Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 76, No. 139, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 28, 1965 Page: 7 of 42
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SATURDAY & SUNDAY JULY 31 - AUG. 1
THE NEW
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BOTH STORES OPEN THURSDAY UNTIL 8:30
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NOW FOUR
BIG NIGHTS
FOR YOUR
SHOPPING
PLEASURE
TUESDAY
and
WEDNESDAY
9:30
til
6:00
Rebels Called
Best Students
tables, your choice of six authentic
colonial designs.
Sweden's King Gustar Adolf
to his.fishing hut in northern]
Sweden has made a forced |
LIVE! ON STAGE!
8 PM EACH NIGHT
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/ VI 2-7400 at the DeVille
across Penn Square • U.S 66
Supermarkets will handle
tickets and booths will be
set up at shopping centers
across the city. Individual
Jaycees will have tickets.
Alpha Gamma is partici-
pating to finance its work
with handicapped children
and those struck by cere-
a. swivel rocker
b. traditional pillow-back
c. Colonial pillow-back
L
ust sale. Solid maple
CHRISTY
MINSTRELS
*4%
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be
TAKE UP TO
2 YEARS
Columbia Recording Artists
SHOWS 3:30—8 It 10 p.m.
Adm. $1.00 Per Person
*1
4’
$
Explaining the upcoming charity Arabian horse
show € B. I). Eddie, city businessman, are Mrs. Larry
E. Dean and Mrs. Basil Sinclair.
TONIGHT
SEE...
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IT TAKES
ONLY MINUTES
TO OPEN A
CHARGE
ACCOUNT
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LYRIC
Theater.
11 A,
AN EXTRA
NIGHT
OPENING
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Cpringlake
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Rides—Game*—Funhouse—Swimm inf—Pic mein
—Between NE 34 & 50 on Eastern GA 4-1405
Tr July 27 Thru
Aug. 7
Featuring Gene Lorev and
Brenda Spurlin Don't Miss Itl
Ticket, on Sole New-$3.50, $2.50, 51 50
Fullerton’s CE 5-0640—
CE 9-2965
Lyric Box Office JA 8-2688—
Sears Cashier’s
Fine Arts Auditorium OCU
N W, 25th & Blockwelder
UTRIGGER
CLUB
featuring Nightly
Exciting Singing Group
The Chantones
Two Shows Nightly
Spend on evening of exotic dinins,
dancins end entertainment
RIO MOTOR HOTEL
2411 NW 39th
For Reservations WI 6-3311
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TWI-LIGHT BEACH
SWIM
Open Everyday 9 ML TN Dark
6000 N.W. 54
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7 & 38 2
Sat
U
BERKELEY, Calif. (AP)
— A British sociologist says
the brightest students on the
Berkeley campus were the
most ardent backers of the
rebellious Free Speech
Movement that stirred up
unrest at the University of
(California last fall.
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I Swim Every Day 10 am-10 pm ।
ELMWOOD
• SWIMMING POOL 1
Swimming Lessons Available!
4901 Sa. Shields * MEE-04101
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34,
worker too tired to attend
. night classes” begins this
। fall at Miami-Dade Junior
College.
Initially, the program will
include 500 students. Classes
will be scheduled in three-
hour blocks between 8 a m.
and 6 p.m. every Saturday.
landing on a mountain mea-
dow following engine failure
but no one was injured.
The king and his company,
including Prince Carl Johan
Bernadotte. switched to
another helicopter and con-
tinued the trip.
f, aait
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OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
Wed., July 28, 1985 7
-
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aa .
Proceeds will help sup-
port the Dale Rogers
school for the mentally re-
tarded, open to all mini-
mum brain damage pa-
tients in Oklahoma Coun-
ty
The Jaycee portion of
the funds will go into the
regular budget, to be used
3 FOR 888
reg. 33.00 each *
King’s Copter
Engine Fails
OSTERSUND, Sweden
(AP)—A helicopter carrying
2,,
m $1
1 2efe ;8 22 1
1 388%, 223 33833333
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3233
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New Arena’s First Event Slated
propriation. The Civitan
Club, French Heels and
Junior Hospitality clubs,
among others, help sup-
port the school.
One pressing problem at
the school is the lack of
buses. Current enrolment
for the workshop and
school is 68.
Patron’s tickets, which
provide a box seat at all
four performances, are $12
at the gate and $10 ad-
vance; reserve seats,
nights only, are $2.50 at
the gate and $2 advance,
adults, and $1.25 gate and
$1 advance, children.
General admission,
night, is $2.00 gate and
$1.50 advance for adults,
/ / / /) DOWNTOWN—420 WEST MAIN
Hatbeut-/6ngnte .........."
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"THE FABULOUS"
FouRMiTs
0/o
2 SHOWS NIGHTLY
NOW thru SUN AUG 1
27E"P4 n0im"m4 " TTA"KEN-AAT,
& duodaige,sasc-
002* Au , ' . - ..7
. .—--
for various projects. Jay-
cee projects include a par-
ty for underprivileged chil-
dren at Christmas, an an-
nual lighting contest and
junior tennis and golf.
The Dale Rogers school
accepts for a small tuition
children from 3 to 16 years
old and an affiliated work-
shop takes all above that
age. The oldest currently
is 46. It is operated by the
Oklahoma County Council
for Mentally Retarded
Children with offices at the
school, 2501 Meek Dr.
The $60,000 budget of the
school is partially met by
a $14,000 United Fund ap-
The Fifth Region Arabi-
an Horse Show, sponsored
by Alpha Gamma Delta
Alumnae and the Oklaho-
ma City Junior Chamber
of Commerce, will run
September 11 and 12 in the
new State Fair of Oklaho-
ma arena.
Proceeds from the chair-
ity events will be divided
by the two organizations
for philanthropic projects.
Slated to open before the
state fair begins, the horse
show will be the first event
held in the arena and the
first showing of Arabian
horses in the city. The
show embraces a seven-
state area.
From 275 to 300 horses
from across the country
will be shown in the Class
A show, which will return
to the city next year.
Both the sorority and the
Jaycees were selected by
the Oklahoma Arabic
Horse Club as sponsors.
A gate of 25,000 persons
is expected at the arena.
Because of the arena, the
horse club hopes to draw
the national show to the
city in 1967-68.
Ticket sales begin Au-
gust 1. Humpty-Dumpty
and $1 gate and 75 cents
for children. Afternoon
general admission is $1.50
at the gate and $1 advance,
adult, and 75 cents gate
and 50 cents advance, chil-
dren.
Co-ordinators of he event
are Mrs. Barbara Chris-
tenson and Mrs. Gretchen
Collins, Alpha Gamma
Delta; Ken Wahrman and
Trent Cornman, Jaycees,
and Elwood Pugh jr., and
Otis Bealmer jr., Arabian
horse club.
3.
—
1
Plunge Fatal
NEW YORK (AP)—Allen
Jensen, 59, a correspondent
for Berlingske Tidende, a
newspaper in Copenhagen,
plunged to his death Tues-
day from an apartment
house.
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Cobblers bench
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lamck eiu
Relax in the luxury of foam cush-
ions and handsome quilted fabrics,
as these comfort-loving chairs ex-
tend a warm invitation to friend
and neighbor to "sit and talk a
while”! Make your choice from Co-
lonial pillow-back, Traditional pil-
low-back or swivel rocker.
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Weekend Class
Program Due
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MIAMI, Fla. (AP)-A
weekend college designed to
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 76, No. 139, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 28, 1965, newspaper, July 28, 1965; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1844277/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.