Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 83, No. 74, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 16, 1972 Page: 4 of 26
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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
•eai
City’s
r
ea
ost
mong
ir
■ z*
ei
•’ A
I
I
Egg
I
Auto Sales
Resume Talks,
I :
•1
■
U.S. Violates Statement?
by
t
—
£
Protection Extended
■k
Ls
Rev. Al Edenfield
f
t
t
♦
I
• J
-J
TOILET LEAKING?
REVIVAL
1
1
KBYE 2:30
Tues. 4 Thun.
f
(L)
(E)
2nd BIG WEEK!
MIRACLE
Blanche of the
health department
1
th
th
By Ervia Watson
Oklahoma City air rank*
among the most lead free
in the nation, an intensive
two-month survey by city
and state health depart-
ment officials revealed to-
day*.
Results of the survey
city-county health depart-
ment.
Only two of 16 sampling
stations in the Oklahoma
V ;. .
have better air quality
than most cities across the
nation,” said Blanche.
‘ We do not have a gen-
homa City or even in the
state a* was indicated in
the Environmental Protec-
taYwright
I
n
c
4
6:30 P.M.
SUNDAY
WKY T.V. 10 A.M.
May 21st
in
d(
w
fo
la
ONIY
S149J
Virgil I. Trout
Minister
Deliverance Temple
528 W. Reno
Okla. City, Oklahoma
Rdv. A Mrs. Don McCorkle, Pastor
7:30 P.M.
NIGHTLY
f f
Our World Today
A
o
P
Back to Oklahoma City
Arrive
3:58 p.m.
3:58 p.m.
3 58p.m. .
5 59 p.m.
6:58p.m.
8:27 p.m.
__ 9-43 p.m.
1:28 a.m.
"MR. MIRACLE
contract agreement is
negotiations
union
. 17 Injured in Explosion
BELFAST (AP) — An explosion wrecked a Protestant
bar in Belfast late Monday night, injuring 17 persons
and sending Protestant youths on a rampage.
It was the second bar bombed in three days. A Roman
Catholic tavern was demolished Saturday, touching off a
36-hour Catholic-Protestant battle tn which nine persons
were killed and more than 70 wounded.
A 50-pound bomb in a parked car shattered the Blue-
bell Tavern’in Sandy Row, a Protestant district in East
Belfast. Three girls, 7,10, and 13 years old, were among
the casualties.
among the offending cit-
ies," he said. .
He said city and state
health department officials
expressed shock both at
the isolated sampling and
the fact that the allowable
figure was reduced with-
out advance notice.
‘‘There still are no es-
tablished standards for al-
lowable lead — only pro-
The four major U.S. au-’ posals
tomakers reported Mon-
.. ( cars
in the first part of May
compared with 217,619 in.
* the same period last year.
When figures are adjust-
ed for an extra selling day
this year — nine against
eight in 1971 — sales were
up a modest 3.7 per cent.
Mayf mt Ctarcii Of Chrnt
2340 I.W. 50
s. kor ky f
THE ONLY ONE-PIECE FLAPPER TANK BALL
Fit* oil con»*ntlonol Huth volvot. For-
foci tool endt drip drip of wolor. Over
10 million In uto. Got Korky ot plumbing
and hardware ttorot. Pot. No. 2,767,406
Manufactured by
LAVELLE RUBBER CO. Chicago 60622
ml
th
m
fk
ait
| Up Slightly
I DETROIT ^(AP) - A
lackluster performance by
■ industry giant General Mo-
: tors Corp, took the gloss
1 off otherwise very strong
auto sales in the first 10
I days of May.
We have flights to
LaGuardia and Newark,too.
A full choice when you
fly Braniff Style
toNewYorkandback.
•**~'*W
A
manager of General Mo-
tors Corp.’s Oldsmobile Di-
vision, is dead at 46. «
Braniff has the
only flights
direct to New Wk’s
Kennedy airport.
■ VWj' ■ ' i
K'5 \ ' 1
‘ ■ J
military force in resolving
international conflicts, a
Kyodo news service corre-
spondent reported from
Peking.
The correspondent said
Chou was speaking to rep-
resentatives of J a p a n *s
Komeito—the Clean .Gov-
ernment party.
Chou told them that
whether a national leader
keeps his promises would
have vital consequences
for world peace, the corre-
spondent reported.
To New York/ Newark
Arrive
12:43 p.m.
1:22 p.m.
2:55 p.m.
3:19 p.m.
4:13 p.m.
3:47 p.m. (J)
6:00 p.m. (J)
8.30 p.m. (E)
9:25 p.m. (L)
10:37 p.m. (J)
3:25 a.m. (J)
ander Korneichuk, a ma*
jor R u s s i a n playwright
and literary ideologist, is
dead at 67. .
tion Agency’s report last
said Blanche.
Blanche and other health 2.05 micrograms during
one quarter of 1971.
He said the fire station
sampling machine shows
lead from the battery
salvage station where
corrective measures are
Leave
5:^0 a.m.
5:20 a.m.
5:20 a.m.
8:45 a.m. Ex.
8:45a.m. Ex.
10:25 a.m.
12 40 p.m.
3:00 p.m. Ex. Sat
3:00 p.m.
3:00 p.m. Ex. Sat.
6:30 p.m. Ex. SatT~
/z
M
GM Executive Diet
Worship: hiilh or I urir?
Church services hegin al eleven
o’clock sharp and close al twelve o’-
clock dull! Each Sunday at noon the
church gives up her dead. Is this the
way you feel? Perhaps so.
But whal is Christian worship
anyway? A performance built upon
crusty traditions? Emphatically no!
Jesus said. "God in spirit, and those
who worship Him must worship in
spirit and truth.” (John 4:24).
Worship is the opportunity to give
praisp to.God. It is an act of kivc. Il is
10 he done with the supreme purpose
of pleasing lhe Father. If worship is to
satisfy man. it is merely an escapist
fad But when God is the object and
when the attitude is that of reverent
obedience. worship is truly and acY of
dynamic faith.
Lynn Martin, with the city-county health
on air sampling unit at NW 10 and Pennsyhnn a. . a
8:45a.m. (L)
9:45 a.m. (E) Ex. Sdh.
1O:(X)a.m. (J)
2:00 p.m. (L) _
„ 2:20 p.m. (E)
/ 4:30 p.m. (L)
4 45 p.m. (J)
7 5:15 p.m. (E)
6:45 p.m. (J)
Guardia, E = Newark, J = Kennedy
President Nixon ordered
Treasury Secretary John
B. Connally to extend prot-
ective coverage to Kenne-
dy and Reps. Shirley Chis-
holm, Q-N. Y., and Wilbur
Mills, D-^rk
Those receiving proiec-
TOKYO (AP) — Pre-
mier Chou En-lai of China
said today U.S. action in
Vietnam runs counter to
the spirit of his joint state-
ment in Shanghai with
President Nixon, a Japa-
nese correspondent report-
ed.
Chou said that in the
statement at the end of
Nixon's visit to China in
February, both China and
the United States had con-
firmed principles for
peace ruling out the use of
ree in
> ? :
departed from lead levels
previously considered
safe.
He said that prior to
February all health agen-
cies had been advised that
atmospheric levels of 4 to
5 micrograms per cubic
meter were considered
safe.
“The 2 microgram fig-
. ure was announced at the
same time that Oklahoma
City was listed as being
IVlOfC rOOfll in coach, the plane's not full, you'll have an armrest
Soon wherever you fly Braniff, you'll By table next to you, not another passenger.
”727 Braniff Place. "Mora room, more com- More elbow, shoulder, and hip room than
fort oiMnore and more flights each week, ever before. For reservations, call your
In coacn, there's 2-and-2 Mating. Whan travel agent or Braniff: 235-8531.
<3-6-—
YbuTlliteflyingBranifTStyle
I V
1 *
that have been
made at citizens hearings
around the c 0 u n t r y,"
Blanche said.
He said lead levels of 4
to 5- micrograms are not a
health threat.
Blanche said 1.300 sam-
ples taken during a two- ;
year period covering 1970
and 1971 revealed an over-
all lead content of only .18
micrograms for 16 station*
in the metropolitan area.
He said only two of the
stations showed lead con-
tent exceeding the 2 micro-
gram level.
“Both of these stations
were in areas where the
known lead content was
particularly h 1 g h,” he
said.
He said one of the sta-
tions is located at No. 1
Fire Station. 428 W Califor-
politan areas with “a dan-
gerous I—. 2—2
air."
"That report (EPA) was
based on one sample from
one station that was up-
wind from a battery sal-
vage plant," Blanche said. L'
He said measures al-
ready had been taken to
correct the lead pollutant
from that plant before the
EPA report was made and
that correction controls
are nearly complete. ’ •
The EPA report was
based on a sample taken
in 1969, he said. ‘
Blanche was critical ot 1
the EPA for its February
report on the grounds that
it was the result of only'
one sample and said it also
• from automobile tailpipes,”
he said.
It reported 241 micro-
grams for one quarter of
1971.
He said a recent survey
showed about 60,000 cars a
day pass the intersection
where NW 10, Pennsylva-
nia and Virginia meet.
He said lead concentra-
tions there would be ex-
pected to be higher be-
cause of stop and pfi and
slow moving traffic.
"Lead" concentrations
tffre about three times as
high when traffic stops or
moves slowly than it would
be where cars are moving
rapidly," he said.
Bus Strike Set
For Nine States
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
— A strike of 4.500 drivers
and 700 mechanics against
Greyhound bus lines in
nine western states has
been set for May 23 unless
a
reached in
next Monday, a
spokesman says.
j
Reds. Demand
I
PARIS (AP) — The Viet Cong demanded today that day they sold 254,010
the Vietnam peace talks resume on Thursday.
There was no immediate reaction from the U.S. and
South Vietnamese delegations.
The United States suspended the talks indefinitely’ on
May 4. charging that the Communists were not negotiat-
ing seriously.
In a note to the U.S. delegation, the Viet Cong also de-
manded “an irtimediate end to the mining and blockad-
ing of North Vietnamese ports, and an end to the bomb-
ing and pounding of the two zones of Vietnam . . .
32 Words Get Through
MOSCOW (AP)—Tass, the Soviet news agency, retri-
ed the shooting of Gov. George C. Wallace in a 32-word
dispatch today, nearly 12 hours after the shooting.
The dispatch, from Washington, said: ‘‘An attempt
was made on the life of Governor of Alabama George
Wallace who is seeking presidential nomination.
"Several shots were fired at him as he campaigned at
Laurel, Maryland, near Washington.”
.★ ★. ★ * * *
Health Officials Breathing Easier
Cl.y area showed .eal ndhlonmolW
tent exceeding 2 micro-
were announced jointly by grams per cubic meter.
Robert Blanche of ’ the The two-month survey
state health department analyzed ~ samples taken
and Bennie Cranor, of the during 1970-il.
(By way of illustration, cral lead problem in OKia
Blanche said there are 454
grams in a pound and that
a microgram is one-one
WASHINGTON (AP) — tion before the shooting
Two Democratic presiden- were Wallace and Sens,
tial candidates and Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, Hu-
Edward M. Kennedy re- ' bert H. HuThphrey. Gebrge
ceivcd Secret Service pro- McGovern and Henry M.
tection within an hour aft- Jackson.
er.Alabama Gov. George
C. Wallace was shot Mon- ' woman Sworn In
d’V WASHINGTON (AP) -
’ Dr. Mary Hamilton, an as-
sociate professor of fi- I
nance at Loyola University .
in.Chicago, was sworn in I
today as the lone woman I
on the seven-member I
Price Commission.
“We in Oklahoma City February,
officials took issue’ last
February with the EPA re-
port from Washington say-
ing that Oklahoma City
ranked among 27 metro-
level of lead in the nearly complete.
“The NW 10 and Penn-
sylvania station was locat-
ed right down on the
ground and practically
sucked exhaust emissions
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.
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. 83, No. 74, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 16, 1972, newspaper, May 16, 1972; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1788184/m1/4/: accessed June 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.