Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 65, No. 282, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 12, 1979 Page: 2 of 42
forty two pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
■ . 1 '' , ■ ■
•' fc ..
• ’•• v:, ' V: W;’r
‘ ' V’: • ••"*
4
-
;.T-"
PACE TWO-A—Sapulpa (Okla.) Herald, Sunday, August It, |t7t
Serving The Flag
}
FORT BENNING. Ga.-
Prt. Randy G. Harry, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Simon N.
Harry, Mounds, recently
received a Parachutist Badge
upon completion of the three-
week airborne course at the
U.S. Army Infantry School,
Fort Benning, Ga.
During the first week of
training, students undergo a
rigorous physical training
program and receive in-
struction in the theory of
parachuting. The second
week they receive practical
training by jumping from 34-
foot and 250-foot towers. The
final week includes five
static-line parachute jumps.
Harry entered the Army in
March 1979.
The private is a 1975
graduate of liberty High
School.
Lisa 0. Putman
SAN ANTONIO, Texas—
Airman Usa D. Putman,
daughter of Wilma P. Put-
man of 1406 Hill St., Sapulpa,
has completed Air Force
basic training at lackland
Air Force Base, here.
The airman, who is
remaining at lackland for
specialized training in the
security police field, studied
the Air Force mission,
organization and customs
and received special in-
struction in human relations.
Completion of this training
earned the individual credits
towards an associate in
applied science degree
through the Community
College of the Air Force.
Airman Putman is a 1979
graduate of Mason High
School, Tulsa, Okla.
CARLISLE BARRACKS,
Pa.—Col. Raymond H.
Young, son of Mr" Fay
Young, Bristow, recently
graduated from the
Corresponding Studies
Course at the U.S. Army War
College, Carlisle Barracks,
Pa.
Students selected to attend
the course complete the
correspondence portion in
off-duty time and then do
resident study at Carlisle
Barracks for two weeks
midway through the course
and again two weeks prior to
graduation.
The Army’s senior
educational facility prepares
officers of all the services, as
well as civilian officials of the
Federal government, for top
level command and staff
positions with the armed
forces throughout the world.
Upon completion of the
course he returned to his
regular unit at Kirkland Air
Force Base, N.M.
Young entered the Army in
July 1954.
He received a bachelor’s
degree in 1954 from
Oklahoma State University,
Stillwater, where he also
received his commission
through the ROTC program.
The colonel’s wife Evelyn,
lives in Albuquerque, N.M.
Marine Pvt. Wayde E.
Bolin, son of Don E. and
Peggy L. Bolin of Sapulpa,
has completed recruit
training at the Marine Corps
Recruit Depot, San Diego.
During the ten and one-
half-week training cycle, he
learned the basics of bat-
tlefield survival. He was
introduced to the typical
daily routine that he will
experience during his
enlistment and studied the
personal and professional
standards traditionally
exhibited by Marines.
He participated in an active
physical conditioning
program and gained
proficiency in a variety of
mill Ur y skills, including first
aid, rifle marksmanship and
dose order drill. Teamwork
and self-discipline were
emphasized throughout the
training cycle.
A 1977 graduate of Sapulpa
High School, he joined the
Marine Corps in March 1979.
Bob Watson
Dies Saturday
Robert (Bob) Watson, 73,
618 N. Elizabeth SL, a self-
employed contractor and
longtime Sapulpa resident,
died Saturday at Bartlett
Memorial Medical Center.
He had been ill since May.
Mr. Watson, who lived here
since 1918, was a member of
100F Lodge and South
Heights Baptist Church.
Services will be held at 2
p.m. Monday in Westside
Baptist Church, with burial in
Greenhill Memorial Gardens,
under the direction of Smith
Funeral Home.
Survivors include his
widow, Mrs. Elba Watson;
three sons, Roy Watson of
Tulsa; Charles Watson, 1130
E. McKinley SL and Jerry
Watson of the home; and two
daughters, Mrs. John Sontag,
618S. AppleSt. and Mrs. Judy
Fulks, Keifer.
Rawdon Rites
Held Monday
Services for Mrs. Belle
Rawdon, 93, 110 E.
Goodykoontz Ave., a
longtime Sapulpa resident,
will be held at 10 a.m.
Monday in Owen Funeral
Horne Chapel, with Reverend
T. Howard Allen officiating.
Burial will be in South
Heights Cemetery.
Mrs. Rawdon died Wed-
nesday in Doctor’s Hospital
at Tulsa.
Pallbearers will be Carl
Carlock, Waldo Carlock,
Lloyd Carlock, Kenneth
Foster, A.W. Kidd and
Leonard James.
FHAOffering Rural Car Tag
Housing Guarantees
The Farmers Home
Administration has begun a
program through which it
will guarantee rural housing
loans made by commercial
banks, savings and loan
associations and other
private lenders, C.R. Wood,
FmHA County Supervisor for
Creek and Tulsa Counties,
announced.
FmHA, the rural credit
agency of the U.S. Depart-
ment of Agriculture will
guarantee up to 90 percentr of
the principal and interest of
these loans.
Guaranteed housing loans
wil be available for above-
moderate income borrowers
who cannot get housing
mortgage credit without a
guarantee.
At present, the USDA
agency will will offer loan
guarantees only under its
single family housing loan
program. FmHA will con-
tinue to make single family
housing loans with its own
funds. It will also continue to
make but not guarantee loans
for rural rental housing, farm
laobr housing, housing site
development and other
purposes.
Single family housing loans
are made in open country,
towns of up to 10,000
population and certain
designated towns of between
10,000 and 20,000 population.
They finance modest but
adequate housing and related
facilities. Wood explains.
Loans may be used to buy,
build, improve, repair or
rehabilitate haouses and
Carter Defends Mayor
As ‘Honorable Man'
The Worry Clinic
Teenage
‘Horse Sense
By
Georg* W Cran*. Ph.D., M.D.
(2) If you can afford only one
year of college, you get the best
leverage for winning a good job
by gaining the 1-year Business
School Diploma.
For Business Colleges offer
you immediate “mer-
the very
Marvin is like 1,000,000 other
high school graduates who are
tempted by desire for an auto
and a quick pay check. I^ook
ahead! Don’t Imitate the
Biblical Prodigal Son!
CASE S-638: Marvin T„ aged
18, is at a vital crossroads of his
life.
“Dr. Crane,” he asked, “my
folks want me to go to college.
"But I am tired of going to
school all the time so I'd like to
get a job.
“For I can make good wages .chandisable skills"
right now and I'd like to buy a day you graduate!
used car to go out on dates. (3) If you wish to be a
“So what could college do for teacher, clergyman, doctor,
me that would be better?” engineer, etc., you will need at
TEENAGE "HORSE SENSE” le“st 4 ^ars„of Liberal Ar*j
college, plus 3 years more of
Many teenagers are like the graduate work for a doctor’s
Biblical Prodigal Son, who degree,
didn’t think ahead but soon But those extra 3 years of
ended bankrupt and starving. liberal Arts aren’t propor-
Other teenagers look 10 years tianately as valuable as just
into the future and ignore the one year, if you plan to go into
attractive glitter of present business or factory and office
dates and quick money. positions.
Teenagers, please carefully Remember, the people who
analyze these helpful grab the first available job in
statements: order to splurge with a car on
(1) At least one year of dates, will likely be begging
college in your pedigree gives their former high school
you far more leverage for classmates for jobs just 10
better jobs, as well as officer years later!
status in the Military in case of For the people who take more
lege or trade
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
President Carter says
Housing Secretary-nominee
Moon Landrieu is an
"honorable man, and he has
“no concern” the former New
Orleans mayor has a conflict,
of interest problem with his
real estate dealings.
In an interview with
visiting editors Friday,
released by the White House
Saturday, Carter discussed
allegations against landrieu,
the Palestinian question and
his own re-election.
Carter was spending the
weekend at Camp David and
planned to return to the White
House Monday.
Landrieu went to work for a
New Orleans developer,
Joseph C. Canizaro, the day
after his term as mayor
expired. He later received a
10 percent interest without
putting up any money. While
Landrieu was mayor, a rich
an parcel of cityowned river
front property was traded to
Three Mile Island nuclear
accident. But he added, there
is “no way that our country
can close down nuclear plants
... and it would be ill-advised
to terminate the construction
of nuclear power plants that
have already been ap-
proved.”
related facilities and to
provide adequate water and
waste disposal systems.
Guaranteed loans will be
made only to applicants with
above-moderate incomes,
defined by the FmHA as
adjusted gross income qf
815,600 to 820,000 per year.
Low and moderate income
applicants may be eligible for
rural housing Ions made by
FmHA.
Inans to be guaranteed are
limited to 97 percent of the
market value of homes and
sites for the first 825,000 and
95 percent of the loan in ex-
cess of 825,000, The
maximum repayment period
is 33 years.
Wood also reports that
FmHA regulations provide
lenders who obtain
guarantees for rural housing
loans options for selling,
assigning or selling par-
ticipations in the guaranteed
part of these loans.
FmHA regulations require
that the lender making a
guaranteed rural housing
loan be a local lender-
located in or doing business in
the area where the house is
located. To apply for an
FmHA guaranteed rural
housing loan, contact you
local lender.
Davis Services
Held Monday
Services for George W.
Davis, 82, 718 S. Mission St.,
will be held at 2:30 p.m.
Monday in First Baptist
Church, with Reverends F.M.
Byford and Paul Thompson
officiating. Burial will be in
Green Hill Memorial Gar-
dens under the direction of
Owen Funeral Home.
Mr. Davis, a supervisor of
maintenance in the school
system here, died Friday in
Doctors Hospital at Tulsa.
Pallbearers will be Rev. T.
Howard Allen, Dr. Walter
Cale, Gorden Henley. James
Bell, A.L. Bradley Sr. and
Jack Doudican.
Sapulpa tag agent Joan
McKenzie reminds residents
to check the tab on their auto
license tags for the expiration
date.
“The last number on the
tag has nothing to do with
anything,” she said. “Forget
the numbers. All tags should
have a monthly decal on
them, that is where the ex-
piration date appears.”
The month that appears on
the tab in the comer of the
car tag is when the
registration should be
renewed. The following
month is a grace period and
the next month is a penalty
oeriod
Prison Rodeo
Aug. 31-Sept. 2
This year's Oklahoma State
Penitentiary Rodeo is em-
phasizing a return in
presenting the rodeo “like it
used to be.”
Part of this tradition is a
greater inmate involvement
in the production of the rodeo
which will be held Aug. 31
through Sept. 2 in the rodeo
arean at the state peniten-
tiary in McAlester.
“Money the hard way” is
an event at athe prison rodeo
that has been described as
“the mast dangerous, the
most exciting and the
wildest” of the inmate events
at the rodeo.
The object of “money the
hard way” is to grab a
tobacco pouch full of cash
from between the horns of a
Brahma bull.
'The bill and the inmates
enter the rodeo arena at the
same time. The bull or the
inmate leaving with the
money wins.
For the past two years,
inmate Larry Breedlove has
“beat the bull” out of the
cash. I,ast year, Breedlove
donated part of his rodeo
earnings to charity.
Other inmate events
unusual to the rodeo arena
are the tub ride, where in-
mate cowboys ride a bucking
bronc lh a wash tub, and a
Brahma bull chariot race.
Inmates will also take part
Senior Citizens
Weekly Calendar
Taft&Blxby
224-7184
Monday
Games, Bus Service, Congregate Meals 11:30-12.
Tuesday
Games, Bus Service, Congregate meals, 11-11:30, Bingo 12-3.
Games, Bus Service.
Sahoma Lanes 12-3.
Wednesday
Congregate meals 11:30-12. Bowling
Thursday
Games, Bus Service, Ceramics 9:30-12. Congregate Meals
11:30-12.
Friday
Games, Bus Service, Congregate meals 11:30-12.
ParkAnd Recreation
Calendar For W eek
MONDAY
liberty Fields I&II-Men’s Softball ..............6:30 p.m.
TUESDAY
liberty Fields I&II-Men’sSoftball 6:30p.m
WEDNESDAY
liberty Fields 1411—Men’s Softball................6:30 p.m.
THURSDAY
liberty Fields I&II-Men’s Softball 6:30 p.m.
SATURDAY & SUNDAY
Municipal Golf Course—18 Hole Turkey Shoot 8 a.m.
Municipal Golf Course—Mon -Fri...............8 a.m.-Dark
Municipal Swimming Pool—Mon.-Fri.—General Ad-
missions ......................................12 noon-8 p.m.
Municipal Swimming Pool—Saturday—General Ad-
missions ....................................10a.m.-6pjn.
Garfield Summer Playground—Mon.-Fri .9 a.m.-Noon—1:00
p.m.-4:00 p.m.
Jefferson Summer Playground—Mon.-Fri. 9a.m.-Noon-l:00
p.m.-4:00 p.m.
Tiger Community Center Playground Mon.-Fri. 9:00 a.m.-
Noon—1:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m.
Woodlawn Summer Playgoumd—Mon.-Fri., 9 a.m.-Noon—
1:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m.
Park & Recreation Office: 224-1144
Senior Citizens Community Center
Argentine Peso Card Is Issued
• * p, * .in traditional events such as
Congressional Delegationbronc and ridin«
‘' ~ Native American inmates
will perform tribal dances in
Wins Vietnam ‘
qualifies you for being
alumnus or alumna of college
Thus, the fact you can an- Canizaro'
swer Yes to being a college “Moon is an honorable
person, will put you into a high .,
bracket for better jobs. man’ carter said. I have no
war!
You realize that it is
necessary for high schoolers to
be 16 to get an auto driver’s
license and 18, to vote.
Well, one year of colli
likewise gets you past
“screening” of applicants for
jobs.
For example, prospective
if you are
school
college or trade school training,
usually become the employers!
They also will live on the
"better side of the tracks” and
offer their children far more
advantages, so use “Horse
Sense” and look ahead.
Send for my “Vocational
Guidance Booklet”, enclosing a
employers will
Mgn school gradual
you are usually ignored.
man,
concern about this at all. I
trust him and he would be an
excellent Cabinet officer.”
Carter said that if he
decides to run for another
term, “I would have a good
chance to get re-elected." He
said he would announce his
intentions later this year, but
he is expected to run.
Asked to clarify his position
on the Palestinians, Carter
said:
“I am against any creation
of a separate Palestinian
state. I don’t think it would be
good for the Palestinians. I
don’t think it would be good
for Israel. I don’t think it
would be good for the Arab
neighbors of such a state.”
Carter said he will not deal
with the Palestinian
Liberation Organization
unless it recognizes “the
right of Israel to exist," and
added US. policy has never
deviated from that condition.
He warned it would be
“dangerous” and he would
oppose a move to gut the
windfall profits tax on the oil
industry in the Senate and try
to draft a more acceptable
bill in a House-Senate con-
erence.
Carter said he will follow
the recommendations of the
commission looking into the
HANOI, Vietnam (UPI) -
A U.S. congressional
delegation Saturday won
pledges from Vietnam to
solve the question of
Americans missing in action
“perhaps once and for all.”
In specialized talks
described by delegation
sources as "very very
frank," Hanoi also agreed to
allow the Bangkok-based
Military Joint Casualty
Resolution Center to in-
vestigate the MIA situation,
the sources said.
Obviously pleased with the
three hours plus of hard-
nosed talks with Vietnamese
MIA experts, delegation
leader Rep lister Wolff, D-
N.Y., said in an interview:
“The State Department
people really must be
crititizedfor their handling of
this situation. I think we may
now solve this problem
perhaps once and for all."
Senior pentagon MIA ex-
pert Capt. Ray Vohden, held
prisoner by the North Viet-
namese for more than eight
years, said no U.S.-Vietnam
meeting on prisoners of war
and MIAs was ever so
fruitful.
Vohden, the fourth U.S.
serviceman shot down over
Vietnam in 1965, said. “I want
to put the past behind.”
Delegation officials refused
to release complete details of
their understanding with the
Vietnamese team, but said
the Bangkok-based JCRC will
be allowed to make frequent
trips to Hanoi to assist the
Vietnamese in accounting for
more than 1,500 MIAs in
Vietnam.
In the past, the Vietnamese
refused to help in such ao
counting although they said
Vietnamese teams con-
tinously searched for
remains.
Congressman Robert
Dornon, R-Calif., a MIA
expert, said, "Never have the
Vietnamese been so for-
thcoming on this issue. They
told us they never realized
how deep this issue was to
Americans before.”
He seconded Wolff’s
criticism of previous State
Department efforts to ac-
count for MIAs.
A once-over with an
electric razor may remove
knots and balls from
sweaters.
costumes made for the rodeo.
The inmate band from the
state reformatory at Granite
will provide music for all
three sessions.
BUENOS AIRES,
Argentina (UPI) —
American Express recently
issued its first new card in
Latin America since 1969,
naming it the Argentine Peso
Card.
Holders of the Argentine
Peso Cards will be billed in
both pesos, the Argentine
moneraty unit, and in dollars.
The card will be valid In-
ternationally, the company
said.
Election Of
Trustees
VFW Auxiliary
Tuas., 8 p.m.
VFW
1 Mile West ot Sapulpa
V0UR BEST IDEAS CAN EARN
VOU UP TO *2,000 CASH!
POPULAR SCIENCE AND FILON ARE
CO SPONSORING AN EXCITING
FIBERGLASS PANEL DESIGN
CONTEST, AND THE GRAND PRIZE
IS $2,000 IN CASH. SEE
THE BOYS AT BENSON
LUMBER FOR DETAILS!
■Mfei:
.. .
long stamped, return envelope,
I ask if you are a plus 251.
iduate. If not, It contains some of the types
of tests you must take for
Thuk, your high school college entrance or when ap-
diploma geta you over the first plying for e job
“hurdle” when you seek a good
Job. < ArwflVl wrtM M Or. CraM. M**W*«
Next, you are asked if you m*-. m—w. *•» «•* u>.tr pUimbta*
are a college man or woman, J7 prumm «x*d ►>«»* to pay um pip*r.
and even one semester y» •*•* (*•»* m*
★ Smile-Awhile ★
WESTERN
HERITAGE
DAYS
COUNTRY
MUSIC SHOW
AMPHITHEATER • CITY PARK
BRISTOW, OKU.
TUESDAY AUG. 14
8:00 P.M.
mmr
J
m
9i!
VKMYTH/HS TO BU/iC AATYTNfi
EN50N LUMBER ED.
114 E. LEE
2244)225)
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Lake, Charles S. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 65, No. 282, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 12, 1979, newspaper, August 12, 1979; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1494515/m1/2/: accessed August 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.