Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 94, No. 116, Ed. 2 Wednesday, July 6, 1983 Page: 3 of 16
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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
7
0
1
AP Lecerphoto
a
e
P.
)
PAULINE TGE2E
Suspected Red spy won’t talk
(
Informal modeling.
I
V
-13
I
k
"2
2
clinic aim at AIDS
ZROOMS•
4) for the price of A
\ Y
ELLEN TRACY
I
1
i ■
A
Satisfaction guaranteed Of your money back
seW
.y:(01,
115/312%
Government begins
AIDS phone hotline
Corruption charges
dismissal refused
J
H
4995
Reg. 68” SAVE $19
any size room — residential only
WHOLE
. HOUSE
-
0
-
n
),
h
Gennadi Batakhev, a
42-year-old engineer
employed by Moscow’s
mission in Cologne, con-
tended the trial's pur-
pose was “to worsen re-
lations between our two
countries."
DUESSELDORF,
West Germany (AP) —
A member of the Soviet
trade mission accused
of spying in West Ger-
many refused to answer
questions put to him as
his trial opened.
I
Professionally
Cleaned
Carpets (
a
those taxes and doesn't pay the credit-card bill un-
til the following year?
Harking back to a 1931 court decision, the IRS
1
s
5
)
+
I
For appts, made
thru July 9
949-2445
Balliet's is proud to present the fabulous designs of Pauline Trigere this Thursday, Fri-
day and Saturday. With special fashion envoy John Pierre Radley.
Enjoy these benefits at no additional
cost:
• One price for any size room
• Professional strength truck-
mounted equipment
• Furniture moved and replaced
• Problem areas pre-spotted
• Bonded technicians
• Convenient scheduled
appointments
• Quick, quiet, dependable
• No mess to clean up
Oklahoma hotline,
/
1
1
t
-
-
Balliet's is pleased to announce that this Thursday and Friday, July 7th and 8th, special envoy Geri
McDowell will be in our Contemporary Shop with the Fall and Holiday collections of Ellen Tracy.
29
4
To help you beat the heat, on Thursday from 11:00 to 3:00 Whirla Whip, Oklahoma City's newest
Ice Cream Craze, will be in our Contemporary Shop. Come in and sample this new taste treat
while you make your selections from the Ellen Tracy collection — the best in Contemporary
Career Fashions
Thursday and Friday
July 7 and 8
You can
count 9
Use your SearsCharge
_________________ Sears Authorized
r
।
I
l’
CORRECTION
In the Dillard’s ad on page 12 of the Quail Springs
Mall Sidewalk Sale insert in today's paper, the copy
in the first box should have read:
Special Group of Famous Maker
TOWELS
From the Bath Shop
. SAVE 75%
•DDillard’s
V QUAIL SPRINGS MALL
Tomatoes get real support
Alison Griffin, 12, of Cicopee, Mass., appears to ally using them to support her tomato plants. AU*
be growing crutches in her garden but she is actu- son’s uncle supplies her with discarded crutches.
/
Treasury gives arthritic
1
pgjei
,%3
* •
I
I
L
Housekeeping fl
,*5
g
fm*die,~3
6-
e bme 9
h a
KSl> /sA
BA_NI
50 PENN PLACE 848-781 1
ties to produce 155-mil- WASHINGTON (AP) - Prompted by what it
limeter artillery shells called the worst safety failure at an atomic power
tipped with the tactical plant since Three Mile Island, the Nuclear Regulat-
warhead. or Commission is ordering reactor owners to im-
It was the third time prove automatic shutdown systems.
the Reagan administra- within 120 days, utilities that operate atomic
tion had sought money, power plants must report on the status of automat-
and the first time Con- ic shutdown systems and safety maintenance pro-
gress granted the re- grams, the NRC said Tuesday.
quest, but lawmakers The order resulted from two failures of the com-
attached a big string to puterized automatic shutdown system that caused
the appropriation. one reactor at a Salem, N.J., plant to approach an
Before the president unsafe condition.
I
I'
=
V
Sears servndeg.
MinMXMOCO
tion request when Sen- only as one-for-one re-
ate and House negotia- placements for the cur-
tors drafted the com- rent 155mm nuclear
promise. warheads, which have
Because of that, he been stationed in West-
said, the restriction "is ern Europe for two dec-
the best defensive fall- ades.
A hotline and clinic are open here today to identi-
fy and counsel potential victims of AIDS, a mysteri-
ous disease that kills three-fourths of its victims.
The Oklahoma Blood Institute in Oklahoma City
announced the beginning of its hotline — 239-AIDS
— which will be in operation from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m.,
Monday through Friday.
The hotline telephones will be manned by blood
institute staff members during the daytime and by
representatives of Oklahoma City's gay community I
during the evening.
In addition, the institute will be holding AIDS
clinics on Mondays and Wednesdays from 7:30 p.m.
to 9:30 p.m.
Clinic patients are being asked to make tentative
appointments through the hotline.
_____iGIMAMIMESWednesday, 6,1983 3
Nntgorf warheads program alive
WASHINGTON (AP)"may spend the money, Sen. J. Bennett John- weapon." back position the com-
-While the public spot- the compromise bill son, D-La., who wrote Sen. Mark O. Hatfield, mi t tee from the Senate
light has focused on de- said, he must certify he the provision, said this R-Ore., the Senate Ap- was able to obtain."
ployment of Pershing 2 has received "formal go-slow approach would propriations Committee The bill, which is
and cruise missiles in notification" from the mean "we should not chairman and an oppo- awaiting President Rea-
Western Europe this allied country in which get into a multibillion- nent of the program,, gan’s expected signa-
year, another politically deployment is planned dollar funding program said he lacked the votes ture, also specifies the
sensitive weapon - the that it will accept the until we know first that to block the administra- neutron shells be used
high-radiation neutron weapons. we can deploy this
warhead — is moving .
forward.
otInoaperernganas Nuclear safeguard
ter development spend- ~
ing bill last Wednesday, 2 I I •ge I
congress included $50 standards stiffened
million to build facili-
lad tax break in pool use
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Internal Revenue issued a private ruling saying that what matters is
Service says swimming can sometimes be a deduct- when the sales tax — not the credit-card bill - is
ible medical expense. paid. "Using a credit card to pay general sales tax-
Doctors recommended that a 9-year-old boy sub
tering from rheumatoid arthritis swim three or roweddoarst Pay. those taxes, IKS held. You
lour times a week in a heated pool. The closest la- willbe entitled 10 deduct those taxes the year so
cility was 15 miles from his home and it cost $100 a P
year. The IRS, in a private ruling, allowed the par-
ents to deduct the $100 membership fee plus the The governor of an unidentified state, facing re-
cost of transporting the boy to and from the pool. ductions in tax revenues, urged staff members and
, . , high-level officials to take off five days without pay.
The ruling turned on the fact that swimming was The governor, in consultation with union officials,
prescribed as necessary for alleviation of a physi- saw the tactic as a way to preserve the jobs of some
cal or mental defect or illness. Because it was a workers who otherwise would be laid off.
private ruling, it may not be cited as precedent by
any other taxpayer, although it indicates how the Officials who honored the governor's request
IRS is likely to rule in similar cases. drew their full paychecks but then turned back five
days' pay to the state treasurer. IRS ruled that they
• would have to report their full pay as income for
State and local sales tax may be deducted on fed- federal tax purposes but could count the five days'
eral tax returns in the year that the sales taxes are pay as a deductible charitable contribution — if
paid. But what if a person uses a credit card to pay they itemized deductions.
"/gE
g5"1a5
Eg 2
2 6
WASHINGTON (AP) she said. GAgmepagm-
iinAnasbeen x; The, hotline, will be-DEEI •
the government to pro- open from 7:30 a.m.to
vide up-to-date informa- 4:30 p.m. CDT daily.The
tion on AIDS, the deadly numberis 800-342-AIDS.
disease that attacks the Callers from Alaska and
body's ability to fight Hawaii may phone col-
infections. lect to a separate num-
in addition to the tele- be r; (202 )24 5-6867.
phone hotline, Health Public Health Service iff
and Human Services employees will answer The Final TOUCh KJ
Secretary Margaret the calls and make re- To Your /,$
Heckler said Tuesday ferrals if necessary. ---u lIF
that a new leaflet titled The leaflet may be ob-
"Facts on AIDS" is tained by writing the
available to the public. Public Health Service,
The booklet will be up- Office of Public Affairs, 4
dated as soon as new in- Room 721-H, 200 Inde-
formation about the dis- pendence Ave. S.W.,
ease becomes available, Washington, D.C. 20201.
a
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
July 7,8 and 9
A federal judge has led to a four-count fed-
- turned down a defense eral grand jury indict- i
motion to dismiss rack- ment against Page last
eteering and extortion April.
charges against Oklaho- Page, 56, was indicted
ma County District on charges alleging be
Judge William C. Page. engaged in racketeer-
U.S. District Judge ing activities and ex-
Ralph G. Thompson also torted bribes from crim-
on Tuesday denied a inal defendants while .
motion to suppress FBI serving as Oklahoma
wiretap evidence gath- County prosecutor and
ered against Page as special district judge,
part of a joint state-fed- Page's trial has been ]
eral investigation that rescheduled for July 18. |
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Standard, Jim. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 94, No. 116, Ed. 2 Wednesday, July 6, 1983, newspaper, July 6, 1983; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1849017/m1/3/: accessed November 14, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.