Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 77, No. 290, Ed. 2 Tuesday, January 24, 1967 Page: 2 of 4
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.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
(
\
X
Dogs Uted on Crowd
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
Brawl Greets
Senate Votes
Ky at Airport
Districting Bill
Bill Seeks
will
Felon Time
(R-
Credit Cut
Pike
CTIOIIINB-/
□
(Continued From Page 1)
Despite complaints about
it failed because of the "‘si-
Skirmishes
fered other amendments to
against it.
Quiz
Shell Error
Kills Six
Visit Opposed
Protested Sewer
Funds
J
(Continued From Page 1)
Plans Approved
$A
- Advertisement
| when
the Seventh fleet de-
t
Rain Badly
Needed
and true pink color
Branscum Named
Edmond Bureau
EDMOND
Bicycle
To Affairs Board
Novelist Dies
(homag
4
ORGANS
II
HIGH
concerning X
announcement
•A
1
Cqopoek
I
4FT9N
3
Nome
highest ranking prelate alter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Don-
Address
•00v••
Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski,
ham, 622 SE 2, was rushed to
State
Oy
was considered a develop- St. Anthony about 2:30 p.m.
J
ment of major significance.
Tuesday.
< > • < •o•mc > •mo
" »
<
ll
")
J
-‘L
—u
—
—
Address
In Error
Now you may
Restore
Dentures
Original
stroyer
hamlet.
not
ex-
SAIGON (AP) — The U. S.
command disclosed Tuesday
that accidental shelling by a
U. S. Marine platoon of the
signed by 39 percent of prop-
erty owners affected request-
ing construction of the sew-
malapportionment
exist,” Smith said.
Habitual criminals and pa-
role violators would be strip-
ped of their good-conduct
measure.
“I cannot buy a 26-county
(sixth) district with 396,000
serious to slight has broken
out in three sectors of Laos
between Laotian government
Coll Day or night
CI 5-4922
&
3
Music Company
3208 N. May
WI 6-2673
B. Field (D-Texhoma).
The Smith bill has a sixth
district that is 2.6 percent
larger than the ideal popula-
tion of 288,047.
Sen. Denzil Garrison (R-
Bartlesville), minority floor
Girl Swallows
Laundry Bleach
A 2-year-old girl was listed
in good condition at St. An-
thony Hospital Tuesday af-
ternoon after she reportedly
swallowed some laundry
bleach.
Lydia Donham, daughter
would not issue an opinion as
long as the matter was be-
fore the court.
Poulos charged in his law-
suit that John Kilpatrick jr.,
Oklahoma City, was in viola-
tion of turnpike law forbid-
ding a conflict of interest.
FAMOUS FOOTSTEPS are being followed by James H. Doolittle III of San An-
tonio, as he gets his air force second lieutenant bars pinned in place by his fian-
cee, Miss Pat Nagel at Texas A&M University. Doolittle is the grandson of the
World War II pilot who led the first raid on Tokyo. (AP Wirephoto)
The most complete tin* in
organ manufactured.
So many features for so low
a price.
3
AUCKLAND, New Zealand (AP) — Policemen with po-
lice dogs broke up a wild brawl at Auckland airport Tues-
day night after demonstrators stopped South Vietnamese
Premier Nguyen Cao Ky’s car by throwing themselves on
the roadway.
Women hurled themsleves in front of the speeding
black limousine, and men pounded on the windows with
The address of an Oklaho-
ma City man arrested on a
morals charge was listed in
error Monday in an Oklaho-
ma City Times story.
The article stated Bobby
Ray Thomason, 37, lives at
1040 NW 68, 'but he actually
lives in an apartment at the
rear of this residence.
There is an old wrecked car standing in the street in
the 700 block NE 20. It is a hazard to all moving traffic. I
notified the police but they did nothing. T. R. B.
Action Line notified the police department traffic di-
vision shortly after your letter was received, but they re-
ported back they were unable to find any such car at
that address.
was lost and I filed a refund claim in Norman. I have
heard nothing from it. N.I.W.
The Norman post office reports the claim in question
was lost in the San Francisco office and a new claim of
indemnity needs to be filed. It takes approximately six
months to get a return on a foreign claim, the post office
reports.
run at large in 1968.
Own Plan Offered
war.” A bearded young man
handed out printed booklets
denouncing Ky. forces and North Vietnamese
and Pathet Lao troops, reli-
able military sources report-
b
2
V
7
2
bill by striking most of the
4 title, to force it into confer-
Please Note
Action Line will study every inquiry or request, but
it isn’t possible to answer each one personally. Don’t en-
close self-addressed, stamped envelopes, as answers to
general interest questions can be given only in this col-
umn.
Remember, Action Line wants to protect every citi-
zen’s rights to be treated fairly by government agencies
— local, state, national — or any other community or-
ganization. If you are confronted by a problem of this
type, call or write Action Line. And please give a phone
number at which you can be reached in case additional
information is needed.
lent no” vote.
Plea Tabled
I
i
stert where you left
school, texts furnished
Dipleme Awerded, fraa
2 Bulletis
I LOW MONTHLY RATES
! AMBICANSCH00L.om.OT
I Box 480, Okle. City, 73101
"SeasonaV
5
t
e
4
I SCHOOL
i AT HOME
! IN SPARE TIME
Miami) moved to amend the houses to agree on a single
Touch Um magic switch apahe and the ama»
ing Color-Glo lighted keys disappear leaving
a beautiful spinet organ console that will be
he focal point the most admired piece of
arniture in your home. Your colorful music
cacher is your secret!
Drop by today and prow to yourscir yon
can play. Start your family on their musical
Adventure. Demonstrate your musical talent
to vour friends this weekend!
J
I
Defeated Republican
congressional candidate Tru-
man Branscum of Seminole
has been named to the state
board of affairs, Gov. Bart-
lett's office announced Tues-
day.
Branscum, a former high-
way commissioner who was
defeated by Democratic in-
cumbent Tom Steed in a 4th
District congressional race,
will succeed Etta Mae B.
Reed, vice chairman of the
board, Bartlett said in a pre-
1
)
(
was junked in the joint con-
ference committee that fol-
Gee (D- lowed failure of the two
_____________Advertisement_____________
Helps Solve 3 Biggest
FALSE TEETH
Worries and Problems
A little PASTEErH sprinkled on
your dentures does all this: (1) Helps
hold false teeth more firmly in place;
(2) Holds them more comfortably;
(3) Lets you bite up to 35% harder
without discomfort. PASTEETH
Powder Is alkaline (non-acid). Won’t
•our. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste.
Dentures that fit are essential to
health. See your dentist regularly.
Get PASTEEFH at all drug counters.
Compare our three manual
with others selling from
$3000 to $4000 More. We
invite your comparison.
t
I
I
)
)
I
Modern dentures are expensive
-and like fine jewelry they are
easily damaged. Abrasive pastes
or hard brushing may scratch
dentures... may cause ‘teeth’ to
be dropped or broken.
But today there’s a newer,
safer way to clean dentures-.
goak them clean in KLEENITE!
Fast-acting KLEENITE com-
bines three stain-removing ac-
tions: (l) detergent; (2) oxi-
dizer; and (3) solvent. It helps
soak away discoloration... pene-
trates toughest tobacco stains.
IMPORTANT: Th clean costly den-
tures like fine jewelry, get
KLEENITE at any drug counter.
3 v
: 2 Tuesday, Jan. 24, 1967
not writing the bill in the
"2
‘I
Earlier, the South Viet-
L
k
I
L
3
c
4
FAi
h
i
EAa a
w d
■ V 1
r J A
Fiph dg
j A
Ej A
4 JI
J
AA 11
1
ed Tuesday.
Army officers showed no
concern over the fighting,
which they described as sea-
sonal clashes. No casualty
figures were available.
Investigations and sur-
veys: Cache Creek, $35.-
000; Minco, $15,000; Okla-
homa basins, $42,100.
Envoys Change
WASHINGTON (AP) — G.
Frederick Reinhardt, U. S.
ambassador to Italy since
1961, will replace James Rid-
dleberger as ambassador to
Austria.
i
! senate, no other senators of-
the third member of the
board, Democratic member
Ludwig Johnson. There has
been no indication whether
he will retain or replace
him.
Williams also reminded I , ,
the senate that voters turned 1 change 11 “ and the vote on
down their last product at the measure was taken at 11
the November general elec-a.m. Nine Democrats joined
--'as many Republicans to vote
CHICAGO (AP) — Harry ।
Stephen Keeler, author of
more than 100 mystery nov-
els, is dead at 76.
o-oemo•o-o
(Continued From Page 1)
rules committee voted to ask
for an attorney general's
opinion on a key question:
Whether turnpike authority
member Kilpatrick was
guilty of a conflict of inter-
est.
ence committee.
Gee said he had been ad-
.. vised the house would take
similar action on its differ-
ent plan later in the day. His
amendment was adopted.
Sen. G. O. Williams (R-
Woodward) sought to amend
the Smith bill by substituting
his own districting plan.
Williams said his plan won
favor with a majority of vot-
ers when it was on a state, , ...
. n . . . , ten in conference committee,
ballot several years ago, but
Oklahoma farmers, the
weekly state and federal
crop report indicated Tues-
day.
Statewide, only 57 percent
of the small grain fields
were rated in fair condition,
and 42 percent of the stands
Channel
leader, said he was con-
vinced the ultimate redis-
jtricting plan would be writ-
-___2-d
thieves blitzed an Edmond
neighborhood Monday taking
three bikes in one block and
a fourth from a nearby yard.
Police said the victims all
reported the two-wheelers
taken from yard or garage
apparently in the afternoon.
Three of the thefts were
late-model bikes for boys
and the other was a girl’s
model.
VIENTIANE, Laos (AP)
— Skirmishing described as
Norris shelled a
Operation and mainte-
nance: $4,545,000.
their fists as a shower of
eggs splattered against the
car.
Some Dragged Away
Screaming and punching
at policemen who tried to
stop them, the demonstra-
tors forced the driver of the
car to brake quickly. Police
dragged two women and sev-
eral men from the road as
the crowd of about 300
surged around the vehicle.
The car’s interior light was
on, and Ky appeared anxious
thumped the window and
cursed him. The booing,
jeering crowed changed
“Ky, go! Ky. go!" and “Fas-
cist! Fascist!"
Car Delayed
Placards and lumps of
wood bounced off the car as
it sped off after a delay of
about three minutes.
The crowd tried to stop
other cars in the motorcade,
and fights between police
and demonstrators continued
for several minutes after Ky
was on his way to a down-
town Auckland hotel. There
another crowd of about 200
hurled ink at policemen and
kept up a continuous booing
that could be heard for sev-
eral blocks.
Security police surrounded
Ky as he stepped from the
limousine and walked brisk-
ly to an elevator.
The demonstrators at the
airport waited more than an
hour for Ky's plane to arrive
from Wellington, the capital
450 miles to the south.
Suntanned girls and young
men in bare feet who looked
as though they had just
come from the beach carried
printed placards saving "Go
home Yan-Ky Quisling” and
“No more lies. Stop this
er. Protests received Tues-
day by the council amounted
to less than eight percent of
affected property owners.
County commissioners re-
cently paid an assessment on
a water project under pro-
test .
Richardson, chairman of
the three-man commission,
said the commissioners
would stick by their official
refusal to pay the county's
assessment on the sewer pro-
ject.
It is estimated the county’s
share of the project cost will
be between $12,000 and $15,-
000.
Attorney General G. T.
Blankenship had said he
Surveys: Arkansas River
from Keystone dam to
Webbers Falls reservoir,
$15,000; Tenkiller Ferry
dam and reservoir, $20,000.
Love said he was
aware the city had
‘ produce one-man-one-vote years ago. however, when
• redistricting, all that state's the senator worked many
congressmen would have to hours perfecting a bill that
tion. However, the senate ta-
bled Williams’ amendment.
Sen. Roy Grantham (D-
Ponca City) then sought to
move Kay County from the
fourth to the second district,
but the senate refused.
“It is quite obvious that if
we start moving one county
at a time from this plan.
(Continued From Page 1)
* emergency clause resulted in
members," said Sen. Leon
YOU CAN OWN A NEW THOMAS’’
TRANSISTOR ORGAN gnngi
FOR AS LITTLE AS 493 ,
I
p. the 1965 redistricting act
,J going on the November 8
4 ballot, where it was voted
d down by the people.
The senate bill, crippled to
a force it into conference com-
’ mittee, would put both of the
.. state's Republican congress-
V: men in the same district
villages of Vinh Lai and
Luong Kim last weekend re-
sulted in the killing of six
[Vietnamese civilians and
wounding of 10 others
The villages are about 424
, miles north of Saigon.
It was the second acciden-
Reclamation Projects
Construction: Arbuckle.
$119,000; Washita basin.
$40,000; reservoir recrea-
tion facilities, $43,720.
pressed a desire to build a
toll road.
City Manager Robert M.
Tinstman said he was en-
couraged by Kilpatrick's I
statements on the proposed
changes in the routing of the
pike. He said if the turnpike
authority has the money and
is willing to go ahead with
plans and surveys, "I hope
they would go ahead and do
it.”
Tinstman said after fur-
ther study and work, another
look could be taken at the fi-
nancing of construction and
how it would serve the public
needs.
Love pointed out that the
money belongs to the turn-
pike authority and the coun-
cil does not have the authori-
ty to tell that agency how to
spend it.
He said he is confident the
turnpike authority would
consider all of the city’s
plans for downtown renewal
and “our posture should be
one of assisting."
Several councilmen sug-
gested that better communi-
cations should be set up be-
tween the city and other gov- '
ernmental agencies such as
the turnpike authority.
Dr. Charles Atkins, Ward <
7, said if the city was re-
quired to take this initiative, ।
“I think we should do it.”
Mayor Shirk suggested a 1
committee of city officials be
established in the future to :
work with the turnpike au- :
thority. i
He said if a toll road is ;
built, "it would require a (
Sen. Roy McClendon (D-
Idabel) warned senators that
their only chance to shape
the districts to suit them was
while the bill was before
them.
‘Can't Buy’ It
He told senators they could
vote only for or against a
plan that came out of a joint
conference committee, and
would have no voice in shap-
ing districts.
Many senators remem-
bered the floor fight of two
4 dit
eea l
"ada.e J
to answer.
Defending himself in the
lawsuit, Kilpatrick admitted
he was a member of the
turnpike authority as well as
a director of the First Na-
tional Bank and Trust Co. of
Oklahoma City. The bank is
[their meeting in Wellington,
he and Holyoake agreed that
South Vietnam will need mil-
itary assistance as long as
North Vietnam persists in
trying to take over the coun-
try by military force.
tai shelling reported in two
That was the very questiondays. Monday the command
House Speaker Rex Privett said four civilians were
said he wanted Blankenship killed and nine wounded
transaction because it is
all the state's money.
McCune said the state
would have gotten the
money anyway on July 15,
but that would not help the
financial pinch this fiscal
year.
Since the bonds are held
by the state in a depository
account and the state con-
trols money, McCune said
he sees no problem in
transferring the funds.
McCune also said the
plan will not hurt the state
next year because the
state won't have to pay
anything into the bond
sinking fund.
Edmond Bikes
j Stolen Fast
introduced in the senate
Tuesday by Sen. Jack Short
(R-Oklahoma City).
Short’s bill would amend
present law under which
convicts get sentence reduc-
tion known as “good time."
“work time” and “blood
time.”
Only first offenders would
be entitled to these credits,
and repeat offenders would
be denied them.
Under his bill, parole vio-
lators would lose any credits
they had earned before pa-
role.
Present law allows a sen-
tence reduction of two days
for each six days worked
and 20 days for each pint of
blood donated to the Red
Cross or similar agency.
Under present law, a 5-year
term can be served in three
years and seven months, a 1
4-year term in 36 months,
three years in 28 months,
two in 18 months and one
year in 10 months.
namese leader’s tour had ap-
peared to be turning into an
unexpected success.
Before his arrival, most
newspapers had urged the
government to call off the
visit. But since his arrival in
Christchurch, Monday. Ky
had turned in an impressive
performance as a President
Johnson-style crowd pleaser,
shaking hands, kissing old
ladies and holding hands
with babies.
Ky, Holyoake Meet
In Wellington earlier Tues-
day he met with Prime Min-
ister Keith Holyoake and his
cabinet and waved at or
shook hands with many of
the thousands of office work-
ers who turned out to see
him pass by.
Demonstrations in Christ-
church and Wellington had
high court’s action did not
keep him from filing his suit
in district court.
“I didn't get to put on any
proof before the supreme
court," Poulos said.
“I’m going to wait until
the right time, now," he add-
ed. concerning tiling suit in
district court
Poulos had asked the su-
preme court to halt the bond
sale, which refinances three
existing turnpikes and will
build two new ones.
In a speech before the
house, Poulos said he
thought there was something
underhanded in the bond
sale, and wanted it investi-
gated.
Planning: Crutcho
Creek. $50.(MX): Lukfata re-
servoir. $120,000; Shidler
reservoir, $100,000: Wauri-
ka reservoir, $190,000.
Sen. Robert
been orderly and generally
Ky arrived in New Zealand | Whiteness
Monday from Australia. At
(Continued From Page 1)
kansas, Texas and Louisia-
na. '
Also provided is $1 mil-
lion for a chloride control
study on the Arkansas and
Red Rivers in Texas, Okla-
homa and Kansas.
A key feature of the Ar-
kansas River development
is a 9-foot navigation chan-
nel from the Mississippi to
Catoosa.
The channel is due to be
completed to Little Rock,
Ark., in 1968, to Fort Smith
in 1969, and to Catoosa in
1970. Sponsors have high
hopes the navigation will
speed the industrial devel-
opment along the river in
Arkansas and Oklahoma.
President Johnson’s re-
commendation of $155,-
029.000 is about on the lev-
el of the amount congress
voted for the program last
year — $155,050,000.
The budget also recom-
mended appropriations for
these projects, which are a
part of the overall pro-
gram:
Bank Stabilization, both
states, $5,500,000; Darda-
nelle dam, Ark., $3,500,000;
Ozark dam, Ark., $12 mil-
lion; Keystone dam, Okla.,
$4,579,000; Kerr dam,
Okla., $13 million, Webber
Falls dam. Okla.. $14.
700.000; Oologah dam.
Phase 2, Okla., $1,350,000.
Other army engineer
projects included in the
budget for Oklahoma:
Construction: Broken
Bow reservoir, $5,200,000;
Hugo reservoir, $1,500,000;
Kaw reservoir, $4,700,000;
Optima reservoir, $2 mil-
lion; Pine Creek reservoir,
$5,600,000.
Chickasha) would wind up in
the third district with Rep.
, Carl Albert (D-McAlester).
Rep. Page Belcher (R-Enid)
, would be in the same district
2 as Rep. Tom Steed (D-
Shawnee).
Smith told senators that
F anyone who thought he could
? draft a plan that would satis-
1- fy everybody “is greatly in
error."
However, he said, the U. S.
Supreme Court recently told
Missouri that if it did not
trustee for the turnpike
bonds. j
However. Kilpatrick, , , .
argued that his share of any Promised showers can '
profit the bank might make come a moment too soon for
as trustee would be so insig-
nificant that it could not be
considered as influencing his
action as a turnpike authori-
ty member.
Poulos told newsmen the
pared statement.
The appointment, which
requires senate confirma-
tion, is co-terminous with the
appointing governor's.
Bartlett earlier named
Waukomis banker John N.
Happy Camp, the man he de-
feated for the Republican gu-
bernatorial nomination, as
chairman of the board of af-
fairs, replacing Ted Parkin-
son.
The governor has made no
The city council voted
Tuesday to proceed with
plans for a sanitary sewer
assessment district in the
College Park addition.
This is the sewer, in the vi-
cinity of NW 115 and Walker,
that county commissioners
have protested.
The warehouse of Commis-
sioner J. P. “Dick" Richard-
son lies within the assess-
ment district and would be
subject to paying a portion
of the cost of the sewer pro-
ject.
The city has a petition
with Democrats.
Lineup Listed
Rep. James Smith
as a burly New Zealander credit under a bill (SB 137)
I are in "poor” shape.
In most wheat areas of the
state, county farm agents
said crops are suffering ef-
fects of recent hard freezes,
poor root development and
dry topsoils. Wind erosion
now is a po en ial threat in
the Panhandle and north
west.
Dwindling stock ponds—
some entirely dry—are forc-
ing many stockmen to use
alternative water supplies
for their cattle, the report
noted.
(Continued From Page 1)
day when Ward 6 council-
man Frank Love said he had
read a story in which Gov.
Bartlett was quoted as say-
ing Oklahoma City wanted
to build the turnpike.
IE
H M jh ■
. , f
Pg
r 1$w
T
% 1 ‛^1
E N
W
ka) X
Polish Prelate
Talks With Pope
VATICAN CITY (AP) -
The first Roman Catholic
prelate to leave Poland since
the eruption of bitter
church-state controversy
there a year ago arrived
Tuesday to confer with Pope
Paul VI.
The visit of Archbishop Bo-
leslaw Kominek, Poland's
considerable expenditure of
city funds” to set up traffic
: signals, one-way street de-
signations and other facili-
ties on streets connecting
with the turnpike.
Meanwhile, Kilpatrick in-
vited Gov. Bartlett and sev-
eral turnpike and civic lead-
ers to an informal breakfast
session at 7:30 a.m. Thurs-
day at Howard Johnson’s
Motor Lodge.
Among those invited to
join the hour-long discussion
in advance of Thursday’s
turnpike authority meeting
were:
Frank Lyons, state high-
way commissioner; Marvin
Millard, authority chairman;
toll road expert H. E.
Bailey; E. K. Gaylord, editor ,
and publisher of The Daily
Oklahoman and Oklahoma
City Times.
Also Stanley Draper, exec- '
utive vice president of the (
Oklahoma City Chamber of
Commerce, and C. A. Vose,
president of the First Nation-
al Bank and Trust Co., which
is the authority’s trustee I
bank.
THB OAlUf OKLAHOMAN
TEsuaAFEEA49AN
"260%
Oklahoma 73125. Phone CE 23112
MQME.PEIVR
FE#
S’* d je ror waak #
Policing Start Set
WASHINGTON (AP) —
The agriculture department
said Tuesday its policing of
suppliers and users of dogs,
goats and other animals for
research to assure their hu-
mane treatment will not be-
gin before May 24.
I
I
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 77, No. 290, Ed. 2 Tuesday, January 24, 1967, newspaper, January 24, 1967; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1846375/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 9, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.