Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 82, No. 138, Ed. 1 Friday, July 30, 1971 Page: 4 of 38
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
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Four Say ‘Souped Up’
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A Cold Day in July
$250 Billion
It Happened!
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Nobody mako$ a better oppie pie
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Pits to take home!
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Model RS30P
Limited Quantities
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2303 N.W. 16th
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geles city schools, is dead
available on the number of at 59.____________________
OF
BEST
YES!
THERE IRE A FEW
KINDS OF PIE
THAT EVER WE
CANT MATCH
year now under way, the deficit is officially set at $11.6
'billion.
Sharon Tate and three oth-
ers in August 1969.
The boy’s attorney, Na-
thaniel Friedman, said he
hopes to collect the court
award from royalties on
books written by members
of the clan.
Judge Jessie Curtis
Agnew Critic Fired
Robert Lee Grant, special assistant in the Depart-
ment of Housing and Urban Development, said Thurs-
day he. had been fired from his $21,000 a year job be-
cause he accused Vice President Spiro T. Agnew of ra-
cial bigotry. (AP Wirephoto)
“Billie Lee is the pie for me!”
■B’dlu- fes
4620 N.W. 39 S2S N.W. 23
787-4601 • 524-2700
ICE MAKER
AVAILABLE AT
EXTRA CHG
men Thomas Curry and
Nicholas Blnnetti, both 39,
who were guarding Ho-
gan’s residence on River-
By The Associated Press
Cool autumn-like weather covered the nation’s
midsection today as temperatures tumbled into the 40s
MODEL FPDI46TP
Limited Quantities
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First pboie will be the 17,000 sq. ft. basement, prov-
iding fellowship hall, assembly areas and classrooms.
Outstanding in its rapidly growing Sunday school and
missionary work, the local church expects to raise its
designated missionary giving from $58,000 in 1970 to
$75,000 in 1971.
SOUTHWEST BAPTIST CHURCH
1300 S.W. 54th
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OPEN DAILY
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FRIDAY & SAT. til 6 PM
Closed Sunday
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that California has 3 mil-
lion veterans, or more
than 10 per cent of the na-
tion’s total.
Educator Dies
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Sam Hamerman, assistant
t1
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elg^^j
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SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
— A 23-year-old veteran
whose legs were blown off Thursday were on
by a land mine in Vietnam
was one of 1,000 ex-serv-
icemen who showed up at
a one-day “Job Fair.”
The former staff
geant, 1
Da Nang in 1966. Besides
losing both legs below the
knees, he is missing his
left eye and his left fore-
‘ • ‘ , 12-year-old son of a Polish
The .House Foreign Affairs Committee already has playboy killed with actress
voted to eliminate all $118 million in proposed aid to
Greece until the junta restores democratic government.
A move to restore the aid is expected when the House
takes up the $3.3-blllion foreign aid authorization bill
Tuesday.
Four-Day
Week OK’d
Great Lakes.
New lows for July 30 were set in Chicago, where the
There mercury fell to 57, and in Oklahoma City, where it was
57. Other cities with new lows for today included St. Jo-
seph, Mo., 54, and Grand Island, Neb., 52.
Scattered thundershowers soaked sections of the
Midwest, Southern and Northeast coast. More than 3
inches of rain drenched Cobat, Ark., northeast of Little
Rock, during the night, while more than an inch wet
Portland, Maine.
Elsewhere across the nation, fair skies and pleasant
temperatures prevailed.
Temperatures before dawn ranged from 41 at Sioux
Falls, S.D., to 97 at Needles, Calif.
lawful possession of a ma-
chine gun.
Hogan said the weapon
was the same one Moore
allegedly had in his pos-
session when he was ar-
Manhattan rested in the Bronx during
a holdup on a social club
June 5.
Moore, 26, is charged
New York City policemen with trying to kill Patrol-
last May 19.
Dist. Atty. Frank S. Ho-
gan said the indictment
charges Moore with two
counts of attempted mur- side Drive, along Manhat-
der and one count of un- tan’s upper West Side.
Greek Aid Threatened
WASHINGTON (AP) — A showdown has been slated
in Congress next Tuesday on cutting off all American
aid to the military government of Greece.
them up afterward,
said.
Minnich, who has
worked as an engineer in
aerospace projects, is now
owner of the Perris Prog-
ress, a weekly newspaper.
He and three engineer col-
leagues have worked on
the project in the newspa-
per garage during their
spare time since January
1970.
John Chao, an engineer
with the state Air Re-
sources Board in Los An-
geles, watched a demon-
stration of an earlier test
vehicle, a 1930 Model A
- b
GARDNER, Mass. (AP) -
— George Bent Co., a fur-
niture manufacturer, says
that after a trial since
May 3 it will institute a
four-day work week per-
manently.
Herbert Rose, treasurer,
'said Thursday the trial
showed morale improved
and absenteeism and turn-
over were sharply re-
duced.
Bent employes work a
S’/j-hour day Tuesday
through Friday for a total
of 38 hours. The firm
pays a two-hour bonus so
workers collect 40 hours’
pay.
Tulsa Transit
X I
Grant Awarded
football Draws Nixon
* CANTON, Ohio (AP) — President Nixon plans to at-
tend the annual dinner at the Pro Football Hall of Fame
’-tonight.
•J Nixon is to make the closing remarks at the dinner,
which honors the sev*n pro football players who are to
be enshrined in the hail Saturday.
The presidential party is to stay overnight in Akron
and Nixon is to leave Saturday morning for Iowa, where
he is to dedicate a dam. Then he flies to the Western
White House at San Clemente, Calif.
Panther Indicted in Slaying
NEW YORK (AP)—Rich-
ard Moore, one of the ac-
quitted panther 21 defend-
ants, already facing a
number of charges includ-
ing murder, was indicted
today4 by a
grand jury on charges of
attempted murder in the
machine-gunning of two
STANUV ASTRO
OAXAM OOM OXMI.
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sit
_______rtUSTAX — —
PERRIS, Calif. (AP) -
Four men say they have
adapted a 1960 pickup
truck to run on a mixture
of hydrogen and oxygen
that does not emit pollu-
tants.
Dwight B. Minnich, one
of the four, said Thursday
that they chose the hydro-
gen-oxygen combination as
the basis of their experi-
ments because the fuel
mixture would burn with-
out harmful leftovers.
"The best way to avoid
pollutants is not to make
them in the first place,
rather than to try to clean
........ -v r
GAR
REGULAR 144.95
NOW *1 1 9M
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TULSA (AP) - The |
Metropolitan Tulsa Transit
Authority has been award-
ed a $1.69 million federal
grant to upgrade its opera-
tions.
The funds will be used to
upgrade the existing bus
fleet and purchase the I
maintenance garage the
MTTA now leases from a
commercial bus lines.
•TAMXV ASTRO
OfcUXt OOM
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HUI TAX
BETTER LIVING PRODUCTS
538-3533^
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Ford pickup, and said the
engine started easily and
ran smoothly.
Method Is Cleaner
“Their concept of using
hydrogen as fuel is cleaner
than petroleum products
as far as emission is con-
cerned,” Chao said. “If
they can satisfy safety re-
quirements and possible
problems in lubrication
and fuel on long trips and
other problems, their car
would be just as good as a
regular car."
The Model A, the second
vehicle adapted in the ex-
periments, also had prob-
lems with oil and fuel con-
trol and the cooling sys-
tem, Chao said.
The 1960 pickup, which
| has been driven 40 miles
an hour, is the fourth in
the series. Minnich said
the truck uses an intake
adapter instead of a car-
buretor and has a recy-
cling system to use all
fuel. The fuel mixture is
| fired by spark plugs.
Presentation Due
The four plan to present
their work to a meeting of
the Society of Automotive
Engineers next week in
Boston.
Minnich said hydrogen- and 50s from the Southern Plains and Rockies to the
powered car^ would have
to overcome fear of the
fuel, but added:
are dangers in any fuel.
Hydrogen has its dangers,
but they are of a lesser or-
der than gasoline.”
Minnich said the four
have spent $8,038.76 on the
project and can’t afford to
spend any more.
“We feel we’ve proven
the theory,” he said. “To
complete the development
would take something in
the order of a couple mil-
lion dollars because you’re
getting into some pretty
sophisticated equipment.”
Carmakers 'Courteous’
He said some major car-
makers contacted “have
been very courteous, peri-
od,” and the federal Envi-
r o n m e n ta 1 Protection
Agency told the ‘four it
could not make funds
available because the
group was not a university.
Minnich’s colleagues are
Patrick L. Underwood and
Frederic F. Nardeccia,
aerospace engineers, and
Paul Dieges, a civil engi-
neer.
‘ > or pooch pie than
Billie Lee, but we admit there are a few varietie* we
haven't mastered yet. For one, we haven't been oHe to
figure out how to fit four and twenty blackbirds into a
pie pan; nor hove we been able to capture the seaet of
mud pies. But who cares. We'll leave these to others,
and continue to concentrate on the 32 varieties we have
mastered. Like strawberry. Or lemon meringue. Or
chocolate. Or sour grape!
Manson
I National Affairs
Budget Goal
Must Pay
LOS ANGELES (AP) —
Charles Manson and four
________________ _______ members of his hippie-
The floor fight Is set the d^y U^S. Ambassador Hen- style clan have been or-
~ ;___* * ■ ' ’ _ . dered by a U.S. District
tioning before a House subcommittee that has been critl- Court to pay $500,000 to the
cal of the junta’s rule. 12-year-old son of a Polish
Approval Given
BELGRADE (AP) -
Yugoslavia’s federal par-
liament today approved a ruled Thursday for Bartok
new ’ federal government Frykowski, son of Wo-
headed by Dzemal jieieeb Frykowski, a pro-
Bijedlc. ducer-disector.
IWSELfl;
Frigidaire
STARS -E. BUYS
Efe-
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A. 1
chair by his wife, Geor-
gianna, from their home in
suburban Fremont.
He told interviewers that
the job would have to be
“something I could do sit-
ting down.”
" TTie former Marine was
wounded 10 miles south of but that most took applica-
tions for jobs in govern-
ment agencies and private superintendent of Los An-
business. No figure was geles city schools, is dead
Line Up at Job Fai
jobs filled.
As the line inched for-
ward, Eugene Martin, 22,
of San Francisco, said: “I
was an auto mechanic in
the Army, but I’ll take
anything. All I want is a
job, man.”
Gordon Elliott, director
of the Veterans Adminis-
tration regional office in
^41
arm.
Many of those who came
— • - “i crutch-
es or in wheelchairs.
“We never expected this
many;” said Ben Burk,
chairman of a board rep-
The former staff ser- resenting the 50 federal
gcai.t, Norbert Olbrantz, agencies which cooperated
was brought in a wheel- with city, county and state
Sr in'war Memorial Vet- Los A n g e 1 e s, estimates
erans Auditorium.
“We probably have 300
job openings," Burk said.
Burk said some agency
representatives had au-
thority to hire on the spot,
DR. BERT
HARRISON
Fastor, Breaks
Groundfor
th«24M
Capacity
AUDITORIUM
UrgMl Ir
Oklahoma CHy
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Nixon administration
tentatively plans to spend about $250 billion in fiscal
1973, a figure in line with its “full-employment-budget”
’ !.toncept.
Sources said that amount is “in the ballpark area”
i the total President Nixon wants to put in the budget
; -he will send to Congress early next year,
;. - But officials decline to say whether the spending
4 -Emit implies another huge actual deficit In government
Operations. In the 1971 fiscal year which ended last June
• ;30, the budget deficit was $23.2 billion. In the 1972 fiscal
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 82, No. 138, Ed. 1 Friday, July 30, 1971, newspaper, July 30, 1971; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1786785/m1/4/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.