Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 286, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 14, 1965 Page: 1 of 60
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VOL. LXXV, NO. 286
FINAL HOME
FIVE CENTS
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Bellmon
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Regents to Investigate
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Jolted
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OU Coaching Program
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Pro-Link
Johnson Seeks
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$3.38 Billion
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In Foreign Aid
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WASHINGTON IPP — President Johnson asked con-
Fire Missing
sidering turnpikes alone
Two Are Killed
in a special message to congress outlining the 1965-
By Landslide
Touchy Issues Skirted
9
4
il
!; *
s
The nine-page presidential message left undecided
turnpikes and highways hold some touchy matters that are likely to come up in con-
Vast Medical
ic and military measures might be split this year.
diately.
Police said “we could hear no more voices" when
McCarty predicted a house
(See JOHNSON—Page 2)
(See SETBACK—Page 2)
Arendx Hang* On
House to Launch Probe
Ford Whipped Permits
I
Due Bun?
On Aide Choice
thoroughly
By Jim Standard
By Kay Dyer
the ABC board and its direc-
An
the
stage for the investigation
The contract hires as con-
scribed as a leading medical
Dennis told regents in
gal technicality.
Sapulpa Woman
built.
Dies of Injuries
WARMER
semi-trailer truck driven by feeling among legislators the
the accident.
(See ABC—Page 2)
A
4
A-
P 1 .
)
4
F.
A
■
)
than that ’
However.
CHECKING evidence in the Jack Ruby murder trial,
Glenn Haynes, clerk of the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals, examines the .38 caliber revolver Ruby used
Monroe appointed the en-
tire board to act as a com-
mittee of the whole to meet
with the athletic council lat-
een ter
firm.
Dr
near
mys-
gress as it begins work on the bills to set ceilings for.
and name the amounts of, the aid programs for the com-
ing year.
assistance. Administration sources said this has not yet
been determined.
( life-or-
parts of
to deter-
rescuers were withdrawn in the pre-dawn darkness be-
cause of the danger of new slides
Ten persons were rescued five with minor injuries.
About 1.000 of Ocean Falls’ 3,000 residents moved to
safer ground, including occupants of a large apartment
block only a few feet from the path of the slide.
and tragic crash
Del City remains
tery Page 18.
Amusements
Business
Bridge
Classified Ads
Comics
National Affairs
(Ml Reports
Our World Today
Sports
Tell Me Why!
TV Time
Vital Statistics
Women's News
e
te
Clear to partly cloudy
and little warmer Thurs-
day night and Friday. Low
Thursday night 33, high
Friday 58. (Details, Page
.34)
34
8
», 31
y
r
1
r
a
=l
And Johnson stressed continued efforts to streamline
the proposal.
‘ Indeed. $500 million may not be enough," the presi-
dent said
26
33
3
34-39
32
4
(See REGENTS—Page »)
Building
s
18
34
18, 11
H
SBa"
... rI
Hi
"in harmony with a total
campus design."
Dr. Dennis, in urging re-
gents to approve the initial
$5,200 contract, said:
‘ ‘We have no time to waste
the whole thing to see what
can be done "
McCarty, lashing at weak-
ness by the ABC board and
Parham, said there is some
50 PAGES—500 N BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY, THURSDAY’ JANUARY 14 1965
ATOM BLAST sears mem-
ory of war-years physi-
cist, in city for lectures.
Page 15.
CAUSE of two-car chase
1
I
“Stride”
the rules, " Finch said. I
"There isn’t any more to it
mine whether it will be ac-
Irepted or whether the legis-,
llature will have to write a
' program
! House Speaker J D Me- [
('arty said the governor has;
not shown the house that his
i fices in Connecticut and Cal-
ifornia) was consultant for
Johnson's proposal—$1.17 billion in arms aid and
$2 21 billion in economic assistance during the coming
fiscal year—was the lowest such presidential request
since the beginning of massive foreign aid under the
Marshall Plan after World War II
the governor s program on ■
a
federal matching funds.
Dr James L. Dennis, di-
rector of the medical center,
disclosed to the regents that
the $5 million grant had just
i been approved with the pro- i
vision that work toward a
/7
water ’
Both he and MeSpadden
Oklahoma City Times
ENTIRE CONTENTS COPYRIGHTED 1965 OKLAHOMA PUBLISHING CO.
7:» p.m. .
icmi
fe
was passed by the house
Wednesday. It would assign
a committee to study rules
and regulations of the ABC
board.
Heber Finch jr., Sapulpa,
author of the resolution, at-
tempted to pass it off as a
there is more to it than a le-1 same firm (which has of-
a quick
on kev
Cireulation 309,414 A.M. P.M. n<»iiy Average, December 1994
the "Giant Stride
same time. they
board “hasn’t policed the in-
dustry as strong as it should.
“The board and the direc-
tor should take over and run
thing s,” McCarty said.
and construction
War Chance Eyed
MUNICH, Germany (—’
Erich Mende, West German
deputy chancellor, says the
chance of civil war in East
Germany cannot be exclud-
ed.
McCarty said a written statement that the
Rep. Gerald R. Ford, and
re-elected Rep. Leslie C
Arends as party whip
Ford, who earlier ousted
rain sluicing through a deep snow pack, thundered down
off 4 bOO-foot Caro Marion mountain at 10 oclock
Wednesday night
The two duplexes a printing shop and a credit office
were swept in splinters to the edge of Dean Channel,
where this coastal pulp mill town sits 300 miles north-
west of Vancouver B C
Canadian mounted police said rescue crews hacked
their way into one duplex to find five occupants safe.
Five others were rescued with only slight injuries and
were taken to a hospital here for treatment.
Bodies of the woman and child were found In wreck-
age of the other duplex. They were not identified imme-
was in the hands of Mayor
Shirk Thursday at a re-
cessed city council meeting.
At the close of the meet
ing, Mayor Shirk asked if
anyone from the urban re-
newal agency was present.
He received no reply, and
the meeting was adjourned.
After the meeting. Mayor
Shirk said he had understood
the urban renewal people in-
tended to be present at the
council meeting to discuss
an ordinance that would cut
off the downtown building
permits.
Shirk said he had a copy
of the ordinance but had not '
had time to read it and :
didn’t know all of its provi-
sions.
He said it was his under- *
(
(See ORDINANCE— Page 2)
A proposed city ordinance
has been prepared which, if {state's
passed, would cut off the is- be conducted by the house of
suance of building permits in representatives, it appeared
",7930
-i"r-ud
§ ;33
bond issue he wants the peo-
ple to vote
replacement for Arends Rep.
Peter Frelinghuysen of New
Jersey.
However. Arends refused
to step aside and took his
lease to the party conference.
At Thursdays closed-door
I session, the GOP members
picked Arends over Freling-
huysen by a vote of 70 to 59.
The action represented a
sharp setback for Ford be-
cause it was his first test of
strength in his new post.
Arends, 69. has been GOP
whip in the house for more
than 20 years. He served
under two previous leaders,
Reps. Joseph W. Martin jr.
of Massachusetts and Hal-
leck. He said he could be
just as loyal to Ford.
However. Ford preferred a
whole new team.
Ford, of Michigan, said
Frelinghuysen was the best
available man to work with
him and Rep. Melvin R.
Laird of Wisconsin, the new
chairman of the party con-
ference and successor to
A’ the
ralled for
death test
The $3.38 billion Johnson is seeking compares with regents approved a contract I planning program.
the approximately $3 52 billion he sought, and the:s3 25 Thursday for a work plan The move will give the
I that starts the OU medical | medical center $5 million in
stall the whole program until.
the governor discloses the)
rest of his plan
Schedule Wrecked
the downtown area of Okla-
homa City.
The ordinance, apparently
aimed at preventing the con-
struction of buildings that do
not conform to the Pei plan
for the urban renewal of
downtown Oklahoma City..
“They should tell people in planning
the industry when to get up
indicated their committees
would spend considerable
time studying the turnpike
measure—enough time to
“The legal thing is one
part of it," McCarty said, eight of 12 new medical cen-
"but we re going to look into ters recently built or being
ga 2
h 4
University of Oklahoma [center on a vast long-range
Relfls Good
The directoryaid all cen-
ters on which ’ they have
worked have received imme-
diate approval by the federal
fund-granting agencies.
Dr. Dennis said the plan-
ners will not supplant local
architects, but will work
with them to provide super-
vision of all architectural
Thursday.
J. D. McCarty, speaker of
the house, confirmed there is
much legislative concern
about the Alcoholic Bever-
age Control Board and its di-
rector, Roy Parham.
“There are some who are
• --e
■ '* ■<
and go to bed."
McCarty criticized the
board for ever allowing the
construction of a watchtower
above a bomb-shattered Ok-
.7.
' i -
amiiama
investigation of the
liquor industry will tor, McCarty said.
A resolution setting
Of ABC Board, Parham -m
Evidence of such planning er this month. He appointed
f • 9^04***
A Sapulpa woman died
early Thursday of injuries
received in a car-truck colli-
sion on U. S. 66 just west of
Sapulpa Wednesday after-
noon.
The victim, Margaret
Brown, 44, was a passenger
in a car driven by Carolyn
D. Keizor, 21, of Mounds.
The latter was taken to a Sa-
pulpa hospital in critical
condition from head and
chest injuries.
The highway patrol said a
WASHINGTON (UPI) — veteran Rep Charles A. Hal-
House Republicans rejected leck of Indiana as ‘ GOP
advice of their new leader leader, had hand-picked as
Houchin as chairman.
Dr Cross said he has
scheduled an appointment
with Jones to talk about the
coaching of football and the
premature signing of pro
contracts as soon as Gomer
returns from athletic meet-
ings in the East.
The message did not say whether further aid will be to kill Lee Harvey Oswald. The evidence was shipped
going to Egypt and Indonesia, whose presidents Nasser from Dallas to Austin where the court is reviewing
and Sukarno, respectively, have publicly scorned U. S. Ruby s death sentence. (AP Wirephoto)
Robert Lee Wearve, 34, Tul-
sa, attempted to' stop for
another car coming from the
opposite direction and which
was making a turnoff.
The truck jackknifed and
slid across the road, and the
Keizor car, also approaching
from the opposite direction,
struck the left front of the
truck’s trailer, the patrol
said.
Wearve was hot injured in
2“
• l
campus planning
The massive slide, triggered by a week of heavy
OCEAN F ALLS. B C.e—A woman and child were if.We passed it first. He said he would ask an additional open-end “stand-
killed and five others were missing and feared dead -P • aye no by authorization,” for use if he decides later that more
Thursday in the ruins of two duplex homes smashed by Scen 5 stanttaung 8ures money is needed “to protect our interests there" against
a snowslide in this mountain-ringed town, as ,o the money saved and the Reds' "frontal attack ’
(Other factors which make)
am
‘First Love’
“I think that’s the gover-
nors first love, and he
' might not be as interested in
{other facets of his program*
Thursday’s development
shattered the governor s
time table He was trying to
get the legislature to ap-
prove the four new turnpikes
[before he disclosed plana of
.the proposed $500 million
disgusted with;procedural look-see at the: is required by the federal
board [government by June 19. and
Thursday’s action bv regents
The law* requires the reg- • Cen ’ . . .
{approved a $5,200 contract to
ulations to be reviewed by begin the work program
the legislature and I was
afraid some smart lawyersultants Lester Gorsline &
would use this to get some- Associates International. de-
one off if we didn't look at'
Administration officials say direct aid to those two
countries is now small Nevertheless there have been
protests in congress against continuing any of it.
7
’ 4
Ford in that post.
: 4
. - /
--------
— 41
---
Letters. Callers Slap All Sports
I am opposed to rushing
I the turnpike bill and placing
jit before other parts of the
I program." McCarty said aft- 66 aid program, Johnson said more than a half-bil-
| er a conference with Me-1 lion dollars will be used for weapons and economic help
Spadden I to counter Communist guerrillas in Viet Nam and Laos.
" 18
What’s Inside
Also left open was whether the specific legislation— j v a y w w
to be sent to congress later—will be in one package or in ! 4 wemng M 1 4 Wmw wemN ■
separate bills. Influential senate and house members are VJA UUNLE ^7 F F g GUU(N
at odds on this. Administration officials said the econom- !
Bv Hugh Hall
Gov Bellmon suffered a
m.jot setback Thursday 1
when legislative leaders in
effect put his turnpike bill lol
sleep until he reveals his
$500 million road bond plan
There also was talk of a
sales tax increase.
House and senate leader-
ship* combined in an effort ।
to force the governor to dis-
close his road bond plan be-
fore getting approval of the
four new turnpikes he wants
to build
Test Nought
TTTTTT-
"=TETTTTMA
• - ' >
Spur Quiz
University of Oklahoma
Regents agreed Thursday to
serve as a committee of the
whole to investigate the en-
tire athletic coaching pro-
gram at OU.
The decision came after re-
gents chairman Eph Monroe
of Clinton said he had re-
ceived about 200 letters, tele-
grams and long distance calls
complaining about the OU
coaching situation in all
sports.
He suggested the univer-
sity administration investi-
gate to show definitely* "if
we have any coaches moon-
lighting with the pros "
Monroe said he believes
none of the OU coaches is
working with the professional
athletic scouts, but he thinks
this should be made clear
Several regents indicated
they have heard of wide-
spread disturbance because
four of OU's top football
players signed professional
contracts prior to the Gator
Bowl on January 2.
Players Warned
Dr. George Cross, OU
president, told the board the
four players and other team
members were warned in
advance , by Gomer Jones,
head football coach, that
they w’ould become ineligible
to play in the post-season
[game if they signed prema-
ture pro contracts.
"You mean they were
warned by the coaches and
they still signed?", Monroe
asked
New Information?
1 Dr. Cross answered in the
affirmative.
I Monroe said that this in-
[formation has never been in
the press and he would like
to see it there.
John Houchin, Bartlesville
regent, said one distin-
guished All-America player
[complained strongly about
the basketball program.
" And when this man talks,
we ought to listen,” Houchin
said. He did not name the
sportsman or comment fur-
ther on the nature of the
complaint.
AmPeeVAadeab •• P
f E 4 ■ 26636853 V
"" Tax Boost Mentioned gress Thursday for $3.38 billion in foreign aid to promote
SURMAL KITS—for final exams, not atomic holo- Sen Clem Me Spadden { the defense and economic strength of free countries.
> i . r r d} for.d ivery to ' ninerpit of Illinois mentioning a sales tax in-
students who face fallout Monday. The kits, a project , ,
v, g,. , .1 crease vote bv the people as
of the < of I Mothers Asnociation, contain 47 instant . . ,
1 . c. an alternative, said in his
snac h items and sell for S3. (AP Mirephoto) ,
' opinion me senate wants
the entire financial pic-
ture" before seriously con-
e, " ' ** s'*.
. au p
. 3 •
fe - g"ro
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 286, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 14, 1965, newspaper, January 14, 1965; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1843438/m1/1/: accessed June 8, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.