Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 93, No. 120, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 28, 1986 Page: 2 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
P. 2, Perry Daily Journal Saturday, June 28, 1986
The Perry Daily Journal
Member
ONLA
. (ISSN 074R.76501 © Entire contents Copyright 1986 by Perry
) 00 Journal Co., Box 311, Perry, Okla. 73077
A Daily except Sundays, New Year’s Day, Fourth of July, Thanksgiv-
1M APSOCIATION ing and Christmas if TH Delaware St., Perry, Oklahoma, by Tha Parry
Journal Company. Second class postage paid at Perry, Okla. 73077
C-A
@1986 FORT WORTH STAR-TELESTAN ETTA
HULME
NEA
WASHINGTON WINDOW
Successor to The Noble County Sentinel established Sept. 16, 1893. The Perry Republican, merged May 1, 1924,
and The Morrison Transcript, merged May 1, 1958.
All unsolicited manuscripts, letters and pictures brought or sent to The Journal are submitted at the risk
of the sender. The publishers expressly disclaim any responsibility for their safe return.
Milo W. Watson
Gene Taylor
Mobol Miller
Mark Washington
Editor A Publisher
Managing Editor
Advertising Manager
Production Superintendent
Subscription Rates
Single copy
By Carrier-
Por Month
Six Months
Por Year
By Mall-
Noble, Logan, Payne, Pawnee,
Kay, Garfield, Osage and
Grant Counties (Prices include
state sales tax)
One Year
Six Months
Three Months
One Month
25
$46.00
$41.30
$23.23
$12.91
$ 8.33
At Perry Post Office Box
(P. ice Includes city and
state sales tax)
One Year
By Mail Elsewhere In Oklahoma
(Prices include state sales tax)
One Year
Six Months
Three months
One Month
By Mail Outside Oklahoma
(No State Sales Tax)
One Year
Six Months
Three Months
One Month
$47.81
$48.32
$26.85
$16.11
$10.74
$55.00
$33.00
$20.00
$15.00
Mother Regrets Decision
To Let Child Raise Child
By Abigail Van Buren
• 1986 by Universal Press Syndicate
DEAR ABBY: 1 am the mother of egocentric to recognize them-
a teen-aged unwed mother. “Lucy” selves in this column. You say
is 16. Her baby’s father left town this friend is a “nice” person
when he found out Lucy was whom you see often, so why not
pregnant. Lucy begged her father be frank with her? Tell her you
and me to let her keep her son. I felt are hurt, and find it irritating
he should have been placed for when she always turns the
adoption, but I allowed my love for conversation back to herself.
Lucy to overrule my good sense, so You will be doing her a favor.
1 let her keep the baby, stood by her And if your frankness damages
and paid for everything. your friendship, what have you
As soon as the baby was born, lost? The company of a person
Lucy reverted to being an irrespon- whose insensitivity you find
sible teen-ager, and guess who is irritating to the point of driving
raising her child? We are! ■ you crazy.
Abby, we love our grandson, but
we are 50 years old, and if we had ** *
wanted another child we would
have had one 15 years ago. I know DEAR ARBY. Will . kindiv do
=====-= ==========
child should have been placed for has ever loved an animal will bless
adoption, but it’s too late now you, as PATRICK FITZGIBBONS,
TRAPPED GRANDMA KALAMAZOO, MICH.
DEAR TRAPPED: It is not too nED SIGIR
late to sit down with your DEAR PATRICK FITZGIB-
daughter and let her know BOND. Los
firmly that if she does not PRAYER FOR ANIMALS
====-== S^
home. If you and your husband als. Especially for animals who
======e
notab den. and pity. And for those who
... deal with them, we ask a heart
of compassion, gentle and
, kindly words. Make us true
DEAR ABBY: I have a friend I friends of the animals and so to
see very often. She’s a nice person, a share the blessings of the
but she has a very irritating habit merciful.
that drives me crazy. No matter
what I start talking about, she
always turns the conversation back
to herself or someone in her family.
If I start to tell her about my
ALBERT SCHWEITZER
DEAR ABBY: I’d like to tell you
daughter, she doesn’t even let me
finish; she starts in about her how I got my children to write their
daughter. thank-you notes: It was a running
Most of the time she goes on and battle with my three sons while they
on just talking about herself and were growing up. I finally told them
her family and her experiences and they could write their thank-you
her this and her that, and she notes whenever they felt like it, but
doesn’t seem one bit interested in the rule in our house was: You can’t
anything I have to say, eat it, wear it, spend it, play with it
Maybe if you print this, she will or use it until the thank-you note
recognize herself, and give someone was written.
else a chance. As for the spelling and grammar
IRRITATED AND HURT — they were on their own. All I did
was give them the postage stamp.
DEAR IRRITATED: There are You’d be surprised at how fast
a lot of people like your friend, they get their notes written.
but they are too insensitive and KAY C., OAKHURST, CALIF.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands for
another. Today’s clue: H equals C.
by CONNIE WIENER
ASVOMCEZU aw V MBBP
The World Almanac
DATE BOOK
June 28, 1986
KVN EB IBM GLEZULYSSN
Today is the 179th 3101,15
day of 1986 and the H HE
eighth day of
summer
KGECBOE CVAGLM EB MB
BOEPBBUW.” - LBUFVL
HBOWGLW.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The squeaking wheel doesn't
always get the grease. Sometimes it gets replaced." —
Vic Gold.
o 1986 by NEA, Inc.
236
TODAY’S HISTORY: On this day in
19 19, the Treaty of Versailles, which
ended World War I, was signed
On this day in 195 1, CBS aired the first
commercial color television broadcast
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS: Henry vill
(1491); Peter Paul Rubens (1577);
Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712); Luigi
Pirandello (1867); Richard Rodgers
(1902); Mel Brooks (1926).
TODAY'S QUOTE: “I hate books;
they teach us only to talk about what
we do not know " — Jean-Jacques
THE BETTER HALF,
e 1948 Cowan Syndicate, Ine
NEW !
COMPUTERIZED
TALKING
BATHROOM
SCALE
559.95
By Harris
HARRIS
Rousseau
TODAY’S MOON: Last
quarter.
(D
“I tried a talking scale once. It said
‘oooof.’ ”
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK possible by contemporary
WASHINGTON (UPI) - observers. ...
Daniel Webster Hoan, the one of the remaining :
long-time mayor of staunch liberals from the :
Milwaukee, was fond of say- Warren years is William .
ing, “Avoid the power of ap-
pointment. All you get is a
thousand enemies and one in-
grate."
Dan Hoan’s advice has had
special meaning to many
presidents who have selected
Supreme Court justices
whose ideologies seemed to
change once they donned the
black robes.
In some cases, the ap-
pointee a president felt sure
would support his views on
the high court turned out to be
the justice who cast the
deciding vote against him in
a crucial case.
Some say it is the lifetime
tenure that goes with the job
that so often transforms Su-
preme Court justices. Others
pulpit which had been vacant By United Press International under the sign of Cancer, say the “experts” probably
one year...An all-day open Today is Saturday, June 28, They include French were guessing all along about
house was scheduled at the the 179th day of 1986 with 186 philosopher Jean-Jacques what kind of judges a
new Noble County Com- to follow, Rousseau in 1712, composer nominee would be.
munity Action Foundation of- The moon is approaching Richard Rodgers in 1902, spy An example was Felix
fice on the west side of the its third quarter, novelist Eric Ambler in 1909, Frankfurter. Because he was
square, according to Bill The morning stars are and comedian Gilda Radner the sponsor of a long list of
Hager, county director. Mars and Jupiter. in 1946 (age 40). young liberals who studied
Thirty Years Ago The evening stars are Mer- --under him at Harvard Law
A total of 20 blocks of Mor- cury, Venus and Saturn. On this date in history School before joining the New
rison streets had been sur- Those born on this date are In 1778, the Continental Ar- Deal, it was assumed that
faced with road oil to reduce rny under command of Gen. Frankfurter would be a left-
blowing dust in the communi- . George Washington defeated leaning activist when
ty, according to Arthur D. D.C., where she was to visit the British at Monmouth NJ Franklin D. Roosevelt ap-
Kerr, member of the town with her two daughters, Mrs. o pointed him to the Supreme
board...Jim Edgar and Frank Roger Allen and Miss Martha In 1919, World War I was of- Court
Cutsinger III, both sponsored Jensen - Miss Martha Jensen ficially ended with the signing In fact Frankfurter was a
by the Perry Rotary club, was head of nurses at Colum- of the Treaty of Versailles. model of judicial restraint,
were to attend the first sum- bia hospital in Washington. In 1971, the use of public opposing Supreme Court in-
mer conference of the Fellow- Fifty Years Ago funds for parochial schools volvement in “political”
ship of Christian Athletes, Perry s quota for reorgan- was ruled unconstitutional by cases, such as the constitu-
Estes Park, Colo. izing Boy Scout work in the the Supreme Court. tional'ity of legislative ger-
Forty Ycars Ago North Oklahoma area was In 1972, President Richard rymandering. Not until he left
Jewel Gillihan, daughter of $500, but with the drive not Nixon announced that no the court did it finally lay
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Gillihan, completed, the local com- moi e draftees would be sent down the “one man, one vote”
had returned from the mitteemen had turned in to Vietnam unless they rule now in effect.
Oklahoma College for Women pledges totaling more than volunteered. There were opposite
campus at Chichasha where $650...Members of the Perry In 1984, Israel andSyria ex- expectations about another
she had been attending Girls' Campfire and their guardian, changed prisoners for the Roosevelt appointee, Hugo
State as th eonly representa- Miss Louise Tucker, enjoyed first time in 10 years; 291 Black. Although he was a
live from Perry...Mrs. C. D. an outing and picnic lunch at Syrian soldiers were traded solid New Dealer, Black, an
Jensen left for Washington, the Perry Lake Park, for three Israelis. Alabama senator, was
regarded as a staunch
segregationist, and disclosure
that he had been a youthful
member of the Ku Klux Klan
aroused an outcry from
liberal and black organi-
zations. As it turned out, no
more enthusiastic battler for
the rights of minorities and
for civil liberties than Black
ever served on the high court.
Earl Warren also was
something of a surprise.
When Dwight Eisenhower
tapped him for chief justice,
he was regarded as a
moderate Republican, but
certainly not as a civil liber-
tarian. In fact, Warren was
known one of the principal ad-
vocates of sending Americans
of Japanese descent to con-
centration camps at the start
of World War II.
The Warren court became
known for its liberalism and
activism, going well beyond
anything ever considered
"Stay tuned for a special — ‘Adult Illiteracy: A Growing Problem.’”
MIRRORS ESTERDAY
The Almanac
Five Years Ago
Golf balls were presented to
Mrs. Milo (Anne) Watson and
Mrs. Jean Crider for best
score in players choice golf at
the Perry Golf and Country
club...A Perry FFA livestock
judging team which included
Harlan Hentges, Randy
Hodge, Billy Streller and
Mark Baetz, ranked eighth of
52 teams which participated
in the Oklahoma State univer-
sity Swine Breeders field day
at Stillwater.
Ten Years Ago
Dr. and Mrs. Pran Khanna
had arrived in Perry from
Richmond Heights, Ohio, and
planned to open his new medi-
cal practice in Perry about
July 12...Albert L. Staerkel,
son of Mrs. Charles Muldun,
Enid, and Orael Streakel of
Covington, had been grad-
uated from the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point, N.Y.
Twenty Years Ago
Fred R. Belk was to arrive
in Perry with his family to be-
come minister of the First
Presbyterian church, filling a
Brennan. It is almost sure .
that Eisenhower did not ex-
pect that is what Brennan :
would be when he appointed :
him.
Byron "Whizzer" White
was John Kennedy’s choice
for the high court, and many
in Washington assumed he
was going to be a liberal
judge. To date, he has been no
farther to the left than the
stripe down the middle of the
road and has joined court con-
servatives a number of times.
All this points out that try-
ing to guess what the
Supreme Court will be like
with William Rehnquist as
chief justice and Antonin
Scalia as an associate justice
might be an exercise in
predicting the unpredictable.
Rehnquist has been serving
on the Supreme Court for 14
years and Scalia has been a
federal appeals court judge
for four years, both making
records that ought to be some
clue as to their future actions
in a field where precedent
usually rules.
So if either Rehnquist or
Scalia turns out to be
anything less than conser-
vative judges, it would be a
major surprise. But it won’t
be the first time it has
happened.
DR. GOTT
TODAY’S TRIVIA: Which of the follow-
ing is not one of Rubens’s paintings? (a)
"The Rape of the Sabines" (b) "Venus
and Adonis" (c) ‘‘Peasant Dance’
TODAY’S BARBS
BY PHIL PASTORET
Someone’s going to make a bundle
selling cabinets with doors you can’t
see through in which to keep weird
bowling trophies
If you let your right hand know what
your left hand is doing, you'll never
make it big in government
TODAY'S TRIVIA ANSWER: (c) "Peas-
ant Dance" is not one of Rubens’s
paintings: it is by Pieter Bruegel the
Elder
News that focuses on the
great Perry area • em-
phasized each day in The
Journal.
ASKING COURT
CHEYENNE, Wyo. — The
Wyoming Employment Se-
curity Commission is asking
the state Supreme Court to
determine whether it must
turn over unemployment
claim records to the Casper
police. Natrona County
District Judge Harry Liem-
back has ordered the commis-
sion to turn its file on Rodney
Christensen over to police by
Friday. Christensen was in-
volved in the death of a
pedestrian in January and
police believe the file may
have information showing
Christensen knew he was
legally blind and not capable
of safely driving a motor
vehicle.
think that your early nosebleeds were associated infection is treated,
unrelated to the ones you had later, DEAR DR. GOTT _ A year or two
which may have been the result of a ago there was a great to-do about che-
blood-pressure problem in any case, lation therapy, but now I hear nothing
I appreciate your writing and sharing about it. What is this therapy and
your views.what conditions can it help?
DEAR DR GOTT — My husband .
has blood in his semen, and 1 don’t DEAR READER — Chelation ther-
know what to do about it What does it apy hasn’t withstood the test of time,
mean? except in the acute treatment of
DEAR READER - Blood in the heavy-metal poisoning, such as lead
urine or semen is always abnormal. It poisoning In this situation, a com-
could be due to infection or tumors. I pound that binds metal is given to the
suggest that your husband check with patient As the substance attracts the
his doctor and, if blood is present, be metal, the metal is drawn from the
referred to a urologist. tissues and bloodstream, and toxicity
DEAR DR GOTT - Can erythema is relieved Use of chelation therapy
nodosum recur in the future? Could to treat heart disease, peripheral vas-
Peter
Gott, M.D.
Nosebleeds and
blood pressure
By Peter H. Gott, M.D.
; Summer Sale
; now in progress
: THE SHOE SOX
: 336-420€
628 Cedar %
DEAR DR GOTT — I got nose- you describe the condition and discuss cular disease and cancer has not been
bleeds for no reason from age 5 to 37. its prognosis? successful; it is being Pushed by
Finally a new doctor came to town DEAR READER - Erythema no- health hucksters but has not been
and I consulted him He asked me if dosum is a peculiar skin reaction proved effective by scientific studies
I’d ever had my blood pressure thought to result from blood-vessel in- for these conditions
checked, which I hadn’t. He took a flammation due to an allergic rea- Unquestionably, chelation therapy
reading and has had me on high-blood- tion. The condition is not a disease but has a great deal of popular appeal but
pressure pills for the past 40 years, is seen in conjunction with certain in- is not an approved method of treating
and I've had no more nosebleeds 1 fections, such as streptococcus, ulcer- diseases other than heavy-metal
hope this helps some of your readers, ative colitis and tuberculosis. It can poisoning
DEAR READER - As you con- occur during pregnancy in normal Report
eluded, nosebleeds can sometimes be women The skin reaction appears asmotes mew-nee
an indicator of high blood pressure red, painful bumps, usually on the ABOUT GOUT explains the cause
Frankly, I find it hard to believe that shins The lesions may last several and treatment of this disease, and
you had hypertension as a child and weeks and are often associated with your copy. Send sI and your name and
into young adulthood In addition, low-grade fever, joint and muscle address to Box 2597, Cincinnati
most pediatricians will check blood pains and a rundown feeling. OH 45201 Be sure to mention the
pressure as a routine part of a child's The bumps go away with time; they title.
examination Therefore, I prefer to usually disappear more rapidly if the © 1986, newspaper enterprise ASSN
and training because they represent a
disproportionately large share of the
700,000 students who drop out of pub-
lic schools every year and the 300,000
who are chronically absent.
As a result, only slightly more than
half of all black male teenagers (16 to
19 years old) are even in the labor
force, fewer than a third are actually
■ L employed and a quarter have never
The great labor mismatch held any job at all.
• Other potential members of the la-
Bv Robert Walters to undertake a task that it has gener- bor pool suffer from different handi-
P " ally shunned. caps. Millions of adults are functional
WASHINGTON (NEA) — The “There remains an isolated minor- illiterates who are unable to read,
seemingly ubiquitous signs posted ity, an underclass located largely in write or compute at a level that en
outside of every imaginable type of our major cities but found in many ru- ables them to follow written instrue-
business proclaim “help wanted" and ral areas as well, who are cut off from tions or perform other routine tasks
“now hiring " They are the first evi- the mainstream of American life,” required for many jobs
dence of a labor shortage that is likely notes John Ong, board chairman of About 115 million workers lost
to become far more severe the B.F. Goodrich Co. their jobs between 1979 and 1984 be-
Figures compiled by the U.S Bu- He suggests that the business com- cause of plant shutdowns or reloca-
reau of Labor Statistics reveal the munity, acting in its own self-interest, tions, technological changes or re-
scope of a nationwide phenomenon may now accept the responsibility to duced output Employees of old-line
- From 1975 to 1985, the country's educate and train the disadvantaged, manufacturing industries are vastly
economy created 21.3 million new many of them poor and members of overrepresented among those dis-
jobs but the labor force expanded at minority groups placed workers — and many lack the
an even faster rate, growing by 21 7 Ong made that proposal here re- skills required for new jobs
million people cently in his role as chairman of the “More jobs will require not only ba-
- From 1985 to 1995, 15.6 million National Alliance of Business, a sic skills but also problem solving, an-
new jobs will be created but the labor Washington-based organization that alytical and communicating skills,
force will expand at a much slower long has been concerned about the yet a growing percentage of the pro-
pace, growing by only 13.7 million. issue jected new labor force entrants are
There will also be important quali- “Unless we change how we educate expected to lack these skills," warns
tative distinctions between the jobs of and train the U.S. labor pool, Ameri- the NAB
the past and those of the future That can business increasingly will be ata Federal, state and local govern-
has become apparent during the past competitive disadvantage in the ment efforts to aid the disadvantaged
15 years, when 90 percent of all new world marketplace," warns the NAB have produced only limited success
jobs were in the service and informa- The difficulty in performing that Perhaps the NAB will fare better in
tion sectors while only 5 percent were task is perhaps best illustrated by the dealing with what it aptly character-
in manufacturing industries problem of dealing with black chil- izes as "pervasive mismatches be
The business community, which dren, 46 percent of whom live in fam- tween workplace needs and work
desperately needs a larger and more ilies with annual incomes below the force capabilities."
sophisticated labor force to sustain poverty line.
economic growth, may soon be ready Blacks often lack needed education ©1986, NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN
ROBERT WAITERS
ACROSS
1 Concerning
(2 wds.)
5 Dancer
Verdon
9 Play by
12 Jacob s son
13 River in the
Congo
14 Compass
point
15 Trapeze artist
17 Dead heat
18 Economic
indicator
(abbr.)
19 Neuter
pronoun
21 Loosen
24 Skin
25 African feline
27 Iron (Ger.)
31 Modern
32 Aid in diag-
nosing
(comp wd.)
34 White frost
35 Maple genus
37 Fish sauce
39 Steal
40 Repeat
showing
42 Sweet wine
44 Firearms
46 Foreigner
47 California
mountain
50 Flightless
bird
51 Take a meal
52 Entrance fee
57 Supplement
58 At hand
59 —
sapiens
60 Footlike part
61 Shady plant
62 Chinese
currency
DOWN
1 Auto club
(abbr.)
2 Compass
point
3 Thrice (pref.)
4 Source
5 Swallow
6 Chinese river
7_____
Dinsmore
8 Vex
9 Grafted in
heraldry
10 Dye
11 Ridge of rock
near water
16 Add on
20 Budge
21 Of arm bone
1
2
3
12
15
21
25
31
35
4
47
57
60
18
16
22 23
44
48
49
13
26
32
37
3
NEW VACUUMS 3
• PANASONIC
• KIRBY 1
• RAINBOW 0
Call 0
ERNIE VOISE
336 4874 0
1705 Ridgecrest Drive-
Repair Service
Answer to Previous Puzzle
Eliouoocix
□I
is
5
AS
41
45
DBQG
(
• GEL
SUE cacao
JIE □□□
SUE
E
11
no
F
30
3
4
BUG □□□on non
IQD Ogano EEB
22 Sister s
daughter
23 Motive force
24 Old
Testament
book
26 Mrs., in
Madrid
(abbr.)
28 Biblical
mountain
29 Novelist Zola
30 Baltic river
33 Cry of
affirmation
36 Mats
38 Jams
41 Drooping
43 Muddy
45 Consumer
advocate
Ralph
47 Doze
48 Food fish
49 Sweetsop
50 Ireland
53 Actress West
54 Paper of
indebtedness
55 Medical
suffix
56 French
negative
7
8
10
11
24
42
53
19
33
50
20
27
34
38
43
46
59
62
28
29
30
39
54
65
56
1
■ ^^^^^X^^^^^^g
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.
Matching Search Results
View 10 places within this issue that match your search.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.
Watson, Milo W. Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 93, No. 120, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 28, 1986, newspaper, June 28, 1986; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2254718/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.