Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 87, No. 232, Ed. 2 Wednesday, November 17, 1976 Page: 4 of 29
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T"
Hall wants to enter
Wednesday, Nov. IT. 1976
5
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
New officers elected
Douglass to lead Baptists
prison with dignity
I
David Hall
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Food relief due
ROME (AP) — The
U.N. Food and Agricul-
ture Organization has
announced a major
emergency program to
provide food relief for
four months for 1.35
million victims of ths
civil war in Lebanon.
I
I
who gave the annual sermon, and
the Rev. Charles Graves, pastor of
Nichols Hills Baptist Church, outgo-
ing president of the convention.
GIFTIPS
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Kepone lawsuit filed
by seafood workers
NEWPORT NEWS. VA. (AP) —
An $8.8-billion suit has been filed for
10.000 persons who earn their living
in the seafood industry against Al-
lied Chemical Corp, in connection
with Kepone contamination of Vir-
ginia Waterways.
An attorney for Allied, which has
headquarters in Morris Township,
N.J., declined comment on the suit
Tuesday but said the firm has assets
of about $1 billion.
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Senate lists
new leaders
his conviction and that of Dallas fin-
ancier W. W. "Doc" Taylor.
Hall and Taylor were convicted in
March 1975 of conspiring to bribe
Oklahoma's secretary of state at the
time, John Rogers, for his influence
in investing state retirement funds.
Hall was also convicted of extorting
money from Taylor.
Hall's attorneys have declined to
say if they will ask the U.S. Supreme
Court to reconsider its earlier refus-
al to review the Hall and Taylor
cases.
Both Hall and Taylor have been
ordered to begin serving their prison
terms Monday.
Taylor was sentenced to an 18-
month term at the federal prison at
Seagoville, Tex.
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Crossroads and Penn Square open daily 10 a.m. to 9 p.A. . . . Sunday I to 6 p.m.
SACRAMENTO (AP)
—California's two ma-
jor urban counties, San
Francisco and Los An-
geles, showed a drop in
population from July
1970 to July of this
year, state officials
say.
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XI
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The Rev. Richard Douglass, pas-
tor of the Putnam City Baptist
Church of Oklahoma City. Tuesday
wqs elected president of the Baptist
t- A petition by former Oklahoma
(Gov. David Hall asks a federal judge
to allow Hall to travel to Arizona on
his own and surrender "without a
complete loss of dignity" next week
4o begin serving a three-year federal
.prison sentence.
t ‘‘Granting of this request will al-
low him to enter Into confinement
without the complete loss of digni-
ty," the petition to U.S. Dist. Judge
Fred A. Daugherty states.
Daugherty is expected to act this
week on Hall's request to go to Ari-
zona himself, rather than under the
^sebrt of a law officer.
Hall was ordered to a minimum
s«urity prison camp at Safford,
Ariz., after the U.S. Supreme Court
refused earlier this month to review
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3 days only
Thursday, Friday & Saturday
at Crossroads and Penn Square
tivities and agencies.
Tuesday's speakers included the
Rev. Robert Hammons, pastor of
•Seminole's First Baptist Church,
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Diamonds iolhame
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General Convention of Oklahoma.
Other officers are the Rev. Brad '
Allen, pastor of the Central Baptist |
Church of Lawton, first vice presi- I
dent, and A. L. Butler, minister of I
music of First Baptist Church of
Ada, second vice president.
Re-elected were the Rev. Hale
Hixon of Pauls Valley, recording
secretary; the Rev. Eugene Thomas
of Oklahoma City, assistant record-
ing secretary, and Dr. J. M. Gaskin
of Durant, historical director.
Mr. Douglass, 40, is a graduate of
Oklahoma Baptist 1‘ntversrty anti
has pastored churches in Minco,
Cheyenne, Wyo., and Eagle Lake.
Tex. He served as a missionary to
Brazil for four years, and he has
been pastor of Putnam City Baptist
Church for the past four years.
In other business, messengers
adopted a 1977 Cooperative Program
objective of $6 75 million and author-
ized budgets of more than 554 mil-
lion for the BGCO and its various ac-
I
M.
Senate President Pro Tern Gene Howard an- 1
nbunced Senate committee chairmen Tuesday (or
the next legislative session.
The chairmen, most of them holdovers, were 1
fhosen by Howard and confirmed by the Senate
Rules Committee.
The chairmen and their committees are:
Sen. John Dahl, D-Bamsdall, agriculture; Sen.
Herschal Crow, D-Altus, appropriations and budg-
et; Sen. Roy Boatner, D-Calera, banks and bank-
ing; Sen. Kenneth Butler, D-Okmulgee, business,
industry and labor relations; Sen. Ed Berrong.
D-Weatherford, constitutional revision and regula-
tory services; Sen. Bob Wadley, D-Claremore.
county, state and federal government; Sen. Lee
Cate, D-Norman, criminal jurisprudence.
Also, Sen. Jim Howell, D-MIdwest City, com-
mon education; Sen. Bob Murphy, D-Stillwater,
higher education; Sen. Bob Shatwell, D-Tulsa,
elections and privileges: Sen. John Young, D-Sa-
pulpa, employment and administration; Sen.
Mary Helm, R-Oklahoma City, engrossed and en-
rolled bills; Sen. Roy Grantham. D-Ponca City,
judiciary; Sen. Marvin York, D-Oklahoma City,
municipal government.
Also, Sen. Bill Dawson. D-Seminole, professions
and occupations; Sen. Ernest Martin. D-Ardmore,
public and mental health; Sen. Bill Scheulein, D-
Miami, public safety and penal affairs; Sen. Finis
Smith, D-Tulsa, revenue and taxation; Sen. Gene
Stipe. D-McAlester, roads and highways; Sen. E.
Melvin Porter, D-Oklahoma City, social welfare;
Sen. Leon Field, D-Texhoma, wildlife, and Sen. Al
Terrill. D-Lawton, rules.
Gasoline firm
cuts its prices
:CHICAGO (AP) — A
spokesman for the
American Oil Co. says
Amoco has cut gasoline
prices by 1 cent a gal-
lon in all of its market-
ing regions, which in-
clude all but the far
western states. ‘ '
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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/m1/4/: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.