Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 82, No. 289, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 22, 1972 Page: 2 of 18
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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Saturday. Jan, 22,1572 OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
Ntlwrqion Seo
a
Coast Area
At Brussels Signing
NORWAY.
SWEDEN
FINLAND
$io<kholm
F
It fl A ND
DfN.
•ta»
*
surrounded
FOlANO
Kiev ,
but
,IUX
«*o
Lvev
%
’I
Ata
Alqwiv
7:00
Qtao
Situ r
Oi
I
imam
I
*
L
*
>, hrtw
♦-won
Ttelromn OM 9m.
t
:O ?
I
w
8:00
gRj
I
tas OlStwenj
am: Grote Tore*. M*e Smith, Me Into
Im.
CnWhiwIMM.
7:OOPM/COLOR
♦
A
a
1
i
SW(
ilk
M<
Mir
*• W
y -kt ■
r* tato
e
c
■
i
y
4
tw x/t island neae Coe Cod.
8:30
9:00
....... *SC
...... 45c
ecfrura. naw an ogtag tonuX, i
tanra tor auto
kr iR Hamon.
Postal Pay
Hikes Top
Guidelines
Mod. >4
Volenc^t/
Robert Fuller, Julie London and Bobby Troup
in Jack Webb’s exciting new series about the
paramedics—those on-the-run savers of life!
Wanow
Officers said they found
over 14.000 cash in Jack*,.,
son's apartment.
Police said they
after he refused to leave
the square.
SCHfDutfD
TO ttCOMt
MlMtft!
MAtKf/
MtMtets
Ml PM
1:30 PM
HIM
KWS
GHKETMK
wuno
MKSMffll
SPOTS
ME TVS
tat "Mt. M*. tarto|” Trtita Brt
tert Stejhaiie hw! Grl tart to mroy •
London wits dead tonw tern's moth* ttoo
•nvvrs hff _______
7000 N.W. 32nd Street • 700-7242
WENDEMERE
NURSING HOME
IS A HAPPY PLACE
Won't you think of joining us?
• Hotel Section
• Intensive Cere Units
• Semi-Private Rooms from $11 per day
tnto. Vrne cawus boss he shout) "nt uro
canpaiy pproai
“ Mum Mtator Worn murter taros u
I, idmrttod to m Kta> M a dnwi out ot Mr
rand with dnifi
Om Croftort ttatm Uro. Guests Stele:
Jones. Pool Ljta.
Mm Wn M MrotoS’Dta Wm. C»
ter Rogers fro cartes n rtormed tar
narrates we not tefrt
IOMPKINS
18 Company
MHBTnKlSMB
BMfom "tart" The sMs of Rrowfl
Hosptji s emergency slit* n! the wrjmedKS
of Fire Station 5L
tto tot Itot fat Bjte ta . Jtor brm<s 1
orejiam hme hrtchM* here rt they start
*or pans the sane tme
North
Sea
I Bur I in,
EAST
INV ,
Oklahoma s
LFAOING -mma!
NF WS STAT ION
SPAIN
_ Boarlooe
RGENCY
'■tata to ta <w
■r* tamtam*
Murmon\k
Kol.ninfl.od
~\U.S.S.R.
I
KoUTU.DOAYNKSHT
Mold aw Ota taw tart* tota-
hta ta Sttaw taun. A Itay ywra
• • * • • * , --m,- 4 k •-■ r
I ’WOOU ■ RIV*
--uto wurtr Io
too thio ta her Im
10:00
10:15
10:30
Im tat Uro •* Tamml (contmed)
hrtor Wigrer
bn Gro|t Tome*. Mme Srath. ta Ireps
Mb'ntoMnr."
tantdad "tarn's tata." Guests Pete
trotord. Elen Weston Cousin taeno rs on
aiwelcomed house guest
Mm “Tto tape * fan Derby. Den OTtafihy
States of wterWartay disaster find new
end better wey to line on earth
Ito 9x» taae . The Heat That Wouttot
^tey Buried" Jessica Wolters. Urm Dey.
tert Enrtoon end tocteel taphy pest sta
Dr Rhodes las e cMlay ns«n while conduct
mg ai eminent m tads he sees himself
strm|lmg on ota mon e stray
ta» lock Bums, tote Hrt. Ted lertmr.
s-wco-n
TtoMMWorM of Sorts (amtuud).
Sorts Acta taMi
1/22
EE
5:30
6:00
6:30
7:00
tlrnin*f«4
BK Wl
WEA1M 1
NKSMII k
SPOTS 1
MEWS I
©’
City man remained in crit-
ical condition today at St.
A n t,h o n y Hospital after
being struck by a car on
1-40 near Meridian Friday
night.
Investigators said Rich-
ard Edward Gray, of 4436
NW 14, apparently was
standing in the westbound
traffic lane when he was
struck by a-oar driven by
Paul Edward Seller. 32. of
3032 Overland Drive. /“
i£ v>*4
SAIGON (AP) — Enemy
forces kept up their at-
tacks along South Viet-
nam’s central coast today,
while in Laos intense fight-
ing continued on Skyline
Ridge overlooking Long
Cheng, the former U.S.
Central Intelligence Agen-
cy base.
Informed sources in the
Laotian capital of Vienti-
ane said Laotian irregu-
lars seized an important
hilltop from the North Vi-
etnamese three miles
south of Long Cheng.
The hill controls air ap-
proaches to Long Cheng
and was used by North Vi-
etnamese to shoot at U.S.
and Laotian aircraft pro-
viding air support for Lao-
tian ground troops.
The sources said intense
fighting continued on Sky-
line Ridge overlooking
Long Cheng as Laotian
forces recaptured another
helicopter pad from the
North Vietnamese.
Meanwhile, Pathet -XaS
SiHtey UM
Cap«ta<um^ ftiOMr
CvSMstwS
Ctorck TnMg
$MfMg to Nnvsm
Fir Costay Cm Call S32-444I
Cl«»» PrwwMta for
1^41 I
Mm "Tto fasaro In Croat
M tn tatot* Cal Rena. Ew ta*
Sta Ru»i» sutoame gets Sturt on sta
ngiano
IsL NfTH.
RsOGSMUIPAYlWHT
’ ATTWMOVIIS
"THS RUSSIANS ME
CQMIN0,TNE RUSSIANS
'AH COMING”
Crtf Swim, Ero Marta Sta ta Ata Arta
Mar to Ata cotaytaca otooui a Rtaan art-
■tan on Rtanaroar aN ta eta M Nro Cat-
ta^wlta gow> arata on a naMbar on
dependent agency within
the legislative branch of
the federal government
effective July 1,1971.
Members of the postal
unions also picked up a
$250 increase Nov. 14, but deputy editor of the nortl)-
there is no indication that ern Thai newspaper Ron
the Pay Board will resist
that either.
na
< o'.oblonro
Schedule of Services
S3S Mt
11:00 AM
the same 10 carried on 41
per cant of the world’s in-
ternational trade, com-
pared with 14 per cent for
the United States, 6 per
cent for Japan and 4 per
cent for the Soviet Union.
Car Strikes
Pedestrian
A 44-yoar^old Oklahoma ,
%
Premiere Tonight:
A Mew NBC Series
Lt.
* I
THE DAILY OKLAHOMAN
Mdrnina
THE SUNDAY OKLAHOMAN
’ OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
Evuomk fdiljOCjrt TM DwJy OtoWta-
’'on- OwrerM OMICTO I W Mil.
HOME DELIVERY
Itoyta ratal
Mormn*. E<*"«W. Sunday
Manta A Sunday ...........—
Evanna to Sunday.................
Mamin, only
EvtmntoMy --------------------
MAIL SUBSCRlPnON RATES
(Okiahama. Taiat. Kama*. Aruamai
Mtoaouvt. Naw Mo.icoi
1 yr A HIM I mo
Ntomin, ..............til 00 Sil « «■
Evanina II SO 1IM l.W
Sunday .............. 14.00 I M 1 ■
MS___»00 10M IM
ES ...... — »« 10 M J»
M-E-S_____- MOO ».M 5 J0
O«har tao» on, torata cotartaa
rata* u**iy htaaf-d»adiy hrotaad
udon raomt ____
Second daM Roaiaoo pM at Okiata
ma City. Oklahoma.
T-
England Killed
Continued From Page One / •»»m •» i ••
viet Union or the United
States.
The 10 will also produce
more steel and automo-
biles, do «more foreign
trade and sail paore mer-
chant ghips, according to
figurrs compiled by the
Common Marl
tive Commission.
UU cdfhmlssjpn figures
shoyyfl -foat in 197(k the
grtoea 'production of the 10
w£f/aBbut $637 blBion,
cogtoarpd t(F 1933 bilHon
Bhutto Going to China
KARACHI, Pakistan
(AP) — President Zulfikar
All Bhutto announced to I
day he will visit Red |
China.
• : are
I
Continued From Page One
well, Wester said,
•"Diere's not a soul there
now.” The water company
answering service, howev-
er, said that crews were
on the scene.
Residents of the area
say that the water goes off
three of four times a year
in the area.
“This is hardly the first
time this water has gone
out, one said, ‘‘One time
we went without service
for three days.”
Residents noted that the
company then tried to haul
in water then but in their
opinion it brought barely
adequate pressure.
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Postmasters and other
white-collar Postal Service
employees have received
hefty $l,000-a-year pay
hikes In most cases far in
• e x c e s s of Pay Board
the death car were injured guidelines.
There is no indication
that either the Pay Board
or the Cost of Living Coun-
cil intend to act on the in-
creases for about 80,000
postal managers. They clais'sa7d they had her
..—------- —l ? their list as a
journalist-3hey have her
name as KRflne Cooper.
Trooper
Continued From Page One
areas from
the fog and icing condi-
advised police to release
Jackson because the shoot-
ing wal Apparently in
self-defenso.
Police this morning are
seeking the second man in
connection with the abor-
tive holdup.
Union of Croatia and presi-
dent the Writers Union
of Yugoslavia, resigned to-
day.
Britain, Ireland, Denmark and Norway (diagonally ahaded areas) join the
European Common Marked. (AP MWro^hoto) - ■»
r
Tunis'
JNFjH
4:30 ROLLIN'ON
THE RIVER
Uta to Itany faron art Tto Ant EAion to
Aa tata' RRtart tarattatag •
*rot ta»e tatari.
said. .. ..
The icing extended as
far south as Altus but
cleared up as tempera-
'll
pistol by Lovest Jackson,
61, in Jackson’s apartment
at300NE 5.
Detectives A. J. Clovis
and Fred Weed said Jack- .
son told them he was
asleep about 4 a.m. when
two men demanded entry
into his apartment. Jack-
son said one of them de-
manded money and j^reat-
ened him witba knife.
Jackson said he shot
Perry and chased the oth-
er man into the street fir-
ing three shots at him.
Jackson told detectives
people might suspect him
as having large amounts
of cash.
R* J
i i
By Gunshots
s'.Mxrau rata* ‘
A 54-yeanold Ada resi-
dent was shot to death
•ket Execu- early this morning by a
man who said the dead Police said they con-
man was atgmpting to rob ferred this morning with
him ai knife point. */f__ prosecuttng*attomeys, who
Polico 4aid' Lee Doran
Perry was shot once In the
forthe United States. But chest wkb a .23 cillber
Writers’ Chief QuitJ
IB, YugoJlavigj
°%
f ITALY
BRUSSELS (AP) — An
unidentified woman struck
Prime Minister Edward
Heath in the face with
black ink today as the
British leader arrived at
Egmont Palace to sign the
treaty taking Britain into
the European Common
Market.
Officials
Heath and took him to a
cloakroom. His face was
splotched with ink
Crash
burned away.
The Weather Bureau
said as a low pressure sys-
tem slowly moves east-
ward, the fog will make
way for partly cloudy to
cloudy skies statewide ex-
earning cept lor western sections
I where skies were already
ciear.
The clearing was expect-
ed to warm up tempera-
tures to the 60's Sunday,
with overnight lows rang-
Contiaued From Page One
tert and were the daugh-
ters of Mr. and Mrs. Law-
rence Gray who live near
Ramona.
Mr. Sullivent said young
Russell, driver of the car
in which the church youths
were riding, had been a
member of the Happy Hill
Church only a month.
Two other members of
the church group riding in
__J__xl_ ________
and hospitalized in Bartles-
ville.
Anna May Cox. 28,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Cox of near Ramona,
suffered a broken arm and
lacerations. She was re-
ported in good condition to-
day.
Cecil C u m m i n g S,18.
Ochelota, was hospitalized
for observation. He was
asleep in the back seat of
the death car when the
crash occurred and was
knocked unconscious, hos-
pital official! aaiff. X'
QarlC.^rivtr df the car
across the centerlio! in. the
wrong lane and meeting
oncoming traffic almost
headon, was the son of Mr.
and Mrs. S. D. Clark of Rt.
1, Dewey. ’M
Clark's mother said he
was on the way to Inde-
pendence, Mo., to look for
eiiployfnent when he was $14,000 range,
killed. For someone i
jjfunevsti •„ arrangements $10,000 the increase would
for all. five victim* of the
cl* *
In -r.*r-, w-s r
crash in Seminole County,
Wllch was killed when the
car in which he was riding
went out of control on a
curve and overturned six
times, Trooper Olen Carr,
Wewoka, said.
The driver, Quinton Al-
len Womack, 21, Sasakwa,
Welch and two of the other
occupants were ejected.
Hospitalized at Valley
View Hospital in Ada
along with Womack were
Nicky D. Reich, 16, Roland
K. Nail, 17, and John Paul
Jones, 15, all of the Sasak-
wa area.
Womack, Reich and Nail
were reported in poor con-
dition while Jones who
was not ejected, was in
satsifactory condition to-
day.
Water
rt’
- V
« •
Muang was fatally shot
Friday. _______
TV Programs
tat "Tto Ctata* (continued)
RlWt
"ton: tack Burf. Iji ^U, Tud leitw.
Jmtattoy.
have been in effect since
the freeze ended Nov. 14.
The Postal Service noti-
fied managers of the in-
crease Nov. 17, but made
no public announcement.
"We haven't dealt with
that,” a Cost of Living
Council spokesman said of
the increases. A JPay Weatherford
Board official acknewi- t _ _ „
edged that the Postal Serv- lions, a patrol spokesman
B. G. Dun- ice has notified the board
:, said - was of the hikes, but said qp
one has complained. •
White-collar workers
benefiting from the raises tures climbed and the fog
work in headquarters, re-
gional and district offices
as well as local post of-
fices. They earn between
$8,000 and $20,000 though
most fall in the $8,000 to
SB
Emergency!
?nhprt Fnllpr. Julip London and RnhhvTronn
TMSM "torondtolMrortMtaf
HSN Tto M Ml 14 hr
TIE UPTOT TEMPLE
NW SOflhlVHIa
Actum taro Storoterta Mell
Mfirg
1150 AM
• 45 PM
Wmw
HIM
Tntotoi
THmW.TMi
Egypt Sending
Peking Envoy
CAIRO (AP) — Presi-
dent Anwar Sadat is send-
ing his foreign affairs ad-
viser, Mahmoud Riad, to
Peking for talks with Pre-
mier Chou En-lai and oth-
er Chinese officials, 1
£ Egypt’s semiofficial news- |
paper AI Ahram reported '
today.
.Sadat assigned Riad be-
cause of the importance i
the president attaches to |
an “assessment of Chinese
viewpoints on the Mideast
crisis through direct con-
t a c t 8,” the newspaper |
said.
Demonstrators of
Smith’s group brandished
signs that read "For sale
by Rome treaty,” "Britain
is not joining the EEC,"
"The British people say
no," "Non, nein, no.”
Police had asked Smith
and his followers to dis-
perse quietly and not to
create any disturbance.
there was no indication
that he was hurt.
A small band of about 50
foes of the Common Mar-
ket had been demonstrat-
ing in the square in front
of the palace.
Christopher F r e r e -
Smith, chairman of the
"Keep Britain Out Cam- create any
paign,” was forcibly led Smith protested he wanted
away by Belgian police to speak to authorities,
j i Three policemen dragged
him by his lapels and
pushed him into a police
van. Most other demon-
strators then left quietly.
I^ter, Heath arrived
and was walking up the
palace steps when the
woman, a blonde, darted
up and threw a plastic bag
filled with what appeared
to be printer’s ink. The
bag struck Heath on the
right side of the face.
She shouted something
unintelligible.
The ink ran over Heath’s
face and suit, and he
stepped back a few paces.
He seemed surprised but
calm.
Before police hurried the
woman away, reporters
asked her what her nation-
ality was. She shouted
back: "German.’*
Foreign . Ministry offi-
■ on
Swedish
f O<toi\o
ROMANIA *^3
_ ta<K«iT-.l A*
< • r
troops, backed by Nor
Vietnamese artfHWy*H
— tanks, captured the town
of Sala Phou RKoun on
Route 13 betwedrt Vienti-
ane and Luang Prabang
Friday night, the inform-
ants said.
The town, 100 miles
north of Vientiane at the
crossroads of Routes 13
and 7, has been threatened
in previous dry season of-
fensives, but has never be-
fore fallen under Commu-
nist control.
I Capitol Hill I
i Baptist Church 1
Famous for the Gaebel
Cammofcto
' -y ;v' .•***.•- •»*»
tahrt rWO* •• aMNOMto * ** - >
« 4
x * « • A”
»M***>-*w*r'^
nu> w'
—<hun<»a /
_________ i amount to 10 per cent,
rtsh were pending today, compared with the 5.5 per
th? other fatality cent guideline set by the
‘ , board.
Postal reform legislation
set up the service as an in- jng from the upper 20’s in
the Panhandle to the lower
40’s in southeast Oklahoma
predicted.
Editor Is Slain
BANGKOK (AP) - The
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View 18 places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 82, No. 289, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 22, 1972, newspaper, January 22, 1972; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1787792/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 20, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.