Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 74, No. 131, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 18, 1963 Page: 51 of 64
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES Thursday, July 18, 1963 N$
Museum Serves as Living laboratory
,1
Veteran CSC Historian Guards Lore
25
20"
ae
1s
men to register
room.
~4‘
ton's
as pleased with the labora-400
as a classroom aid.
Casady Teacher ‘Outstanding’
K
mond.
This way, Miss Hampton
28th & North Penn.
M
CLUB STEAKS
SIRLOINS
I
L
2"
r 1"
2-
by students and friends.
Oklahoma City
1015 N. Walker
Pc
Richard A. Marble demonstrates award-winning style.
dg
PLAN a FAMILY PICNIC
lb.
•5
STOP ‘N SAVE
with QUALITY FOODS from KAMPS*
1
A
HEAUTH 1 BEAUTY AID DEPT.
SANKA INSTANT COFFEE
V
/
HUNTS TOMATOES Peeled
a
7/7/4
II
PINK BEAUTY SALMON
1 lb. can 69* 1/2 lb. can 37'
L
HEINZ DILL PICKLES Genuine, cured in wood
AK
24 oz. jar 55'
QUALITY MEATS
ARMOUR BACON
1b. 63*
BABY SWISS CHEESE
1b. 89*
WE HAVE ITI
SPARE RIBS Pork, trimmed to Bar-B-Q
1b. 69*
MORRELL HAM E-Z Cut, slice n eat
69
lb. !1"
2 jars for
OLIVES
lb. 63*
85*
lb. 59<
3 No. 2 cans
10 slices
BIRDS EYE FROZEN FOOD
39
5 . 99
98*
aa
98*
594
BUTTERSCOTCH BROWNIES
6 for 305
CAKE Coconut, Choc. Macaroon, without icing 53'
GIANT TIDE
1«: w
BLADES
74‘
;hic
NOW ONLY
^inlh&
\
1
4
49
A*
01
i
<
anasammama
" i
hmmae «
.. rer
SHADID’S
*
2202
I
*
*
»
*
J A 4-2251
V w 25th & Ca sser
4
5 oz. size with 15’ coupon 51.05
No. 21, can 25‘ 4 cans for 98(
(10 regular)
79c value
CHEESE SPREAD Kamp's Home Made
LOAF MIX Ham, pork or Veal
FRESH
FROM
CALIF.
BIG
BABY
BEEF
SALE
14%
Pkg.
A picture of him in blue
uniform, looking young and
HE DIED the year before
Miss Hampton began teach-
ing at the college, but she
refers to him affectionately
as "my little drummer boy.”
The lab has fared well in
For a bought for the college’s Di-
wasamond Jubilee by the Cen-
CINNAMON TOAST
COFFEE CAKE Apricot Danish
FRENCH BREAD Plain or seeds
GOOSEBERRY PIES Fresh frozen fruit
Libby's Corned
BEEF HASH
courses,
said firmly.
CAROIO-
■III BALTB
REALEMON
RECONSTITUTED
LEMON JUICE
HAASE TWIN PAK
PIMENTO STUFFED
AVONDALE
SLICED PINEAPPLE
07
z
V
za 1
Broccoli Spears,
Cauliflower, Whole
Okra, YOUR CHOICE
REESE
SWEET SOUR
RED CABBAGE
A Casady Upper School
teacher has been honored for
outstanding teaching ability]
by the American Association]
of Physics Teachers.
He is Richard A Marble,!
Nabisco Premium
CRACKERS
NEW! SCHICK
STAINLESS STEEL
Saltines,
1 lb. pkg.
ty.
er-
eff
ar-
tty
dy
la-
la-
ne
nd
Ki-
Purple
PLUMS
Dr. Garland Godfrey, left, college president, Miss Lucy Juston Hampton,
and Dr. Carl Thomas examine 12 volumes of the memoirs of John Quincy
Adams, considered the most historic autobiography of any American states-
man. Only 17 such sets originally were printed.
Welch Grape
JUICE
FRESH APPLE PECAN CAKE
Two layers made with fresh apples
and pecans throughout
rich caramel fudge icing
SOUTH PACIFIC LAYER
Made with fresh crushed bananas,
pineapple and oranges,
pineapple cream icing
STRAWBERRY CHIFFON CAKE
With delicious strawberry fondant
cream icing.
i
Peas, cut corn,
spinach,
YOUR CHOICE
HELP
STOP
WINTER
ILLNESS
a
, FARM FRESH
/ PRODUCE
ry
ry
>h-
le-
nd
rk
en
596
5
i
UNIQUE 3-WAY
LAXATIVE
1 aids
digestion)
2 stimulates
bile flow
3 relieves
constipation)
effectively,
gently
$1.23
bo ft l • of ,
100 toblete
1
Supreme Cinnamon
CRISP
Swanson
TV DINNERS
6 for 25’
485
21'
60'
I
1
r
ALL MEAT PIES .. 4/99<
5* OFF
-
beaiNEcYat
Rutgers and has been teach- them with artifacts donated
ing the system at Casadyby students and friends.
MARBLE and other sec-
ondary teachers from across
the country were selected to
•S -• ‘ soececc e
♦ 2 • 2pE
BRAND
DISINFECTANT
a.
ipjfsrv
a
« W
nE
""3 NA
. 4
DISINFECTS
AND
DEODORIZES!
MA
d« 23‘
4.99*
chised by the Historical So-
ciety are "in memory" of or
"in appreciation" of these
1 Cent rallies
I * iA
‛"TMMh
2
. 1
Bha,
8828588. ;
He studied the compara- ] when she founded the lab.
lively new Physical Science She borrowed cases from a
adf
Study Committee method at idrug store and started filling]
h T P
A E
of Frederick Douglass’ bookin the Normal School, are
"My Bondage and My Free- nearby, and the first year-
dom (1845), two Negro bills book records and letter' oc-
of sale, reading glasses dat- c upy another case.
ing from George Washing-1
1.53
169
the Shampoo ^PHENOLPHTHALEIN
2*
Te
fresh All Melt
Ground Beef 1.256
Some of the items are hand-made desks, made by
War II Many volumes pur-
POTATOES California White
pt. box 19*
stored in an unlocked attic tral State College Historical
1596
August 1836 to November
1840, several Civil War items
and countless records are
stacked, waiting display cas-
es.
. 32
pux2
h
the hall," she said.
Evans heard about it
came rushing over.
f 18
%
d
"34
■ A
E A
A
■ ■
E X
’1.29
"Mr.(quite valuable. For exam-1President Thatcher and thelthe
MISS HAMPTON had been
ion the campus five years
F a
' 4^/
do the
Miss
^040^.
VBRAND
SPRAY
DISINFHCTANT 1
-
and Oklahoma territories,
Students, when enrolling in for example, includes photo-
। her class, would ieserve agraphs of Mrs. Leo Bennett
THE ARTICLES are only | laboratory period for a dayand C. G. Jones, the bride
compete for the award. Con-
testants took a four-hour ex-
amination which determined
the finalists, who were ex-
amined and investigated for
leaching ability by a com-
mittee of educators selected
from across the nation.
Dean A. McGee of Kerr
McGee Oil Industries pre-
sented Marble with a plaque
from AAPT at a recent Cas-
ady assembly.
MARBLE won his BA in
math and physics from Wil-
liams College and a MS in
computing from Harvard.
He has studied several sum-
mers at Rutgers, Southwest-
ern State College at Weather-
ford and Oklahoma State
University.
LARG NECTARINES .
S" GRAPES
£ PLUMS
/AfAkE#
SEED
-------
isz zuu'me
Little Pal
44 A
tory as was Evans.
while, the collection
didn't you tell me?’ he said.
"Then we got the whole
west side of Evans Hall re-
served for us."
Not all the presidents were
mu
h‛na
(secondary studies which
could be compared and test-
ed with trained consultants
ready to help.
FURTHERMORE, the lab
is fairly inexpensive. Nearly
all the items are donated—
Miss Hampton says the only
cost to the school so far has
been the price of the cases,
$10 for the Lincoln ballot
.55*
inscribed! Hampton's. When he was 15. ! is open only two or three
u_ j—i he walked 20 miles to enlist 1 hours a day during the
school year. When it is
moved to the library, it
TOMATOES Cocktail
a Casady chemistry and
physics teacher since 1951.
in the Old North Tower, but Society
in 1930 it was moved into Miss Hampton, who found-
Evans Hall balcony and ed the society in 1915 se.
Miss Hampton once again lected the volumes herself
started adding to it, using it
ORANGES California Sunkist
pleased with the attitude of
the president, Dr. Garland
Godfrey, who, she says, "has
a real feel for history.”
The two hope to get the
and designed the bookplate Another wall is devoted to laboratory moved into the 11-
for each volume. A curator Dr. Richard Thatcher, the brary annex to be construet-
IN 1953, the whole collec-from Chicago says it is the school s first president a nd edsoon.Fow. the laboratory
tion was returned to the only dual bookplate in ex- another favorite of Miss ton s distress, the aboato y
west basement of Evans istence. It can be i
Milton Reynolds, another fa-
vorite. and copies of his first
edition of the Edmond Sun
occupy another corner. The
Edmond Sun was the first
weekly newspaper printed in
Oklahoma Territory, Miss
Hampton pointed out.
Naturally, there is a large
collection of articles impor-
tant to the college's history.
Photographs of early-day
faculty members, students
and buildings decorate sev-
■ new CAROID &
v^^bile salts
I
L., 194 Chuck Roasts Best Cuts 1b. 33*
FITS AIL DOUBLE EDGE RAZORS
A’
Th
s.: 35*
and $6 express freight on a
spinning wheel. oral walls, one of the first
.... 59
NOW YOU CAN RESERVE A
PLACE IN
DALE CARNEGIE CLASS =264
which will hold its first session August 2L Loom how to win
friends, speak effectively, overcome fear, improve your mem-
ory and sell more. Clau limited to 40 men and women. For
information call CEntral 6-3586 or write
BLACKWOOD LEADERSHIP TRAINING
mid : 6Oe
PER. : 30<!
------------------------1---
ROUND STEAKS
SHORT .
ribs T-BONES
i it a 33’
students.
"Once I started, I couldn't
stop,” she said, gazing
around the treasure - filled
rooms in Evans Hall base-
ment.
Although Miss Hampton
has been retired from teach-
ing since 1958, she has con-
tinued as professor emeritus
in history and as acting di-
rector of the laboratory. Pro-
fessor Roger S. Umphers is
curator.
FE"SH 98*
SCENT “
By Sandy Montgomery
In one corner sits a sword,
once used in the Battle of
Waterloo, its edge now
dimmed by age. A ballot
showing Lincoln ran on the
Radical • Union ticket is in
one glass case, and a grey
Civil War uniform, two bul-
let holes through the hat,
rests beside a blue uniform
in the same case, nearby.
An ox yoke and a horse-
hair trunk dating from the
Run of 1889, one of the big-
gest collections on the mar-
riage between Indian and
Oklahoma territories, and a .
copy of Mein Kampf, taken
from Hitler’s apartment, are
displayed in other cases.
An invitation to Governor
Bellman’s inaugural ball, a (
book containing the business
of the 28th Regiment Co. M.,
Elbert County, Ga., from ’
an 49*
====
on all C entral State men and the past few years, and Miss
women who served in World Hampton is particularly
2 35
five years.
He's teaching a PSSC
course for teachers at OSU
this summer.
Marble and his wife, Ann,
live at 2307 NW 59. They
have two sons, Chris and
David.
‘-BA
e. fl
Hall as originally blueprint- "in memory” of the dead.
ed I or “in appreciation" of the in the Civil War, became a
livino drummer boy, and later was
“History and governmentcaptured and sent to Ander-
classes need a laboratory; OTHER ITEMS are espe- sonville prison.
period in sequence, just ascially important to Oklaho-
much as do thegsnienon ma history The collection on
P the marriage between Indian
2 an 29*
As more items were add-
ed, the then president,
Charles Evans, gave her the
room adjoining her class-
room.
“I filled that, too, and so
one day I just moved all
the students’ desks out in
190
YUBAN COFFEE, "Nd
WORLDS FINEST I M”
RICHEST COFFEE _ lb. ■ V
I
80. I J
.C
CABBAGE Green table
time, and more than IN ONE CORNER sit files
will be open nearly all day,
she said, her eyes lighting
up.
The move better mean
more room, too. Miss Hamp-
ton has just received several
more boxes of donated
items.
laboratory's reading
LIMES Mexican
,-T
¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥
49-
26 7
b--e.
KAMP’S Complete
and groom for the Cere-
mony.
One case honors Gov. Bill
Mrray. a favorite of Miss
Hampton's Photographs of
■ “
t E
r >
3
confident, is placed beside
100570009
) ' "2
I
Grade A Small
EGGS
4 o $1
Miss Lucy Jeston Hamp- felt the lab served as more
ton founded the laboratory than a museum It provided
in 1915 as a study aid for her authentic source records and
MORTON HOUSE AE
OVEN BAKED .52’
PORK & BEANS 2 1 lb cans ■ •
WHITE ROSE JELLIED Are
CONSOMME MADRILENE K5N”
OF CHICKEN 12 ox. can V V
ft 'Ra
I Aliv9' Hair
7
.ti -
andple, there is a first edition) first young
Why
historical volumes
his drum sticks on the west
wall, as the first thing the
visitor sees when he enters
lg. : $100
Adees
gsas
/,dhhe
^7^83^9*1
1 /,d
a few of thousands making when Miss Hampton or a
up the laboratory of history | history major could be in
at Central State College. Ed- the laboratory.
b €3$
sK)
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 74, No. 131, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 18, 1963, newspaper, July 18, 1963; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1844068/m1/51/?q=architectural+drawings&rotate=90: accessed July 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.