Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 93, No. 219, Ed. 2 Wednesday, November 3, 1982 Page: 18 of 20
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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I
Wednesday, November 3, 1982
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
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Mid-spring
PEKING - Chinese
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PROGRAMMING!
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Cmcago Troune Orapmcs by Jack Sionag Sour M 8 Reynolos Assocates
Chinese paper reports breakup of spy rings
save, too, on special
selection of handbags
Burts
mid-season
Mans FOUDS TOWER, uw
M TELSWAV M Mav
OKIAMOMA an ormom
sponded.
Kids are fun, huh?
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20% OFF
40% OFF
50% OFF
20% OFF
331,% on
Infer: How many a
woman would like to be
clothed.
MRS HARRY A MATTHEWS out at
Clinton adds to the Our Times list of
ways you can tell if you are getting
older.
“What worries me," she says, "is
when I write down something in my
ERNIE HOBERECHT out at Waton-
ga wonders where parents learned all
the things they tell their children not
to do.
ity services available on cable
including, the optional MOVIE channels that
let you enjoy first rate movie hits. Commercial
free! (And ask about special discounts when
you sign up for more than one service.)
Or. for more information, send in this coupon.
Either way you II be on your way to discov-
ering a whole world of better television. For
a whole lot less than you thought it would cost!
CLO ANN DAVIS out in Midwest
City reports her 5-year-old niece,
Teresa Grega, was telling her the oth-
er day how upsetting her 18-month-
old brother, John Michael, can be (It
seems he’s learned that all he needs
to get her aroused is to grab her fa-
vorite doll and run).
Mrs. Davis says she told Teresa
that perhaps they should pack up
John and his clothes and have a ga-
rage sale. Her niece thought that
might be fine.
"How much do you think we could
get for them?" Mrs. Davis asked.
"Oh, about $158," the 5-year-old re-
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AH Selko Watches
AM Longines Wetches
AM LOOM Diamonds
AN Diamon-Z Rings
M Mounted Diamond Rings
Life doesn’t begin at
40 for those who went
like II at 21.
•m04m
MOW-OAT
out exercise completely.
DEAR DR SOLO-
MON: I don’t like to
write to ask simple ques-
tions, but I’d like to
know what an emulsifier
is. I tried looking it up in
the dictionary, but I
can’t make heads or
tails out of what it says.
Can you tell me what it
is and what it is used
for? — Lisa, Newark,
Del.
DEAR LISA: EmulsI
fiers are used in food
special group of seasonal styles
from regular stock
not all sizes in all styles
MW Seth el Mey
ORW ।
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l.
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Meigt in inches
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reg. 16.99 to 20.99
12.98
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1 Ct
2
in any event, the Chandler celebra-
tion is scheduled Sunday afternoon.
Nov. 14. The Cyclone band will play
1907 music in the town square from 2
p.m. until 4 pm., just at it did at
statehood.
Visitors also may participate in a
“statehood stroll,” a walking tour
conducted continuously from 1:30
p.m. to 3:30 p.m., viewing buildings
and churches built in territorial days.
One of the houses was the home of
famed Deputy U.S. Marshal Bill Tilgh-
man.
At the same time, there will be a
continuous showing of silent movies
made by Benny Kent, one-time Chan
dler filmmaker. Antique autos and
quilts will be on display in the town
square And at 3:30 p m the Lincoln
County On-Stage theater group will
perform the musical "Mame.”
I hope everyone who shows up has
fun — and doggone it, if I can. I’m
going to join ’em!
3XOXTK THI
_©r124£8
Seen at an establish-
ment in Britton:
reg. 25.99 and up
16.981
Japanese seek
court's apology
WASHINGTON — Defendants in the 40-year-old
Supreme Court decisions that were used to justify
wartime internment of 110,000 Japanese-Americans
are planning to seek a reopening of their cases, cit-
ing postwar evidence the government withheld cru-
cial information from the court.
The information, including Navy and FBI intelli-
gence reports then in government possession, flatly
contradicted the government's claim at the time
that “military necessity" required the curfews and
evacuation orders imposed on Japanese-Americans.
That claim formed the core of the rulings.
The defendants seek an unprecedented Supreme
Court admission of error in the cases that would nul-
lify their convictions for violations of restrictions
and serve as a powerful symbol of apology by the
court at a time of revived interest in the Japanese-
American community about the internment.
• The decisions in Yasui vs. U.S., Hirabayashi vs.
U.S. and Korematsu vs. U S. are cited as a low point
in the court's history, comparable to the pre-Civil
War Dred Scott ruling justifying slavery, because
the court uncritically allowed the government to
take action based solely on the victims' race.
The wartime internment in desolate barbed-wire
camps is widely regarded now as a gross injustice,
the product of hysteria and racism following the
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
Weshington Post
reg. 21.99 to 24.99
14.98
Cox Goble
Oklahoma City
P.O. BOX 82729, OKC, OK, 73148
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My Name is:______
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My Phone No. is: —-------------;----------
CALL COX CABLE AT 525-8282
DISCOVER BETTER
CHILDREN’S
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Eady spring
cardiovascular function- rots, and tough meats have uncovered three
ing. But the value of ex- can be chopped, ground- Nationalist Chinese spy
ercise extends beyond grated, steamed or rings in Fukien Prov-
the 20 minutes or so that stewed. This would make ince, the newspaper Peo-
you actually spend jog- them easier to chew pie's Daily says.
ging. while at the same time The article'followed a
Recent research has preserving all of their report in the Shanghai
shown that exercise not nutritional value,
only burns calories
while you are engaged in
the activity, it also re-
sults in an increased
metabolic rate for up to
15 hours after you stop.
In addition, exercise
cuts down on the amount
of fat the body wants to
carry and suppresses
appetite.
If you don't like jog-
ging. try swimming or
bicycling, but don't cut
71
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- Jogging good
for muscles
-Fall planting guide-Fnars mowre"
• -for spring blooms -
38...... . ........ ———
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LOOSE DIAMONDS PRICED
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press last week that a The People s Daily Lin Qianmin who passed
Taiwan agent had said eight members of on "secret documents
sought out “weak- one Nationalist ring had and information about
willed" Communist Par- been arrested in Fukien. the party, government
ty officials in Shanghai the province that faces and army” to Taiwan,
to recruit them for the the Nationalist-held is- • The paper gave no de
Nationalists. The report land of Taiwan. The pa- tails of the other two
did not say how success- per said the chief spy rings that were uncov-
ful the agent had been. was a fisherman named ered. . ____
* By Neil Selemen
• DEAR DR. SOLOMON: preparation to keep oil
I started jogging a few and water from seprat-
memo book — and then I can’t read weeks ago in order to ing. Oil and water genet-
It." lose weight, and I was ally do not mix, and
Hoo Boy* tknow what she means really congratulating without emulsifiers,
myself for sticking It bread would quickly go
out. The more I hated it, stale and cake would not
JUNIOR ADKINS out at Carnegie the more I felt I was be light and fluffv.
, has dropped me a note saying that be doing myself good. Then DEAR DR. SOLOMON
could not find me at the State Fair of I read that if I jogged for How can I get my father
Oklahoma this year (he couldn't be- an hour, I would only to eat better? He is 87
cause I was off on vacation). lose about 700 calories, years old and just
“I asked a man (at the OPUBCO Since I'm good for about doesn't seem to want to
building) if you were deceased." Ad 20 minutes before I feel bother with foods that
kins says, “and it embarrassed him.” I’m going to collapse, require any chewing.
/, prMly embarraskod him. Dr _______________ Can you offer any help’
Mr. Adkin. because he knows me •_____yMrst —
and u'Of.n t fure uhat he should eleren M 5
say. I'm still among the liiing. all I DEAR MRS. E: Many
right, but tome days I don't show it m,ne rm jyoe older people have diffi-
much. 11 mean 230 X £ culty with chewing, and
WKatb"the big dedi the logical first step is
PERRY WHITE, in the newsroom, about exercise if that's toshave.y ourfather
thinks perhaps he's found a compan- all you lose’ Is it worth chesKen D4 45
ion statement to "Things that go the effort? - Sandy. that anynde nta -.PTo
bump in the night." ■ Tampa. cmsbemorrected1?
He says the name of a hike being DEAR BANDY: First chewing remains a prob-
planned in Oklahoma City s Martin of all, exercise would be )em, there are some sim-
Park Nature Center is "Things that beneficial even if it did pie steps you can take to '
bite and sting. not produce weight loss, overcome it.
Need I say "ouch’ Exercise helps tone the For example, hard
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(NE OF TIB MORE interesting ob-
1V serverances of Oklahoma’s Dia-
mond Jubilee celebration, Ithink, will
be over in Chandler this month.
A fellow can't say that time has
stood still In Chandler through the 75
years since statehood, for It hasn't
Yet, Chandler has about the same
- population it had when Oklahoma was
admitted to the Union as a state.
Many buildings erected In territorial
days still stand. And the same opti-
mistic spirit seems to exist.
And even the Chandler Cyclone
band (which got Its name from a tor-
nado that practically blew the town
- away in 1897) has been revived. It’s
an all-male band, composed of busi-
nessmen, under the direction of Jack
Garrett. Women have been excluded
from participating in the replica
band to make sure it remains histori-
cally authentic.
Fonterana—-.
U ip Hyacinth
Lavray Mow fo Chntmas (1/10 Dowm)
Uank • Ct M rm ret
Sue 10 orb 55 to put dowm fu Layaway Sts
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Our Times
by Wayne Mackey •
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Standard, Jim. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 93, No. 219, Ed. 2 Wednesday, November 3, 1982, newspaper, November 3, 1982; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1848667/m1/18/: accessed November 13, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.