Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 82, No. 17, Ed. 2 Thursday, March 11, 1971 Page: 3 of 14
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SAG PAULO, Brazil
(AP) — General Motors
Do Brasil S. A. says it will
introduce its new small
Brazilian car in 1973.
’73 Debut Planned
ions which were previously
under the two brigades
and ATCheadquarters.
Col. Robert G. Cramer,
formerly 1st Brigade com-
mander, will be deputy
commander of ATC. Tak-
ing over executive officer
duties of ATC will be Col. i
L. D. Johns, formerly 2nd
brigade commander.
Artillery Training Bri-
gade. The consolidation is
complete but the name has
not been changed yet, he
said.
The ATC reorganization 1
decreases the number of
personnel assigned.
The new command re-
tains the same five battal-
LAWTON — The mili-
tary cutback which has re-
sulted from the Vietnam
withdrawal and a tight de-
fense budget is having its
effects on Ft. Sill units.
The only advanced indi-
vidual training center for
field artillery in the U.S.
Army has recently under-
gone extensive reorganiza-
tion because of reduced
strength and the need to
save money.
The U.S. Army Training
Center. Field Artillery
(ATC) at Ft. Sill was reor-
ganized on the brigade
concept early in 1967 with
the activation of the 1st
and 2nd Brigades.
A Ft. Sill spokesman
said Wednesday that the
two brigade headquarters
have been deactivated and
consolidated with Head-
quarters ATC to form a
proposed U.S. Army Field
Fund Cutback
I
Teachers
Curb Needed?
Arthur F. Burna, chair-
man of the Federal Re-
serve Board, told the Sen-
ate Banking Committee in
Washington that labor
law* may need to be tight-
ened to reduce union*’
]H»wer to force wages up.
(AP Wirephoto)
Convening
■yet.
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ALVA — Teachers from
six counties in northwest-
ern Oklahoma will be at
Northwestern State Col-
lege Friday for the annual
district meeting of Oklaho-
ma Education Association.
In a general session
opening the day’s activi-
ties at 9:30 a m., Frosty
Troy, editor of the Oklaho-
ma Observer, will speak
on ‘‘Where Do We Go
From Here?”
Ron Hodges. Arnett su-
perintendent of schools,
will complete a term as
president of the district
OEA. yielding the gavel to
Dr. Daniel Shorter, profes-
sor of biology at North-
western. who was named
president-elect a year ago. j
Three candidates are in
the running for president-
elect this year. They are
Mrs. Jaydene Morrison,
Helena-Goltry; Mrs. Ione
Calkins. Woodward, and
Jack Tilley, Burlington.
Candidates for vice-presi-
dent are Dean Hubbard, i
Cherokee; Bill Riding.
Buffalo, and Mrs. Rita
Bryant, Northwestern.
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; WASHINGTON (AP) — Transportation Secretary
John Volpe told a Senate subcommittee today the com-
puter that absorbs the names of 3,000 traffic violators
per day is not an invasion of privacy but a saver of
lives.
• The National Driver Register helps the states keep
bad drivers off the roads and the program should he ex-
nanded. Volpe told the subcommittee on constitutional
rights.
• ‘‘Through the register.” he said, “a state can query
other states to guard against issuing what can only be
called a license to kill.
"We believe the NDR in no way constitutes an inva-
sion of an individual's privacy . . . The NDR doesn’t de-
stroy lives, it saves them."
Governor Gets Through
I FRANKFORT. Ky. (AP) — Gov. Louie B. Nunn,
Who often places his own telephone callw. lectured secre-
taries In.the state Highway Department on telephone
courtesy after two hung up on him.
Nunn said he tried twice to place a call to a depart-
ment official only to have two different secretaries gig-
gle and hang up when he told them, "This is the gover-
nor.**
Nunn summoned a car and went to the Highway De-
partment where the lecture followed. Then he turned to
the official he had tried to call and said. “Now if it is n"t
too much trouble. I would like Io talk Io you."
a
Increase
: WASHINGTON (AP) —
Quick enactment of a 1<I-
pipr-epnt increase in Social
Security benefits for 26
million Americans appears
certain under a short-cut
maneuver worked out by
Democratic congressional
leaders.
Under the strategy, the
increase in benefits and in
wage deductions to pay for
them would be enacted
months ahead of the
schedule likely for the Nix-
on administration’s own
p|an.
• The maneuver calls for
adding the Social Security
Muskie Sets Deadline
• WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Edmund S. Muskie,
seeking to dispel the idea that he is vague on presiden-
tial campaign issues, is sending Democratic delegates
and opinicfn-makers copies of a speech declaring the
United Stales must withdraw from South Vietnam by
this year’s end.
About 9.000 copies of that Vietnam policy address
will be mailed by the Maine Democrat s political head-
quarters. command post for a presidential campaign
Muskie has not yet formally entered.
Failed Certain
provision as a Senate
amendment to a House-
passed hill raising the na-
tional debt limit by $35 bil-
lion.
The Senate will open
consideration nf the debt
measure Friday, although
final action may not come
until Monday.
Democratic leaders said
the amendment will be
adopted without difficulty,
noting the Senate passed
R1 to 0 last December a
bill providing a 10-per cent
Social Security hike; it
died because the House re-
fused to go to conference
on it.
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100-CT.
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CAN
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SAVE 10C ON NORELCO
Flash Cubes............
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Kodak Color Film...
SAVE 19« ON HEADACHE RELIEF
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SAVE 10C ON MID OR HARO LACTONA
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50-CT.
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Ruby Red Grapwf nut
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 82, No. 17, Ed. 2 Thursday, March 11, 1971, newspaper, March 11, 1971; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1786091/m1/3/: accessed June 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.