Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 94, No. 36, Ed. 1 Monday, April 4, 1983 Page: 5 of 76
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I
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
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integrate.
The council voted
decision about rehiring
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Spanish aide, Jeckson
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HURRY! BEST BUYS WILL GO FIRST!
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Hoffman
b FURNITURE to
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794-5537
Moore
201 S Broadway
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Shop Sunday 1-6, Mon -FTi 10-9, Sat 10-6
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2nd mortgage refinancing
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e
CITICORP O
Sammon*
Hu MU*
unanimously last week
to introduce the absen-
tee-ballot ordinance and
aide, Capitoi
Elba Roubert,
Special
Orders
included
1
“Pop” your-.balloon
note blues with
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r
t
9
•
i
i
Awailable through April 29, 1983
© 1983 Copyright Citicorp
• Eliminate concerns over your high rate
balloon note coming due
THS MAN’S SHOR
2800 N PENN •528-4451
Call
for details
405-942-4670
it would take a slash to 25 percent to take care of the
overproduction problem.
Patricia Amore, an attorney for the Oklahoma
Kansas Oil and Gas Association and Mid-Continent
Oil and Gas Association suggested reverting to te
commission's old rules in effect before the natural
gas demand created an explosion in production — a
boom that began about 1978.
Suggestions were made that the-reduction in al-
lowables be tried for three to six months to see its
effect.
• Enjoy the peace of mind that goes with
permanent, fixed rate financing
• Low rates now mean lower monthly
payments
‘f
docket for a final hear-
ing
There may be some
lengthy wrangling on
Tuesday over three al-
ternative proposals for
taking competitive bids
on city contracts with
wrecker services
Ward 1 Councilman
Bob McCoy said today he
favors the proposal that
a wrecker company pay
the city a "lump sum" or
flat rate" for the privi-
lege of being awarded a
city wrecker zone
'wR
■ / ।
f
Acid cloud threatens Denver
PERMANENT
FIXED RATE
FINANCING
14.75% -15.25%
Annual Percentage Rate
is Your Yard Washing Away?
la the drainage off your houae
ruining your planta? 1
« •
♦
Bedrooms... Dining Rooms... Sofas... Loveseats...
Occasional... Accessories... Bedding... Lane Love Chests
... Game Sets... (ENTIRE STOCK!!!!)
1)
Person-to-Person
Financial Cubist, Inc.
Student Intervention
Pregram
Karen Lynn Simily. adviser
Institutional Pregram
Lonna Jackson ande, Monro*
and Delores A Walker mo* Jon-
•on
Marcetle L Presson, adviner Pa-
tricia G Sapp advisor; Christine
Sekayouma, adviser; and LIlleM
Toahty. adviser
Shirtey F Wapekineh adviner:
Frances Bennett specialist; Jane
Jones, specialist Reuben Topaum
spocinltst. and Patnicia Tremain.
Hoffman
to FURNITURE to
I
Other second mortgage financing needs?
Call us . . we can
help you take advantage of today s lower rates!
MARK HOFFMAN
FURNITURE & STUDIO
5450 N MAY e 947 1505 NW EXPRESSWAY AT MAY AVE
Shop Sunday 16 Mon Th^s 10 8 Fn & Sat 10-6
Cnidren’s Mtospitat, Shirtey Thom-
as, teacher, Chidren’s; Gioria
Reed, aide. Chudren’s; Brand*
Wagkina, akM. Chdren’s: Wanda
L Steward, nide. Prairie Oueen
Mchelle Evana, aide. Moon, and
Teresa King, mide, Burbank
Capitol Hill High School
Alternative Education
Pregram
Judy L Crutcher Engiish and
reading teacher and Vwnia wu-
• •mi mam
Handicapped pro-
grams
Sharon Acun, instructonal ande,
Buchanan. Martha Bigby instruc
tional nide, Pag* woodson; Emma
/ )
_L.
. ington High Scheel where she was foreed to spend much of Paster Sunday after
being evacuated frem her heme because ef a nitrie acid spill. A yellow toxic
• elead seared frem the seene where a railread tank was ruptured and spewed eat
the acid. A 500-block area was evacuated.
School workers will face
• 3
YT*
iff
A gutter around your house would elim-
inate these problems for less money thaq
repairing your yard or buying new plants. 1
RAINCATCHERS GUTTERING, INC. t
having a Special Spring Sale on Custom
Seamless Guttering. We have an easy pay-,
ment plan and guarantee all work and ma-
terials. We also take Mastercard & Visa.
For FREE estimates on our special,
price this month call: 1
840-0981 or after 5 p.m. 424-2775
—.....r
Peterson, Spanish aide, Aiverside,
Evelia Sermiemto. Spaniah aide.
Eugene Fieid Rosaiba Cashon
Spnigh Md*. Laa. Rosario Zana-
biia, Spanish nide, Jackson; Alba
Unified push evolves to ease gas glut crisis /
/ 1
4
Monday, April 4, 1983 5
; • The Oklahoma City
• school board will vote
3 tonight whether to notify
'. the following employees
4 They may not be re-hired
1 due to funding cutbacks
1 >nd other reasons.
1 Those Oklahoma City
* school employees are:
Bilingual Program
• Carman Obregon, Sanish mde.
; Fleld; Merteny Tapia. Spanien aide.
--Lincoin; Blance opinoza, Spanleh
mde, Morec Mann and Wesfwood;
Irma Palacous. Spanish aide
epitot HB Mktdto Schoot; Eugenia
Pgoa, Spanton eide, Jackson; Egle
Barnoa. Spanish aide, Jackaon
Patso Houngullay. Laotian aide,
Lincoln. Amphay Rattananong.
Laotian aide, Edgemere, Bourima-
vong Watgaly. Laotian aide
Edg-mere, Teresa A Rendon, au-
pervisor: Maria Espinosa-Char.
matin, tacitator Frences P Roach,
tmcmitator; and Frede Sampson,
secretary
Mary Hopa Aiverez, coordinator
Thanh Van Anderson, resource
teecher; Anna Dewine, resource
Machar. Chery L Hutman re-
source teecher Lynn C Holdaciew
resource specialist; Ngoc Thi
Huynh resource tpactokat Tarry
, V Wada secretary. Hoe Nguyn,
Vietnamese aide
i
Dad accused
: in 3 deaths
LOWER TOWNSHIP.
N J (AP) - A man ac
. cused in the Easter kill-
' ings of his three children____
: had been despondent Campbpoanns"undonanpdnatTo.
\llen
DMOSDS
POLO
Sale Priced
•104
m -w ?.
production from 50 to 25 percent. nal hearings Tuesday on
— Retesting of wells now classiffied as oil wells to ordinances to permit ab-
determine whether they should be reclassified as sentee voting in city
natural gas wells. This would place any reclassified elections and competi-
wells under natural gas allowable rules. Live bidding for city
— Examine on a well-by-well basis those produc- wrecker contracts.
ers now classified as "distressed " to determine The meeting will begin
whether any could be shut down without destroying at 8:30 a m in the coun-
the wells * . ..cil's chambers on the
Commission referee Randolph S. Speck postponed third floor of the Munici-
the taking of evidence until later today after attor- pal Building. 200 N
neys for producers, pipeline companies and natural Walker
gas purchasers generally agreed the proposed solu- ward 8 Councilman
tions should be tried in an effort to solve the current Robert M Frank pre-
crisis. dieted today that the ab-
For more than a year, an overabundance of natu- sentee-ballot ordinance
ral gas has caused prices to drop, users to shift to "will just sail right on
lower price fuel oils and the market to generally dis- through "
A
By Mary Jo Neison Galen Ward, attorney for Phillips Petroleum Co.. He said within a year the gas glut could be taken
Producers and buyers of natual gas in Oklahoma said that Bartlesville-based giant shut in 600 natu- care of, but added, "We can't afford to wait that
more or less agreed today they must work together ral gas well last week He said the Corporation Com- long."
to solve a current oversupply crisis. mission currently has the power to deal with the nat- Some attorneys representing independent produc-
The development came in a hearing before an Ok- ural gas crisis that is crippling one of Oklahoma's ers favored a reduction to only 37.5 percent of allow-
lahoma Corporation Commission referee who had most important industries. able, rather than one-fourth. However, most agreed
scheduled a pre-trial conference for today.
The conference was to take up Oklahoma Natural (AI-nAI Agil AAmI,f
Gas Co.’s request natural gas production in the state OullC II WUll C llUu( I
be limited to current demand.
With nearly 200 lawyers filling the commission's ■ • ■ •
main courtroom, three main remedies were pro- orounonCe heorUnS
posed: •
— That current allowables on unallocated (a clas- By Jan Paschal
sification affecting most producing wells in Oklaho- The Oklahoma City
ma) should be slashed in half, by cutting the allowed Council will conduct fi-
Neglected and Delin-
quent Transitional Ser-
vices Program
Saundra Vallejo, coordinator,
and Donna Murray. secretary
Community Edueation
Betty Hudson, secretary, and
John Hattteid, coordmnator
State Department of Hu-
man Services programs
Jemi Hay on d deycKometrist,
about family matters, tionelade. paga-woo<»aon Backy
_ .. -2 , Henzel, instructionai aide Bur-
Cape May County Prose- bank; Ham Jarrett, instructional
’ cutor John Corino says. aouctonhrmana £
Walter Keresty. 26. hcca.Watker. inatructional alde,
e Jonson
• faces three counts of
: homicide in the slayings Indian education
of 2-year-old Heather wCrrphoawpisacoondynscnasAnna
Lynn and 8-month-old innonavbxendnanovadaronynng,
twins Jennifer Marie r ,
and Lorrie Lee in his g» q Gooden, Mdviner: Deborah
home in Villas, authori-
ties said er; and Ptyis J. Perkins, adviser
,6*4
Two teachers and two
aides will move with the
Bethany Coop Program,
a traveling project, to
the Midwest City-Del
City school district next
year. They are Rosemar-
ie Kleber, Lynn Summer-
ville. Linda L. Hamilton
and Linda K. Morehead.
The following employ-
ees would be laid off due
to enrollment declines
at their schools. They
are:
Ethelwyn Glasscock instruction-
al aide Hayes; Cher Adhamwo
clerk: Pierce/Shidier Sandru
Steele cierk, Edgemere Paula
Currier instructional aide Star:
Lynda Ward instructional aide.
Wheeler Janice J Smwth, instruc-
tionai aide. Jefterson
Wilma Threant, Clerk Garden
Oaks Marquita Robinson, instruc-
tional aide Truman Charlie Dan
tala, cierk/aide, Parker Batty Jo
Hayes, instructional aide Parker
Daria Washington, instructonai
aide: King
MAVE20%to50%
•A"- 2LCATIONS
TO BRING YOU THE BEST BUYS IN HOME FURNISHINGS
3 R SALE
“Remodeling, stock Reduction and Really going out for business Sale”
Hoffman Furniture in Moore and Mark Hoffman in Oklahoma City have joined hands to bring
you the best possible buys in home furnishings. We're celebrating with a 3-R Sale — A com-
plete front to back Remodeling at the Moore Store, A huge stock Reduction sale and the fact
that we Really are going all out for your business is going to make this the furniture retail event
of the decade! Don’t Wait! Hurry In to Claim your best buy today!
g - "
Y 4.
-•*2
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‘32
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Standard, Jim. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 94, No. 36, Ed. 1 Monday, April 4, 1983, newspaper, April 4, 1983; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1848882/m1/5/?q=Cadet+Nurse+Corps: accessed July 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.