Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 141, Ed. 2 Thursday, August 4, 1977 Page: 2 of 14
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OKLAHOMA CHY TIMES
Thursday, August 4, 1977
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south Texas gave him
President the victory in a 1948
Senate primary race,
according to private
papers released by the
LBJ Library. ___
“golden" opportunity
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BERKELEY HEIGHTS, N.J. (AP)
— Oxygen and nitrous oxide gas
lines were crossed in a new ward of
a New Jersey hospital but the prob-
lem was corrected before the facility
opened, says a medical systems ana-
lyst.
A similar mixup in the emergency
room of Suburban General Hospital
in Norristown, Pa., in which the
lines for oxygen and "laughing gas"
were mislabeled, is suspected in the
deaths of some patients. _____
Grain growers
protest prices
PAMPA, Tex. (AP) — Dozens of
boxes of wheat—addressed to Pres-
ident Carter — will be shipped to the
White House Monday, say more than
100 Panhandle farmers angry over
current grain prices.
The farmers, along with their
wives and children, gathered
Wednesday to stockpile the boxes of
wheat and threatened a farm strike
to protest low prices "as soon as
three months from now."__________
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Saxbes plan garage sale
Former attorney General William Saxbe and his
wife are planning a garage sale of memorabilia col-
lected in a lifetime of world travel. The former U.S.
Bureau of Investigation, whose
agents were brought into the case at
the request of Sheriff Delbert Ham-
by',
Officials said the dead youth ap-
peared to have been shot twice in
the right temple.
Wesley Duffield was jailed on sus-
picion of murder and his brother
taken into custody as a material wit-
Men’s Fashions
pre-Washed Jeans
$16.
. 3pr. *45.
3 different denim with a superb fit?
Several super styles. 28-40 waist.
Birdshot kills ~
Soweto youth •
JOHANNESBURG
(AP) — Police fired
birdshot into a mob of
stone-throwing student
demonstrators in 1 the
black township of Sow-
eto on Wednesday, kill-
ing a 16-yearold and
wounding several other
youths, police reported.
fay
Energy
(Continued)
a small brown table in front of him.
Arrayed behind the President
were House and Senate leaders, in-
cluding Sen. Abraham A. Rlbicoff,
D-Conn.r«md Rep. Jack Brooks, Il-
Tex., who head committees impor-
tant in passing the legislation.
Carter took the opportunity to plug
the energy policy his new depart-
ment will administer. "We've got a
long way to go," he said, in shep-
herding the policy through Congress.
He thanked members for their ef-
forts so far.
When the Department of Energy
begins operating this fall, Carter
said, "we will have an energy policy
to make our nation proud."
He ribbed Schlesinger before final-
ly putting his name to the adviser's
nomination. The President, who has
said ail along that he would appoint
Schlesinger, joked that he had decid-
ed to establish a committee to find a
nominee.
"At his request," Carter said, nod-
ding toward Schlesinger, "the mem-
bership of the committee will be lim-
ited to one person." Then the Presi-
dent praised Schlesinger as "a nat-
ural leader" and declared:
"Without waiting for his recom-
mendation, I would like to ask him if
he would serve as the secretary of
the Department of Energy and sign
his nomination."
senator and ambassador says they have thousands of
Items and souvenirs which they no longer have room
to store. (AP) •
Men's and Boy's
Sport Calendar
k Watch
• 1 YR. FACTORY WARRANTY
F]| • LUMINOUS HANDS
J/ • SWEEP SECOND HAND
• SHOCK RESISTANT
J • SILVER TONE CASE
r WITH BLACK —
| DIAL AND $ / 88
STRAP 1
t)0
■ LAS VEOAS •
* 30 HOUR MINI-JUNKET *
* AUG. 19 A 20
« JEW'S
« CASINO TOURS .
* 1-405-794-69*2 •
Open Evening*'
Sunday' 1 pm to 6 pm
Body
(Continued)
ness. Formal charges were expected
to be prepared today by the district
attorney's office.
Goss said additional material wit-
ness warrants in the case would like-
ly also be issued. •
Authorities have declined to specu-
late on a possible motive for the '
slaying. ____________________ *
Men's Knit
shirts
Reg. 6"
shortages has brought about unpre-
cedented quick action by Congress,"
said the President. He noted that it
took lawmakers only five months to
approve the department.
Carter said it will help him alle-
viate the impact "of inevitable short-
ages of oil and gas and other energy
supplies." He praised members of
Congress for "extraordinary good
work in bringing this legislation to
completion."
The President said his new depart-
ment will help increase energy pro-
duction and make sure energy prices
are fair to consumers.
"I'm very proud of this accom-
plishment by the Congress," Carter
declared.
With a black pen he took from an
inside pocket of his gray suit coat,
Carter put his name on the inch-
thick Department of Energy bill, on
• 4J01 SOUTH LJI
• 4201 N.W. IXRRIIIWAY
...... ’•J""’*
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I Men's light- /
jacket (l
of 100% nylon
hrWeta. Flannel
lined, elastic cuff,. .
Drawstring S'/
bottom. Many '4*.
colors. / /4
policemen stand in __ _
along the surf in the —■—
hazy, humid heat. Oc- J
caslonally, a mounted
officer gallops across "
the sand. Other officers
sit on motorcycles in a
ipting to evict parking lot.
..... The state has spent
about $85,000 in police
overtime during the
past two weeks to pro-
tect about 100 blacks
who swim at Carson
Beach,
nated stretch of sand __
three-quarters of a
mile long, says a
spokesman.
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THS DAILY OKLAHOMAN
TH£ SUNOA^1 OKLAHOMAN
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OkUtaman. call
LBfs papers deny stuffing
AUSTIN, Tex. (AP)
— Former
Lyndon B. Johnson de-
nied any knowledge of
allegations that a
stuffed ballot box in
- Tony
(Continued)
were golden for Orlando.
Then, in early 1976. Orlando's sis-
ter, Rhonda Marie, died. She had
been mentally retarded and stricken
with cerebral palsy, and Orlando
had cared for her since she was a
year old. n
His TV show was canceled in De-
cember. A month later, his personal
World was shattered by the suicide
of comedian Freddie Prinze, who,
like Orlando, had known the opposite
worlds of New York's Hell's Kitchen
and glamorous Hollywood.
"When Freddie died, he was
there," said Prinze's mother, Maria
Pruetzel. "He was there all 33 hours.
He was there at his bedside, he was
there at the funeral. He was really a
gorgeous, gorgeous, human being.
Prinze's death apparently haunted
Orlando, .
"The time I spent with him after-
wards, there was a lot of rambling,
a lot of things said," Lieberman
said. "What happened, why It hap-
pened ...
"When he will perform again, if ne
will perform again, I doiH-J-^ -
know." Lieberman said, "It's a very
difficult thing."
CIA
(Continued)
Turner would not become an "intelli-
gence czar" as other agencies had
feared because they could appeal
any policy decisions to an interagen-
cy Cabinet-level committee of the
National Security Council.
Secretary of Defense Harold
Brown had opposed Turner's efforts
to get full control over the NSA and
NRO budgets, which had been under
his office and account for nearly
three-fourths of the nation's estimat-
ed $5 billion intelligence spending.
Under the new program, the
Times said, Turner would control
the intelligence community's budget,
but Brown would retain operational
control of NSA and NRO as well as
the Defense Intelligence Agency.
Carter's plan was to be revealed
this afternoon at the White House.
Our finest
classic styles
-J with the
lookthat
quality it
. a moderate
price-
Browns or
blacks, blue
and natural
Governors
(Continued)
represent our most distinguished
artists and our finest talent."
Following the conference, the ex-
hibit will hang during September in
the governor's office where it can be
viewed by the public.
Art will also be used as a gift for
the visitors. Gov. Boren will present
each governor a framed print by two
Indian artists — either the late Jer-
ome Tiger or Enoch Kelly Haney,
Shawnee.
The conference festivities open
Sunday night with a barbecue fea-
turing country and western music, a
fiddling exhibition, a visit .by Indian
leaders from eastern Okahoma who
will bring along tribal dancers as
well as a square dance exhibition
from Tulsa clubs.
Governors will be entertained with
a luau Tuesday night and'a dinner
and ball will be Wednesday night.
Entertaining at the dinner will be
Ron Radford, guitarist, singers Dr.
Thomas Carey and Carol Brice Car-
ey and entertainment by Jane Jay-
roe Peterson, Miss America of 1967.
Governors attending willzbe Otis
R. Bowen, Indiana; Robert Ray,
Iowa; Robert F. Bennett. Kansas;
Julian Carrol,"Kentucky; William G.
Milliken, Michigan; Joseph Teas-
dale, Missouri; James Exon. Ne-
braska; Arthur A. Und. North Dako-
ta; James A. Rhodes, Ohio; Richard
K. Kneip, South Dakota; Martin J.
Schreiber, Wisconsin; James
Thompson, Illinois, and Gov. Boren.
Riot grenade blamed
in protestor’s death
BOURGOIN JALLIEU, France
(AP) — Authorities say lung dam-
age apparently caused by the explo-
sion of a riot police grenade was re-
sponsible for the death of a French
protestor at a bloody anti-nuclear
demonstration last Sunday^__
Men's
by Lacy®
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as police began coming iruin
building, carrying the 65 passive ten-
ants and leaving them in the street.
There were no arrests and no inju-
ries were reported.
"You have five minutes to va-
cate," a policeman announced over
a bullhorn. The demonstrators
chanted "no evictions; we won't
move."
Nearly 2,000 foes of the eviction BOSTON (AP) —
began grouping at the low-rent, resi- Each day, at least 100
dential hotel late Wednesday night.
Police, carrying billy clubs and
wearing riot gear, began marching
in small groups toward the hotel
about 3 a.m. today. The blocked-off
area rocked with the chant "we
won't move" after caravans of police
cars were seen driving into a nearby
underground garage.
Owners of the hotel,
Corp., have beenattdf .
the tenants and tear down the hotel
to make way for new construction.
A lengthy legal battle to halt the
eviction ended last week when the
state Supreme Court turned down
petitions seeking to block the evic-
tions.
Hospital gas
lines crossed
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Protest
(Continued)
police began coming from the
ants and leaving them in the street.
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Standard, Jim. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 141, Ed. 2 Thursday, August 4, 1977, newspaper, August 4, 1977; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1797903/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.