Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 74, No. 137, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 25, 1963 Page: 2 of 62
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-S3!
3.
T
I
Hiskey
I RE
M
National Affairs
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Mother of Dying Child
Vote Opposes
Indonesia Aid
homa City mother of a dying versity Hospital of a malady
I
baby boy.
time apparently was staying/Bellmon, but if he were in
away from the bedside of
IK
A
"The response of the people,salesman."
"3
INSURED
Overtime Pay Hike Urged
136-138 W. Main in Downtown Oklahoma City
Sale! Blacks and Browns
700 Prs. Famous Make
Men’s $1177
Pocketbooks No Luxury?
Shoes
kidnapped and assaulted her and forced her to have nor-
STATE TRAFFIC DEATHS
Values to $32.50
The boyfriend, Rodney K 1962 to date, 372; July, 61.
21, of the 2804 N
testified
Pair, now
No Money
<>n
unconsci-
in-
the driver s head.
I
She wants to be a teach- ।
9
I
,8
.E
brothers and sisters watched
bayou at Houston's Memorial
f
A
d
Reynolds Heiress
To Be Married
10" Relish Dish 3.95
WASHINGTON Iff — Rep.
(y IM Week)
cent of the first 10,000 re-
ORDER BY MAIL
in W. MAIN '
C
JEWELERS SINCE 1111
postene paid at Okle-
ed.
*
I
A
NUM
A,,
Replies Favor
School Kites
that already had killed two
other children in his family.
Mrs. Jean Crawford at the
MAY BROTHERS BASEMENT
SHOE DEPARTMENT______
liminary hearing before Ben Breuer, :
LaFon, justice of the peace. Robinson,
A WISE
INVESTMENT
iing
।
ligious observances in pub-
lic schools.
itries
rnished
HOUSTON iff — Three
young girls drowned in the
muddy waters of normally
shallow Buffalo Bayou dur-
ing a farm workers' picnic.
re-
1963 to date, 367; July, 47.
t h e
parked
likes all the publicity. She
still seems a bit camera-
shy. but, she said, "I love
it. It's been terrific!"
KNOCKED DOWN by vice trial spectators at London’s
Old Bailey Court, a woman is helped to her feet by a
policewoman. The woman was caught up in the swarm
of people trying to glimpse Christine Keeler following
her testimony in the trial of Dr. Stephen Ward. Spec-
tators threw two eggs at Miss Keeler, one hitting a
policeman and the other a photographer. (AP Wire-
photo)
my position at this time I
think he would do the same
thing "
While Chief of Negro
Group Tells of Plans
(Continued From Page 1)
L t
WASHINGTON Iff—A labor leader has suggested to
congress that to bolster employment, the working of
oxertime should be discouraged by requiring employers |
DOWNTOWN • PENN SQUARE 9 H DW3Si C.W
COMPOTE
4.95
: Indonesia unless President Kennedy makes a formal
finding that it is vital to U. S. interests.
Rep. William S. Broomfield (R-Mich.) author of the
proposal, said the vote "wasn't even close." He said
.the action was "definately bipartisan" and emphasized
congressional concern over the activities of President
Sukarno's regime.
The group, turned down a similar move by Broomfield
last week while meeting behind closed doors on Presi-
: dent Kennedy's foreign aid bill.
Broomfield said in a statement Thursday that "there
' should be no doubt in anyone’s mind — even that of
opr state department — that President Sukarno is go-
ing all-out to prevent the federation of Malaysia, sched-
: uled to take place August 31."
$
I
I
W
COVERED BUTTER DISH
GLASS LINER
4.95
OKLA. RESIDENTS AOO 2* STATE TAX.
; i
. Above prices include 10% Federal »•«. When orderins by mail, ;
1 please include all mailine charee.
I
I
I
# ’e
233 »
East Pakistan or Switzer- 1 :
land—Oklahoma.
■ "wrote
used car
PIERCED ROUND TRAY
4.95
70c
4k
I
o
§
35
GIFTS FOR THE BRIDE
have the courage to go for-
ward with a broad base rev-
enue measure" not just serv-
said "It's different from i
anything I've ever known ||
I ■
MP-*
20
1022253024889055286..
ji •
2 Thursday, July 25, 1963 OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
is
i*
l
II
i
port him in his motion to
provide the defense with the
clock and other evidence,
Mounger and Berry then
engaged in an argument at
the bench and the recess
was granted.
Mounger and Berry later
said the y reached agree-
ment that Berry could look
at the dock in the presence
of Mounger.
3 Girls Drown
In Texas Bayou
I
mk ■ • 2
•Tn
328
,,3
1
i
could only postpone them,
though. She would be away
from Oklahoma most of a
year if she were to win
the Miss America contest
Labor Day.
mg. The third girl apparently
tried to aid them. The vic-
tims were Janie Beltran. 8;
her sister Yolanda, 12, and
Carman Perez, 10.
before."
Miss Oklahoma even
Suspect identified
By Assault Victim
A pretty 20-year-old Ok-, with a dangerous weapon.
high school in Oklahoma. .
Not Maine. California, |
er. She plans a major in
English and a minor in
speech. She wants to teach
dramatics in high school.
And she wants to teach
f
I
|
5
torney has
1988 19.88
21.99 ii«
31 oc 16.00 —
THE DAILY OKLAHOMAN
THE SUNOAiP5?LAHOMAM
Evon8cas$ /1e8f3 okia
8. Nonprpagysyirxtanome
HOME OELIVERY
stated he
1
Sornjn '
Evenins nty.......
ndXaRnUBSCRIPTION BATES
(Oklhom, Arkanses, olorade, Kan.
:amiasour , Ne" mexico and Texe"
(Continued From Page 1)
? be sent to the state hospital
Alphonzo Bell (R-Calif.) re-
trouble" in connection with ported Thursday that 73 per-
his participation
Acting Gov. Leo Winters
canceled Thursday a war-
rant Gov. Bellmon had is-
sued for arrest of an Okla-
• Another shipment of famous make men's
shoes just received . . . fine calfskin, hand-
crafted in Black and Brown . . . moccasin
toes and wing tips . . . current styles . . .
sizes to 13, but not in all styles . . . widths
AA through D.
Good selection of loafers and slip-ons.
Richard Allen Hill, and par-
ents were not present when
the preliminary hearing end-
ed.
Earlier, the hearing had
been recessed briefly after
law enforcement officers
gave conflicting testimony.
The hearing was recessed
while subpenas were issued
for officers to, bring into
court the electric cord with
which 17-year-old Mrs. Vicki
Jean Hill was strangled.
Hiskey is charged with
murdering Mrs Hill.
in Oklahoma City, said she is
con f i de n t white church
groups will assist in the de-
monstration—"if a demon-
st ration becomes neces-
sary/’J
that 21-month-old Richard
Crawford is dying in Uni-
ROSENFIELD’S
PLEASE SIND
NAME
ADDRESS
CASH T
Bogus Check
She has been sought on a
bogus check charge from
ice taxes and nuisance Wichita Falls. Winters said
UNDER 71 0 PLS FED TAX
)
V/
HHH
; M-e
/
7 €
; mal and abnormal sex
‘lations with him.
don't think of her as
Cheryl Ann Semrad any-
more.
"There goes Miss Okla-
homa," they whisper.
"But I like it." Cheryl
to death.
The highway patrol said
Wallace C. McVay, 30. of
Tulsa, died at the scene of
head injuries. Trooper Dick I
Caw ley said McVay was
held in by a seat belt but I
that the car top caved in on
wanted to help out."
He has attended youth
group meetings since, and
was named a Minuteman, or
commander of one of the
Commando groups The
groups are made up of boys
only. He is the only white
commander in the city
branch.
No Trouble
He said he has "had no
A car overturned on a
curve on the Ponca City-to-i
’ 2
DrIT
•23
{51 e0g g
r ' f
H ■ k * u---
Taxes
(Continued From Page 1)
[the child to avoid arrest and
will i extradition to Texas.
Air Editorials Studied
ATHENS, Ga. Iff—Radio and television broadcasters
met Thursday to talk about a conrtoversial subject—edi-
torializing on the air.
One question they face is, "Does a broadcaster have
the right to express his own opinion and let all the other
opinions go by the board?"
But this is only one phase of the subject expected to
come up at the three-day conference of the National
Broadcast Editorial Conference.
Rigid new regulations are proposed in a broadcast
editorial bill sponsored by Rep. John E. Moss, (D-Calif.).
With more and more editorials being broadcast, poli-
ticians are demanding some sort of control over such
programs before the 1964 political campaigns.
The Moss bill would require a station that endorses a
candidate to offer equal opportunity to other candidates
to reply to an editorial.
The bill also would require the station to send other
candidates transcripts of editorials within five days of
the broadcast date. And it would bar editorializing dur-
ing the final two days prior to the election.______________
I
A legal battle over the
cord developed after J W.
Forney, Midwest City police
detective, testified.
Forney described the
death scene and told about
removing a clock cord that
had been used to choke the
teen-age bride to death. On
questioning by defense law-
yer James W. Bill Berry,
Forney said he was the per-
son who removed the elec-
tric cord from Mrs. Hill's
neck He also testified that
I
T2701E
CHIP’N DIP
DISH
7.95
Cud jo, 32, of 617 NE 10. young couple was
when he was struck
WASHINGTON (UPI) — In a rare expression of
pproval of another government, the house foreign
irs committee voted Thursday to end U. S. aid to
he understood she
stating, one bad check to a '
Cheryl said when she be- ig
came Miss Oklahoma, |
things changed immedi- g
ately. She doesn't feel
she's changed, but others §
act as if she has.
"I'm a new person to all 1
my friends," she said, still S
somewhat amazed.
She Likes It
Even her closest friends j s
Berry said the county at- is charged with first degree
rape and assault and battery; head and knocked
the bodies
from the
decide" he hopes "we
Winters said he was in- has done anything for which
formed shortly before noon she owes society a debt, she
representatives urging
them to campaign among
their male colleagues to
repeal the luxury tax on
pocketbooks.
A man can cram keys,
money, address books,
pencils, a billfold, aspirin
tablets, cigarets, matches,
a handkerchief and other
things into his pockets,
said Lubliner.
"Why don't they put a
luxury tax on our pock-
ets?" he asked.
Fairfax "short cut" Thurs-
the day and crushed its driver
j will have a lifetime to re-
pay it — and that 21-month-
old baby needs his mother
right now."
Winters said due to the ur-
gency of the situation, he
did not take time to cal)
June 27.
The identification was
made during Cudjo's pre-
tends to ask the death penal-
ty for Hiskey. He added
"This is the only means we
have to make an investiga-
firm of this case.” We have
no money. I am sure the
Supreme Court of the Unit-
ed States will uphold us and
this record will go to the
Supreme Court of the Unit-
ed States.”
"We have here a man's
life at stake."
Mounger objected to "turn-
ing our files and our evi-
dence" over to Berry.
Berry Overruled
Berry was overruled by
Justice of the Peace Wen-
dell Foster.
Judge Foster called a re-
cess while one of Berry's as-
sistants went to the law li-
brary to look up the Su-
preme Court case which
Berry claimed would sup-
The committee's decision was a major about-face
NEW YORK (UPI) —
A union official has called
on the nation's women
-legislators to help put
women’s pocketbooks back
’. in the necessity class for
tax purposes.
Philip Lubliner, manager
of local 1 of the Pocket-
book and Novelty Workers
Union, AFL-CIO, Wedres-
' daysent letters to Sens.
: Margaret Chase Smith (R-
Maine) and M a u r l n e
Brown Neuburger (D-
Ore ) and nine woman
-■
Grief-stricken parents and
Beauty
(Continued From Page 1)
beauty contests because
they offered scholarships.
"I’m very interested in
going to college," she
said.
would be better than if we
tried a lot of nuisance taxes. ।
The response of the people ,
is better when they get the
full picture of our needs ;
rather than if we're timid ।
or try to make it easy." ।
Police Concern
Tinstman said he hopes
that the city's financial sit-
uation in view of the excise
board action will not require,
killing the recently approved I
police pay raises and in-
creased manpower. "That
must be one of our first con-
cerns," he stated.
The city manager said
that he hoped to have the
Arthur Andersen report com-
pleted as soon as possible |
The city council authorized
a contract with the company
Tuesday by which the city
will take over a study made!
by the company at the re-
quest of the Mayor's Budget
Study Committee and have
1 it adapted to the city's needs.
Tulsan Dies
three percent were undecid- are 20. The wedding will be
the first for f oth.
NEW YORK Iff—Heiress |
Mamie Spears Reynolds. •
whose grandmother once I
owned the 112-carat Hope di- I
amend, will be married herep
Saturday to the son of a re-I
tired Italian sports car ra-e
cer.
Miss Reynolds and her Q
' ■ . -----
* •* n m*
Arrest Shield Given
p--
e A.
Lcsostdu I
to pay for it at two-and-half or triple time.
- Such premium pay should be required on work in ex-
cess of sexen hours a day and 35 hours a week, said
Joseph A. Beirne, president of the AFLCIO Communica-
tions Workers of America.
"Obviously, the present time and a half overtime
rate for work in excess of 40 hours in a week is not
discouraging oxertime in many industries,” he told a
house labor subcommittee Wednesday. ..
He also said his union recommends that congress
prohibit or limit dual-job holding, but he conceded this
is a difficult practice to legislate against
Wednesday as
at Vinita, because that insti-
tution has maximum securi-
| ty facilities.
The dead girl's husband,
9
r
ous.
The victim testified she
jumped out of the car and
attempted to escape on foot,
but was caught by the de-
fendant and forced into his
automobile parked a half-
block away.
were removed
13" SHELL DISH
7.95
He said 24 percent did husba’nd-to-be, Luigi Chinetti
not share this belief and jr., Greenwich, Conn., both
lahotna City office secretary The victim said Cudjo A A —I.
identified Patterson Cudjo knocked her boyfriend un- As Qlar FlIvs
Thursday as the man who conscious, kidnapped her
SECURITY
FEDERAL
4%%
l-Yr. 4-Mo.
$12.00 MOO
1100 4.60
the city is not ready to ac-
cept it.
"We appeal to the white
community to offer proof to
him that the city is ready."
said Mindlin. "We appeal to
the people to prove they will
not tolerate segregation "
Contacted Member
Mindlin said that when he
came home for the summer
he heard about the demon-
strations of the Negro youth
groups at downtown Oklaho-
ma City restaurants and con- ,, ,
• I 4 rk
tacted Calvin Luper. son of I ' ... . , .
.. t j ... j u t Two of the girls stepped
Mrs. Luper, and told him I ■ . . . , , . _____,
’ into a deep hole while wad-
■
CHARGE • LAYAWAY □
At University, he is work- plies to a questionnaire he
ing on a private research sent to his 28th congression-
project. Ia| district constituents fa-
Ruth James, president of voted a constitutional
the NAACP’s youth council amendment to permit re-
Dll 01. AT HARVT j
. ' .OKLANOMA Ci a
KLAlr,,
fei
8888388820093 228320828288382892828282202322883988
n.i ridehim
j
the word was knotted tightly.
Earlier witnesses had tes-
tified that the alarm clock
cord was wrapped around
Mrs. Hill's neck twice and
that it was not knotted. An-
other earlier witness, Don
Rogers, fingerprint techni-
cian, testified that he was
the person who removed the
cord from the dead woman's
neck.
Knot Present
Forney also testified that
the knot is still in the cord,
which has been locked at the
Midwest City police head-
quarters since Mrs. Hill was
slain April 22.
An argument between Ber-
ry and Mounger, assistant
county attorney developed
at this point. Berry asked
for a two-hour recess while
he issued subpenas to bring
the clock and the police de-
partment's master file on the
Hill murder to court.
Mounger objected, calling
the request "highly Improper
at a preliminary hearing.”
taxes.
Wilkes agreed,
/z
/4
Where Quality is a Oration {
OSENFIELD’S
"I hate to do this." Win-
ters told newsmen, "be-
cause I have assured Gov.
Bellmon that in his absence
from the state I would not
take any action contrary to
his wishes.
"However, if this woman
Mmdmmmsma
121/2"
BREAD TRAY
4.95
Sg*
■
- 1. 2.2
-
{ • •
8
-
OSU Preferred
Cheryl will enter Okla-
homa State University in
the fall. 'Ive always
loved the OSU campus."
she said.
There is one big event j
that could postpone ,
Cheryl’s college plans. It (
the psychiatry department
at University Hospital.
Policy Insult?
, “It is the feeling of the
Commandos that the policy
announced by Mr. Woods is
an insult to the people of
Oklahoma City," he said.
“By his action, he has said
that the people of Oklaho-
ma City are not ready to
accept integration — they
are not ready to accept
Democracy."
Mindlin said Woods offered
“loss of revenue" as proof
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 74, No. 137, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 25, 1963, newspaper, July 25, 1963; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1844094/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.