Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 244, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 30, 1967 Page: 4 of 68
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Reds’ Assault
Copper
By John T. Wheeler
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Rallies Held
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ALL SUBURBAN STORES OPEN LATE TONIGHT
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In Flaming
Car Crash
NEW MIRACLE PLASTIC
ENDS FALSE TEETH MISERY
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So far this year: 801
This date last year: 720
’67 deaths under 21: 220
SO GOOD THEY
OUGHTA' BE TWINS
plush
cuddle pet
with 3 pairs of Milling's Sheerlove
seamless nylons
285
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LABOR SECRETARY W. Willard Wirtz
says a report he would quit the cabinet
to protest Vietnam policy is "poisonous
poppycock."
BERT LAHR, Broadway comedian, was
reported recovering from pneumonia.
cers said.
Oklahoma's traffic fatality
toll stands at 801, two ahead
of the all-time record set for
I the 12 months of 1966.
DOWNTOWN
205 Pork Avenue
PENN SQUARE
Penn. & NW Hwy.
MIDWEST CITY
117 W. Atkinson Plato
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REDING
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National Affairs
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Yanks Shatter
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"workers will fight for and get a greater share of indus-
try profits.” About 8,400 persons — mostly workers and
some of their families — attended rallies Wednesday in
Butte, Mont.; El Paso, Texas; Tucson, Ariz.; Waterbury,
Conn. and Perth Amboy, N.J.
The strike which began July 15 has shut down 95 per-
cent of the nation's copper mine production, 80 percent of
its copper processing capacity and 35 percent of its cop-
per fabricating capacity. Negotiations in the dispute
which has idled some 50.000 members of 26 unions have
been at a virtual standstill since the walkout began.
Al Butte, an estimated 2,700 workers from Great
Falls, East Helena, Anaconda and Kellogg, Idaho, gath-
ered in the civic center to hear their leaders attack the
copper industry. Joseph Molony, international vice presi-
dent of the United Steelworkers of America, said copper
workers were determined to catch up with workers in
other industries and gain a bigger share of the profits.
The companies estimate they have offered the work-
ers an increase of 50.6 cents an hour over the old wage
scale over three years. The steelworkers are demanding
a 99 cent an hour hike. Each side disputes the other’s
. computations.
'Job Enrichment Advocated
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From: 595
FREE . ■ • be sure to osk for your free golden Uy tie tac with any
suit, sportcoat, oll-wecther coot or topcoat.
JACQUELINE BISSET, young English
actress, has been signed to replace Mia
Farrow as Frank Sinatra's co-star in
Save money on
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and powders.
tap.
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A sharp suit for the holidays and one with so
much fashion news, three famous makers in-
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Eagle Clothes, Botany 500 and Westberry
Clothes. Fashion colors in houndstooth checks,
plaids, checks and stripes in fabrics that can be
worn the year-around in Oklahoma.
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STATE TRAFFIC DEATHS
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DAMON interprets the world's greatest historic medals on ties and
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a 1
A Wellington, Texas, man
was killed late Wednesday
after his car left the high-
way, hit a bridge abutment
and burst into flames, the
highway patrol said Thurs-
day.
Billy Doyle Black, 36, died
at the scene of the accident
shortly before midnight on
US-62 west of Hollis in Har-
mon County.
Trooper Gerald Cartmell
said Black's west-bound car
was traveling at high speed,
ran oil the highway and
down a south shoulder for
approximately 150 feet be-
fore hitting the abutment.
Cartmell said the car's left
side was sheared off, trav-
eled another 68 feet across
By the Associated Press
Striking copper workers have met in a series of ral-
lies around the nation as their union leaders pledged that
R• "
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BU DOP, Vietnam (AP)
— Backed by big artillery
rockets and heavy mor-
tars, a large Communist
force attempted Wednes-
day night to overrun a bat-
talion from the U. S. 1st In-
fantry Division staked out
as bait. The Communist
assault died at a big con-
crete cross in a Roman
Catholic cemetery 50 yards
from the American lines.
Using tactics that have
cost them dearly this year
in fighting north of Saigon,
the Communists attempted
again to overwhelm well
dug-in American positions
but American infantry-
men, artillery and air pow-
er hurled them back and
inflicted heavy casualties.
Twenty enemy bodies
were found on the battle-
field, and one wounded
man was captured. But the
fleeing Reds carried away
many more dead.
Seven Americans were
killed and 13 were wound-
ed. One 122mm enemy
rocket scored a direct hit
on an American bunker,
killing the three men in-
side and burying them un-
der five feet of dirt.
A mortar crew fighting
valiantly in the open was
wiped out by a direct hit.
The attack came at 10
p.m. as many Americans
slept in the open while
their comrades kept
watch. The first salvo of
122mm rockets sent men
scrambling for their sand-
bagged bunkers.
Mortars and anti-tank
rockets began dropping in,
making bright orange-
yellow flashes in the night
and spewing thousands of
pieces of shrapnel.
"Doc! Doc! Hey, where’s
the medic?" a man called
as he dodged among the
bunkers.
Moments later machine
guns began spraying the
American positions.
A mortar round hit a
rubber gasoline storage
dump set up for helicop-
ters and a sheet of flame
shot several hundred feet
into the air. The fiery tails
of Communist rockets
arched through the night
sky.
Ground fire intensified
as the enemy massed for a
ground attack. Anti-tank
rockets were launched at
the forward American
bunkers but failed to knock
any out.
More firing touched off
another part of the gaso-
line dump. American artil-
lery fired pointblank into
the edge of a rubber plan-
tation 100 yards away
where the Communists
were massing.
Helicopter gunships with
machine guns and rockets
joined the fighting at 10:38
p.m., but the enemy mor-
tar and machine gun fire
continued without letup.
The U. S. artillery was
exploding so close to the
American positions that
bits of shrapnel fell within
the lines.
Men called to neighbor-
ing bunkers to check on
their buddies. Calls to the
northeast corner bunker
went unanswered. It was
the one wiped out by a
122mm rocket.
A necklace of flares
dropped by air force
planes allowed the infan-
trymen on both sides to
aim their weapons accu-
rately.
At the battalion aid sta-
tion, the battle to save
lives was under way.
TWIN PIZZAS
All cheese, sausage-cheese, pepperoni-cheese
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"The Detective.” Shooting of the film the roadway before coming
has been halted since November 22 rest on the north shoulder,
when Miss Farrow and Sinatra an- i The weather was foggy
nounced a trial separation. and the pavement wet, offi-
A- a
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NEW YORK (AF) — An employer who considers his
employes to be lazy, disloyal and unmotivated is proba-
bly right, said a high ranking American Telephone and
Telegraph Co. executive Thursday, but the fault probably
lies with the employer. More specifically the fault lies
with the growing tensions between man and machine, a
, characteristic of our age which has led to overmanage-
ment and employe-employer tensions, said Henry M.
Boettinger, company assistant controller.
The answer can be found in humanizing jobs and per-
mitting employes to develop to their full capacity, he
said. Boettinger described programs of “job enrichment”
developed by his company which he said resulted in in-
creased motivation on the part of employes and, as a
“by-product,” increased productivity.
Boettinger spoke at a meeting of the National Indus-
trial Conference Board.
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CHAIRMAN Wilbur D.
Mills of the house ways
and means committee
holding hearings on an ad-
ministration proposal to
boost taxes $7.4 billion
and cut spending $4 billion
said it is impossible for the
house to act on it now. (AP
Wire photo)
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,88 ,,
, Nov. 30, 1967 OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 244, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 30, 1967, newspaper, November 30, 1967; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1847428/m1/4/: accessed June 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.