Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 87, No. 232, Ed. 2 Wednesday, November 17, 1976 Page: 3 of 29
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.4 Wednesday, Nov. 17, 1976
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
Jury OKs $105,000
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STore News
I
1
studies
Tulsa fir
Konawa sales tax vote due
Lawton denies
Wrecked
car
airline switch
• UWTC.
1
$24
fact:
I
• *• I
And that’s a Fact.
Available in regular and menthol.
Fhctilhe low gas, low ‘tar.’
I
Crossroads & Penn Square open daily 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., Sunday I to 6
A
A
H
Warning The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health
For this special season,
it's Tribute and C & R
L
I
I
t
I
•
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<
John a brown
ty, he is an automobile
dealer.
vote on a proposed ad-
ditional 1 per cent city
sales tax.
City officials say the
revenue would be ear-
marked tor water sy«-
tern improvements.
♦
j
Tin.sa (AT) — When the Bank of
Oklahoma opened its towering new
building in downtown Tulsa this
month, it happily invited customers
and Tulsa residents to tour it.
What the bank didn't count on
were some uninvited birds. Now, the
problem is how to get them out.
A number of birds have set up
housekeeping in the three-story lob-
by of the bank among 1,300 live
Going out for the holidoys?
Our quietly dressy dress
will also cover you for
casual goings. In holiday
red or midnight black
easy-care polyester. Sizes
10-20 and 14 1/2—24 1/2.
(Budget Dresses and
Women's World)
3
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9 I
> I
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►
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* JI '
Lobby provides ‘home’
Birds invade bank
LAWTON — The City Council late
Tuesday rejected consideration of
proposed changes in Continental Air-
lines' bid to substitute service
through Lawton with Rio Airways.
The council took the firmer stand
on a position statement that will go
to a Civil Aeronautics Board hearing
Wednesday in Wichita Falls, Tex.
The CAB hearing on the future of
air service in Lawton and Wichita
Falls opened Tuesday.
Council members previously voted
to support Continental's plan to sub-
stitute Rio on four daily flights from
Midland, Odessa, Lubbock, Wichita
Falls, Lawton, Oklahoma City and
Tulsa. ,
Continental later proposed an al-
ternate substitute to continue its
flights but bypass Lawton and Wichi-
ta Falls and put the two cities on an
extension of Rio's commuter flight
out of Dallas.
Chances are, you’ve never heard gas and cigarettes
mentioned together before. Just ‘tar’ and nicotine.
According to some critics of smoking, gases are part of
the controversy too.
You see, smoke is mostly gas. Different kinds of
gas. And despite what we tobacco people think, these
critics say it’s just as important to cut down on .
some of the gas.; as it is to lower ‘tar’ and nicotine.
No ordinary cigarette can do it. But Fact can. L_
\ Fact is unique, the first cigarette with a
revolutionary Purite filter.
And Fact reduces gas
concentrations at the same
time it reduces ‘tar’ and
nicotine.
Meaning you get low
gas and low ‘tar.’ Together.
But that’s not all.
Take a minute to read
our pack. It tells you how
Purite makes this the first
’ low ‘tar’ smoke with good,
rich taste.
Taste as good as the
leading king-size brand.
gets lift
Wrecked auto due to become cannon fodder geta an aerial lift to FL
Hill's artillery range where it will be used for target practice.
•aid Tuesday that Spain, France and Hispano IT — controls all production
Algeria are seeking the study by Re-
sources Sciences Corp. It will check
seafloor alignments under the Medi-
terrean Sea for the proposed line,
with the work to be finished by next
spring.
If the line is built, he said, Spain
could hook up with a European "gas
line network." •
20 CLASS A
CIGARETTES
Fact is the first cigarette with
Purite granules.
The selective filtering agent.
Selective.
That means ii reduces specific
gases in smoke that taste had.
Without removing the elements
that taste good.
So. for the first time, you get
low gas. low "tar,'’ and satisfying
taste in one cigarette.
ELK CITY — A man who charged
that a former Elk City policeman
beat him and unlawfully arrested
him has won a $105,000 Judgment in
U.S. District Court in Oklahoma
City.
Lloyd Simmons of Elk City
charged that policeman Kelly Rush-
ing, now an officer in Amarillo,
Tex., beat him in the face, hand-
cuffed him and kicked him in the
head and then threw him in Jail aft-
er Rushing arrested him on a
Introducing Fhct.
The low gas, low ‘tar.’
plants and trees. They apparently
came in through openings in the
building during construction.
"They're eating the leftovers frpsn
the workmen's lunches," theori7e^
one woman employee.
Workmen have tom down most of
the nests but, undaunted, some of
the birds have rebuilt from scraos
around the building. I \
undersea gas line
: TULSA (AP) - A Tulsa-baaed
firm has started a study which may
lead to an undersea gas line from Al-
geria to Spain and other parts of
western Europe.
. Jose Roton Trespalacios, presi-
dent of Recursos Naturales, S.A.,
T I » • ‘
for arrest charge
V
charge of driving while intoxicate^
in March 1973. !
Simmons* attorney, Paul Brunton,
told jurors that Simmons had one
drink the night he was arrested and
did not resist arrest.
Simmons originally filed the suit
against Elk City Police Chief Clar-
ence Mayberry, Mayor Tom Joins-
son Jr. and city council members.
Others were subsequently dropped
from the action and final Judgment
was against Rushing only.
Regular. 14 mj. Ur." 1.0 mg. ntcotro. MinthoL
13 mg. "ur." 1.0 mj. Hcatine. w. p« ogiretti. by FTC method.
/■
1
Frederick man
named regent
ALTUS — Charles W.
Eckenrode, Frederick, |
has been appointed by ■
Gov. David Boren to j
the Board of Regents of
Western Oklahoma
State College.
Eckenrode has pre-
viously served as a
member of the college
Athletic Advisory Com-
mittee. A native of
southwestern Oklaho-
ma and a graduate of
hoped nuclear plants will supply at Central State Universi-
least 22 per cent of all Spanish ener-
gy needs.
KONAWA — The
Konawa city council
has called a special
election for Dec. 7 to
At present Spain gets liquefied
natural gas from Algeria to Barce-
lona, an operation that requires ex-
pensive ships. The proposed line
would provide natural gas, eliminat-
ing the liquefying process.
"The state-owned oil company —
operations of the country," Trespala-
cios, former president of Hispanoil,
said. "It currently has working in-
terests in several countries through-
out the world including Sicily, Gaon,
Ivory Coast, Algeria, Dubai, Indone-
sia, Greenland and the North Sea,"
he said.
Trespalacios Is now president of
Recursos Naturales S.A. His firm
represents Spain, France and Alge-
ria in having the study made.
He said Hispanoil now contributes
about 80,000 barrels of crude daily,
less than half of Spain's daily con-
sumption, at a cost of about $4 bil-
lion for imported oil.
"Hispanoil is seeking oil and wel-
comes foreign companies and inves-
tors in exploring for and developing
domestic reserves," he said.
He said that any oil discovered in
domestic offshore drilling will re-
main in Spain. Foreign companies in
Joint operations will be paid for their
share of oil recovered in domestic
operations.
Spain can process up to 54 million
tons but is averaging only about 44
million now. There are eight refiner-
ies in the country, plus one in the
Canary Islands.
He said that by 1981 the company
hopes to produce more than 200,000
barrels of oil per day, but that will
still be short of the need.
He also said that by 1985 it is
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Bennett, Charles L. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 87, No. 232, Ed. 2 Wednesday, November 17, 1976, newspaper, November 17, 1976; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1797530/m1/3/: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.