Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 84, No. 139, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 1, 1973 Page: 3 of 60
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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b
Bridal set with
cantor diamond
and 3 saophifes
$300
politics
aren't 1
vi Mo
r
t«
*
Bombing
Check Due?
saw I
nothing wrong with locat-
ing the mansion on the
I
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He said*at the time a three-judge panel would likely
hear the constitutional question sometime early next
week. No date has been set for the hearing.
The panel was announced today by Judge David Lew-
is, chief judge of the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in
Denver, Colo.
■** "Last Tango" was shut down in Oklahoma City after
two hours after Harris threatened prosecution under ob-
scenity laws if showings continued.
Free discussions on how
to do so will be conducted
at 7:30 p.m. each Tuesday
and Thursday, beginning
Aug. 7. The location will
he the Cancer Society of-
fice at 1312 NW 21.
SACRAMENTO (AP) —
Prospective candidates to
the governor's seat here
are battling it out oyer
whether a new governor's
mansion should be con-
structed on an ancient In-
dian burial ground. ,
Gov. Ronald Reagan has
$1.3 billion from the Leg-
islature to build the gover-
nor’s home on the burial
grounds of the Maidu tribe
—an 11-acre bluff over-
looking the American Riv-
er.
When descendants of the
Maidu tribe protested,
Reagan received an addi-
tional $110,000 from the
t legislature for archeolo-
gists to excavate the site.
Rut the Indians say they
are opposed to any dig-
ging, whether for construc-
tion or for archeology.
Now, prospective candi-
dates to succeed Reagan
as governor in 1974 have
taken up the battle.
costing Mrs. Richard Riley $210 , money she'd planned
to use to pay medical costs for a baby expected Sept. 5.
Mrs. Riley, 4020 S Douglas, said she had cashed her
last check from her job as a secretary, and had put the
money in a white purse with black stitching.
At 7 p m., she said she and her two children, Jimmy
and Michelle, stopped at Spartan's, May and Reno, for
snow cones. At 10 p.m., she realized she'd left her purse
on the car parked next to her's when she unlocked her
■ car.
Mil
MV
burial grounds 14 miles
from downtown Sacramen-.
to.
"We should get on with
it," he said. "Further de-
lay is ridiculous."
Flournoy said
the propospd mansion site.
The secretary of state con-
tended the digging would
violate state law which
protects items of historical
significance.
•Republican State Con-
troller Houston I. Flour-
noy, another likely candi-
date, Tuesday challenged
Helping Hand Offered
Local Heart Association
and Cancer Society chap-
ters are offering a hand to
anyone who has decided it
in time to quit smoking, in
a series of classes opening
next week.
WASHINGTON (AP) —
Rep. Bella Abzug said to-
day that Congress should
send persons to check
whether the United States
halts Cambodian bombing
Aug. 15.
In a letter to House
Speaker Carl Albert, D-
Okla., and Senate Demo-
cratic leader Mike Mans-
field of Montana, the New
York Democrat said Con-
gress will be in recess
when the bombing halt is
mandated to take effect.
"Despite assurances
from Secretary of State rheological excavation at
William P. Rogers that the
administration will not
seek an extension of the
cutoff date, it is our view
that the Congress should
take precautionary mea-
sures to guarantee that the
bombing halt will be scrup-
ulously observed," the let-
ter said.
Snow Cones Costly
Two snow cones she bought Tuesday night wound up
Brown's authority to spen^
state money on hi; law-
suit. He said he would re-
ject the expenditure unless
Brow’n justified it.
Flournoy said he
The governor's office (
said any graves turned up
by the excavation, now’
held ufi pending settlement
of Brown's lawsuit, would
be properly relocated.
The Indians still aren't 1
happy.
Marie Potts, a 77-year- I
old Maidu, said, "They are
constantly digging up our,
graves and desecrating
them."
While the politicians es-
calate their battle over the
site, the judiciary is taking
a look at the issue.
Superior Court Judge
Lloyd Phillips -Jr. said,
"It's quite an interesting
case. I want to review the
law and consider it at
some length." ’
I
I
A three-judge federal panel was named today to hear ,
a constitutional challenge of Oklahoma's obscenity laws
lodged on behalf of the movie, "Last Tango in Paris."
U.S. Circuit Judge William J. Holloway Jr., Oklahoma
City, was named to join U.S. Dist. Judges Fred Daugh- 1^'TB
erty and Luther Eubanks to,hear the case.
Judge Daugherty last wdek turned down a temporary |^r
restraining order against Dist. Atty. Curtis Harris bar- _
ring prosecution pending a hearing on the law question. ArrPStCCl
Mary Vecchio, who was
photographed • kneeling
over a victim in the Kent
State shootings in 1970,
says publicity from the
event has had a damaging
influence on her life. She
was arrested in Miami re-
cently and pleaded no con-
test to a charge of offering
to commit prostitution.
(AP Wirephoto)
r 1'iUl nuv o j
had nothing to do with his
action against Brown, but
Brown disagreed.
"Mr. Flournoy's com-
ments were motivated by
his zeal for personal pub-
licity in his floundering
campaign for governor,"
he said.
Other prospective Demo- .
cratic .candidates have
joined Rrown in condemn-
ing the suburban site and
say the mansion should be I
built downtown, near the i
"If the governor's man- ’ Capitol. ‘ f
sion is built on this site,
the building will-stand for
• all to see as a ‘shameful
monument to the white
man's callous disregard
for Indiarj traditions," de-
clared Democratic Secre-
tary of State Edmund G.
^rown Jr.
Brown, son of the former
California governor, wdnt
tp court and won a tempo-
rary injunction halting ar-
Mi
A
J.
Wedding pair with
center diamond
and R rubies
$300 .
L v*
The sparkle of diamonds
complimented by the
fire and color of precious gems
A -ffl
a
$
I.
r
' 1
r.._
Judges Kwori In
Swearing in ceremonies attached new
“ names to two Oklahoma County District
Court benches today. William C. Kessler,
above, took the oath as a new associate
district judge, succeeding Judge John
Amick who has resigned to teach law at
Oklahoma City University. Attorney Joe
Cannon, onetime state public safety com-
missioner, was sworn in to fill Kessler's
former post as special judge. (Times
Staff Photos by Roger Artman)
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PENN SQUARE
MIDWEST CITY
DOWNTOWN
REDING
Dinner ring with
sapphire center and
10 diamonds
$300
Dinner ring with
1R rubies and
11 diamonds
$500
i
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009 of oui Ch*,rj* Accounts rr R ANKA MERICARP, MA j , ER ^liARGK
Jfoeacock)
JEWELERS
When It Conies To Love-We’ve Been Around
Double flower ring.
2 center diamonds and
12 sapphires
$190
Indians Protest ** ■ w
-------B -
Burial Grounds
Mansion Site?
■
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regular 9*>c
A
c
■♦ji
79'
y ^ave 20c a pair!
/ opaque panty hose
The perfect partner for your hodv
Mills. One si/e opaque panty hose in
navy, black or expresso. Styled with
.sandalfoot. SAVE!
/
7W
f. Jr
■fl
Police Seek Driver
pretty mini half slips
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who never took the city's qualifying test.
■»
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positive thinking in textured polyester
from Sears Junior Bazaar
unearthed near here in the
oldest such find in the
pastern United States, an-
thropologists report.
Think of a new you in a new dress, then think how nifty you'll look in
any of these casual numbers. Notice the new sportif touches.. .the bottte^
jacket on one, the button cuffs on another, the vest on a third. In a roll
call of fashion shades like burgundy, brown, beige, green, royal. Also in
combos like pumpkin and eggshell. Machine washable. Jr. and Jr. Petites.
Nomad Basket Found
PITTSBURGH. Pa.
(AP) — The remnants of a
basket used 70 centuries
ago by nomads have been
Midwiest Ckv
?511 S.E. 1.<th
737-1461
Remember dresses.’ Well lhevjre hack, mini as
eser so sou must have this slip. Antron^ 111
nslon, cling resistant, machine washable. In
colors sou won t mind showing. Sizes S, M,
I..
Bribery Trial Docketed
• •
A Sept. 26 trial date has been set for William Steimer,
Oklahoma Ctty's suspended chief electrical inspector, on
J'
■
12K gold-filled and 14k gold and
sterling silver ptcreed earrings
A little elc^aikc al a little price and why not
Smartly designed earrings io g.> with most of
lhe things in sour wardrobe \i 4 XS a pair
you may ssanilu consider busing a lew. .
Jewelry rntargrd to show detail.
Dist. Judge Clarence Mills ordered the trial during
district court arraignment after Steimer waived prelimi-
nary hearings on the charges. •'
Steimer was released on a $2,000 signature bond
Steimer, 57, of 212 NE 61. is acc used of accepting three
bribes tn rtvp ioumevman electrician licenses to men
tt. 1
A
SHOP AT SEARS AND SAVE
Satufaction Guamntfrd nr Xnu.r Afones Back
SLABS. BOnVCK CO.
Police are looking for a
young man with dark hair
today in connection with a
hit-and-run accident that
alightly injured an Oklaho-
ma City woman early to-
day.
Officers said Patty
Russell, 42, of 129 W Jar-
man, was injured when a
car driven by her husband
Finis Russell, was struck
by a car leaving the off-
ramp at 1-35 and SE 59.
Russell described the
2 („r 3*
hit-and-run car as a late
model two-tone El Camino.
Police said the driver
apparently disregarded a
stop sign, hit the Russell
car and left going south on
High St.
Officers said part of the
vehicle was left imbedded
in the Rdksell car.
South Community Hospi-
tai spokesmen said Mrs.
Russell was treated and
released shortly after 2
a.m. today. /
CHARGE IT on Sears Revolving ( harge
Sale'pru es in effect thru Saiurdav.1 ----:------------------
^l°P ’til 9 P.M.... Sunday 1 P.M. 'til 6 P.M.
S Shepherd Mall Sequovah Reding
N.W. 23rd A Penn. , S.W. 44th & Western
525-5477 6J2-1611
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Panel Named
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Sears
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 84, No. 139, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 1, 1973, newspaper, August 1, 1973; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1788939/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.