Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

San Antonio Express from San Antonio, Texas • Page 46

Location:
San Antonio, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
46
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

AUTONOMES 73 PINTO WAGON Automptic, olr. 75 PINTO WAGON ud no eauitv. call nedit Manager. 349 6948 '77 PLYMOUTH Barocuda. auto air, power steering, vinvl root, beoutiful.

Original owner. 534-8187 '89 Pi.VMOUTH Satellite Power. good mechanical condition. 1500 YMOU TH Satell ite FTTTT power, oir, stereo. 65S 3626 eves PLYMOUTH SATELLITE 74 power, bucket seats.

688 PONTIAC Astro. Air, 4-speed. very good cond. 53450. PONTIAC BonneviHe 4 Or hardtop, cruise control, tilt steering Fully equipped Extra clean, low mileage.

$3150. 5939 70 Pontiac. Catalina, good condition. owner, 661 1974 Pontiac Catalina. cream puff has A C.

and cruise control 71 PONTIAC Catalina Take up payments, no eauity, call Credit Manager. 349-6948 PONTIAC Executive, power steering, brakes, new tires, eves. 72 PONTIAC FIREWiRD. power steering. 3452 T0 a ORA i 7J, Excellent condition.

Reg. core, low easy miles, 1 owner. $3300 494 73 PONTIAC Granville. Auto power steering brakes, air AM PX trac. Vinyl lop, cruise control, orl'pls.

41,000 mi. 656 '69 Pontiac GTO, Standard. Air. 5500. 876 3989 5 to 7pm.

76 Pontiac LeMans 2-door hardtop Loaded. equity, pay off balance 732 PONTIAC Storchief Clean, new tires. After 5 pm, 337 8870 PONTIAC Trans Am Silver, red interior, am frn stereo. Tilt wheel, power windows, door locks Railve wheels, extra clean 317 641 eves, weekends. cAmeifcan bargain WANT SACRIFICE 71 Maverick, 2 door.

6 rvl, stick, 24,000 actual miles, new tires. 71 Olds 98 waaon, 3 seat, loaded. excellent 220 413). 75 Silver T-Bird, excellent above wholesale owner-681 1009 air, 51800. Call til 71 Skylark, 8, )PM.

341 3815. Take over payments on 73 Cutlass Supreme No eauitv. Coll 824-4420 ask for Fred Take over payments on 74 Firebird No eauity. Call 824-4420 ask tor Take over payments on 74 Novo NO eauity. Call ask tor Dennis Take over payments on 74 nova equity Call 824-4420 ask for Fred Take over payments on 73 Cutlass Supreme.

No equity. Call 824-7604 ask for Dennis T-BIRO '72 Black Inside out. Loaded, outstanding appearance, performance, condition. Under 49,000 miles; under 27,000 miles on high performance engine. Price negotiable near No trades.

Coll to inspect at 9414 Ranchero St. 74 TbundBPbird $4889 WHITE on WHITE with vinyl roof Fully loaded, immaculate car and low mileage HEMPHILL MCCOMBS FORD SOUTMSIDE 1901 S.W. Militqry-922-6317 THUNDE RRIRD. Grig! owner Less than 16,000 mi. Gold with matching leather interior.

New rodials, ail power options, including AM FM 8 track stereo. lmmoculote condition. 55800 653-1870 THUNDERBIRD Extra clean! Extra 'ow mileage. Loaded. 433-6658 TOP CASH PRICES PAIO FOR CLEAN USED CARS Superior Pontiac Co.

920 BROADWAY 227-5041 7C TOR O'N A TTXC eflenf'' must sell by Dec 15 72 Toronodo, fully enuipoed, s'l 700 Will consider trade. 681 326) 76 TRANS-AM. No eauity, take up note. Call Mary: 690-8933; otter 76 VEGA extra clean, am-fm radio, outo. no down payment reautred lOOMinancIng available.

Call Johnnie 3871 '74 VEGA. tires. Clean. after 5 p.m. 73 VEGA Station Wagon.

Air, good tires. Very clean 690 1939. 76 VEGA Wagon, automatic, take up payments, no eauity call Credit Manager, 76 VEGA Wagon, no equity, take up payments, auto, air, extra nice. Randy WE BUY-SELL USED CARS AND TRUCKS KINNEY MOTORS 1928 BROADWAY 828 2213 74 XR-7 COUGAR. AM-FM stereo, air, disc brakes, all power.

Speed control, radlals, sunroof, V8. 54400. 342-3205; otter 5: Patterns and Needlework His Suit Pretty Apron Please him with this casual jacket and pants set in denim, corduroy or a polyester knit! No. 8345 with Photo-Guide is in Sizes 3 to 8 years. Size 4 2 yards (i0-inch.

Patterns available only in sizes shown. $1.25 ea. Coupon for FREE Pattern is in the Fall Winter Basic fashion. Price $1,25 a copy. Also send for No.

1500 ADVENTURES IN SEWING. Hints to give garments a professional look. $1.25. Ruffles and Sunflower pocket make this a pretty apron! No. 366 has tissue Medium Size; full directions.

$1.25 ea. Coupon for FREE Pattern is in the 1975 Needlework 68-page ALBUM. Only $1.25 a copy, ALSO THESE BOOKS AT $1.25 EACH. NO. 0-116-BLUE RIBBON OUILTS.

contains sixteen lovely quilts. NO. Q-117-aUllTS ON PARADE. Directions for sixteen quilts. No.

FLOWER QUILTS. 16 fascinating quilts. NO. Q-119 AMERICA'S FAVORITE AFGHANS. A beautiful selection.

No. Q-120 MAKE A GIFT. Many gifts for friends and family. IjjSKLiSKM Mail TO: Son Antonio Express News Pattern Dept. 782 P.O.

Chicago, Illinois 60680 Name 7 i Address City PATTERNS No No 1 25 each "Sire Si te I Fftsh'on Book SI 00 Sfate Zip Code No. No Album 1.00 All pattern mailed first class. Books separately ALLOW FIVE TO SIX WEEKS FOR DELIVERY. Put our sticker CUSSIFUD ADS UICKY UCENSE on your and you could win $50 cash! Our bumper sticker makes your license a lucky License eligible for Express-News classified price money! Gel your FREE bumper sticker of the Express News lobby, Ave. and Third from 8:30 a m.

to 5:30 m. weekdays, or at any Lone Star, Mr Circle or Tote store. Put 3 on your cat reor bumper close to the license plate! Our photographers ore snap ping pictures of Lucky Licenses every day you could win $50 if yours is published in the classified section of the San Antonio Express and The News! WINNING LUCKY LICENSES APPEAR EVERY DAY IN THE SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS AND THE NEWS! CHECK IT TODAY YOU CAN WIN $50! Lucky License Rules Where to get your sticker: 1 lucky I'turne on -ear bumper of veb.th* as Gense as possible Be sune bumper is o' adhere to dtrty surface Wrjtch the xrvess and News fO' pe hire of wmnmg pjates which will be published every day, skjMwg 26 must clow pnte by sJatfid the ad must show automobile slip order to claim pme money 5 of News or and families are eAgtbfe If such license inadvertently published, will no be honored. 6 Only wtfh News rear bumper sticker attached will be --for pho'o winner will be awarded $50 cash fhe pure claimed deadline If is the pme forfeited 8:.. net sat Bumper oyadpbie News tone and Tote and ate qvaiintnf; fot mspF-ct'an hc-nt (omhtr 5 30' and wtfl be Claiming the pnte will be an release such nfotmahpn far publicity purposes.

up bumper of the I News, lobby, and Third from 8 30 5 30 p.m wyehdays, or of cmy Son Anfohto tone 5for. C'r rid ot tor Express-News Classified Ads Work! Call 225-1666 To subscribe to the Express and News, call 225 7411 AMA endorses health insurance SAN ANTONIO December 8 1976 Page 19 -C PHILADELPHIA (AP) The American Medical House of Delegates, voting after long debate and deep disagreement, endorsed a national health insurance program Tuesday. The program is embodied in one of the most conservative of several health insurance proposals expected to be reintroduced when the 95th Congress convenes in January The 181-57 vote of the delegates was a reaffirmation of past AMA policy and a rejection of a strong move within the House of Delegates to refuse to endorse any such program. felt confident the House would react this way, even though there was strong said AMA President Dr. Richard Palmer, an Alexandria, pathologist.

Voluntary The AMA approach to national health insurance includes using the existing private insurance industry and making participation voluntary for employes. The bill, HR6222, echoes that approach. It was introduced in the last Congress and is almost certain to be reintroduced in January. What is not in the bill is more significant than what is included: it reflects AMA thinking by calling for minimum federal involvement, no added social security tax for funding and voluntary participation for employes, although employers would have to take part. Delegates voted after two hours of discussion and after rejecting a move to ote by secret ballot A special reference committee that had held a hearing on the issue Monday, at which almost 50 doctors spoke, told the House of Delegates on Tuesday that bill embodies the principles approved by this House and represents a viable mechanism to advance the association's views on this Credibility Proponents of the official AMA position said the association must take positive to maintain any credibility in the national debate that many doctors expect in the next Congress.

Dr. Palmer had warned the delegates at an opening session last Sunday that the election of Jimmy Carter might mean trouble for American medicine, based on the known support for a national health insurance program. Therefore, he Scouts honor deceased educator Scout units from the East Terrell Hills Elementary School area dedicated a memorial plaque to the late principal Tuesday. The memorial to Edward Raymond Farris reads One Who Cared From Those Who Farris, 53, died of an apparent heart attack last March. Farris's son.

Ed, was the spokesman at the dedication ceremony, which was held at the school Tuesday afternoon. In addition to the plaque, three trees were dedicated to Farris. three trees? Because they symbolize three key beliefs always held high in children learning, character and said Farris during the ceremonies. Boy Scout Troop 266, Girl Scout Unit 133, Brownie Scout Unit 757 and Cub Pack 301 were represented at the ceremonies at the school. Farris was the principal of East Terrell Hills Elementary School until his death.

He had been with the North East School District 13 years. SNAC sets elections The Southside Neighborhood Assistance Corp. will conduct board elections for Program. Planning and Operating Area 12-2 at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the Palo Alto Outreach office, 509 Palo Alto Road.

For more information call the SNAC main office at 924-8344. The public is invited to attend. Medical association-supported national health insurance gram is one of the most conservative of several expected to be reintroduced when Congress convenes said, the AM A must be sure to have its own version to fight for its points of view Critics of the AMA line charged that the action would be that would inevitably lead to government regulation of American medicine. Other national health insurance proposals introduced in the past would have the government operate the entire program. The AMA is opposed, for example.

to the labor-supported Kennedy-Corman BUI of the last congressional session, which is a mandatory program with more federal involvement. The Kennedy-Corman bill was sponsored by Sen Edward Kennedy. and Rep. James Corman, D-Calif. Police nab theft suspect in hurry Police officers drinking coffee at a downtown motel Tuesday speedily arrested a 23-year-old man after a man walked into the motel office and reportedly grabbed almost $300 from a desk.

According to police reports, a man walked into the manager's office at La Quinta Motor inn, IflOt E. Commerce and asked a secretary for a job. After being told by the manager there would be no job until January, ibe man grabbed $280 from a clerk's desk and escaped through a back door, police said, Bexar County Metro Squad Lt. Bob Lew arrested the man near Crockett and Chestnut streets after chasing him about 10 blocks from the motel, officers said. Arthur L.

White. 23, of 60S Belmont was charged before Night Magistrate Manuel Lopez with theft. He was Jailed in lieu of $5,000 bond. Pleasing pattern A bird would have had this view of Fourth Street in Richmond, during a light rain this week, The manhole cover, the umbrella, leaves and cracks on the sidewalk for this Wirephoto Pearl Harbor attack recalled at ceremonies PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii (AP) The 35th anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor was observed Tuesday in a sunset ceremony at the USS Arizona Memorial, and at a cemetery where the only governor of Japanese ancestry said: are things we should remember, and things we should forget," Hawaii Gov. George R.

Ariyoshi, addressing a service at the Cemetery of the Pacific overlooking Honolulu, said, must remember the suffering, the anguish, the deaths of so many on that frightful Sunday Ariyoshi said the sacrifices made to protect and preserve the freedom of the nation must be remembered along with the lesson of Pearl Harbor: be prepared and be To be forgotten, he said, the hatred, vengenee, malice and unjustified hostility. must get rid of our' personal ethnic and cultural disharmonies which help divide the peoples of the he said In remarks prepared for a sunset ceremony at the USS Arizona Memorial, Navy Secretary J. William Middendorf said the Uniled States was able to recover quickly after the attack on Pearl Harbor because of a farsighted rebuilding program already underway. That same preparedness does not exist today, he said. 7, 1941, was a day of infamy because we were perceived to be Middendorf said perception of weakness has been a major cause of wars in the he said.

American man or woman who loves his country would ever again wish to invite attack by participating in another perception of Voters down tax to reopen schools GROVE PORT, Ohio (AP) A lax levy that would have reopened schools to 6,900 students in the Madison Local School District was defeated Tuesday for the second time in 35 days. Dr. says alliance firm BRUSSELS. Belgium (AP) Henry A. Kissinger.

on his last scheduled trip to Europe as secretary of state, arrived Tuesday for a meeting of the North Atlantic council and said the U.S. commitment to the alliance will remain firm. Kissinger told reporters at the airport that all changes of administration, NATO has been the cardinal commitment of the United States, and I am certain that it will continue to be so in the The outgoing secretary brought with him a message from President-elect Jimmy Carter that he will deliver at the opening session of the ministers Thursday. In his airport statement, Kissinger said. don't think any alliance in modern history has lasted so long, grown so much in vitality and extended the range of its concerns so Kissinger did not wait to answer questions, leaving immediately with his wife.

Nancy, for the residence of U.S. Ambassador Leonard Firestone. He will spend Wednesday talking with members of the permanent U.S. delegation to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and possibly confer with some attending foreign ministers. After the council conference ends Friday, he will go to London for talks on the racial crisis in southern Africa.

Kissinger hopes to boost resolve in the face of increasing Soviet military might while also underlining the need for a nuclear weapons treaty with Moscow. Armed forces of the Sovietled Warsaw pact in Eastern Europe outnumber NATO forces 910,900 to 635,000, according to Western calculations. The Warsaw pact also is believed to hold a 3-1 superiority in, tanks and a edge in tactical aircraft. the proposed tax increase, to have been assessed in each of five years, would have allowed the district to borrow money to resume classes. The tax equaled $13 80 for each $1,000 ni assessed valuation.

Schools now will remain closed until Jan. 3, when a new budget year begins fur the district. Doubt can finish (his (school) year, but 1 doubt we can open next said school Supl Paul Williams. will have used up all the money by then. talking about a $6,4 million annual budget When it's gone, we have to is nothing else to be said Mary Havens, mother of seven school-age children and member of a group that worked lor passage of the tax.

a Mrs. Havens fought back tears and bit her lower lip as her friends presented her a box of red rosebuds all the hard work and all the Unofficial vote totals were 3,764 against the lax and 2.999 in favor. On Nov. 2 voters rejected an 11.5-mill tax increase, the ninth since mid-1971 The current tax rate is 44.4 mills, of which 30.1 mills goes to the schools. Pupils return; budget still out PUTNAM, Conn.

(AP) Public school pupils went back to classes Tuesday after a brief, unscheduled vacation because townspeople approve a budget. Attendance was normal, and there were no problems with reopening of the elementary and high schools, Supt. Albert DePetrillo said. About 1,500 pupils attend the two schools. The school board closed the two town schools last nesday because state law bars municipalities from spending money more than 90 days into a fiscal year without a budget.

Wednesday was the 91st day. Common Pleas Court Judge Thomas O'Donnell ordered the town Monday to spend money to keep the schools open He cited a state law requiring towns to ide 180 days of education yearly. The was caught between two stale statutes, he said. DePetrillo said students would have to make up the four days during scheduled vacation time this school year..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About San Antonio Express Archive

Pages Available:
224,132
Years Available:
1900-1977