Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 83, No. 74, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 16, 1972 Page: 11 of 26
twenty six pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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- OKLAHOMA crmiM-l
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Lee Grant as she appears on Broadway.
PEOPLE!
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WINCHESTER
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APOLLO___
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"The Ooy Bawtaan**
Aid Group
Is Formed
ACOG staff.
Phil Waring. ACOG staff
member, said letters were
sent to 24 firms inviting
BACK IN TOWN
2 WEEKS ONLY
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Oklahoma City’s
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a study for more than a
year. Purpose is to deter-
mine whether all cities in
the central region should
join to find a common wa-
ter source, and how water
problems of the metropoli-
tan Oklahoma City area
should be solved.
Members of the screen-
ing committee come from
the central Oklahoma gov-
ernments which make up
ACOG, but were not indi-
t.43 nn«»»ni
WMUMACt*
Mother of 3 Heads College
A psychologist who has
studied the emotional
strains that professional
success brings to women,
Dr. Horner is an assistant
professor of clinical and
personality psychology at
Harvard.
OPEN TILL
FRIDAY TILL
SATURDAY TILL
56th and N. WESTERN
DOOM 11:45
HAT: 1:15. 4:36,
7:30, 10:30
Now you can ' eat undar a dollar" anytima in
all Oklahoma City Admr'i catawnW Tha 87«
lunch haa baan to popular wa dacidad to make
you tha aama good daai attar tha tun eats and
call It "tha »7< suppat!" Coma on in and try
our "naw-daai-maal" anytlmet
Strvad from 11 tm to 2 pm and 5 pm to I pm
Mondar thru Saturday,^! am to ^pm Sunday
♦-------------i------------
MJOH
‘•"fikCi h
The Originol
Charcoal Broiled
HAMBURGER
12 PM
1 AM
2 AM
THE
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.
(AP) — Dr. Matina Soure-
tis Horner, a 32-year-old
mother of three children,
will take over on July 1 as
the youngest president in'
the 93-year history of Rad-
cliffe College.
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PRIME RIB
BUFFET
In th*
Don Quixote
Cub
Sarvad Mon.4rl.
11M1»M
Live tnta^Vain^nant
MvHug Ivncti • • •
35351W. 39 Eximswjy
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For $40,300
LONDON (AP)--A
price of $40,300 was paid
by a private English buyer
Monday for a pair of 17th
century flintlock pistols,
sent for sale by an Ameri-
can arts academy.
Sotheby's, the London
auctioneers, said the price 1
was. the highest ever paid
for a pair of pistols.
The arms were made by ;
Andrew Dolep, a Dutch ;
imnpgrant arms maker,
betw<|f»n 1680 and 1685y
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"Frlandt" (*•>
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■ __ ___ ____
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12:410 TH
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The Cornucopia
11th B Dewey
■ ■
the award, and also for
."Ransom for a Dead
Man," opposite Peter Falk
in what turned out to be
the successful pilot film
for the Colombo series.
She also was nominated
last year for an Oscar in
best supporting actress
category for "The Land-
lord,’’ but lost out to Helen
Hayes (in "Airport").
Lee’s career has been
mercurial the past year.
The Emmy and Oscar-
baitjng performances, fol-
lowed by the big hit on
Broadway, have given
enormous new stature to
her career.
HAPPY HOUR
Caah •ay* "Ma aaa It IB F*.
Wally nw—aw Ptana Vaawl
NHHy
No Cover Choree
Jerry’s Tempo Club
NW 23 1 Portland
SELCJuca
Like Mama.Iik^Son.. .True Mexican
TOWER
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fhtatnf
JAMILS®
DUCK HICKORY WILLED STEMS
4910LMC0LN BLVD.
U—wm Hm* B'eewrm
B-IBai. HUT 3.SO
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OPtH OAIIY 5:00
Bet. 525-9121
* ~ ----1 earned her
two nominations for
Emmy Awards, and a
third nomination for an
Oscar in a single, match-
less year—1971.
She won the Emmy,
even though she was in the
unique position of compet-
ing with herself last year.
She had been nominated
for both "The Neon Ceil-
ing," for which she won
-----
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I? IWICACTUSIN
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A l,P IICHARO THOMAS
MARY LATHI
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"But you know what?
It’s a good show. Funny.
And it proves anyone can
do It.”
That’s prepping for a
soon-due change ‘ in the
cast of the big hit by Neil
Simon. Both Lee and Falk
will relinquish their roles
this summer, Peter to re-
turn to playing Lieutenant
Columbo for another sea-
son on NBC and Lee to
make her directorial debut
in movies.
Directing for Lee will
add even greater stature
to the iminense talents of
this gifted actress, whose
the speaker but the laughs performances c_----- .. -
got stronger, and then
“ there were the closing
. lines and the applause
reached crescendo. A few
minutes later, Lee Grant
trudged Into her dressing
room, changed into a robe,
and stretched across a
sofa. A young lady had
heated up some soup, and
Lee unwrapped the foil
from a sandwich. It was
snack time between shows.
It is a grind, eight shows
a week, including two on
Wednesdays and Satur-
days. Yet Lee can recall
only once having missed a
performance in her Broad-
way career. That was re-
cently, when a severe sore
throat prevented her from
doing an evening perform-
ance (she had done the
matinee).
At that, Lee couldn’t
stay away. "I watched the
show through the side cur-
tains,” Lee revealed.
"Since I wasn’t working, it
wouldn’t have been right
for me to sit in the audi-
ence to watch it, so when
the lights went down, I
thinly parted the curtains
at the side of the theater
and watched.
fa OMN 7:00
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"The Ooy Bactaan" (■)
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"SHAFT'
Now
Eat Under A Dollar ■
Anytime!
David Outflies Most Pilots,
Hosts Talk Show, Too
five Oklahoma City en- preliminary work for such
gineering firms are being
Considered for a consulting
contract to study the water
needs ot central Oklaho-
ma.
The $45,000 contract will
be awarded by the Asso-
ciation of Central Oklaho-
ma Governments.
Th<‘. firms will make
presentations to an ACOG
selecipn committee on
June II, after which one
will tfe selected. ------—
Scheduled for interviews vidually identified by the
are O.H. Guernsey & Co.,
which has joined with a
Dallas firm for the pro-
posed^ study; H u d g 1
Thorrrpson-Ball & /
ciatas; Benham Blair &
Affiliates; Phelps Spitz
Ammerman & Thomas,
Inc.,*and Russell, Gravlin,
Douglas & Cornell, Inc.
ACOG has been doing
n
Asso- them to participate in pre-
liminary meetings. TTie
five to be interviewed June
1 were chosen from those
that responded.
Letters were sent to the
firms after the selection
committee investigated ex-
perience and qualifications
of engineering companies.
Preliminary interviews
were held May 8.
The five being consid-
ered have been instructed
to submit detailed descrip-
tions of how they would
perform the study, other
performance data and
schedules Indicating time
and cost needed to develop
More than 50 Oklahoma various parts of the plan.
City residents have formed
a group to help parents,
teachers and children cope
with the transition to the
Finger integration plan
scheduled to go into effect
in Oklahoma City schools
next fall, it was announced
today.
The group, calling itself
A Voice of Quality Inte-
gra t e d Education (VO-
QIE)', is made up of "citi-
zens interested in promot-
ing quality education in
the Oklah^na City school
system, with particular
emphasis at present being
given to integration as an
essential dimension of
quality education,” said
Dr. Frank Manning,
group spokesman.
Manning said the group
will take no particular
stand regarding the Finger
plan or busing nor will it
endorse any political can-
didates.
"The Finger Plan is a le-
gal r e a 111 y,” Manning
said. "We will try to help
people live with it."
Manning said VOQIE in-
cludes parents, teachers,
ministers, counselors and
businessmen. A core group
of about a dozen directs
the group. About 40 more
have volunteered to serve
on the panels which will be
the organization's chief
tool, Manning reported.
The panels will appear
before parent and student
organizations, sharing
I their knowledge of integra-
tion problems with them.
I Hopefully each panel will
I include a parent, a stu-
I dent, an educator, a minis-
I ter or counselor and a bus-
I incssman.
I Panel members will
I present their views how an
I integrated education can
I be beneficial and will also
I discuss the problems of
I achieving that integration
I in schools, said Mrs. Lydia
I Gill, one of the group’s
I founders.
"We will try to lift this
I problem out of the area of
I emotion and onto rational
I plane where people can
I deal with it creatively,”
I Mrs. Gill said.
I Another VOQIE project
I planned for the near futfire
I is a six-week course deal-
I ing with the problems of
I integration. Mrs. Gill said
I she hopes the course will
■ begin operation in several
I area churches within a few
I weeks.
I Pistols Sold
■STUON SNOAOSMINT
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LOS ANGELES (CDN) — David Frost, a regular Lon-
don-Hollywood-New York-Las Vegas commuter, some-
times gets in more flying time a month than airlines will
■■■■■I permit their pilots to do. "And,” muses
' David- ”^’018 tend not to get off an
I a-irplain0 and do a talk show.” But he says
he real,yloves iL “Its just that ru 11376
r - -r . ■ to hurry up and invent the 48-hour day.”
. Actress Susan Sullivan, star of the
K . / NBC soaper “Another World,” declares a
few years ago she thought she ought to
devote herself to marriage, to one man.
"Then I realized how lirainwashed we
girls have been. So it was back to a ca-
reer for me." It’s too bad. Susan is re-
Frost garded, as she puts it, "a minor casserole
selection commit- * queen. It’s not that I love them, but my
J *'— kitchen is so small that’s all I can cook for
more than one person.” . . . Opera star
M Robert Merrill denies he’s temperamen-
tai. "At least no more temperamental
than any other fell^v who comes from
Brooklyn and used to root for the Dodg-
ers.” Merrill refuses to do any comedy
routine that might offend opera lovers.
A "Some singers forget their voice must
B come first,” he said. "That’s a big mis-
r take.” . . . When Ted Knight, the fabu-
. Merrill )ous .anchor man of the Mary Tyler
Moore Show, got to Hollywood 15 years ago he sent 400
says . . Lyle Waggoner of the Carol Burnett show got
into acting by playing a muscle man in a road company
of Li’l Abner in Kansas City.
Each firm will send rep-
resentatives to meet with
the screening committee,
with interviews beginning
at 9 a.m. June 1.
"Hie i
tee’s recommendations
will then go to the ACOG
executive committee for
action.
3 to Talk
Her Directing Debut
By Dan Lewis
Npw YORK—Backstage
at the Eugene O’Neill the-
ater the laughs came
through the little loud
speaker outside Lee
Grant’s dressing room. It
was Wednesday afternoon,
and the matinee crowd
sounded like it was enjoy-
ing "The Prisoner of Sec-
ond Avenue” at least as
much as every packed
evening audience since the
show opened.
The dialogue between
Lee and Peter Falk
seemed distant through
At Phillips
ENID — Three students ____ _ _____________
will share in delivering the ‘|^hures producers. "I got exactly three replies,
address for the 65th com-
mencement for Phillips
University graduates at
2:30 pm. Saturday in
Briggs Auditorium.
Mary Jane Buck, Ok-
mulgee; Dan Stichman,
Independence, Kan., and
Diane McCracken, Oklaho-
ma City, will be the speak-
els. Five honorary docto-
rates and 232 bachelor,
masters and doctor’s de-
grees are to be awarded.
Receiving honorary doc-
torates will be Donald Hel-
seth, Denver; R. A. Langs-
ton, Topeka, Kan.. Robert
M. Hall, Lincoln, Neb.; W.
0. Coburn, Muskogee, and
Jean Woo If oik, Little
Rock, Ark.
The degree candidates
from the Oklahoma City
area include:
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 83, No. 74, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 16, 1972, newspaper, May 16, 1972; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1788184/m1/11/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.