home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1993
/
TIME Almanac 1993.iso
/
time
/
041392
/
0413107.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1992-08-28
|
2KB
|
42 lines
NATION, Page 31American NotesFAMILIESLost and Found
It was the sort of bittersweet tale Hans Christian Andersen
might have spun. An old man with a vacant stare was discovered
sitting in a wheelchair at a dog-racing park. Two attached
notes identified him as an Alzheimer's patient in need of
round-the-clock nursing care. Outrage and sympathy poured in
from around the country, and complete strangers offered to take
him in.
The old man will not long be dependent on the kindness of
strangers. Accompanied by her sister-in-law, last week Nancy
Myatt of Dickson, Tenn., flew to Portland, Ore., to be reunited
with the man she recognized from news photographs as her
long-lost father John Kingery. Myatt found Kingery at the
Laurelhurst Care Center, a nursing home from which he had been
removed in early March by her half sister Sue Gifford. Myatt
explained that she lost touch with her father, a former
autoworker, after he remarried in 1964 and just "slipped away
from us." After a time, Myatt assumed he was dead. "It's
something," says Myatt, "to think that you didn't have a dad,
and now he's alive again."
As authorities continue their investigation of the
abandonment, the saga of John Kingery seems destined for a
heartwarming ending. Myatt and her siblings want to move Kingery
to a Morgantown, Ky., nursing home so they can better watch over
him. Says Myatt's brother Charles, a Morgantown resident: "We
want to bring him back here, close to the family." Although he
will probably never be able to grasp it fully, John Kingery has
a lot of grandchildren and even great-grandchildren waiting to
welcome him.