The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 81, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 28, 1965 Page: 4 of 14
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PAGE FOUR
THURSDAY. JAN. 28. 1M5
THE OKLAHOMA DAILY. University «f Oklahoma, Normaa, Okla.
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O.L'.’s Student Shoe Center
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Center
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Town & Country Shoes
are the suitiest!
Billions of Dollars
Lost Due to Colds
By Line $14.98
Platinum Candy Kid
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SUITS
SPORTSWEAR
DRESSES
SLIM JIMS
SKIRTS
UNIFORMS
COCKTAIL
DRESSES
S*x*> 6-11
All prices
Offices: 555 Constitution, South Campus
Phone JE 6-2260 Ext 417
107 N. Hudson
’933 Penn Square
Okla he ma City, Ok Io.
Ley A wav accounts and
3 month budget
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She Stork Shop
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They’re the perfect shoes
for town, travel or trodding anywhere your
favorite suit goes.
its interest and Donald's friends
are urged to write him since he
will be confined for some time"
assistant
and stage ments for contestants
^MWTWWt^-***** *•'*
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Where you can alwavs step »1urient hours
Open until 9 p m.
Conveniently Located in Downtown Shopping
for this year’s pageant which will bonifide
carry out the theme of "Dreams". ~ *
All aspects of production will be
built around this central theme
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A weather space station resem-
bles an oversize hat box. Its 18
sides are covered with more than
9,000 tiny mirrorlike solar cells
that recharge the powerful operat-
. ing batteries.
OU Correspondence Courses
Can Help You ...
... Overcome scheduling problems
. make up deficiencies
. earn University credit at home
Derby
Platinum Candy Kid
will be treated to production ef-
fects entirely new in design.
Ten finalists will compete for
more than $1500 in scholarships.
19€5's Miss Oklahoma City will
receive $600 and the first runner-
up will receive $400. The sec-
ond runner-up will ret $300 and
$100 will be awarded to the girl
selected as Miss Congeniality.
Since the pageant's purpose is
to effectively choose a girl most
able to represent Oklahoma City,
the judges will be concerned with
several aspects of the girls' per-
sonality.
Talent, poise and conversation
will make up 50 per cent of the
judges choice Swinsuit competi-
tion and evening gown competition
will make up 25 per cent each.
Mrs. Pat Shockey, well-known
local fashion coordinator, is in
c h a r r e of the contestants.
Through .Mrs. Schockey's ef-
forts. it is hoped that this year’s
pageant will draw applicants
frem every area, thus giving the
judges a wide choice in select-
ing the perfect Miss Oklahoma
City. The peageant will again be
telecast live from the auditorium.
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Fashion Goes Corduroy
The very top gentry wears these
with a shoulder patch and a
pouch in the back for the game.
These are so high style they
could replace the dying ski look
here.”
In Paris Mrs. Cram ran into the
Western Look from the United
States to the point where one store
had a section called ‘La Ranch—
Steve McQueen.” A so-called
Steve McQueen jacket was so wild
looking she brought it back "not to
copy—just to stare at.”
She also found epaulets on every-
thing. belts and a fad for the Lon-
don bobby coat which she adopted
for 10-year-old boys. And in Lon-
don she ran into a combination of
Mod outfits and traditional coun-
try sports jackets with a few new
twists.
Mell rt
Order* ^>rw»
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By WALTER LOGAN
NEW YORK iUPI) — Corduroy
has been around for a couple of
centuries, usually the garb of the!
working class—tough and durable
breeches which whistled as you
walked. In recent years it has be-
come far more elegant, turning up
in such things as stadium parkas.
Next fall corduroy for men's
wear will be more elegant than
ever, thanks to Spanish work-
men. Italian gamekeepers, the
British Mods and the French Ye
Ye set, all brought together in
some new designs by the Cor-
duroy Council of America.
Amelia Cram, the fashion direc-
tor of the Council, toured Europe
in search of ideas for new cor-
duroy designs and had them trans-
lated into ideas acceptable to
American men and boys for a
showing <Feb. 12, 19 and 26 • in
New York.
Mrs. Clare Elliott Nelson, the
Council director, told about it.
"In Italy the most interesting
thing was the shooting jacket.
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NEW YORK <UPD—The com-
mon cold's fiscal year is in full
swing Before it is finished Amer-
icans will have accumulated near-
ly 1 billion colds, the average
adult accounting for four and
children, the most vulnerable
That a lot of adults heed the
doctor's advice to stay home and
in bed is evidenced by industry's
annual loss of 218 million work
days and $3 billion.
People spend $350 million a year
on decongestant, antihistamine and
other preparations, according to
an estimate by the Menley &
James Laboratories.
Another S10 million is being
spent annually in pure research
for a cure for the common cold.
Miss Oklahoma City of 1965 vill
be officially selected at the gala
Miss Oklahoma City pageant on
April 3 in the Municipal Auditor-
ium in Oklahoma City.
Raymond D. Larson,
professor of drama and stage
crafts, has designed all the sets
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WILL SHE OR WON'T SHE—Only time will tell whether Susan Fryer. Oklahoma City freshman, right,
will decide to enter the Miss Oklahoma City contest. Linda James. Richardson. Tex., left, is trying to help '
Miss Fryer decide what to do. The contest will be held at the Municipal Auditorium in Oklahoma City
on April 3. Ten finalists will compete for over $1500 which will go to the winner and first and second
runners-up. (Photo by Stan Skinner) i
Miss Oklahoma City for 1965
To Be Chosen in Early April
Any girl interested in becoming ,
a contestant should write for an
application from the Miss Okla-
homa Pageant. Inc., P.O. Box
1165. Sheraton-Oklahoma Hotel or
call CEntral 2-7478. Basic require-
are: 18-25
years old, never married and a
resident of Oklahoma
city.
—
and the pageant's live audience OU Student Moved
To Army Hospital
Donald Kain, 19-year-old fresh-
man from Falls Church. Va., has
been translerred from a Spring-
field. Mo., hospital to the DeWitt
Army Hospital at Fort Belvoir, Va
Kain was seriously Injured while
returning to school after the
j Christmas holidays when the car
his sister. Donna Kain. 20-year-old
I sophomore, was driving went out
| of control and hit a bridge. Miss
Kain died as a result of the acci-
dent.
Mrs Donald Kain, mother of the
two students, reported that physi-
cians had not yet been able to
place a cast on Donald's right leg,
which is broken, but he is able to
rest without the use of medication
and is beginning to resume "his
normal outlook on life ’’
A recent letter to Dr. W. R
Brown, dean of men. said. "The
Kain family wishes to express its
appreciation to the University for
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Resler, Beth. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 81, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 28, 1965, newspaper, January 28, 1965; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1828585/m1/4/?q=Cadet+Nurse+Corps: accessed June 20, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center.