Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 77, No. 200, Ed. 3 Saturday, October 8, 1966 Page: 2 of 6
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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I
' N
3
4
- E
3
L 1
Pair’s Escapes
Habit For
By Bill George
Escaping from the law is
10-Hour Big-D Melee Biggest Yet
charges of
and kidnaping Friday in Ok-
port directed that “films and lahoma City.
other information” be deliv-
John Oscar Engberg, 33,
es-
and tape recordings, never
The
kansas law officials, along
1
Inez Stirs
4
Feeble Dodgers, 1-0
jury had ordered a visit to
f
apartment complex
runs, rm hn, m errers, ene be.
Inez, packing winds of 135 of a witness and for inter-
AB • M BI PQ A
1
1 8 1
0
Wednesday night that his Oklahoma City about mid-
1 0 1
4 0 0 0
4
morning Saturday but the
4 0 2
to
record of 28 set by the New
.000
2
0 0
0 0 6
JHI
1
।
Zone Area
yE
11
has
“Ear? Hears Conversations
War Declared on Toy
i)
TNI
Y
UK.
Be
reported
near-
IV
have taken only four prison-
Methodist Tulsa district
era
eration August 3.
ership beginning Sunday.
IFT1ON
«
«
9
news-
paper profession.
power.
4
6
A
)
M
{
2
II
40115 29
Nap Fatal
For Driver
Light Rain
Moves In
Boys Safe,
Del City
Police Told
OCU Dean
To Assist
Warnings
For Texas
with three other prisoners.
In 1963 the Denver convict
been ordered for identifying
the number of an apartment
Officers said the escapees
moved under cover of dark-
ness in the thick Arkansas
miles at the center, was re-
ported moving westward at
12 mlles-an-hour about 370
miles southeast of Browns-
0
0
0
Veteran Reporter Dies
Dallas (AP) — Harry Mc-
Cormick, 68, veteran Dallas
0
0
$
<
J
♦
views with occupants of the
apartment house.
Frasier reported to police
armed robbery.
The grand jury’s final re-
people along the Texas coast
to take precautions.
There was something funny going on Saturday
morning as Randy Harris and Judy Myers — Oklaho-
ma State University students, yet — headed for Dal-
las. OSU was preparing to meet Colorado at Stillwater.
The pair offered no explanation.
played for the grand jury.
Rumors Resented
.8,
6}
23 1 ly increase the threat to the
chase for several days.
Roadblock Smashed
During their freedom the
pair eluded officers three
times, once when they sped
through a roadblock and dis-
appeared into a thick pine
forest near Ferndale, Ark.
The two earlier had been
captured in Little Rock but
J
the entire investigation,” the
report said.
“No One Entered*
o
0
1
Texas coast.”
Mexican Meteorlogists
said if the present course is
held, no land areas will be
seriously threatened for
about 24 hours.
Course Switched
tot involved in the robbery-
kidnaping in which Engberg
«
o
i
i 6 ville, Texas, in the Gulf of apartment had been burglar-
o 2 Mexico.
4
0
4
Jones will be one of 16
Methodist ministers and lay-
men conducting the four-day
session. The former Method-
Round Three
Engberg finally was cap-
tured for the third time in
Mena, Ark., by policemen
who spotted him near a used
car lot. They gave chase and
stopped him within a short
distance.
14
A
died 1st minister, now professor
had of religion at OCU, will lead
-eem-
t -
Hardee was serving five to
10 years for burglary at the
time of his escape from the
Kansas prison.
In 1960 the Wagoner native
was arrested after a 16-year-
old Oklahoma City girl told
police the man held a knife
to her throat and raped her.
Hardee testified the girl
drove his automobile off the
main highway onto an un-
paved county road, parked
and did not resist his ad-
vances.
A district court jury, com-
posed of six men and six
, I0W COST
( ¥ed 20/ce
FOUNDER s I AIR INS DEPI
Ng runs, one hit, im errers, ene l
orieles — Powoll fouled out to Par
D. Johnson grounded out Parker to
Tulsa
(Continued From Page 1)
calling for ouster of Tulsa
Fire and Police Commission-
er Larry Coulson. Coulson
also was indicated on two
counts, one alleging perjury
and the other alleging har-
boring a fugutive.
Most of the other indict-
L’-ePR
2j x
police car and made a sec-
ond dash for freedom.
being returned to Wichita, and Hardee are suspects
They overpowered officers — -
The report said the grand near Glencoe, Okla., strife the
238
a study of James and First
Peter.
per week
SANr
7
Ci 2 1258
now have not scored since
the third inning of Wednes-
day’s opening game at Los
Angeles. Drabowsky blanked
them with one hit for 6 2-3
relief innings, and Palmer
shut them out Thursday with
four hits.
Bunker’s string of nine
made it 24 shutout frames,
r.- M
■ • -2
g. *>5
33
Boarding the Dallas Special, Mr. and Mrs, Raymond Reed, Wewoka, talk
with porter Edward Scott at city station. (Times Staff Photo by Jim Lucas)
By early Saturday, the
hospital staff had treated
110 patients and turned
them back out onto the
streets. Officials said this
was about double the nor-
mal Friday-night business.
One Texan, riding a bit
too high, fell from the top
of a car on Akard Street
and was hustled off to
Baylor Hospital.
Possibly the busiest
place Saturday morning
was the Dallas ball bond
office at city hall, where
about 310 hung-over and
battered citizens paid bond
money to get out of jail.
WisaupE-.i.6.
orker 1b
Regen B .........
W. Davi, cf
Fir/r
Letetvre 2b
L Johnson If-rf .
ene 36 .
Xpavi if
ttais .
The jury said in its report
that it resented rumors that
it had been used as a front
or a tool by the county attor-
ney’s office.
“Let the record show that
the county attorney and his
entire staff have acted per
our instruction throughout
switched course several
times, pounded villages
along the Yucatan northern
coast for nearly 24 hours
with 125 mph winds and
heavy rains.
Damage to the port of Pro-
greso, 22 miles from the Yu-
catan state capital of Meri-
da, and to other smaller
towns was believed heavy,
but there were no immediate
reports of serious injuries.
Pounding Continues
Most of Progreso’s 15,000
residents were evacuated be-
fore the full fury of the
storm hit Friday, and the
city was nearly deserted ex-
cept for police and troops.
Residents in the central
gulf coast area, meantime,
started storm preparations,
and the New Orleans weath-
couldn't make out every-
thing that was said, but I
could understand part of
it.”
The police called the
prosecutor. The prosecutor
called the FBI. The FBI
called a U. S. attorney.
Ruling: The Pi Ear is
legal until the listener pub-
lishes or otherwise repeats
a confidential conversation
he overhears.
Richard Mossoney, man-
ager of the radio parts
store that sold the ear to
Soltesz, said the device
originally was designed to
pick up bird songs.
He sells about 12 a week,
some of them to private
detectives and others to
some who “don’t look like
birdwatchers to me,” he
said.
Rock, Ark., escaped from 1
They reportedly were in- the Sedgwick County, Kan., Mena police.
Dr. Robert L. Jones, act-
ing dean of the College of
Arts and Sciences at Oklaho-
ma City University, will
teach a course in two New
Attorney Hall denied that
any of his men had entered
the apartment although he
admitted they had ques-
tioned other tenants in the
complex.
B52s Blast
convict’s latest escape was
lawyer concerning contribu- with Federal Bureau of In- with two Oklahoma inmates,
" .. . " Oliver Hardee, 27, Wagoner,
and William E. Hunt, 37, Al-
escaped when they were
The storm, which
.10 10
SAIGON (AP) — Waves of
U. S. B52 bombers ham-
mered north Vietnamese in-
filtration routes and bivouac
areas in the embattled de-
militarized zone Saturday. It
was their 14th raid since the
giant bombers began hitting
inside the buffer zone.
The U. S. military com-
mand said the bombers
straddled the demarcation
line which runs east-west
across the center of the six-
mile wide zone between
North and South Viet Nam.
Just south of the zone, U.
S. marines pushing through
mountainous jungle terrain
encountered only light con-
tact as they continued Opera-
tion Prairie in an effort to
halt the southward infiltra-
tion of the North Vietnamese
324-B division.
terviews by newsmen with jail and led Kansas and Ar-
private club operators and a
made public, were seized by
the county attorney and
■ Kennedy threw out F. Robin-
Ropinson walked on a 3-2 pitch,
lit into a double plav, Letebvre to
“erker.,.
“' ne Nita, ne errors, none left.
EIGHTH INNING
_______ Wharton was picked up by
and another prisoner, Oscar two FBI agents near Little
Floyd Wharton, 36, Little Rock shortly after Engberg
was taken prisoner by the
where Frasier' lives last
Wednesday night by police
and county attorney invest-
igators but added that re-
ports from the investigators
state “that no one entered
apartment No. 3,” the apart-
ment reportedly occupied by
Frasier.
The jury said the visit to
against the
j ? n j
06024 14
tions to the campaign fund vestigation agents, on a wild
of Coulson.
kix only four short of the Serles
highway patrol said he ap*
since they began the op- Workshop in Christian Lead- parenty fel asleep at the
“Present indications are
that Inez will turn to a more
northwesterly course Satur-
day and Saturday night and
continue at about the same
speed,” the weather bureau
said. “This turn would great-
Orioles Again Blank
33-year-old Denver
Eobinsbnarsoconadon
M arror, PM toff.
FIFTH INNING
Deepers — L. Johnson hloqped • pinole
to toft. Roseboro dopped to B. Robinson,
Koonedy fored L, Johnson at second, B.
Robinion to D. Johnson. Osteon filed deed
ground was hardly damp-
ened.”
Showers also fell in two
other areas — north in the
Bartlesville and Marland
area and south in the Law-
ton, Comanche, Temple and
Grandfield area.
The showers, which devel-
oped in the south and passed
through central Oklahoma,
had moved into eastern Ok-
lahoma and were expected
to move out of the state later
Saturday afternoon.
There is a chance showers
may return to the central
part of the state during the
night.
For Sunday, the weather
bureau said temperatures
over most of the state will
be warmer except for the
the Philadelphia A's.
It was the best since the 26
by the Cincinnati Reds
this year. You must have
been using psychology on
’em.”
Paul Harkin, Adolphus
night manager, said it was
a “real fine night. There
was some noise and that’s
about all.”
The Statler-Hilton Hotel,
which is set apart from
the center of celebration,
closed its doors to anyone
who could not produce a
room key.
Barricades were set up
along sidewalks to keep
people from overflowing
into the streets. But they
did little good.
steen In the,B00c00o_,
.......... PPP MP NX—1
Mexican coast from Tampi-
co to Progreso to remain in
port.
The first heavy winds of
the storm struck Progreso
Thursday night and the
pounding continued Friday.
Communications to the city
were knocked down and the
tus, along with Randy L.
Miksell, 27, Carthage, Mo.
Miksell was arrested Fri-
day in downtown Oklahoma
City by detectives, who spot-
ted him walking down a
sidewalk.
He’s Ruled Out
Officers said Miksell was
They were to take their
place with more than 75,-
000 other football support-
ers at the Cotton Bowl Sat-
urday afternoon.
As usual, the people who
got into trouble were not,
for the most part, stu-
dents, police said. In fact,
almost all were from Dal-
las or surrounding towns
and were not connected in
any way with either uni-
versity.
Some 25 aggravated as-
saults were reported down-
town. Two youngsters
were arrested for looting a
store whose plate glass
burglary and convict, who is believed to forest while search parties
have taken part in a robbery with bloodhounds pursued.
er bureau Issued an advisory their enemy death toll
for small craft along the
ered to the executive council Denver, serving 25 years for
of the Oklahoma Bar Associ- first degree robbery,
ation for possible action.
Dedpers — T. pavis baffed for Osteen
id plnglfd up top middle. Wlts sacrl
' Powell to D. Johnson, who covered
... "8.
Johngon to Powell,
No rum, pm hit, ne errera, pm left.
orloles — Regan now pitching for the
White Sox in the scandalous
Black Sox Series of 1919.
FIRST INNING
Dodeers — Wills struck out Porker
(truck gut. Bletary mode • good running
cotch of W. Davl/fiv.
No runs, so Nits, m errers, none toft,
oreles — Lefebvre threw out ADarIclo.
Biefery grounded out. Porker unassisted.
F. Robinson etruOc out.
No run, m hit, no errors, nene le.
SECOND INNING
Dedeers — FalFW lined on bock to the
women, announced it was
deadlocked.
Hardee later was convict-
ed of the burglary charge.
Pair identified
Engberg and Hardee were
identified Friday by a hos-
tage who was grabbed by a
pair of gunmen as they fled
from the Honest Grocery &
Market at 301 S Broadway.
Adrian Telles, 46, of 2845
Guilford Lane, a salesman
for Zoernig Brokerage Co.,
was entering the market
when the robbers pointed a
gun at him and said, “Come
on, we need you.”
Telles was released un-
harmed about 2 p.m. north-
east of Spencer some 45 min-
utes after his abduction.
The victim identified Eng-
berg from a photograph at
police headquarters, and lat-
er looked at a picture of
Hardee, which was brought
to his home by a deputy
sheriff.
threp pifches. Apariclo grabbed Kennd’s
one-hopper over second Mm and threw
him out. Osteen struck out.
No runs, no hits, m errers,eem toff
Orfatog - Blair lined to W. Davis. Willa
threw out Etchebarren. Willa also threw
No ru; no hits, no errors, com left.
fourth inning
Dedeen — Willa bunted toward first
and was thrown out by Bunker. Parker's
tone drive to Hohl center bounced over
the fence for a ground rule double. W.
Oavli filed to Blglr In right center. Fair-
ly walked. Lefebvre struck out on a 3-2
Ne runa, om Nt, m errors, two left.
..^f.^ Uid e
AnWiisl Kennebifaone
ments were returned against becoming a habit for one
persons already facing Kansas State Penitentiary
The marines
newspaper reporter,
Friday. McCormick
city was without electric spent 56 years in the
E _ None. DP — Aparicio. D. Johnson
and Powell; Wills, Lefebvre and Parker;
Lefebvre. Wills and Parker. LOB — Log
nqeles IN) 4. Baltimore A) 1.
28 — Parker. HR — Blalr. N WlLn
Qstoan (LI ! 2 ‘ *
-n .................... 1 •
-----• (W) » 4 - -
BB — Osteen 1 (B. Robinson), Bunker
1 (Fairly). SO — Osteen 3 (f. Robinson,
Blefary, Bunker), Regan 1 (Etchebarren),
Tunker 4 (Wills. Parker, Roseboro 03
teen. Lefebvre. FairIv.)
Light showers barely
dampened parts of Oklaho-
ma Friday night and early
Saturday morning.
Ponca City recorded .08
inches and Altus had a
trace.
A quickie shower fell on
DETROIT (AP) — Stev-
en Soltesz, 8, was attentive
to the sounds relayed to
him by The Big Ear. He
knew something was
wrong when a voice came
through all too clearly: “If
you don’t put that thing
away . . ."
In the friendly yards of
suburban Allen Park.
Francis Drobowski—tired
of being spied upon—had
declared war on the toy
listening device aimed
from the Soltesz garage.
But the boy spy has the
law on his side.
The Big Ear looks like a
radar scanner—a concave
dish about a foot across
mounted on a tripod—and
the advertisements say it
can pick up conversations
100 to 200 feet away.
It sells tor 112.95 and
caped September 30 by tun-
Several television news films neling through a cell wall
, . BALTIMORB (A)
W.
fo 8- Svndw If .
rd..fhe F Eobinon rf
l tone* b Robinion 3b
the: Powgll 1b
Willi p Jhnson 2b
lair Cf
(Continued From Page 1)
bottles, paper cups, cans
and an occasional prone
pedestrian lined the gut-
ters and sidewalks.
Some 200 policemen in
the downtown area alone
tried to make some sem-
blance of order out of
madness, and apparently
were doing a pretty good
job of it.
Fights were numerous,
but apparently no one was
seriously injured. City-op-
erated Parkand Hospital
was busier than a bank on
payday.
o° ?
1 3 ’t
1 ; 3
$ 8
Panhandle.
Temperatures should
range from 72 in the Pan-
handle to 84 in central Okla-
homa. Overnight state lows
should be in the 50’s and
60’s.
L Etchebarren c
r second. "“P8nP
ing the 1,000 mark. They Testament Letters in the
Podqers. Regan threw out D. Johneon
Lefebvre threw out Blglr. Ethcebarren
stryck out.
No runs, ne hits, M errors, mm toft.
NINTH INNING
DgOggn — Fairly struck out. D. John-
eon threw out Letebre. Aparicio threw
out L. Johneon.
Na rune, no bite, m errors, none toft.
Box Score
more intense” and advised the apartment complex had
2 Sat, Qetobar t, IMS OKLAMPMA OTT TIMES
Hopes Up as Sooner
window had been smashed
by the crowd.
Police said many win-
dows were broken, includ-
ing those of two jewelry
stores, but apparently
nothing was taken.
The Baker and Adolphus
Hotels, situated in the
thick of the melee, report-
ed some damage, but
spokesmen said the mob
was not as rowdy as it has
been in past years.
The desk clerk at the
Baker, who asked to re-
main annonymous, said:
"It looks like you (Okla-
homans) have a little
more competitive spirit
A hurricane watch was ad-
vised Saturday as far north
as the Texas coast as unpre-
dictable hurricane Inez
airmed her savage winds at
Mexico’s populous east
coast.
The U. S. Weather Bureau
at New Orleans said at 10
a.m. that Inez had become
Fans Board Train
A gala crowd of Big Red second time to travel on fee, said he and his wife
fans boarded the 18-car the special train to Dallas, had planned the trip for
special train early Satur- “Tast year it was a pret- several weeks.
day on NW 36, the first of ty quiet bunch going down, "Everybody thinks we
two loading points for the but they made up for it on have a chance this year,
927 Dallas-bound Sooners. the return trip,” he said. but I can’t see it. Maybe
The Santa Fe special The train trip is the it‘s because we’ve won a
picked up several hundred third for Williams. couple games and Texas
more persons at the down- Bob Lee assistant golf has already been beaten. I
town depot. professional at Lincoln sure hope we can do it
At the northside gather- Park Golf Club, said the thpugh.
ing, just east of Robinson, trip will be his first time Conductors. F- Me
many of the fans grabbed to see OU play Texas since cuuough and C Hen-
a quick cup of coffee and 1950. nington stood at the rear
made for their assigned "And this is my first ofthestrain and directed
cprdsrscondumtors stood by timeata E0 on the train," my m or sixth
wTwo youths, Fletcher Hugh Rice, 27, ot2516 N clmoogh,hsaipecial,
Wiliams, 14,.06612/Hill- Hudson, also was making Kennington said he had
n Si? tin ' his first train trip to Big D been 80 many times he has
ingahead to kickoff. “I saw the teams play in "°Johnn.Warren, passen-
What I ve heard on the I960 and in 1964, and be- ger representative for the
radio and TV so far indi- lieve me, my heart is sure railroad, said the special
cates we might have a with OU and I just hope train to Dallas has been in
good chance to win this we can win it this time,” operation 30 years,
year,” Williams said. Rice said. "Back in the 1950s, when
"The team sure seems Bud Nave, 27, of 2252 the Big Red was hot, we
ready to go, but of course Downing, who was hurry- ran three trains, and had
they always are.” ing back to the train with as many as 2,000 passen-
Conley said it was his two steaming cups of cof- gers.”
York Giants in 1905 against $ tSNpredyaPieir .MM
to the left of the MO-foot slan for
mer and a 1-0 Baltimore lea. .....-
threw out Etchebarren.
Om run. om hit, M errers, mm left.
SIXTH INNING
.Dedeers — wills singled over second.
Old Chicago Wrogyfroynaacaput rjitexin
ping after the eaten and moving to ______
base. Fairly tapped back to Bunker who
threw him out.
Ne runs, om hit, no errers, ene toft.
.Ortetoe - Bunker took a called third Ai
•trike. Aparicio tiled to W. pavis. Parker
made e looping grab of blefarv’s Iner to
r • rums, ^"*1® gg.
Dedeers — Lefebvre lined to F. Robin-
eon L. Johnon bounced e «Ingle up the
middle Roseboro filed to Blair. Kennedy
bounced beck to Bunker on a checked-
swing end was thrown out.
Steve got one from his fa-
ther, Ernest, on the young-
ster’s eighth birthday last
April 24.
Hie Drobowskis live
across the street, about 100
feet from the Soltesz
house, and they didn’t like
the idea of The Big Ear
being tuned to monitor
anything they said.
Drobowski went over to
the Soltesz house and said
so.
"Whatever an 8-year-old
kid hears he don’t care
about,” Steven’s father re-
plied. "I told the guy if he
ever talked that way to
my boy again I’d call the
police.”
But Drobowski beat him
to it.
An officer, aiming the
ear at a conversation 150
feet away, reported: "I
Two brothers who disap-
peared Friday from Town-
send Elementary School
were reported safe in Los
Angeles, Calif., Saturday
morning.
Del City Police said a
woman claiming to be the
mother of William and Eu-
gene Moore called Saturday
from Los Angeles to explain
she took the boys from
school.
“She said she had been
given legal custody of the
children from a Los Angeles
superior court,” a Del City
officer said.
William, 12, and Eugene,
11, left the school Friday
with a woman who told
school officials she had come
1 g
aa.P,
(Continued From Page 1)
Baltimore when he was not
protected in the draft.
Bunker, on the disabled
list from July 27 to Aug. 15
due to tendonitis in his right
elbow, was in control all the
way, struck out six Dodgers
and walked only one. Wes
Parker’s double to center
was the only extra base hit.
The slumping Dodgers
STATE TRAFFIC TOLL
So far this year: 592
This date last year: 525
‘66 deaths under 21: 191
A 30-year-old Langston
man was killed early Satur-
day when his pickup crossed
the center line and slammed
into a bridge eight miles
west of Langston on S. H. 33.
Dead is Walter Trice. The
moyn4, knockins, Bunker‘ elove eft and Ne runa,
*# 232,52222 geg
D. Johnson to Pgweil. WUto to Par
Ne rum. ene Nt, me errers, mme toft. Ne rnm,
orleles — L. Johnson cut in front of W.
Davit at the tas Mcond and onehande Dedpers -
B. Ropingon’s easy fly to cantor. Powel and singled
singled. D Johngon ereunded into a dou- ficeg, r
ble Nev, wiils to Letobvre to Perker. Ferber
Ne runs, om hit, M errors. Held II
THIRD INNING Johheoi
Dedeers — Roeoro struck out or
ized and ransacked. County weather bureau said “the
MEXICO CITY (AP) — an
she drove to the airport and
flew with the boys to Los An-
geles.
William R. Moore, father
of the boys, has produced a
court order allowing him le-
gal custody of the boys, but
giving his former wife Mrs.
Helen R. Gutierrez of Whit-
tier, Calif, the right to visit
them.
The Del City officer said
officers first will check to see
if the woman was given a
court order for the children.
He said Del City police will
ask the county attorney Mon-
day to decide on any action.
Admiral Buhr
Dies of Illness
SALISBURY, Md. (AP) -
Rear Adm. Victor W. Buhr
USN (ret.), 68, died Thurs-
day after an illness of sever-
al weeks.
Buhr, who commanded the
25th naval construction regi-
, ment and was in charge of
. installing the artifical har-
bor at Omaha Beach during
World war II, retired in 1946.
AB R H BI FO A
3 0 10 13
3 0 0 0 3 0
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 77, No. 200, Ed. 3 Saturday, October 8, 1966, newspaper, October 8, 1966; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1846121/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.