Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 93, No. 177, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 15, 1982 Page: 2 of 52
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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Buses
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
Rain
Wednesday, September 15. 1982
From Page One
I
Continued
Continued
Grace
Continued
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'I
Beirut
Fuel
■t
I
1 14
■ I
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 46, 1982
1
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Shoot
Continued
$
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Continued
. 63
500 Morth
I
poenmAsTEN, MND Aponas chamoc* TO ma
nd cis
g
wom DELVENY susacmrnom nA
Health care and cost-
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. ’•4
IMA Mai. NATION RaTES macLuomG POSTAGE
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y
f
U
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t
The UAW demanded
by
!
SSKExSlSR
Warn* ■
A
7
I
6
7125
(405)232-3311
eue.
MM
MM
one way or another. I
■ just can't say one way or
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ta
CORRECTION
On page 3 of the Wednes-
day. September 1 Sth
"96th Anniversary Sale
newspaper supplement the
savings on the 499895 mi-
crowave is incorrect It
should have read Save
$130 The regular and sale
prices are correct We
sincerely regret this error.
M7»
an
48.96
6 p.m. — Hart & Soul,
four-piece instrumental
playing pop music.
m»
r. oam
31.98
1.45
125
IM
TO
so
n
74.04
14.04
MTS
Betheny
DM Cn,
Draper
Horman
nsa«
.251-55
31.02
37 02
MM
ATrademark of The Singer Company Not all offers available at all locations Prices and credit plans optional ai participating dealers. Convenent credit plans
as ailable to qualified customers.
performances listed are
at the Kerr Park Am-
phitheater.
Lebanon," Sarkis said in
an audio broadcast. “In
spite of your age you
have done more than
others to try to free Leb-
anon with pride."
Calling the 34-year-old
Gemayel “the hero of
Lebanon," Sarkis said:
"your name has become
famous for strength and
ability.”
The Israelis — for the
first time in their 14-
week-old Invasion —
drove into the former
PLO nerve center in the
Fakhani neighborhood
of west Beirut.
7
i
FACTORY
REBATE
Singer Zig-Zag Model 6136
14 buult-in stitches.
free-arm, bult-n buttonholer.
11:30 a m. — Majic,
country and western mu-
sic.
1 p.m. — The Sulli-
vans. pop music.
2 p.m. — Jim Smith-
son. magician.
3 p.m. — Terri Silves-
ter, guitar and vocal.
4 p.m. — John Amos,
guitar.
5 p.m. — Towers Band,
New car sales tumble
DETROIT (AP) — The major U.S. auto manufac-
turers say new car sales tumbled 29.3 percent in ear-
ly September from the same period a year ago.
6.17
440
For forugn subecrtptlon rates CM 231-3434
MMMM vwepN•
OurOffiee !
Will Be Closed
1 Mm
in
4.08
senior citizens playing charge of the investiga-
old-time songs tion.
fl
- L.
Strike
FACTORY
REBATE
Singer Free-Ann
Model 5522
Horzontal thread
delivery
2
1 •
‘ of-living allowances
; were two main sticking
; points, Fraser said. The
' ; company had demanded
, : workers help pay for
; health care through co-
* payments and deducti-
Net, a position opposed
? by the union.
Okieoma i
T«HM« I Qmes
end you cr i resoh your carmer
250-7171.
n
11
,-f
ri
23
-
j,
t
u
i
14
juoee 120-600)
4 -wy Seturdey momning
woedway. Mm 28125
Monwij end Sunday
Evenin and Sunday
Moring and evening
Mommg only
1 venin ont
Sunday only
.-204-4244
..TM-adir
..2919201
..OTO 6718
..231-931
..251-5225
..Blioii
..5-557
TO
3 SO
TO
3 10
1.30
>00
1 M
2.74
1.00
1M
1M
3.30
1 40
TO
04
204
4)
14 45
S 30
540
5 20
305
32
Education impact discussed
NORMAN — State Rep. Cleta Deatherage,
D-Norman, will discuss the upcoming elections
and higher education funding at noon Friday
in the upstairs dining room of Couch Cafeteria.
Deatherage will answer questions after her ad-
dress which is being sponsored by the Univer-
sity of Oklahoma Employee Executive Council.
Deatherage is chairman of the House Appro-
priations and Budget Committee. She will
evaluate the impact the elections may have on
1983 funding for higher education. The infor-
mal lunch and speech are open to the public.
lone plans Fall Fest
The first Arts and Crafts Fall Fest is
planned for 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday at the
Ione Branch YWCA, Dorothy Griffith, branch
director, said.
The public is invited to attend the Fall Fest
which will feature several arts and crafts
booths manned by local artists and craftsmen.
For fne OKanoman, oM betore 4 30 am.
For the Okiehoma City nimes, CM 6 Mon 730 pm
For The Sundey kiaoman, OM bator >4 4m
omacro numwon wunens
SINGER
100 MILLION PEOPLE SEW EASIER WITH SINGER.
1
i
r
Metro rainfall
Here are 24-hour rain-
fall amounts reported in
the Oklahoma City area
as of 7 a.m. today.
Error forces budget revision
NICHOLS HILLS - A city treasurer's error
has forced a $100,000 revision in the city's al-
ready-beleagured, budget-surplus estimates,
City Manager Doug Henley told city council-
men Tuesday. Henley said Treasurer Huston
Huffman over-estimated Nichols Hills' cash on
hand by some $100,000 as the council prepared
1982-83 budget estimates. The manager said
he absorbed the error in the budget-surplus
balance.
Elven before officials discovered the error,
councilmen were expecting the 1982-1983
budget to eat into the estimated $582,000 sur-
plus to the tune of $115,000. Mayor John Mee
agreed to meet with Henley and Huffman to
discuss the city's bookkeeping procedures.
Residents flood shelter
WARR ACRES — A rain-soaked man wear-
ing only black trunks walked into City Hall
Tuesday night and asked for directions to the
nearest storm shelter. Spurred by reports of
tornado sightings in the area, Warr Acres resi-
dents began showing up at City Hall about 8
p.m. The city has an underground shelter
there.
"It's good that people know to come here for
shelter," city attorney Robert Jernigan said
during a cable-televised meeting of the Warr
Acres City Council. At one point. Mayor Doro-
thy Rowe stopped the meeting to announce
over cable television that a tornado warning
had been issued by the National Weather Ser-
vice.
11
p
H A
in Memory CX 31
Betty Hirschfield
FACTORY
REBATE
Singer Free-Arm Model 5528
8 built-in stitches.
Universal Pressure System.
La
Aevartemng
Mein.
Dlapech ...
Shomdansa
Commerce i
Hmm
Acuon Une .
B unirO«
selfservice regular 11.09 ($1.15), self-service
unleaded $1.15 ($1.09), self-diesel($1.12).
Southeast: Phillips Truck Plata, 1307 8E 44. full-
service regular 11.29 ($1.29), self-service diesel
$1.19 (11.17); Kwik Pantry, 1001 SE 29, self-service
regular 11.11 ($1.13), self-service unleaded $1.17
($1.17); John's Skelly, Moore, full-service regular
11.25 (no July report), full-service unleaded $1.29,
self-service regular $1.19, self-service unleaded
$1 23.
/ 9
, 4
$v •
IR
a
3dn4
1956
Sears
*00 par. 00 3 22 tl t
—me-
Hrsehfeld
&Co.
1 50 Tinker AFB .75
1 00 The Viiege 3.30
1 40 WM Rogrs 2 30
1 00 Yukon 2 40
1
V
........ 2319326
....... 231-5425
....... 235-6722
...231-301
).......230-77
। early 1950s, said: "She was a lady and
* dedicated to anything she took on.
;, She was very, very serious about her
;(film) career, then she became very
serious about her career as a wife and
a mother and a princess.”
: President Reagan said he and his
wife, Nancy, were “shocked and deep-
: ly saddened" to hear of the death
"As an American, Princess Grace
brought character and elegance to
1 the performing arts and always found
' -time to make important contributions
’ to her craft,” the president said in a
statement released from Washington.
____ "The principality of Monaco and
the world community have suffered a
great loss.”
Frank Sinatra, who starred with the
princess in her last movie, "High So-
ciety,” and his wife, Barbara, said in
a statement, "Grace was a gracious,
wonderful woman who was a princess
from the moment she was born."
In their statement, released in New
: Fest
FACTORY
REBATE
Touch-TtoraC • 2010 Memory
Machine 29 stitches pre set to
optimum width and length
One-step buttonholing
REBATE
Tuchlonic 2005 Memory Machine
Memory stitch selection,
wind-in place bobbin.
Universal Pressure System
Ae
■ MM
firing, Markham said.
Both buses were in good shape and recently in-
spected. After this morning's crash, a preliminary
inspection indicated no mechanical failure had
caused the accident, Markham said.
5
1 I
)
The following is a diesel 81.21; Expressway Phillips, 6000 N Bryant,
schedule of Thursday s self-service regular $1.26, self-service unleaded
performing artists. All $1,31; Don Strawn Automotive, NE 23 and HIwasee,
Metro
Conttnued
is being transferred to Langley. James comes
to Tinker from Cannon AFB, Clovis, N.M.
i *
y I
u I
Quail Springs Mall
Oklahoma City 7555314
Mayfair Shpa. Ctr.
Oklahoma City 947-6104
f sc •
■ ' gyg
I ur qijm
: pension improvements,
: wage increases and cost-
* of-Uving allowance re-
2 sumption, but the com-
• pany's proposal tied CO-
; LA to profits, and Fraser
; called that "unsatisfac-
t tory."
; The automaker lost
$3.27 billion from 1979
4 to 1N1, but earned 8256
. J million in the first half
i oftyear
FA A pledges plane probe
SANTA ANA, Calif, coming in for a landing.
(AP) — The Federal
Aviation Administration None of the 103 pas-
says It will investigate sengers or six crew
the fall of a tail cone members aboard the
from an AirCal DC-9 jet- Sacramento-to-Orange
liner as the plane was County flight was hurt.
SINGER
FACTORY REBATES
Cashin citthese
JoAwenpnICS :
1 A entgp t
ni.1d90znaa absbsuqi
8:45 p.m. at NW 10 and ened streets, Markham said.
Robinson. Traffic had to Bus damage estimates are not completed yet, but
be rerouted temporarily, the Longfellow bus may require a new axle, “which
Some electric lines were is not inexpensive," he said.
also blown down in the Both men are veteran drivers who have received
9200 block of North Mill- extensive training “so they knew better," Markham
tary. said. “I had considered both good drivers.
High water caused "Under district policy, when a driver is cited, he is
some flooding in parts of to be immediately suspended for two days without
northwest Oklahoma pay. And that's what I did."
City. Wright, a three-year bus driver, was involved in an
By noon today Nation- accident in 1980 but was not cited, Markham said.
al Weather Service ra- Under district policy, a driver receives a "mark
dar indicated a few each time he is involved ti an accident or receives a
thunderstoms lingered citation. Five marks in three years means automatic
The Dely Oniehoman
Okiahoma Cny Times
Tne Sunduy kienom
in southern and western
near Gage. Binger and
Wapanucka.
Today's forecast
called for soggy weather
to continue over south-
ern sections through to-
night before giving way
to partly cloudy skies
and warmer tempera-
tures statewide on
Thursday.
State rainfall
Here are the 24-hour
rainfall amounts report-
ed in the state as of 7
La.20 -- ——-—32
\ tpiperpxmpegmeureprgmenpmog
KM
(ITS NATIONAL
HOME SEWING
MONTH AT SINGER.)
Come in and get your best
hurry? If you wait az
too long, you may
not save at all.
(See Singer dealegx
for rebate detais)9
morth-Wen
2outhemnb
SMMnMi
y,c*,#
Continued
• from 16 states will be ex-
hibiting and offering for
sale three-dimensional
arts and crafts daily
- from 11 a.m to 7 p m
The festival features
original handcrafted art
- through the mediums of
pewter, fiber, bronze,
: leather, wood, stained
and etched glass and
metal. Motorists should see a drop in pump prices at the lieving in God and in
The Festifall will also beginning of the year, Hall said, followed by a jump
include seven interna- in prices with the onset of spring travel,
tional food booths. one Current gasoline prices, with July's prices in
more than last year, parentheses, are:
with delicacies ranging Northwest: Onan Oil, 7308 N May, self-service reg-
; from Chinese egg rolls, ular $1.11 ($1.15), self-service unleaded $1.16
meatball sandwiches, ta- ($119); Chuck's Conoco, Yukon, full-service regular
: cos and baked potatoes. $1.25 ($1.25), full-service unleaded $1.31 ($1.31),
A special children's self-service regular $1.21 ($1.21), self-service
: activity is also sched- unleaded $1.27 (81.27).
' uled Saturday at Arts Southwest: Mosley's Texaco, 7515 S Pennsylvania,
; Place II, 115 Park Ave., full-service regular 81-39 (81.44), full-service
: next to the festival site, unleaded 8144 (81 48), self-service regular $1.10
Several musical groups (81.15), self-service unleaded 81 22 (81 27); Walker
: will perform in Kerr Oil, Tuttle, full-service regular $1.25 ($1.29),--
, Park. vice unleaded 8129 (81 33); Woerner’s, 17 SW 59,
"As
—
5 2TF
r
t
price on any Singer machine shown
here. Buy the machine
and Singer will send 5 -2 •
you a factory rebate. g . /
So you’re not saving .
once, but twice. ButiNs-Mdr-
: ing if a settlement would
be reached today.
Fraser responded: “I
, don't know, really.”
Company spokesman
Britt Temby said Chrys-
ler would not comment
on the talks.
"There were a variety
< of problems, both eco-
nomic and non-econom-
ic," Fraser said. "We
: just wanted to give our-
selves more time to ex-
/ haust every single possi-
( bility."
The M__-___
ondehomecey fime
The Sundey Okiehom
More than 90 percent full-service regular $1.2 ($1.32), full-service
of the festival's weekday unleaded $1.27 ($1.35), self-service regular $1.09
traffic is from employ- ($1.11), self-service unleaded $1.16 ($119).
ees of downtown busi- Northeast: Pro Am Truck Stop, 7600 N Bryant, full-
nesses, but Saturday is service regular $1.41 ($1.41), full-service unleaded ___
family day, Bully uld. $1.45 ($1.45), full-service diesel $1.29, self-service
a.m. today:
AIM to Mollow
Anadarko 1.12 Lenepah
Aroda 4M Lindey
AaNlend 10S Lookebe
Brietow M Mono*
Claremore 1M Moweta
hattanooga n okteha
MM •• Pawhueka
Chckasha ISO Piedmont
Qolony 144 Pontotoc
Comenche 65 Prague
Coe City 1.05 Rarona
Dewar 2.22 Stella
Duncan 2 02 StItwater
Meter 1.29 Stroud
Fon sat 3.10 Tecumseh
Qrady 104 uea
Hanna 1 04 Tunny
Mnae ITS VMM
HeMMon n Wagoner
IIHel 74 Worm
Moma 102
CASH IN
ON FACTO
REBATES.
a _ age > senBrai
5 61 -1
V -7 pco
l
MaaTSMa ,,. ni-«ns .
orlels ........ 291-3440 0
new*...... 251-3200
"It's not anything that another right now.”
was done behind any- n, . _
one's back or without FBI spokesman Gene
anyone's knowledge." Pogue.!would not. give
Wilhelm said. "It was any details about the
something that hap- shooting or Mrs. Cain s
pened with the full reneas
knowledge of the shift "About all were say-
supervisors involved." ing right now is that he
"At this point we don't is an agent here. He's
know if was an accident been with the bureau
or not. We don't have about 10 years," Pogue
any conclusive evidence said.
The Oklahoman and Times
raE DAILY OKLAHOMAN
(uses 144-700)
Pubsehed eech morneing. Monday through Friday
TE SUNpA OKLAHOMAN
I IMPS 110-330)
Pubnened •very Sunday morning
—I i sn a CITY TME
(uses 406 460)
Evening edmon of The Den Okiahomen
Pubmshed 44) evening Monday through Friday
fU unwr MI IMM4S a HMBI
York, the couple said, "We still can-
not believe it. Our hearts go out to her
husband, her children and her family
here in the United States."
In San Antonio, actor Yul Brynner 5
led a silent tribute to the princess #
after his opening performance Tues- 1
day in "The King and I." M
Brynner returned to center stage at ■
the Majestic Performing Arts Center ■
after repeated curtain calls and said ■
he wished to say a few words about ■ Ap-----r
Grace Kelly. L—, ,
"What did she bring? She brought Bashir Gemayel was
serenity and many gifts. Join me for a photographed outside
few moments of silence for the gifts Beirut 8, Presidential
she brought to all of us,1' Brynner falaee, fair Mars be-
said fore he was slain.
Entertainer Bob Hope said, "The
. world loses a great lady and I lose a
personal friend." Hope never made a
movie with Miss Kelly, but appeared
with her at various fund-raising bene-
fits and visited her at her Monaco pal- Continued
ace. themselves across his
coffin and tears welled
in their eyes as the Mass
was said at St. Abda’s
church in the Gemayel
family's home village of
Continued Bikfaya, 12 miles east of
sylvania. "I don't know until they call me on the Beirut.
phone. . u . in n ■ . >< । Elias Sarkis, the presi-
For right now, there is still an oil glut, Mosley dent Gemayel was to
said. ... . i. . have succeeded, deliv-
Plentiful supply should keep city and state gaso- ered a eulogy in which
line prices steady for the remainder of the year, said he praised the slain
Don Hall, public relations manager for the Ameri- leader’s iife as one dedi-
can Automobile Association, cated to his country.
"We have a lot of inventory now. Hall said. Some
refineries are closed down now and can.reopen "You spent your life
again. But they will work this (inventory) off first.” working for Lebanon, be-
■ I sd"Eei* N61a
mrntetti 3
- sinceneemKa ' M*' I
mmiy
mdirira
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Standard, Jim. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 93, No. 177, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 15, 1982, newspaper, September 15, 1982; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1848596/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 22, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.