Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 91, No. 179, Ed. 2 Tuesday, September 16, 1980 Page: 3 of 11
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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OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
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Nigh’s own oil tax suit tagged"political’
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Fire Department spokesman Phil
Cooksey Mid it is believed the fires
were set intentionally. No damage
estimate was available early today.
*
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bery, stockyards night supervisor.
Calbery said the first fire was dis-
covered about 11:45 p.m. and the
second at about 12:30 a.m. He said a
night watchman who found the fire
saw two youths running from the
scene.
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cation, but they said their chances
were not good.
"The law says that if you have ful-
filled the requirements of the zoning
and your building specifications are
all right, the building permit must
be issued," said Cornett.
McCoy pointed out another line of
attack when he talked about a re-
cent drainage ordinance change.
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pavement isn't going to help the
flooding at all.”
Opponents also said the 76 addi-
tional housing units would overload ’
the sewer system. Norman attorney
Patrick Powers said a study for the
project indicated the area's schools
and sewers were adequate to handle
the additional units.
]
t
from the parking lot of the Heisman
Four theater here in the early morn-
ing hours of Sept 7. Police investi-
gated the theater after receiving a
call from Cates’ wife, who was con-
cerned because he hadn't returned
home
On the parking lot behind the the-
ater, police found Cates' locked van,
with his briefcase and key ring ly-
ing nearby on the pavement. The
night's receipts were safe inside the
theater, but there was no sign of
Cates
Police used a helicopter, air-
planes and several ground patrol
units as they concentrated their
search in the area of Lake Thunder-
bird. Later in the week, about 20
civil defense volunteers and several
deputy sheriffs Joined the search.
OKLAHOMA CITY
TMERATUNG
$166
M u3
mi am
By Terry Neugebauer
Elysian may mean happy, but the
birth of Elysian Estates is turning
out to be far from blissful.
Almost 1,000 angry residents
gathered at Hilldale Elementary
School Monday night to sign peti-
tions and listen to their city and
state representatives protest the
construction of the federally subsi-
dized middle income housing proj-
ect in the 4600 block NW 16.
The planned project will provide
living space for 76 families with in-
comes between $7,000 and 114,000.
The U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development will give resi-
dents rent subsidies up to 75 per-
cent.
Though the project is being fi-
nanced privately, the Government
National Mortgage Association is
backing the loans. All the project
lacks is final word on financing and
a building permit, project oppo-
nents say.
Some residents made their point
outside the stuffy, overcrowded au-
ditorium at 4801 NW II, carrying
signs protesting the project and
Tulsa and an Oklahoma City paper
in January.”
State Rep. Bill Graves, D-Oklaho-
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picc-
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savings on specialty-priced
items throughout THE STORE'
But you'd better hurry .. SALE ENOS SATURDAY AT 5:00 P.M."
Zones 2 and 17 — Thirty per-
cent chance of thunderstorms.
Low tonight near 60. High
Thursday low 80s
MIDWEST CHY
SE 16 and Midwest Blvd
732-0321
OPEN DAILY 7:30-6, SAT 7:30-6
Charles Richards, Mgr.
f
Albany
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Helena
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Memptla
ration alwu
State attorney general's staff members say they
privately believe political purposes were the rea-
son Gov. George Nigh launched his own effort to
intervene in a federal lawsuit attacking the wind-
fall profits tax.
Several of Attorney General Jan Eric Cart-
weight's assistants noted that Nigh's brief to the
court arguing for his intervention specifically
asks that be be the sole representative of the
state, even though the attorney general also has
sought intervention.
“He wants to be able to stand up and tell folks
that he fought the windfall profits tax when he
runs for re-election,” said one Cartwright aide
who asked not to be identified.
Sam Hammons, former Nigh aide and now head
of the state Department of Energy, is acting as
. one attorney for Nigh, and the other is Oklahoma
City attorney J.D. Helms, a longtime friend of
Nigh who also served as Nigh's volunteer fund-
raising chairman in the 1978 governor's race.
But the governor's office said Helms is not re-
ceiving pay for his work.
Cartwright was with bis hospitalized mother
and could not be reached for comment.
Nigh and his press secretary, John Reid, were in
Two councilmen promise fight at today’s meeting
"To get a building permit in a drain-
age basin where it floods, you must
include drainage work," he said.
McCoy claims the five-acre tract
the proposed complex will sit on
drains onto the 4400 block of Liber-
ty, NW 13th and NW 12. “It floods
there now. I'm not talking about wet
garages either. I'm talking about
four feet of water going through a
DOWNTOWN
3rd & N. Walker
232-6185
OPEN DAILY 7-6:30, BAT. 7 AM-5 PM
Jim Breshears, Mgr.
Overnight lows ranged from 33 degrees at Sheri-
dan, Wyo. to 91 at Blythe, Calif. Most of the nation
will have sunshine today, although thunderstorms
are expected in the Great Lakes region and along
the Gulf Coast states.
Temperatures are expected to be in the 60s and
Coast will have temperatures in the 70s and 80s.
Others, including George Carlin,
Jack Klugman, Penny Marshall and
Cindy Williams, were to usher
guests in the 17,000-seat outdoor
theater.
The unions hoped to raise
1150,000 from the event. The pro-
ceeds will go to the emergency fund
of the striking Screen Actors Guild,
which had a balance of about
128,000 when the strike began.
4 Palestinians jailed
TEL AVIV (AP) - Israel said to-
day it has arrested four Palestini-
ans suspected of killing six Jewish
settlers in an ambush in the ccupied
West Bank city of Hebron last May.
shouting to passengers of passing
cars to come inside and sign the pe-
tition.
“I've been married 14 years," said
one angry woman. “This is the first
home we’ve been able to buy. We're
not going to let a project ruin the
value of it.”
Other sign-toting protesters
claimed a high percentage of re-
tired people live in the area and
couldn't move out of the neighbor-
hood if they wanted to.
Inside the school, Oklahoma City
Councilman Jackrea and
couldn't move out of the neighbor-
hood if they wanted to.
Inside the school, Oklahoma City
Councilman Jack Cornett, Ward 3,
organized opposition to the pro-
posed apartment complex. He told
the crowd planning for the complex
was begun in August 1979, and has
been carried out "in a very low
key."
"Their idea of public notice is dif-
ferent than the Oklahoma City
S. WESTERN
5817 8. Western
631-3731
OPEN DAILY 7:30-6, SAT 7:30-5
Dan Jaronek, My.______
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Minn amp oMb
New Orleans
New York
Omaha
Phoenix
Pitsburgh
PortlandM
Portiand O.
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Ban Frencisco
Seattie
St Lome
womea.to
wiohita
wiha Falla
1,000 angrily protest housing project for 76 families
house," he said. "Five more acres of
ma City, and Ward I Councilman
Bob McCoy joined Cornett in pro-
testing the project.
Cornett and McCoy said they plan
to try blocking the project at to-
day's city council meeting by fight-
ing to kill the building permit appli-
Preco.
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NORTH PEHN
5521 N. Pennsylvania
848-2655
OPEN DAILY 7:30-6, 8AT. 7:30-5
Delbert Poole, My
$549
• Toe switch • A metal iMaaw
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*249
Menday’s high: 186 st Glla Bend, Arts.
. Overnigat low 28 at Lewiatowa, Ment.
Overnight temperatures dipped to the 30* over
the northern Rockies and northern plains. Home
snow feU at higher elevations. Cooler air spread
•ver most of the upper Mississippi valley region
and northern half ot the Groat Plains.
KEYS
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BELFAST (AP) —
Belfast's Victorian
Grand Opera House,
closed eight years ago
after it was damaged
by guerrilla bombs, has
reopened amid signs
that some kind of nor-
mality is returning to
this violence-scarred
city.
“This is an act of
• Adpusts YOUR
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100 78
Zones t, 4, 8, 12 and 11 -
Chance of showers and cooler.
Low tonight upper 60s. High
Wednesday upper 80s Proba-
bility of rain 20 percent
SOUNDESIGN AM/FM Rado $1 7490
5" DiagonaiBaWTV meerm A f *T
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Norman man calls
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and says he’s safe
ByJane Aldridge
Council’s idea,” he said. “We give
notice to all residents within 300
feet. They published a notice in a
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Striking stars to perform !
to help needy colleagues
Zenes 1, 1, 4, 16, 11, 14, 16
sad 14 — Partly cloudy, cooler
Wednesday with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Low tonight
mid-60s. High Wednesday mid
80s.
Zones 18,18 and 28 — Partly
cloudy and cooler. Southerly
winds 5 to 15 mph. High
Wednesday mid-80s Low to-
night low 60s. Probability of
rain 30 percent.
Zene 21 — Partly cloudy and
mild, northerly 5 to 15 mph.
Low tonight upper 50s. High
Wednesday mid-80s. Probabili-
ty of rain 30 percent.
NORMAN — Bruce Carter Cates,
a Norman theater manager whose
mysterious disappearance more
than a week ago sparked a massive
search effort, is safe in another
state, his relatives have reported to
police.
Cates' family will meet with him
today to determine his reasons for
leaving, said Capt. Dave Boyett,
who coordinated an intense, week-
long search for the missing man.
Cates called his family at about
1:30 p.m. Monday to say he left on
his own and was safe, Boyett said
Monday. What state the call came
from was not immediately known to-
day.
The man was believed to be a vic-
tim of foul play after he vanished
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caused by arson destroyed a hay
barn and damaged a feed barn nt
the Oklahoma National Stockyards
early today, officials said.
Na injurles were reported in the
blaze. A fire in June destroyed the
historical Stockyards Exchange
Building. with damage estimated at
11.5 million.
•We had a bay barn destroyed and
about 30 minutes after that we had
Zopes 7 and 8 — Partly
cloudy and cooler Wednesday
with a M percent chance of
thunderstorms. Northerly
winds 10 to 15 mph. Lew to-
night upper 60s. High Wednes-
day near 90.
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Two separate tiros believed a fir* st a feed barn,” said Bob Cal- ne vEAD coDihic Lt A 1 — I
faith,” declared Dr.
Kenneth Jamieson, di-
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Http calebrate opening the mmmkkEakhu Er"
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HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Downs of
stars who have been striking film
and television studios for more than
eight weeks were heading to work
tonight as ushers, emcees and enter-
tainers at a benefit for the neediest
at their union colleagues.
The gala Hollywood Bowl event,
entitled “An Evening of Stars," was
being held in the first week of a new
television season in which few new
shows have been broadcast. The
strike by 47,000 actors has crippled
. production.
Among those scheduled to appear
were singers Waylon Jennings and
v. Melisaa Manchester and actors
Alan Alda. Lily Tomlin, Ed Asner,
Larry Hagman and Robin wiams.
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\ ______“As-
Williamsburg, Va., attending the Southern Gover- Nigh's brief asked that he be named the sole
nors Association meeting and also could not be representative of the state and that the counse
reached. designated by him be considered the only legal
counsel for the state in this matter.
David Hudson, Nigh's staff legal adviser, said
the governor filed the separate action because the The governor has sought intervention on
governor's office and the attorney general's office grounds that the state can sue on behalf olits ci -
could not agree on legal arguments to present to zens and that the tax is unconstitutional because
the courts. it is nothing more than an excise tax.
Highest temperatur a year ng
yestrdavy. 78 __
Hghe temperature on record
in #0 years, 106 * 1965
Lowato temperature tool M«M.
78
Lowest temperature • yaw ngo
toot night, 52
Lowest temperature on record
in 40 years, 46 in 1916
pnecITTATOM
Total 24 hours ending H 7 «m
today. 0.00 in
lotto Jan 1 through 7 a.m to-
day. 20 43 in
Kormal Jan 1 through this del*.
24 47 in
BUMRIM AND suneer DATA
Rises tomorrow at 7 14 a.m
Sots 735 p m
CIVIL TWIIGMT
------DIS'— <48 am—tods. 8.00
pm
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wa 800.8 Bop*" Bepta
MOOM 04TA
PTwoo Nrei moon. Rmo* z.3i p m I08W
Sms 12:56 a m tomorrow ________
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OPEN DAILY 7:30-6:00, SAT 7:30-5 I
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Tomorrow
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62 46 cloudy
00 74 ptc
76 43 cloudy
70 54 cou
104 73 sunny
•7 47 ehower
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74 M pt ctoy
47 <7 di old -
780 ttor
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•7 52 cloudy
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to 75 pt ctoy
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95 60 PI Cidy
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Standard, Jim. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 91, No. 179, Ed. 2 Tuesday, September 16, 1980, newspaper, September 16, 1980; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1847556/m1/3/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.