Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 87, No. 267, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 28, 1976 Page: 7 of 30
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7
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
Tuesday. December 28, 1978
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25% off
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imagery of a stand of, say, 70 per
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25% off
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coat sale
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said.
$15
a carat
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• He added that officers have had difficulty in re-
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One major difference between the
two projects, Miller explained, is
that crops owe their distribution to
human beings and generally follow
field patterns — a potato field here,
a wheat field there.
Naturally distributed trees may
come in thousands of mixtures and
variations. That makes it more diffl-
Our entire stock of
leathers & suedes
Everything from buckskin to soft,
buttery suede to smooth grain
cowhide. Dress & jacket lengths.
Orig. $7O-$22O, 59.99-164.99
(Misses' Coats)
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• Tr~.
Maj>fairChurch
of Christ
2340 NW 50th
OKLAHOMA CITY
Rabbit fur short coats
in 3 favorite styles
Make yours the one with
toggle closures, or hooded style
or one with leather trim insets.
InS-M-L. Reg. $120-$ 140.
(Misses' Coats)
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BOISE, Idaho (AP) — More than
500 miles above the potato fields and
forests, two satellites pass in nine-
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afteraChristaau
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89"-99"
Mur land Packer, chief of Water
Resources’ Bureau of Technical
Studies, explained that cost of a
Misses' wool blond
coats in dross lengths
We've got the duffel coat with
hood, updated trench, double &
single breasted styles, some
belted. 6-18. Reg. $94-$l 12.
(Misses' Coats)
Every kind of misses and junior coat you can
imagine from wool blend jackets and coats to our
entire stock of leathers and suedes!
Be here when the doors open at 10 a.m.
ft
Groat missy pretend furs
in short & boot lengths
Our entire stock of mink and
muskrat furs don't let on
Reg. $105-$ 155, 77.99-115.99
Hope and the
New Year
You can be more
than just a pawn of
time. The stars do not
control your destiny. You
can be a performer rather
than a spectator.
There ia aomeone
who needs you. Here is
a chief reason for view-
ing the new year with
determination. Here ia
the determining factor
between bravery and
cowardice ... childiah-
neaa and maturity.
God will be active in
history in 1S77. "Yet
love will dream and
faith will trust (Since He
who knows our need ia
just), That aomehow,
somewhere, meet we
must. That life is ever
Lord of Death, And love
can never lose its own!"
Whittier
"The Lord is my
shepherd, I shall not
want..." Psalms 23.
The entire project over the three
states is funded by the Pacific
Northwest Regional Commission
through June 1977. Officials said the
commission will spend 7350,000,
mostly on personnel salaries and
travel, in fiscal 1977, with another
SI .5 million worth of services coming
from NASA and USGS. Total cost of
the three-year project is estimated
at $4.6 million.
2 w
4 John a brown
Crossroads & Penn Square open Tues., Wed., & Thurs. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., Fri. 10 o.m. to 5 p.m. Closed New Year s Day.
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Service to bid
goodbye to *76
Worshippers will bid
farewell to 1976 when a
special watchnight
service is held Friday
at Wesley United Meth-
odist Church, NW 25
and Classen.
Leading the service,
beginning at 11 p.m.,
will be the Rev. Lonzo
Battles, pastor. Fea-
tured will be a "love
feast," or communion
Save up to 50% on our Diamonair simulated
diamonds this Wednesday, Thursday and Friday
3 days only at Crossroads & Penn Square
Diamonair, the incredible simulated diamond is so brilliant, so superbly made, it's the
perfect fooler for a diamond . . . and it costs a lot less I It's even set like a diamond in
14K white or yellow gold. All ore gift boxed. And you'll get a 1 oz. bottle of jewelry
cleaner at no extra charge. Completed rings in 14K gold . . . $40 ♦© $240
(Fine Jewelry)
*for loose stones
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\ Modules plot map
\of tristate region
Junior wool blond dress
length coats, sizes 5-13
Our entire stock I Pick from
bold plaids and solids in
hooded, scarfed, fit 'n' flare,
and princess styles. Redg. $80-$90.
(Alot Like You)
John a brown
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cycles, intercepting reflected ground and low-level survey, unaid-
from earth in a search for in- ed by satellite, would be prohibitive,
itlon about the geography and "We’ve never known exactly how
rces of Idaho, Oregon and many irrigated acres we have in the
state," he said. "But this system is
going to be very cost-efficient and is
giving us Information we never had
before."
Using satellite images taken in the
summer of 1975, Water Resources of-
ficials studied three test projects
along Southern Idaho’s Snake River.
The Snake, with its tributaries and
associated underground flows, is the
source of most of Idaho’s irrigation
water.
B .. . . Now. Packer said, the department
* Since the project began in 1975, the Jg proceM ot mapping most of
--....- U_,._ -------. ._ j liTlgated land gouth of the
Salmon River. That stream is a di-
viding line between northern Idaho,
where there is abundant rainfall,
and southern Idaho, where cultiva-
tion requires Irrigation.
Idaho's Department of Lands is
just beginning its forestry Inventory
project. The state has nearly 900,000
acres of commercial state-owned
timber and ranks in the top-three
states in U.S. National Forest
acreage, as well.
Ray Miller, department research
chief, said satellite imagery may of-
fer a way to differentiate between
stands of different kinds of trees.
He said the survey of the forests
'ashington.
The Landsat satellites — about
ght feet high and five feet across
■ are part of a regional project
med at starting a comprehensive
iventory of surface features and re-
sale*
An ft- v m.6 «
' Some of the questions asked by of-
ficials of the three states include:
jHow much timberland do we have
and what kinds of trees? How and
Inhere are our cities growing? What
^bout our available water?
Apace modules have been used to
Jnap ground features ranging from
Washington's heavily urbanized Se-
attle-Puget Sound area and the Boise
Area of Idaho, to the forests of west-
ern Oregon and the irrigated crop-
lands of Southern Idaho.
Officials of the Pacific Northwest
llegional Commission — a tristate,
federally funded organization spon-
soring the satellite project — say 35
•State agencies are working with the
Rational Aeronautics and Space Ad-
ministration and the U.S. Geological
Survey on the project.
Working at laboratories in San
Francisco and Sioux Falls, S.D., the
two federal agencies analyze data
gathered by the NASA satellites and wfn present problem’s that the study
U2 former spy planes, and help the on croplands did not.
three states develop computer Im-
ages of their surfaces.
a Then, it's the turn of state and lo-
Cal departments Interested in water,
farming, forests or urban planning
to use the Images.
Officials emphasize the Images
Are not photographs but visual
ynock-ups of reflected light waves
gathered on magnetic tape. They cult to differentiate between satellite
consist of checkerboards of small, Imagery of a stand of, say, 70 per
brightly colored squares each repre- cent Douglas fir and 30 per cent
Renting 1.1 acres. grand fir and another of 50 per cent
,* In Idaho, the Department of Water Douglas, 20 per cent grand and 30
Resources was the first agency to per cent lodgepole pine.
■use the computer maps, although the ~
Jiepartment of Lands is now begin-
ning its own project on state forest
Jand.
♦ Water Resources*has been map-
ping cropland for years, using pho-
tos from low-flying aircraft and field
.Agents on the ground. Until now,
Jhowever, there has never been a
"comprehensive survey of Idaho's ir-
rigated farmland.
I '
Lord Nelson
dand for sale
•
i CATANIA, Sicily (AP) — The dukedom of
53ronte, a vast estate on the slopes of Mt. Etna be-
stowed on Lord Nelson in 1799 for his victory over
-Napoleon's fleet, has been put up for sale.
• The package Includes 600 acres growing fruit
and olive trees, a 25-room 12th century castle,
-swimming pool and tennis courts. No price was
?given.
; A gift to Nelson from King Ferdinand IV of the
5\vo Sicilies, the dukedom is now owned by Alex- using bread and water,
onder Nelson Hood, 28-year-old Viscount Bridport, a church spokesman
a descendant of Nelson’s niece.
• The British naval hero, who died from a cannon
ihot In 1805 in the Battle of Trafalgar, received
Jhe dukedom in gratitude for his defeat of the
^French fleet in the Battle of the Nile in 1798.
Viscount Bridport, executive of a bank In Rome,
-commutes between his estate and his office in the
Italian capital. Sources in Bronte said he is not in
jiny economic difficulty but finds it Impossible to
.Ynanage the vast land holding.
J "The viscount wants to see if there are any in-
-teresting offers," said Frank King, an English-
man who administers the holdings.
• The announcement the estate was up for sale
-was published as a classified advertisement in
.several newspapers. It said the sale price was ne-
gotiable after interested parties inspected the
-property.
• Lord Nelson is believed to have never set foot
-on the property during the six years that re-
mained in his life.
. It passed by the marriage of Nelson's niece to
J the family of Viscount Bridport. Nelson had no le-
■ gitimate children.
i Bronte, a town of 20,000 inhabitants, lies at an
; elevation of 2,897 feet on the slope of volcanic
• Etna about 30 miles from Catania.
•
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i Court date slated
* Charles Wayne Rhinehart, 36, will appear in
^district court Jan. 13 to answer charges that he
; violated a 7-yeft* suspended sentence by stealing
? horses and hay, Undersheriff Gene Wells said to-
3 day.
e The undersheriff said Rhinehart has admitted
«stealing about 60 horses in Oklahoma County.
I That evidence will be used in the upcoming hear-
J Ing, Wells said.
•’ Rhinehart received the 7-year suspended sen-
tence after he had earlier been convicted of bur-
*glary charges.
J The undersheriff said Rhinehart is being inves-
tigated for horse thefts in Oklahoma, Cleveland,
•• Pottawatomie, Lincoln, Okfuskee and Atoka Coun-
«ties.
" He said officers believe the stolen horses were
*: sold to an Individual in Atoka County.
-• covering any of the stolen horses.
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Bennett, Charles L. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 87, No. 267, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 28, 1976, newspaper, December 28, 1976; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1797588/m1/7/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.