)rt, Tat)orsak andPelto could have an •mpacton legmlatmn and futurepolitical feuds reside theDemocrahc Party
The success of thesechallengers can be expectedto spread The leadership ofGov O'Nedl and his allies Inthe General Assembl) isunder attack, not nuly fromRepubhcans but from thoseliberals m the part3 x•ho• ant to call the shots
The state House pmmar.,,confrontatmn •as anotherround m •hat man) behoveto he a mo•e h) IormerCongressman Toby, Moffetlto challenge Gov "O Neill in1986
The Leglslatwe ElectoralAction Program tLEAP>, aliberal state coahhon of 22varmus groups '.upportedthe three challengers whowon on prunar3 day LEAPTreasurer George Springertold a state cap•tol nexusconference that the primary
•lctorms •ere defeat •'ort)uslness as usual ""It's no secret that LEAP
x•ould like to take on Gov•l Nedl m 1986. and many of•ts members hope Moffettx•dl lead the party's liberalIorces
Gov O'Neill hasd•scounled the primary winsas evidence o[ a civil wargoing on x•flhm the party Hebehoves local issues andpersonalltms decided theoutcome ot those primariesI•ut the success of the liberalcandidates signals an
ongoing battle x•ithln thestate's Democratic party forpowei" and control
It also may be a sign thatone element of theDemocratic Party Ismarchmg to a differentdrummer And that may beanother 'reason whyPresident Reagan and hisConnecttcut supporters feelso confident
Nancy Johnson's Congressional Re ort
Serious Social Security questions addressed
Hats off to Waterbury mayor!%hen a Repubhcan president visits a city
wflh a strong Democratic stronghold led by•ts mayor, how does the latter handle thesfluahon" Well, in the case of Presidentlteagan dropping m on WaterLurv lastweek. l)emoeratw Mayor Edward DBergm welcnmed the Repubhcan's numberone person w•th class
Heagan's appearance certmly waspohhcal, tie was there to boost Ihe chancesof John G Howland to wrest control of the
Bergm rolled out the red carpet Good forhun
The l)emllcratlc mayor also drop()ed afew ntcehes •n introducing Reagan bycongratulahng the president for meetingthe challenges of the I)ast four years head-on and for coming to the heartland of theI)cmocrahc Part.,, m Connecticut
Thus it v,a,. proper that Bergln did whathe did But •t alsoshowed a touch of class
-J?ff•.h Dt•tra•mboat-J•emocraL•'h•ch •s rather rare in thee p_qbtlcal arena.I' S Rep Wdham Ratchford unforhzn•[tb[v -
But the fact remained. •t was apresfflenhal v•slt to a city which i arely seeslhe chwf iif staff m person It was historicalThe schools were closed for the day and
Letters to editorappear on page 7
A dmproporhonately largenumber of older women inthis country are living onsevereb h'm•ted incomes.depending solely on monthlySocial Security checksWomen repre•,enI nearly 60percent of the over-65 pop-ulatmn,. Wilhlu that 60 per-cent. three quarters arepoor The median income forsemor •nmen is only halfthat of retm-.•i men. andv, hde thr• is hi,cause only 18percenl o[ ,,•omen receivepensions. •I is a human
participate in the unveilingof a new study last week onthe economic status of olderwomen by the Women'sResearch Education In-stitute (WREII of theCongressional Caucus forWomen's Issues The eventhad special significance forme and Connecticutresidents because it wasfunded by The TravelersCorporation of Connecticut.Its qoahty demonstrates thepotential that lies in publicand •rlvate sector
1 am xer) pleased that thepensmn reform legislation,which I co,,ponsored andwhwh recently passed theCongress, wdl change this inthe future, anll 1 was proud to
•__._•_£.9•r•ttmnand the up-porlumty for such lmtiahvesto provide data from whichsound public policy can bedeveloped
The study revealed that •nthe last year, we have made
little progre,,;,, twxard Im-proxmg lhe econnmw statusof women m Amerwa It d•d,ho• ex er att•rm thatlegnslatmn passed last yearassured lhe soh'encv of theSocml Securfl• system andprowded mdllon• el older• OlRen who are dependenl on
then" monlhh, Socml Securdychecks •l• al least lhe
I lle,,' need"I;housands of people in
('onnectlcut have un-justlflabl} been deniedbenefits and have soughthelp from mv office Oftenthese are olOer people, m-lured at work or taken ill.with few alternatives TheSocial Securdy DisabilityReview legislation passed
certainty that Chew benefits last week would 11 requirewdlconiume • the Social Security Ad-
As a co-sponsor n[ theoriginal }louse bill toeslahlmh a fan" standard for
-review -ot Soetat-•ec-untydlsablhD cases. I waspleased last •eek tii vote onfinal passage and send IoPresident Reagan soundlegislation that wdl assuredisabled persons the benefits
ministration to prove abeneficlary's medicalcOndlhon has Improvedbern.re terminating benefits,2) rd(•uqrt•ex-ammor•.to take _inlo account the cumulativeeffect of mullaple im-pairments, 3) conhnue amoratormm on reviewstd regulations are in place
your page----The Observer, Thursday, Sept 27, 1984
leffers fo fhe newspaper
Junior High girls slighted in soccerEditor's note: The
following letter was sentto Superintendent ofSchools John Pyne byresident Shari Guarinoin her attempt to findout why there is no girlssoccer program in thejunior high schools. A
• Shari Guarino forpublication in this issue."
Dear Mr. Pyne.
I am' very concernedabout the tack of asoccer pro.gram for girlsin the junior highschools in SouthlngtonAlthough I've con-sldered the schoolsystem's views on the.matter, the only con-ctusion I can reach isthe2 this policy isdiscriminatory and m-defensible
Row can you justifyhaving soccer teams forboys and none for girls?In the absence of a fallsport for girls in juniorhigh school, how canyou prt)hiblt girls from
trying out for positionsan the boys' teams."Aren't female athletesas important as maleathletes in Southlngton •They certainly aren'tbeing given equal op-
portunities •
wasn't enough interest,n girls soccer at juniorhigh level to make ateam at each schoolThis is nonsense TheSouthlngtqn YouthSoccer League has 57girls, ages 12, 13, and 14,registered I'm surethere are many moregirls who would like toplay on a girls onlyteam
Lack of funding hasbeen gwea as 2xmtherexcuse for short-changing the girls Evenif soccer were a veryextensive sport (whichit isn't) I can only thinkthat if you can findfunds for boys' teamsyou can (and should)find funds for girls'teams
The other excuse fordenying the girls anopportunity to play ha,sbeen that there aren tgirl's teams in othertowns There are girl'steams at the junior highlevel I've just begunlooking into this so I
8th grade girls should beable to try out for theboys' teams, this yearAnything less is simplyunfair The excuse thatsoccer is too rough asport to be played co-edis just that--an excuse--and a poor one If 1,000
teams, but I know of fiveschools that do Becausemost other area townshave middle schoolstgrades 6-8) we wouldhave to continue havingour ninth grade girlsplay on the high schoolgirls' team Findingteams to compete withwould be no problem
I'll concede that
season would be dlf:ficult, but now is thetime to plan for nextyear A program forgirls is long overdueand I'm amazed that ithas taken so long toresolve For thepresent I feel verystrongly that the 7th and
Southlngton YouthSoccer League. why notin the schools."
After consideringthese excuses. I cancome to only one con-cluslon Seventh andeighth grade girls in
.Southlngton are beingdenied an opportunity toplay for only one reason.because they're girls!How can you justify or
getting girls' teams defend such a policy."orgalli/•d JJ:IL thts_•rlow £a.n__you•[ow ij;. to
continue" In the interestof fairness. I hope youwill work to change thismtuatlon at once Thankyou for your cooper-ahon
citizen levels blast
Yours truly,Shari Guarino
22 Merriman Circle
S nior at RepublicansSince our home was What good is it to take
reevaluated, our taxes your choice and lose outhave gone sky high I lathe end."can't understand wher•the Republicans will The Circuit Breakerhave to gain by giving was voted at a publicus a lien We worked meeting Why so muchhard in our lives as.have ado about nothing?many more for their Putting on a referen-homes Now to have dum who is kiddingthose homes taken away whom?because of. the liens My wife and I havefrom our children--I been Democrats andjust don't understand it always will be
The Republican Partyhas taken all our seniorcitizen benefits due inJuly•holding them untilJanuary And they aredoing away with Triage•making things moredifficult for us
Sincerely.Karl Kishkiunas
25 WhippoorwilI Rd.Southington
To the editor:
My wife and I haveworked all of our livesNow, we are retired
When the first CircuitBreaker ordinance tookeffect• we only paid afew dollars
! am a double am-putee as of eight-and-a-half years ago, also aU S. World War IIserviceman
Dems shouldn't be taking credit for surplusthe money we spent atthe end of the year"makes me wonder justwhat these politiciansare talking about
Just recently, twoexpenditures weremade that were notitems in the budget Themoney will come out ofthe contingency fund Isthis the same as"spending at the end ofthe year?" Is "heavycutting" done becauseof careful study of thebudget to eliminate
unjustified expendituresor only to create asurplus `)
The Board of Financeis non-partisan and iselected by the peopleand they work hard toserve the taxpayers Ifthe politicians did such"heavy cuttlng'• as theyclaim, they would nothave had to raise taxesagain and again
Councilman Korenk-lewlcz stated the "townwas overtaxed lastyear " This means that
homeowners, young andold, were overburdenedand should be givenrebates. I wonder howmuch more money willbe spent outside of thebudget process j•tbecause of a surplus forwhich the Demoerahcpoliticians have takencredit for its creationHow much will the taxincrease be in 1985."
Mrs. F.J. MarineIt Whippoorwill Rd.
Southington
To the Editor:
In the Sept 20th issueof The Obscrrer. theDemocratic politiciansare taking eredll for asurplus in the 19•3-84budget There is an oldsaying. "don't countyour chickens beforeibey are hatched "
The statements "the
surplus is a vindication,)f their heavy cutting•vhen the budget wasformed" and "that's abig surplus considering
Young Republicans claim charge is unfairevery Young Republic-an agrees that thoseseniors in need of taxassistance should behelped
Our group takes pridein itself The YoungRepublicans take pridein the fact that we arelooking out for the bestinterests of SouthingtonWe have held two publicforums on pollutionproblems in this town.and we will continue towork hard to protecttown residents Ourvice-president DaveMoreHl spend manylong hours researching•ollution problems, and
e did it because he
cares about our townEvery Young Republic-an cares
Unfortunately, somepeople take for grantedthe freedom of thepress They write liesabout people and don'tthink twice about •t Ihope everyone willforget what they readlast week It isn't trueYoung Republicanscare abo• our sem-orcitizens, YoungRepublicans care aboutSoutbington
SincerelLDan Massucci.
President.Young Republican•
Town board meetings
Town Council--second and fourth Mondays, 7 30
p m. CourtroomPlanning affd Zoning Commission--first and
third Tuesdays, 7 30 p.m, planning officeZoning B•ard of Appeals--second and fourth
Tuesdays, 7: 30 p.m, courtroom. -Board of Water Commissioners--second Thurs-
day, 7" 30 p m, water deptBoard nf Police---same time unless specifiedBoard of Fire Commlssioners--s•eOmt Tuesday,
fire office, 7: 30 p.mBoard of Finance--second Wednesday, confer
ence room, Town Hall, 7" 30 p mBoard of Education--second and fourth Thurs-
days, unless specified, BOE office, 7:30 p m
To theeditor: t•e Circuit BreakerFurthermore, no such
I was very disturbed Young Republicanlast week when I party or victorybecame aware of a celebration or anythingblatant lie Art Kratzke ever took place thathad written about my night Words such asorganization--the those Mr KratzkesaldSouthington Young Re- were "proudly" spokenpublicans at the 'imaginary' party
"l•he lie. which ap- are terrible It'speared in one of outrageous that heKratzke's usual letters would have the nerve toto the editor, was as say such a thing: not afollows single Young Republic-
' " The Young an would never drop toRepublicans, I am told. such a low level Anyheld a victory party Young Republican whoelection [Circuit opposed the CircuitBreakerl night At this - Breaker did so becauseparty, they proudly he/she knew it was un-called themselves 'The fair legislation, andCircuit Breakers ' "
That's a disgusting Letters!lie' Art Kratzke shouldbe ashamed of himself The ObserverThe man who is welcomes orginal let-Secretary of a townwide ters from readers onorganization [The subjects of current
interest Letters shouldSouthlngton TaxpayersAssoclationl should be typed, if possible, orhave more respect for wrtl•o• l--.bly-•}rr nnethe towncitl2ens than to side ,,, lhe paper andprint damaging lies Not contain name, addressonly was that lie about arid hand writtenour group damaging," signaturesbut it was so far out of Please try and get thewhack that it nearly put letters to The Oh-me into a state of shock server editorial officeswhen I first read it downtown, across from
Ironically, several the post office. 132 MainYoung Republicans St , P 0 BOx 648,were not even against $outhington, CT 06469
The year was 1980 -and tJ, orld •Aar I xeteran Xdain Ractkm...-ski ,aas mattldng in the Xpple Ilarxest Feql•al parade at the
ripe old age of •5. Thi• xear. the 89-xear-old •eteran •ill take part In his last local parade, ill ,i jeepprovided b) Naugatuck "Xrm> personnel Adam i• a nah•e of Naugatuck. although hc ha• hxed Ul ourtoxin since the 1920"s.
Speaking Out!by Michael Murphy
Fusco has 'feel' for diverse groupsSouthlngton citizens combined v, lth honest, and. more lmportantl• go against his partx
n•ed a State strongleadershlp kn,,w., that everyone phdosophy or •tance mRepresentative x•ho Th•s comblnahon of Ibis solnelhlng {coffer order to bcnc/ll thetruly represents the concern and strong Isn't fl hme that people He kno• Ihdl•ople A person •ho leadership •s nursing m Soulhmgton had a State going agatoM the gramknows the n•ds of the our state Angelo •fll Heprcgenlall•e who t• not alx•a• poptdaremployer and era- brmg lhls COl•bmatmn cdresabo•l ouroptnmns But he knox• Ibal allot
ployee, the town and the In ttarlford tot the and bebeves m com- lhe dust •ellles. lheindividual, the leader peopleotgouttnngton mumcatmgx•Hhus" successful Implement-and the follox•er Angelo •s xer• aehve We need a Represent- atmn of • bill orSomeone who can m lhe to•n. currentl3 ahve•ho•fll nol forget can onl• bc donebalance the needs of serving as a I)•slrtcl us after the •otes are through tcam•ork andlhese diverse groups Manager for thc cam Someone" •ho p•severanceThe person that Republican To•n x• anls to represent us ttavlng a StateSouthington needs a• Uommttlee and a F•sh Ang•lo has the Representahxe x•tlhState Representahve •s and Game •arden tte leadcr•htpquahtte•thal Ihe•e ([ualltle• •tllAngeloFusco under•l,mds that one make ,m etlechxe Slate beneftl the t'fltzcns of
I am a co-worker of must use one s ahdfl]es llepresenlahve As a Soulhmgton all ol us*Xngelo*s at Pralt & to give hack to the to•n Fwsl IJeutemmt m lhe Angelo Fu•eo has theWhitney As t'nton x•htle working tox•ards Arm> Reserve. he ha• negohahng skdls un-President. I have improvements tte learned interpersonal dershmdmg ol peopleworked•flhhnn forlhe kno•s that mdwtduals skills and people anti eommumeattonbetterment of the jobs have umque separale management along•flh ,d)lllhe• Ioao ellechveand hves of our mere- ideas and that these leadership Where else and credd•h, Stalebets Angelo•sachvem ]deasmu•tbeprescnled • d more Hnporlant Io Repre•entattxe forthe umon because he and hstened to b3 have good leaderslnp Southmglon•hares our concerns others quahh•s than m the o•n. he has laken the
Also. Angelo has been defenst and prolechon first step b3 serwng anthe co-ogner of a small Angelo ha• lot a long ofournahon" internship x•th Stalebumness He kno•s the hme expressed his These quabhes may Representahve M•gbaxarlous SitHatlons and Oplmons on issues bc nalHFal to some hut ro at thc Simile ]louse
problems lhat a facing the commuml3 the vet) good conbumness o•ner faces and state And he has hnu,dl3 unpro•e aod The x oter• ofHe knox, s lhal k•ken lhe t,ne h• hslen •lrenglhen lhe•e Soulhmglon must lakemmmanagement of 1o lhe peoph, thew quahhes Angelo a •lep Iorlher b•lunds or people can lead roncerns, lhcw •dcas Wehavcseensoman3 elechng hm• SidleIofallure lhewopmmn• bdls pas•cd m our sldh' Beprp•enl,lh•e II •e
Angeloreabzesthal m For t(}olong dct'•mns bet',m•e the Democrats don t. we II b.•xe no onebusiness, as m •tate m our •klle hdxe been •ote on part) lines to hk•¢,h••overnme•t. the •'• ma• • ¢m l• q•cking together hke •hen the •,llHecerns of the people mu•t oomton• ol a le• glue Th• t• Ioadershtp" rheh)rle t'omc•be addressed and Angelo kno•s people. Angelot•not alratdto It.trllordncxtxear
Response for political forum has been 'good'
To the editor:
The Southtngt,,ntaxpayers Assoclaholl
Inc is pleased ,.•llh Ihereponse so far Irolncandidates for pohhcaloffice Io appear at ourforum on t)clober1984 at 7 30 pm in theTown Hall Courl RoonlSeven have stud theywill appear
Invitahons have beensent hrst to both local-party _•h•ers•nsinsure Ihal -dldates reCrlx t' •tlllltnotice if for some reasonthe mail doesn't reachlhem
Two Imps
.thee In llalth,rd
obt,un up d,dcd lists
,:,uidl(l,d e•, and their
m,•dc TotI,L'. ,m,,tilcl
trip •1]] be madeol>tam th• •el Io he
rmnpdcd
Personal appeals tohoth Senal,,rs ('hreq
opher Dodd and I,owellV','eu'ker h) encouragelhe n,dtonal (.,lndtdate•
recorde(t in the
.%et'l'el,i r• ot Sidle `+`
olhce ',o all •.11 haxe
I)t•2 n nohln'(I
"]'hc dl).IxI' I• ,i (luote
Ironl lhe ht)(l,, ,+I lhe
in'.+ll,Hlon to lhe lot',il
cop> ')l 'Ahlt'h x•,l', ',enl
tendlng hopehlll.,,, the, hoping for olbcl rcpbe,,
earherre(luest vdllg,un I now seck theplace on xour h•t cooperation ol the
Soulhlngto• ts a puhbc to make the
• eentrall) Totaled presence lqea,eaccepl
x-+.)lamcd a ('o])• of lhc I(,dor,•l ,ll•(t '.Idle
parlv chmrperson• t)eauhlul toxin St" I'reqdeot
llopefull}, all mmov AI• appearance in Soolhiogtoo TaMm•er•parl 3 and pehtlon Southmgton can be X•Mwiation. I)O Boxcandidates h•ay wdl produchxcpobhcall• lt.•nuthiogton. CT
farriily li ring The Observer, Thursday, Sept .27, 1984
Observations
The Auxiliary ofBradle•y Memorialltospltal and Health'are Center currently is
•n the midst of amcml,•rship •
Hynn, president of thegroup, and Tern Gof-lred, membershipchairman
Physically fitThe ,,tudents at North ('enter Elementary School again received the Presideot's Council on PhysicalI:ltnev, and Sport,, Av.ard. for having the highest percentage of qualifying elementary school students ina .,chool of h• o to 500 pupils. Twenb-three percent of the pupils passed the youth fitness test. In the abovephoto. ,, me o[ the happy pupils at North ('enter pose for photographer Beth Utke. The school will receive
a plaque add presidential a•ard.
Kelly Russell is chosen as Festival Queen
Flynn-noted that overthe years, the aunharyhas "helped the hospitalb.,, purchasing thous-ands of dollars of need-ed equipment The aux-d•ary also has offeredhealth education pro-grams, gwen scholar-shps to future healthcare prof•-sslonals, op-:crated a cheer cart. and{he mira gift and thriftshops
The group's presidentsaid achve and inactivemembers are needed"Acttve members arealways needed." Flynnsald. "It's a way tomake friends, galnvaluable experience andpersona] pleasure '"
I{u,.sell v.as chosenApple ttarve',l FeshvalQueen Salurday mghtKell,. explained she wasdeh•hled hut ,,hocked atthe decms.m "I stillcan't beheve Ft." she'•,,(I, n.hng she ts happyto repre.wnt Southmg-ton •n the [eshval TheApple Ft•. hval runs unt dSunda.', ()ctober 7
Russell samd shedec•ded to appl.,, as oneof the tl currenthostesses because she"tb•ought d x`.ould be
Kelly Russell
fun" and she -v, anfed tomeet people -
One of the reasons theSouthlngton Hmgh seniorwas chosen was becauseof her essay on volufl-teer• VblunteensmIs the 'theme of this
year's Festival Parade"l '.• role I think rat's goodfor the feshval torecogmze the volun-teers." Russell sa•d.noting that the whole•dea of the week-long
,event •s for people tohave fun. and to ramsemoney for the local c•vmcgroups
Kelly and the 10 otherhostesses rode Sundaym the Bristol MumFesbval They will alsopresmde over openingceremonies of the AppleFeshval Saturday onthe Town Green Aspecmal treat for Kelly.the other youngwomen, and the town,wdl be a dance numberthe girls have planned mnSaturday mght's Yoking
People's Talent Show-case. to be presented atCentral Elementary
One thing Kelly isquite sure about Inrecent vears, some ofthe appl• hostesses havegone on to run for MissSouthmgton Kelly hasno mtenhons of beingMiss Southington How-ever. she does plan toenter college and stud•,Business Managementwhen she graduates inJune. 1985
At SHS, Kelly msheavdly involved m theKev Club She is also re-volved with her youthgroup at PlantsvdleCongregational Church
Kelly is the daughterof Ken and D•aneRussell of Southmgton
Inactive membersalso are welcome Theauxdmary Is grateful forthe support Cost of aregular membership ms$5 a year. sustainingmembership ms $10 a•,ear. and life mem-,bershlo •s $100
Flynn said to send)our name. address.and check to Auxdlary.Bradley Hospdal.Mermden Ave .Southmgton, 06489
Three students fromNew Hampsh,lre
College, School ofHuman Services. JuneBryant. Karen Sabo,and Jan Megas. Inconjunchon with RitaBartlelL Town WelfareOfficer and assistant.Lea Porter. are plan-
llo,,p•talxull he thestte •tatex•e lleallhol a Free Stop Smoking %ellnessmonth('bntc I)egmnmg ()c Accordmg h) Ernesttoher lq lrom 7 30 lo h•ron F•xe Day Plan• n. p m lot five con- d•rector and health•ecuhw daj• coordmalor lot the
The "F•w 1)a3 Plan •hot't'h. more thanto Stop Smoking", mtlhon persons havecop) r•ghled m Iq62 quit •mokmg through•n•(fl•('• a hudd) lhe plan•qem group lherap) For about 90 mmule•,rod a ' personal control el each of hxe eveningsprogram The chmc • .I Ihe plan, a mlmslerollered I)• lhe local heallh educalor learnSeu'nlh (li•) Ad•enhsl •dl d•rect a groupchurches ,is part ut thcrap> •eSslon l,ecBradley's mvolvemenl lures on them Ihe Connechcul ps?choloncal aspects ot
scheduled October 1 .,ng an onentatmn andopen house for volun-teers mterested in
•nok•ng. its ha,.,, to deal wlth workmg at Shlrlee'sph.•stolog•c,II effecls smoking an a "ph.•smcal. Bouhque The Boutiquefihns and exchanges b.v mental and social" ts a source of freethe parhc•pants are level Each participant clothing for socialincluded •dl also be assigned a service chents and other
Complete Dental Carefor the entire family
621-5040
Eady Mornin¢ Evening and Saturday Hem
CAPS (CROWNS)
Each parhctpant v, dl budd.• needymndremdualsreceive a booklet•outhmng a "persoua]control program" mqep h.', slep fashion foreach of the ft',e daysVarious techmq.ues helpthe smoker to learn he,,`.to relax, a,.ozd famdar,,nluahons h ke]', to',hmulate srno'kmng.deczde v, hat to eat anddrink, and ,.,,hat to thinkat "crucmal tu'nes- and
The onentahon will beheld on Thursday,September 27, from 7 to8 p.m, m the WelfareOffice at To•,'n Hall For
-mo•-mforaa:mhon. ca!!
The Arts and CraftsAssoclahon wdl sponsora program on Wed-nesday, October 3, at 7p m. at the center,Main Street Theprogram ms. gmven byarea photographer h'aYellen, who will talk onbemng a betterphotographer Thinsopen to the pubhc
Red Cross instructorRobb¥1 •hiVlma• -,x"rtlteach a CPR course,starhng Tuesda) •October 16. runnmgThursdaL October 18and ending Tuesday.October 23. at theMdldale School. from 7to 10 p m Call 628-2600for reservations
YMCA Seiners •meet Monda.'.. October1. I pro.at theY Hallon High Street Therealso ,,,.ill be a luncheonand social hour
The F•rst BaptistChurch v, dl hold •tsMertden Avenue Markeland Boutique -onSaturday, Sept 29. from10 am to 4 pm. onMende• Avenue
Some of the featureswdl include Counlr,.Kmtchen, Nature'•Bounb, the NeedleNook. Lunch a la Carte.Pdlo,.• Talk. HohdayHandicrafts. the GreenThumb. Children'sBooth. Fish Pond andBalloons. as ,,,.ell as theTreasures and TrashSate There will also bea Silent Auction for aFriendship Qudt made
h,. the women of the ,Proteetlon Teaml,¢trst Baptist Church coordinator, associated
with the Children'sFollowmng the Fair at Trust Fund Project, the
6 p m. there wdl be an session will presentold-fa•htoned Ham and achvltles that will helpBaked Bean Sup0i•r commdffltV leader• to"l'tckets lor lhe supper mdentffy maltreatedare available mn ad- children and willvance from committee troduce agencies andmembers or at the resources for respon-('hutch office Mrs dlng to child abuse andJean Carlson ms neglect reportschairperson el the ****event Congratulations to
**** Sout hmglon's newestIn an effort to educate licensed balloon pilot,
the commumt.', about Lots Osher. of 841the problems and Prospect St. Plant-prevention of child svdleabuse and neglect, the ****Southmgton Parent- The YMCA SeniorsTeadaer•tmeit -va4t .an•outtce that_ a fewpresent a program on seats remain forTuesda.', October '2 at members and friends to7 3It p m in B•cen- attend the lobster baketenmal Auditorium. m New HampshmreCentral School The Please call Jiggy at 628-program ms designed for 6708 for more mfoall persons v.ho come incontact v, th children-- The Stroke Clubv, hether parents, meetthursdav. Sepl 27.grandparents, neigh- 7 p m at \Voodmere
Health Care Centerhers. doctors, day-care Summmt St ,Plantsvdlexu)i'kers, pohce, clergy.Sunday school teachers, The club •s for peopleor Scout leaders who have experienced
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The Observer, Thursday, Sept. 27, 19•4
Weddings
Mrs. Lynda Beattie
Lynda Simpsonmarries Atlen J.
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Bennett
Diane LaMontagneweds Eric A. Bennett
tffe• Diane LaMontagne. handmade at Ronanne'sBea Jr. .nd Eric A Bennelt m Plar•svflDLynda F Simpsonand Best man was Robert were married June 23. Paul Bennett v, as best
Allen J Beathe. Jr Blain. while Edward tl a m • at Mary Our man. while Chris Jones.were unitedmmarrlage Madore and Todd Botto queen Church in James Whalen. andon June 29. at St An- were ushers Jason Southington The Rev Kurt Fuchs werethony's Church m Reklaflm x•as ring Arthur Dupont of- ushersBristol The Rev bearer hmated The new Mrs BennettSalvatore Cavagnuolo The bride x•as The repiner Miss La- was graduated m 1980officiated gradttated from Montagnemdaughterof from Southmgton High
Southlngton High Mr and Mrs Armand and from CentralThe former Miss School Currently. she LaMontagne of159 Pond Connecticut State
Simpson •s daughter of attends Central Con- View Drive Mr Ben- University in 1984 SheBarbara H Drost and necticut State nett m son of Mr and m a teacher at MillsRobert E Sunpson. Sr Umversity m Nex• Mrs Jan Bennett of 143 High School inMr Beathe is son of Ann Britain Gannet Drive Burlingtona•l AIle.n Beathe. Sr. of The groom was The bride was given in Mr. Bennett wasI•lstol graduated from Bristol marriage by her father graduated from
Central High School. the Juhe O'Hala was maid Southlngton High mCherm Blumer of University of Hartford. of honor, wi'ule Lisa 1980. and from the
Southmgtonwas maldof and Ward Technical Palumbo, Carolyn Pu- University of Hartfordhonor, while Patmma School leo and Alison Harper College of EngineeringKalosky of Southmgton After a reception in were bridesmaids The in 1984and the bride's sister-m- their honor at Nuchm's bride wore a Victorian After a reception atlaw Geanna Simpson m Forestvllle, the style gown of embrmd- Old Cromwell Inn, thewere bridesmaids couple left for a trip to ered organza lace with couple left for a weddmgNicole Simpson was Nova Scotia They will Venice lace trim The trip to Cape Cod Theyflower girl resideln Bristol gown and veil were wlllllvelnSouthington
Grimaldi is named our Teacher of the YearMrs Judith M Program. sponsored by skilled and dedmaf•d University lab school m
Gmmaldl. third grade the Council of Chief teachmg, and having Nee. Britain and in theteacher at North Center State School Officers. the respect and ad- Intensive Program forSchool. has been named the Encyclopedia mirahon of students. College Graduates atSouthmgton's Teacher Britannica Companies colleagues and ad- Central Connechcutof theYear Through the and Good Housekeeping mmmtrators State University SheTeacher of the Year Magzme Mrs Gnmaldl was has been a primaryprogram, a Southlngton The selection process graduated from Central grade teacherteacher is chosen to involved e•ach Connecticut State SouthLngton for 16symbolize the fine el- Southmgton school Umverslty with a yearsforts of dedicated principal nominating Bachelor of Scienceteachers throughout the one teacher who would degree in Education and She has served ontown Mrs Gmmaldl be honored as received a Master of numerous local com-will go on to represent representative of all Science degree in Ad- mlttees in the schoolSouthmgton in the- dedmatedteachers The ministration and system and workedConnecticut Teacher of most important quality Supervision from the ),ear on a committeethe Year Program a nominee should University of orgamzed to reaet to DrThe winner of the possess, according to Bmdgeport She has Gerald " TtrozztConnecticut Teacher of the state criteria is "a done additional proposals to improvethe Year Award will superior ability to in- graduate work at the educationrepresent Connecticut spire learning in University of Con- Mrs. Grimald, hasin the NahonalTeacher students " Other necticut Mrs Gnmaldi also been activelyof theYear competition criteria included active has taught in the Cen- volved with many cwwThe local, state, and participation in the tral Connecticut State organizationsha'aerial programs are community, leadershippart of the National in civic andTeacher of the Year humanitarian activities.
Counselors prepareMember,, of the staff at the Counseling Cooperati• e m Plant.• ilh' recentl) held an open hou,,e. Ilere wesee the staff meeting to discuss their nex• program I,e[t tu right: Paul Vkmn. Tamara Digman. JohnR¢•ddick.Jr.. and Jeanne Schumann.
Mr. and Mrs. Grenier
Blind scholarshipBlind people ma.• Thm,e a•ards are
apply for either the g•ven by the Natumal$1,500 scholarship for Federatmn ot the Bhndcollege students, or m ('onn For more in$1,500 for vocahonal formatmn, contac! (;inl,,tudents In add]hen. Perbnan.:lSan[ord Rd.there is a $500 music Manchester. ('Tperformance award or p•one 646-7917
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The couple reheated •ilh The lied ('ross. Stlhelr Indrrla•(' %1i%%s dl "['bomd• Church and,ill ouldoor in,i• • I/i',id h'• Memorialt'elehrd h'd tl• Rex Ihl•inl,iI Thrill Shop
Kindergarten Registrationweek of October 8
,hilne• J &r•en.ulll be on "rue,,(|d', October
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•t,ph(,ti tl PswP•tl)P(,•ident ()I ScholaP•h•p• t nlHntted, a
or cootph'lnng college
ARE YOURLIFE INSURANCE
DOLLARSEARNINGA-GOOD
RETURN?
Barbara Miesak
Military news
New ttanpsh•reLt Bobrm`.]eckl
beg•n his Marineassigmnenl `.`. ulh.Judge A(h ,)care'. Off)ce)n October )9)t3
Bet oardl was award-ed lhe A+r AssaullBadge lie •s an air-home mfanlrymana•+gned to the I01+IPaths[ruder Co at. FqrlCampbell Thal +s theonly l•antr• umtjump status in the 10lstAirborne
SP ]4 BernardCs othera•ards include theParachuhsl Badge,
Arco• Second A•ard.Good Conduct Second +Award. Natlon,t]Defense Medal.Professmna] ' Develop-ment Amard and ArmySerxuce Rut)hou
Rwk Bernard• •,•gradualed m 197fiSoulhmgh)n thgh Ih'lhe son of Rwk Bernard)ol • alhngh)rd and Fa•eBernard) of SoulhmgIon
Support theA pple Harvest Festival
See you at the Parade!
Re-Elect
LOREN
DICKINSONState Representative 30th District
Berlin Southington
Kimberly Gorr
The Observer, Thursday, Sept. 27, 1984
Five local womenwin PNA awards
Five Southlngton Beverly Wltkoskl, 27
young women, recently Roseanna Road •graduated from Currently, Charlene isSouthlngton High at Emerson College tn
School. have been Boston, majoring inawarded the scholar- Public Relationsships in memory of Mms Mmsak is theDawd T Zdunezyk, daughter of Jozef and
according to a spokes- Czeslawa Miesak o.f 28man for the Pobsh Whitney Ave BarbaraNational Alhance is studying at the
Group, No, 684 Umversity of Con-Three of the women necticut She •s
are pictured 0t the left •pursuing a career mThe other two will ap- m•di•ab•h•mistry.
next week Those plc- daughter of' Alan andlured here are Charlene Kathleen Gorr of 24Wltkos:ki. Barbara Cambridge Dr She isMlesal• and Klmberly attending BryantGorr College m Rhode Island,Miss W•tkoskl is the taking up Busmessdaughter of Robert and Management
Music scholarshipN•cholas A Azzolma, Gentile's Sentimental
President of Local No Journey" are $6 per55, American Feder- person A telephone
Assoctahon. announced m Me|den. Walling-today that the A F of M ford, Southmgton andwill once again sponsor Cheshire to sell ticketsthe Musicians Scholar- to the show and pro-ship Drive, to benefit gram book advertising,
'qaH Sgt AItred G Inlaotr.x l)l•.lsmn, ',,,as qualified high school for mf•matmn, callkmght. •on of E<h•ard prex)()u•l• a+s+gned at music students from the 265-7549, or writel{ and •qnntfred N F•rt•tm Va Mer)d•, Walln•ord. Mumc•s Schol•Knight uf 74 %%oodland Southtngton and Chesh- Drove, 105 South Elml)r,xe has partnc+pated **** we areas who •sh to St. %%allmgford. CT,,n (;h)bal Shmld '•I an Marme l.ance ('pl pursue a musical 06492t,xeu'c•' m•ohtng t b M•chael K tt,otleu+ •t)n career•u l"orce %•t Force o', Russell W and Scholarship awards Holvst•ets)c.(q%e •u %ah,)na] Margot) tin%den ot 300 •dl be presented to the
Na•'• ann Kr,olk•oudRoad, South- •mners at the show. SnecialAward(,u,trd
M•rme ('(u'ps nn)t• and mg•.on, recentl 3 depart- wh)ch •s billed "A]clcmenl• ()1 llffe ed'on a deployment to Ge•tde's Senhmenta] Margaret-Mary Hol-(,umdmo h)rce. " lhc %estern Pacffw Journey." at Maloney vst of I Saw Mdl Lane.
•he .ergeanl • a 1q73 tlei• a memh(• ol 2nd H)gh School. 121 Gravel •]antsvdle. Corm. has• ddu,lh, ol SI P.nll l•atlahon. );lh Marines. St, Menden. on Fmday. rece)ved The Irene Bush( a)h()ht Ih•h sch.ol. Jnd Marine [hvmmn. December 7. at 8 p m S•embock A•ard at theth,.l,)l ('amp[.ejeune N (" B•g Band vocahst Dmk Umvermty cf R•hest-
Wm• t)•1 Paul S th<umt•dl@ends)•- Sanh will he featured er(;.dh) so• ol Mde and month• overseas as part wffh AI Genhle's WRCQ The Stembock AuardMa•)ne ,I Gall,) ()1 87 ()f the Marine Corps' B•g Band. as well as )s g)ven annually to theImnham Road. ha• umt deployment pro- -comedienne Ell•e student m the semorarr)•ed h)r dub at gram Theconcept rode- Emerson and v•abst class m the College of('amp ('ase) South •gued ,o rotate •hole Dora Alfano T•mpet Arts and Scmnces whoKored baltahoK• of squadrons vwtuoso Jeanme P•lus has made the
GaHo. an an'plane at a hme instead of wdl also be featured noteworthy contmbuhonrepawer •)th lhe 2nd m(h%•dua]• T•ckels for "A] tohumanre]ahons
Penny Rose Central sensationOfle of the top female tennis players m
Lady Knights history is astonishingnumerous collegiate opponents on thecourts this season
Penny Rose, who captained theSouthmgton High girls tennis squad andlater was named on the Colonial Con-ference All-Star first team, is playing avital role for the Central Connecticut•omen•s Tennis •eam this season
Only a freshman at CCSU m NewBritain, Rose has won a starting berth andtook first place in three of four singlesmatches and three of four in doublescompetition As a result. Central Con-necticut has notched three victories in thefirst four battles
Head Coach Vic Stone said. "Penny isoutstanding, and a hard hitter, tremen-dous student and definitely has a fantasticfuture here "
The third year coach at CCSU added thatPenny is well disciplined and accepts allcoaching methods very well, and herpotential is unlimited. Being a verypopular and a well-hked student, Roseworks hard every de) she is on the courtand won the fourth of six singles varsitypositions on the team. and is involved withLuz Ponce as the third best doubles teamat the area institution
With three wins on four starts thisseason, Central Connecticut is well aheadof the 1983 pace when the Stone-coachedsquad compiled an 11-4 record
So far this season. CCSU whitewashedConnecticut College 9-0 and dropped a 7-2decaslon to the University of Connecticutbefore rebounding impressively to easilyoutclass Springfield College 8-1 and theUniversity of Bndggport, 9-0
Central Conoe'ctmut won the NewEngland Division Two championship lastseason and could repeat this season
Knights on TVSouthmgton High School gridiron
followers will be able to see the BlueKnights" in action on cable television fivetimes this season starting with the FermiHigh • Enfieldl game at 8 p m. on Oct 2 onDimension Cable ITelesystems of Con-necticut. Inc ) It will appear on the eighthchannel on the cable identification box
A ",•eekly scoreboard show of schoolboyfootball results of the preceding weekendinvolving Memden, Southington andCheshire will be featured on Tuesdays at 8•.m for the season Some of the gamesighhghts and other fall sports will be
included in the s•owThe play-by-play commentary of the
games will be handled by Dave Sweet andPete Talbot
Because the Blue Knights will faceFermi at 10.30 a m Saturday, Sept 29 inEnfmld. Blue Knight followers unable towitness that gridiron battle will get theopportunity to catch them on cabletelevision
The Southmgton at Newington CentralConnecticut Conference battle set forSaturday, Oct 6 will be on cable Tuesday,Oct 9 at 9.30 p.m, while the Blue KnightsMaloney High Spartans conference battleset for Saturday. Oct 20 here will be oncable at 8 p m. Tuesday, Oct 23
The Plait paffthecs-Blue Knights conteston Saturday, Oct 27 here win be featuredon cable at 9"30 p m Tuesday, Oct 30
The Southmgton-Bristol Central con-ference battle at Muzzy Field. Bristol. at 7pm Friday, Nov 2 wlll be on cable at 8p m Tuesday, Nov 6
According to Telesystems of Con-necticut, the scoreboard show everyTuesday will feature results of football,soccer, cross country, field hockey andothers, for Southington, Maloney, Plait.Cheshire, Cheshire Academy and WilcoxTecb, followed by highlights of local and
area gridiron b.attles
Heflin Bentley aceAnother Southington football player is
starring on the gridiron for BentleyCollege tWaltham, Mass ) this season
Jon Hefhn has been named the 'Falconof the Week" at Bentley College for hisoutstanding performance in the Falcons'season-opening victory at Assumption
The former Blue Kmghter, who cap-tained the 1981 team. scored the game-
Penny Rose
winning touchdown with just five secondsremaining to give Bentley a 13-10 victory
The alert Hefhn grabbed a fumble in the
air after teammate Jay Edmunds lostpossession and ran 47 yards unmolestedfor the winning touchdown
Bentley COllege won the 1982 and 1983club football national championships
A graduate of Southington High School in1982, Heflin missed most of the 1983 seasonwith a knee injury He carried the ball 16times during that season, gaining 82 yards,an average of better than five yards acarry
Blue Knight head coach Dora D'Angelosaid, "Heflin is a dedicated football playerand• you couldn't find a moreknowledgeable player What he lacked insize he made up with his heart."
Whalers readyAfter an impressive exhibition ga•ne
performance against Pittsburgh Saturdaymght at the Hartford Civic Center, theHartford Whalers will not return homeuntil Wednesday, Oct. 3, when they battlethe Washington Capitals m another NFLexhibition battle m preparation for theopening of the regular season Oct. It,against the New York Rangers in NewYork City
The explosive Whalers have neverscored ii goals in an exhibition game inthe NHL, and it was Ray Neufeld, whoscored the three-goal hat trmk and the clubalso scored three of their first four powerplay opportunities that ignited the goodcrowd.
The team effort was excellent as theWhalers took every advantage the Pitt-sburgh team, last in the league, handedthem
By the time the Whalers return home onOct 3, the coaching staff would have seenthe entire 47 player roster in action for fourgames, anti will be able to evaluate eachplayer before determining which 20players will remain in Hartford
Because of the competitive battles goingon for the major league positions, theWhalers are way ahead of the 1983-84pace and are expected to b.e very com-petitive when the regular campaign starts.
"Considering the major increase inseason ticket sales this year, as comparedto last year, we encourage people to buytheir individual game tickets as early aspossible, so t,,hey won't miss the game oftheir choice, Whalers Vice President ofMarketing-Public Relations Bill Barnesremarked. "The interest in the team is atan all-time high It has already beenreflected in our summer ticket salesprogram," he added Anyone seekinginformation on Whalers tickets in this areacan call toll-free 1-800-WHALERS,"Barnes added.
• Out w th crowd 11
• Mtdqet tootball - 12
• Youth soccer - 13
11
C ridiron Knights on road;2-0 with airtight defense
Unbeaten and un,.cored motivated and ,,v.flt moving ti)uchdov.'nwhen it recovered The locals ,,cored theirupon in its first tv, o starts,the Blue Knight gndders wdlbe on the road Saturdaywhen they journex to Enfleldto battteFermi H't•h at to•0
The locals will he seekingtheir third succesmve victoryand are the favorites toemerge victorious as thehome eleven is seeking itsfirst win
Fermi played a 20-20deadlock against Far-mington High in their seasonopener and were aheadbefore Farmington ralhed toeven matters Fermi *•assoundly defeated by Malone),t0-7 Saturday as theMeridembased grtddersunleashed an effechve'ground attack
crewWhde the offense shghtl)
improved •ls game.especially in the second halfagaim:t :nodloca• Pmlke!eyHigh last Saturday. when •tsaerial attack dl.•phiyed snmemomentum, d is the defensewhich has played the majorrole in the two xuctorteschalked up so l at this season
The defense has played amajor factor in the victoriesregistered over RoekvdleIhgh, 16-0 m the seasonopener and the 27-0 trmmphover hapless Bulkelev la,.;lSaturda.,, as they have" giventhe offensive unll excellentheld position m cro,,,qng theopponem s go',d hue
The - Kmght's -offense,,cored one touchdll•n m the
The Southington gridders opener on a 3u-•ard drivewill also be seeking their "after the defense i'ecovered athird straight shutout, the Rockvllle fumble q'x•o plays
' first time since 1972 when later. Rob Thomson scoredhey c•omplled the feat the TDTh. defensive squad has •The dcfemqve or kickoff
to be a sound team scored the second
a loose k•ckoff •n the op- final touchdov, n e,trly tn the"ponents end zone fourth quarter driving 42
In the recent battle, the •ards, thew longest scoringlocals marched 41 yards, •trlve of the campaign '.,.hen•e!F lon°o°"t Sa,ormg drove Of __'I]IDJB•OB •cored hl•_ 1•the early season and this TD of the season this tunetime Thomson passed toCaptain Peter Meade for 28yards and the score Meade•lace kicked the extra point
It was the deiense that setup the ensuing touchdownshortly after when Darrellttolley blocked a Bulkeleypunt and ran tt to the latter'sfive yard hue beforeThomson took it over on thenext play
i)efense l)ominates
The Knights' -defensivetrey,, which surrenderedonly one first down toBu[keley ,.,,'hen the)' roughedthe kicker, forced the visitorsto punt to their 37-yard lineTwo plays later. Thomsonpassed to Rob Sinkewlcz fora 32-yard score
ttead Coach l)omD'Angelo was ver', much•mpressed with the •lynalmcdefensive crew consisting ofMike C-alderonl. DanBadgeley. Jeff Zurosky, .In.,,Wtl,•on. Hobble Thomson.Kurt ttol.,..,,t. Peter Meade.Larr) McNelh,•. Darrellttolle.'., and Eric Stmone
"Our (fffense shov, ed some•mprovement m the passmggame. but v.e have to admitthat w• havtm't played any
deterinme our ,dr•ngth."added I)'Angelo
The Kmghts v.dl utlhze thesame offensive and defensiveunits as in the opening twobattles against Fermi
Knights on the runSHS ran tfirough, over and around the defen,,e of Bulkele) tligh School last Saturda.,, en route to a 27•1shellacking of the Hartford team. On the left. halfback Mark l,ampkin I:tl• tries to elude a Bulkele)defender. And on the right. Rob Thomson •tlli. the Knights junior quarterback, is chased by the op-
position.
- 'h SHS imp_ ose runners are ressiveThe high-flying
Southington High Schoolcross country squad could bein the double win columnTuesday whep it returns toaction in a quadrangularmeet in Hamden againstWest Haven Maloney andHamden High School
Having chalked up im-pressive victories overFarmington. BristolEastern. Watertown. Plait.Wilcox Tech and Bulkeley
High Schol)l,, lhe unbeatenWayne Naklmcc/n.,, harriers
are considered the mosl
powerful learn m the Con-necl•cul Inler•holaM•cAthlehc ('(mlerence •('IA('•because the? • m handdy
In their room recentquadrangular meet tnMertden Tuesda• theyoutclassed Plait. Ih 47 andWdcox Tech and Bulkeley hvidenhcal 15 •)11 illaF•lns
Bwk Black oulran 28 op-
portents in the three mile runv.mnmg by a comfortable 37seconds margin The BlueKnights completelydommatod the meel Inkingrune of the lop 12 posihonsSouthmgton's Mike Early.Tun Ther•ault. Marly Burns.Jeff ('avaliere. ArthurMflchell. Mike Krar and EdBeaupre all ran very well mlhe meet
.Joe t'arta and Jerry
(',l•ahere bare ,d',o pla'.ed a
x ttal role in the hoge su('( CSSthe 6-0 Knights ha• com-plied t his •()a•on
The Km•h• lace hm•hoppomtmn and are wellre.peeled m the •tah,
Lady Knight Socceron a roll (page 12)
Application.', are coming infor the Fourth Annual LittleApple Half Marathon onSunday. October 14 The 13 1mile road rat e is sponsoredby the Southmgton YMCAand Thv 08,, , er
Those wishing to run canpick up registration sheets atthe YMCA on High St. or atthe editorial offices of Th,Obserrvr at 132 Main St.opposite the Post OfficeThere will al',o be race<layregistration taking placefrom 10 001o t I : 30 a m. withthe event to ,tart at noon onSummer SI
T-shirts wdl be given to thefirst 200 entrdnts in the raceand trophies will bepresented to the male andfemale wlnm'rs in eight agedivisions 19 and under. 20-39, 40-49 and 50 and over
Medal,, wdl also hc a•ardedto the fir'.,l three runner• in
each division
Lahoud Trophies
A h•hhght II1• year wdlbe t•e pre•entah,)n of theTony l,ahoud memoriallr(>phie• for the topSouthm•ton l'tlt+t+er• m the
PaeP al•o• the Ina]e• and
[emale• l,ahoud x•,+• the
phys-ed dn'eclor ,d the Y •hohelpod gel lhc I,dlle AppleHalf Marathon •tarled fourvearg ago lie dwd of ak•dne• admenl la•l year
Sho•er and locker roomfacd•he• •dl be .•adahle tolhe runne• al lhe YRefre•hmenl. •ll .d•. beofferod
The Southmgton HighSchool gwIs .•oece• team offto its fine start v, lth fourstratght victories has twoh)u•h lests scheduled for thenext several days when inplays hosl to New BritainFr)day at ') 15 pm at theh)cal field and at Bmstol('enlral Tuesdav al the sametlln• m ('Pfltra] ('onnechcul('onference baltics
The I,ady Kmghts havechalked up •tns overBulkele+. St Paul. BristolEaster• and Plait
In the 9-2 trmmph overBrmlol Eastern. the I•als•ere fantashc m the firsthalf •cormg mx goals •n 40minutes before • mntng 9-2 inIhew best offensive shorn ofIbe earl• •cason Melodm
I,IM ,.e,u • '+'•OIIIt'I '•-.l" J Johllson came through ;',dhKolbof'Bo,lon ,.•HIiahmeof Iour goals and an asslst m theI 0• lrt battle m Bristol Other goals
,sere scored by Smda Recor.
IA',a Mat nkalti'•,I.andlno Belh Morelh andAlhson l)in,.more l)ebbmTnskox•,,k• scored the goal tnthe • 2 win +)x('r St Paul sBr)qol m overhme andadded a paw ot ,+•s+st• m theEastern hattie
l)ehloe 'I'u•kox+sk) camethrough •)lh a three goal'hal trwk tn the one-sided
hattie mhde other goals werechalked up I)• co-captainBeth Morelh (2). LisaMatuk,ut)• and Alhson
lhn•morc
SHS Spikers3-1; See page 12
Half Marathon October 14 team undefeatedSHS girls soccer
"" The Observer, Thursday, Sepf. 27, 19841 2 sports "
3-1 Lady Knight spikers have busy slate.Th• Lady Kmghts The glrlshaddefeated scores of 15-9, 15-3 and responsible for the
vt eyball squad 13-1• Holy Cross of Water- 15-5 Knights to win the first
hl threecruclal battles bury, 3-2, and Bulkeley The locals came 12 points Kathy McKee.m the Central Con- High of Hartford. 3-1 In through brdhantly Rose M•cacci and Shen
Pelrm were fantastic asnectlcut Conference their wctory over Monday to defeatstarting today I Thurs- Bulkeley, they won the Bristol Eastern, 3-0. Ihe Kmghtswere behindday) against New first two games by wmmng 15-7 •n the 10-0 and 12-2 m the thwdBritain at 3"15 p m at scores of 15-1 and 15-3 opening match, 15-1 in match before the girlsthe local school gym- before dropping a 15-11 the second and took the rallied them to a 16-14
nasmm battle and came back to third by a 16-14 margin wm
They will travel to win 15-5 Head Coach Edward Other topnotch Lady
Bristol Central Monday However, thew two- Malczyk cited the ex- Kmghts players arefor a 3 15 p m match game winning streak ceptmnal play of l,orl Missy Folc•k, Lorebefore entertaining was stopped by un- Wilcox m the second Scaringe and AnnNewmgton Wednesday. deteated Maloney by match because she was Dahlgrent)cl3•at 3 15p m _
Boys soccer Knights seeking more offense
Conference They areKnight5 5coring ace currently 1-3-1Tom l'oitr,p, I I I • ctmtrols the ball m a recent 5115 bny,, soccer game. Poitras, a transfer student from St. The Dan MurawsklPaul m ttr•dol. •as the leading,,t orer for the Knights as the. ueek began with six goats, coached squad will
Winners of one game They dropped their Tom Pmtras is the lone the Plait squadm four starts, the Blue first two decmions to scoring threat for the Tuesday. but wereKnight boys soccer Bulkeley High of Blue Knights as he has unable to kick the hall •n
squad wilt return t,o, Hartford I-0 and Hall. scored tuss•xth goal m the .Panthers net as..... u,• "•t'* Plate s goalie Thaneaction Friday at Ne• thgh 3-2, and rebounded fou• •,•,,,,.s .... m• •s
Britain H•ghSchool ma with a vengeance and have contributed the Sawyer booted out atCentral Connecticut completely outclassed other six goals m the least two potenhalgoals
off the toes of Poflras.Maloney 9-0 when theytook advantage of everySpartans' mastake
Just when fl appeared
Midget andFlagFootball: make ,Is next home Ihe club was on the ,nctors took advanlage South,ngtonmthenetsappearance TueSday. winning trail, the of the sloppy style of- SH,S
Mclntyre's touchdowns key to Cardinal win ,,c, 2 at 3"!5 pm Bristol Eastern booters play exhibited by thehosting Bristol Central sdenced them with a 4-1 starters protecting
Bryan Saxo.x converted back Shawn Banbault The Kmght lucleers decision and handed goa'he Pat McCann sw•rnmer•
m• the exlra point try and ran 50 yards for a are havmg their ups and them its third loss m However, theydowns so far this fourdeclsions 2-1season It •s apparent that
%flh t;ar.• Mclntyre The Jets detente
•t'ol ing lhree louch caused several Packers
do•qs. Ihe ('ardmal• m•takesl)• their toughl)l,i•h.d cros•to•n rwal hne play as .lasonBrnncos 62-o. =n lhe Mo•koquflz and KellySoul hHl•lon Msdget l)onahue •acke(lF'¢mlball l,eague laM Packers ball carrmr•eekend at Recreatmn llo•e•er lhe Packer•l'ark gel on the l)oard t•=lh
Al•o •cormg lor the lalequarhr('ardlnal• •ere John In the fourth quarter.l)anko. Todd Ramsev, lhe Jets B •quad.lee Arch,toRch), Brnin marched for anolherIbsen Tnm Ramse) Iouehdo•n on lheand Scott Ba•hen running el
('ar(hnals coaching DtZenzo and the e•-stall csh.d the ex cellent blockingeephonal performances lheky Weslover antiof the offenswe and Tom Fedorak M•kdeleos•e learns for lhe I)addona scored on a•hlle•ash rune-yard run Io •rap
Besides lhe pla)ers up the •cormg
mvoh'ed m scoring, the Flag Footballcoaches cfled the in-dividual •ork of Brmn • The Bro•ns d•playedDlxon, •ho intercepted hm much clas• m
lhree pa•es. GregCox. overpowerlngIOch l)anko. Jameson 5h'elers 32-0 Saturda)Lukas•e• •cz. Larry m lhe Soulhmglon(as•. Emc Vetergren, M•dget Football LeagueEd McMahon, Sha•n al Beereahon ParkMcLellan, ('hr•s The Browns scoredDoucelle, Seolt lhe first hme th% had
Brustmn, J•m Allmre. possessmnoflhep•gsk•n.l•m l,aRosa. Joe m the first quarler onM•halek and Jell Core) MasuccVs 30I)anko )ard run Da•d •Inle
The ('ardmals •dl rushed thecoversmnface the• hle•rday David White scored onal 7 pm al Recreahon a 29-yard run andPark Masuccl converle•
lhe Browns led,let• •in •fler the t•o teams
Sr•rmg •n ever•(uarte• lhe Jels baffled even m the(eh,ated the l'acker• second quarter theSunda• •n the Browns e•ploded m theSoolhll•glOll M•dgel (h=rd quarter •hen Joe>
F ) b, (,agueb• a 34- (;rffflO intercepted a6 •core at Veterans Sleelers aerlal and ran
fl back for a 25 yard TDMemorml l'ark
"the .h,l, •cored rue Shane Gmmaldl scoredtouchdo• n• =n the for the •mners from theopening quarler •ale l•o Io •md up lhwd
('hubel ran m• )ard• for quarter scoringIbc [=r•t TI) on a [me An aerml fromhhwkh•.hmMarhn lle Griffin Io While •a•
.fl•o rushed lhe e•Ira good for a 15-)ardlouchdo•n m the final
poml
Olher top performerslhe mr ]ah,r tn lhe for lhe Browns werequarter and quarter- Je•u•e R•ccflelb. Jaredback Ken Decker, amember el the B squad Steele and Ron Chasepas•ed tuTom I)onahue The top players forfor 20 •ards •n the end the Steelers were John/one (:hul)el rushed lhc Adam. F•nk Smog.con•ersmn Aaron Spring. Brandon
)ards m lhe second gamemtheSouthmgtonquarler to increase lhe M•dget Flag Football.h,l• lead to 20-0 League lasl week,
The .lel• maintained defeahng lhe Steelerslhc•r momentum m the 28-6ai RecreahonPark'Inrd qoarh'r and AI I)ann) Boulol Jrl{dlne• raced seven scored the,ard• rote the Packers louchdo•n of lhe baffleend /one for lhe for lhe Patrmts on aIouchdo• n hrdlmnt 45-yard r• and
Paul R. Mastrianni
PATIO WORK " LANDSCAPING * RR TIE WALLS
SHRUB b HEDGE TRIMMING •TREE CUTrING•TRIMMING
Seasoned firewood Sale
opening four contestsThe Knights defense, the Kmghts top scorer
was•mediocre against Pat McGann •asBristol Eastern and the equally brilliant for
621-6332 Always an answer!
.h, rem.• Pa• a no andI)eleon picked up goodyardage €)• runs forPal•. •hwh helped• $he touchdown
The v•clors scoredIheu second touchdox•n
Paxano cuhnmated ashorl dr•e for Ihe scoreIrom lhe lx•o •'•rd line
l']arl• m lhe third
brflhant dnx• nfleldblocking and LennxBoudh' converled as lhePdls led 21-0
Boulol scored h•slhwd louchdown m theImal quarler on a 58-yard run and AdamPelleher conx erled
Frank Smole put theSleeler• on lhe boardlate m the game on a
For the Patrmts,other fine performancesx•ere turned m by JoeyKznne) Bdl) Bmhnp
,znd I)oug ( )t z•'Fop performers [or
lhe Steelers wereBranCh F•etIo. ScotlSla•chke. Brian tlenbn.Xaron Spring. FrankNmole. John Adams.,rod Mike (hccarello
The Rmders defeatedthe (hanls •9-12 m aNoulhm•ton MzdgetFlaR FooH)all Leaguegame Salurday atBecreahon Park
The Rmder• wasted
xer) hltle hmegelhnB on the board as[)ammn Freberg took ahandoff from quarter-
touchdown"Freberg continued hi:
hne running behln(effective blocking in the
second quarter, raem•75 and 4• yards for hissecond and thirdtouchdow
The Rmders main-tamed their momentumm lhe. th=rd quarter andfl •as Freberg whobroke away on a 30-yardrun for his fourth TD
The Giants •ade a•trong scoring threat inthe third quarter but theRa=ders Banbault in-tercepted an aerial andran it back t•9 yards tothe one yard line Hescored on the next playand rushed the conver-
sionThe G•ants scored
early m the final quart-er on a 45-run by MikeMongdlo
The Giants scoredagain as Jerry Jaq.uesran 60 yards for the TD
Joey Barmen scoredthe final touchdown forIhe Raiders.and CharlesFarr scored the con-
Other stars for theRaiders are JamesGuru. and ShawnBambault
Top l•erformers forthe G•ants are "Skip"Reed. Jaques, and MikeSorbello
Rod Carew of theCahforma Angels leadsall active players with alifetime batting averageof 331 He has hit betterthan 300 m 15 con-secuhve seasons
Joe Dulac wins to.urney.lee l)ulac fired a 66 to
•ln lhe (;ranqmstMemnr•al Scholarship(loll Tournamenl
5unda) at the Patton
Brook •l)unl ry Club
April McCaughey wonthe Ladies competition
with an 82A total of 80 golfers
parhcipated in theGranqmst Memorml
J(• Fbrher u,o• the and $400 was realizedIov, nel competition wflh [or the scholarship
the aid of a handicap of21 to win with 5(I ****
Why Rent An Old Car,When You Can Rent
A New Car for $15 a day*LOW COST RENTALS
t
• Rent by the day week or month
M ITCh1•-ZJ• MOTOItSMain Street
Southington, 6")a-03
Field hockey Knightstie Maloney thanksto H01ian goal
The Lady Knights Russo and the defensefield hockey squad, •ork of Cheryl•h•ch is off to =ts Valukemchslowest start m several The Lady Knights hadyears, will entertain previously droppedEnfleld High Fmday at close decmtons to South3 15 p m at the local Windsor and Wmdhamheld High
The locals came frombehinddeadlockH•gh Spartans 2-2 whenTri-captain Sue Hoha•scored late m the secondhalf for her fourth goalof the season, the LadyKnights top scorer
Semor forward JanaWong scored the firstSouthington scoreagainst the LadySpartans with less than
Monday to Chargersthe Maloney
now 3-0The Chargers won
their thwd strmghtgame in the SouthmgtonMidget Football LeagueSaturday night at
Recreation Parkbeating the L•ons 36-2
The Chargers are atopthe Southern D•vimon
25 seconds left m the standings w•th 3-0first'half to tie the score followed by the Jets 2-1,1-1. The home squad Offers 1-1-1 and Broncostook a 2-1 lead •n the 0-3second half before the The Chargers scoredlocals deadlocked two touchdowns m thematters first quarter when Kirk
The locals dropped a4-1 decision to Enfmld intheir thwd game andHead Coach DoreenLeahy also died theflan of goalie Roberta
M •dlcal Rentals
621-9166
displayed superiordefense in shutting out
Last season, T•mRaines of the Montreal The Southingtotr H•ghI• tpos became the flrsl School girls swimmingp ytr in National squad will compete mLeague history to steal its first home meet of70 ba•es and drive m 70 the season Friday atruns m one season Tim 3 15 p m at thewound up with 9o steals Southmgton YMCAand 71 RBI's against New Britain
High m a CentralKowalsk• culmmatea a Connecticut Conference12-play, 75-yard drive battle The:,' arewith a s•x yard run and currently 2-1.Scott Otis returned a The locals performedLmns punt 35 yards mid very well winning overpaydirt Bulkeley High of
Otis scored hm second Hartford and Sheehan"touchdown in the third High ofWalhngfordqqarter while John In thmr recent battleAretz scored two against Sheehan, Stacytouchdowns in the Towne first placefourth quarter on runs honors in the 200-yardof 15 and 12 yards on freestyle in 2"1303 andblocks by Dave Robb the 100-yard backstrokeand Chris Riecio in 1 17 08
The Lions. w•nless in In two winning relaythe three decisions in events, Jeannethe Northern Diwsmn, Ferguson. dody Hall.scored a safety in the Klm Denmson andthird quarter when the Laura Sadowski wereChargers punter was sensational in the 4OO-forced outside his end yard freestyle m 4.41 15zone while the team of
The Cardinals are •n SadowskL Towne,,"first place m the Nor- Karen Shatas andthem Dw•sion with a 3- RoxanneShatas won the0. followed by the Bears 2OO-yard medley relay1-1-1 and Packers 1-2 •n 2"04 19
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Hem'e your c•t•e to be •e•d dinner by a Hart.ford Wha•q 1'he fun b•n• v•h e cash be,r m 8•0on Fdday, October 19 at V•le'- in Ha•ford. Theprime fib dinner fo•lo• •rved by your•He'll a•¢ogr•ohyour free program, po•e for en•.oshots with yo• and go all out to make sure youh=ve a good time becauee your lip will help pre-vent bllndne• here In Connecticut. There will be• |_of •lploere and of ¢ogree that spe.
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Many More To Choose From
The Observer, Thursday, Sept. 27, 1984
Soccer League players putting ball in net
sports-- 13
Defense took a back thewinners single goals as the Todd and Jamiason and Kex In Salernoseat to offense again in Todd Alfano had four Stingers edged the Bouhher. Jeff Clark, added lx•o each and Jeffthe third week of action goals as the Metros Pumas. 2-0 Steven Mike Hudson. Klrstln Gorman tallied once asin the Southington crushed the Spurs. 9-2 Shuberl. Sara DeVito. Moffitt, Dave Palmer, Ihc ('hlel,, homhed theYouth Soccer League ('had Boudreau added Robin Hartnett. Todd Colleen Clark and Brian Surtcr,, q 0
In A dr,us•on play. two goals and Mark GuzzL Joey Parad]s, Moffltt played well for B(dfl).• McKee andMike Olson had a hat Mead, Bill Bombatzand Marlessa Longo. Greg theCanes D,r,e Marek bothtrick as the Teamen Chris Bleau all had Zbell and David Soc- Jason Fltstmons and pla.,.ed xkcll Ior thewhipped the Clippers, slnglescores cadato did a fine.lob for Todd Cutler scored two v, moer,, 'l'abb.,. Ioons,10-0 Eric Ma.leskL Mike Terray. Chris lhewmners goals each while Rick Bill Brutton and And.,,Brian King and Kevln Murphy. Deb Burns. Corbm Kane. Ed Math. Mike Landmo, ('olcvteh ,,tarred for theFaucet had tv, o goals Bill DeVoe. Graig Bradley. Chris Maz- Jarred Tebo and Chris Surtcr,, Pal ('elanlanoeach for thewinnersand Davey, Matt Gutauskas zarella. Craig Pana- Mangene all had a goal and Gu.', Sabtno had twoBrian Ma.leskl added and Sarah Lacourctere rella, James Smith, each as the Ear- go,d,, eJch and Erwone all had fine games for Elhott Lees. Tim Robit- thquakes whipped the Lex•t,,and Chris Warran
Mark Porada. Alan the v, inners elle. Nick Panarella. Stompers. 8-1. added ,,ingle goals asKra.lewski. Jay Salerno, In AA divisional play. Jason Smith, Judith Darren and Danm, lhe G,dors ,,•h•pped theTim Landry. Chris Ken Crooker. Steve Helster. Walter Grover.- F]tzslmons. T•m •Ahaecap.,,. t;.1 Caleb
Andy Hallgren. F JKeneflck, Joe Colwlch.Eric Adams and RalphWarner played well forthe winners
Chins Kasev. MaganKoefe Francis PullaroChris Gmgras, JeffPotter. Chins Sheppard.Jennifer Trlano and JaySarzen had a good gamefor lhe Clippers
Dave Lepreay scoredtwo goals and TraceyCarnadded a third score-as lhe Stars blanked lheDarts. :l-O JimValentine, Neal Botelho..lalnle Fritz, JohnColaccmo and KevmGlatz played ,,,.ell for thewinners, whale DaveLev. andov•skL h,hkeTom.lotus. ScottRoberge, At Kules•a.Christine Caprm JohnKlepackl Dave Devltn.Scan Conran and Robertand Craig Badorekstarred for lhe Darts
In a ,.,.ell-playedconlest, the Tnrnadoestied the Strikers II. 3-3
Norton and Scan Bakerscored lot the Tor-nadoes, v. hde DougBadgle) scoredgoals and Jason Gmnelhadded a Ibwd far theStrtker,•
.hm Pouhs and Dehh.,,Brenckl added assists
•l'b•" 't•e' Tnrnat'h•,,s andDale Ouelletle Am.,,Schmarr. Jushn LeDuc.Jim Pouhsh MareKrystano,.• fez. JellVivlano. Eric B•erly andJohn Casate played ,.• ellfor the Tornadoes
Jenny Guarmo. BobSabaleila. Pat Gmgrasand Greg l,eBrunstarre,• for the Str|kers
Tin1 Bellam•, scoredthe only goai of thegame on a direct kick asthe Dlplomals edged lheHelhons 1-0 TedMcG•nn, MichelleBernler. Jayna D•n-smote. Robert Salernoand Craig DeMellox,.had a solid game for the,.•.lnners. while BrianDrechler. Scott Pamsh,Jesse Cr•spmo. JeffBork¢r,•,sk•. Shav, nLewis. Amanda Keene.Colleen Porch and TomGreen starred for lheHelhons
Mike Bazelals scoredboth goals as the Ex-press mpped theRoughnecks. 2-1 BrmnCzak and Jason Lewis
and David Mikos allscored as the Rangersedged the Binders. 4-3Hemant Vyas, JeffGraz•ano and PatHuntley scored for theRaiders
Pat Carmody.Michelle Marshall,Wayne Lewis, JohnCarmody, Matt Suess.Mike Richter, KimCoulter, Steve Abbott.Steve Scursso, Colleen=Stemrragte, Ste,ce Butl.•M•ke Houle. T JEaccar•no. NigelDragon and TomDowme all starred forlhe winners
Kristln Shubert.Bruce Vagts, SandlStanhope. Tom Dolan.M•ke Marietta. KewnP,•sezek, bleath•r Brut-on and Scott Manglaghall had free games forthe Raiders
Tom Lyons. MiReKostrze'.•.a and TanyaGndbout all scored goalsas the Rowdies shutoutlhe Knights 5-0 DavidGulll added an asslsland Mark Trojl,lnda Maxv•ell. RobertLewm. Keith M'Sado-
ues. Mike Nadi. An-tony Del Buono andJoe Rogdansk• had a,,,olld game for the
Mike Soccadato. JoeAlfano. Tommy Stmth.Sue Emerson, DaveBoudreau. Tom Kasek.Jason Prozzo. AmyBeaudmn and RaySweetland all plJx.,dwell for the Knights
Christine Belvm andShawn Zenuh had singletalhes for the Celtics tooffsel Iv.o scores by theSpartans' Brmn Molusisin a 2-2 tie
Karen PlenkowskLPaul Mamula. PatJones, Dave Kochol.Jetf Pitt. Jim Kolyk andAaron Bicknell played'.,.ell for the Celts T•mt'urlev added an asslslfor the sparlans andteammates AI Sestakau-skas, Paul Scruton.Jason Boulilier. RyanKell,y. Troy Jones. MattNorton. Bob Hensen.
Atomy Kaye. ChristinaForg•one. Mark Caprio.Ronnie Gozzo andStephen Telxierastarred for the Spar-tans
Vmny Baggetta hadIhe only goal for theTitans m a ,5-1 loss to the
added assists and Jeff Hellions I1 Tim Olson.Giroux. Lorl Schroder. Mike Mezzanotte. TomKun Forester. Corev AIbright. John Napole-Bouhber. Peter DuntL tano. Tom Wilson andDamon Querim. Jerry Dave Dressier starredSiegel. Carol Lipelz and for theTitansSteve Belanger all ,In B division games.starred for thewmners Erik Toohev scored
T•m Guerrelte scored twice and E•lc Bartlylhe lone Roughnecks" also scored as thegoal as teammates Cosmos topped the
Kevln Z•mmer, James Toros, 3-1 ,Nelson and Dave Desell Debb•e Suess. Garyplayed well in a sup- Burdettl. Jason Papa,porting role Guido Volpe. Dana
Kelth Rmnes scored Rouleau. Jenny Arlola.tv, o goals and Scott Van Angela Audl• BrianEpps, Mar',' Beth Schmdner. Steven Audl,Poltra• and Scott M•ke Brezickl. StevenTholnpson all added King and M[c.hael Audls•ngle tallies as the all starred fbr ttreC•mos II beat Ihe winnersM.]stangs. 5-2 Mike Galah scored
Eric Parente. Katie lhe only goal for theSidomk. Ton',' l,a.ndmo, Toros off an asslsl fromTom Eng'. Cathy Tad Landr•v MatScurrso, Mike Pienkow- Johnson. dohn Tuskow-ski, Mike De Luco, ski, Jeff Kotyk. ChrisJimmy Clhzza. Keith Egan and Krystm De-Triblanl. Marcus Luco all played well forHaothoff. Shawn Dorio. IheTorosDarren Prozzoand Mike Tom Bessonl andWallace all starred for I.htchm Bigge scored
Vaughn., Tom McAloon D'Pastino pl.ayed ,,.,'ell ph.• Er•k tlamm andplayed well for the for the wlnners Kl'l•llOe PienkowskiPumas Chris Ca,mirand had paced the v;mners'
Tom Gulh and Scan the only Stompers'Carson scored as-the score Shawn Simons,.Blcs topped the DuaneBarnett, M]chael M•keSher,d,mhadtheHurricanes, 2-0 Eric Bull. JessTe Crufas• and tone score for theCarson. Chrm Dorio. Kris Dutton starred for •,•.h•Iccaps AnthonyAmy Lacourcmre and theStompers ('haphnsk• and l',yanChrlssa Allen starred Jake Frame scored Ttwreaull alos playedfor the Bics four goals, Chins Stack_• •,.ell 1or the ('aps
Press box dedicationThe Sonthington (;rid•ron ('lub, Int. came throngh ag;lln. This titne it built anex• pre• box at Fontaoa Ficld. Ceremonies •et'e hehl la•l Saturdax todedicate the oet• aod larger press box. On tlw righl i• (.rulnron ('lub prc•ndentXnthoo) Tarfano On the left is SOmol Board chao'nlan Ke% iii Kelh'• ahmgt%ith fello• board nucmber Za•a O•haoa
Supermarket-200 Main St. Southington
Double Say-Plus Coupons Wed. & Sunday
Souihington'sLOTTO
Independent 3-PLAY 41
Supermarket n s OWBuy all your t•ckets
Guido'sFamily owned & operated
14
legal notices legal notices legal notices
APPEAL #2449 A
The Observer,•'hursday, Sept. 27, 1984
for sale for sale for sale for sale for saleautomotive automotive automotive furniture general
FOR SALE: 1973 AMCtlornet, 4 dr, auto, highmileage, runs good,passed Inspections,clean, no rot Many newparts $475 621-0773after 5 p m
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
ESTATE OF
FRIC VAt IQUETT[
lost (•, found
FOR SALE: 1974 MallbuClassic. new parts, A/C,PS. PB, best offer Callweekdays 621-5802 after6pro
FOR SALE: 1,976 OldsCutlass Supreme. 4door. PS, PB.A/C. runsand looks great $1.80•620-2212
FOE SALE: 1979 DodgeAspen. 4 door. 56.000roues, asking $2.600Call 620-7924 after 5 p m
FOR SALE: 1973 ToyotaCorolla 1200 cc. enginecompletely overhauled.new tires, needs bod:•work $800 or best offerCall 589-7817 after 5 30pm
FOB SALLY: '71 DodgeWagon. runs good. $250Cal1629-673t after 4 p m
FOR SALE. 1980 FordVan, EIS0. AT, PB, PS
TO WHOM IT MA• CONCERN
FOR SALE 1•74Camera. 4 speed. P•,PB. AM/FM cassette.$1,300 or B/O Call 621-0891
FOR S XI.E 1974I.OST- Diamond and Mercury Comet. run-weddmgbandattached, rang. for parts $350m Southmgton K-mart firm Call 589 5198 MterReward 621-0365 4 p m
Flit NIl Black & •h•te FOR SALE 1980 (lidsca! w%'ll c.llar in Delta B8 Royal, velour,x.qmt• ol houth•ngton loaded. 20-30 MPG. book•l..rod ltur•ell Ave •.•. wdl sell $3.3•(',•(,• O• ••I N•doash. 5•:1023
FOUND: Young mother FOR SAI,E lq7q ltonda
bgh•, luggage rack,new hres Call 621-95•after 5 p m
FOR SALE: Truck cap,EN(iAGE-A-('ARTm: 8 ft, $'75 or BLO 1971Need a new car • Cash Ford LTD wagon, $400flow a problem" Let Bob firm, needs some work
q)eBmhop show you- 1975 Chev Mabbu, $800leasing makes sense' firm, runs wellNo down paymenU Low Chappee coal stove.monthly payments' 628- good cond . $2009596 Authorized Wanted to buy--Engage-A-('arTmbroker snowthrower, 5 h.p or
larger, 0 K if needsFOR SALE: '73 Ventura some work Reasonable}latch, 6 cyl, 3 spd. 5824841after6pmstd. high miles. $500, FOR SALE: Two cars,new bar wtr pump, must sell--1968 Buickbody fair. some rot, no LeSabre, 1975 Chevydents, tires and exhaust Mahbu. form.al duunggd Air shocks, drive table. 42x63 747-0204train good. needs clutch.but dnveable 30k on FOR SALE: 1983 Chevyfront end Passed 4x4. 4 speed, with plowemmsmns '84 Will pass Dr blue bed. liners.mspectmns 747-5•71 cover & step sides.
sliding window, call 621-FOR SLAE: 1974 Dodge 6345after 6p mDart. fic•d•lLoor shill 3speed, good body runs FOR SALE: 1967 Fordexcellent, must sell. Van, body fair cond,$|,500 B/O 621-3149 motor 2 yrs old, 3 speed,
$500 or best offer Call621-7024 or 621-7181 and
FOR SALE: 1980 Chevy le:ave messageC-30. 12 ft walk-inaluminum van with roll- FOR SALE: 1981 .Chevyup back door, 58.000 Citation• 4 cIE•_4 dr,miles $•,• bzl-•ro•mr---- h-tlyat•,•6 ,PS7-271-3667 PB. A/C. cruise.
AM/FM. 47.090 miles.FOR SALE: '83 Jeep mint cond $3.50• 621-CJ-7. showroom con-- 4278dlhon, drk green, softtop. llx15 Goodyear FOR SALE: Must sell totires. 17k miles, $8,000 pay off Ioan--1982 BuickCall John at 583-2865 Skylark Llmlted, $4,750,eves.or 621-8945days 1981 Chevy Citation,
$3,700, 1975 ChevyFOR SALE. Mabbu Mabbu,$1,000 224-3751Classic, •75. AT, PS,•PB,V-B. 2 dr, AM/FM FOR SALE: Lincoln•tereo.$800 628-4652 Mark IV. 1975. 71.000
orlgmal miles. $2.700Call 224-0734. or 225-
FOR SALE. 1976 Ford. 5953. after3 30pro.askVan. short wheel base. for Mike3 spd. 6 cyl. carpet.asking $2.500 621-8870 FOR SALE: 1974 Chevy
Impala. automatic.Tr•I•L• •-•(:ouga• power s•eerlng, many
XR7 Priced $!0000• new parts, will passless then dealers •ould inspections $600orB/O•ell for All white ex- 583-7935temor, cloth seats, ware..poke x•heel covers. FOR SALE: 1975auto . 302 eng. ps. pb. Mabbu. excellent cond.am •fm stereo. 2 studded no rust 620-7443•nm•s Exc cond 45.00omites ('all 584-1021 FOR SALE In-befnre 2 p m after 5 ternahonal GA42 snowp m $3,900 o• thrower for front mount
on Cub Cadet, $350 521-Et)R SALE. 1976 Pinto, 5712light blue, good runningcondition, very little FOR S&LE : 1977rust, sound throughout Plymouth Volare$795 628-8209 Stahon Wagon. high
mileage, transmission.FOR SALE: 1971 VW exhaust system, car-Bug. ex int. solid body. hurator, replaced withinrebuilt engine, with last two years Tiresextras Reliable 584- good. includes extra act8370 of snows with rims Can
be driven with repairsFOR SALE: 19•1 or good for parts $525Datsun 210. blue. 4 Call 620-9564 after 5:30speed. AM/FM quad p mstereo cassette, must
for sale
appliancessell. $3.495 Best offer628-9403
FOR SALE. Toyota FOR SALE: ElectricCehca, 1978, GT lift- stove, excellent con-back. black, sunroof. 5 dlhon, hot water heater.speed, air. AM-FM wedding gown. assortedstereo, very good gowns, like new. size 5condition. ,628-7787 after tap shoes (new) winter7p m coats Call 628-6023 br
628-7897 eveningsFOR SALE. 1968Fireblrd Convertible. FOR SALE: 1976 GEAT. PS. passed self-cleaning 30"emissions, body needs electric stove. $175 firmwork. have parts for 1976 Bendix travelrestoration. $950 Call trailer. 18'. self-621-2794after6p m contained Call 589-1413
after 5 p mFOR SALE.Volkswagen Rabbit. '75, FOR SALE: GE range,4 spd. rbll engine, new " list of features includevalves, clutch, brakes, two ovens, both haveall receipts since '76 black glass doors.Must sell--asking rotisserie for bar-$1,000 628-6605 becmng, meat ther-
mometer, tempFOR SALE: 1971 Opel regulated grill for top ofManta. good motor, range ovens, self-body rusted, asklng$100 cleaning, many moreor B/O 621-9819 after 6 features Almond colorp m Looks brand new $75•
• 6214347FOR SALE: .'972Pontiac LeMans. V-8. FOR SALE: Mercury 80
350 engine. $500 621- h p outboard motor.9150 bottom end done over.
asking $350 Call 628-FOR SALE: 1971 Dodge 8267 or 621-3097Demon 340. V-8. auto.PS. AM/FM tape. super . FOR SALE: 1978 ,'Dayttlner. 67.0•0orlg mileS. 25. inboard. 3 sails.car has never -been many extras, must sellabused, owned by older Call 58•-ff763 after 5 p mlady for many •ears FOR SALE: 16 footMust ,,etl h., many Columbian boat with fulltoys $2.500 or B/O 747- canvas, 70 h p Johnson.5010 anytime Please 1983. Dill galvanizedleave message, first trailer. 1982, firstlooker be first buyer •akes it Call 599-8•19747-2589
FOR SALE: Full-size GALVANIZED MOPbed, lncludmg head- BUCKETS: on castersboard, excellent con- 141 & 7 mop wringers. 4dlhon. 2 yrs old $200 mops. all new equip-
ment $150 takes it all628-6308 Call Cheshire. 271-3667FOR SALE: Beigenaugahyde sofa & FOR SALE: Warthogrechner. $300 Call 629- Magnum Bow. redwood7377 handle, used twice.
42x52 and 36x52, wm-FOR SALE; Large top dows steel-framed,to hutch, dark plne. •x60. 38x60. ideal-for•.^^a •..a.*,^• €,• "$28. graonhous•. $7 each0872 582-3216 after 5 p m
FOR SALE: Round FOR SALE: Lockingglass-top coffee table, wardrobe closet.antique brass base, $20 ivory/bronze, fancyCastro sleep sofa, green doors, inside mirror, 2woven fabric, con- shelves, mint condition
FOR SALE: Colonial FOR SALE: Electricwing-back sofa Call 628- hospital bed. Evrest0761 after4p m Jennlngs Premier
wheelchair. Betabed.FOR SALE: Cou•ch• air-pad, p-ortabt•-•'hing k•Ve •eat-,-•atr•--•41-, B•O•-carpet, II 9xll 10 Call621-9538 after 6 p m
FOR SALE: Maple endtable. Ethan Allen.brand new. $75 628-8872
FOR SALE: Table saw.10" Craftsman. withtable extensions andblades. $200. Call 628-8243 after/4 p m
FOl{ SALE: Freezer Inexcellent condition.prachcally new.commercial chestfreezer, best offer over$500 Also. golf clubs.bag & covers, in goodcondition 589-2979
NEWSPRINT: Off-white paper end roils.when available--ideafor shelving, picnic.table topping, etc $1 perroll At The Step Saver.213 Spring St .Soathmgton
FOR SALE: Franklinstove with acces. $100.alum thermo shdingwindow. 4"x4'. Andersoncasement window.3'xSx3'-6. $25. An-derson picture window.6'x9' x 4'-6'. $100 Call621-6100
FOR SALE: New Ad-vantage fireplace, ef-ficient heat reclaimingdesign, my kids won it, Ineed the room $150takes it 621-7297 after 5pm
COAL/WOOD STOVE:Plus 1'• ton of coal inbags, becking, coal hog.the works $250 Dish-washer. $100 628-6440
FOR SALE: Singersewing machine, stretchand decorative stitchesLike New 6284984 a m
FOR SALE: Weddingdress, size 10-12, withacces, from Marmlla'sCreations $150 628-0872
FOR SALE: OympacDP 1000 home fitnesscenter. $200. MemphisLes Paul electric guitar.w/amp. $150 621-5526
FOR SALE: Puch Force12 twelve speed racingbike, ultra lightweight,quick release wheels,excellent condition,worth over $650, willsacrfftce for $325 forquick sale Call Don at621-0015 after 6 p m
FOR SALE: Franklinwood stove, used 4years Goodshape $100621-586fi
EVERGREEN TREES.Spruce, for tran-splanting Ornamentals,natural fences $5 eachCall 589-1773 evenings.weekends
FOR SALE: CoronaKerosene heater, 22.600BTU, $75 firm Pleasecall 621-8698
FOR SALE ' 6'metalworking bench.lathe w/access, $600Call 621-4745 mornings
FOR SALE. 90 galaquarium, stand, light,filter system, like new,$200 Ca1747-8305
FOR SALE: Still chmnsaw. 038.20" bar. brandnew. $300 Call 621-8345after 6 pm.
FOR SALE: HeightBrand fireplace insert,heating umt, dualautomatic blowers.glass doors 621-5817
FOR SALE: Four radialL T tires. P195/75 R 15with rims. only 5.0•0miles. $250 Call 747-2678FOR SALE: RCA 25"
color tv. older model.works well $65 628- FOR SALE: Musmtan's0288 1977 Guild Jazz Bass.
excellent playingINTERIOR & EX- condition, great forTERIOR DOORS: Steel beginner ordoor units, windows, professional. $300.molding, thousands of Delta-lab Effectronnew items ta choose 1024. full second delay,from You always pay flange and d•ulMlngless at The House of Excellent cond. $175Doors, Inc 540 West Nady Pro-49, wirelessJohnsen Ave., Cheshire system, like new, red271-3667 channel. $125 Call Bdly
at 628-8500
Buy--Sell Trade Try The
classifiedsThe Observer, Thursday, Sept. 27, 1984
for sa]eautomotive
FOR SALE. Radialtires, 155 SR 13's w/w,one new and two usedBridgestones, $45 and2./550, one new Arm-strongsnow tire, $45 Allfor.S130 Call 621-8053
tag sales
motorc'rcles
FOR SALE: 1974 Harley•a'D-•dson Sportster.
17,000 original miles,recent motor work.clutch, and paint ontank Runs great, $2,000628-8425
FOR SALE: 1980 HondaXL FO05• •Enduromotorcycle E•cellentcondition, low mileage,best offer over $400 Call628-0761 after 5 p m
FOR SALE: 1974Honda. 350, four cyl,•i•y "bar rnll bars.electric start, bike iS innice shape, asking $400Call 582-8094•
FOR SALE: '79Kawasaki KZ650, manwheels, disc brakes allaround. Kerker header.ferrtng, Barnet clutchand two seats Call 628-8627 from 6 30 a m to6:30 pm at work.evenings, 628-0761
FOR SALE: 7 rmranch, 1% baths, three-bedrooms, finished recroom. 6xl0 wood shed.flrepPacenn-lwmg-•oom,1/2 acre level treed lot.close to schools, eastend of Seuthlngten 628-8425 Call after 5 30 p m
FOR SALE: Mountainhome m Vermont, 3 br •open kit. living area,gas. hot air heat. woodstove, carpeting, bunkhouse on 2% acres, nearnatural forest, Lakeskiing-on mamt rdPmce $35,O0O Call 489-8624
FOR SALE. Twobedroom Delahuntycustom built home inwell-established cul•le-sac neighborhoodBeautiful landscapedlot, screened-in perch, 1car garage, plasterwalls and hardwoodfloors throughout Noagents, please Call 621-7806
FOR SALE: By ownerBristol Marsh Road.Chippens Hill area 7•room raised ranch, 3bedroom. 1•2 haths,fully apphanced - kit-chen. rec room, laundryroom, and wall to wallcarpeting For appt.call 563-2775 $87,500negotiable
RNs Er CNA's
Please ApplyCARE MANOR
ot Farmington
Call Lynne Gow
677-7707
real estate help warned
FOR SAb,•,E. Spacious 3bedroom home, locatedon a quiet dead-endstreet Wall to wallcarpeting, combinationdining room and bringroom with fireplace,white aluminum sidingand attached garage,central heating and airconditioning Newdishwasher, locatedclose to downtown•n,th,n•tnn and 1/2mile from 1-84 Must beseen to be appreciatedCall 628-5986 eveningsafter 6 p m, or anytimeon weekends
FOR SALE: Moving toFlomda • Must sell atonce• Att ]wing anddining room furniture, 6
•c French Provincialedroom set, lamps,
tables, pictures, pots.pans, toaster oven,glasses, silverware.Berkbne lounger, 19"color TV, and carL ere •• -$2:500 complete628-0428, call for appt
ROOMMATE TO
SHARE APT.: inSouthlngton Largeyard. garage, $180" plusI/2 utilities I month'sdep Call Jeff at 621-4447after 6 p m
FOR RENT: Furnishedroom for rent m privatehome For info, call 626-0159, ask for Bdl
--wantedto rent
•,', XNTEI) T() RENT 3bedr home or 2 bedr
• condo with a brushedbasement 2 adults 3children, 2 g•rls ages 11and 13 I bo.• age 16Wtlbng to do palnhngaffd minor repairs' ifnecessary, goodreferences Plantsville-South area 621-3404
IIEI. P W tNTEDFOURSLIDE TOOLM-AKER Experiencedrequired on closetolerance parts Goodpay Full benefitsAppl:, •n personSouthmgton Tool & MfgCorp 63 East SummerStreet, Plantsvllle orcall 521-0500
Magson Uniform i")(" Clothing Outlet "X"
Magson Uniformli 279 New Britain Rd.
K•slng•en, £3".
mi•cellaneou• services t•S sales tag sales
Home Health Aides:Part-Time:
11-7, 2 or more nights/wko
YOU CHOOSE
Community Care ServicesCheshire, CT.
272-2745
• Roofing• Siding
i[ FREE ESTIMATES =1
NANFITO'SCAMP ST., MERIDEN
634-:[660
SECURITY OFFICERS
Needed for fast growingbrm Full E• part hrneopemng avadable =n theFarmmgton, Avon, Hart- 'ford area Must be over19 years of age, have aclean police record, owncar Et phone A neatpearanco a must
Call 249,8Ins for appt
15
BELP WANTEDFoursbde, working asstforeman neededAmbitious person to set-up and operat as well assupervise operators forfoursbde from •00 to •3regular Experiencerequired on closetolerance parts Goodpay, full benefits,chance for ad-vancement to foremanApply in personSouthmgton Tool & MfgCorp 63 E SummerStreet, Plantsville orcontact Anthony Atkiusfor appt All replys keptin strick confidence 621-0500
IIELP %•, ANTEDATTN RETIREESFourshde working asstforeman needed We are
ST. JUDE: Thank youfor answering myprayers Publication aspromised F J M
FREE: The SouthmgtonArts Couzwai presen•the US Navy Band inconcert Sunda•', Sept30, at 7 p m at theBicentennial Auditorvurn, SouthlngtonSeating on a first-come,hrst-serve basis
SOUTHINGTON FA-RMER'S MARKET:Now open Thurs 5.8p m, and Sat, 8 a m -1p m Across from theGreen, thru the summerand fall seasons Far-now taking applications
for a fourslide set-up reef's Market featuresperson to set-up and local farm-freshopera•e-Rmrshda frmn• •ulks--and vegetablns, -=00 to =3 reghrar Nice plants,•mngmg baskets,positron to help sup- custom made dry flowerplement income Call arrangements, home-Seuthmgton Tool & MfgCorp 621-0500 for appt
tlELP WANTED Part-time counselors Sub-stltute positionsavailable in Seuthlngtongroup homes formentally retardedpersons Afternoon.evenings and overnighthours Contact SARC.201 W Main St .Plantsvdle 628-9220
WANTED: Painter, 5•ears experience and
elper, with some ex-perience, own tran-sportation, work allyear round Call 621-4845after p m
GOVERNMENT JOBS:$16.559-$50,553/yearNow hiring Your areaCall 805-687-6000. ext R-4128
EXCELLENT INCOMEfor part-time homeassembly work Formfo. call 504-641-8003,ext 9266
SITTER NEEDED: towatch my 16-month-oldson in own home. threedays a week, from 11-6References requiredCall 621-8239 after 4 p m
WANTED: Person tocut. bale• take away
made jellies and jams,honey, and home-bakedgoods
NOVENA: May theMost Sacred Heart ofJesus be praised,honored, adored,glorified, loved andpreserved, throughoutthe world, now andforever, amen SacredHeart of Jesus, pray forus St Jude. worker ofmiracles, pray for usSt Jude, helper of thehopeless, pray for usRepeat nine times a dayfor nine days, andpublish, and your wishprayer will be an-swe.red B P
YOUNG CAT: Black,female, in need of agood home 583-7681after 4p m
FREE: One grey kitten,eight weeks old, boxtrained Call 621-7642
HAVE YOUR HOUSEPainted Professionally
WOOD SPLITTINGSERVICE. Fast andinexpensive' Call nowbefore November rush.621-3323 evenings
PII\o TtNING &REP •,IR by craftsmanmember PianoTechnician's GuildAlso. old pianos wantedM Foster 628-0288
WAi.i.PAFERING ANDP•INTING: Interiorand exterior Ex-perienced, neat andreliable Have it donerlght• Call DaveOkenqulst, 583-4189
CERAMIC• TILES: Newinstallation or repairsFree estimates, workguaranteed 621-3560
PI.AINVILLE DAY('eRE CENTER. Ages3-5 Open 6 45 a m -5 30pm Mon-Fn, year-round Sliding fee scale,$0-$75/•,'k, dependingon famdy .incomeMeals provided 130West Main St, Plain-wile Phone 747-3321
DRAGON FURNi-TURE STRIPPING &REFINISHING: Rush-lng-Canemg-Repalrs-Pick-up and Delivery621-0064
FRED'S ALL AP-PLIANC]• SERVICE:Same day service, allmakes, low rates Call583-9599 any time
CANDID WEDDINGPHOTOGRAPHY:$199 95 with album'Color' Years of ex-perience' Professional'References' Reliable'Samples '• Thousands'246-7800 or 666-4350,call collect any time •
Hi: We clean carpetsfloors, and offices Callfor a free estimate 583-,6461
DEALER SPACEAVAILABLE: InTerryvdle, for 6.000 sq
TAG SALE. Sept 29th &30th 10-4, old dolls,sabre saws. Jig sawsTools. clothes &household items 20Adna Rd. Bristol
4 FAMILY TAG SALEMist items & furnitureSat &Sun,8am to6p m 20 Hemlock St. rat, SALE I Forlz•oneForestwlle, off PlneSt Dr, Plantsvdle Sat &
Sun. Sept 29 & 30, fromTAG SALE: Sat & Sun. 9 to 4 Furmture. glass-Sept 29 & 00, 1-5 1832 ware. clothes, and muchMt Vern(rrr Rd , more •
-S-c•u t h:ngt cn Nepreviews TAG S •,I.E Lamps.
TAG SALE- I0 families* clothes, slze 16 and up,toys. Atarl cartridges,
Set, Sept 9, from 10-4 19 inch B&W TV, 2 15"Rain date Sun. snov" tires, w/rlms. 2following day Laurel 14" tires, curtains,St, Southmgton Queen sheets, drums, etc RalnSt to River St, to or shine 8 WhltlockDun.ham St to l.aurel Ave. Mdldale nff Route
I0 Sept 29th & 30th SatTAG SALE" Boy's and &Sun 10am todpmglrl's winter clothes.sizes thru7 Someladles GIANT TAG SALE:and men's, including Antiques, collectables.larger sizes Lots of furniture, old scaleother items, plus fabric lamps: glassware.•d _plants.- Sept. 2•th• depresmonglass, linens,29th, Fn and Sat, 10-4 dol!s, frames, baskets.1061 Pleasant St, paper •goods, ,1ewelry,Southmgton Rain date vintage and regOct 5th&ath clothing, curtains,
drapes, bar stools, miscFOUR FAMILY TAG Frl /Sat. 104, 161-100SALE: 64 Debhle Dr, StuartDr ,South•.ngton_Sat. Sept 29, Sun, Sept30 10-4 Baby furniture. TAG SALE" 306 Curtlssbikes, and many St. Southmgton Sat,household items. South- Sept 29. Bo•'s BMXIngton dirt bike. rlmng lawn
mower, lamps. OrmntalTAG SALE. Sat & Sun, rug. and watercolorSept 29 & 30, from 10 to drapes, children's toys4 229 Stonegate Rd. aodgamusandclothmg,Southlngton No and much more 9 00-previews 2 30p m
TAG SALE. Two TAG SALE 3 familiesfamilies, Friday, Sept 29-30, Sat, Sun,Saturday, 9 a m -I p m I0-5 Sims Rd, Bristol.Kmck-knacks, househo- off Ivy Dr Rain orld items, girl's, boy's shine Spurting g•ods,clothes, toys, mlsc 58 household items,Pepperidge Dr and 123 clothing, toys.Pepperldge Dr glassware, curtains,
lamps. Atarl, XmasTAG SALE: Mmc tree. much more' Nohousehold items Baby prewewsthings, toys Sept. 29 &30, 10 a m to 5 p m 382 TAG SAt.E- Furniture.Pondview Dr , dehumidifier, officeSouthmgton furniture & equlpmenl
Boy's clothing, manySUPER TAG SALE. household items Sat &Sat, Sept 29, l0 to 5 Sun, 9 to 5 540 WSquare oak table and Johnson Ave. Cheshirecommode, rocker, At Paul Bunyan statuecherry ladies' desk,walnut drop-leaf table, GARAGE SALE'Vmt card table, table Knick-knacks, ,1ewelry.lamps, lots of Dep, dishes, glassware,china, sterling, Barbm p•ctares, lamps, couch.dolls, linens, ladies and chairs, Sept 29, 134men's, chddren's coats. Gannet Drive.
B•BN TAG SALEFantastic assortment,old tools, furmture.collechbles 9/29. 9/30,from 10 to 4 Ram orshine 7O8 SouthmgtonRd , Rt 164. Kensmgton
V, ANTED. Brother andtwo sisters, all employed, desire 5 roomrent m tm•i•='zident•
$250 to .$350 621 3139 or238-0700
W •,NTED Babysitterinto> home. 7 15a m to4 45 pm 2 chddrenages 2 & 7 HattonSchool area Owntransportation, refsCall 621-2576 after b p m
%ANTED Dishwasherno experiencenecessary Part-timenights Apply in personat Giovanni'sRestaurant, 181 Main St621-2394
WANTED. Privateparty would like to buyold coins or coincollections, pennies 1958or older, nickels 1945 orolder, dimes & quarters1964 or older, halves1969 or older Bring yourcoins to CalvaneseNursery. Rt 66.Mflldale 628-5888
%',, '•%TED Customersv, ho need quality inler•or and exteriorpainting' Seniordiscounts available Ifyou've called the rest.nov, call the best'Economy Palntrng ('o,Free eshmat.es Full>insured 583 2200
W,•NTED Smalportable refrigeratorunder 6 cu ft Must tw ,,good conditionreasonably priced Cal628-2614 after 6 p m
FOR SALE
Nancy 621-3401
-- and inexpensively. 2free--12 acres hay, experienced painters, ft indoor flea market suits, pants, sweaters A Southlngtonborderline Kensington 2rid year in business opening n Oct For largeclean tag sale Rt Iand Southlngton Call Call John Wells Pain- more lnfo, call 879-4471 I0, East St, Plalnvllle. I Experienced Part 82.8-6051 , tlng 879-2752 or 589-6682 next to Snow White
1I Counter Person {
HELP WANTED: let WEDDINGS ARE OUR Brake & Front god •; * • •1• Ik•d• • | GM experience preferred. Excellent working con- IwlthShlft injectlonPers°n famlllarmoldlng PhotographsSPECIALTY: & Mechanic • : %•, •-• (•' •. i ditions, all benefits, including pension plan. uni 1
machines & with Vldeography by Scott '•.....• '•" ....... •: * • /'•"•"•a• • I forms, etc Call or see I•,.-•,,........ '•,, :. * - •..IM•. I Raymond Henne, Service Manager Itrouble-shooting mold- Ca11589-6292 •, •,•o•.,• •,•,.•.• ,• • * ..... •
inn problems Apply In o•,• c.. •,,. •, •, •,• ,• Iq•ll •. I._ I Wasley Buick Olds Iperson at Lake Eyelet PLUMBER: Seml-ret]- ,,•,,,•,•,•,•.•,,•,•, w, .; • e,,• •"
.... * --' * I 1461 Farmington Ave. Ioffice, 170 Canal St, red PI license, repairs, o.o.•.....•o,, •o,•,•., > •. • "a'•A •.
Southlngton, between renovation, reasonable p ; o.i-#... . I3Oam-dpm Ca,lMarvmat583-9607 •:'=':"•°•'•• •r i Ch,ldren's [ •. • 589-4444 Bristol 522.9 s6 I
"Professional" 6.T.,55 Co•o-vstSilverCitYMerK]enTireCo. P• ** , Birthday Part es , ** •
'.he ..a,l lit' h)hl me h+bt' t att'tul '.'+hen I +/or,o l'l.nnx dh' ttl cattlt lht'
The dt'•FCe ot ch.nI•t'lilt '+,,hen ".he toh!
'Tin, (+thcl (la', I
Imlshed to the happ.,.applause of thc •roup
Iler tlr',t Fememberance ()1 l,e'.'•l •, High,.•as ot Room I v•hlchhchl 311 studcnb, -tr.',t •) lea rn Geomet r,, "
O'. ,Hid lh,tl the
•t •hc ,•dii.ttcd
I In, •ItC of l.e'..'.lli•h l>ehlnd the
t.hlt,+ I• • ,th the
I
•radoale from the
t<) a luno)r hl•h school
r edl cd it•
ltoall• torn dox•nc¢.nph'tcl•
RcHred mslruclorRax mood ,loyal cnm-incnlcd upon •rowinRold a tact ot hie the
pcFwnCC+X•hen you •et
a•c •ou •e•m to havecxperumce• hke this•hen •ou can't sleep.don't kno•+ •hen you do•o to Meep and are not
he Ic•tcd." con•ratula-t+n• Ihe clas• "Some-Ihlo• mum havc rubbed
the •amc category.
' •,' ,• hke the
m•h'd Accepl d x•htle
conccrocd x+ +tJ+ a•e lhatHh,d old ol the baoquel
h.tpp• chatter pun•-luale(l I)• shrdland hearlx lauRhs ac-c¢onp,•nied thc Rroupah)nR ;t• •alar• route.makm• an e•c+tmg halfhour h)F the •roup and achallen•mg permd ofIruMFalH)n for thephotographer
Palmetr) Ilenrmtta%lit Aldl. FrancisPetr•llo •eMar•o.Mhet't Mon•dlo+ andl)avtd •rlse wereheartd• thanked forthciF efforts as the
Nntlng that t'he old prnduclng the success+,chnol "e, rn)rongcF'+•flh lhc e%cnl turned out to
hl +
('harles Frate ex-plained he no•+ lives in('harlotte. North('arohna and received aheart•' laugh when henole• "everyonemvded to come downand visd "
Mary Barosky toldher schoollnates she•a• "Mill going to•chool" by takmg•olle•e courses
John A+klar. notingthat ¢han•e was notnec•arlly •+ only
".it the same address I¢hd durra+ h•h seh•ldd•s "
•>erhaps hawng cometo Ihe same conclusmn+Betty Krahk Carbonethexplamed her return to•aulhmglon "I've comehack to roost." she sa•d
R•chard Hubbard.now of Charlestown+Rhode Island. explamedhe mas married to JanetAtwater of Southmgtona,d had j•st r•month as a postmaster"I hope to go to Flomdam the wmters." he stud
"Why don't you go toNorth Carohna."Alexander Aduskewczcalled from the back ofthe room. settmg thegroup to laughter onceagain
Some g•v•ngdescr•phons of the pastHII• ve•rs prowdedm•Hc•lous detailOthers shyly stoodsmd their name qmetlysat down agam Butevery member •group seemed to havelhoughtful expressmnon thew face 'as thisverbal updat!ngprowded a private,personal memory
The class of '34 wdlnot have to wmt another50 years to meet agam,ff their response to aquerm as to when thenext should be wasposted
"We should not gomore than two yea•before the nextreunion." Fratesuggested "I have a lotof work, but l'm wdhngto work " A several-second gap •curredbefore everyoneremembered he nowhved in North Carolinaand burst mto laughter
Other 1934 Lewm H•ghSchool graduates at-tendmg the reumonmcluded Lena GrflloAIdL James AIdL MaryR•dz•k Bmerch. Emdy
Two apply for care liquor licensesThe Zonln• Board
.\ppeal• h•s recewedI•o apphcatmn• on carehquor hcenses
The appeal• board•tll hold a pubhchearmg at 7 3o p mTuesday. ()ct 5 on arequest from PaulPaohno+ 2854 East ManS• , Waterbur), andJules Moskowflz, 23Tudor lodge, Southmg-
ton, seekmg a specmlexceptmn for permlssmn to apply 1o lhe Slaleof ('nnn•'llcul [or a ca[ehquor hcense Io he usedat IT8+ MerldenWater-bur) "turnpike. 3oo feetca•l o[ the interseclmn•+ill+ Rugg]es Rom m ahtl•mC•S/one
Vincenl (+apnp. 13
l.onng St, Spmngfleld, Pilgrim Lane m aM a •, s a n d S i m o n residential 20-25 zoneKonover. 2410 Albany Robert J Andrews,Ave. V;est Hartford, 140 Runtmg Hall Dove,are requesting a spemal is seeking a variance toexcept,on for per- reduce the reqmredmmmon to apply to the parking •paces by threeSlate of Connecticut for from 4• 'o 43 spaces ata cafe hquor hcense on 176 I ".ang St, 1,500 feetQueen Street oppomte e" t of the intersect|onthe mlersectmn with •th Queen St. m aAwcraft Road in a business zonehusmesszone The Boy Scouts of
Rvsz•rd Sadanow•cz+ America of 589 Mare St,,to X"vdlm+dale Drive. •s Plantswlle, and Dr Arequeshng a variance to D'Angelo of North Mainadd a 24 by 3O foot two- Street, are re•luestmg acar garage and a to 3 special exeeptmn tosetthat side yard variance Christmas trees as aon h•s property m a fund raiser for Troop 32re',+dentml 2O-25 zone on the east rode of MareThe propert+', •s located Street opposite the125 feet north of the-intersection of Center•ntersectLon with Street in a CB zone
Paladlna Bucchler•WIIILam BennettMargaret KennedxBlock, Dorothy Jud•tCarter, Ernest Hobsonand Albert Dudzlk
other classmate,•ncluded Wesle•l,anbee, Mary Ma•:cmlec. Anne WalshMason, ElizabeEhReeves Musso. WllhamMamvare, Cheste•Potrepka. ConstanceMiller Rich, Mar•
Wrmn Scott, Darth•Taylor Savage
and Rose DellaVecch•uS•mone
P
Markley's tagsale Saturday
On Saturday, Sep-tember 29, a huge tagsale will be held to rmsemoney for the StateSenate candidacy ol Parks appreci,a,tionJoseph C Markley The Della Construction (ompany and Schal Associates were recently presenteffav, ards of appreciation fromtag sale will take place the tov, n for their contributiomin equipment and materials to thepark department. Shown left to righton-the coraer •of-.Wes• are: Bob Raulukm•fi•: s-dperinV#nWenVof D•lla-•onstrtlt'tlon::-Dave Choplins'•i, superin'tPnde•t of con-
,,truction for Schal Associates: Paul Wojdyla of Schal Associates: froward Slaney of Evans Shure Con-,,truction Company; Jerr• Limmer, representing the town engineering department: and John Salerno.chairman of the park department.
and West Main Street mPlantsville, from 8 a mto5p m
Markley •s running mthe 16th Senate Distractwhich includes parts otWaterbury. Wolcott andSouthmgton
The tag sale wdl include hundreds of item•of all kinds
%bout :H)O millionpeople speak English.
Markley accuses Democrats of 'negligence'Republican state andhlghways problems wnth the Yankee Doodle Bridge
senatecand•dateJoseph "For ten years'they Yankee Doodle Bridge in Norwalk. only fifteenMarkley has accused let the badges go." show that the ad- males from the sac of-the current Democrah( Markley sad "Now ministration still hasn't the Mlanus Riveradmm•stratmn of we're paymg the price learnedltslesson " Bridge Collapse Ex-
gros• n'eghgence', m of mismanagement with In early September, a repairs resulted inlmhng to maintain trafhc jams. patchwork dangerous spbt was enormous traffic tie-upst'onnectmut's bridges repmrs, and fear The discovered in the over the
BE AWIHlmER[
-- your Friendly Supermarketin Downtown South•ngton--
- home of fresh, well-trimmedWestern Beef tha(you'll be proud to
serve, and S.P.C. Coupons-to saveyourself cash or to save on grocerypurcha•ses-- Now's the t•me to startsawng S P.C. Coupons-one FREEw•th every $5.00 purchase. They
udd up fa•t and save you rash --Save 80 S P.C. Coupons and get$4.50 •n cash, so START NOW andbefore you know it you'll be savinglike never before•
IllII1
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III Drawing date Wed, Oct 3, 19•4 at I p.m, lI I
Congratulations to this week's HG Guido winner, Andrew Hubeny of Plantsville.