Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 213, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 25, 1967 Page: 4 of 32
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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Entire stocks not included
By 4 Early-Balloting Locals
an
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i
Anniversary
A-.
AIL®
/
Our Famous Once-A-Year Event!
Men’s Suits
Reds Hold
Air Duels
7485
8485
U. S. Building
Korea Fence
4
6485 to 18485
I
Krg $42.^0
V.
- f
R
Stuart Keith Wool Slacks
)
1
P
her and hear a recorded
•Golden House Sport Coats
54s5
-Men S SportSWftf) 2nd I loor Dou ntou n; 1st Floor Penn Square
told
will introduce a bill to create conference October 3 “there
their
of training
j learn." Olds said.
Permanent Press Dress Shirts
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/
ICO
r
3
2
3"
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1
Ho Cancellation Fee or Pre-Payment Charges
499
4
——d
ILY
By the Associated Press
" e
„ednesday from the mid-
O-
I
Whirlpool
Men’s Shoes
Famous Name Hats
Model SPP-75
bama state police esti-
lo, high winds
by winds
-
ich raked parts hour.
A
)
he
$
Doncaster
Reg $90.00
Golden House
Reg. $110.00
National Park
Bill Is Planned
Other famous name suits
Rtf. $80.00 to $215.00
At CORNISH
FURNITURE
an
or
notable increase in
aggressiveness and
TOP LOADING
PORTABLE
DISHWASHER
a ti
ain
(left) Permanent press 65% dacron polyester
and 35% cotton oxford cloth. White, blue or
pewter. Reg. $7.00
tures dropped into the 40s in
outh central Texas and the
horthern portions of Missis-
bippi and Alabama.
. The mercury dropped into
namese air force in dogfight
kills from the beginning of
the air war.
American fliers returning
from the war zone have been
telling newsmen of the grow-
ing professionalism of the
North Vietnamese air force.
Air force Col. Robin Olds,
Get Complete
Information
Reg. $18.00
1185
year of his tour.
“Either they've done
and 35% cotton broadcloth. White, blue, maize
or mint green. Reg. $6.00
"" """ F
Reg.
$70.00
3
A
Nettleton & Allen Edmond
Reg. $33.00 to $38.00
. Famous Name
Sport Shirts
Permanent press shirts of dacron
polyester and cotton. Many pat-
terns and solid colors.
24”
Zip-Out Lined
All Weather Coats
599
*
#
• 2 full size
revolving
spray arms
• Exclusive
Filter-Stream
washing and
rinsing
• 16 NEMA
table settings
Reg. $20.00
13”
j Our World Today
29”
Alen's Hats. 2nd Floor Dou'ntou n;
1st Floor Penn Square
4
♦
-
Alen's Shoes. 2nd Floor Dou ntoun;
1st Floor Penn Square
Edge
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newspaper story told how order American Air Force,
readers could dial a num- Navy and Marine jets to at-
/
5 f
SOI N Robinson CEntrol 1SW. Oklahoma City
Home Office Ciry Ohio
of the three northwestern Al-
abama counties of Lawrence,
Lauderdale and Colbert dur-
ing the night. Seven homesj
1
r . 1
(
plant, voted to ratify by a 6-1 margin. Skilled tradesmen
approved 364 to 202 and production workers from local
182 voted 1.500 to 100 for ratification, said President
Charles Gillette.
Skilled tradesmen from Highland Park s Local 400
approved 78 to 24, and Local 1273 in Birmingham 10-0.
Other production workers in separate tallies, voted
402 to 26 in favor at Highland Park and Birmingham.
The returns came after back-to-back television ap-
pearances Tuesday by UAW President Walter P. Reuther
who appealed for approval.
If the contract is approved, workers in 25 Ford
plants across the country would resume work schedules
Thursday and Friday.
tack the important Phuc Yen
airfield 18 miles northwest of
Hanoi.
people neglected to first j
dial the area code, they
rang Mrs. Bocelli's num-
ber which just happened to
match the president's. (AP
Wirephoto)
ALONG THE WESTERN FRONT, Korea (AP) — U-
Make Your Home A "PLEASURE ISLAND"
‘ PRICED
TOO HOT
TO PRINT!!
Come see for Yoursefl!
k
_
1
L
/Rain Widespread
iln Intense Storm
their capability” over the
t
l
I
KINGING in her ears was
all too real at 6 a.in. for
Mrs. Joseph Borelli, San
Francisco, who re-enacts
; her weekend by placing
j pillows over her ears. A
vest to the Appalachians as
r
/
DETROIT (AP) — Skilled tradesmen and production
-workers in four locals of the United Auto Workers union
have approved the new' contract with Ford Motor Co. by
comfortable margins.
Production workers voted heavily for the pact Tues-
day while skilled tradesmen approved it by a better than
two-to-one margin.
The remainder of the UAW's 160.000 Ford members
in 101 bargaining units vote Wednesday.
Production workers at Ford Local 600 in Detroit were
Reported to have given from 88 to 90 percent approval to
the new three-year pact, while skilled tradesmen ap-
proved by a 3-1 vote, said local President Frank Dom-
brosis.
Ford workers at local 182, Livonia transmission
tound 60 miles an
he teens in parts of North
Dakota. Snow flurries occur-
rred n the northern Great
j Lakes.
: loudy skies kept mini-
um temperatures in the 30s
ard 40s over much of the
reat Plains and Mississippi
>aey.
' Tornadoes touched down in
beven states Tuesday and
ITeesday night, and there
were scattered reports of
Minnesota when there is sub-
stantial support for it among
local groups.
Such backing for the pro-
posed Voyageurs Park of
168,000 acres, Blatnik said, is
likely by early next year.
Over-all, the U. S. fliers
still claim an 86-26 advan-
tage over the North Viet-
%y I-
>3X5
.cXa
awful lot
they've run
J An intense storm centered
pver the northern Great
Lakes region spread rain
0:to SAVINGS & LOAN
V 0 We « Never Missed A Dividend 6
7 a,, eo .
-3,8
a ,1922
" 2-
message from President
Johnson but since many
WASHINGTON (AP)
Rep. John A. Blatnik (D- the leading MIG killer of the
Minn.) said Wednesday he Vietnam war. told a news
. egae
203,3-
persons were injured, one
critically, and damage was
estimated at several hundred
thousand dollars.
Other twisters were report-
ed in Illinois, Indiana,
Tennessee, Mississippi and
Ohio.
Heavy rains soaked many
sections of the storm belt,
with Muscle Shoals, Ala.,
measuring nearly 2 inches
and more than an inch re-;
ported at Lexington and Lon- j
doh, Kr
Wind gusts up to 72 miles
an hour buffeted Pellston, in
» 3 Wed., October 25. 1967 OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
Dacron polyester and cotton shell with orlon
acrylic pile lining. Solid colors or muted
plaids. Regular, short or long.
Men's Clothing. 1st Floor Dou ntou n & Penn Square
were demolished in the
« .. small community of Town
much cooler air knifed into* , ...
1 i . Creek and three persons
ihe southern and eastern; ua
J . ... . ! were injured,
parts of the nation. j
* ; Worst of the tornado activ-
ity Tuesday was centered in
the St. Louis area. Sixteen
g tteduduLb
th
: year-old German student who tried to save $35 by stow-
l ing away on a London-to-Frankfort jet hop, will have to
: phy $360 for getting on a plane headed for Kennedy Air-
2 port.
‘ •*- Heimo’s problems started when he found himself in
2 London Tuesday without any money to get home. Being
2 resourceful, he stowed away on a jet he thought was
2 headed for Frankfort. But the short hop from London to
• Frankfort turned into a seven-hour, 3,600-mile nightmare
2 in the subfreezing temperatures of the baggage compart-
2 ment of a cargo plane. “It was an awfully long 30 min-
l utes," he said later.
2 . Things won’t get very much better. Seaboard World
• Airlines is rharging Heimo $360 for his flight. And feder-
* al law forced him to he transported back to where he
1 started — London.
Now!
WASHINGTON (AP) L_
S forces guarding an 181 --mile section of Korea's demili-
tarized zone are building a chain link fence across the
front to cut down on North Korean sneak attacks that
; have killed at least 20 Americans and wounded 60 others
•in the last 12 months. South Korean Army authorities
: said construction of a similar barrier is expected to be
• completed before next spring in the part of the 151-mile
: border the Koreans guard.
The barrier going up in the U. S. patrol area is top-
sped with barbed wire and appears similar in some re-
Aspects to the one Secretary of Defense Robert S. Mc-
: Namara ordered built just below the demilitarized zone
’ in South Vietnam to slow North Vietnamese infiltration.
Both fences are basically an early warning system,
c The Korean fence, although reinforced by watch towers
2with electronic equipment, does not have the electronic
• and anti-personnel devices planned for the Vietnamese
2 barrier.
{Stowaway Goes Astray
a national park in northern was a
100% wool twist weaves or flannels.
Plain or pleated front styles. Regular,
long or short.
(Right) Permanent press 80′0 dacron poly-
ester and 20%0 cotton broadcloth. White with
blue; maize/green stripes or white solid. Reg.
$9.00
northern lower Michigan,
while Indianapolis and
Ad damage at $300,000 Huntsville, Ala., were swept I
SAIGON (AP) — The down draft from the rotor
3 Hades of a heavily loaded U. S. Army helicopter col-
* lapsed a rural building Tuesday on a group of Viet-
2 namese children, killing two of them and injuring nine, a
; U. S. military spokesman reported.
He said the helicopter was loaded with 8,000 pounds
of rice being delivered to Vietnamese villagers. It was
2 hovering 20 feet above the ground when the draft gener-
jated by its rotor collapsed the structure on the children.
• He said the incident occurred in the village of Vo Dat
2 east of Saigon near the coast of South China Sea.
in a new ball
WE HAVE THE MONEY FOR YOUR NEW HOME!
w CORNISH =
WEEK-DAY
®
BHERt
*: i
• ■ f 34 a. •.
* 34
1/--
Reg $19.00 1/85
& $21.00 I
STOKELY CARMICHAEL told a Cairo
newspaper he plans to return to the
United States soon to organize a mass
boycott of the 1968 presidential elec-
1 ions.
J Early morning tempera-!
#a NS
Improved training and com-
bat experience are credited
with enabling North Viet-
namese fighter pilots to duel
American jet pilots on better
than even terms in recent
dogfights.
The Pentagon disclosed
Tuesday that North Viet-
namese MIGs o u t k 1 1 1 e d
American jets six planes to
two during a period running
from late August to mid-
October.
This reversed the better
than three-to-one ratio in ae-
rial kills scored by U. S. pi-
lots over North Vietnamese
fliers throughout much of the
air war which began in Feb-
ruary'1965. *
This turnabout, plus a sig-
nificant rise in the aggres-
siven e s s of North Viet-
namese air force combat
'sorties, led U. S. officials to
New Ford Contract Approved
Reg. 299
$0.00 J
Alen’s Furnishings 1st Floor Dou ntou n, 1 ptoun & Penn Square
NEW YORK (AP) — Heimo Schoenberg, a 23-
1622u SOVIET TEST PIIOT Nloxander Fodolov
1 world record by flying his super-
WM II sonic fighter to an altitude of 98.458 feet
carmichael with a iwo-ton load. Pravda reported.
I Copter Mishap Kills T
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 213, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 25, 1967, newspaper, October 25, 1967; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1847283/m1/4/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.