Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 70, No. 230, Ed. 1 Friday, June 8, 1984 Page: 2 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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I
PAGE TWO—8a pulps (Okie) HeraM. Friday. Jane 8.1M4
'Area newsbriefs
Hours rut
Employees at Bartlett
Memorial Medical Center have
had a cut back in hours rather
than the loss of eight hours of
pay, according to Fern Kelin, co-
administrator of the hospital.
A statement in Thursday's
Kapalpa Dally HeraM said the
employees were working eight
hours a pay period without pay.
Kelin Thuisday said employees
are working 72 hours a pay period
rather than 80 hours a pay period.
Board member charged
MOUNDS (AP) - A Liberty
Mounds School Board member
has been charged with assaulting
two eighth-grade students at
tlieir graduation dance
John E. Mulkey. 45. of Bixby
was charged with two misde-
meanor counts of aggravated
assault and battery after the
parents of 13-year-old and 14-
year-old boys filed complaints
with the Tulsa County district at
tomey’s office.
Mulkey denies he struck De-
Wayne Stacy, 14, and Buddy
Wells, 13, at the dance May 21. He
said he told them to leave the
Liberty High School gym because
they were fighting.
Stacy's mother said the boys
told her Wells was dancing
backwards when his head hit
Mrs Mukley's chin, bloodying
her lip. Mrs. Stacy said.
She said several other parents
at the dance confirmed what the
boys said.
Bid opening OK'd
The Oklahoma Transportation
Commission approved a final Ju-
ly bid opening list Monday total-
ing almost 835 million.
The list represents projects
that will be let for bid during Ju-
ly
Transportation officials said
work will begin as soon as the
bids have been received and ap-
proved by the commission
Meanwhile, two jobs in Creek
County are being advertised in
the final July 1985 bid opening
list.
One job begins 2.5 miles south
of Highway 33 and goes north to
1.2 miles south of Highway 51 on
Highway 48 The job calls for an
one inch asphalt overlay.
The second job begins 42 miles
north of Highway 51 on Highway
99 and continues into Pawnee
County. This job also calls for an
one inch asphalt overlay.
Center may clone
TULSA (AP) - Officials of the
Federal Emergency Manage-
ment Agency say they may close
the agency's offices Wednesday.
The center will have registered
"99 percent" of the Memorial
Day weekend flood victims by
then, said Bob Broussard, coor-
dinating office for the agency.
He said a trimmed down
disaster center might remain
open after Wednesday, if there is
still a need.
When the disaster center open-
ed. Broussard had predicted 3,000
to 4,000 flood victims would pass
through to center by today.
However, by Thursday evening,
1,984 had been registered
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Police and fire reports
Car missing—
Johnny Bridges, of Cliff's Auto
Sales. 20 E. Taft Ave., told police he
was approached by three males
wanting to test drive a 1977 Buick
Electra at 11:15 a m. Thursday.
Bridges told police the men had not
returned the car
Bridges said the 1972 Lincoln the
men drove to and parked on the car
lot before they left in the Buick is
still there
Bike taken—
Jimmy Montezuma. 44. of 301 W.
Norma St., told police a motocross
bike was taken from his porch
between 11 p m. Wednesday and 8
a m. Thursday.
Montezuma said the bike was
valued at $50.
House entered—
Mary Stroup. 38. of 4377 Lakeside
Drive, told police she was showing
an apartment at 202 S. Linden St.,
when she noticed the apartment had
been entered and several items
taken.
Stroup said missing are light
bulbs, mirrors and windows from
the apartment She estimated the
damage and losses at $300.
Stroup said the incidentyoccurred
between 2 p.m. Tuesday and 11 p.m.
Thursday
Mini mart robbed—
Lynn Haley, 19, a clerk at the
Delta Mini Mart, 1 N. Mission St,
told police a male paid for $5 gas and
pumped $16 52 gasoline into his van
at7:15p m Thursday
Cars wreck—
A vehicle pulling out from the Wal-
mart shopping center parking lot
collided with a vehicle pulling into
the Wal-mart shopping center park
ing lot Thursday.
Police said Mounds residents
Josephine Henshaw and Judith A
Sturman were drivers of the cars.
Henshaw's car sustained $300
damage and Sturman's car sustain-
ed $900 in damages
Car shot at—
Orville Nichols. 49. of Kuute 2 told
police a person stuck a pistol out the
drivers window of his car and fired
four rounds at Nichols' truck
Nichols told police after the gun
was fired he rammed the suspects
vehicle.
Seven firefighters responded to
the O. B. Barsh home, Route 2. at 1
a m today. The call concerned flam-
mable liquid accidently spilled and
ignited by vehicle exhaust.
Firefighters said the fire resulted
in a total loss to house
A Fire Department official said
the building loss was $12,000 and the
content loss was $30,000
Death
Thompson
Funeral services for Neal Thomp-
son of Sapulpa were today in the
Smith Funeral Chapel, with the Rev.
Harley Hunt officiating.
Soviets reportedly
supplying Iraq arms
By The Associated Press
The Soviet Union has supplied
Iraq with sophisticated missiles
capable of hitting Iran's main Per-
sian Gulf oil terminal at Kharg
Island and targets deep inside Iran,
according to a foreign diplomat in
Iraq.
The Baghdad-based diplomat said
Iraq recently received shipments of
Soviet-made AS-4, AS-5 and AS-6
guided missiles, along with
shipments of modified surface-to-
surface SS-12 missiles.
"The new AS missiles can easily
score hits in Kharg Island and, if
launched by the supersonic
bombers, can reach any vital Ira-
nian economic facility,” the
diplomat said Thursday, speaking
on condition of anonymity.
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
said May 23 that his country would
"soon acquire new weapons capable
of striking at Iranian economic
targets deep inside Iran," but he did
not identify the weapons
Hussein called on his air force of-
ficers Thursday to "strike at the
enemy's economic targets."
Iraqi officials reached by The
Associated Press refused comment
on the diplomat's report.
NBC News reported Thursday
night that Iraq had ordered 5,000
cluster bombs from Chile. Each 500-
pound bomb, made with U.S. parts
and technology, explodes into 240
1010 E Taft
U4 //09
Thick Hickory Grilled Steaks
Lehanoso Hors (Tooinos
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Politics overshadows
economics at summit
Burial followed in South Heights
Cemetery, under the direction of
Smith Funeral Home Serving as
casket bearers were Ted Hudson,
Sonny Parker, Odie Ashcraft, J.R
Williams and Bill Trail.
LONDON (AP) - Leaders of
seven major industrialized
democracies tackled their economic
problems at the summit today, with
British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher expressing worry that high
interest rates might undermine the
economic rebound and worsen the
debt burden of poorer nations
"In the world outside our own
countries, the level of international
debt is a serious and pressing pro-
blem," Mrs Thatcher told her col-
leagues at the first formal session of
the 10th annual economic summit.
"There are no easy or painless
solutions" to the these difficulties,
said Mrs Thatcher But she added
that the summit's "first message"
must be that the current strategy of
ensuring economic expansion
without inflation “is the right one —
and we intend to stick to it.”
President Reagan and the other
chiefs of state turned to economic
issues at their first formal summit
session at Lancaster House after
discussions Thursday night about
such pressing political concerns as
terrorism, arms control and the
deep chill in East-West relations
It appeared likely that the seven
Daily records
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smaller “bomblets” that can spread
fire and shrapnel over an area the
size of 10 football fields, NBC said
Communiques issued Thursday by
Iran and Iraq said 54 people were
killed when the two countries bomb-
ed each other's cities Thursday and
shelled border regions
In Taif, Saudi Arabia, oil
ministers of the Arab gulf nations
were to hold an emergency meeting
today to discuss threat of attacks on
tankers in the gulf. Both Iran and
Iraq have attacked commercial
ships in the region.
Iraqi pilots have damaged more
than a score of ships in the gulf near
Iran in an attempt to halt Iran's oil
exports and thus cripple its ability to
continue the 45-month war.
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Romancing
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Plus.. .Bonus Feature
Friday-Saturday-Sunday
The Hunter
from the Future
YOR
A COLUMBIA PICTURE
leaders would endorse some form of
political statement — possibly as
early as today — apart from the
final economic communique ex-
pected at the end of the summit
Saturday.
Although Mrs Thatcher express-
ed confidence that the industrial
allies of the West and Japan were on
the right policy track, she said.
"There is still much to be done "
Mrs. Thatcher, a close ally of
Reagan's, did not single out the
United States on the matter of in-
terest rates.
Walker in Rogers
TULSA (AP) — Former mental
patient Gary Alan Walker was in the
Rogers County Jail today awaiting
arraignment on murder, kidnapping
and rape charges in the death of
Tulsa radio newswoman Valerie
Shaw-Hartzell.
Three murder charges were filed
against Walker in Tulsa County on
Thursday, accusing him of killing
Ms Shaw-Hartzell. Eddie O. Cash
and Janet Dee Jewell
Walker, who was being held in the
Tulsa County Jail, was transfered to
the Rogers County Jail.
VFW POST 1320
MNC£ TO THE MUSIC OF
CURT
AND THE
*T* TOWN THRILLS
Friday...................8:30 p.m. to 1:00 a.m.
Saturday.................9:00 p.m. to 1:30 a.m.
PUBLIC WELCOME
ADMISSION $3.00
Aft Limit 18—I. D. Required
lb Mitel Wat o( Sap.lp» On lta|. "ft"
Nick HoiItmin-Post Commands!
PICNIC
Sat,June 9
Sapulpa Historical
Society Picnic
Will Bo Held
At A Later Date.
LosHughos
SATURDAY NIGHT DANCE
JUNE 9
9 p.m. To 1 a.m.
Presenting
"Tice Swift Fwify Bond"
Admission At Door $3 Pm Poison
Public Wokama-BYOL
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Lake, Charles S. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 70, No. 230, Ed. 1 Friday, June 8, 1984, newspaper, June 8, 1984; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1503603/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.