The Lawton Constitution (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 72, No. 30, Ed. 1 Monday, September 17, 1973 Page: 1 of 18
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THE LAWTON C'
‘I
A 1
im
$9
(Courtesy Pvblic Servke Co)
VOLUME 72—NO. 30
(AP) — (AP WIREPHOTO)
THIRD AND A AVE., LAWTON, OKLA., Mu..
18 PAGES
SINGLE COPY 10c
i.
Tulsa's Telex Awardea
Million In Damages
Judge Finds IBM Guilty
Negotiation
f 11
I
Of Monopolistic Practices
I
nu
-7
1
Environment
• a
I
an early settlement," a Chrys-
4
ler statement said after the ses-
t
fi
ta"
To Appeal
2
&
I
IBM Gets Order
Cityans Stoke Furnaces
B ■■
Ne
cn2
As Chilly Air Hits Area
Spokesmen at both companies
comment
I
70s.
phere and blamed it on man’s
tures extended into northern
News in Brief
one • half cup of cottage
mained sealed until today
names of persons or organ-
The magistrate scheduled a izations responsible for its dis-
tribution.
The maximum penalty for
i
plea to the new indictment.
day's indictment is one year in
with after the report went to the sabotage in Florida
you mix orange juice
| in a brief appearance before Segretti, 32 years old today,| prison and a $1,000 fine.
)
7
Computer
Giant Set
Report Goes
To Congress
Temperature Chart
2 Hour Remge Ending Todoy
Summer is officially sched-
uled to last until Saturday.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Council on Environmental Qual-
IBM was ordered to begin a
senes of actions to break up
the huge firm's hold on the
computer assessory market, ac-
tions which Telex had sought.
The opinion was released by
U.S. District Court Judge A.
Sherman Christensen of Salt
Lake City, who heard argu-
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)—State Regents for Higher Educa-
tion decided today to look Into the problems at Oklahoma Col-
Man land to send its findings on Vice President Spiro T. Agnew
to Um- House of Representatives, sources close to the investiga-
tion said today. Such a move, which could tie a prelude to im-
peachment of Agnew, should the facts warrant such action,
would get the Justice Department around the thorny constitu-
tional question of whether a vice president can lie indicted be-
fore he is impeached.
Meanwhile, the UAW said to-
ken picketing was continuing at
all Chrysler plants. Picket lines
consisted of as few as one to as
many as a half dozen workers,
the union said.
The strike was costing the
112,000 UAW members $5 mil-
lion a day in wages, the union
said.
13)
Losses Soar
And Chrysler was faced with
soaring production losses and
prospects of laying off office
workers.
Ic
14
4.
SY
ing most of the marathon bar- area,
gaining session.
Lynn Bryant, who works as a secretary for a downtown firm, attempts to
fend off this morning's chilly temperature and drizzle, made even more appar-
ent by gusty northerly winds. Miss Bryant is the daughter of Mr and Mrs.
Roy Bryant, 1922 Ash. (Staff Photo)
/ Istat's Sn.fide
mdsm
sion broke up.
Talk To Resume
m menu in the case for nearly
two months earlier this year.
TULSA, Okla, (AP)—Inter-
national Business Machines
Corp. was found guilty of mo-
nopolistic business practices in
the computer industry today
and was ordered to pay the
Telex Corp. $352.5 million in
damages.
Telex, a Tulsa-based firm, in
return was ordered to pay IBM
$21.9 million in damages for
stealing IBM trade secrets.
4
the next 10 years, but perhaps
will reap greater benefits in re-
duced pollution damage.
The council offered revised
cost estimates in its latest an- l
nual report submitted to the
President and to Congress.
Progress Cited
President Nixon, in forward-
ing the bulky document to Con-
gress, cited advances in clean-
ing up the environment and
said "our progress should in-
spire us to get on with the job
that still remains."
He referred to several admin-
ist ration-proposed bills which
have been pending before Con-
gress for up to 2% years.
"Passage of these measures
is crucial to the environmental
well-being of America," the
President said. "The time for
action is now.”
The report noted some im-
VA
minced onion.” little or no change in emissions agreed today to plead guilty to
3) Unnamed. Make it with to the air of carbon monoxide an expanded indictment charg-
one third cup peanut butter, and nitrogen oxides. ing him with violating federal
The report, compiled by the election laws during the 1972
cheese, and "add raisins and staff of the council, was signed Florida Democratic presiden-
)
Auto Strike
$ 1
‘ IfV
4 i
44"
leaders had no comment.
O’Brien told newsmen as he
was leaving the bargaintag
room that be was on his way to
talk with Chrysler Chairman
Lynn Townsend.
Townsend reportedly stayed
thunderstorms in Southwest
Oklahoma through tonight.
Rain was falling in some
areas of the City at 1 p.m., provement in national air quali-
but forecasters said there was ty in 1971, its latest avalfable
By PEGGY JO ORMSON
COUTHWEST Oklahomans
• forgot about air condi-
tioners and started lighting
furnaces early today as a slow
moving cold front ushered out
■
2
Make it with cream cheese,
sugar, peanut butter, milk
and whipped topping. Top
with, naturally, chopped pea-
nuts. A delight that will, in
the publicist’s words, “last in-
definitely in your freezer."
2) Peanut soup. Make it
with cream of chicken soup,
cream of celery soup, milk,
and two or more tablespoons
of peanut butter stirred in.
"Some people," the peanut
publicist wrote, “also like to
“The commission is suggest-
ing ways of eating peanuts
that the average gourmet
probably has not thought of,”
it continues.
Although the release doesn’t
say it, the reason the average
gourmet hasn’t thought of the
recipes is probably due to
lack of "nutty" inspiration, as
can be adjudged by sampling
some of the commission's of-
ferings.
1) Frozen peanut butter pie.
a federal magistrate, Segretti was released on his personal
agreed to have the case trans- recognizance.
ferred from Florida to Wash- The new indictment charged
ington, D.C. Segretti with conspiracy and
Spokesmen for both the com-!
pany and union insisted the *
talks had not broken off, and a
union spokesmen said its ne- a
,-vhorl“t
ity reported today the nation j
must spend some $274 billion on |
environmental clean-up over I
eat up." The commission isn't by its two present members, tial primary.
more specific on how it John A. Busterud and Beatrice Segretti received money from
should be eaten, or, why. E. Willard and former chair- president Nixon’s former per-
41 Breakfast delight "To man Russell E. Train, who was , ’ . ,,hearino for net 1 when Sepr.
J mmmmmmmrmseradora MeS : pssedi • " M sr. z •
.1
HAEA-
092-
summer and brought autumn.
■
. 1d
day to a low tonight in the
upper 40s.
High Sunday was 68, low 53.
The cold frontal system
swept across the Sooner state
during the weekend, dropping
temperatures and bringing
cloudiness, rain or drizzle to
most areas.
At 5 a.m. today tempera-
tures ranged from 64 at Mc-
Alester to 48 at Gage. The
mercury' stood at 54 degrees
in downtown Lawton at 5 a.m.
today, but had dropped to 49
degrees by 9:30 a.m. today.
The system could trigger
Tush-n
, a gaky
MF* -ds=- e" #
but weather officials said
mercury readings through to-
night will indicate an early
arrival of fall.
Temperatures should range
from a high in the low 80s to-
A federal grand jury in Tam- with illegally publishing un-
pa handed down the four-count authorized political statements.
1 . , Federal law requires that po-
indictment Aug. 24 but it re- litical literature contain the
Jomncwory "
sptc4g,i‘
ado'
k g M0,% i
at company headquarters dur- like temperatures to the
with car ana truck production, bation by the North Central Accrediting Association.
Chrysler’s automotive assem-
bly lines were halted at mid WASHINGTON (AP)-The Justice Department is consider-
night Friday when thousands of ing asking a federal grand jury investigat ng alleged graft in
UAW members walked off their —
The cold air is plunging burning of fossil fuels. By MICK TAYLOR confined in lieu of bond set at Christensen’s opinion said
throughout the central U.S. , The council noted that some A 43-YEAR-OLD cityan was $35,000 during his arraignment IBM “is enjoined from adopt-
Frost and freezing tempera- scientists fear continued carbon being held in Comanche County this morning on a charge of see- ing, implementing or carrying
tures extended into northern dioxide increases could create jail today after being charged ond degree manslaughter. out predatory pricing, leasing
portions of Michigan and Min- a "greenhouse effect" trapping in District Court with the slay- Cortez is accused of fatally or other acts, practices or
neseta as well as western Ne- solar heat and perhaps alterin’ ing Sunday of a 61-year-old Law- -hooting Luis Adrian, 4624 J, strategies with intent to obtain
braska this morning, the world’s climate tonian. Sunday evening in what police or maintain a monopoly in the
Some snow was reported in me . ,1 . Felix Cortez, whose address described as a heated argufent market for (electronic data
Nebraska. tion abatement etsnaturimPot, was listed as 2705 Ave. I, was involving Cortez’s former wife, processing) peripheral equip-
Scattered morning showers decade from 1972 trouah 19g Investigating Officers Harry ment plug compatible to its
throughout Southwest Oklaho- m‘ t I oh ) 8h 78 C L 11 ill Ezell and Laurence Mahamed (processing units).
- o: ais Sexluplets All a i S~ .
s.ma atkaki "Lawzinkamea for solid .. 505.8 bl ny |_ ~,A, bendeen‘Cortez ann nouncement on electronic data
Adache In the "ondcanapnutontotacUK in Colorado theslyear-oid truek drive
STENTS uSS £ ‘ DENVER, Colo. (Ap, -s- POLICE FOUND the victim 01 the elec-
. . clean-up out it had estimated ..... .. , slumped over in the front seat tronc interrace.
ka watershed area, recorded the cost n. tuplets born to a 34-year-old . . ' . " ' * ; j IRM also was nmohihited From
15.in. A +te1 nt nan. tne cost of damage from air 1 ____ ___• of his auto with a bullet wound 1bM alS0 was promibited from
:n h. A total of -08inch pollution alone in 1988 at about Lakewood, Colo . woman who in the face. "single or bundled" pricing of
wasimeasured bo thin down $16.2 billion without pollution had been taking fertility drugs Cortez was arrested the IBM memory systems in its
down-awton, atthettpwton controls and projected the an- were satisfactory condition home. In his possession was a System 370 central processing
EutshingCo,an at ire nual damage cost without con- today, a Colorado ,eneral Hos- .38 caliber pistol with one car. unit and was ordered within to
HationEwe, 53rd and Gore trols could reach $24.9 billion Pl,a spokesman said. tridge fired, police said. days to price its processing
by 1977. The sextuplets — four boys Police sald witnesses told units and memories separately.
Levels at both Lawion wa- Figure Multiplied and two girls — were born late them the argument and subse- It also was ordered to price
ler reservoirs have risen con- Multiplied over a 10-year pe- Sunday night to Mr. and Mrs. quent shooting occurred when separately its functionally dif-
sistenty from runoff received riod, these figures would in- Eugene Stanek. The hospital Adnan, accompanied by Cor- ferent products, such as central
Im generous September dicate that air pollution alone spokesman said the mother and tez’s former wife, Ramona, and processing units and their con-
could total some $162 billion to babies "are doing just fine. The a third friend, went to the Cor- trols and other products, wheth-
$250 billion, compared with the Coctors are encouraged.' tez home to pick up Adrian’s er they are placed in single
ttal clean-up costs for air, wa- The hospital spokesman said parked car. cabinets or multiple cabinets.
Telex had argued that IBM
See IBM. Poge 4. Cal. J
Company executives said lege of Liberal Arts. “There’s too much talk," said regent
that, if no settlement were Exall English of Lawton. "Can we just sit here and watch
reacied today, they would de- them waste money?” Regent John H. Patten of Norman said
cide whether to lay off an un- he has been getting reports that OCLA enrollment is continu-
specified number of the auto- ing a steep decline, but Dr. Dan Hobbs, regents vice chancel-
maker's 10,500 white-collar lor. said full enrollment figures will not he ava lable until Oc-
workers. Layoffs would hit only tober. “I don’t hear anything good about the place," English
those whose jobs are linked declared. “Is there anything we can do." OCLA is under pro-
I Telex warrants, securities
which give their holders the
right to buy Telex stock under
specified conditions, were also
delayed in opening on the
American Stock Exchange.
Opinion Aired
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12 00 night s
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2100 a.m. s
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7:00 am. n
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11 00 e.m. »
By NICK STUART
"THE state’s publicists are
- are not prone to un-
derstatement.
For example, try the latest
“press release” compiled by
an anonymous, for obvious
reasons, writer for the Okla-
homa Peanut Commission.
"The Oklahoma Peanut
Commission is an Inspiration
to the palates of the dining
public," the blurb modestly
begins.
ga wont am . . W4M
A3299 Circulotion . 153-0628
“47 Edit. Ofice . 253-0620
jobs.
That meant Chrysler lost 4,-
600 cars it had expected to as-
semble Saturday on overtime.
wVWIM 8UV VaIE •MDUILU LUP«ILIILHV «lvuIIU UIIC UIIUEIy UuaLLH- . 1 . 1 , .
Chrysler had planned to build tional question of whether a vice president can be indicted be- The Lake. Lawtonkasleyel
42,000 cars and 11,000 trucks fore he is impeached. at 115 feet below the . ______-
this week, including Saturday " top of the floodgates Satur- ter and solid wastes of about Caesarian surgery was used to Cortez came out of the house,
overtime. nAr „ ..m . .. , day, compared to the Sept. 1 $274 billion, assist in the birth of the last argued with Adrian, went into
----- -anasz 5 =2 -EE m—ne — 4
been cancelled, a company miles northwest of Swan Island. Lake Ellsworth measured to be borne by the private sec- pital said. shot as he sat in his car, police .... » ow w ... >
spokesman said Sunday. 3.40 feet below the top of the ter. I Medical staffs from three said. Dorstt " ’ * ’ * .....J
Even so, the Budd Co., a De WASHINGTON (AP)—Only reviewing the White House tape new spillway gates Saturday, The council estimated that by Denver hospitals assisted in the Cortez Washeldtovernight n ... 2 Comis *. ’ 1
troit-based parts supplier, said recordings remains before the federal grand jury probing the compared to 4 06 feet below 1973 the antipollution effort delivery of the children. thefuyand Iran 10 Hospitots • - • « Crossword • - • »
it is laying off 250 of its 2.500 Watergate break-in, as it considers issuing indictments. Ail Compared, t *05 Iet would “cost “TPamiyn eaming Ted Wrenn, the hospital county ad following his arraign- Enlertoinment .. 10 .... a
workers because of the Chrys available evidence in the case, except the tapes, has been pre- the top of the 8a e on Sept. 913,500 abut 1.8 Cent Its spokesman, said it had not ment. His preliminary hearing
ler strike. sented to the grand Jury and it is ready to vote on indictments 1, and 3.85 feet below the toP income or around $250 due to been determined what fertility “asseusor -nd
No immediate effect is ex charging perjury and conspiracy to obstruct justice. The Asso- ol the spillway on Saturday, antipollution laws drug Mr* Stanek had been tak- , 1 e Vcm 5 Doy."astaken
»W, ««Press has learned. Sept. 7. । The councii nted some Im- Ing.buzxdoptor pad known, of for an zr Cty hospital
• xamaTT MM axax-TUMmaI of sulfur dioxide _ _ I I•!
State Commission Bids To Entice Gooher Gourmets -- Segretti Agrees To Plead Guilty
But it noted an increase of al-
most 6 per cent in “particulate WISH INGTON (AP) - Politi-
add a teaspoon of dehydrated matter” (smoke and dust) and “ cal agent Donald H. Segretti
; / t
-,4.
. b
gotiators planned to return at
noon today,
"It’s not a bargaining break-
down, it’s a breakdown of
stamina," Chrysler Vice Presi-
dent William O’Brien told news-
men after the marathon ses-
sion.
Because of a news blackout
Imposed on the negotiations, no
further details could be obtain-
ed about progress in the bid to
end the strike which began at
midnight Friday and to affect-
ing 112.000 UAW members at
Chrysler plants in the United
States and Canada.
But O’Brien did concede,
"We’re closer than we were
yesterday."
No Comment
A newsman who told UAW
President Leonard E. Wood-
cock that O’Brien said the two
sides are “close" drew the re-
ply, "I think you're mis-
quoting.” Otherwise, union
Mm
"We are now optimistic about 2M-6m
IE rr
C"r. ,
K?3
-
» A
04
only a 10 per cent chance of estimate.
additional moisture tonight. Fuels Blam'd
Partly cloudy skies and a But It pointed to a distinct
little warmer temperatures and accelerating increase in
are expected Tuesday. High the concentration of carbon
Tuesday should be in the low dioxide in the world’s atmos-
eStan Phete)
Accused stayer Felix Cortez, right, is led from a Com- _____________
anche County courtroom this morning accompanied declined immediate
by Ronald Callicott, his attorney, and Deputy Hugh on the decision
Thompson. Cortez is being held in lieu of $35,000 bond. Both IBM and Telex were de-
layed in opening on the New
o, gm | l| I I York Stock Exchange after the
Cityan Charged, Held -
In Slaying Of Trucker
Progressing
DETROIT (AP) — Weary ne-
gotiators today recessed a 23-
hour marathon bargaining ses-
sion aimed at ending the three-
day strike by the United Auto
Workers against Chrysler.
Company officials said the all-
night session had brought "con-
siderable progress."
See PEANUT, Page 4, cw. « printer.
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Bentley, Bill F. The Lawton Constitution (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 72, No. 30, Ed. 1 Monday, September 17, 1973, newspaper, September 17, 1973; Lawton, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2037598/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.