The Altus Times-Democrat (Altus, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 210, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 6, 1978 Page: 3 of 14
fourteen pages : ill. ; page 21 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Million Students Resurrects
set up picket lines.
InIllinois, teachers' strikes in
Come on in!
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85I
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(And you might win a
HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
)
Skim milk high in calcium
main bank and in
fBET’aank
(
)
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)
"e
Name
Address
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
City
State
Member, FDIC
Telephone
___I
\
tens
- pizza
Bunker Hill shop-
ping Center you'll
be redi to use it. . .
for extra banking
convenience.
Any time during banking hours, we'll be glad to
show you how easily you can use REDI-BANK
... for twenty-four-hour banking convenience.
Our experienced
we’ll be giving FREE pizzas from Ken’s Pizza for
specially marked transaction receipts. So come
on in and meet REDI-BANK, face-to-face. Then,
when we open our
A
W
prize for letting us
demonstrate it
A to you!)
• ---j , P,P,5 hvv • ",6 a run nuiui
. report for their first classes of and Detroit’s suburban Warren
the fall term as angry teachers Consolidated School District.
EXTRA: If you bring us the coupon from this newspaper ad, you’ll be
eligible towin a pizza feast for four from Ken’s Pizza ... so don’t
forget to bring it.______
(.
P » p The Altus Times-Democrat, Wednesday, September 6, 1978 3
Une of Every 4 Farmers Considering a Change
mu • ' am "
ne kpublshedbysthe magaz- her husband Tom. At her death, to Pers0 to 8068 estateworthsro,ooowou id be each child $6,000, $3,000 tax free Upon her death, the remaining 42 common law states, this trusts, farm partnerships, gifts
• ponhe book is entitled “Estate her heirs would face taxes of —nlin8 4dnno At 788,069 without corporation from each parent, even if the stock would be divided among merely means legally that he to children and life insurance
■
sr a?”- ”u“ ^^”“2 Lla dej"iscdmttny "Many timkshere
Strikes Affect Fort Sill
2 Pistols Linked to Slayings
m-maemsna mhamaamm- m-mtenz
possibly the massacre of - Sanrdnvsandpolicespokes aboratoryexpersusedanacid ina field the next day.
FORT SILL, Okla.(UPI) - persons at a steakhouse, police Sirloin Stockade restaurant in A third"pistol a bolstered 22- solutionto raise the num-
Army ranks at Fort Sill am said today. Oklahoma Citv polidesaid AI 4 , bers, police said. Investigators said .38-caliber
Army ranks at Fort Sill are .. City, .Diee Mid. aliber automatic, also was A resident of the Green bullets, possibly fired from a
Aadona Dausuics tests found. Police said it was not Pastures '
were planned today. Officers used in either of the
.38- said the weapons would be test slayings.
isryrrqeopa
310166850 .? 33
ALTUS OKLAHOMA 73521
; In New Orleans, where a four districts — including
< week-old strike has disrupted Rockford, second largest in the
classes for about 90,000 stu- state - idled 50,000 elementary
dents, teachers ignored threats and secondary pupils.
of disciplinary action and Highschool students staged a
refused to return to work. sit-in at the school administra-
A strike by instructors at tion building in Richmond, Ind.,
Chicago's city colleges left while teachers picketed for the
112,000 students locked out of eighth day, halting classes for
class for a second week. 10,000 students.
Studentscomplained they would Another walkout in Marion,
be forced to "work like dogs” Ind., affected 10,000 students,
to catch up once the strike In Ohio, teachers struck the
ends. Tallmadge and Lima Shawnee
Deadlocked contract talks districts, but supervisory per-
threatened to break out in sonnel taught classes for 6,900
picketing when classes open students in both districts.
Thursday for the 110,000 stu- Classes were canceled for 4,300
dents in financially pressed pupils in Logan.
Cleveland. The 1,500 teachers in Strikes and lockouts plagued
Dayton, Ohio, voted to strike six school districts in Pennsyl
today, a preparation day for vania.
g We'll show you how
m easy it is to use our
-*—-- _
REn-BAnIKI!
v*"TT
tWttm,
■
%
zV
new twenty-four-
hour banks at the
! ATD-78-D
demonstrator is
located in the main
lobby ... and she’ll
show you all the
simple steps in per-
forming a transac-
tion with REDI-
BANK. And to make
it more fun for you,
By United Press International them and one day before the 4 D,pg
More than a million students start of classes for 37,000 llo DUYIIII
fromelementaryschoolthrough pupils. "b""b
college are being affected by The 70,000 students in
ongoing or threatened teacher Boston’s schools, who begin
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i ““^u^T mad atm tdm witt UteS am^niJoZeref^SuT tmem. patee dit zamdetdrmasonruanus
aapttsatcamasommmgpiie taraama; memcpiminoz sbmms,mmomvemi sonvzanmdm aeakho^iolta" 01 * srmmsnthenuretsg sum % soMaaalLAtenEezcanash smoenonng"iemmmautim
in ial Ju’e and ie Sheyhavetoiivelyimked rs'trjr, adsmtalfsNazomaklatiemd
perform once the strikes are ton. California’s first strike, calls have been used on many F •_ .
seted.., affecting 7,500 high school bases, replacing the fellow L.) I u m a •e A me a —I. - B — T)
About 250,000 st udents in students in Daly City, was whose lot it was to arise before K\( V AGC fit A HArere
Philadelphiai faced the prospect scheduled to begin today. his comrades and sound the 111 Wl “u I VO I O A | VI % W V () I U
Q an extended summer vaca- Salary disputes are at the wakeun reveille nfwdfiut I, IIoI . . 1 .
tion beginning Friday, the day center of most of the strikes. Spec. 4 Randy Mueller 23 The Jamuna ndia n- .Mu dy waters apped a t! The Mood Control Office said tombs of Nehru and his for the moment because it was
passes are scheduled to open. The Chicago college teachers handles the bugling chores at rising watera already whose tombofthelatePrimeMinister the Jamuna stopped rising at immediate successor, Lal Baha- situated on high ground.
Teachers, on strike since last are protesting an increased Fort Sil. Hesaysmorsamd Forndmtersamareadyhaye JawalharlallNehrua nd, came dawn today with its waterline dar Shastri, and disabled two Even ‘hough the river
week and the school board workload imposed by their more buglers are being used in out of their homes in th? Ne majestic Tai Mahal officials 5 feet above mean flood level, cremation grounds a mile from stopped rising today, thousands
were far apart in negotiations, governing board. the Army. Delhi area crested at aheap" mt f - the highest ever recorded. the river’s bank. of persons were still being
I have no feeling .hat we’re in Tacoma, Wash., striking “There's been a kind of a 15 feet above pg 1a,j Eo Si,, . n The official death toll in the The sprawling lush green evacuated from suburbs and
on the brink of a settlement,” teachers rejected a contract resurgence of traditions like Flooding efloodleveltoday. More than aquarter-million New Delhi floods mounted to 47 lawns around the tomb of the villages. Officials said the
John Ryan, the chief negotiator proposal Tuesday, sending bugling here at Fort Sill” scores ingare in ha skilled peopleghave.been evacuated when a rescue sailboat over- late Mohandas (Mahatma) operations would continue until
forthe Philadelphia Federation home 30,000 students. Mu%er salS 'Every once ’in “Z andD capital from floodthreateneduareas; turned Tuesday night, drowning Gandhi. India's independence the floodwatersstart receding,
of Teachers, said Tuesday. Strikes hit 100,000 students in awhile, we get up and playth? no of’the New Delhi ,gQVe pTh ? at J rrib ’ 25 persons, officials said, leader, have not been affected. The mass exodus began early
, Schoolofficials in Seattle 15 Michigan school districts, rveile.mesusuansinPon-umc norrotottesn.Deht Federal Twenty other persons died Reports said the Taj Mahal Tuesday. People scrambled
. today told 55,000 pupils not to including Pontiac, Port Huron on with aceremony” j told reporters after an aerial Monday in a similar incident. palace at Agra City, 140 miles aboard any kind of available
> ---' g mss tour of the New Delhi area. River water seeped into the south of New Delhi, was safe vehicle tomove to safer places. '
5""Te-e""GTE-EASagm6
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. are our best sources of cal-
DEAR DR. LAMB - For cium in the diet. One of my
the past two years I have favorites in this group from
been giving my children, a health point of view is low-
ages 11 and 7, low-fat and fat cottage cheese, some-
skim milk. I asked the doc- times referred to as slim
tor if they were getting cheese or low calorie cheese,
enough calcium and he said You can also use low-fat
they were. Recently I heard yogurt provided you don’t
a nutritionist claim that chil- have a problem of intoler-
dren should have whole milk ance for milk sugar. In that
to get the calcium they need, instance some of the yogurts
Who do I believe? Are there may not be satisfactory,
other foods that supply calci- Mature beans contain an
um ? appreciable amount of calci-
DEAR READER — I um, considerable amounts
would suggest you place of protein and are a low-fat
your trust in the food analy- food. Canned salmon or sar-
sis of the U.S. Department of dines, if you eat the bones,
Agriculture. There is no cal- also supply an appreciable
cium whatsoever in the fat amount of calcium. There is
in milk. It is the fat that’s a certain amount of calcium
removed from low-fat and in the leafy vegetables but
skim milk. ' very often this calcium is not
In fact, if you were to readily absorbed from the
check the agricultural hand- digestive tract. It isn’t al-
books for food values you ways available to the body,
would find that fortified DEAR DR. LAMB — I
skim milk and fortified low- have a friend in college who
fat milk, which is what most studies many hours a day
people use in these and gets very little physical
instances, contain consider- activity. She eats quite a bit
ably more protein and cal- hut she doesn’t get fat. Does
cium per glass than ordi- studying use a lot of calo-
nary whole milk. Perhaps ries? Would you use more
you misunderstood the nutri- calories studying for three
tionist She may just have hours than you would just
been talking about milk in sitting for three hours?
general and cited whole milk DEAR READER — I hate
as it is commonly used, to disappoint you but the
rather than implying that if brain uses very little energy
the milk wasn't whole you evenwhenoneisconcentrat-
wouldn't get the calcium you ing on extremely difficult
needed. tasks. It has been said that
To give you more informa- you can run the brain on less
tion about milk and the cal- calories than you find in one
cium and protein content of peanut, which I guess means
whole milk, low-fat milk and that all of us have peanut
skim milk I am sending you brains.
The Health Letter number 7- This is one of the main
2. Others who want this issue reasons that office workers
»on milk can send 50 cents and people who use their
! with a long, stamped, self- brains tend to get fat. Desk
; addressed envelope for it to work of any type in a person
• me in care of this newspa- who does very little exercise
Iper, P.O. Box 1551, Radio means that the person
' City Station, New York, NY doesn’t use very many calo-
: 10019. ries a day.
Milk and milk products (newspaper enterprise assn »
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Gilmore, Robert K. & Hart, Sandra. The Altus Times-Democrat (Altus, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 210, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 6, 1978, newspaper, September 6, 1978; Altus, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2122867/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.