Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 80, No. 296, Ed. 2 Friday, January 30, 1970 Page: 3 of 5
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Grand Jury
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Near Close
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of Birmingham, Ala., to do
routine maintenance of the
KC135. Only special KC135
projects, which usually
take more time than sim-
ple maintenance, are done
at Tinker.
If tentative plans work
repair program in full op-
eration. Officials said the
work will not mean a ma-
jor increase in the Tinker
work force.
You always know the value of
your investment—it equals ac-
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terest. Your money starts work-
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you put it in a savings account
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OKLAHOMA
CITY TIMES
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Bartlett said six such
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TODAY’S
NEWS
TODAY
r
i Advances
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This marvelous new wig of mi-
raculous modacrylic looks, foals
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‘‘Some people spent their money for tick-
ets although they knew they couldn't come,”
she said. “A lot of people wanted to help out
and they thought this was just the way to do
it.
STILLWATER - Robert
. MacVicar, a member
the Oklahoma State Uni-
rsity faculty for 21 years
1 fore moving in 1964 to
f urthern Illinois Universi-
t , was .named today as
esident of Oregon State
niversity at Corvallis.
MacVicar will take the
I isition July 1.
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« *He was named vice pres-
• i< ent for academic affairs
* a SIU in Carbondale in
» 1164 and has been chancel-
1 r since 1968.
MacVicar became wide-
1; known at the Illinois
i liversity for his ‘‘medical
s hool without walls" con-
cipt which won approval
ol the medical profession, “practical answer to a
legislators and laymen. He problem which must be
credited with obtaining
r the university a tong-
ught medical school on
ringfield and Carbon-
de campuses.
CHOUTEAU (AP) — A ham dinner at the
Chouteau school Thursday night was a matter
of the heart.
People who live here raised more than
$100 for Laverne Yoder, 14-year-old Mennonite
farm youth, who was injured in a farm acci-
dent three weeks ago. Laverne, the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Noah Yoder, was caught between
two tractors and suffered a crushed pelvis.
Since Mennonites do not participate in in-
surance programs, neighbors have been help-
ing defray medical costs.
dr* w 3
The first F4 Phantom II
Ighters are expected to
egin arriving in Oklaho-
ma City for repair by July
, Tinker Air Force Base
fficials disclosed today.
Tinker officials an-
ounced Thursday that the out, three KC135 mainte-
nance docks will be moved
from the hangar in which
they currently are located
to the original Tinker
hangar, which has been
devoted to miscellaneous
fighters to be repaired airplane repair.
Base officials said 18 F4s
can be worked on in the
space formerly required to
maintain three KC135s.
It is expected that it will
>me time but the body re- take one year to put the F4
sir of the fighter has
een assigned to other has-
s until now.
OCAMA has contracted
ith Haynes Aircraft Co.
Is Found Safe
MANILA (AP) - A pret-
ty American college girl
missing since Tuesday
night turned up today and
denied she was kid-
napped. She told police she
eloped with her Filipino
boy friend.
Deborah Stevenson, 20,
of San Francisco, had been
the object of a police hunt
since Maryknoll College in
nearby Quezon City report-
ed she was taken by two
men at gunpoint from the
school dormitory.
The girl said she eloped
with Christoper Licaros,
whose father is mayor of a
town south of Manila, but
a local judge refused to
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THE OKLAHOMAN A TIMES
stock
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Laverne has undergone surgery on his
bladder and pelvis and is in good condition at
Oklahoma Osteopathic Hospital at Tulsa. But
he will be in traction for several weeks.
The monthly dinner of the Chamber of
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marry them because she
was under age. In the Phil-
ippines persons under 21
must have parental con-
sent to marry.
Licaros was not with her
when she arrived at the
Quezon City police head-
quarters.
At the police headquar-
ters. she immediately tele-
phoned her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Lloyd Stevenson,
in San Francisco. She told
her mother: "I’m alright
. . . No, I was never kid-
napped. I wanted to get
married.”
She said she had know
Licaros for 13 months.
I •
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OKLA. CITY NOIMAN
• 5400 N. M«« A NW Eipwy Maia St. A 2<th Avt.
a 100 5W 44 A Wul.
a Eatf A MMwatl ll«4.
Opaa Maa. tbra Sat. 1 -1
Saa. 11-4
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Oklahoma City Air Match-
I Area will be a key main-
mance center for the F4,
ie main U.S. fighter
town in Vietnam.
Tentative plans call for
be
l an area now devoted to
IC135 jet tanker mainte-
ance.
OCAMA has been over-
Buling F4 engines for
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Secretary of Defense Mel-
vin R. Laird, sounding du-
bious about prospects for
an all-volunteer military
force, apparently has
come around to former
President Johnson's think-
ing.
Reflecting nearly a
year-long search for ways
to end reliance on the
draft, Laird said Thursday
“I personally believe that
you have to get down to a
level for an all-volunteer
service . . . near the 2 mil-
lion (man) mark.”
This recalled Johnson s
March 6, 1967, message to
Congress, reporting that
“research has . . . dis-
closed that volunteers
alone could be expected to
man a force of little more
than two million.”
An armed force of that
size would be the smallest
since just before the Kore-
an War when there were
only 1.46 million Ameri-
cans in uniform. To get
down that far, the Penta-
gon would have to trim
nearly 1.3 million men
from current levels.
The Nixon administra-
tion has been reducing lhe
over-all size of the armed
forces as the Vietnam war
unwinds, but Laird never
spoke before terms of a
post-Vietnam force much
2NEW YORK (AP) -
Oklahoma’s Gov. Bartlett
iscribed Thursday a pro-
J-am whereby existing
Rtrnpanies sponsor inde-
pendent feeder firms in
economically depressed
Aral areas of his state, to
Ait down a multimillion
Allar drain from outside.
I"It's a new concept, uti-
■ing the purchasing pow-
« of existing companies,”
tie Republican governor
Id the New York State
tamber of Congress.
educator
below 2.6 million men.
• The Nixon administra-
tion has pledged to move
toward an all-volunteer
force. But it may be find-
ing it unfeasible to gener-
ate enough volunteers to
reach a 2.5 million-man
level after Vietnam with-
out the prod of the draft
and-or vastly increasing
spending to attract enough
men into long-term mili-
tary careers.
After three major
studies, the Johnson ad-
ministration—which also
wanted to shuck the draft
—concluded it couldn't be
done.
There is increasing evi-
dence senior defense offi-
cials have doubts and mis-
givings about an all-volun-
teer force, even as a spe-
cial presidential commis-
sion prepare? to make rec-
ommendations designed to
bring that about.
Assistant Secretary of
Defense Robert F.
Froehlke recently voiced
h i s reservations in a
speech before the Wiscon-
sin press association.
Froehlke conceded the
concept has great emotion-
al appeal, but said “we
may all he shocked at the
price tag.”
He also said he has a
"philosophical aversion to
an Army made up entirely
of mercenaries.”
Your Money
W Has
. WMMMI
Duane Pope, under heavy guard and wearing a half smile, leaves Deuel
County Courthouse after being sentenced to death. (AP Wirephoto)
Skinng Jenny Vow Chubby
Dr. J. W. Kribs, a Flint, Mich,, chiropractor, visits
daughter Jennifer, 10 weeks, who was rapidly starving
to death when she arrived in University Hospital in
San Diego De<. 30. She weighed 5 pounds, 9 ounces
then. Now she’s a plump 8 pounds, 1 ounces and gain-
ing each day from nutriments fed intravenously. Doc-
tors had to remove most of her small intestine after
birth because of gangreene. (AP Wirephoto)
>1
cookies are traditionally served to Mennonite
children to pacify them during long church
services.
Mrs. Amanda Chupp, who planned the
_______ money-raising dinner, said the response of the
Commerce was catered Thursday night by community was "just the way the community
Mennonite women with all profits going to the
Yoder family. Eight women donated their
services and a local grocer, Frank Kroeker,
sold them most of the food at wholesale.
Several families furnished home-made
bread and heart-shaped "church cookies.” The
feeder firms have been es-
tablished, proving "a very
workable economic vehicle
for providing local or mi-
nority ownership with lo-
cal or minority manage-
ment and minority and
disadvantaged employ-
ment."
The governor said the
program was conceive^in
1966 by the state's Indus-
trial and Park Depart-
ment, after it was discov-
ered that Oklahoma com-
panies were purchasing
$789 million in goods or
services outside the state.
Sponsoring companies,
Bartlett explained, pay the
wages of a designated
number of employees in
the rural firms, and the
salaries of management to
train the personnel.
Further, the sponsoring
company provides a guar-
anteed market for the
goods of the rural firm.
Meanwhile, the feeder
firm is also free to bid for
other markets, thus broad-
ening its profit base.
“T h e involvement
business is essential for
the success of the experi-
ment,” Bartlett told the
gathering of business men.
He added, “Urban prob-
lem begins in the rural
areas, and we wind up
treating the symptoms in
the cities Instead of the
fl
■
‘A
RK. I
GUTHRIE — The Logan
County grand jury which
has been in session two
weeks appeared today to
be headed toward making
a final report on its inves-
tigation.
"There’s a possibility
the grand jury will finish
its work today,” Hugh Col-
lum, assistant state attor-
ney general who has been
assisting jurors, said as
the day's session began.
He said that if a report is
made it will come late this
afternoon.
Collum said the grand
jury had no witnesses
scheduled during the day
but that one volunteer wit-
ness from Crescent might
testify.
The jury has concentrat-
ed on an Investigation of
the office of Asst. Dist.
Atty. Allen Gray. The peti-
tion on which the jury was
called asked specifically
for a probe of Gray s of-
fice.
For Slayer
CHAPPELL. Neb. (AP)
— Duane Pope, robbery ,
killer of three, chuckled to
himself as he was re-
moved from the court-
room. He had just been
sentenced to death in the
electric chair.
Dist. Court Judge John
Kuns ordered Thursday
that Pope be executed dur-
ing the week of April 6 for
one of the bloodiest bank
holdups of modem times.
Defense lawyers said
they would appeal and that
it may be years before it is
known whether the sen-
tence will ever be carried
out.
Second Long Wait
Thus, the lanky 26-year-
old farm boy from Roxbu-
ry, Kan., faces a second
long wait with the threat
of death hanging over his
head.
More than four years
ago a jury condemned him
to death on Federal Bank
robbery charges in connec-
tion with the June 4, 1965,
holdup at the Farmers
State Bank in Big Springs,
Neb., which left three dead
and a fourth crippled for
life.
Sentence Vacated
The U.S. Supreme Court
vacated that sentence be-
cause of a defect in the
capital punishment provi-
sion in the Bank robbery
law and Pope was resent-
enced to life imprison-
ment.
The state then prosecut-
ed him on a murder
charge. His lawyers con-
tend this subjected Pope to
double jeopardy.
Pope showed no emotion
when Judge Kuns an-
nounced: "The severe pen-
alty of death must be im-
posed in this case.” Pope
was seen laughing to him-
self as marshals escorted
him from the courtroom.
Parents Present
His parents, Mr. and -
Mrs. Earl Pope of Roxbu-
ry. were sitting nearby
when the sentence was
read. They bowed their
heads, and Mrs. Pope's
eyes watered.
"No comment, no com- I
ment,” said the elder
Pope, a burly farmer.
The state’s chief prose-
cutor, Deuel County Atty.
Robert E. Richards, had
told Judge Kuns that a
death sentence could defer j
other persons from com-
mitting such crimes.
"Some other young man
who might want a fast
buck or the perfect crime
^jay look or read of this
ase, and that would deter
him,” said Richards,
Lady Furness
Under Secretary of Com- Jg Dead at 65
merce Rocco C. Siciliano,
another speaker, called
the Oklahoma program a
“practical answer
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Actress Hedy Lamarr's $5
million suit against a de-
partment store over what
she said was a false arrest
on a charge of shoplifting
has been dismissed.
Superior Court Commis-
sioner Gerald Malkan said
the 55-year-old actress had
failed to prosecute the ac- I
tion. '
■
.-3
Oklahoma farmers are
finding fertilizer a sort of
financial water-wings to
keep them afloat in a sea
of inflation, James N. Bal-
linger, state board of agri-
culture president, said to-
day.
Ballinger said fertilizer
use has grown tremen-
dously in the last 10 years,
and totaled nearly 560.000
tons in the year ending
last June 30.
As a result, he said,
farmers are setting new
yield records for grains,
sorghums for silage and
grain hay.
"Farmers, facing con-
stantly rising costs for pro-
ducing food and fiber,
handicapped by limited
acreage for certain crops,
plus low prices, are exert-
ing every effort to in-
crease income, and wide
use of fertilizer is one of
the most extensively used
aids,” Ballinger said.
Hedy Lamarr’s
Suit Dismissed
City Tanas i
----------------------- ■
j Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73125
■ Encloiad is check, cosh, or money order'for f
|-----(amount) (or- copies of the Oklahoma City E
. Times Stock Guide. 7 ■ ,
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| City c*-*- ■
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NEW YORK (AP) -
Thelma Lady Furness,
who wrote that her ro-
mance with the Duke of
solved so that every Amer- Windsor ended when she
ican will know that he is asked her friend. Wallis
not the imagined prisoner Warfield Simpson, to "look
of a rigid economic system after the prince,” died
which prohibits mobility.” Thursday. She was 65.
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 80, No. 296, Ed. 2 Friday, January 30, 1970, newspaper, January 30, 1970; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1785466/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.