Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 93, No. 219, Ed. 2 Wednesday, November 3, 1982 Page: 5 of 20
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OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
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25%
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LE ROY
Gentle classics. In easy care
acrylic. A Open front style
in white, black, beige. navy,
wine, brown, mauve, mint $30
B. Pearl button front in white,
black, bone, beige, burgundy,
rose $36. Both in sizes S-XL.
Ladies Sportswear-All Stores
Great-looking dress shirts
Each with the classic style
and tailoring the name Dior
implies. Broadcloth in white,
blue, ecru, grey 27. SO. Tone-
on-tone in white, blue, tan
28 50. Both In polyester/cotton.
Men's Furnishings All Stores
4
k
for conviction of in-
mates involved in a riot
at the state prison in
1
__
but Weicker ducked,
saying his Senate battles
on social issues like bus-
ing and abortion showed
his liberal credentials
were intact
dent, who made a cam-
paign stop in New Jer-
Transit starts
NEW YORK - The
first streetcars in the
United States began
horse-drawn service in
New York in 1832.
14Kt. GOLD
DIAMOND
PENDANTS
OR EARRINGS
••
•,5
-
where San Diego Mayor
Pete Wilson beat color-
ful if enigmatic Demo-
cratic Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr.
After the 1980 con-
servative sweep, Repub-
licans talked of widen-
ing their eight-vote Sen-
IN OKLAHOMA CITY -SHOP AT GORDONS Crossroads Mall, 7400 South
Interstate Highway 35 • Heritage Mall, 6801 E Reno Street, Midwest City • Quail
Springs Mall, 2501 West Memorial • Shepherd Mall. 2604 Villa Prom • And open
in Sooner Mall, Norman and Central Mall. Lawton • Shop Gordon's Coast to
Coast.
5u l
hit
Merchandise on sale not subject to
further reduction
Fenwick supported Rea- in the last days of the
gan's program of budget campaign with televi-
cuts, and Lautenberg's sion ads accusing Binga-
victory was a personal man of recommending a
setback for the presi- pardon for a convicted
41
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PRECHRISTMAS’e
> ward M Kennedy a rous-
■ ing re-election party and
a message that he
should run for president
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629
2-11-09 40
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Reg. ’199 to ’1999
SALE
$149 to 91499
ONE WEEK ONLY!
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Epmi
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8
GOP keeps Senate helm
____ _____I__,,17
WASHINGTON (AP) memamawwouuremurare narrow victory over release of the prisoner
Washington (AP)
- Democrats elected
; TI incumbents were of the three open seats
-elected and one lead- including California,
t, and two lost, one
0m each party. No in-
mbent was running in
$
i $
Gordon
JEWELERS
Day founded
WASHINGTON •
Thanksgiving Day was
first officially celebrat-
ed in the United States
Nov. 26,1789.
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had been sought by the
federal government in
return for his testimony
in a major case involv-
ing the murder of a fed-
eral judge. Bingaman al-
so emphasized that he
had headed an investiga-
tion of the prison riot
and referred cases to the
local district attorney
for prosecution.
In the only other loss
by a Senate incumbent,
Nevada Democrat How-
ard Cannon, 70, was de-
feated by former state
Sen. Chic Hecht, who
succesfully exploited a
split within the Demo-
cratic party in the state.
In Connecticut, Incum-
bent Republican Lowell
Weicker beat Democrat-
ic Rep. Toby Moffett in a
battle of liberals in a lib-
eral state.
Moffett sought to
paint Weicker with the
C,
1
4
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.land.
2there
“Senate count the same
♦
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• y c
two new faces to the Sen-
ate, but their attempt to
make the midterm elec-
tions a referendum on
Reaganomics left Re-
publicans In firm con-
other hand, incumbent 1980.
Republican John Dan- Bingaman countered
forth squeaked out a with documents showing
__/82
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Wednesday, November 3, 1982 5
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Democrats and Minority Leader
idcumbency, more Robert C. Byrd of West
than Reaganomics, Virginia - also were
Kmed the deciding fac-* given new terms.
Mt in the 33 Senate rac- Republicans won two
74:
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Critical Republican
victories in Cafornia, I
Virginia, Missouri, Wyo-
ning, Nevada, Utah, I
Connecticut and Minne- ’
sota more than offset .
emocratic upsets in j
Aw Mexico and New 1
Republican Sen. John I
Chaffee led by a narrow I
margin in the only unde-
elded race, In Rhode is- I
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Kennedy had a broad
smile on his face as he
walked across the ball-
• room stage, decorated
with blue and white bal-
loons, and kissed his
1 three children, Kara, Pa-
trick and Edward Jr.,
and other members of
the Kennedy clan.
But he stopped short
of throwing his hat in
the ring. He sidestepped
questions on whether the
Senate race was a test
run for the 1984 Demo-
cratic presidential nom-
ination.
"Im eager to return to
the Senate and will give
consideration to future
decisions In the future,"
’ Kennedy
: receives
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"m--ftiNeme
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.three races
3; As the final, absentee
billots were being
pounted in the lone unde-
tided race, Americans
appeared to have given
mixed signals on wheth-
ter they want more of
: Reagan’s economic pro-
S grams or a change in
course.
They re-elected eight
Republican incumbents,
but a big bloc of the
; president’s biggest Dem-
* ocratic critics — includ-
t ing Edward M Kennedy
2 of Massachusetts, How-
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CORRECTION
On page 8 of the
Wednesday,
November 3rd “Get
Set for the Holidays
Sale” newspaper
supplement the
RoadHandler gas
saver P215/75R14
tire is unavailable at
this time. Rainchecks
will be issued and
honored at the sale
price upon delivery.
We sincerely regret
this inconvenienee: - '
1 1 ■
stafe-Sen. Harriett
Woods, a Democrat who
also made an issue of
Reaganomics.
In the biggest Senate
upset, New Mexico's
) Democratic attorney
general, Jeff Bingaman,
I unseated incumbent Re-
publican Harrison
I Schmitt, one of the presi-
i dent's most consistent
Sunbelt supporters.
Reagan made New
| Mexico, a wellspring of
hardcore support for the
! president, the last stop
of the 13 states in which
• he campaigned for een-
। gressional candidates.
I But Schmitt, a former
astronaut who had been
, considered vulnerable
\ i
N*
ate majority for
generations to come. Al-
though that clearly did
not happen, Democrats
had little success con-,
vincing voters to blame
the recession and high
unemployment on the
president's economic
program and turn out
his backers.
The most obvious ex-
ception was In New Jer-
sey, where Democratic
businessman Frank Lau-
tenberg, sought to link
Republican Rep. Milli-
cent Fenwick with
Reaganomics and final-
ly came from behind to
win.
Although a moderate
on social issues, Mrs.
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J ; BOSTON (AP) - With
• a roar of “ '84, ‘84,"the
। • crowd of wall-to-wall
’ • supporters gave Sen. Ed-
A GOP victory ksuageom
would leave the a»u .
San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson acknowledges victory, from the start, apparent-
tore the election, 54 . . _ ly made a tactical error
bicans and 48 ard Matzenbaum of Ohio
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China seated Nations join
NEW YORK*— Com- NEW YORK - On
munist China took a seat Sept. 30, 1947, Pakistan
as a permanent member and Yemen were admit-
of the U.N. Security ted to the United Na
he said later.
"I think we took this
race seriously,'’ he said
“I was the No. 1 target of
the Moral Majority and
radical right. They spent
a million dollars in this
i state. I had a well fund-
ed and financed oppo-
nent who conducted a
I vigorous campaign.
• Kennedy defeated Re-
publican Raymond
Shamie with more than
60 percent of the vote,
which he termed a
strong showing Politi-
cal observers said that
anything leu could have
hurt him if he decided to
make a bid for the Dem-
ocratic presidential
nomination in 1984.
• 30-60-00 Dov Choroe • Budget instonment • Revowino
• intrest-Free layaway
Repvenentame styn mov not te ovokoe in os stores M onw ewory Drce1 n
ttes od um*' to chong* duue to morxel conotons iBushratons erorged
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7th
Come join us in our neu' location for a Celebration
of Dedication. November 7th thru 14th
Special Guest Speakers include:
Dr. JIminv Allen Dr. Warren Hutgren Dr. John Bisagno
Dr. Gene Garrison Dr. Herschel H. Hobbs Dr. Richard 4. Jackson
3
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Standard, Jim. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 93, No. 219, Ed. 2 Wednesday, November 3, 1982, newspaper, November 3, 1982; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1848667/m1/5/: accessed November 9, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.