Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 81, No. 198, Ed. 2 Thursday, October 8, 1970 Page: 3 of 16
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Wat total Affairs
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Mayo Clinic
Pioneer
October Reader's Digest. Get your copy today.
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tion bill as it went before
the House would:
—Clamp a $65 billion Ud
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at all since almost full
Safeguard funding has
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Tenn., and delay construc-
tion of a new unit there be-
cause of what it called a
slackening of market de-
mand.
OB
..jASu-JIat . iZr-
Church.
Survivors 1 n c 1 u d e his .
wife, Myrtle, and a son,
Ferman, Oklahoma City,
executive secretary of the
Oklahoma Education Asso-
ciation.
Surcewor Named
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) 1
— Alfred E. Perlman, for-
mer president of the old .
New York Central Rail-
road, will succeed Myron
M. Christy as president of
Western Pacific Railroad
Co.
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combat ability as pGrt of
the administration's. Viet-
The committee’s ’rtajor
slice was a $1.5 billion cut-
back in dozens of weapon
3 Piece Fiberglas
Tier And Valance Set
• Gold • Green • Melon • White
W
* Power Administration, and lesser amounts for a number
- of projects.
r-
<s
attorney that he has
enough Information to file
charges in the case.
Wayman's office report-
bi’llon defense appropria- ed he had gone to an un-
I ——Mii—iiii
Cutback Planned
PITTSBURGH, Pa. (AP)
— Aluminum Co. of Ameri-
ca has announced plans to
shut down a portion of its
smelting facility in Alcoa.
of its findings.
They also would require
retail stores, gasoline
service stations, travel
and entertainment credit
card concerns, and banks
and other credit dealers to
post finance and similar
charges to a customer's
account if the dispute is
settled in his favor.
to Resume
Mullendore ranch home .
District Atty. T. F.
Dukes said at the same
time he has enough Infor-
mation to file charges but
that he wants to explore
every avenue in the case
been approved regularly namization program.-
by the House.
The bill, trimmed $2 bil-
lion from President Nix-
on’s $68.7 billion request in development and purchase
committee, contains an ad- projects,
dltional $417 million for
Navy ships and cuts $13
million for four proposed
Safeguard sites geared to
a Chinese attack.
It appropriates all $358
million Nixon asked fnr
boosting South Vietnam's
I-.
WASHINGTON (AP) —
New-efforts to draw Con-
grew puree String, on the ~ "‘"7" £
® ■ on the bill, leaving to the
Pentagon the decisions on
where to cut the extra $1.7
billion.
—Direct a 50,000-man re-
U'■ ’I
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ically would ban a busi-
ness from billing its cus-
tomers with disputed
charges until the business
has investigated the case
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New Slaying Leads
Reported in Osage
PAWHUSKA — Osage disclosed area Wednesday
afternoon to work on seme '
new phases of his probe of UPAITUICD I ||T|b
the Sept. 26 slaying at the IlCALI el I tie UiIb
doctors now know that you can add from 1 Oto 30 het It hy,
•. *
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active years to your lifespan! Often, even killers like
heart disease and cancer can be averted. Here are health
guidelines to follow...with invaluable tips on exercise,
diet, relaxation. One of 42 articles and features in
■■li ■A • WM
Agnew Critic
Joseph Rhodes Jr., 22,
Harvard graduate student
and youngest member of
the President’s Commis-
sion on Campus Unrest,
expressed criticism of
Vice President Agnew’s
comments on the report.
Ing of rancher E. C. Mul-
............. ...... 1 e n d o r e III, despite a
June 30 was planned by statement by the district
Rep. Donald M. Fraser,
D-Minn.
Other amendments
being drafted for the $66.7
Just th* kind you'll live in and
love — spans the seasons
with the greatest of oaso.
Pretty colors that make it your
choice to "put-on" at a mo-
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to you. Sizes 10-18.
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon has recom-
mended that Congress give the highest priority to con-
trol of drunk drivers on the nation's highways.
In reports to the Congress on 1969 traffic and high-
way safety, the President said “no program is more im-
portant than one seeking to control the problem of drunk
driving, which accounts for half the nation's highway fa-
talities.”
Recommendations from the Transportation Depart-
ment’s National Highway Safety Bureau include identi-
fying drinkers who drive, programs to determine who
are problem drinkers in the community and action to get
those unfit because of drinking off the road.
Nixon noted a “small but hopeful trend” in the re-
ports which showed a downtrend in the highway death
rate.
There were 56,000 deaths in 1969.
Public Works Bill Signed
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Nixon, despite
saying “there is too much pork in this barrel,” has
signed the $5.2 billion public works appropriation bill.
The measure, signed Wednesday includes about $2.2
billion for the Atomic Energy Commission and $1.4 bil-
lion for Army Engineers. It also provides $1 billion in
grants for facilities to prevent water pollution, $310 mil-
lion for the Reclamation Bureau, $56.18 million for the
£ Tennessee Valley Authority, $6 million for the Southwest
duction of U.S. troops in
Europe.
—Trim the Safeguard
antimissile system, al-
though critics were uncer-
tain before the debate how
much they should try to
cut—or if they should try
USM
pr ..... * •’
Drunk' Driver
Control Urged
Indochina war and pull
U.S. troops out were prom-
ised in the House today
hard on the heels of Presi-
dent Nixon’s cease-fire
proposal.
Rep. Donald W. Riegle
Jr., R-Mich—saying he
wants to “lock in” the ad-
ministration's timetable
for withdrawal from the
war—proposed amend-
ments to a $66.7 billion de-
fense bill to cut off funds
for U.S. ground troops PAWHUSKA - Osage
effective June 1 and put a County Sheriff George
: $15 b i 111 o n ceiling on W a y m a n was reported
spending for the war. "developing new leads” to-
And a new effort to cut day in the mysterious slay-
- off all funds for U.S.
troops in Indochina next
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Most major weapons
systems—Including MIRV
nuclear warheads, the C5
supercargo jet, the- Fill
swingwig fighter ana F14
and F15 fighters—got full
funding. Almost no Weap-
ons w ere eliminated. ____
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NINE STEPSTO A LONGER,
Water projects, principally flood control a.nd channel
work, sometimes are referred to as pork barrel items.
p Buyer Protection Pushed
WASHINGTON (AP) -
The Federal Trade
r Commission today pro-
posed new regulations
i-: aimed at providing more
protection for credit card and informed the customer
* users and deferred pay-
* ment plan customers.
The proposals are sub-
I? ject to the outcome of a
hearing, now scheduled for
Jan. 25, and to responses
by businessmen.
The regulations are
aimed at cutting down on
the flourishing stolen cred-
Z it card business. Hiey bas-
| Strike Talks
u
? DETROIT (AP) — After a lapse of nearly a month,
J General Motors and the United Auto Workers return Fri-
J day to discussion of the issues in a strike which erupted
* 24 days ajo.
- Renewal of bargaining on wages and fringe benefits MeAlester s First Baptist
.’ was proposed Wednesday by the UAW, and GM quickly
* agreed. Each side said, however, It had no new offer to
make.
When the union ordered the walkout, which has idled
approximately 400,000 at GM plants in the United States
and Canada, national-level bargaining was broken off.
Both the company and the union turned toward at-
tempts to speed at-the-plant agreements which supple-
ment the over-all contract.
McALESTER - Serv-
ices for Jesse W. Phillips, I
88, probably the last sur-
vlvin" person elected in
the first election held after
Oklahoma attained state-
hood. will be at 10 a.m.
Saturday at the First Bap-
tist Church in McAlester.
Mills Funeral Home,
McAlester, Is in charge of
arrangements. He died
Wednesday at an Oklaho-
ma City nursing home.
Phillips was the first
sheriff of Atoka County,
elected at age 25. He later
became postmaster at Ato-
ka. served as an assistant
warden at the state peni-
t r n 11 a r y at McAlester,
where he moved in 1929,
l^cn served as McAlester i
postmaster until his retire- [
ment.
He was a native of
B' rasville, Miss., and
moved to Caddo, Okla., at '
the turn of the century. He '
formerly was in the mer-
cantile business and was a I
member of the Peace Offi- I
ccrs Association, the Ma-
sonic Lodge and Eastern
Star. Hp was a nlember of
4^
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 81, No. 198, Ed. 2 Thursday, October 8, 1970, newspaper, October 8, 1970; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1785793/m1/3/?q=majorettes: accessed July 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.