The Chickasha Star (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 67, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 7, 1969 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Chickasha Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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NO. 19
SINGLE COPY — 10c
CHICKASHA, OKLAHOMA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 1969
VOLUME 67
Commencement Set August 22
Would You
Believe That..
Tested in Pool
*
8
*91
8,
Melon Festival
*"
Su
<
1
Anna M. Glidewell, route
Anadarko,
I
I
Anadarko’s 38th Annual American
Indian Exposition Begins August 11
1
G. Pruitt
3
V
Brooks Foundation
Officers Installed
At July 29 Meet
b
Hess. third;
of directors
assigned the task of providing the 1 created by the use of costumes,
City. The 37-year-old minister is a
f
field, La., Hardin-Simmons Univer-
Southwestern Seminary.
Burton and Everett Armstrong.
terested people are invited to attend.
from Southwestern in 1956 and the
The In-Service Program will be doctor of theology in 1960.
The schedule of the meetings is
4
0. r .s
--i
! t!
Of Central State
L 1:
n
graduation from basic combat train-
i
*>
I 1
dation board of directors. Hunt, a
#
A 1965 graduate of Verden High
I
impressed he was with the work
""
<
- ■ •
meyter/F
-I
24 Countians Among
OCLA Summer Grads
Alex Schools Prepare
For August 25 Opening
NOFU Fish Fry
Slated Tuesday
Bus drivers are Floyd Wilson,
Keith Fields, Guy Hughes, Hugh
Slated Saturday
At Rush Springs
Some 2,000 acres arc planted year-
ly in watermelons within a 15-mile
radius of Rush Springs, the water-
melon capital of the world, and
on Saturday 40,000 pounds of the
fruit will be served free to some
10,000 persons attending the annual
Rush Springs Watermelon Festival.
elementary edu-
Junene Holmes,
Jerold R. McBride, pastor of First
Baptist Church, Ponca City, for the
past five years and former Chick-
asha pastor, was elected as secre-
tary of the Department of Evan-
gelism of the Baptist eneral Con-
vention of Oklahoma at a special
BIBLE SCHOOLERS—Vacation Bible Schoo’ at the First Baptist Church this year has
been the largest in many years. Dr. David C. Hall, pastor, says full enrollment has to-
taled close to 500. The school ends today.
There will be an Arkansas flavor
to the 15th annual Northeastern Ok-
lahoma Farmers Union fish fry.
Wanda Stewart, Sallisaw, who was
Mingled throughout this tragedy
are definite elements of force—just
Grady County's
Loading Wookly
Ntwipaptr
Former City Pastor
Named To State Post
3,
73
tion;
2. ;
Mobil Oil gauged flow of 101 barrels of oil and 18 barrels
of load water in 24 hours through quarter-inch choke at 1
Stewart Unit n 23-7-5, third producer in the southeast Mid*
dleberg pool of Grady County.
Free watermelon is served from
7:30 to 8:30 p.m. At 10 p.m. 16-year-
old Carla Cass will be crowned
Watermelon Queen by Miss Okla-
homa, Jeanne Gambrell.
unanimously to extend an invitation Sunday at Central State College,
to Joe B. Hunt to serve on the Foun- Edmond.
In December and January, Yusti
will tour the Orient and Far East,
including concerts in Korea, Ceylon
and India.
Last winter, Yusti toured Europe,
where he was booked for concerts
f
the All Indian Pageant will be pre-
sented in the grandstand.
The Grand Finale for the All In-
dian Pageant at 8 p.m. Aug. 16.
portrays the death of Black Kettle,
Chief of the Cheyennes, at the Bat-
tle of the Washita, November 27,
1868.
The American Indian Exposition
. . . Albert A. Ersland of Chick-
asha will fill the pulpit Sunday at
the 11 a.m. service at the First
Lutheran Church, 828 Minnesota, in
the absence of the pastor, Rev. Theo
Knepper.
• — -
I I
! ’
27
------★-----
OCLA Pianist Begins
Concert Series With
South American Tour
e S
nrke
63.13, topping the previous Training
Center record of 62.94.
The Training Center was estab-
lished at Ft. Benning Sept. 15, 1965,
and since December 1965 has grad-
Coutinued on Rage 8
Worth and has also done additional the fry to a different location with- as it may be found in lives of all
MOORE-STAUFFER COMPANY
Verden
No. 1 $28.00 ton
« J 4s
T ytke .g
GRADY COUNTY
ALFALFA HAY MARKET
Top Quality Alfalfa
Weighed Last Week
5 -
r -
e 9
L 7
I
Rq2 ’
Darcy, field representatives from
the University of Arizona, will be
fourth; Mrs. Nola Dickey, fifth;
Mrs. Bernice Meek, sixth.
Headstart staff, local teachers not sity and
in the program, and any other in-
*203*4
"DOG LEG” PUBLIC SCALES
Hiway 81, South Chickasha
No. 1 Brown $31.00
"TT- •e - + -
| - - 1- 44 .
5. i « jORm
boosted their company average to the Silver State Medal. He also
grandstand. At 8 p.m. tribal dances. Union members. Several thousand time to encourage them to create
Citian Honored In
Army Graduation
Rites In Georgia
Pvt. Larty M. Lemmerman of
. . . George D. Allen of the Allen
and Allen law firm, 116 North 4th,
is among 50 candidates who suc-
cessfully passed an exam to re-
ceive certificates as Certified Pub-
lic Accountants.
Donald Wayne West, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth West of Verden,
received the Bachelor of Science
degree in business administration at
summer commencement exercises
guest at the meeting, accepted,! School, West is employed at the
commenting on his recent visit to1 State Highway Patrol headquarters
the school and how very favorably , in Oklahoma City as a radio dis-
impressed he was with the work patcher.
W The GICKASHA STAR
SERVING CHICKASHA AND GRADY COUNTY SINCE 1902
in the park. man. Chekhov wants his audience
It will be the biggest outdoor to understand that their lives are
gathering of the year for Farmers "bad and dreary" and at the same
meeting of the board
July 17.
McBride's election
. . . Chickasha students receiving
degrees at Central State College’s
summer commencement July 27
were Carolyn H. Houser, Master of
Education in elementary education,
and Eva R. Stone, Master of Educa-
tion in special education.
• • •
.. . It's always good to hear from
our readers. Mrs. C. F. Taylor of
Amber writes, "Thanks for your
nice paper and for your kindness.
It's really a pleasure to get the
paper and read the news.”
Karen Keithley, Duncan, ele-
mentary education; George King,
ten and
Morris, I
McElroy,
Celebration events include a three-
night rodeo which ends Friday
night.
Festivities Saturday got underway
at 10 a.m. with judging of water-
melons in Jeff Davis Park. Prize
money is $290 in seven classes in-
cluding the laregst melon in the
show. Last year's winner was over
90 pounds.
Entertainment during the day will
include an old fiddler’s contest and
performances by several bands in-
cluding the Army Band from Fort
Sill.
• . . Due to a conflict with the
High School All-Star Football Game,
the Grady County OSU Alumni
Banquet, originally scheduled for
August 7 has been changed to 7:30
p.m. August 21. Speaker will be
Floyd Gass, new head football coach
at OSU.
arts and crafts, sports, dances,
parades and pageants all in a
spectacle of splendor as only Indians
in their native costumes can pro-
vide. Hundreds of Indians will set
up their brush arbors, teepees and
tents at the camp grounds.
On both opening and dosing days,
Aug. 11 and Aug. 16 at 1 p.m. a
grand parade will be staged in
downtown Anadarko.
Indian games and skill contests
are conducted at the fairgrounds
business meeting. Each member
was presented an annual report of
the Jane Brooks School in booklet
form from president, Robert J. An-
derson.
Mrs. Jane Harris, director of the
Brooks School, reported visiting the
following schools for the deaf:
Pilot School, Dallas; Sunshine Cot-
tage, San Antonio, Texas; and the
Mexico School for the Deaf, Mexico
City, and expressed her feeling of
pride in the oral communication
skills taught at Jane Brooks School.
Mrs. Harris also noted that five
Jane Brooks alumni have finished
their high school education in their
various home towns and are enter-
ing colleges- or technical schools
this fall.
The Foundation members voted
unanimous recommend At ion of the
evange lism committee of the board
of directors which considered a
, total of 15 nominees for the post.
I A native of Rocky Ford, Colo.,
' McBride served as pastor of the
First Baptist Church of Chickasha
from 1961-64 before moving to Ponca
cation; Connie
I graduation from basic combat train- the signal honor of being elected
. ing at the U.S. Army Training Cen- I Academician of the Academia
ter, Infantry, Ft. Benning, Ga., for Tiberina of Rome, in connection
Tibor Yusti, Belgian concert pi-
anist who in September will start
his second year as head of the piano
program at Oklahoma College of
Liberal Arts, leaves early in August
for a concert tour of Central and
South America.
Chickasha, business;
. . . Phillip Wheeler, Route 1,
Chickasha, has recently become a
Life Member of the American Polled
Hereford Association.
Chickasha was one of 11 soldiers in' in Rome, Berlin, Vienna, Budapest,
Company • D, 711) Battalion, 2nd London, Torino and Athens. It was
Brigade, who were honored up in during the past year he received
. . . Approval has been granted
from the Office of Education in
Washington for entitlement of $4,,
623.00 to Amber-Pocasset Inde-
pendent School District No. 128 for
current fiscal year under public
law 874, a program providing finan-
cial assistance for current expendi-
tures for schools in federally af-
fected areas. Certified for immedi-
ate payment $3,467.
ONE SECTION -EIGHT PAGES
— , _ guoeNQ
Coslg"ambvs-n"“
Third) Producer
I reading: Mrs. Carrie
first grade; Mrs. Helen
One of America's great Indian
shows will be presented Aug. 11-16
in Anadarko during the 38th annual
American Indian Exposition with
over 5,000 Indians participating in
parades, colorful pageants, skill
contests and the National Cham-
pionship War Dance Contest.
The Exposition will feature the
. . . Also Mildred Stone, Perryton,
Tex., says, "We couldn't do without
the Star." “Really enjoy the paper,"
echoes Blanche Carter, Phoenix,
Ariz. Thanks, ladies, for renewing.
* * *
held at 9 a.m. for grades 7-12.
Grades K-6 will enrol with their
classroom teacher. Pupils in
Kindergarten must be five years
of age prior to November 2,
1969. and first graders must be
agd 6 as of the. same date. Both
Kindergarten and first grade pu-
pils must present birth certifi-
cates to establish date of birth.
Kindegarten classes will be in
the morning only. These pupils
may ride busses to school, but
parents must pick them up at
♦ noon.
Twenty-four Grady County stu-
dents are candidates for degrees
from Oklahoma College of Liber-
al Arts when commencement ex-
ercises are held at 8 p.m. Fri-
day, Aug. 22, in the Administra-
tion Building auditorium.
This marks the second year
OCLA has had an August com-
mencement. Formerly it had
been the custom to confer de-
grees only once a year — at the
end of the spring term.
Fifty-eight students are candi-
dates for degrees, 15 of these be-
ing for the Bachelor of Arts, two
for Bachelor of Arts in Music
and 41 for Bachelor of Science.
Dr. Robert L. Martin, OCLA
president, will confer degrees.
Members of the class will be pre-
sented by Dr. Donald T. Wells,
academic dean.
Candidates, listed in alphabeti-
cal order, follow:
Bachelor of Arts
Nancy Shelton Buckner, Chick-
asha, speech and hearing ther-
apy; Marilyn Ann Denney, route
2, Pocasset, mathematics; Linda
Citian Has Part In
Russian Drama To Be
Presented At OCLA
Calvin Good of Chickasha has
been cast as Serebryakov in the
Oklahoma College of Liberal Arts
production of Anton Chekhov's
“Uncle Vanya" at 7:45 p.m. Aug.
13, 14 and 15, in the College The-
atre, Davis Hall. T. M. Schmidt of
the speech and drama department
faculty is director.
Setting for the drama, which takes
place in Russia during the latter
pari of the 19th century, will be
e‛
nekah, elementary education;
Oscar Bennight, Chickasha, ele-
mentary education; Ronald Lee
Brightwell, Oklahoma City, busi-
ness; Karol Alyne Burton, Nor-
man, home economics.
Teaching personnel follows:
Mrs. Wanila Moore, Kindergar-
second; Mrs. Faye
Mrs. Amy Lohner,
Jean G. Reed, Chickasha. ele-
mentary education; Opal O’Briant
Reed, Chickasha, home econom-
ics, Donnie Fay Sage, route 1,
Gracemont, elementary educa-
tion; Lynda Samm, Lawton, ele-
mentary education; Nancy Ann
Scott, Duncan, elementary edu-
cation; Janie L. Wagnon Stovall,
Duncan, business; Jerry D.
Swarts, Chickasha. business; Son-
ja Turner, route 3, Chickasha,
business; Ray Allen Webb, Chick-
asha business; Kay Byrom, Fort
Cobb, business; Peggy Hooten
White. Anadarko, elementary ed-
ucation; Elizabeth Nell Woods,
Tulsa, health, physical education
and recreation; Vicki Young, Al-
tus, biology.
Raymond Burch is custodian,
and the cooks are Mrs. Lettie
Burch, Mrs. Mildred Barbee and
Mrs. Edith Rayburn. Several im-
provements have been made at
the school including a new cafe-
teria and a room for Kindergar-
ten.
as follows: Wednesday, Aug. 13, 1-1 ' studies at Southwestern Seminary.
p.m.; Thursday, Aug. 14, 9-4; Fri- The couple has three children, |
day, Aug. 15, 9-4; Monday, Aug. 18, Renee, 8, Charlotte, 6, and Todd, 4.
9-4; Tuesday, Aug. 19, 9-4.
Miss Alice Smith and Miss Carol
red man in contrasting modes of is unique in that the original or-
living de picting progress of the In- ganizers still running the Exposition
dian in competition with modern themselves are Indians of the Kio-
methods in all trades and profes- wa, Comanche, Delaware, Wichita,
sions. Visitors will see the Indians Caddo, Kiowa-Apache, Osage, Paw-
Yusti will appear this (all in con-
certs with a dozen or more sym-
phony orchestras, including opening
the Lawton Philharmonic season
Oct. 2, with the Wichita Falls
Symphony, and those in Sioux City,
Iowa; Fort Myers, Hollywood and
Miami, Fla. In addition he has
some 30-40 recitals booked through-
out the United States, mostly on
the east coast.
Lewis, Blanchard, elementary ed-
ucation; Kimberly Ann Lorenz,
Arvada, Colo., business.
-8
988
is effective
cation, parents, members of the graduate of public schools at Winn-
Parent Advisory Council, Principals, I
holds the National State Prize at
the Rrussels Rpyal Conservatory
He has persgrmed in he Scali
in Milan, the Salle Gavea in Paris,
the Theatre Lamoureax in Paris and
on BBC TV and radio in London.
nee, Otoe, Cheyenne, Arapaho and
i many other tribes throughout the
United States.
Exposition prices are $1.25 for
adults and 50 cents for children for
the afternoon performance, and
$1.75 for adults and $1.00 for chil-
dren for the evening show.
Other attractions to see in and
near Anadarko are Indian City,
U.S.A., Southern Plains Indian Mu-
seum and Crafts Center, Philo-
mathic Museum, Riverside Indian
School, and the National Hall of
Fame for Famous American In-
dians. The Exposition Arts and
Crafts Center will also be open with
exhibits of beadwork, paintings and
oilier hand work.
For further information contact
the American Indian Exposition or
the Chamber of Commerce at Ana-
darko, Oklahoma 73005.
------*------
He will enter the U.S. Air Force
Officers Training School at Lack-
land Air Force Base, San Antonio.
Tex., in November, for pilot's train-
ing;
His wife Sheryl is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Parr of
Verden.
scis •
a ,
ception while in Rome. Since Nobel
prizes cannot be given a performing
artist, the Academia Tiberina and
the French Academia are the high-
est European nominations.
A native of Antwerp. Belgium,
Yusti is a graduate of Antwerp
Royal Conservatory with the first
National Award of Virtuosity and
fish, has purchased 1,000 pounds of furniture and properties. Typically
fresh-caught catfish from Jean and constructed scenery will not be
Bob McCowen, Van Buren. Aik. | used. Mood and atmosphere will be
The Arkansas commercial fisher-1 enhanced with music, sound effects
men will deliver the fish "cleaned,1 and proper development of each
washed and cut," ready to go in actor s character.
the big cookers. | The play examines real, people
The annual fish fry will be held with their emotions and conflicts
Tuesday at Sequoyah State Park's' who have been trapped in their
No. 2 Area. Tho park is on State existence by their own human weak-
Highway 51 between Wagoner and, nesses. It deals with the waste of
He recived the Bachelor of Divinity Tahlequah. beauty by those who are unable lo
Area plans could be changed, but value the importance of nature and
there will be plenty of markers to; human feelings.
I .
220
Oklahoma City, home economics;
Mondee Hooker, Alex, business;
Gerald Eugene Howerton, route
3, Blanchard, speech and hear-
ing therapy; Jimmy Charles
Ivey, Chickasha, biology.
First two wells were gas-conden-
sate producers. Perforations in Os-
born sand from 10,290-10,368 feet
had been fracture treated to make
initial swab and flow test for 230
barrels of load water and 20 barrels
of oil in 11 hours at the Mobil well.
Casing Run At Deepest Operation
Mobil Oil has run 51 2 -inch casing
to 20,315 feet at 1-A Cement Ordo-
vician Unit in 18-5-8, deep test in
western Grady County, south of
shallow production in the Cement
district.
Total depth is 20,330 feet. Spudded
in January, 1968, the operation has
7-5/8 inch casing set at 16,745 feet.
Nearest production is from the
Springer, both northwest and south-
east of the present drill site.
County Producer Second
A Grady County producer, drilled
by Chevron Oil, is now in second
place on the producing depth list.
Springer perforations to 18,646 feet
had held the record since 1967. An-
other Chevron operation, offsetting
the Grady County well, holds down
third spot in the producing depth
category.
Field Reports
Cameron Oil's No. 2 Thompson
in 32-3-8, Marlow District, is drilling
at 6,886 feet.
No. 1 Dietrich Unit of Big Chief
Drilling, et al, in 13-7-8, a wildcat
located three miles northwest of
Chickasha, has a total depth of
14,380; now logging.
Oil & Gas Leases
John V. Melton offered $27.50 per
acre for two tracts in Grady County
to pace bidding at the state school
land lease sale held Monday morn-
ing. Melton's bonus bid for half
minerals under a lot in 23-9-7, lo-
cated four miles northeast of Po-
casset, was $1,650, while half min-
erals under another lot in the same
section had bonus bid of $275. The
440 net acres offered had bids total-
ing $5,356.64, or an average of $12.18
1 per acre.
Alvy and Mildred Norman leased
160 acres in 14-8-8, located 5 miles
east of Amber, to John W. Baker,
who assigned it to Mobil Oil Cor-
poration for a two-year term.
Audry Hill, Arlie C. Parrott, and
Ida Bell Hill leased 160 acres in
25-10-7, located three miles east of
Minco, lo King Resources Com-
pany for a five-year term.
Continued on Page 3
--*-----
In-Service Training
To Begin Wednesday
On Wednesday, August 13, al 1:00
p.m. the In-Service Training Pro-
gram for Follow-Through Personnel
will begin. The first meeting is de-.
signed so that it will be of interest
to parents of the children that will
be in the program this year.
All members of the Board of Edu-
Ffe "ea
Hkd"am
WmkegFe
Ik 5"MMF #.
g$ E 1 4
Aug. 15. He will succeed J. A. Pen-
nington who has served as evan-
gelism secretary for the past 21
years and who will retire in Oc-
tober.
McBride’s election came on the
being done there.
Anderson noted that the Jane
Brooks School is beginning its 40th
year of teaching oral communica-
tion skills and that special events
will be planned throughout the year
climaxing with a Brooks Alumni
meeting in June, 1970.
I present during the workshop.
-----*-----
West is Graduate
Keith Fields, social studies and
driver education; Kermit Selzer,
junior high math and science.
Darrell Merrifield will teach so-
cial studies, coach football and
girls’ basketball. J. W. Freeney
is Grade principal, English and
boys' basketball. R. L. Meek is
high school principal and will
teach math.
ee
♦ > ♦ -
Also, Mrs. Glenda Fields, jun-
ior high English; Mrs. Mary El-
len Addy, French and language
arts; Mrs. Frances Baker, busi-
ness, Mrs. Alma Ball, science;
Mrs. Evelyn Williams, vocation-
al home economics; George Pro-
vence. vocational agriculture;
Imogene Cook, Marlow, ele-
mentary education; Bonnie Mar-
ie Dolan, Wichita, Kans., chem-
istry; Kathleen Durant, Atoka,
psychology.
Frances Farley, Tullle, home
.economics; Judith G. Frank,
Chickasha, elementary educa-
held at the Auchincloss House, 628, His wile, Elizabeth, is a graduate ' point the way, especially if manage-]
South 6th. of Texas Wesleyan College, Fort ment finds il necessary to move
Classes for students in the Alex
schools will start on Monday,
August 25. Teachers report for a
week of in-service and prepara-
tion a week earlier. A general
faculty meeting is scheduled for
Monday, August 18, at 10 a.m.
Pupils in Kindergarten through
grade twelve will enroll August
21. from 9-11 a.m. Busses will
make routes at that time arriv-
ing at school at 8:45 and return-
ing students home at 11 a.m.
An enrolment assembly will be
3
Turner Finkelstein, Brooklyn,
N. Y., history; Saundra Pat Grif-
fith, route 1, Norman, history;
Joe K. Hansen, Chickasha,
speech and hearing therapy; Ed-
na Crowder Hicks, Cyril, math-
ematics; Cassie H. Hill, route 4
Ada, psychology; Bet tenia Crit-
tendon Hulsey, Rush Springs,
speech and hearing therapy;
Alice MeCary, Oklahoma City
chemistry; Sherry Fay Moore,
Midwest Cily, art; Shirley Poe
Chickasha, chemistry; Susan
Mills Preece, Chickasha, speech
and hearing therapy; Yolanda
M. Reece, McAlester, speech and
hearing therapy: Billie Jean
Rodgers Sanford, Lindsay, math-
ematics; and Donald C. Thack-
er, Chickasha, psychology.
Bachelor of Arts in Music
Linda Luiean Howard, Tulsa,
voice; and Carolyn Jane Wiley,
route 4, Walters, music educa-
tion.
Bachelor of Science
Derald Ahlschlager, Lawton
history; Judith E. Black An-
drews, Chickasha biology; Fran-
ces Davis Anthony, route 2. Nin-
The Jane Brooks Foundation,
which operates the Jane Brooks*
School for the Deaf, met July 29 at
the Holiday Inn West, Oklahoma
City, for installation of officers.
Sen. Al Terrill, Lawton, who con-
ducted the installation, spoke on
the importance of “Total Commit-
ment” in any endeavor and charged
members of the Foundation and par-
ticularly the officers to become
totally committed to the Jane
Brooks School.
Officers installed were chairman,
Hari Stokes, Oklahoma City; first
vice-chairman, Mrs. Harold Law-
rence; second vice-chairman, Ver-
non Cook; secretary-treasurer, Mrs.
Emery Conrad; chairman, opera-
tion and policy committee, W. K.
Malaby; vice-chairman, operation
and policy committee, E. B. Turley;
secretary-treasurer, Marion Morris,
all of Chickasha.
Gavels were presented to the
chairmen of the Foundation and the
operation and policy committee.
Recognition was given to Dr. N. L.
George. Oklahoma City, Dr. Jack
V. Hough, Oklahoma City, Cal Bow-
man, Oklahoma City, and Lois
Black Hill, Chickasha, as members
added to the board during the past
year.
Hari Stokes conducted a brief
Otis Merritt, route 1, Ninnekah,
elementary education; Lynda
Jane Miller, route 2, Lookeba,
health, physical education and re-
creation; Robert Oliver Merton,
Oklahoma City, biology; Vinita
Myers, Chickasha, business; Don-
na McWhorter Ohl, Chickasha,
elementary education; Clara Ann
Brees Phillips, Chickasha, busi-
ness; Cecelia Brown Power, Mc-
Alester, home ecenomics.
* • •
. . . For several years the Okla-
homa Medical Association has been
writing a weekly column titled "A
Message From Your Doctor." Now
we would like to change, said Dr.
Ed Kelsay, associate executive
director of the association. Persons
desiring medical information may
address their questions to The Doc-
tor Speaks, P.O. Box 18696, Okla-
homa City, Okla. 73118. The ques-
tions will be answered by a panel
of experts and carried in the new
column, "The Doctor Speaks."
-----*------
Chatham Appointed
Seminar Instructor
At OU Med School
Dr. B. C. Chaiham, Obstetrician
and Gynecologist with the Chicka-
sha Clinic, Inc., has been appoint-
ed as an instructor in Ihc student
seminar area at the University of
Oklahoma Medical School, Okla-
homa City, according to Dr. James
A. Merrill, professor and head of
the Obstetrics and Gynecology De-
partment at the Medical Cenler.
Students will be discussing prob-
lems in the ambulatory care of ob-
stetrical gynecological patients and
Dr. Chatham, along wilh an as-
sociate, will be discussing the prob-
lems that arise in the treatment of
patients o fthis type as related to
their experience over the years.
The appointment is effective Sep-
tember 2, 1969.
--*------
Citian Appointed
Field Representative
John Beasley, 1824 Montana, has
been appointed field representative
for Woodmen of the World Life In-
surance Society. The announcement
was made by Robert E. Simmons.
Oklahoma City, Woodmen state
manager for Oklahoma.
A native ol Walters, Beasley is a
member of the Baptist church, the
Moose Lodge and Woodmen of the
World.
Yusti will return the first week in
September, after playing more than
a dozen concerts in Erifish Hon-
duras, the Honduras, Guatemala,
Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Sanlo Do-
mingo, Puerto Rico and Venezuela.
“e-am-n- •: 2
La ——.d -83amzi
their record-setting Individual Pro- with which he was honored at a re-
ficiency achievement.
Each attained perfect scores on
the IP test covering such topics as
first aid, military justice and cour- |
tesy, drill and ceremonies, in-
dividual tactics and bayonet. They
were the largest group from a
single company ever to achieve the
maximum score and their efforts
EMM
■ ie
*0329 f
ceremonial dances, war dances and people are expected to attend. | new and better lives today.
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The Chickasha Star (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 67, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 7, 1969, newspaper, August 7, 1969; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1898586/m1/1/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.