Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 295, Ed. 1 Monday, January 29, 1968 Page: 2 of 28
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V
^ Monday. Jan. », OKLAHOMA CITT TIMM
Colleges
«
From Paco I)
(Coaliaiiod From Paco I)
la a hazard. Mr*. 4. I.
Wo reported ihi* to Fire Marshal John P. Anderson.
Ho aaya tho lot ha» now boon cleared and tho church ia
being repaired.
•
There ia a large dug running l«o*e in the 14*1 block
KW 78 Terr, that we bate reported several time*. Thi«
Cog la to large you can't run It away from yon because It
will attack. It ha* bitten one boy, but the people *till let It
rua loo*e. Mr*. Me
We talked lo Poundmasier Royal Burti* about thi*
dog and he ha* been in touch with the owner. They ad-
mitted they had been letting the dog outside to exercise.
Burri* ha* warned the owner* that one more complaint
about the dog running luo*e and he will file police court
charge* against them
•
A car ha* been parked in Iron! of my home in the
1CM block NW It since Thmnk*gi\ing. It belong* to a
neighbor. Tan you get it moved? A.B.K.
voice*. *ald of the regent*.
“Am we in effect saying,
posed Sen. Bryce Baggett
<D-Oklahoma City), “that
the regents most of the time
want u* to keep our fingers
out of their business, but in a
matter that takes some cour-
age and guts, they would like
to have our backing?"
"If ihey have the power. I
want to know why they don’t
go ahead and do it," Sen. A)
Nu hoi* (D-Wewoka) said of
higher regents.
Miller said he had talked
with icgents. and found them
reluctant to pick out the
schools which would lose
course*.
“I think it i* a mandatory
obligation on our part to try
to encourage them to do It,"
Miller said
Sen Byron Daeu* (P-
Uobaiil said the resolution!
in effect told higher regents
they weren’t doing their job.
and called on Miller 10 "spell
| it oul in deiail."
Miller said he got the idea
after Gov Bartlett's budget
‘War Levy’ Tops Big
Budget Asked by LBJ
r-" tav*
hon, who refused last year to funnel money Into the hands
support a la* hike, said he U CREDIT — A possible of mo, (gage lenders - would
“committed completely" to squeeze on the supply of ^ ,.ul jrom this year's S2.3
the proposal this year. mortgage credit, perhaps ^uion t0 less than $1 billion
"We have to move on both enough to damage the hous- Jn jqgg
fronts." he added, “increa*- Ing recovery, is seen In a _ .
Ing revenues and decreasing proposed curtailment of the HOLHl.N PI*
«*—» w. —I ».I.... rwa WMfI »*** SSm ^
We reported this to the police department * traffic di-
vision which got in touch with the owner. The car has
now been moved. ,-----
# came up with only 1800,000 in
1 entered a conte*l and won a golf carl. I didn’t re- , ncw money lor higher educa-
tive H and wrote the company a letter. They have never
Answered me. Mr*. R.
~ We look thi* up with the Belter Business Buieau and
they have been in touch with you. They report you have
row received vour golf cart.
What I* the ju*Utieati«w for the signal light at SW S2
and Robinson? I drive that street every day and seldom
my car* using the east and west light. Mr*. 4. M. D.
This is an acutuatcd signal light for car* to use to get
zinto N Robinson The light stay* green for the north
and south traffic until a car trip* the light to get on to the
street from the east or the west, says .lame* H. Robin-
son. traffic control director.
•
Who can I contact to force nty e»-hu*bnnd lo pay me
child support? I rau't afford to hire a lawyer. Mr*. R. F.
You should talk with one of the assistant district at-
torney* In the county courthouse If you feel the need of
further legal advice and cannot afford m hire a lawyer,
contact the Legal Aid Society. The listing is on page 251
of the telephone book.
•
On Jaauar.v ?. about 2:W p m., ia a school suae at
XW tl and Portland. I was driving 38 miles aa hour like
you should when a police car passed me like I waa »Mad-
iag still. He wasa'I going after anyone because I followed
him lo XW’ 39 and Portland. Police car* should not drive
like thi*. Mr*. W. I.
We took this up with MaJ. Wayne Lawson, command-
er of the police department’s scout car division, who
assures us he has conducted a complete investigation and
can not find that any of the city’s officer* were in that
area on that date or at that time. He suggests it could
have been some other city's police car.
He says acts such as this are r.ot condoned unless the
officer is on an important assignment. Violator* will be
disciplined
lion, and "I thought it was
only appropriate ... to ask
i the r-gent* ... to do all in
| their power to make the sys-
tem efficient.
• I 'houghi one thing ihey
might look into is the $195.-
000 home for the OL’ presi-
dent." said Denzil Garrison
(R-Bartlesville).
"And another lhmg is that *°uld lead to bootlegging
• • t M.ki MM 1m *4*
students .ire being forced to
A SHEET VEX DOR. this liny South Vietnamese girl
sells sugarcane to crowd* that flock lo Saigon for the
Tet holiday*. Tel. the lunar New \ ear, is January 30.
(Al* Wirepholo) _
Teacher Pay
Raises OK’d
I put no stock in that.
Siuacnis are uemg luimi iu
live in university housing be- ’h** house speaker said
cause they overbuilt.-'
ery policeman in the state
IU5r lltrv uvriuum - - . . ,,
Baggett said he wanted to have a stake in it
become a co-author of the P'ivetl referred to the hq-
resoluiion. but warned Miller u°r ,ax- °t whith on<Mh,rd
it could cost his Ada Central 8°*** >o cities and town*.
Stale College h* education' However, at the revenue
department and lax committee hearing.
longer.
The budget makes no pro-
vision for a jump In military
spending arising from North
Korea * seizure of the navy
ship Pueblo.
The startling height of the
new spending tola! is due
chiefly lo th "unified budg-
et” format recommended by
a bipartisan presidential
commission. But actual dol-
lar outlays are escalating,
too. They will climb $10.4 bil-
[lion, or 5 percent, next year
if congress permits.
Significant disclosures
. ame in these Johnson high-
lights:
WAR — Vietnam i-osts add
up to $25 8 billion in the new
budget, rising $1.3 billion
from this year. In four fiscal
years. 1966-69. the l'. S. will
have poured $75 billion in lo
the war.
! EXCISES — The ltl per-
cent telephone lax and 7 per-
........ - ................ cr.nt nuio excise should be
Roy Tant. representing llq- blended beyond April 1.
uor retailers, said illegal Johnson said, instead of
sales will increase and some dropping then lo 1 percent
retailers w ill be forced out of ]an(j ^ percent respectively
Court
(Continued Front I'nge I)
Distilled Spirits Institute.
(Continued From Page I)
rived from that outlawed
occupation will be subject
to the legitimate reach of
the tax laws."
The federal law making
it a crime to (Misses* err-
tain kinds of unregistered
firearm* was successfully
challenged by Mile* Ed-
ward Haynes of Dallas
who was sentenced to four ^
year* in prison on convie- >har**!
lion of possessing an unre-
gistered shotgun.
Haynes contended lie
was being punished for re-
fusing to incriminate him-
self by declaring himself
Ihe possessor of an unre-
gistered shotgun. Forced
self-incrimination is pro-
hibited by i he Fifth
Amendment to the l'. S.
constitution
unintended elimination of the
6 percent i-eillng on interest
rate* on mortgage insured
by the Federal Housing Ad-
ministration and guaranteed
by the Veterans Administra-
tion.
That would permit higher
mortgale interest rates, rais-
ing the cost lo homehuyrrs.
Bin it might attract mote in-
vestment fund* into thu
mortgage market.
Johnson Claim* Frugality
Johnson loaded his mes-
sage with assurance* to eon- (
that hi* budget is a
ba rebone* spending blue-
print. frugal enough to justi-
fy the house ways- and mean*
committee In reviving con-
sideration of the surtax. The
.ommittee recently shelved
the tax plan for the third
time, waiting to see thi*
budget.
Johnson called on congress
to help him "cull out lower
.priority programs." and he
devoted 2' > page* to a listing
business.
Claud Thompson.
repre-
Thi*. plus the surtax and
proposed speedup of corpo-
The 19.14 National Fire- jof entrenched but less-
arms Ad grew out of the essential program* whirh he
attempted assassination of jsaid should be slashed. Set-
President Franklin D. ling priorities and culling ar-
_ _____ .. . . .1.___ **;. .. slifflssiilt a net
sentmg liquor wholesalers. raU, ,ax payments, would
said because taxes are paid brjng total tax increases to
in advance the wholesalers billion in fiscal 1969.
. Ill L_______ nn U’ith
"h",, -due,.on d-’“L1?;:: 12
Gui-
de- a lineup oi speaxers preaic- wm nose ... -...... .... ...... |irT|nN _
nnimen’s that turn out pd the return of bootleggers more than $6«U>00 the day! to*sTRI ‘ .
homa snem 'can 'absorb*" agamTerome^ pmblem’h. t’he SSIeTl^Iid oni°fim fderal
SEI...... ass rr £ zxxx srs**
Roosevelt in 193.1. It im-
pose* annual occupational
taxe* nn tho*e who manu-
facture. import nr sell cer-
lain firearm* and put* a
tax nn the transfer of some
other guns.
tivities "is a difficult and
painful task." Johnson said,
adding:
"Hut It is also a duty. I ask
the congress and the Ameri-
can people to help me carry,
oul that duty.
OEA
State
'
(Continued From Page I) (Continued From Page I)
tended the Monday meeting, elude $330,000 for highways
• OEA associate secretary in the Anadarko district and
$550,000 for road* In the Mus-
kogee district.
Army engineer project* In
Oklahoma and neighboring
states are:
IVMlI — ArfcUM* Stvvr G-M* *•”*
Kan . is Tvrta. 0*ia MO .000. Grand-
K900.0 «tvar Maw. Kantai. VMOOO. Var
dtor.1 Slvsr saiin. inciudwo nav,aai.«r> .n
Kan tat an* Okio««m». Ml 300 iar.na
aivar in Mlttaun. 0»ian*ma and Kantai
KI.4CS. Ark an tat Snrar tram Ktrtlont
0am is waabart Sam Satarvs.' in Oma
noma S33.000. Ctmrai Ornansma oroiact
190.000. P0*44W Rlv»f •« OkiAN>n"ia 4*0
550400;
•n4 fMtrvotr S35400. 0*r>,5on rt**rv8tr, |
L9k» T •■©"'•. 175.000
Broken Boer Bfiervoir
teMfvOir S).300*000.
“ RjMfvOir.
Alma ftmrvotr
■Hffvolr 15.
114 IWOW, WMr,M a»vn »glf. I9rt0 •€■
oul*. it ton I900/i00, Wtooeri F«ll» L0«k
bkP**
•nd 0«rr H5.VOO.OOO
ei»nnmo - C«ndv Beiervotr IIJ5.000;
Clurton »#Aervotr HOOjOOO *9$-
•rvo<r 140400. SMOltr BftfrvO'f 75400:
Ark8n$«$-Bfd fiver etjior de coniroi »t.-
000,000 Ark(in$f8 »tv*r eWorld# con-
trol 0#rt on« 1400.000
OMfAtifA and m«tNtonan<«
*4. 15 4VJ0C
F. E. Willingham said the
presidents would decide dur-
ing the Monday meeting if
the yellow four-page resigna-
tion would be distributed lo
their membership.
The form Is entitled "1968
— a Year of Decision and
Commitment."
Support Sought
In a foreword OEA presi-
dent. Mrs. Gladys Nunn,
writes:
"In support of the OEA
legislative program and the
future of education and the
teaching profession in Okla-
homa. each OEA member Is
requested to sign the at-
tached undated resignation
form.
; "It is understood that
tttese will be placed In ihe
hands of OEA officials and
will not be activated uniil __________
deemed necessary by the
OEA board of directors."
Will Be Confidential
* •
Teachers are askPd lo sign
the form in three locations.
One indicate* teacher's un-
derstanding that the resigna-
tion will be kept confidential
In the "OEA vault" until its
iise.
A second signature place
reads:
"i will not *lgn a contract
until and unless sanctions
•re lifted by ihe OEA board
Of directors and It is furl her
Understood that no leather In
fee state will accept employ-
. jnent until they are assured
’that punitive action will not
.be taken agalnsi any teacher
Who has submitted resigna-
tion . .
pore Clem McSpadden (D-
Chelsea), one of the authors,
told the senate he supported
consolidation of courses and
a fuller use of phy sical facili-
ties.
Sen. Ed Berrong (D-
Weatherford) termed the
$195,000 OL* president's home
"ridiculous.”
Baldwin said he doubled
that higher regents, held re-
sponsible for co-ordinating
the entire college sysiem,
- could do anything about the
home, because ihe OL’ and
Oklahoma Slate University
boards of regent* also are
constiiutional bodies.
"One day the people of
Oklahoma will have to real-
ize ihat those two boards are
obnoxious and deter the pro-
gram of higher education in
the state of Oklahoma,"
Baldwin said.
The two board* "lie their
hand* behind Iheir backs"
for the higher regents, he
said.
inventory. I billion below the appropriate
Ted Davis, represent ing jed levels of 1968, Johnson
Rain Totaled w,nf> 'n,oros,s’smd ,he pro-. said
Following are Oklahoma
lainfall amounts reported for
the 24-hour period ending at
6 a.m. Monday.
IS Okia Cir
13 W"
30 Po’Mu
04 "
5
All**
Anflfrt
A rtfrreft
Beots
Cfttcotk*
Colt rr»f\
D•war
Ej'», a
Fort Si>l
Htnn*
HttfcftH
McAltf*«r
_____ .ihr
13 Win *o«*<$
30
04 Fryor
1 Qwiotofl
.1 StHitt*
90 StiltMH
.13 TriMiA''
•1 Twi
» Wt
_ I w«
77 Wt*______
03 W.ibyrton
posed tax i* "mnfiscatory.-
The tax rate on wine would
double and in some cases tri- .
pie under the legislation.
"Ours is the drink of mod-
eration. yet you are using it
a* a whipping boy," Davis
declared.
-ISO
W#»Urtlk*
£
77
03 .....
1 44 ZO*
Powtal Spending l |>
FEDERAL DEBT — The
national debt, as measured
the unified budget, will
total $387.2 billion on June
30. 1969 Since part of this is
not subject to the congres-
sional debt ceiling — which
---- rises automatically to $365
»• Harry Hudson, attorney biljion on .ju(v 1—Johnson
r (or cigaret distributor*. ««W| M no ,nrrPase in the legal
fj his client* will have to bor- |lm() w
»’ row millions of dollars to pay
* advanr-e taxes on iheir in-
, ventory.
Hudson predicied the "re-
turn of syndicates" to Okla-
homa. "We will again be-
Sg?UN ^ S
mioiN
limit will be needed. But if
congress fails to vote ihe
tmis wain LUMCNiea seacisL
CLUB STEAK
With i«ktd MM tr Fr,M S T#.il Tull
TOP SIRLOIN
,^MRM MllM
[STCAK SANOW
SIRLOIN SUM
All StUki Sr*
I HOUlf: IH9.J
utBst*a
> SIRLOI
YORK CU. -----
GROUNO SIRLOIN
B4krt F«t4H %r frit A T«49t _
^ '***«**! *rw*%Mi*«itrltliti ** US* N.W. IV* SMS »■». Mtsj
WASHINGTON (AP) -
President Johnson said Mon-[come ihe laughing stock of
day postal expendliures will the nation as we were during
total nearly $7.3 billion in fis-' prohibition of liquor. " he
— 13 percent more pj u j „ 0 n said organized
the current fiscal bf)otlegging of cigareis would
i cal 1969 — 1.1
than In _______
year — but the postal deficit bring products from sur-
will be rut nearly in half rounding states and low-lax
largely because of ihe recent stales such as North Carol!-
postal rate hike.
na.
5
i'
FLORSHEI
_ ___In OkidSd-
n>*. IS*S3 COG
Rtcltn-A’ton Sur*«u Aroitct* *r*
CtntlrutlMH - M*in»» B«*,n S10.00C,
rffvOH rkcrkilton »4Cii'Nf$ 130 000
invtltlfatttBt IN
Crc»k $34,000 “ —
bAtinn % 14.000
134400
selected styles regularly $1995 to$2995
• in* wrvrtt — CMh*
V "CO 131.000 Okinfom*
I, Rt’fO* (3.000. WllMII
i«P,
j
Paid PrIMcrI AdrTtllRRlRRt
Last few days—tremendous
savings on many selected
Florsheim styles from our
regular stock. Broken lots—
not all sizes in all styles. Hurry
in. This price can’t last I
.r?N
C5
A
m
„ Okie
kitbo<n4
1 3-3311.
tm
'JtfiXZW'
JOHN JARMAN
SISTN DISTRICT C0N#eH(MAN
Ladies and (icntlemen:
I will be st the Post Of-
fice in the pieces and at the
times listed below, available
to anyone on any matter on
which I may he of service:
IATVRIAV, MMUARV I
Ruretll 3 t# 3 *."’.
*• ill Villtv 4 t« I a.m.
n*ea Mie at
EL0BSHE1MSHQE shops
m
201 WUT MAIN
2)4-1124
SHIPHIRD MALL
942-0771
3
D
0T7
And Your Group Is Invited To
Toltt Part...Any chariteblo
orqaniiation n wslcomt to ute
ipace and veil in Shepherd
Mall'i Annual Le Grand Charity
Boiaor!
Com* one...come all,..end
for further information call: Mr.
Jack Dean, tales promotional
manoqer. Shepherd Moll Mer-
chants Association, Wl 6-7977.
4
S1IIP1I1® SMLL
VIILA TO Pf NN ON N w ?ird
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 295, Ed. 1 Monday, January 29, 1968, newspaper, January 29, 1968; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc993304/m1/2/: accessed March 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.