Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 88, No. 174, Ed. 2 Monday, September 12, 1977 Page: 2 of 13
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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400 reporters tied
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
2
Monday. Sept. 12, 1977
pace one )
FROM
. Beating
i
1
' Bl
Wayne Edward Garrity, 29. Statesville, N.C., Is «*C****Jby “ J1”
Weather
■* ** _ 1
mm..
J
<
3
who doesn't cry easily
Man dies
yes!
I
I
Save on the price of your new car!
• All
■
1
I
I
i W
ITEll
<
r»4.m»
SIX
ST
IN ONE!
Save on the financing, too.
Call us. 232-5551
Ing into the demon-
lut before barricades ,
some
Moise cut planned
WASHINGTON (AP)
— The federal govern-
ment is moving ahead
to cut down on noise
caused by city buses.
agent as Garrity arrived In Charlotte for arraignment
ping charges. (AP)
• 24.36 t.o«wd CM Romm*
• S«lKWd Work! .............
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(Continued)
at Christ Community Hospital, au-
thorities said.
Police estimated the number of
demonstrators at 1,000.
Authorities tried to cut off vehicu-
lar traffic feedii
stration area, 6t
were completed.
Central National Bank
Downtown - 304 Farit Ayoomo Motor j**.-** *"d Cl,lien
Phone 232-5551 Member ED.i.c.
Attikatod with Friendly National Bai*
• gallery . . .
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20% OFF OF ANY ITEM IN
OUR GALLERIES • HUNDREDS
OF PRINTS & ORIGINAL
WORKS TO CHOOSE FROMI
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(Continued)
Anderson. 44. lifted off just after
sunset Friday from Marshfield,
Mass., a coastal community south of
Boston.
They hoped their three-day flight
would take them somewhere be-
tween Norway and Great Britain.
They originally had planned to land
somewhere in France.
Actor honeymooning
BEVERLY HILLS (AP) — Glenn
Ford and his new bride, Cynthia
Hayward, were on their way to a
honeymoon in Jamaica after a pri-
vate wedding at the 61-year-old ac-
tor’s home.
ited to any income bracket in
Oklahoma City," Ms. Miller said.
"The main thing we need now is
some way to deal with the situation
to get the couples to counseling so
. the courts won't have to be the in-
termediators in domestic disputes.
In a June study, the YWCA task
force recommended a local "hotline"
for counseling battered women be
established, discussion groups for
HOBBY
LOBBY £1
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Centers
1312 8.1. 44th
4223 N.W. 10th
BUYING IN VOLUME TO GIVE THE BEST VALUES!
BEJMAT*
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2S1.3H.Y
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KritttaYsm
ttaftM
HOW He SKEIN
Miss America
to speak out
ATLANTIC CITY.
N.J. (AP) — The new
Miss America de-
scribes herself as an
"ambitious, sincere
and unpretentious" girl .
who doesn't cry easily I
and won't be afraid to ,
speak her mind.
"When I have some-
thing to say. I'll speak
out," said Susan
Yvonne Perkins, 23, Co-
lumbus, Ohio. I
on federal kldnap-
\
(Continued)
pared for the National Bank Card
Convention in Atlanta, said he
doesn't know if .Lance actually has
done anything wrong, but some of
• picture frames . . .
HKCTWH MOULDED
POtYEURADUM y \ I
MINI \ .V.
FRAME 1
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police who soon cap-
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EXAMPLES INCLUDE
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18.24 He-.ipr.ru • REG 3 55
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and decorative merchandise at our 4223 N.W. 10 Location. Como by and »oo tno »o e -----
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to CIA, article says
but no outtakes. This went on for a I
number of years — into the early 1
Seventies." /
Salant said Sunday that he had not
read the article and had no comment
on it. A CBS spokeswoman said that
since Salant came to the network in
1961, it "has had absolutely nothing
to do with the CIA." She said that - ,
during the cold war of the 1950s, it ’
was "standard practice" for journal- *
jits to debrief the CIA and that "ev-
eryone did it."
The Times provided cover to about
10 CIA agents from 1950 to 1966 un-
der arrangements approved by the
late Times publisher Arthur Hays ,
Sulzberger, Rolling Stone said.
A Times spokesman said Sunday
night that the newspaper "has abso-
lutely no information to add to the
statements made by (Publisher) Ar--
thur Ochs Sulzberger in 1976. At that
time Mr. Sulzberger said: 'I never
heard of the Times being ap-
proached either in my capacity as
publisher or as the son of the late
Mr. (Arthur Hays) Sulzberger.' "
Rally
THESE VALUES IN EFFECT FROM NOW UNTIL
SEPTEMBER 24, 1977 ONLY AT THE . . .
HOBBY LOBBY CREATIVE CEHTERS
4223 N.W. 10th ST. *1312 S.E. 44th St.
HOURS: MON.-SAT. 9:00-S:30; OPEN THURS. EVE. TO 8:00
I
I
II
“YEAR END SELL-OUT!”
pelted with stones, according to po-
lice.
"Some blacks just got by my
blockade before I cut it (traffic)
quoted as saying that in off," said District Police Command-
----- - - -f er William Woods. "They were at-
tacked by white youths."
The school busing plan that went ’
into effect this year Involves trans-
fering children from crowded build-
ings to less crowded facilities.
Annette Adams. 19,
who spoke with report-
ers Sunday in the
driveway of her home
here, 180 miles from
Nashville, hours after
she'd been freed.
Miss Adams' father.
W. C. Adams, is presi-
dent of the Bank of —I11'
Maryville.
FBI agents said the
news media helped by
keeping silent about
last Thursday's kidnap-
ping. The kidnappers
threatened to kill their
hostage if the abduc-
hurt. I tion was publicized.
Police identified the
suspects as Shelby Ann
Baker, 28. and Wayne
Edward Garrity. 29,
both of Statesville, N.C.
Reporters heard
Garrity tell police that
Miss Baker also had
been kidnapped and
was not involved crimi-
nally.
After dropping Miss
Adams off, the suspects
abandoned their car.
tEMimOUSM
• 4AU0M4 446MUO*
. W OMIH • (UMn*
*24.95 x??
.19 F-
UUHAND MJBSERT
M4I M IuNr.
<34-1466
(Continued)
ers and thunderstorms were forecast
for Oklahoma City and the state to-
night and Tuesday.
The probability of rain is expected
to remain at 40 per cent tonight and
Tuesday morning, with precipitation
ending in Western portions of the
state Tuesday afternoon.
Lows tonight will range from 60 in
the Panhandle to 70 in the southeast,
with highs Tuesday in the mid-80s.
Balloonists
husbands-boyfriends and women and
a place to make victim* aware of
their rights.
According to the report, the state
welfare department handles about
300 battered woman across Oklaho-
ma each year. Many are given im-
mediate shelter because of marital
problems.
Between June 15 and July 15, the
YWCA center handled 11 such cases.
Twenty battered women sought help
during the same period from five
major local hospitals and 19 request-
edassistancefromjheLegalAidSo-
ciety of Oklahoma County Inc.
Lance
• Bulk SFyroloom Doll*
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• All M.ntatu'4 Furnrtx» ...... •;’2« J.,',,*
• D.wwy Chonxtart Sw'ng * * 9i V*WE
• Comp1*1* Mocto™ K,t» $7415 Volut .
• Point By Nirtibw K.n -------- ........
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• Fobulon • T'ornl* Mod.um For T-SNrtt
• 910 JutaFot Mooomt .................
. -------hov, th* Ims* 4ol»ction» o* mirrors
a station
sale
(Contlaued)
YWCA task force show in 1976, of
the 364 spouse-assault cases enter-
• ing Municipal Court, 49 per cent
were dismissed because the com-
plainant requested the matter be
dropped or failed to appear in court.
Of 66 total assault cases during
1976 Involving cohabitation where
the woman was the‘victim, 50 were
dismissed for similar reasons and
onlv 17 per cent of court hearings re-
sulted in conviction, records show.
Sgt. Ina Miller, police department
crime prevention specialist, said
rniin«»iing (or wives involved in
battering incidents "has been lack-
ing" in the past, but groups simi-
lar to the Rapp Crisis Center are
now being formed.
"The matter of wife beating is
something that we need to deal with,
because many of the incidents where
domestic fights are reported later
end up in serious injury or death,"
she said.
Oklahoma County records com-
piled by the YWCA team and police Ihe a|]eged activates "are deary not
groups during the past two months —.w. "
show 13 convictions recorded from
31 cases filed in state court in 1976
on assault and battery with a dead-
ly or dangerous weapon and point-
ing a firearm at another.
On misdemeanor assault and bat-
tery or aggravated assault and bat-
tery cases filed, 7 out of 10 hus-
bands brought into state court were
convicted.
Police department records show a
majority of domestic-fight cases in-
vestigated during July and August
n
/
MARYVILLE, Tenn.
(AP) — A banker's
daughter held for a
$150,000 ransom says
her kidnappers treated
her well during her 56
hours and 25 minutes in
narts of the comptrollers report, the captivity. They even
* .a a a __ _9 —— MOIR aa a. *8aaaa*
her free in a North Car-
olina motel parking lot.
Two suspects arrest-
ed and jailed in Char-
lotte, N.C., faced a
hearing today where of-
ficials will seek to re-
move them to Tennes-
see for trial.
"I was not
was well treated . . .
They never threatened
to hurt me at all," said
Coed says kidnappers
never threatened harm
TISHOMINGO — A
59-year-old Tishomingo
man jailed on a public i
drunk charge was
found hanging from the I
bars of his cell here [
Sunday in what police |
H'’T said was an apparent
suicide.
Authorities said,
Woodrow Burris was
found hanging from a
jail blanket shortly aft-
er two officers had j
tried to talk him out of
an acute depression.
Attempts to revive him
were unsuccessful.
in cell
lived in moderate-income neighbor-
hoods. ,
"This is not a problem that is lim- comrnute and to take part in politics,
any income bracket in r e p 0 r t came amid new
suggestions that Lance resign to
avoid embarrassment to Carter and
as the Senate committee prepared
for its second week of hearings into
the C3SC.
The comptroller of the currency's
report was shown to members and
staff employees of the Senate com-
mittee, which last week began hear-
ings to look into questionable prac-
tices allegedly used by Lance while
he headed the National Bank of
Georgia and the Calhoun (Ga.) First
National Bank. — -
Quoting sources said to have seen hours and 25 W>ni
parts of the comptrollers report, the captivity. They
Post said the controls the banks used gave her $25 as they set
to keep track of the airplanes used
b> LaB< e were so loose that even the
pilot was able to take personal trips
in the aircraft. *
The Post said Lance asserted in
the report that the trips he took in
the planes were business-related and
therefore properly charged to the
banks.
If the trips were not business-re-
lated, Lance could be in violation of
securities and tax laws.
Meanwhile, a Newsweek-Gallup
special telephone survey of 501 per-
sons last Thursday showed 54 per
cent think Carter has tried too hard
to protect Lance, a long-time person-
al friend.
Carter made his first campaign
trip as President over the weekend.
But his trip to New Jersey brought
more questions about Lance. Carter
said he did not know the full extent
of Lance's financial dealings before
he nominated him to be budget di-
' rector.
"The only thing I knew was that
he had a problem in the 1974 cam-
paign and it had been resolved," he
said. Lance was defeated in the
Democratic primary in his attempt
to win the Georgia governor's man-
sion that year. '
THS OAILV OKLAHOMAN
Pu6litH»6j»4rti rnomUta. Mond4»
ths suhoWoklaTomah
PvOlIrtM MCh Sun6HL"Wnln»
OKLAHOMA CITV TIMS*
Swung edition al Tbo Oollv Oi l-
homin Publlthod •*"' o'onlno.
ffiTl.’TSYB^LAHOM.N
AND TIMES
PufcilM SMlurdMY
500 North Broodwoy. Bo«
^rirt0^”7’oii<«.
” HOMS DELIVERY
Mom.Ej, S«, ..... •'»*§
...... ’2 Is
EvonifW 4 SufWRV....... < M
Knii bwF ---------- 4 rS
■WMIMPV ........... «« «
^L^BSCRlPT.OH.rTes’6
lOOiohonx. Tou*. K«noo»..
ArtinnSM. MlMOWl. N Mod i
eludod In mMcrlptty'*N»_______
jrtttm stafM and coun*ri*>
rofoTiiisW hiohor-oioaiT 'w-
Wifi
S®rvFC«, 72^7171 _
For
btJorMJ
taFo? T»? Sunday 0R^a»w«•,', coll__
'“*”* **'" and air links with the 1
typical of banks in this country."
"I see red whenever I hear any-
one dismiss the allegations about
overdrafts and improper disclosure
about loans as being 'just typical
business practices,"' Mulligan said.
While confirming the existence of
the comptroller's report, the Justice
Department spokesman refused to
discuss the contents.
But the Washington Post said in
today's editions that the report says
Lance, who heads the Office of Man-
----- _ agement and Budget, used two
involved couples in their 30s who p]anes owned by the Georgia banks
lived in moderate-income neighbor- he headed to take personal vaca-
tions. to fly his children to school, to
d NEW YORK (AP) — Former
r Washington Post reporter Carl Bern-
stein says in an article for Rolling
L Stone magazine that more than 400
H American journalists secretly car-
| ried oqt assignment* for the CIA
during the past 25 years.
The article, scheduled for publica-
tion Oct. 4, said American journal-
ists were used "to help recruit and
handle foreigners as agents, to ac-
quire and evaluate information and
to plant false information with offi-
cials of foreign governments."
Many of them reported to CIA of-
fices abroad and others provided in-
formation to the CIA upon returning
home from foreign assignments, the
magazine said. It said some Pulitz-
er Prize-winning journalists, colum-
nists and network correspondents
had CIA links.
The article said CIA records show
that high-level editors, publishers
and broadcast officials placed
agents with no journalistic training
on their staffs and directed mem-
bers of their staffs to supply infor-
mation to the agency.
News organizations contacted Sun-
day denied the allegations, as they
have denied similar allegations in
the past.
The article said CBS, the New
York Times and Time, Inc., were
"by far the most valuable" in pro-
viding information to the CIA.
CBS Chairman William Paley pro-
vided cover for CIA employes, the
magazine said, gave the agency ac-
cess to the CBS newsfilm library, were completed, some cars got ,.
provided unaired newsfilm to the through. Cars driven by blacks were
agency and allowed reports by CBS
correspondents to be monitored by
the CIA.
CBS News President Richard Sal-
ant was (w
February, 1961 he "got a phone call
from a CIA man who said he had a
working relationship with (former
CBS News President) Sig Mickelson
... I said no on talking to the report-
ers and let them see broadcast tapes
"Th* Promiftt of God ...
Havt All Been Fulfilled.”
-ErtauWi-
•te.ah.nitt
They found
wagon for sale and <
paid $1,900 from the
ransom money.
The seller became
suspicious and called
nnlino who soon cap- '
B*'
• craft materials . . •
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JUTI
WELT CO*D
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FMOUALHY
MIRRORS
nuiiWriRii
SS. '/■» 23
Strike moves
into 12th day
ROSEAU. Dominica
(AP) — This island
state on the Caribbe-
an's eastern rim contin- I
ued in virtual isolation
'tjToJiiT okiM>«n«^F*" today, the 12th day of a
",oSiSim"< c"v public employee* strike
' ,J" that has cut most sea
linlrc with thp I
outside world.
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Standard, Jim. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 88, No. 174, Ed. 2 Monday, September 12, 1977, newspaper, September 12, 1977; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1797957/m1/2/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 22, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.