Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 184, Ed. 3 Tuesday, September 9, 1952 Page: 1 of 12
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77
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VOL LVIII, NO. 184
Peasants Given
1 "
On Enrolments
IF
g
'V
I
I
1
*
v
Five Show increases
Students
ing even those of ex-King Farouk,
his understanding.
from the Panamanian tanker aft-
Expansion to Ind?
job.
that Slack would be
minister, explaining their proposed
19 MIGs Lose
came from an informed source
I senhower. At stake were Texas’
In UN Jet Duel
said they had little doubt he would
normally Democratic 24 electoral
come him. That is the score.
Eisenhower could count these
Best Day for UN
He was identified as Lieut. Wil-
Justice
PIEASECOEUMN%
ever, “Millie'
word on
German Police Smash
The men were ordered out of the
Beckham county near her home-
l
third. The wheat king title goes to
winner of the Oklahoma
wheat improvement contest.
of the crowds and the reception
100 screaming communists pro- Cumby, Texas; and Wesley B.
manche strain off the 13 acres he
along the line, Stevenson told a
Christopher suffered a fractured
for an average of 26 bushels per
Although the Reds were tempor-
height, a South Korean officer es-
OCEAN CITY, N. J., Sept.
swamped the office
munist Independent Free German
i
MIG.
PKEASFCOLMT°
youths.
I ,
Stata Is Doubtful
European immigrant children, be-
most
or scarlet fever, perished early to-
immigrant camp hospital at So-
mers, near Melbourne
h-
He plans to spend 2% days in
no decided changes thereafter, afternoon.
the
, whereas some of his
state,
i hav
as
kj
return to his airplane.
1
I
-I* Wireshote
I1
I
+
t
Justice Unit Aid
Ouster Hinted
Aggies Again
Pace Sooners
Land in Egypt;
Parties Erased
Tour Cheering
To Stevenson
Butler Boy’s
Fall Is Fatal
Showers Are Possible
Over Eastern Section
O-Year-Old Dies After
Being Tossed by Horse
Sweeping Decrees
Pulverize Ancient
Serfdom Structure
Major Institutions
Both Show Decline
From 1948 Peak
No ‘Sitdown' Strike Against Candidate Seen;
Senator Holds Off Pending Talk With General
CLEVELAND, Sept. 9—(P)—General Dwight D. Eisen-
Later in the autumn, regents will
issue 1951-52 enrolment totals, in-
States Righters Push
For Ballot With Ike
ranging tour of the Western states.
Apparently heartened by the size
Turner told a reporter. "Now we
can’t count any longer on a forced
Another effect, if the outpouring
of defense outlays levels off at
ment service at Southwestern. In
an effort to lighten her burden
a new setup was formed. How-
SEATTLE IP - Gov. Adlai Ste-
venson headed south today, hunt-
ing political gold in the hills of
California with the confident asser-
tion his campaign is "going beau-
AMARILLO I — Texas Demo-
crats, for the first time in their
stormy history, faced a showdown
Five Die in Blaze
SYDNEY, Australia UH - Five
help the general’s efforts.
“Sen. Taft is a Republican,
Chief of Tax Fraud
Division Is Target
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9——
Ellis N. Slack, who figured in an
■ N
hi
l
town of Sayre, and served as as-
sistant superintendent of public
instruction a year before she
came to Southwestern.
150 Red Planes Fail
To Stop Air-Assault
The 70 future farmers in the con-
test were a record entry.
other taken from the vessel had
died afterward of exposure.
Campus folk know that Mrs.
Thomas will be working long
hours in an effort to see that ev-
ery student gets the class sched-
ule needed. They also know that
a lot of free advice and sympa-
thy will go along with the enrol-
ment.
who insisted on anonymity.
No Official Comment
viding the total number of semes-
ter hours carried by 12 to give the
total of theoretical full-time stu-
dents in each school.
J
j
w
w
-Times SUH Photo by Ron Pver
Twenty-Fifth Group of Students Joins Her ‘Family’
Mrs. Millie Alexander Thomas, left, is enroling the 25th crop of freshmen at South-
western State college, Weatherford, since she entered the registrars office in 1928.
She has been registrar of the college since 1942. Above she talks to Sue Overfield,
Altus, and Dale Martin, Clovis, N. M.
PRICE FIVE CENTB
ST ATI—Fair in west, partly
cloudy in east today and to-
night. Wednesday partly cloudy
other crimes against the state.
The decree dissolving all existing
political parties provided that the
political groups could not form new
parties until they had filed notice
of their intention with the interior
_ . .son, Vancouver, Wash., who also
DORTMUND, Germany, Sept. 9 made the jump. Others were Capt.
_ ---------- cl - - — t. address not
man Youth (FDJ) members ac- Minn,
cused of creating a major disturb-
'stop an Allied air assault on a
North Korean military academy.
Allied F-86 Sabrejets, knocked
down seven MIGs and damaged
11 more, while an F-84 Thunder-
jet fighter-bomber accounted for a
12th damage claim.
» Biggest Festival Day
Blows in at Cushing
Pictures, Story on Page 3.
Peal
study marketing, handling and pro-
cessing of wheat.
liam F. MCMillen.
Far east airforce headquarters
said four others also bailed out of
the craft without injury when it
developed engine trouble. They
were picked up by a ground party
and returned safely to their base.
M
Survivor Thinks Thirst,
Rough Sea Killed
Crewmen
and on the vast program by
which the government at-
tempts to guide the economy.
'A Delicate Job'
As Turner put it, this means it
will be “a difficult and delicate job
to maintain our present prosper-
ity ” At another point he said con-
tinued growth and stability will
require “economic statesmanship
of the highest order.”
One offshot of the new situation,
Turner indicated. might be a fur-
ther easing of direct controls on
prices, wages and materials. In-
7
of clinging for two days to a life
boat in stormy seas killed seven
crewmen from the Tanker Foun-
dation Star, a survivor said Tues-
day.
cayne hotel just off the boardwalk
early Tuesday sending 80 guests
fleeing to the street in their night-
clothes.
year. They are Oklahoma College
for Women, Chickasha; Cameron
Agricultural College, Lawton; Eas-
tern A&M college, Wilbruton; Nor-
thern Oklahoma junior college,
Tonkawa, and Oklahoma Military
Academy, Claremore.
Wilburton A&M Leads
Of those gaining, the Wilburton
A&M college made the biggest
jump. Its first semester enrolment
jumped from 254 in 1950 to 363 last
autumn. Its second semester enrol-
ment for the two years jumped
from 282 to 315.
The figures do not reflect the ad-
dition of Korean war veteran enrol-
ment, which will not be felt until
the current semester’s enrolment
is complete.
Following are first semester en-
rolments for others of the 18
schools, those for autumn of 1950
being given first:
Panhandle A&M college, Good-
well, 549 to 488; Langston univer-
sity, 789 to 731; Central State col-
lege, Edmond, 878 to 938 (second-
semester decrease, however, re-
sulted in an overall-drop from
1950-51 to 1951-52); East Central
State college, Ada, 1,439 to 1,153;
Others are Listed
And Northeastern State college,
Tahlequah, 1,175 to 1,001; North-
western state college, Alva, 525 to
441; Southeastern State college,
Durant, 1,073 to 951; Southwestern
state college, Weatherford, 917 to
827; Connors Agircultural college,
Warner, 324 to 307; Murray agri-
cultural college, Tishomingo, 217 to
183, and Northeastern A&M college,
Miami, Okla., 664 to 506.
The report was released by H.
PLEAsEEVD.Fo, A&M Again
hard luck stories. For 25 years
she has been coming to work
early and staying late to help
her children. They even troop to
her house at night for advice
and understanding.
Named assistant registrar of
the college in 1932, Mrs. Thomas
was promoted to the top spot in
the office 10 years ago. When
the Southwestern State College i
The report
ousted—either
I
I
y
I
Maine’s Governor Congratulated for GOP’s Clean Sweep
Campaign workers congratulate governor-elect and Mrs. Burton M. Cross*-left, at his
headquarters in Augusta Tuesday after his election to the Maine gubernatorial post.
Maine.* first-m-thc-nat v ei election brought a clean swoop for Republicans, but voting
atatisticai also brought. November victory’ daima from Democrats. (Details on Page S).
Program Nearly Year Ahead
Of Schedule, Truman Adviser
Holds; Curbs May Be Eased
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9—(P)—A government econ-
omist says the golden tide of defense dollars is leveling off
far ahead of schedule—and may wash some of the props
from under business in the process.
Robert C. Turner, a new member of President Truman’s
three-man council of economic advisers, gave this surprise
appraisal Monday as he took his oath of office.
Okeene Youth
Is Wheat King
•
Judges at Enid Pick
His Comanche Strain
AVERAGE CAR
LASTS 12 YEARS . . .
The average American car lasts
about twelve years and rolls up
about 100,000 miles before It‛s
junked. figures show.
If youra also driving an “an-
tique.’’ don’t Junk IL Sell it, in-
stead, through a Want Ad in The
Oklahoman and Times, and use
the money aa a down payment on
a newer, better, safer automobile.
For a helpful Ad Taker, call
2-1211-____________________________
candidate is on a fast, wide-
Thunder jets from two fighter- jury to work
bomber wings roared over the mil-
itary academy at Sakchu deep in
northwest Korea, only 39 miles
A militant never say-die bloc of Sen. Taft is a Republican, was
States Righters came into the con- the way one of them, Roger U.
vention ready for a last-ditch fight Tracy, Ohio.state treasurer and a
on a resolution naming Eisenhow- member of the Taft camp summed
er as the nominee of the Democrat- it up to newsmen.
; . am give his
Democratic picnic audience in
Portland, Ore:
'Signs Are Good'
"I think I can say with confi-
dence the campaign is going beau-
tifully. I have seen the signa all
the way from New York to the
Pacific Coast.”
His trip has taken him into
Minnesota, Colorado, Wyoming,
Montana, Idaho, Oregon and Wash-
ington. In a grueling round of
speeches and appearances, the
governor laid down the main
ground work of his campaign,
But California, with 32 electoral
votes, represents the biggest and
—Al
04 19
' abh“.
their electors to him. Shivers, at
the same time, emphasized his dis-
taste for the National Convention’s
nominee.
Aligned with Shivers were the
Loyal Democrats, a minority bloc
that has been battling to keep Tex-
department. three billion in August. Turner
McGranery had no official com- foresaw a high level plateau of
ment on the talk about Slack’s | monthly s p e n d i n g somewhere
ouster. around the four billion figure.
Slack was a recent witness be- -----------
SEOUL, Korea, Sept. 9—UP-
United Nations jet planes destroyed -----------------
or damaged 19 Communist MIG-15 fore a house judiciary subcommit-
fighters Tuesday when 150 of the tee investigating the justice de-
Russian-built jets tried in vain to partment’s role in a grand jury in-,
touinclude.korsan.veterans has madormzrrintinerminhinmarkatnrto "AHndsChinese also held "Finger restdttet’theytried zjs*; ACEAnarTiFm-ureptroarea
hili,” near Capitol hill, after South a meeting in Essen of non-com- through the half-million dollar Bis-
ENID. Sept. 9—(Staff)—Harland from the Chinese’ Communist bsse James
xm Greb, Okeene, is the 1952 Oklaho- at Antung, Manchuria.
still isthe last ma FFA • hea t king. He was T .......
peak.
Earlier forecasts, by Mr. Truman and his mobiliza-
tion chiefs, had indicated a steady, continual expansion until
mid-1953. This projected expansion—as well as current
spending—had been a big stimulus to business.
Turner, 44-year-old business professor at Indiana uni-
versity, pictured the nation as standing now at a crossroads
where it must face an end to further substantial increases
in defense spending—with far reaching effects on business
Former Students’ association
was organized in 1937 she was
named secretary and has held
the office through the years.
POR SEVERAL years she was
" head of the teacher-place-
Oklahoma City Times
Paid Circulation Greater Than Any Other Evening Newspaper in Oklahoma
In a brief speech, and later in an interview. Turner told ■
ORFOLK, Va., Sept. 9—<tp— of new government studies which he said show that defense *
Burning thirst and the ordeal spending and production already have virtually reached their I
. ________ expansion. We will have to do some
Attorney General McGranery has hard thinking.”
been shaking up the justice depart- Government defense spending
ment ever since he succeeded J. totaled more than four billion dol-
Howard McGrath as head of the lars in June and July and over
perintendents over the country show now in progress here.
that knew her as students still Greb won over Doyle Neely,
call her when they need .heIp. Greenfield, and Eugene Laubach
Pedro Nachado, one of 21 sur-
vivors from the gale-broken tank-
er, said the seven men died of
exhaustion and effects of drink-
ing sea water in the last hours
before rescue.
“Thank God, I’m here,” the
wiry, dark-haired quartermaster
told his rescurers. “The waves
so high . . . and the thirst...
It was awful."
NACHADO, a Honduran, and
I’* Gusto Materosa, a Greek,
were plucked from their swamp-
ed life boat by the navy attack
transport USS Hollis and brought
to the U. S. marine hospital here
for emergency treatment.
With them the Hollis also found
two bodies, bringing to three the
known dead of the disaster off the
Carolina coast early Saturday in
the wake of hurricane “Baker.”
The Norweigian freighter Emu
was putting into New York with
19 others, 18 taken from a sec-
ond life boat and one rescued
“We’ve had an expanding econ-
__________ asked to resign or omy for two yearsan expansion
shifted to another assignment— forced by the defense program,"
WICHITA FALLS, Sept. 9—Jacob tifully."
- The Democratic presidential
investigation of St. Louis tax scan- .
dais, was reported Tuesday to be stead of asking the public to spend
on the way out as acting chief of less, the government might en-
the justice department’s tax fraud courage more private buying to
division—but Slack said that wasn’t try to keep business growing.
Reds Lay Claim
To First ’Copter
MOSCOW, ijR — The Russians
theimnedicopother invention today- er as the nominee of the Democrat-it uP to
writing1 aneademistepar. GiZ; tSxtdderraasyeh a reealu; active support to Gen. Eisenhower.
bemnoeaticPcomventionr the senator,
the history of our aviation.
tal. ।-------. , ,
Haggard’s brother-in-law, Louis foot and multiple lacerations and
J. Fresco, lives at 2717 SW Grand bruises. His wife and the boy suf-
boulevard. fered multiple lacerations and
---•--- 1 bruises.
The Weather —•---
mostly in the 60s. night at the airport than downtown,
EXTENDED — Temperatures with a low of 67 there compared
will average 3 to 5 degrees above with 72 at the Classen street sta-
normal in Oklahoma, turning tion. The airport had a high of 94 on this next leg of his tour.
cooler Thursday and Friday with and the Classen station 95 Monday r ' ' .
tee investigating the justice de-Chickasha Officer]
vestigation of interan revenue bu- Jumps to Safety
reau scandals in St. Louis. -1, rn a .
The grand jury first came up H rom J railSDOTt
with a report giving the tax bu «
reau a clean bill of health. One A Chickasha airforce officer re-
juror called this report a “white- turning to Japan from Korea para-
wash” and federal judge George chuted safely Tuesday from a
••ST ay ror vn H. Moore described it as aston- crippled C-46 cargo plane over Ja-
The Sabre-MIG duels came while ishing." After Moore ordered toe g southern-most home island,
j.j t on the cases further, Kyushu.
33 indictments were returned. - - — • ------ "
Jury Hears Slack
One result was the conviction of
P. Finnegan, former col-
whom he forced off the throne and hower’s bid for the presidency was bolstered Tuesday by
into exile last July 26. The three- word from key backers of Republican Sen. Robert A. Taft of
namnerofparouknsteventimonnhoha Ohio that they were going all out to help elect him.
son was hand-picked by Naguib. | They declared they contemplated no sitdown strike
against his candidacy.
Indianapolis Stop Next
As Eisenhower turned toward In-
dianapolis for another stop on his
Midwest campaign swing, his aides
made no attempt to conceal elation
at the warm reception accorded
him in Taft’s home state.
(WKY will broadcast Gen-
eral Eisenhower's Indianapolis
campaign speech from 8 to
8:30 p. m. Tuesday i. .
Taft himself had not joined in
the chorus. He said in Washington
r I
auuats, eapsamng uneu ptvpyocu . - . . Renuh he wanted to learn more of the
programs, listing the names of the today 0n.Whetherorun.awepu) general’s views before deciding
founder members and specifying lican “ their presidential nominee. •
their financial resources It was a clear-cut issue between nOW muen 01 ■ 1o • PIay • t
their financial resources. Adlai Stevenson and Dwight D. Ei .campaign.
—•--- IenEn.. A I. Tevac But sources close to the senator
state is Facing
little change in temperatures to- Ivr 1 p TT .
day, tonight and Wednesday. Week o1 Heat
High today near 95, low tonight ‛‛ --- ---
near 68. High Wednesday lower
90s. '
WORK IN THE registrar's of-
VV fice this year is heavier than -
& fhihk
vival of the GI educational bill ners get an all-expense trip to a
Southwestern’s Millie
Has Smile, Help
For Everyone
By MARK SARCHET
CTimes Staff Writer)
WJEATHERFORD, Sept. 9—A
VV new crop of students at
Southwestern State college start-
ed registering Tuesday, and
more than 20,000 who have
trooped through the registrar's
office during the last 24 years
will testify they are in the best
of hands.
Mrs. Clyde Thomas, who came
to Southwestern in 1928 as Millie
Alexander and went to work in
the registrar’s office, will be en-
roling her 25th crop of freshmen
this year. “Millie” as she is
called by "my children” over
the state started to work as a
freshman and has been in the of-
fice since.
NRS. THOMAS is known on the
1V1 campus and throughout
southwestern Oklahoma as the
student's friend. Her’s are the
ears that have heard all the
carried.
A&M had a first-semester theor-
tical enrolment of 9.430 students
last year, compared with only 8,-
451 at OU. The year before that,
A&M had 10,690, OU 10,537.
Five of the 18 colleges and uni-
versities reported on Tuesday
showed overall Increases last
the ambulance at the city limits on
NW 10 and escorted it to the hospi- Monday.
anfo one*1was reported injured. 80 Guests Flee After
_______________________ The defendants are accused of F;r Htte RecAr+ Hate]
timated it cost them 954 killed and disturbing the peace and endang I Ire nllS nicOr- --
ering statute order. They were ar-
special report made by the
• regents for higher education
2 to Gov. Murray’s committee
it a doubtful state this year. .
Stevenson’s schedule plainly in- day in a fire that swept through an
dicates the importance he places
pema
and ethical course was to make g ladly.and.L.cer tain ly.will, wel
! Stevenson their candidate and bind
in west, considerable cloudiness More heat, with only meager most glittering prize of this tour,
in east portion with widely scat- prospects of rain to help relieve
tered showers and cooler in Oklahoma’s drouth, was Mr. Although it went Democratic in
southeast and east central por- Maughan's forecast Tuesday. 1948 by a narrow margin, luuai -—5-- —— —----- -2
tions Highs in the 90s, lows It was much cooler during the Western political analysts consider lieved to be suffering from polio
mnentorganization 0 8oe" Water Not
For the second successive year,
Oklahoma A&M college, Stillwater,
edged ahead of the University of ‛N. n)..0 — W..
Oklahoma, Norman, as the state’s I 0 I)T‛LIHN
largest school, although both 7
showed decreases in enrolment
The figures cover enrolment for CV T •
both semesters of last year, com- *010n 1)10
pared with similar periods back to
1947. They were arrived at by di-
Army in Saddle
= Texas Deciding
rounded up 48 of the most power- n n
ful politicians in Egypt it a series I amaorot KAtA
of raids Sunday. All were still in J •UIIIUUI dl ILUW
custody and the army said some
would be tried for corruption and
, . ana ErA wuca. niag. ne was Tuesday’s claim of 19 MIGs gave
teacher-placement. Su- named Tuesday at the state wheat Allied pilots their best day of MIG:
mn" "he m"I i . hunting in September and brought
Mrs Thomas taught school'in gzeemueiu, «“ aueme unyoacu, 2denenye”cont probably destroy- Court Riot of 100 Reds plane by Capt. James C. Hankin-
—“.SJ — okeene,whojplacg Second nd hurled DonrMUND. Germany. Sept, s mnaeVaeegump.oherh-wehocae
FFA’s bombs, rockets and flaming jellied —IA-Club-swinging police Tues- Fieler c Flinguss, address not
ac. aap.cvecu. cuto. gasoline on Chinese Communists day broke up a demonstration of available; Sgt. Clarence O. Marlar,
xt Erxtss sjga.ysgsg: jsa
planted. He harvested 335 bushels tack by South Korean soldiers.
Victory Is Costly
eluding all persons enrolled, re- N
gardless of the number of hours IN
Slack told a reporter he has no
from the Panamanan tanker an- intention of resigning and it is his present rates, would be a reduc-
er it was broken amidship. Aa- understanding that he is not going tion in the government budget con-
' to be fired or demoted to another siderably under present estimates.
-—tt
) •
Firl
HOME EDITION
-------------
jgH
s:
as Democrats solidly in line for
Henry Haggard, 9-year-old Cus- the National Convention’s*nominee, (
ter county boy who suffered a head no matter who he might be.
Injury Sunday in a fall from a ♦--
horse, died Monday night in St. rn vil J T 1__
Anthony hospital. Lexan Killed, lulsans
The boy’s body was taken to the v . • • A A i
Thomas funeral home in Thomas, in ured Hl Auto urash
Custer county, where services are ,3 *------ - - -
Only one of the guests was in.
jured in the pre dawn blaze which
all but destroyed the five-story, 59:
room resort landmark and caused I
an estimated $300,000 in damage.
The one casualty was Mrs. Cath-
erine B. Casey, 53, Lansdowne, Pa. ■
She suffered a broken left leg
when, police said, she leaped from
a fireescape on the second floor
to the street. Her condition is not
serious. '__
Comic Dictionary
Mavriage- Monotony multiplied
by two
aminmmasmmmemn
What’s inside
Crossword Punto ....... 13
Markets..... /......... 21
Oil Reports ............. 13
Radio log ...... 15
Society ................. 10
Sports ......14-17
Town Talk ....... 4
TV Topies 15
Vital Statistics J
Women r.g..,.. IV
^The"^, son of W. L. Haggard. Scheffe, 81, Windthorst Texas, was
Mas brought to the hospital here in killed and Mr. and —
an unconscious condition after he Christopher and their son. Tommy
fell from a horse near his home in3, of Tulsa, were injured in an
Butler Custer county Police met automobile accident on u. □. 28, --"T —-•— ~ -17 r "
sutler, Luster county, rouce met 24 miles south of Wichita Falls they have been giving him all
SB IS
wi
Rainfall will average % Temperature range will be about stops have lasted only as long
inch occurring as scattered the same here the hext 24 hours, 95 it took him to make a speech and
showers or thunderstorms Thurs- to 68. There will be a few clouds, return to his airplane.
day night or Friday and again but showers—if any—are more like- His lieutenants indicated that his
about Sunday. (Normal maxi- ly in the eastern part of the state, speech in San Francisco tonight
mums middle to upper 80s, nor- The long-range forecast calls for — which will be delivered over a
mal minimums 60 to 64.) temperatures 3 to 5 degrees above national radio and television hook-
---- normal for the next five days, up — will deal extensively with
Hourly Temperature which is about the same as during foreign policy.
fm fzure is the rendime .i th. Ciassen the last week. It’ll be • bit cooler in Portland and Seattle yester-
next at the AmH: after Thursday and there may be day, Stevenson covered questions
: -j 38 12 some scattered showers, but no one of development of American’s nst- .
24 sees a drouth-breaker. ural resources, the role of the fed-
n« The mercury touched 100 Mon- eral government in building up the
234 day at Alva. Highest of record here; Pacific Northwest, and sub-topics
•4 u tor thia date was 161 in IMS. aad nf major to the whole
m m (the lowest was 51 in 1907. I area.
IN 52Sf
IT COULD BE YOU
Aceidents to Sept, i .dm
Injured to Sept. 1 . 17302
Dead to September f 4. 353
CAIRO, Sept. 9—(.P—Pre-
mier Gen. Mohammed Na-
guib's new cabinet Tuesday
dissolved all political parties
and ordered landlords to sur-
render all their land in excess
of 200 acres for redistribution
to landless peasants.
The two historical decrees at one
stroke altered the whole basis of
Egypt s political and economic life.
They were designed to wipe out po-
litical corruption and end the feu-
dal economic system that has kept
millions of Egyptians in virtual
serfdom for centuries.
Reform Stops Begin
Naguib described the land re-
form law as “the first step toward
rebuilding Egypt's economic and
social structure."
The decrees were announced by
the cabinet at the end of a mara-
thon nine-hour meeting and cams
less than 48 hours after strong man
Naguib, already commander in
chief of the army, assumed the
premiership.
They will become law when sign-
"\,a
sass Business Warned
I f
venink mum W ne Dai Oktahoman.» Entered at Oklahoma Cits. OWanoma. Pwwmw m mart Haw mal matter mSm W ato «« MmS X MCT
EVENING KXCm- SUNDAY TWENTY-TWO PAGES- 500 N BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1952
um
yTp,
Bp 7k W
ed by the three-man regency coun- w __ e w
k... At Taf t Backers Bolster Old Friend
Ha's Undisputed Ruler
Ike’s GOP Unity Effort Welcomes
with all the powers conferred by •
martial law, which has been in ef-
fect since anti-British mobs sacked
Cairo last Jan. 26.
Naguib thus became undisputed
ruler of Egypt with powers exceed-
Defense Spending
Levels Off Early,
PLEASE TURN TO Taft
PAGE X COLUMN 1 1ani
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 63, No. 184, Ed. 3 Tuesday, September 9, 1952, newspaper, September 9, 1952; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1989547/m1/1/: accessed May 9, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.