Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 95, No. 67, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 19, 1986 Page: 2 of 26
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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Date: Friday
Time: 2:00 p.m. & 6:00 p.m.
Location: Harding Glass, 618 N. 16th
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The World Almanac
March 19, 1986
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om , By United Press International
ST. LOUIS — Shareholders of the Pulitzer Publishing Co. have
rejected a $500 million offer to sell their stock to Michigan developer
A. Alfred owner of the famed Sotheby’s auction house. Neither
Taubman nor his representative attended the meeting railed Tues-
day in St. Loouis to consider his offer. Chairman Joseph Pulitzer Jr.
had predicted owners of more than two-thirds of the Pulitzer shares
would vote to reject the offer. The Pulitzer company publishes the St.
Louis Post-Dispatch and newspapers in Arizona and Chicago. It also
has several radio and television stations.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — State Employment Security Secretary
Imogene Lindsay says more unemployment benefits are available
for workers who lost jobs at Western Nuclear Co. in Thoreau and the
Farah Manufacturing Co. in Las Cruces. Lindsay says the workers
have been approved by the U.S. Department of Labor for additional
unemployment insurance benefits, job relocation and job search
allowances and other related services. She says employees laid off
between Sept. 13,1984 and May 5,1985 are eligible.
DENVER — The city of Denver will auction 25 bison early next
month in its annual effort to thin out yearlings from herds in two
city-owned mountain parks west of Denver. Officials expect as many
as 100 ranchers, breeders and wildlife enthusiasts to attend the April
7 auction at Daniels Park. Proceeds from the sale will help maintain
Denver’s mountain parks. Animals in last year’s auction sold for an
average of $400 to 1500each.
LARAMIE, Wyo.—A University of Wyoming plant specialist says
herbicides normally recommended for killing early season alfalfa
weeds may be harmful in some parts of Wyoming this year. Tom
Whitson says much of the state’s alfalfa never went dormant hwause
of the relatively mild winter, coupled with insulation from early
snow. Whitson says traditional early season treatments on dormant
alfalfa are risky this season because too much of the chemical could
be absorbed by the growing plant.
SAN ANTONIO — A jury is expected today to receive the murder
case of South Texas’ Autumn Hills Nursing Home chain and four of
its former or current employees. State District Judge Don Morgan of
Galveston Tuesday gave jurors their options in reaching a verdict in
the state’s first corporate murder trial. Morgan said the panel could
find the company and individuals innocent, or it could convict them
on charges of murder, involuntary manslaughter or criminal neg-
tgenda inthe 178 death of an elderly patient. Final arguments began
VENICE, La. — Six people have been rescued from a 100-foot
tugboat that was taking on water 100 miles southeast of the mouth of
the Mississippi River in the Gulf of Mexico. A Coast Guard
spokesman said the tugboat Explorer radioed for help when it began
to take on water through the stern, and a private crewboat safely
rescued six workers from the tug without incident Tuesday. A Coast
Guard patrol boat would attempt to float the tugboat and repair it
the spokesman said.
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — A federal task force was to travel today
from Arkansas to Oklahoma and Missouri dairy farms, stricken and
quarantined by pesticide contamination. The quarantine prohibits
affected farmers from selling milk, dairy products, or their cattle for
use as beef. The cattle were contaminated by being fed grain tainted
with heptachlor, a pesticide banned for use on food products. The
farmers are hoping the task force recommends federal help to offset
their losses, which some say will ruin them.
TULSA, Okla. — Another Tulsan has announced his candidacy for
mayor of the Oklahoma city—Colin Tucker, 18, a high school senior.
Tucker said the flood of hopefuls is making the race a farce. Tucker
said the mayor’s job should not be a decision-making one but more
promotional in nature. Decisions should be made by a broad cross-
section of people, said Tucker, who pledged if elected to get more of
what he calls Tulsa’s “great minds” involved in city government.
LAWRENCE, Kan. — Members of the Lawrence City Commiwinn
have given 3-2 approval to an ordinance regulating handgun sales in
the university town. The new regulations stem from an incident last
October in which a University of Kansas coed bought a gun and shot
herself to death two hours later in a city park. Among other things,
the restrictions require anyone buying a handgun in Lawrence to
wait 72 hours between the time they buy the weapon and the time they
actually take possession.
TODAY’S HISTORY: The first recorded TODAY’S MOON: Day after
lunar eclipse was observed by the Bab- first quarter (March 18).
ylonians on this day in 721 B.C.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS: Wyatt Earp TODAY’S TRIVIA: Which of the follow-
(1848); Phillip Roth (1933); Ursula An- ingriverswas not a natural border of
dress (1936). Babylonia? (a) Ural (b) Tigris (c)
________ Euphrates
2r
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Harding Glass
618 N. 16th__Chickasha, OK 224-7492
489
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Don t miss our free workshop! We’l be featuring a step-by-step demonstration
by an Andersen representative: How to replace your old windows with
beautiful, energy-saving, ow-upkeep Andersen® windows!
Come see how easy it is.
FREE WORKSHOP
_TWOA da
—------------------------- THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS, Wednesday, March 19, 1984
Regional News Briefs Arkansas Dairymen Fear Financial Disaster .
i SbIH f"r * Wal Mart Sells for Lbss a w,tl Mart Sells for l.-ss .
_____calliope
7.43 Reg. 8.96-9.96
Infante a Giris
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This shoe has a touch of todays
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Cushion insole, adjustable straps
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MensLeather
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You’ll be d reel id in the beef
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farmers now. We’re under a he said Y P hereis tryto pull everything Food and Drug Administration 7
bank quarantine,” an unidenti- imeremaynL-m, together asfaras short-term re- inDallas."You‘dhavetodrinkaj
fied farmer said at the meeting solution to the tba ” said ■ ‘he said. Nothing happens mess of the stuff for it to do any i
Tuesday with ataskforcesentb MichaeiJ.Masrrrbinyipesnid immediattly.andanothingwi harm."_______-______“)
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SC™" Young Tulsan Joins Mayoral Race |
Tuesday’s meeting to discuss the ..TUHSA (UPI) — Yet another Tulsan has thrown paper.
contamination of herds and milk his hat into the ring in pursuit of the mayor’s office, Tucker, an independent, said his platform is ’
by the pesticide heptachlor. butthispoliticianissomewhatunique. simple — to get more Tulsans involved in 4orms48}
“We’re out of money. We’re Colin Tucker, 18, a high school senior, joined the government ty i
out of time, "said the farmer. race, but he considers it “a farce,” because of the 0, , ,
“Most of us only have a week flood of hopefuls who hopped onto the bandwagon We need to take advantage of some of the great;
or less left” before running out of after the defeat of incumbent Terry Young during minds in Tulsa. There are many who are not con
money, said another. the primaries. sidering getting into politics” because of the nature^
Dozens of farmers in Ar . "I felt 1 had something different from everybody of politics. Tucker believes they can be involved
ki;s,klahomaansvissori M*. j*. mayor oltould without being political. 1
cannot sell milk or dairy pro- dssisionimakeraItshould be a promotional job. De- “I! don’t know that I’d want to do it for a living,
ducts because their cows have Csionsshouidbemade by a broad cross-section of Tucker said. fl
been contaminated with hep- Pou-ueKesaid.. . . He said he is encouraged by the public’s reception;;
tachlor, which has been traced to " Isawanopportunity to show people my age they to his candidacy. P P
livestock feed, mostly corn, sold couldtakteparinpolitics, "Tucker said. “I didn’t think I had a chance when I started this 4
by Valley Feeds of Van Buren, cKerandahis‘campaign managers have gotten butnowlbelieveldo,”hesaid. ns’
Ark. mantenormousamounf of support" from his class- His campaigning won’t be interfering with his
The contamination has forced wasthestraistaundsrrnizedbakeasalastandcar g" J?** !«*M Hall High School, a private )
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Quinn, Jerry. Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 95, No. 67, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 19, 1986, newspaper, March 19, 1986; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1871307/m1/2/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.