Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 94, No. 116, Ed. 2 Wednesday, July 6, 1983 Page: 2 of 16
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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
285
7
I
0
E.
geza. ‘
dewsnnye
A
i
rt
3)
!
3
4
At
।
—
89 24
9
f
* 8
3
4
1' °
2.
9498
1
(
3;
3:
13
Thomasville
g
I
I
NUMM31
11,/71(,75,11/) 101113
C c
123
Pi
$
J
1
BALLENGERS
73.80
13.80
Light
Continued
Vou2 aCwnyp ind 4.
Protect Your Cash
Choose From:
• Doeskin
• Rust
• Bronze
231-3326
231-3420
235-6722
|j furniture galleries
1 ________
Your money Is safe
from pickpockets,
purse snatchers,
and muggers
with the Safe-
It-All from
Kamber’s.
$6.95
(2 for $12)
ishes. Counting both ac-
tive and inactive (ill or
retired) priests, 153
served the Oklahoma
City archdiocese, while
94 served the Tulsa
diocese.
Although numbers
are not as serious here
as in other parts of the
country, every year it
gets tighter to make ap-
pointments, Monaghan
said. It is hoped the cur-
rent seminarians will be
i
' ll
Round Table
40" Extends to
22 To Sell
Reg. $670
UPHOLSTERED •
IN SCOTCHGUARDED
VELVET
Sofa
Retail $700
$2.15
1.45
146
1.40
70
.76
0
The Bundey OkMioman MM
Hr toreign subecrpuon rates call 231-3568
■NM wwapaaN
1
{
Flight
Continued
izer to lessen the fear,
but without success,
Greene said.
"Ordinarily Mr.
O’Reilly doesn’t drink,
but alcohol is the only
way he can deal with it
(fear of flying)," Greene
said, adding that his cli-
ent drank enough on the
flight from Los Angeles
"to become an embar-
rassment to himself."
The charge against
O’Reilly was reduced to
assaulting flight attend-
ant Debra McAdams by
words or conduct, which
carries a maximum
penalty of a $300 fine
and three months in
jail.
The original felony
charge, interfering with
a flight crew, carries a
penalty of a $10,000 fine
and 20 years in prison.
Court officials said that
conviction could have
resulted in loss of
O’Reilly’s law license.
The charge was reduced
after a conference be-
tween U.S. Attorney
Thomas Thalken and
Greene.
O’Reilly was ordered
to pay a criminal fine of
$300, a civil penalty of
$250 to the Federal Avi-
ation Administration
and $8,000 to the air-
line.
Heat
Continued
MTU MOUMM
1 Yr.
70 60
TOM
40.80
FREE
1-800-522-9225
.A
about selling iceboxes to the Eskimos.
"All we have here is sand," says City Man-
ager Lyman Hoffman. "And marsh."
The city even has Its own 200-acre sand pit.
So Hoffman was a little surprised when 500
bags of sand arrived at the airport, carrying a
freight bill of $9,991.
But Anchorage Sand & Gravel insisted the
Bethel Public Works Department had ordered
500 sand bags.
Sand bags — not bags of sand, says Lyman.
"You know, the vinyl bags you put the sand
in."
City workers had planned to fill the bags
with local sand and put them on the rapidly
eroding banks of the Kuskokwim River.
Hoffman says the order was clear, and he
refused to accept the shipment. Anchorage
Sand & Gravel thinks it provided what the city
ordered and has begun legal action to collect
on the bill.
and sometimes fatal condition brought on by the number of seminarians,
failure of the body’s temperature-regulating capac- The numbers were high-
ity,hesaid. er 20 years ago, when
The body stops perspiring and a person’s tern- men entered seminaries
sort and use the "ZIP + 4" system, Becker said.
Large-volume mailers using computerized ad-
dressers can find out the new ZIP codes by borrow-
ing computer tapes from the Postal Service.
Smaller mailers can send the service a copy of the
mailing list for a one-time, manual updating of ZIP
codes.
i
I
I
y
"He is just a fantastic kid," said Mrs. Schmitt,
who proposed giving him the tickets after reading a
story on Borkenhagen in the Sun-Times.
• Fits comfortably under jacket or
coat undetectably
•Ideal for men and women
•Lightweight (just one ounce)
• Adjustable for personal comfort
•Iwo zippered pockets
•Also protects traveler's checks.
credit cards, eta
KamBeis
NORTHPARK MAU.
liind A NORTH MAY AV«
Mail Ordets: Send $7.95 per item to cover merchandise.
State tax mailino and handling to Kambers. 1 22 &
\JM May, Okla City 73120
j
Morning. eveneng. Sunday
Morning and Sunday
Evening and Sunday
Morning and evening
Morning only
Ewning only
Sunday only
1
2-el
buc
ZIP
10
Comfihuca
equipment does not have the capability at this time
to read the nine digits in handwritten script."
igpe
F
; '
' 4
LOCATION 7401 N. MAY848-3507
w your newepeper la not cenvered and you cart reech your carrier
y sephone, cal Cumtomer Deltvery Santo*. 229-7171.
For fhe Oraenoman, oaa baton 630 am.
For *• odehome City Times, oa4 baton T M p.m.
For The Sunday Oluahornan oaa baton 10 am
ouecrormnonswumsens
Priests
-RFasl - 15*9 .. ~
Continued
____ ___ _ - 4_______________
LARGE SHIPMENT OF SOFAS AND LOVESEATS JUST ARRIVED
so.
a
t3
■ '
55
s
REVOLVING CHARGE AVAILABLE
SHOP MON.-FRI. 9:30 am to 9:00 pm
SAT. 9 am-6 pm, SUN. 12-6 pm
OUT OF METRO AREA CALL TOLL
23
I
. 03
2 . 3
MNE 103′283
586
All-Star tickets
r- s"- -
CHICAGO - Todd Borkenhagen, a good samari-
tan who lost his left leg in April when he stopped to
help a woman with car trouble on an area express-
way, will attend tonight’s All-Star baseball game -
thanks to a former cancer patient.
Borkenhagen, 20, was given two tickets by Susan
Schmitt, 31, who had cancer surgery a year ago,
and her husband, Frank, 36, a mail carrier from
Homewood, Bl.
awaiting
decision
SPECIAL PURCHASE
LUXURIOUS VELVET Q 1 0 Q
WING CHAIR now.J
RETAIL $400 ---i
58
The statement by reporters Tuesday,
Zbigniew Brzezinski fur- Brzezinski referred to
ther fueled the Demo- recent reports that Ca-
cratic uproar over the sey’s operation consist-
"filched" Carter brief- ed of a network of re-
ing papers prepared in tired military officers
the White House for the who were to report on
Carter-Reagan cam- activity at various U.S.
paign debate. military bases "to see if
Whether the transfer we weren’t planning to
of the domestic and for- stage a . . . rescue mis-
eign policy briefing pa- sion in Iran.
The Oklahoman and Times
TAE DAILY OKLAHOMAN
(UBP8 144-700)
Publlehed each morning. Monday through Friday
TE SUNDAY OKLAHOMAN
(USPS 110-330)
Published every Sunday morning
on i—mi cmtMi
(USPS 406-460)
Evening edntion at The Dany Oklahoman
Publlehed awry evening, Monday through Friday
TE BATURDAY OKLAHOMAN a TMES
(USPS 120-630)
Publlehed every Saturdgy morning
900 North Bradwy, Boi 25125
Oklahoma CHy. OK 3126
Telephone:Generat Ofices, (406) 232-3311
POSTMAASTER, MNP AboneSS cunnats to ma
baa Mm. OMahama CHy. OK 7125
2nd Ciee Md al Ondehem City, OMa.
wom ozuVEN sunacmonownATES
.2
per piece of mail, if the mailing exceeds 500 pieces. life, Monaghan said. In
That discount will become available starting Oct. 1. north Oklahoma City,
Volume mailers already get a 3-cent discount if for example,, three
they presort their first-class mail according to ZIP Priestsihave had byPass
codes. surgery.
And since the Second
Bulk mailers can get both discounts if they pre- Vatican Council made a
ernor are using televi-
sion to wage their argu-
National security risk “Bx
would ask the appeals and jobless residents the $1.2 billion needed
seen in paner-filchino socraysouarsekety ana te" witnout state "obrcnsepnegancere
ill •-V-- edimmediately. In back-to-back tele- issued Thursday to
If the stay were lifted, vised speeches Tuesday, 220,000 state employees
ty of the mission? . . . lawyers for Gray could Gov. George Deuk- and 1.7 million welfare
"I am deeply disturbed appea to the U.S. Su- mejian invited Demo- recipients, the only peo-
by the national security preme Court. cratic leaders to meet pie immediately affect-
Implications." The Texas case in- behind closed doors ed were 390,000 persons
Brzezinski said "an VolVed convicted mur- while Democrats re- who would otherwise
overwhelming amount derer Thomas Andy plied negotiations ought have received unem-
of National Security Barefoot of New Iberia, to be open, ployment or disability
Council material in his -a.. . The state has been checks since Friday,
office was classified The issue in the Bare- without authority to pay if the deadlock con-
and a majority of that foot case was what its bills since Friday, tinues, the next groups
material had a high standards a court of ap- when the 1983-84 fiscal affected would be nurs-
classification. peals should use when it year started with Demo- ing homes and hospi-
"So what’s particular- considers emergency crats and Republicans tals, due to receive $128
ly disturbing is the pos- requests to postpone deadlocked over an un- million in Medi-Cal pay-
sibility of a longtime po- scheduled executions, balanced $27.2 billion ments Thursday, and
litical intelligence oper- The 5th Circuit refuses budget proposal. cities and counties,
ation" inside the White stays unless the inmate Democrats want to re- which expect $423 mil-
House. can show the appeal is strict Deukmejian’s lion in state support
Mewhouc.Nawe likely to be successful, vetoes and link the Friday.
4 1YRRBI
pers and Casey’s "intel- What these
seeingany 01 the brief- the Soviets monitor our
gPapers.a . d telecommunications?
At President Rea-
gan s request, the Jus- "Suppose a rescue
tice Department is in- mission had been under
vestigating the entire way? And there was a
matter. movement of American
At a breakfast meet- troops? Would they
ing with reporters in Ju- have been willing to
ly 1980, both Casey and compromise the securi-
__________ ■
OkdehomaCiy Times
The Sundey Oktohomt
oeeeconehema
TeDeyOkdehgmen
OMMNM cny fime
""ak Loveseat
“hq" retail $700
MEDIUM BROWN FINISH W)N“9
Walesa balks
in job dispute
WARSAW, Poland
(AP) - Solidarity chief
Lech Walesa threatened |
to ignore a deadline for
returning to work today,
vowing to continue his
unauthorized vacation
"unless I am taken back
by force.’’
as. grandfather, Arthur Borkenhagen, 70, of Des
State Attorney Gener- Plaines, a northwestern Chicago suburb.
al Bill Allain said he The Schmitts gave him the tickets in Lutheran
still hoped the execu- General Hospital in Park Ridge, another northwest-
tion could be carried ern suburb. He was released from the hospital Sat-
out today, "but if the urday but must return for more surgery.
stay is not lifted before Mrs. Schmitt said her husband bought the All-
12 0 clock Wednesday Star tickets for $20 each.
night, the execution The woman he aided, Joy Bassett, 27, a Southsid-
could be weeks away." er who works in Lutheran General's computer ser-
Gray, 34, was convict- vices department, visited him at the hospital Satur-
ed and sentenced for the day.
kidnapping, rape and He was pushing her disabled car off the tollway
murder of 3-year-old on foot when he was struck by a car driven by John
Deressa Jean Scales L. Neu, 32, of Milwaukee, who was charged with
near Pascagoula in drunkendriving.
1976. At the time of the ChicngoSun-Times
killing, Gray was on pa-
role for killing his high m 1 g 1 •
Budget haggling
The 5th Circuit on • •• •
Saturday blocked • 11 • A geg •
p • If nray set for i2n1 a&.idling Laldornia
Relurnng the favor today, expecting the Su- •
u n. • preme Court would use SACRAMENTO, Calif. budget to tax increases
Sara Ginn of Huntsville, Texas, gets an unexpected shower from her dog, the Texas case to set (AP) _ Top Democrats to protect programs,
Star, who waited until just the right time to return the favor and give her new guidelines for stays and the Republican gov- while Republicans want
assigned to Oklahoma master a break from the simmer heat. of execution that might ernor are using televi- to send the budget to
Unlike 20 years ago when ZIP codes were first parishes, he said, affect Gray. sion to wage their argu- Deukmejlan with no
introduced, the Postal Service will not have a mas- The passage of 20 or _____________°m • ] Allain said if the high
sive media blitz to explain the change. In fact, Mr. 30 years takes its toll on
ZIP, the symbol for the first ZIP codes, has gone the priest population,
into almost complete retirement. As they age, a higher
percentage retire, be-
Nine-digit use will be strictly voluntary, but bulk come ill or simply suf-
mailers using the new ZIP can save one-half cent fer from ailments of
newafimes.. ..231-3229
—......... 231-3446
tana* : .#222200
ietbureeu 726-4667
N......... 231-3201
bnmnbi
MM....... 231-4914
M........231-6226
IMM_____251-3664
........... 231-3207
H
.P,
• i t /
32F*83: 823*3
Edbs,25
deliberate effort to in-
crease the involvement
of lay people, it also in-
creased the workload of
priests. There were
more meetings to at-
tend, more committees
to oversee.
"Priests in general
work really hard. It’s a
tense business,”
Monaghan said.
perature climbs to 105 degrees or higher. Frequent- right after high school
ly, a beatstroke victim will go into a coma, he said, and college
and muscle cramps and is caused by loss of body college and work expe-
fluid and electrolytes after exposure to intense rience already behind
heat. them.
Particularly vulnerable to heat problems are the The number of priests |
elderly and the very young, Morgan said. Old peo- nationwide has stayed
pie often have other health problems, such as weak relatively steady during
hearts or high blood pressure, which make them the past dozen years in
more susceptible to heat stress. 1971 58,161 'priests |
Small children, although healthy, do not have served U.S. parishes in
well developed heat-regulating mechanisims. Mor- 1980, the number
gansaid. reached 58,621. And in I
Young and middle-aged people who exert them- 1981, it dipped slightly
selves outdoors either working or playing should be to 58.398
sure to replenish fluids and minerals with drinks Seminarians howev-
such as Gatorade, Morgan said er. have declined drasti-
Virginia Knauer. director of the U.S. Office of cally in the same peri-
Consumer Affairs, issued a special report recently od, Monaghan Said. In
that included suggestions to help people cope with 1971 25,710 were study- ’
theheat. ■ ......... ing nationwide. Ten 0
She advises avoiding hot food and heavy meals years later the number 1
because they add heat to the body. fell to 12 468 I
She also suggests avoiding alcohol because it In 1981, 247 priests
acts as a diuretic and results in fast water loss. soriaq Aln, 91
Alcohol also promotes a feeling of well-being and ^.^mnoma par- |
may make people less aware of the danger signs of
heat stress, the said.
Other recommendations are to drink plenty of
water, to take cool baths and showers for relief
from the heat, to wear loose-fitting, lightweight
clothing and to curtail physical activity.
July 6 ^953
■w
130
6.30
6.10
3.06
3.05
3.26
PogTAaG
616* 1M*
36.40 5.60
3640 580
24 60 4 16
36.00 6.16
34 60 6.16
66.40 4.40
nhe
l salag, . t
Ma
WASHINGTON — Reagan aide Edwin
Former President Cart- Meee said the purpose
er s national security of what Casey described
adviser says a political as an "intelligence op-
"intelligence operation" eration” was to guard
that William J. Casey against any “October
said he mounted in 1980 surprise" by Carter,
as manager of Ronald They indicated this
Reagan s election cam- could include a dramat-
paign could have inad- ic move on the eve of
vertently tipped the So- the election to free the
viets to impending Cart- U.S. hostages then being
er military operations held in Iran.
— including the Iran
hostage rescue mission. In a discussion with
w • ^-2
-Ml' 144
PARCHMAN. Miss.
(AP) — Convicted child
E killer Jimmy Lee Gray
E waited in his Death Row
cell today for word on
whether a U.S. Supreme
5 Court ruling might al-
2 low the state to resume
E efforts to execute him 4
— by midnight.
State, attorneys “I don’t think there are very many people who
planned to ask the 5th would do what he did."
U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- Borkenhagen said in an interview last month that
peals to clear Gray's ex- despite losing a leg, he had "no regrets” over aid-
ecution in the gas cham- ing the motorist on the Tri-State Tollway, the high-
... ber, depending on a way which rings Chicago.
high court ruling in a A staunch Cubs fan, he will root for the National
", separate case from Tex- League in Comiskey Park, accompanied by his
O—rt* mN* . 231-3618 p
Sorvondept.......236-7171 2
em
on Une........231-6666 9
KtaMTOI ......231-3310 6
Cpholburesu 231-3406 M
a*MH(k*.....231-3231 Pe
6 (e
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.
Standard, Jim. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 94, No. 116, Ed. 2 Wednesday, July 6, 1983, newspaper, July 6, 1983; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1849017/m1/2/?rotate=0: accessed November 16, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.