Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 84, No. 28, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 24, 1973 Page: 2 of 22
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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iet Cong
y
Ken Mayimrd in tee eorty 86s, left, and In Awgast 1962. (AP Wirephotos)
»Big Fowr’ Gene
PWs
s
Ken Maynard
Dead at 77
I
Accidents
KiU Two
Texas
»
Calls
Infants
Rainfall
Totaled
Democrats
ixl
1973
»*w
I
Kanawa
I
c
I
A Southern Baptist Church
. 30th and Villa
• __________________________» I
The Churcti you always hoped to find
<
■L
■j
■rusr
I >
I
i
I
1
Hanoi Slaps
U.S. Stand
min
CIK0I
sy staff as guards must be
withdrawn.
4. After 8 am. Thurs-
3
1.25
n
i.A
Jn
in
Gilbert was named by
that committee to serve as
Mott, 31, Moorehead,
Minn.
rain.
Moist, unstable air in the
eastern half of Texas pro-
duced more heavy showers
and thundershowers early
today, with the coastal
areas of southeast Texas
bearing the brunt of the
severe weather, as it did
I
i
i
MA«CM
MMTBPU
El R*no
Erick
r»o»h»w«
Fws*
FaraUr
dochina will be released.
Hanoi's Communist par-
ty newspaper Nhan Dan
said: "This is an absurd
demand since the return of
the U.S. prisoners cap-
tured outside Vietnam is
beyond the competence of
the North Vietnamese gov-
ernment and the Provi-
sional Revolutionary Gov-
ernment"
< -Hi
' SL ~ V
missing in action in North
and South Vietnam.
The United States lists
M0O American troops still
in Vietnam. These Include
825 members of the U.S.
delegation to the four-par-
ty Joint Military Commis-
sion and 50 military at-
taches and 159 Marine
guards at the U.S. Embas-
sy.
In the past, the United
Staten has maintained that
the military attaches and
the Marine guards are not
part of the forces sched-
uled for withdrawal under
terms of the cease-fire.
and was reported shot
down in a helicopter on
Feb. 5,1970.
21. CWO Phillip Dean
Prather, 26.
22. Col. Benjamin Harri-
son Purcell, 45, captured
on Feb. 8, 1968, during the
Tet offensive.
23. First Sgt. Donald J.
Rander, 34, Baltimore,
lit
34
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OMSMCWifaYMSSw
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IrvMrrtlM---m
StM * 7;SO Ml
o» Murwn near mmh
Continued From Page One
spokesman said, however:
"We feel reasonably sure
that the prisoners will be
released within the time
frame set forth in the
agreement."
The Communists have
released 439 American
prisoners since Feb. 12.
The Viet Cong proposal
television.
Maynard had lived alone
in a tiny trailer in San
Fernando, Calif., since the
death of his wife, Bertha,
in 1969. His brother, Ker-
mit, 73, an actor in scores
of Westerns who never
achieved top stardom, died
in 1970.
Coatiaaed From Page One
McAlester, .64; Ponca City,
.58; Hobart, .11; Gage, .92;
Altus Air Force Base, .30;
Enid. .30; Okarche, .60;
Paden, .30, and Wilson,
.90.
Otdahoma City may be
an j“
bettering the all-time rec-
ord for the wettest March,
6.18 inches measured in
1948. So far this month,
4.68 inches of rain has fall-
en at Will Rogers World
Airport, a spokesman said.
So far this year, 8.38
inches of rain has fallen on
Oidahoma City, almost
double the normal 4.68
inch accumulation, the
weather bureau said.
Oklahoma's weather pic- tached to the U.S. Embas-
ture will change when a
stubborn front located in
southeastern Texas moves
eastward, forecasters said, day, the only U.S. military
The front has triggered
rains in the five central
states, I
of flash flooding. The most
severe conditions were in
Orange, Jefferson, Brazo-
ria and Chambers Coun-
ties.
Southeast Texas had
some of the heaviest rain
in 30 years. Galveston re-
headquarters company ports 8 inches.
was reported shot Some residents of Sea-
brook and Kamah along
Galveston Bay where
some of the heaviest rain
fell there moved from
their homes. High tides
added to the danger
Flooding was reported in
the streets of Beaumont
and Galveston, and Red
Cross and Civil Defense
units joined in helping
evacuate residents in low-
lying areas.
Following are Oidahoma
rainfall amounts recorded
John Claro, in speaking
in favor of Gilbert, said,
"If you’ve got four bottoms
trying to sit in two differ-
ent chairs, you've got a
problem."
Claro said the Demo-
cratic constitution speci-
STATE TRAFFIC TOLL
1973 to date: Hi
1972 to date: 164
1978 deaths uder 21: 29
* r TOMORROW IS OUR VERY
SPECIAL 25Hi ANNIVERSARY DAY
Won’t You Join Our Services?
1500 IN SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:30 A.M.
MORNING WORSHIP 10:50 A.M.
Law School.
"There have been many
problems with the present
refutations requiring local
Air poNce presence at baard-
Assoctation, Jug gates, aad its aypbca-
tion has been uneven, with
varying standards of train-
ing and performance," he
continued.
"There have been situa-
tions where local officers
fel, 22. 7_____;
10. Capt. William Joseph Pentagon had carried both
“ ’ . “ ” ’ 7 • fliers as missing in action
ing at 7 a.m. today.
Alva .
3Es_
«m4*V
Anttori
AaManB
taraWall
•arttoaviila
BenaaT
Uganda Tells ; ^ornaneh*
Of Invasion S.
„ -
ydfllflflfck
I r! Swfrxj
Continued From Page One
Jan. 26, 1973, two days be- more than two inches of
fore the cease-fire went
into effect.
14. First. Lt. Alan Jo-
seph Kroboth, 26.
15. Spec. 5 Tom Yoshi-
hisa Kobashigawa, 24, Hon-
olulu.
16. Spec. 4 I s s a k o
Faatoese Malo, 22.
17. Capt. David Phillip Friday.
Heavy rains that started
Friday over all of south-
18. Capt. John Stanley east Texas raised a threat
Murphy Jr., 33.
19. CWO James Ernest
Nowicki, 27.
20. Capt. John William
a Parseis, 27, whose parents
live in Sarasota, Fla. He
was the commander of a
101st Airborne Division's
Caatiaerd Fro* Page One
cents a minute, Reece esti-
mated that the WATS line,
even at the cost of 82,500 a
month, could save students
some 8150,000 in phone
bills over the year.
WATS is designed, said
ATAT, for high-volume
commercial customers
who find it cheaper to buy
phone service at a flat rate
rather than by the unit
can.
ATAT said Reece's plan
would violate its tariff be-
cause personal calls would
not be "communications in
which the customer has a
direct Interest" Also, it
said, such calls "would re-
sult in the service being
used for the transmission
of communications for oth-
ers.
Reece appealed to the
FCC, with the help of a
friend in the university
law school, claiming that
the student government
was a perfectly legitimate
customer within the mean-
ing of WATS regulations.
ATATs reply was in an-
swer to the FCC*s inquiry
about Reece's complaint
that Bel! was being ’’dis-
criminatory.’*
ATAT said ft is "contin-
ually studying its various
__________ service offerings in order
- oa n» o»»y Okuno- to appropriately respond
: to the changing needs and
i —m ot-nn. dowai omcn-tn- requirements of its cus-
- hmmswuufov toners."
ATAT said these studies
are continuing and it ’’ex-
pects that before the end
of 1973 it will have some
study result and conclu-
sions on the feasibility of
modifying WATS rate
structure and expanding
WATS usage "
But ATAT said it is not
giving any assurance teat
Reece will get his way—
obviously aware that this
would open the flood gates
to students at other col-
leges.
Csaflwaed Fro* Page Owe
trtsoUdefldent diet.
The leader of the re-
search team was Dr. Arild
E. Hausen, chairman of
tee department of pediat-
rics at tee University of
Texas at the time of tee
study. He died In 1962.
The Globe said one of
the researchers on the
team, Dr. Doris J. D.
Adam, told the newspaper
by telephone from her
home in Dallas Friday:
- *7 cannot substantiate
whether this (study) has
or has not done any per-
manent harm to those chil-
dren. As far as I know,
- they were perfectly fine."
The Globe reported she
said the children were ex-
r-~ amined when they reached
t the age of 2 or i, but she
X said the results of these
Z examinations were not
; published because the re-
X search team had broken
Z up by that time.
£ Asked what the study
• meant when it said the in-
• fants were at the hospital
C tor "social reason," Dr.
• Adam said the babies had
t been abandoned by their
£ mothers, the Globe report-
£ 00
bteor the speciol orrongemenf of "Never Alone" by Choir. Speciol
greetings from Governor Dovid Holl, Mayor Patience lotting, and Dr.
Joe Ingram Anmvertory Message by Pastor Finley W. Tmnin.
EVENING WORSHIP 6:45 P.M Speciol musk provided by a 100-Voice
Mole Chorus Beginning Service of Revival by Homer Martinez
HEAR HOMER MARTINEZ i
JU
»
1X7
£
£
SAIGON (AP) - The
Viet Cong today released
the names of these Ameri-
cans scheduled to be freed
in the next release of pris-
oners of war.
All are in the Army un-
less otherwise indicated.
Other information on them
has been pieced together
from news reports and
Communist radio broad-
casts:
L S.Sgt. David Franklin
Allwine, 24, whose wife
lives in Phoenix, Ariz.
2. Capt. Richard Camer-
on Anshus, 25, of Minneap-
olis, Minn.
3. Marine Sgt. Jose Je-
sus Anzaldua, 22, whose
parents live in Refugio,
Tex. Anzaldua was report-
ed captured southwest of
Da Nang on Jan. 17, 1970.
4. Sgt. Jon Robert Ca-
vaini, 29, a Special Forces
soldier who Radio Hanoi
has said was captured
near the demilitarized
zone while in charge of a
"secret radio relay site."
5. Capt. Luis Gerardo
Chirichigno, 35.
6. Spec. 6 Lenard Daugh-
terly, 24, Del Rio, Tex.
7. Lt. Col. Artice Weldon
Elliott, 43.
8. Capt. William Aaron
Gauntt, 27.
9. Sgt. Daniel Henry He- plane' in which Kientzler
fel, 22. was radar operator. The
tons, but tjiey are carried
on U.S. prisoner lists. 4
24. Capt. William 8pen>
cer Reeder Jr., 27,> Dug-
way, Utah.
25. S.Sgt Robert Ernest
Tabb, 27.
26. Sgt. Dennis Andrew
Tellier, 23, Woonsocket,
R.I.
27. CWO William Edwin
Thomas Jr., 36, Honolulu.
The Viet Cong also listed
the following as civilians
to be released.
28. Gary L. Daves, cap-
tured Feb. 3,1968.
29. Lewis Ernest Meyer,
captured Feb. 1,1968.
‘ 30. Robert F. Olsen, cap-
tured Feb. 2,1968.
31. Thomas R u s h t o n,
captured Feb. 2,1968.
32. Charles Edward Wil-
lis, whose wife and two
children live in Lacrosse,
Wis. He was a technician
for a Voice of America sta-
tion near Hue and was
captured Jan. 31, 1968,
when Communist-led
troops invaded that north-
ern provincial capital.
Also on the list was the
name of one South Korean
prisoner, rendered by a
Viet Cong spokesman as
Warrant Officer In-
chengchsel.
The list does not include
the name of Navy Cmdr.
Harley Hall, pilot of the
team in Vietnam will be
__ . _______ one charged with acoount-
includtog” Oklaho- ,or American listed as
ma. and has brought
heavy snows to the north-
eastern plains of New
Mexico, b .<• ’ i
Heavy rainsare
falling in Texas, Arkansas
and Louisiana.
OKatoma City’s outlook
is occasional thundershow-
ers through Sunday. A Sun-
day high temperature in
the upper 50s is expected
after an overnight low
near 40.
hmm
Ml*
H«MN
HmMw
MbM
HowwAln
Holltt
Hollow
« aw -u-t-j. ul u~ i- -j u,, m nwTwny
invaders comprised Tan- idXi
zanian troops and Asians -n?*15
expelled by President Idi
Annin's military regime
last year. s
contingent on these de-
mands:
1. The last phase of the
withdrawal of American
forces shall begin on Mon-
day, the day the United
States begins to receive its
its way to equaling or planers. The priaorer re-
patriation and the with-
drawal of American forces
should be completed by
Wednesday,
2. The 825 American mil-
itary personnel attached to
the U£. delegation to the
four-party Joint Military
Commission should be
withdrawn by 8 a.m. Sai-
gon time, Thursday,
March 29.
3. The 159 Marines at-
tion is supposed to be set-
3 tied by the district com-
i u mittee where the dispute is
taking place.
i n Gilbert was named by
.30
X_____________
i n Fifth District chairman.
Other activities for the
ill day included election of
1 - the state Democratic Par-
ty chairman, co-chairman,
secretary and treasurer
and ah appearance by
* Gov. Hall.
Application ‘Uneven’
wfll not perform consent
searches, will not seize
weapons, or will not make
arrests," be said.
Landry said a Mly em-
powered federal force, us-
ing deputized local person-
nel where appropriate but
operating under standard
instructions, would solve
the problems.
Landry said the oants of
providing the tncreaned
level of security required
by the new rules will total
more than 8106 million on
an annual basis.
He said the airlines sup-
port legislation providing
for the use of the present
federal force and expand-
ii< it at major airports,
and using deputized local
and state officers at the
450 smaller airports that
* account for about 10 per
cent of the nation's air
traffic.
Rain
Two Oklahomans were
reported killed on state
roads in separate acci-
dents Friday night and
early today.
Dead are:
DAN MARSHAL HAR-
RIS JR , 30, Edmond and
BENJAMIN S. WOODS,
18, Ft. Supply.
Highway patrolmen said
Harris was killed Friday
when the car he was driv-
ing went out of control on
the Turner Turnpike near
Chandler and struck r
roped and rode in circuses guard rail. The rail punc-
and Wild West shows, in- tured the left door and
chiding Buffalo Bill Cody's, threw him out of the car,
before Fox studios brought
him to Hollywood.
At the height of his suc-
cess. Maynard netted as
much as 88,000 a week
when he was operating his
own company. Rising costs
and television wiped out
the program Western after
World War H. and May-
nard dropped out of films
after 1947, playing only a
few minor roles and mak-
ing guest appearances on
WOODLAND HILLS,
Calif. (AP) — Old-time
cowboy actor Ken May-
nard, the last of the "Big
Four" of early Western
movie heroes, is dead at
77.
Officials at the Motion
Picture Country Hospital
here said the veteran of
some 300 movies died Fri-
day night*
Maynard was admitted
Jan. 18 for treatment of
nutritional deficiency, ar-
thritis and general physi-
cal deterioration.
A native of Indiana,
Maynard first galloped
onto the movie screen in
1983. The next year he had
the starring role in ”$50,-
000 Reward."
For 20 years, Maynard
was a top box-office at-
traction and was consid-
ered one of the "Big Four"
cowboy actors with Tom
Mix, Buck Jones and Hoot
Gibson. He also was the
first movie cowboy to sing
on the screen.
Maynard was a real
cowboy. He rode for a
ranch in Texas, joined a
wagon show, fought in the
Mexican Revolution and
TOKYO (AP) — Hanoi
today denounced the U.S.
position that the final
American withdrawal
from South Vietnam will
be held up until the Com-
munists darify when and
where the last U.S. prison- ______
ers of war held in all of In- for the 24-hour period end- Cinti—rl From Page One
Hamilton said Gilbert
"consistently has refused
, “ to admit this was a state
' » central committee meet-
ing. He's called it some-
” thing else."
.»
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PfRMANENT LOCATION SINCI 1969
FULL SATISFACTION OUARANTIID
OMN MOM. MT. 10 AM TO 7 RM,
SUN. 19NO0NTO6MU
CUITOW T A I L 9 R
26UN.MNN. S25-70M
Henderson, 25, Milwaukee, f ‘ ‘
11. Spec. 5. Thomas Ter- but announced Wednesday
uo Horio, 26. that both were prisoners.
12. Spec. 5 Juan L. Jac-
quez, 25, Santa Fe, N.M.
13. Lt. Cmdr. Philip A.
Kientzler, a Navy flier
who was reported shot
down below the DMZ an
NAIROBI. Kenya (AP)
— Uganda claimed today
that a 3,500-man force
from Tanzania was at-
tempting an invasion.
Radio Uganda said ad-
vance elements of the
force had been captured
well inside Uganda.
The broadcast said the
to THE DAILY OKLAHOMA*
Mamre
THE SUNDAY OKLAHOMAN
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
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ML SU6CCR4RTION RATES
toma, Taxat, Kamai. Arkanm
Miwaurt.atwMrricb)
Iwar 4mba Imo.
I s:
iSE ii S s
investigators said.
According to patrol re-
ports, Woods was driving a
car left of center on U.S.
183 approximately one
mile east of Ft. Supply
when the vehicle collided
with a semi-trailer truck
coming from the opposite
direction.
A passenger in Woods'
car, Alvin R. Hunter, 17,
suffered two broken legs Md., captured Feb. 1,1968.
and possible internal inju- The Viet Cong list Pur-
ries. cell and Rander as civil-
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) Landry made the com-
— An airline spokesman ments in a report prepared
today said some of the new for delivery at a Rymposi-
locally hired security umofflte American Socie-
: gumrds M airports are ty af Internntemnl Law at
good bat others are inef- (he Syracuse University
Jective — and a few think
•jthey have a license to run
•.tee airport.
* James E. Landry, gener-
>4 counsel of the
Transport
jBtfg MoodMitem of police
xaad tatefligenoe functions
husareds of local au-
^Ihortties under new anti-
oirating regulations has
been difficult.
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 84, No. 28, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 24, 1973, newspaper, March 24, 1973; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1788718/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.