The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 99, No. 241, Ed. 1 Friday, January 1, 1982 Page: 2 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Chickasha Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS, Friday, January 1,1982
—TWO
W. Gene Smith
dtidh may eppeer
and any
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Rising Next July
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announced
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MEDIA GAOUP
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As we begin this new
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David F. Jones
222-1
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MR. STVE'S
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RENTALS
invitation to those who
HEATERS
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Chickasha Bank
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DON R E Y
year, we pledge a
renewal of our com-
mitment to outstanding
service. And, we take this
have yet to experience all
that banking can be.
Your Friends at The
Chickasha Bank
sc
sn 0
chosen as a main selection.
Hollywood also has done its
share of cashing in on the
Hemingway name. There
A ■
.1,
opportunity to thank those
who have placed their faith
in us and extend an
Secend dam pesteg ped at Chcheshe
Ohto Peliehed every ehterneen I**
Seturdey and Chrites Oy) and Senday
An ervenens rellectien on the dhere
tar at any peren, lirm or cerperetion
SUBSCAWTONRATES
CAMMMENDELIVEY
Eectiv Oct 1 19!
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2
tu*aW
un
writer’s award in Ns honor
indicate that Hemingway’s
popularity is nearly as high
today as it was during the
days when his novels im-
mediately rose to the top of
the best seller list
While his novels no longer
make the best sellers list
Hemingway’s books still sell
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photographs finally has been
assembled at the John F.
Kennedy Libraryin Boston.
The Hemingway room,
2*03
style and he changed the opened last yesr, contains
writing of fiction in the world, 10,000 photographs, 1,100
particularly short stories, letters and 50 feet worth of
because the short stories are library shelf taken up with
the quintessence of his style,” manuscripts. On one of the
said ScribWft.- '-' *" * welbswhmgs the mounted
"zmueu-. Me ■ • — ■
Hemingway’s work. It’s good
and clean and adaptable to
the needs of kids.”
Rice said he has more
contracts for the use of
Hemingway’s short stories
and "The Old Man and the
Sea” in foreign countries for
the teaching of English than
he does for any of the other
Hemingway properties.
"Hemingway created a
& Trust Compamv %
1924 SUTH FOURTH STREET CHICKASMA. OKLANIOMA 73018 1405) 2-0550 MEMBEI1FD1C
CbidusbaDtily Expegas
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WASHINGTON (uPu —
Fueled by soaring health
costs, the price of premiums
for the nearly 29 million
enrollees in Medicare’s
supplementary medical in-
surance program will rise by
11.2 percent next July.
The increase will hike the
current $11 monthly premium
to *12.20.
E Medicare Cost
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industry flourishes today
much as it did during his
lifetime.
There have been books
written by a brother, a sister,
a son, two of his four wives
and numerous friends,
enemies and hangers-on from
his Paris expatriate days of
the 1920s until his suicide in
Idaho in 1961.
A.E. Hotchner’s "Papa He-
mingway,” a controversial
book, contributed greatly —
many said inaccurately — to
the Hemingway legend of the
brawler, boaster, bullfight
expert and Cuban exile.
A book by his first wife,
Hadley, entitled "Hadley,"
chronicled the magical years
in Paris when Hemingway
was learning to write,
meeting the literary giants of
45 + ’
Tuesday by the Health and
Human Services Depart-
ment, comes on top of an
increase in the program’s
deductible that takes effect
Jan. 1. The program is also
known as Medicare part B.
The Medicare law requires
the premium rate, plus the
federal contribution, be
enough to cover program
expenses for the 12 months
beginning next July, but it
limits any increase to the
percentage by wNch Social
Security benefits were in-
creased the previous year.
HHS Secretary Richard Sch-
weiker is required to an-
nounce the increase in
December.
Because Social Security
benefits increased by 11.2
percent in June 1981, the
medical premium may grow
to no more than $12.20. If that
cap were not in effect, the
monthly premium would
have gone up to $24.60 a
month, HHS said.
The cost of benefits under
the program is expected to in-
crease to $17.3 billion in fiscal
1983, from this year’s $14.7
billion.
HHS blamed increases in
the program’s cost on doc-
tors’ fees and the number of
services furnished, a trend
toward more expensive
services and an increase in
the coat and use of outpatient
services. Health costs rose 15
percent last year alone and a
big increase is predicted for
1981.
Medicare part B covers
doctor bills, outpatient ser-
vices, diagnostic tests,
> %
The rise,
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Hemingway Books Still Thrive Twenty Years After His Death
■ mgmrs esimammm Enz
Hemingway’s book, puhlahedin 1a. . ~ined the whole works. hccordmngnto Twohlegrted.Riv er"„par will provide seholan with at procesdsrromacomendthe
' Barimfavana w have "Howitwan,"a with th mt Wan Hemingway’. - "The implications of what Baker, is “• kina d steictam, peopir In Gnt eh K lensir sgeons worth, at
wtttenaibookabout 17 bi tterweet year d "SelectedLetters,"publahed he put down in the way of nture-lovingman and divided into two parts, the Tiinhsdtpicrn"the With the publishing of the
inaightinto.He mingway. ners and edited by Carlo. 0 the story. It was the story what he waswritine was the homefrom WorldW^I who arstisdeveopmentanutem. pUbiishable Hemingway
Othenseemtohave.wanted beg ntofallapart phyaically Baker. Baker, profasMor that wasn’t told,” said Rice, most important thing in the flnd. the peace and .lability S.i and intdlZtual material is about depleted,
nothingbut money or fame by andImentaly, ending his “e emeritus at Princeton, to articulating what world. that was missing in the war Poctm of his time According to scholars, there
“sgcition death m T croneSundeymomning acknowledged the foremost Hemingway himself Baker and Smith attribute through a camping and ScEioroPaid ar writing are several short stories,
Sinehsdeth 20 Z with doublerbarrel, Bons Hemingway scholar. His described as writing on the Hemingway’s popularity fishing trip alone in the abflUt li pies on art his mostly about World War II.
X.” "X LTSZ shoteuninsthefoyera their book, "Hemingway: A ui. principled the iceberg, todnytthetacthdteratur novellength manuscript
Keshum,dahohoment Story," lb considered by Hemingway explained to is widely readin high uchools i0 nGendespin"hndonhis that have not been published
PuDihed about Hemingway His own writing, published scholars to be the mont iceberg principle in a 1968 andcollamem Teacher. u “His love of nature that he 5 _____
almost annually. posthumously, includes short comprehensive biography interview with Paris Review. Hemingway to demonstrate espouses in "Big Two- wriinencmg com.
hasbeensthewperiodicl STto’lSI liU written to dat“on "There is weights of It writing that emphasise. an Hearted River" hesiappesled munio”™ among Baker said Hemingway
pkgthewriters.own andushigslsttorsiheanove Hemingway, under water for every part economy of words. Student. to a lot of kids who want to Hemingwaychoiars, I spoke often of the World War
WotsgPublished Publthedinv70,"landsin Scribner seid he has never that shows. Anything you rend Hemingway because his escape the urban uprall and fens"na society was 11 stories, but, “I think he
Poth book! combined with thestrmm"was soonamade before seen the kind of review know you can eliminate and it stories are straightforward, get Into something where formed in 1*80 - "We drained off most of the things
5BSS vJSHx '
raM smsiaseminevaytu
ssxsjx: Aindurudetbecauupbab R
"ritenslettershadeverbeen "o“am prveyconductedintyearb elementalinsuensuchaslove, Hemingway Society. Scribner, however,
Rice said “For Whom the Mury the Wiinion demon death and courage. "These "With the opening of the may eventually publish part
Bell Tolls,” a novel about the strate thecxpourerming are issues people want to read manuscripts collection, it was of the novel, entitled “Garden
spanish’civilwarwouia WYslteraturesrecsivein about He writes «b««l to clear there wasa good decade o Eden." Scribner said be.
have been movies med. a llow a director "t show, ai hteanmheo weve asledrtd portantthingi inawaypeopie ortodwonstobndongona
^tortetoto mheaviolence.whichnsithe totodbtobtotototo himaspopular writer." SXXTXX." cfuhesbodtnrhtoseduresstha
about half a million copiesa mAidancpa-"epidaan theywouldlctopunueina Moat .cholain «ay Homing- author . society. Malcolm Cowley, the
year in the United States, said way’s attorney during the last 10,000 advnderteBem cosegeltraturecournee way researcher. Inthe----- American literary critic,
Charles Scribner Jr., W nan of the writer’s life vance tor me Beu sShqkgspear WAS. first will h.ve to dig deeper for The society publishes two poet, editor and friend of
Hemingway’s publisher, and still handles the financial Concerning "The Old man ShtdtortosandHeming"ay their scholarship. newsletters a year and a Hemingway, suggested that
during an interview at his affairs for Mary Hemingway, and the Sen,» sid . PASEsotE-E “The gold rush, you see, is scholarly journal, also pub- the short story might be
New York office. whoowns allo the copyrights with the technolog dvances in a uX hotel Zwldb? over.NOthingis’ienton’the lished biannually, called the detached from the novel and
“That's an extraordinary on her husband’s books, in underwater AhtoeralhV 40"Ao ml "O " surface for the picking,” Hemingway Review. published.
sale, particularly today, 20 .Rice, in a New York in- “they can now make the Charles Dickens” said Wrote Michael S. Reynolds, a Each year the Ernest Hem-
years later," said Scribner, terview, said hes currently is shark a personality. sAkrrssandnwend’yintd literatureprofessor at North ingway Foundation Award,a Scribner said he didn’t
who heads Charles Scribner’s negotiating with several He said The Old Man vn"tetsttdnwyzsantthe Carolina State, in an article $6,000 cashprize, is presented think the “Garden of Eden-
Sons, where Hemingway pub- partieswho are interested in remake “can now exploit in “The Old Man and the Sea” for the journal College to honor the beat first book of as a whole should be
lished for more than 30 years, remaking movies based on the movie the ontest bet assigned to them in high Literature. fiction by an American published because “it’s too
Some of the best writers of two novels,"!For Whom the ween the shark and the old school and know "The old territory has been writer. Money for theaward, rough it was such raw
the 20th century have passed BelTolls’ and The Old Man fisherman," reminiscent of Hemingway’, wnrt It’s good so well mapped that only which is administered by materinl, it would not be fair
through the Fifth Avenue andtheSe."z. the man-shark baffle in the and dean and adaptable to tourists are going there this P.E.N ’ aniinternat on‘ to him to do it.”
doors of the Scribner It s Rice s theory that the movie Jaws. 4leanApnum„PDet season. The old veins are writer’s association, comes
building, including F. Scott Hemingway novels are fa vor- Hemingway’s reputation a. RImJsW has more exhausted." from the Hemingway
Fitzgerald and Thomas with film directors Mr. Pap _ the big-game contracts for the use re If the gold rush is over, the
Wolfe, but none have come becaue theirr structures lend hunter, Gulr Stream marlin Hemingway’s short stories gold mine of Hemingway
close to Heminewav’s sales, themzelvesntosdirector’s fisherman and war manuscripta,. personai
a 1, know of anv fottis—enseFicesaiditi correspondent - lent to his Sen in fareian ™nHto papers, letters and
I don t know of any for this reason movie ver- popularity while he was alive
American writer that tops sions of the novels always "He became a mythichi
that," said Scribner, who fail. figure in his lifetime,” said
added that all of “There are very few, if any, Paul Smith, a Hemingway
Hemingways books, except motion pictures made from scholar who teaches
his first novel, “Torrents of the Hemingway property that literature at Trinity College
Spring,” are still in print were a success at the box in Hartford, Conn
Scribner said the biggest office. That’s because of the “He appealed to certain
sellers continue to be The fact that Hemingway didn't American values —
Sun Also Rises,” “A Farewell write everything. He left manliness, courage, ad-
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age 65 and the rest disabled
under 65.
The increase in the monthly
premium comes on top of a '
$15, an -ease in the calendar
yes ductible, to *75 ef-
fectve Jan. 1, that Congress
passed as part of last sum-
mer’s budget-cutting
legislation.
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Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 99, No. 241, Ed. 1 Friday, January 1, 1982, newspaper, January 1, 1982; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1869647/m1/2/?q=Robert+Banks+English: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.