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The Bridgeport Post from Bridgeport, Connecticut • Page 23

Location:
Bridgeport, Connecticut
Issue Date:
Page:
23
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

IMQW! 7 OAYS A WEEK COMPLETE DINNER am Weiipert, Conn. a 3 Exit 17, Conn. 7pka "octd! PRIME RIBS OF BEEF (also lot pailies to 1001 BAKED STUFFED SHRIMP FILET MIGNON ROCK LOBSTER TAILS 4 Dinner Includes -Soup or Juice, Salad, Potato, Vegetables, Dessert and Beverage. Now sorving daily --freshly Bakod POPOVERS, Strawberry Rhubarb Consorvs Bird-Complete S3.50« Served BRADFORD HOUSE SATURDAY FEATURE DELUXE -CHEESEBURGER PLATE Blaclt Rock Tpke. Tairiield ALt.

THE SAI-AD YOU WANT WE WAIT ON YOU! PIANO BAR DIMLY LIT NAUTICAL ATMOSPHERE FIREPLACE THE STEAK SEAFOOD RESTAURANT New Haven Ave. Milford 877-1467 1-05 Exit -10 93 WINFIELD E. NORWALK 866-9992 CONN. TPKE. EXIT 17 RIGHT a MILES A SPECIAL DINNERS Y- Monday thru Friday (Except Holidays) KFRIED SHRIMP rt 4 BONELESS CHICKEN BREAST 4195 1 LIVER with Bacon Croquettes Sauce Complain.) BROIL PEPPERS with Spaghetti JUMBO KOPEN STEAK Complete Complete LATE NIGHT SNACKS.

MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 'Tit. II PHI. A.A-^.A.^.A.A.^.^.A.A.A.^.A.A.^.A.A. ju. RIVERSIDE PRODUCTIONS "V1NCEMT DeFiliCE" Available For Concerts, Weddings, Cockrail Clubs, etc.

FOR INFORMATION CALL You Tried Our uuu LARGE It One-oF-a-Kind--You'll Love It! Stuffed Clams Fish 'n Chips Fantastic Anripasto Ifalion Dinners WINE BEER Open 7 Days A Week 'Til 12 Midnighr MARIO MACARONI 818 fe BA Dpl Private Room for Small Panics Up to 30 196 MIDDLE STREET BRIDGEPORT 333-8979 1031 North Ave I I I VALDOSTAN'A STUFFBD SCAMl'I A CUTU1T A LA A A SCAI.I-OFINI FRANCA1SF, "The Above Served wllh Soup, Salad or 7,111, Coffee OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY--CLOSED SUNDAY BUSINESSMEN'S SERVED 12-2 6G7 Bridgeport Ave. I 874-780D Seafood At Its Best "JACK ROSS" on Electric Piano Friday Saturday Evenings 8-12 APPEARING TGN20HT 9-2 A.M. SURFSIDE FjH, SAT. "FIREBOfi" NO ADMISSION CHARGE STRATFIELD MOTOR HOTEL MAIN and CHAPEL STREETS BRIDGEPORT 366-4321 FREE--No Admission Making Up for Musical Bernle Frank of Nons'plk who once played a mlnlsler on Ihc Wlllon Ftayshop stage, Is now being converted by make-up artist Pat Gould into a rabbi for his new role in "Fiddler on the Rool" lo open tonight at 8:40 p.m. at the Wlllon theater.

The production will run every Friday and Saturday evening this month. Fire Levels House in Andover As Curious Bystanders Gawk ANDOVER (UPI) Mr. and Mrs. Donald Sobols' house Inirn- ed down and none of the two dozen or so curious bystanders thought to call the fire department. The chief is furious.

"No one had the brains to call the fire department," said Joe Armstrong, 42, who has been chasing fire trucks since he was kid. "I am angry and bitter. 1 Dy chance, a volunteer man, John Hutchinson, looked uo into the Indian summer sky Thursday and saw a column of smoke as he was working on a nearby farm, It was he who called fire headquarters at 9:20 a.m. Four minutes later, Armstrong and his crew arrived with sirens ooen in this tiny eastern Connecticut community of 2,200 hut the gawkers made it difficult for him to get the hoses hooked up to the pumpers. No one was in the fire that destroyed the Satrols' 200- vear-old clapboard nnd house after the couple had gone to work.

But, Armstrong asked, "How were the paoole at the fire to know that no one was in (he huilding?" "This is the non-involved U.S. citizen. It's rrtally sickening." Armstrong said. "You hear about it happening in (he bis: cities likn Boston and New York hut you ficurc that in the small state of Connecticut people feel a closeness. You wonder how this cancer is affecting the nation," he said.

The red house, set among maples with a meadow in back, was on Hutchinson Valley road, a scant 100 yards off a flat stretch of Rte. 6. "A state highway survey would probably show that an auto passes there every -10 to '15 seconds Rte. 6 is that heavily traveled, especially in the morning," Armstrong said. "At least 25 to 30 people were standing around when we pot there.

People were jauntily walking down the road to watch the fire and Rte. was jammed with cars and tractor trailers parked belter skelter," he said. "They were there for a good 10 minutes hut no one had the common sense to call us," he "The extent of damage- was totally uncalled for," he said. "The building was fully charged with fire when we got there. But it was a bad fire only because no one called sooner." "I guess I'm from Ihe old school," Armstrong said.

"I think people should help each other." STUDENT SPOTS A RARE EAGLE HEBRON I A Hebron High School junior, Jeff Bombard, spotted a rarefy seen halt! eagle soaring about 6,000 feet in the sky during an outdoor meteorology class Thursday. His science teacher, Mark Valdamnrini, quickly set up a six-inch reflecting telescope outside and identified the reddish- brown bird with a white head and tail. According to Robert Mueller, director of the Sharon Audubon Center, early November is the prime time in Connecticut for eagle migration. Ornithologist Nobel Proctor of Branford, who keeps extensive bird-sighting records, said more eagles have been seen this fall near New Haven than in previous years. "So far this, fall we've had three bold eagles and tlireec golden eagles sighted in the New Haven area," he said.

PHONE WORKERS SET ELECTION NOV. 10-14 The clcclion of'cxccutivo board members of the 10,000 member Connecticut Union nf Telephone Workers (CUTW) will take place from Nov. 10 through Nov. 14 with two Driclgcport area men running unopposed for scats on the board. Ronald P.

Kavenaugh, of 128 Warwick avenue is up for election to a llirec-year term for west division vice-president. George M. Sherwood, of 4 George street, is up for election to a three-year term for plant vice- president. Both men are incumbents. CUTW members are employed by (he Southern New England company (SNET) which has a nearly complete monopoly on telephone service in Connecticut.

Union members include operators, accountants, engineers, In- slallcrs, cablcmen and linemen. Two Plays Set Next Tuesday at Rodeph Sholom The Rodeph Sholom Festival of Light and Learning will open its season Wth two plays by Robert Lerner next Tuesday at 8:30 p.m; in the Congregation Rodeph Sholom at Park and Capitol avenues. Entitled "Cry in the Night" nd "The Victims" the plays will be directed by Natalie Rogers. Both productions will feature Miss Jean Buchalter, stage, lilm and TV actress. Miss Buchalter has previously appeared in "Waltz of the Toreadors," "Ghosts" and "The World of Sholom Aleichem." Also appearing in Ihe plays will be Burt Grosselfinger and Robert Cutler who has appeared in such films as "Klute," 1 "Midnight Cowboy" and Sweet Charity.

Mr. Grosselfin- ger has been active for many years in the Broadway theater and in television. "Cry in the Night" deals with a desperate phone conversation between parents and a son. The encounter takes place in a phone booth in Grand Central station and in a condominium in Miami beach. The second play, "The Victims," is set in a Brooklyn luncheonette where Max and Sadie Edelman find themselves in the midst of neighborhood change.

Against a tableau of urban unrest, the play deals with a mysterious customer who enters the restaurant to raise havoc with his seemingly defenseless ictims." JEAN BUCI1ALTER 20 Years Ago (From The Post, November 7, 1953) Stock of the Ford Motor company is to be sold (a the public after the first of Ihe year. The Soviet Union celebrated (he 33th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution with massive parade which played down Soviet military might. Louis the hot trumpet player, said he is thinking of going to Russia to preach the "gospel of American jazz." BRIDGEPORT POST ny Nov. 7, Do Todays SKI ING Technicalities Confuse You? The Carrol! Reed Ski Shop is a i representatives from K-Z Kneissl Solomon Olin Raichle Molitor IN OUR STORE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8th JOIN US FOR CIDER AND DONUTS AND SEE OUR NEW SKI EQUIPMENT We'll Be Modeling The Latest Ski Fashions Drawings for Free SKI LIFT TICKETS -SKI MOVIES -Cross Country Ski Waxing Clinics by Trak CARROLL REED PLAYHOUSE SQUARE, WESTPORT Open Daily Friday till 9:00 Telephone 226-9517 headache "S-. SS Xf 8rar" with fiR kidi have a ball, too, drooling over the enticing offerings in such When you've got reading at hand, it's rjajy to relax and put your problems aiide.

When it comei to reading that captures Hie things as bicyctei, trikes, sporting equipment a "cutfdly puppy or interest of Ihc whols family, it's hard to beat the Want Ads. kitten and, for the musically inclined, a wide ranga of instruments. Evefyone is interested in bargains. Dad may be thinking of a better car, or a larger home. Peihaps ho needs help with some remodeling project around tha house, ho can check the- Business Services directory.

Mom can look through tha Classified Pages and find a seemingly unending source of fascinating reading. There are great bargains in household furnishings of every description. Persons looking for a job, a change of employment, or a business opportunity find tha Help Wanted adls of unusual interest. Many a promising career has been started in the Want Ads, Of all the interesting about Want 'Ads, possibly tEio most interesting is the money factor. Not only do you save on great bargains, but you havo access to ready cash by selling off your nO'longer-needed! articles.

Take inventory of these usable items and call cur Classified department to place a fast-acting selling message. Dial 333-4151 Interesting People Use I he CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT Dial 333-4151 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT..

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About The Bridgeport Post Archive

Pages Available:
456,277
Years Available:
1947-1977