Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Akron Beacon Journal from Akron, Ohio • Page 2

Location:
Akron, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 Akron Beacon Journal Sunday, January 4, 1981 eses 'Angel' Ladd weds Actress Cheryl Ladd of the Charlie's Angels TV series was married Saturday to composer Brian Russell, 35, at the Puma Paw Ranch in Rifle, Colo. It was the second marriage for Miss Ladd, 28, and also for Russell. Miss Ladd was married in 1973 to actor David Ladd and divorced in 1980. They have a 5-year-old daughter named Jordan. Russell, a native of Falkirk, Scotland, was married in 1973 to singer Brenda Russell and was divorced in 1978.

They have a 4-year-old daughter named Lindsay. The two young daughters acted as flower girls. Playwright is honored Friedrieh Duerrenmatt turns 60 Monday with a homo-town festival that marks the beginning of a series of worldwide celebrations to honor the playwright, novelist," essayist and philosopher. Duerrenmatt will be honored by residents of the lakeside resort of Neurhatel, Switzerland, where he has lived for nearly 30 years, and will receive an honorary degree from Neuehatel University. On Saturday, he will be lauded by Swiss President Kurt Fuller at the Sehauspielhaus in Zurich, where many of his plays had world premieres.

Mr. Smith is going to Washington on his 59th birthday Jan. 20 for the inauguration of his second cousin, Konald Reagan. "It pr obably will be the biggest birthday I ever had in terms of it being difficult to forget," said Harry Smith, a Gallatin, business executive. Smith's paternal grandmother was a sister to Reagan's mother.

Smith and the nation's 40th president were born 11 years and 75 miles apart in small northern Illinois towns. Tax-revolt leader Howard Jarvis has asked the California Supreme Cour to declar itself ineligible to rehear' his appeal to block state worker's from collecting $207 million in back pay. Jarvis argued that the cast1 involved substantial benefits to the Supreme Court staff. Isr aeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin has come down with a cold and has Ijeen ordered by doctors to stay at home for several days. Nonetheless, Begin, 67, expects to attend some important meetings today.

He is scheduled to meet former U. S. Secr etar of State Henry A. Kissinger tonight. This morning, Begin has his regular weekly Cabinet meeting at which he may have to deal with a split in his ruling coalition.

Begin has suffered two heart attacks. Robert Garwood, the Marine private being tried on charges of desertion and collaboration with the enemy in Vietnam, attended a New Year's party in his hometown of Adams, sponsored by the American Legion, his brother says. "It's kind of a yearly deal, nothing real big. But we had a good time," said Jack Garwood. Jack Garwood said his brother, who spent a holiday break in his court-martial visiting his hometown, was on his way back to Camp LeJeune, N.

for the resumption of the proceedings Monday. It was real nice to have him home," Jack Garwood said. yff I Howard Jarvis challenges court Strom Thurmond one less present Sen. Strom Thurmond won't be getting one of his Christmas presents. Staff workers in Thurmond's Charleston, S.

office became ner vous when an envelope arrived in the mail with a Washington state postmark and a curious bulge. They called police, who blasted the envelope with a shotgun and called in federal agents to investigate the remains. Federal and state agents examined the contents of the envelope and found it contained a Christmas cigar, a plastic holder, a Christmas card and some newspaper clippings. Thurmond doesn't smoke. Eileen Anderson, a political unknown only a year ago, has been sworn in as Honolulu's first female mayor.

She won her first political race with a narrow Democratic primary victory over Mayor Frank Fasi and went on to easily defeat Republican Jack Schweigert in the November general election. Mrs. Anderson, who began her career in government as a state personnel technician in 1956, was named state budget director in 1974. A native of Los Angeles, she is the first University of Hawaii graduate to hold the office of mayor. Her husband is retired from the Honolulu police department.

Erma Bombeck CJ cj- Music We are a country of differences. Our politics are bipartisan, our faith is sectarian, our foods and customs are multiethnic, and our morals are up for grabs. Never are these dif- ferences more evident than when we come across a child who is having a temper tan- floor like a pile of laundry screaming and crying with a voice that shatters plastic. The child whose limbs have turned to string. Whose face is swollen beyond recognition with tears.

Whose very life is draining out of his body because he is tired and wants to be carried at the same moment you are carrying 50 pounds of groceries and a seven-month fetus inside you. THE SAD FACT is mothers do not stick with their own in a temper situation. I found this out quite painfully one summer when my toddler entwined himself around my leg in a supermarket and chanted one word, "Gum," for 35 minutes. The weight of dragging him on my leg became quite annoying and I said to him firmly, "No!" The next thing I know he had pulled over the entire gum machine. I whacked him on the bottom and began picking up 3,000 pieces of rolling gum balls.

Amid a kid yelling, "Please, Mommy. I'm sorry," (that was a touch) this is the kind of support I got from the mob. "What kind of mother can stand to hear her child cry like that?" "He needs loving, that's what he needs." "I'd say he needs attention. Probably doesn't get any at home." "I saw her earlier. She held his little arm so tight, I thought she'd pull it out of the socket." "She couldn't afford a lousy piece of bubble gum?" "She's the one who should be spanked for not keeping an eye on him." Getting up from my knees, I reached over to pick up my son.

It was then that he gave his performance his big finish: He flinched! The crowd loved it. One woman said, "I don't know why God gives children to people like that!" I knew. And I wasn't going to do it anymore. trum. Everyone witnessing it is an authority on who is responsible for the temper tantrum and what to do about it.

LJ Just to clarify, I'm not talking about your harmless little stomping-the-foot-dancing-up-and-down-whining-and-whim-pering of a child who doesn't want to go in the deep end of the swimming pool. I'm talking your one-show-only-matinee-performance of a child lying on the William Appling Photo Pun William Appling, director of the music program at Hudson's Western Reserve Academy, directs his William Appling Singers as well as soloists and an orchestra in Handel's Messiah at 3 p.m. today in Cleveland's Severance Hall. Tickets are $10, $8 and $5 at Acme No. 1 on West Market Street or the Severance Hall box office.

For more information, call 1-231-1111. Art Connoisseurship in Italian Figural Composition, The Realist Tradition: Fivnch Painting and Drawing 1830-1900 and drawings and water colors by Leon Bonvin are featured from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.

Wednesday, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and from 1 to 6 p.m. Sunday through Jan. 18 in the Cleveland Museum of Art, 11150 East Blvd.

Associated Press "It's a fact of life that the clock is ticking. We'll need at least a week to get all the pieces in place." State Department spokesman John H. Trattner on the need for the Iranians to make a decision soon on the American hostages if they want to act before Ronald Reagan tx'oomes president. "I think the idea of a deadline is a good one." President-elect Ronald Reagan on President Carter's admonition that Ir an has until Jan. 16 to break the hostage impasse under the current administration's terms.

"If Chrysler had no way of improving their viability as a company, then I would think that the economic circumstances that would happen there might be that the pr esident of the gover nment might be powerless to intervene." Edward Meese III, a senior Reagan advisor, on the new administration's out on continuing the fedor al rescue of Chrysler. Even if you can't lick this photo pun puzzle, there's no reason to yell and scream. It was submitted by Joseph P. Petrilla of Cuyahoga Falls, who will receive $5 for his efforts. i Can you solve the puzzle? i If you'd like to try your i hand at photo puns, send your photos, preferably black and white, to: Photo pun Photo Department Akron Beacon Journal 44 E.

Exchange St. Akron, Ohio 44328 The answer to today's photo pun is printed under the I lottery number on this page. ohbs number game 841 drawn Saturday I Photo pun answer nn JJ Weather Area climatic data at Akron-Canton Airport.) SATURDAY The forecast Very cold with scattered snow flurries today through Monday. High 5 in; low tonight, zero to high Monday, about 15. Snow Tuesday.

Fair Wednesday, with snow flurries. Fair ThurvJ ty. I.ous in the t-n-ns Tuesday an 1 Wednesday; 15 to 25 Thursday. in the 3cs. lam 1pm 16 2 am.

20 2 pm 16 3am 19 3pm 13 4am 70 4 pm 11 5am 70 Spm. 6am 19 6 pm. 6 7am 19 n. i 8am 19 I tn 5 9 am 17 9 pm. 3 10 a 19 Dam 19 (Courtesy fr National Weather Service station Temperatures: Saturday high, 21 at 5:30 a.m.

Low, 0 at 9:30 p.m. Mean temperature, 11, which is 16 below normal. A year ago today: High, 29; low, 23. Records for today; 60 in 1950; 4 in 1904. Precipitation: Saturday.

0.8 inch. For the year to date, .23 inch, which is .01 inch below normal. Snowfall: Saturday, 2 inches; for the season, 22. Snow Sunset today: 5:11. Sunrise Monday: 7:51 Forecast for today On the road Litter coid today in western Pennsylvania, lower Michigan and Indiana.

Lows as much as 20 below zero in Michigan, ac eorr.panied by snow flurries. Mostly sunny but cold todav rn Kcrriicky; warmer Monday with in the upper 20s to middle 30s. Cold today and tonight in West Virginia. I Monday's national outlook Low 5 -1 7 3. Lunar phases Hi Low 5 Low H.fi tarn Hrgfi A r-f '5 -3 dodor-ati-p cMv JO -1 Sx-V 1 24 Ce -r" nu 5 a 31 Cv.eMM-y ct 1 -3 Los A-x-evta 75 55 Portion, C-p c'tfy 27 A A 21 Cou-Vs pry 17 -2 v.

-o 3 K' -x A- 1 i- 35 h' esC-ar 6S 4 Sj'J--vj-- Oao rr xr -2 c-J -S Si-mnre-vu-- 24 V. S-CW2 i I 3 S- L-s. 33 8 -s cc 6 Nay. 33 15 Ptre'ss-yj-'a I4 ir('' -1 Ve 0a-a 57 35 Sr te 41 8 27 -i-" ij-i a yi-v- 71 1 -a-f c-Cf 1" 23 30 '4 Ss- F-x-s 3-'-' -5 ti 24 $. J.4--s-c.c ti if -s--: "5 --f 33 2 -a 45 23 1- -vk '5 34 So- -r y- 35 Vs cc s.

4 osy is NC s- sor. M-')' 2 i-c cc 71 50 Txv- r- C-. zi 23 tc, "t--c cw 1 im-r-v. t'iyy-c -j La a- 66 42 Pxa- V3 r- 'i -13 'a-o" co i 1 11 NOW flurries and t-day. Drawing by Curtis Amt-ii, 18.

fMuntj-gradtr at fantaa h(xd. -2 47 23 6 Jr 13 -V 20.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Akron Beacon Journal
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Akron Beacon Journal Archive

Pages Available:
3,081,243
Years Available:
1872-2024