1
Volume 112 No. 52 75 Cents Thursday April 1, 2010 P.O. Box 278 •105 W. Main Street • Boise City, Oklahoma 73933-0278 • Cimarron County Phone 580-544-2222 • Fax 580-544-3281 • e-mail [email protected] Visit The Boise City News online at it’s Website at boisecitynews.org Or it’s new Weblog at boisecitynews2.wordpress.com BOISE CITY WEATHER Hi Lo Prec Tues. March 23 59 32 Wed. March 24 41 30 Thur. March 25 47 18 .12 Fri. March 26 69 32 Sat. March 27 50 37 .02 Sun. March 28 61 32 Mon.March 29 74 27 MARKETS Wheat $ 3.97 bush. Milo $2.72 bush. Corn $3.22 bush. (spot prices subject to change) TODAYIN HISTORY APRIL 1 BORN ON APRIL 1 SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT April 3rd & 4th 2010 Saturday Evening 6:00 PM MDT Sunday Morning 6:00 Am MDT (All times are mountain daylight time) Meals Meals will be served at Camp Billy Joe after each performance Supper and Breakfast Cost: Donation Kenton Easter Pageant 2010 Schedule Lodging At Camp Billy Joe Lodging .... $2.00 Per Person Camper Sites.....$5.00 Contact: Diane Smith @ 580-261-7410 or 580-261-7474 For Reservations Self-contained campers may park at Camp Billy Joe free of charge Camping is not allowed at Pageant Site by C.F. David photos by Mike Barnes Since about November, since the snow and ice began to hang around, Mike Barnes of the Boise City Body Shop has hauled in about eight trucks disabled by accidents caused by snow and or icy conditions. However, in the last three days, half that many trucks have been disabled by the “bumps” on Daniels Curve, south of Boise City on Highway 287, and as of Tuesday evening the eighth truck in just a few weeks had been towed from the construction site and it too had ruined its oil pan. Barnes said that usually when the trucks, carrying 100 thousand pounds or so of freight, or in one case, live animals, hit the bump, which is about three inches high, there is no more than a bone-jar- ring ride. In the past three days though, extensive damage has been done to several trucks. When an ill-fated truck passes over the bump, it sometimes shat- ters the heavy plastic bowl hold- ing the air bags supporting the suspension. This can mean that the truck just loses part of its sus- pension, but further damage is possible and has been occurring. Replacing the suspension bags and cup, cost about $400 each. Oil pans are an estimated $1,200 each plus labor and the oil to fill them is 10 gallons at $14 a gallon. Then add on this, the idle time for the truck and driver and the delay in the delivery of freight. When the bags ruptured on one truck, the frame collapsed onto the tires, shredding four tires. Jimmy Meister, of Boise City’s J&K Tires said that a used truck tire will cost about $175 before taxes, and a new tire will run Daniel’s “Bump” Gives Truckers’Wallets a Dent A yard stick illustrates the elevation on the bump south of Boise City in the construction zone. The bump has become a problem, especially for northbound truckers bringing about damages and expensive repairs. Below are truck parts gathered in a circle of 50 feet. about $400 before taxes, for a potential cost of $700 to $1,600, without the service fee. Other damage done; a tail gate jarred off a pickup truck and run over by a semi, ripped out brake lines, bringing the truck to a sudden stop…in the traffic lane. Another truck run- ning over a piece of junk metal accomplished the same out- come. A third truck, upon hit- ting the bump lost the suspen- sion bags, and the frame col- lapsed, driving the axle through the oil pan on the diesel engine, the roadway was bathed in oil. The trucks that aren’t re- paired on the roadside or towed to Barnes’ shop, J&K or Chuck’s GMC have to be towed to destinations such as Amarillo, at a cost of about $700 just for the tow, not count- ing what ever repairs need to be made. To make matters worse at Daniel’s Curve are the drop offs on either side of the pave- ment, about eight inches on the East and about two feet on the west. Barnes said that complaints from Highway Patrol Troopers, a local ODOT supervisor, and the truckers in addition to Barnes, seem to have fallen on deaf ears. Meanwhile, insurance claims continue to stack up, two oil pans, $2,400, 20 gallons of oil, $280, at least four tires, $700 to $1,600, adds to an estimated $3,380 to $4,280, then add the price of brake line replace- ments, towing, labor, down time for driver and trucks, freight delays, and truck replacements, and the figure is quickly into the five figure range and climbing steadily toward six figures, with- out the inevitable lawsuit. by C.F. David James Parker, of Maricopa County, Ariz., and Roy Young, of Cimarron County, have filed a lawsuit against Cimarron County Sheriff Keith Borth, the Commissioners of the Okla- homa Land Office and Land Commission Officer, Randy Schreiner, of Texas County. The lawsuit is in answer to an impending sheriff’s sale for property taken in January, as part of a $564 thousand dollar CLO judgment against the Ci- marron River Ranch northeast of Kenton. At that time, Teri Watkins, communications director of the Land Office told The Boise City News that the commis- sioners of the land office planned to take back land leased to the Cimarron River Ranch as well as 500 acres of deeded land, two homes and the “Wild West Building” at the base of Black Mesa, plus vari- ous equipment and an irrigation system. From the fall of 2005 when the initial land was leased, James Parker has stated that his son Samuel owned the Ci- marron River Ranch and that he [James] was only an advi- sor. In the second lawsuit, which Parker, Young, Turn Tables On Sheriff, Okla. Land Commissioners, Sue for : Consititional violations, Trespass, Property, Damages Parker brings against the land of- fice, Borth and Schreiner, Parker and Young contend that they have been harmed by the seizure of property and also that some of the property has been damaged. Contacted by The Boise City News, (by e-mail), attorney Sheila Stinson, of Oklahoma City, an- swered the question of damaged property with: “The plaintiffs know that at least one piece of personal property was broken while in the Sheriff’s custody. They do not know the extent of the damage to any other items because Plaintiffs have not inspected all of the prop- erty since it was seized.” Parker and Young also contend that the defendants had violated their [Parker and Young’s] Fourth Amendment rights, (illegal search and seizure). Again asked how if the defen- dants had a court order the Fourth Amendment was violated, Stinson replied that: “The Execution al- lowed for the levy of Cimarron River Ranch’s property, not any other third-party. As James Parker and Roy Young were not parties to the suit, the Writ of Execution did not ap- ply to their property.” The suit then accuses the de- fendants of trespass, since the property seized didn’t belong to the Cimarron River Ranch. The Boise City News then asked Stinson: “If the property didn’t belong to Cimarron River Ranch to whom did it belong? James Parker has said all along that he didn’t own the ranch but Samuel did. Is then Parker claim- ing that the property was his and not the ranch’s? Who is the proper debtor? Sam? And where has he been in all of this? Why isn’t he here defending the ranch if it is/was his?” To which she replied: “The personal property belonged to James Parker and Roy Young as attached on the itemized list to the Petition. James Parker does not own CRR, he owned per- sonal property in the resi- dence owned by CRR. The judgment debtor in the first suit is Cimarron River Ranch. CRR has filed a Motion to Halt the Sheriff’s Sale in the first suit which is set for hearing on March 31 in Oklahoma County. Samuel Parker is a member of CRR, LLC.” (This story will continue to develop as both suits make their way through the Okla- homa County District Court.) By C.F. David Chad Douglas Marcum and Michael Justin Ray Truitt, pleaded guilty on March 24 to burglary and concealment charges. The two admitted to having bro- ken into four different businesses in Boise City and to also having concealed property taken from those buildings. By pleading, Marcum and Truitt, both 20 years of age went into the youth offender program Marcum, Truitt, Take Plea and will be accepted into a “Bill Johnston” Program similar to a boot camp. The two will again appear before the Dis- trict Court upon completion of the course, sometime in Octo- ber. Depending upon their be- havior in program, the judge will make a decision on further le- gal action at that time. A juvenile, purported to be with Marcum and Truitt during the burglaries remains at large. Kanon White of the Boise City High School 2010 Gradu- ating Class has been awarded the Henry Barnes Memorial Scholarship. This Scholarship, created in honor of the late Henry Barnes KANON WHITE KANON WHITE AWARDED THE HENRY BARNES MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP who was a long-time resident of Boise City, provides $10,000.00 annually for four years of under- graduate study toward a Bachelor’s degree at any accred- ited college or university in the United States. The Scholarship Selection Com- mittee would like to express ap- preciation to all of the graduat- ing Seniors that took the time and effort to apply for this Scholarship. Based upon the quality of the applications that were received, Cimarron County residents should be very proud of their 2010 Gradu- ating Seniors. ATTENTION!!!! Since October we have received 6.53 inches of moisture either in rain or snow. I read a recent sta- tistic that the U.S. is now 97 percent drought free, the quickest drought re- covery on record “America will never be destroyed from the outside. If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves.” - Abraham Lincoln The Artists of Felt School for using their tal- e n t s to help rebuild Haiti. We give a dunce cap to: We give a tip of the hat to: All those un- happy with the health care pro- gram who threatened con- gressmen and women, and the so- called “Christian Milita”...get a life!! by C.F. David Electronic Technology, in the latter 20 th and early 21 st Cen- tury has moved quickly. In a short eight months we will be seeing the end of the first decade of the 21 st century. We have, in this decade, seen the towers fall, two wars, the election of our first black president and the beginning of the worst financial crisis in over 70 years. In the mean-time large metro dailies have been faced with bankruptcy, closed, or changed the way they do busi- ness. The Boise City News has established both a web site and a blog site. However, technology is moving too fast, a printed news paper will soon be a thing of the past, and we too must move on to the future of news report- ing. THE BOISE CITY NEWS MUST SOON MOVE TO 21 ST CENTURY Beginning in the 21 st century’s second decade, The Boise City News will be delivered exclusively on Twitter. In this way our read- ers, busy with their own lives, will be able to read the news of Cima- rron County at their own speed and leisure. What is Twitter you might ask? It is basically a social networking and microblogging service deliv- ering tweets in bursts of 140 char- acters. Twitter, is the brain child of Jack Dorsey and was dreamed up dur- ing a 2006 brainstorming session at Odeo, a San Francisco podcasting company. It has, in 2010 experienced a 1,500 percent growth, and it has over 70,000 reg- istered applications. In the first quarter of 2010, two billion tweets were posted, and over $57 million has been raised from venture capi- talists. This will, for the Boise City News, cut much of our overhead; we will be able to cut the cost of paper, both used in the build- ing and in newsprint. We won’t have to spend postage, since our subscribers will be receiv- ing the news over either/or their cell phones or computers. However, this comes at a price, since Twitter displays no advertisements. But, advertis- ers often target Twitter users by observing their tweet his- tory. Twitter was used for pub- licity during the 2008 elections by President Obama and his campaign. It has also been used to op- pose the recently passed health insurance reform. In any case, come along with the Boise City News as we go further into the informa- tion age and the 21 st century. And by the way….April Fools!!! 1815 Otto Von Bismarck Germany, chancellor (1866- 90) 1883 Lon Chaney Colorado Springs CO, man of 1000 faces, actor (High Noon, Phantom of Opera) 1886 Wallace Beery Kansas City MO, actor (Alias a Gentleman, Dinner at 8, Ah Wilderness) 1928 Jane Powell Portland OR, singer/actress (7 Brides for 7 Brothers) 1932 Debbie Reynolds El Paso TX, actress (Singin’ in the Rain) 1932 Gordon Jump Dayton OH, actor (Arthur Carlson- WKRP, Growing Pains) 1934 Jim Ed Brown Sparkman AR, country singer (Nashville on the Road) 1939 Ali MacGraw Pound Ridge NY, actress (Love Story, Goodbye Columbus) 1939 Phil Niekro knuckleball pitcher (New York Yankees, Atlanta Braves) 1947 David Eisenhower grandson of President Dwight, married Julie Nixon 1952 Annette O’Toole Houston TX, actress (Cat People, Superman III) 0374 Halley’s Comet ap- proaches within 0.0884 astro- nomical units (AUs) of Earth 1748 Ruins of Pompeii found 1778 Oliver Pollock, a New Orleans businessman, cre- ates “$” symbol 1789 House of Representa- tives 1st full meeting, New York NY 1826 Samuel Mory patents internal combustion engine 1863 1st wartime conscription law in US goes into effect 1865 Battle of 5 Forks VA, sig- nalling end of Lee’s army 1867 Blacks vote in munici- pal election in Tuscumbia AL 1889 1st dishwashing machine marketed (Chicago) 1931 Jackie Mitchell becomes 1st female in professional baseball 1941 Nazi’s forbid Jews access to cafés 1945 US forces launch inva- sion of Okinawa during WWII Editorial Short- In spite of the arrest of two individuals for four burglaries within the city limits, the prob- lems haven’t ceased. There have been reports of continuing burglaries at the Boise City Co-Op, and other rural lo- cations with property and money having been taken. Also, No Man’s Land Beef Jerky was bro- ken into over the weekend. As the arrests in the previous burglaries have made plain, teen- agers aren’t all the problem. However, teens could eas- ily be or become the problem. As I have written in the past I have been opposed to a cur- few, but incidents have changed my mind. The break-ins have become bolder, citizens are sleeping in their businesses; someone is going to get hurt. Tell you councilman, tell your commis- sioner, (the county might have to take action if the city won’t) if you favor a curfew. “Happiness is the full use of your powers along lines of excellence.” - John F. Kennedy

Daniel’s “Bump” Gives Parker, Young, Turn Tables On ...€¦ · 4/4/2010  · one truck, the frame collapsed onto the tires, shredding four tires. Jimmy Meister, of Boise City’s

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Page 1: Daniel’s “Bump” Gives Parker, Young, Turn Tables On ...€¦ · 4/4/2010  · one truck, the frame collapsed onto the tires, shredding four tires. Jimmy Meister, of Boise City’s

Volume 112 No. 52 75 Cents Thursday April 1, 2010P.O. Box 278 •105 W. Main Street • Boise City, Oklahoma 73933-0278 • Cimarron CountyPhone 580-544-2222 • Fax 580-544-3281 • e-mail [email protected]

Visit The Boise City News online at it’s Website at boisecitynews.orgOr it’s new Weblog at boisecitynews2.wordpress.com

BOISE CITY WEATHER Hi Lo Prec

Tues. March 23 59 32Wed. March 24 41 30Thur. March 25 47 18 .12Fri. March 26 69 32Sat. March 27 50 37 .02Sun. March 28 61 32Mon.March 29 74 27MARKETSWheat $ 3.97 bush.Milo $2.72 bush.Corn $3.22 bush. (spot prices subject to change)

TODAY IN HISTORYAPRIL 1

BORN ON APRIL 1

SOMETHING TOTHINK ABOUT

April 3rd & 4th 2010Saturday Evening 6:00 PM

MDTSunday Morning 6:00 Am

MDT(All times are mountain

daylight time)

MealsMeals will be served at Camp

Billy Joeafter each performanceSupper and BreakfastCost: Donation

Kenton Easter Pageant 2010 ScheduleLodgingAt Camp Billy JoeLodging....$2.00 Per

PersonCamper Sites.....$5.00Contact: Diane Smith@ 580-261-7410or 580-261-7474For ReservationsSelf-contained campers

may park atCamp Billy Joe free of

chargeCamping is not allowed at

Pageant Site

by C.F. Davidphotos by Mike Barnes

Since about November, sincethe snow and ice began to hangaround, Mike Barnes of theBoise City Body Shop has hauledin about eight trucks disabled byaccidents caused by snow andor icy conditions.

However, in the last threedays, half that many trucks havebeen disabled by the “bumps” onDaniels Curve, south of BoiseCity on Highway 287, and as ofTuesday evening the eighth truckin just a few weeks had beentowed from the construction siteand it too had ruined its oil pan.

Barnes said that usually whenthe trucks, carrying 100 thousandpounds or so of freight, or in onecase, live animals, hit the bump,which is about three inches high,there is no more than a bone-jar-ring ride.

In the past three days though,extensive damage has been doneto several trucks.

When an ill-fated truck passesover the bump, it sometimes shat-ters the heavy plastic bowl hold-ing the air bags supporting thesuspension. This can mean thatthe truck just loses part of its sus-pension, but further damage ispossible and has been occurring.Replacing the suspension bagsand cup, cost about $400 each.

Oil pans are an estimated$1,200 each plus labor and the oilto fill them is 10 gallons at $14 agallon.

Then add on this, the idle timefor the truck and driver and thedelay in the delivery of freight.

When the bags ruptured onone truck, the frame collapsedonto the tires, shredding four tires.Jimmy Meister, of Boise City’sJ&K Tires said that a used trucktire will cost about $175 beforetaxes, and a new tire will run

Daniel’s “Bump” GivesTruckers’ Wallets a Dent

A yard stick illustrates the elevation on the bump southof Boise City in the construction zone. The bump hasbecome a problem, especially for northbound truckersbringing about damages and expensive repairs. Beloware truck parts gathered in a circle of 50 feet.

about $400 before taxes, for apotential cost of $700 to $1,600,without the service fee.

Other damage done; a tailgate jarred off a pickup truckand run over by a semi, rippedout brake lines, bringing thetruck to a sudden stop…in thetraffic lane. Another truck run-ning over a piece of junk metalaccomplished the same out-come. A third truck, upon hit-ting the bump lost the suspen-sion bags, and the frame col-lapsed, driving the axle throughthe oil pan on the diesel engine,the roadway was bathed in oil.

The trucks that aren’t re-paired on the roadside or towedto Barnes’ shop, J&K orChuck’s GMC have to betowed to destinations such asAmarillo, at a cost of about$700 just for the tow, not count-ing what ever repairs need tobe made.

To make matters worse atDaniel’s Curve are the dropoffs on either side of the pave-ment, about eight inches on theEast and about two feet on thewest.

Barnes said that complaintsfrom Highway Patrol Troopers,a local ODOT supervisor, andthe truckers in addition toBarnes, seem to have fallen ondeaf ears.

Meanwhile, insuranceclaims continue to stack up, twooil pans, $2,400, 20 gallons ofoil, $280, at least four tires, $700to $1,600, adds to an estimated$3,380 to $4,280, then add theprice of brake line replace-ments, towing, labor, down timefor driver and trucks, freightdelays, and truck replacements,and the figure is quickly into thefive figure range and climbingsteadily toward six figures, with-out the inevitable lawsuit.

by C.F. DavidJames Parker, of Maricopa

County, Ariz., and Roy Young,of Cimarron County, have fileda lawsuit against CimarronCounty Sheriff Keith Borth, theCommissioners of the Okla-homa Land Office and LandCommission Officer, RandySchreiner, of Texas County.

The lawsuit is in answer toan impending sheriff’s sale forproperty taken in January, aspart of a $564 thousand dollarCLO judgment against the Ci-marron River Ranch northeastof Kenton.

At that time, Teri Watkins,communications director of theLand Office told The BoiseCity News that the commis-sioners of the land officeplanned to take back landleased to the Cimarron RiverRanch as well as 500 acres ofdeeded land, two homes andthe “Wild West Building” at thebase of Black Mesa, plus vari-ous equipment and an irrigationsystem.

From the fall of 2005 whenthe initial land was leased,James Parker has stated thathis son Samuel owned the Ci-marron River Ranch and thathe [James] was only an advi-sor.

In the second lawsuit, which

Parker, Young, Turn Tables On Sheriff,Okla. Land Commissioners, Sue for :Consititional violations, Trespass, Property, Damages

Parker brings against the land of-fice, Borth and Schreiner, Parkerand Young contend that they havebeen harmed by the seizure ofproperty and also that some of theproperty has been damaged.

Contacted by The Boise CityNews, (by e-mail), attorney SheilaStinson, of Oklahoma City, an-swered the question of damagedproperty with: “The plaintiffsknow that at least one piece ofpersonal property was brokenwhile in the Sheriff’s custody. They do not know the extentof the damage to any otheritems because Plaintiffs havenot inspected all of the prop-erty since it was seized.”

Parker and Young also contendthat the defendants had violatedtheir [Parker and Young’s] FourthAmendment rights, (illegal searchand seizure).

Again asked how if the defen-dants had a court order the FourthAmendment was violated, Stinsonreplied that: “The Execution al-lowed for the levy of CimarronRiver Ranch’s property, notany other third-party. AsJames Parker and Roy Youngwere not parties to the suit, theWrit of Execution did not ap-ply to their property.”

The suit then accuses the de-fendants of trespass, since theproperty seized didn’t belong to the

Cimarron River Ranch. TheBoise City News then askedStinson: “If the propertydidn’t belong to CimarronRiver Ranch to whom did itbelong? James Parker hassaid all along that he didn’town the ranch but Samueldid. Is then Parker claim-ing that the property was hisand not the ranch’s? Whois the proper debtor? Sam?And where has he been inall of this? Why isn’t hehere defending the ranch ifit is/was his?”

To which she replied: “Thepersonal property belongedto James Parker and RoyYoung as attached on theitemized list to the Petition. James Parker does notown CRR, he owned per-sonal property in the resi-dence owned by CRR. Thejudgment debtor in the firstsuit is Cimarron RiverRanch. CRR has filed aMotion to Halt the Sheriff’sSale in the first suit whichis set for hearing on March31 in Oklahoma County. Samuel Parker is a memberof CRR, LLC.”

(This story will continue todevelop as both suits maketheir way through the Okla-homa County District Court.)

By C.F. DavidChad Douglas Marcum and

Michael Justin Ray Truitt, pleadedguilty on March 24 to burglary andconcealment charges.

The two admitted to having bro-ken into four different businessesin Boise City and to also havingconcealed property taken fromthose buildings.

By pleading, Marcum andTruitt, both 20 years of age wentinto the youth offender program

Marcum, Truitt, Take Pleaand will be accepted into a “BillJohnston” Program similar toa boot camp. The two willagain appear before the Dis-trict Court upon completion ofthe course, sometime in Octo-ber. Depending upon their be-havior in program, the judge willmake a decision on further le-gal action at that time.

A juvenile, purported to bewith Marcum and Truitt duringthe burglaries remains at large.

Kanon White of the BoiseCity High School 2010 Gradu-ating Class has been awardedthe Henry Barnes MemorialScholarship.

This Scholarship, created inhonor of the late Henry Barnes

KANON WHITE

KANON WHITEAWARDED THEHENRY BARNES

MEMORIALSCHOLARSHIP who was a long-time resident of

Boise City, provides $10,000.00annually for four years of under-graduate study toward aBachelor’s degree at any accred-ited college or university in theUnited States.

The Scholarship Selection Com-mittee would like to express ap-

preciation to all of the graduat-ing Seniors that took the timeand effort to apply for thisScholarship. Based upon thequality of the applications thatwere received, CimarronCounty residents should bevery proud of their 2010 Gradu-ating Seniors.

ATTENTION!!!!Since October we havereceived 6.53 inches ofmoisture either in rain orsnow. I read a recent sta-tistic that the U.S. is now97 percent drought free,the quickest drought re-covery on record

“America will never bedestroyed from the outside.If we falter and lose ourfreedoms, it will be becausewe destroyed ourselves.” -Abraham Lincoln

The Artists ofFelt School forusing their tal-

e n t s to help rebuildHaiti.

We give a dunce cap to:

We give a tip of the hat to:

All those un-happy with thehealth care pro-gram whothreatened con-gressmen and

women, and the so-called “ChristianMilita”...get a life!!

by C.F. DavidElectronic Technology, in the

latter 20th and early 21st Cen-tury has moved quickly.

In a short eight months wewill be seeing the end of thefirst decade of the 21st century.

We have, in this decade,seen the towers fall, two wars,the election of our first blackpresident and the beginning ofthe worst financial crisis in over70 years.

In the mean-time largemetro dailies have been facedwith bankruptcy, closed, orchanged the way they do busi-ness.

The Boise City News hasestablished both a web site anda blog site.

However, technology ismoving too fast, a printed newspaper will soon be a thing ofthe past, and we too must moveon to the future of news report-ing.

THE BOISE CITY NEWS MUST SOON MOVE TO 21ST CENTURYBeginning in the 21st century’s

second decade, The Boise CityNews will be delivered exclusivelyon Twitter. In this way our read-ers, busy with their own lives, willbe able to read the news of Cima-rron County at their own speed andleisure.

What is Twitter you might ask?It is basically a social networkingand microblogging service deliv-ering tweets in bursts of 140 char-acters.

Twitter, is the brain child of JackDorsey and was dreamed up dur-ing a 2006 brainstorming sessionat Odeo, a San Franciscopodcasting company. It has, in2010 experienced a 1,500 percentgrowth, and it has over 70,000 reg-istered applications. In the firstquarter of 2010, two billion tweetswere posted, and over $57 millionhas been raised from venture capi-talists.

This will, for the Boise CityNews, cut much of our overhead;

we will be able to cut the costof paper, both used in the build-ing and in newsprint. We won’thave to spend postage, sinceour subscribers will be receiv-ing the news over either/ortheir cell phones or computers.

However, this comes at aprice, since Twitter displays noadvertisements. But, advertis-ers often target Twitter usersby observing their tweet his-tory.

Twitter was used for pub-licity during the 2008 electionsby President Obama and hiscampaign.

It has also been used to op-pose the recently passed healthinsurance reform.

In any case, come alongwith the Boise City News aswe go further into the informa-tion age and the 21st century.And by the way….AprilFools!!!

1815 Otto Von BismarckGermany, chancellor (1866-90)1883 Lon Chaney ColoradoSprings CO, man of 1000faces, actor (High Noon,Phantom of Opera)1886 Wallace Beery KansasCity MO, actor (Alias aGentleman, Dinner at 8, AhWilderness)1928 Jane Powell PortlandOR, singer/actress (7 Bridesfor 7 Brothers)1932 Debbie Reynolds ElPaso TX, actress (Singin’ inthe Rain)1932 Gordon Jump DaytonOH, actor (Arthur Carlson-WKRP, Growing Pains)1934 Jim Ed BrownSparkman AR, countrysinger (Nashville on theRoad)1939 Ali MacGraw PoundRidge NY, actress (LoveStory, Goodbye Columbus)1939 Phil Niekroknuckleball pitcher (NewYork Yankees, AtlantaBraves)1947 David Eisenhowergrandson of PresidentDwight, married Julie Nixon1952 Annette O’TooleHouston TX, actress (CatPeople, Superman III)

0374 Halley’s Comet ap-proaches within 0.0884 astro-nomical units (AUs) of Earth1748 Ruins of Pompeii found1778 Oliver Pollock, a NewOrleans businessman, cre-ates “$” symbol1789 House of Representa-tives 1st full meeting, NewYork NY1826 Samuel Mory patentsinternal combustion engine1863 1st wartime conscriptionlaw in US goes into effect1865 Battle of 5 Forks VA, sig-nalling end of Lee’s army1867 Blacks vote in munici-pal election in Tuscumbia AL1889 1st dishwashing machinemarketed (Chicago)1931 Jackie Mitchell becomes1st female in professionalbaseball1941 Nazi’s forbid Jews accessto cafés1945 US forces launch inva-sion of Okinawa duringWWII

Editorial Short-In spite of the arrest of two

individuals for four burglarieswithin the city limits, the prob-lems haven’t ceased.

There have been reports ofcontinuing burglaries at the BoiseCity Co-Op, and other rural lo-cations with property and moneyhaving been taken. Also, NoMan’s Land Beef Jerky was bro-ken into over the weekend.

As the arrests in the previousburglaries have made plain, teen-

agers aren’t all the problem.However, teens could eas-

ily be or become the problem.As I have written in the pastI have been opposed to a cur-few, but incidents havechanged my mind. Thebreak-ins have becomebolder, citizens are sleeping intheir businesses; someone isgoing to get hurt. Tell youcouncilman, tell your commis-sioner, (the county mighthave to take action if the citywon’t) if you favor a curfew.

“Happiness is the fulluse of your powers alonglines of excellence.” - JohnF. Kennedy