Illustrated Woman Started With a Butterfly and Love
--From the neck up, sheâs your charming white-haired grandmother. But from the neck down, sheâs a work of art, ablaze with colorful flowers, birds and bracelets. Thatâs Elizabeth Weinzirl, 83, the tattooed sensation of her quiet retirement community in Gresham, Ore., whoâs taking part in the National Tattoo Assn. convention in New Orleans. Weinzirl, who said sheâs never counted her tattoos, traced it all back to a butterfly on her left thigh about 40 years ago. âMy husband wanted a tattooed wife, and I loved him very much and I was eager to do things to please him,â Weinzirl, known as the âgrandmother of tattooing,â said. âAnd so I got a tattoo, and then I thought âthatâs it.â Then later he said: âDonât you think itâs time for another one?â By the time I got the third one, I started getting interested myself. Itâs something we did together, and heâs gone, and thatâs that.â Her husband, a medical school professor, had only two tattoos--his Social Security number and a âdrinking dot.â She said that the tattooist who put the dot on her husband had told him: âThatâs a drinking dot. If you see two of them, youâve had too much.â
--Itâs turning into a recipe for a modern-day, Texas-style duel. Lufkin Mayor Pitser H. Garrison, implying that he was fed up with it, wrote to El Paso Mayor Jonathan Rogers, asking that they âsettle, once and for all, the issue of which town is truly the oldest of all in Texas: Nacogdoches, San Augustine or the El Paso settlement of Ysleta.â Garrison suggested a duel-to-the-end: a hushpuppy cooking contest among the three cities May 17 at the 16th annual Southern Hushpuppy Olympics in Lufkin. But Rogers wanted to choose the weapons. âWe would insist upon using tamales rather than hushpuppies,â he said. âHushpuppies are imported from another culture into Texas, whereas tamales are truly a part of the heritage of Texas as we know it today.â San Augustine Mayor Walter Richey was in a Houston hospital and could not be reached for comment. Nacogdoches Mayor A.L. Mengham opted for hushpuppies. âAny tamale I made would be interesting,â he said. âI havenât made tamales before. In fact, I havenât made many hushpuppies either.â
--Harvard University will settle for an address by Britainâs Prince Charles, who has agreed to replace President Reagan at the schoolâs 350th anniversary next September. The White House said the President declined the invitation because of scheduling problems. Last spring the university chose not to award Reagan an honorary degree. But Harvard spokeswoman Margery Hefferon said that the honorary degree factor probably did not influence Reaganâs decision.