Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 81, No. 245, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 2, 1970 Page: 29 of 42
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LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Joseph P. Busch, an up-
from-the-ranks prosecutor,
is the new district attorney
of Los Angeles County.
BOSTON (AP) — The of-
ficial canvass of the vote
on the Vietnam war ques-
tion was completed Tues-
day.
The statewide vote Nov.
3 on the issue was:
—Win a military victory,
268,025.
—Withdraw U.S. troops
in accordance with a
planned schedule, 822,955.
—W i t h d r a w all U.S.
troops immediately,
517,550.
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■ CHARGE-IT "7|V“
ity
To Be Protested at Meeting
A'
said
been
has repeated actions for
which she has chastized
him in the past.
*7/
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it
Sea Tragedy Survivors
Two Japanese fisherman plucked from a burning
and sinking trawler in the Atlantic today are helped to
the ground from a helicopter at Boston airport. Two
seriously burned crewmen were rushed to a hospital.
Eighteen others were rescued. Two died. (AP Wirepho-
to)
transfer.
He called Mrs. Griffin’s
action in recommending
his transfer a “personality
clash” and said her accu-
sations against him are
unsupported.
In a letter to the region-
al office, in September,
Mrs. Griffin listed seven
reasons for recommending
that Horowitz transfer.
Horowitz sent his own
By Kay Dyer
An Oklahoma City VIS-
TA worker is to be trans-
ferred off the local project
at the end of next week,
but his supporters plan a
meeting tonight to protest
the action and ask for an
explanation.
Transfer of Mike Horow-
itz, 25, who has been as-
signed to Oklahoma City
for the past two years, will
take place Dec. 11, his su-
pervisor, Mrs. Gloria
Griffin, said today.
Two supporters of the
VISTA worker, Michael
Thomas, of 1504 NE 18,
and Jerry Adams, 325 SW
13, said a meeting will be
held at 7:30 p.m. at the
Cen-
day it hds been approved
by the regional office and
will take effect.
She said she does not in-
tend to go to the meeting generalizations
tonight. She said she in-
formed Adams and Thom-
as
transfer to
representatives, but does
not see the necessity for a
mass meeting.
She said she thinks the
petition will not have any
bearing on the transfer
since a decision already good volunteer, but that he
has been made.
Horowitz said he does
not know where he will
She said on several occa-
sions he has asked ques-
tions in public meeting!
about untrue Information
and in doing so has set ru-
mors in motion.
Horowitz said Mrs. Grif-
fin can point to only one
such occasion and denied
that his comments started '
a rumor.
He also countered her
charge that he relies too
much on people who have
lost leadership in their
community. Horowitz said
Mrs. Griffin has little con-
tact with the community
and does not know who the
leaders are.
In a projection of his
work for next year in the
Riverside area, Horowitz
called for continuation and
expansion of a tutoring
project with which he has
been associated.
He was instrumental in
organizing a group of
Oklahoma City high school
students to tutor children
in low income areas.
Wesley Community
ter, 431 SW 11.
The two youths
Mrs. Griffin has
asked to attend the meet-
ing, along with Thomas
English, director of the
Community Action Pro-
gram which is sponsoring
agency for the VISTA
workers here.
In addition, petitions
bearing 186 signatures sup-
porting Horowitz and ask-
ing that he be retained
have been sent to Mrs.
Griffin, English and the
regional office.
Horowitz, who has been
assigned to work in the
Riverside area of Oklaho-
ma City, has fought the
transfer for more than two
months.
But Mrs. Griffin said to- letter to the regional office
in which he attacked the
reasons.
He wrote that her letter
included “unsupported
1” and that
some of Mrs. Griffin’s
charges against him were
she would explain the contradictory to her phi-
community losophy of VISTA.
Horowitz’s former super-
visor, . Mae Dick, also
wrote to the regional office
in his support.
Mrs. Griffin said today
that she feels Horowitz is a
•>
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SW
Round
By Nominee
w
on
GOP Senator Opposes SST
WASHINGTON (AP) -
A Republican senator usu-
ally lined up behind Nixon
administration policies has
split from GOP ranks to
oppose continued aid to the
supersonic transport.
Sen. Jack Miller, R-
lowa, thereby put in doubt
the fate of a $290 million
appropriation bill for fur-
ther SST development. A
vote is expected on the
measure Thursday or Fri-
day.
Miller said the real
needs of the future are not
in carrying vacationers
through the sound bar-
rier, but in solving the
pressing human and eco-
nomic demands of the na-
tion.
Attempts to muffle the
huge plane's engines have
not been proven feasible,
Miller declared, and he
said it's clear the aircraft
would cause excessive air-
port noise.
Consumer Bill Faces Test
WASHINGTON (AP) — Creation of a federal Con-
sumer Protection Agency to represent the shopping pub-
lic in the courts and government has passed the Senate
74 to 4. Its fate hangs today in a closely-divided House
committee.
As it took up a bill similar to that passed by the
Senate Tuesday, the House Rules Committee was report-
ed so evenly split that it could decide by as little as one
vote whether to clear the measure for full House action.
“We could lose,” said Rep. Benjamin S. Rosenthal,
D-N.Y., co-author of the House bill. “This would be a
desecration of the legislative process after the Senate
passed it 74 to 4.”
Card Is 29 Years in Coming
BRUSH, COLO. (AP) — A penny postcard arrived in
this northeast Colorado community recently with the no-
tation: No postage due. It was mailed In New York 29
years ago.
Chuck Gale said the card was received by his father,
Charles Gale Sr., 83, although it was addressed to the
younger Gale’s mother, who died a year after it was
mailed.
Included with the card was a note from the post of-
fice saying that while dismantling a post office in Ohio,
the card was found and sent on Its way — with no pos-
tage due. Postcard postage has gone up 500 per cent
since 1941.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate Public Works
Committee unanimously approved today the nomination
of William D. RuckelShaus to head the newly created
Environmental Protection Agency.
The vote came after two days of hearings. Chairman
Jennings Randolph, D-W.Va., said the nomination would
go to the Senate for confirmation “as expeditiously as
possible.”
Randolph said Ruckelshaus, an assistant attorney
general, made an “excellent Impression” before the
committee."
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ARLANS
CHARGE ITI
OKUHOMA
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 81, No. 245, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 2, 1970, newspaper, December 2, 1970; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1785879/m1/29/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.