Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 62, No. 158, Ed. 2 Thursday, August 9, 1951 Page: 1 of 6
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1
U. S. Postpones
Oklahoma City Times
<
Price Rollbacks
PRICK FIVE CENTS
Neutrality Violations by Allies
TIh
Charged by Reds
Demand
)
in
For Resumption
a
\
New Czech Jessup Makes
Tells of prewar espionage
I
Threats
On Oatis
To Cadet
Claimed
w
WASHINGTON, Aug. 9—AP--
countries, Singapore and Sumatra."
McCarthy earlier had promised to
names of three Individual* two of
▼ide enough military help for
Wiloughy said “the beat legal Amer-
shelved for at least six weeka a pro-1
Ridgway has demanded guarantee*
alovak national council, which U-
Decision la Ridgway’s
Red mesaage.
which he had made public. and that
with a top of 96 in Oklahoma City. ,
“the war department public relation*
Parker said Thursday a bitter
This would contrast with the 110,
him shortly to tell the Reds that the
Showers
message to him as a sufficient base to
PLEASE TURS TO
Orders Wells
“No action ever was taken." Wil-
L
now have gone before the latest
I
cribbing "didn't begin suddenly. The
charge of the federal bureau of inves-
"This is a long step in taking the patrol out of politics." Gil-
Gilmer said an assistant chief of the patrol would be named
at $200,000.
State in Line
The two wells are not part of the
Loehlein said the exams were
Feeder Sale Scheduled
By Allan Cromley
Oral information from a dep-
What’s Inside
tor resulted in the firing of Coble
Hourly Temperature
Oklahoman & Times
Ing system that followed the state that can be sent to Europe to protect
Prober
rules.
Iha altuatlon we art in today."
for the Keystone dam in Tulsa county.
day committee."
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2240
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6eitd
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Shakeup Aired
Coble Gambill, ousted two
SPiaAL SERVICE
EOR VACATIONISTS
eratie national chairman Wil-
liam M. Boyle 100 percent and
wants him to stay in his job
sued a statement calling the new
ambassador a tool of soviet im-
perialism "
tigation office here, said Parker was a
former employe of the Anglo Califor-
nia National bank in San Francisco.
PLEASE TURN TO
PAOE a, COLUMN 4
bonds for six wells, additional storage
and a fire station in the northern part
HE football captain said he had
been ushered into a large, bare
"They kept hammering at me."
he related. "Even if I knew my
board of review and he understands
they have a procedural officer to
tell them their rights.
Chaska was a passenger, docked. 11
pickets paraded carrying placards
saving: "Go back and tree Oatia,"
Exams for the coarse art often
given al different times for differ-
ent sections.
When reporters persisted in de-
manding why Oatis was given a
10-year prison term in Crechosle-
vskla for trying to report news
l ths government charge was es-
pionage), Prochazka finally said:
Indirect Repudiation' Charged
He said Mrs. Smedley conducted "a
and indicated he will tell the
whole story.
Y
#
rope
Rep. Taber, ranking Republican on'
the appropriations committee told the
house. “Frankly I do not want to be
a party to saying there must be a defi-
nite limit fixed on the number of
troops and the number of divisions
tal is about $30 millions less
than President Truman's
budget reguests.
“Although the exams are iden-
tical. there are often days between
the time the first section takes it
and the last section takes it. What
happens is that earlier sections pass
on information on the exam to late
sections."
names of those who cribbed.
"I checked 30 names." he said.
ferent at West Point than at other
colleges.
"A number of sections take the
same course," he related.
100.000,000 military appropriation bill
that would have cut off financing for
more than six division*
There could be a roll call vote later
The six divisions constitute present
ish their studies and some would
sneak down to the basement to
study by dim lights.
exam. such as t “Was it a hard
exam?" and "Should I study the
whole book or Just the chapter of
summary"’"
"As time went on I began to give
more pertinent information, limited
only by what I remembered of the
exam "
’Thcv Kept Pounding’
About Prison. Grid
Star Savs
Protests Over Writer’s
Imprisonment Greet
Ambassador
2
Role in Patrol out on the highway and start an aU-
I
I
4:30 a.
5 110 •
6:30 a.
list
Midwest City
practice came about gradually " He
day to the city water supply However, said the so-called cheating was dif-
in suspending the talks, Ridgway the negotiations turn out successfully
demanded a firmer guarantee against provided a reasonable armistice ar-
messaged Ridgway that they already I
had "insured strict adherence to the
agreement concerning the neutralisa-
tion of the Kaesong area." “It is in-
conceivable that there will be any
whom he understands have resigned.
He said the third has been cleared by
ths department.
Earlier a senate subcommittee had
uty state examiner and inspec-commissionersmposedna then tostctantMnttcdptetederommttrmrntsotoenAti
Crossword Pumale
Markets ........
0il Reports ...
Radis Log .....
Society .........
Tews Talk.....
Sports .........
TV Tuples .....
Vital Statistles ..
Wemen .........
That j Vacation-Pak, the easy
way to catch up on hometown
news while you re away. Your
carrier will save your papers
and deliver them to you upon
your return No extra charge,
lust phone Service Department,
2-)211 before you go.
»
»a
91
44
no
loughby said "Smedley never sued for j
libel ixs she had threatened), and the
and "Do you dare see Truman with
blood on your hands?" posal to investigate McCarthy, con-
The pickets were from the Czecho- duct.
Gambill as assistant commis-
sioner of public safety, a legis-
committee members Thursday Alton, no more changes were in sight
for ths uniformed members of the
I
I
I
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78
30 1
11
74 1
i$ l1
78
H 1
80
8
is
5
—IP Wirephote
Mitsusada Yoshikawa
Order on Six Major Manufacturing Items
Delayed; OPS Says Time Needed
Authorities said they attach no par-
ticular significance to the tone of ths
0%
Dhu.". 1
assistant chief.
New SUrt for Patrol’
days ago as assistant safety
commissioner, will appear be-
fore a legislative council sub-
committee investigating state
auditing practices at its next
meeting, possibly Friday. He
accepted an invitation from
I didn't know what my rights were."
| Loehlein Mid he has not been
notified yet that he is involved per-
| sonally in the investigation
Ridgway Silent on Decision ; They Mid the final decision was up
whether General Ridgway, supreme to Ridgway, but they clearly expect
UN commander, would accept the him shortly to tell the Reds that the
WASHINGTON. Aug. 9—
(UR)—Sen. Joseph R. McCar-
thy (R.. Wis.), named ambas-
sador-at-large Philip C. Jes-
sup and 25 other state de-
partment employes Thursday
as persons who, he said, have
so tough a lot of cadets had to
stay up after "lights out” to fin-
On White-Flagoed Vehicles
•©
W
Envoy Coy McCarthy List Tip
‘ ‘ Of ‘Bad Risks’ i r
A2rs,.
3
. P*- ■
WASHINGTON, Aug 9—4P genee chief under General Douglas
—General Omar Bradley was MacArthur, gave hu testimony before
• I- - ------ i-te--e1 enno-ttv mhenm-
41
quoted Thursday M saxing the mittee.
administration'* $8,500,000,000
foreign aid Mil may not pro- anfuences on U. B. foreign pollcy.
United Nations truce team la ready to
resume the cease-fire negotiations he return to Kaesong
suspended Sunday remained to be There is a basic conviction here
! seen. । that the communists would like to see
proved by the state board of health.
Loman said. The wells now in use
reach into a water table at 750-163
feet.
Loman pointed out the well in Lions
park can be used to furnish water for
29
29
It
28
it
t
23-14 '
M
M
It "
name 29 state department employes,
r
keep the highways safe." Gilmer Mid.
Gilmer said there might be one or
two minor changes in the accounting
department within the next two weeks.
He Mid, however, that with perhaps
one or two transfers brought about
Picture on page 10
by the promotion of Tyler and Ham-
validity."
The communists addressed two I? D 1
communications to the United MlcIV nCIV
Nations command: j J I J
Red Messages Sharp C n •
ONE—The North Korean and Chi- Span I Drovtnor
nese communist commander. In chief UUUII UI dWIII
Ridgway’s OK
3 a p. M.
4:30 m
: i::
7 .1® p. m.
® 30 p. m
0:1
il: £
HE said at first he'd answer only
I general questions about the
Hamilton was made a lieutenant in Dwight D. Eisenhower However. Sen
1941 and put in charge of the Lawton Connally (D„ Texas) said earlier
u. --------j *- Thursday the United States may have
to put more than that number in Eu- i
For Big Fund
“Hard as it is on the ordinary TULSA. Aug. 9—0P—Oklahoma __ —-
will get a 40 percent slice of the 63.- money out of the pockets of the tax-
800,000 requested by President Tru- payers."
EST POINT, s Y , Aug. 9
to keep going back to shake more
smear campatgn" against the report, inethdaylriotampestorsedurt "2 asked Potnt
By Red Spy Claimed Relief to City;
Mercury Falls
1
The two emergency wells are being
pushed down to a water table at 350
feet which has been tested and ap-
rights, which I now know,
mer said. "It is my hope to remove ail politics from the de-
partment"
to Oklahoma City as assistant chief
of the patrol
Gllmer requested Gambill’s resigna-
tion because of what he termed
"weird" accounting practices. He Mid
he could not handle the 52.100,000
allotted the patrol without an account-
•6
charges" had been filed "on the
basis of FBI information "
Jessup His ‘Prtze Cane’
The senator said some of the per-
son. may later prove themselves in-
nocent. He recalled that Davies, a
high policy-making otficial, already
has been cleared by a state department;
loyalty board
McCarthy referred to Jessup as his
prize case." He mentioned Jessup's
testimony in the two trials of convict- j
ed perjurer Alger Hias but did not
immediately elaborate the reference. J
The first person he named was Vin-
cent, now consul general at Tangier.
Three Names Deleted
Vincent. McCarthy Mid, ha. been,
charged with being a member of the
communist party" and with "espionage
activities in Switzerland ”
Coast Guard Hears
Ship’s Distress Signals
BOSTON. Aug. 9——The coast,
guard Thursday reported distress mes-
sages from an unidentried craft which
said it was burning southeast of Bren-
ton reef lightship, at the entrance
to Newport, R I. harbor.
The coast guard said the vacht Aph-
rodite received the distress message
at least 20 times but was unable to
identify the call because of a weak
district. In 1948, he was moved to the
McAlester district and last year came
of Parleys
on Pan Mun Jan within the Kaesong EiGgwny nas demandea guarantees
neusrasceeadmseroturneggoygnendersharepegneuruizcordesongwouid
UN cease-fire negotiator, at his ad- - -- ---
vance base below Kaesong.
Both Red messages were tough and
uncompromising in tone.
lative council investigating com-
mittee was told Thursday.
Louls Nelson, who has charge of all
departmental auditing. said an audit
of the department of public safety
is still in progress. He said he has
had no report on the audit, which he
also can be used for sanitary purposes
Pressure to Be Aided
He change in temperature; low
tonight 60-65 northwest to 75-80
southeast; high Friday in Ma.
i six to be drilled with bond issue
money. The city last month voted the!
conference room where three "grim-
looking" lieutenant colonels Mt be-
, hind a long wooden table.
He said he was asked to recite an
on Pearl Harbor Showers Bring
The football captain Mid the
TOKYO, Aug. 9—(U.P)—The communists renewed their
pledge to respect the neutrality of the cease-fire conference
city of Kaesong Thursday and called for immediate resump-
tion of negotiations.
But at the same time they charged the allies with four
specific violations of neutrality, entered a “grave" protest
and themselves asked for new neutrality guarantees.
It is up to General Matthew B. Ridgway, supreme Unit-
ed Nations commander, whether to accept the Red reaffirma-
tion of an intention to respect neutrality. The communist
message fell short of an ironclad guarantee he demanded
and implied that any further allied complaint would be based
on faked material.
As regards the communist accusation of an allied violation
of neutrality, it was dismissed abruptly as “completely without
Harold Leventhal, general counsel of the office of price sta-
bilization. said the action was necessary to give the agency time
to apply changes made by congress last month in the defense
production act.
Besides the general manufacturers' regulation, other price
orders on which the effective date will be delayed are machinery,
cotton textiles, shoes, apparel, and wool yarns and fabrics.
All except the apparel regulation were due to be effective
next Monday. The apparel order would have been effective
August 15. Leventhal told reporters the action “means that any
rollbacks that would have taken place will be delayed."
He was not tmprisoned because
ef being * reporter
Asked if he thought the prison
sentence was jusufied, the new am-
bassador parried "It is not my job
—ll Is the Job at the courta.
He declined further comment on
tile subject vmue -- mav ueparueu. eupuuyea.
AUTSIDE on the pier where the But he told the senate he was deleting
U liner Caronta, on which Pro-
tan cathedral and National theater
Wednesday night. Eighty persons were
injured in fleeing the theater. Dam-
age to the two buildings was estimated
. .... officer. in my recollection. and the;
underworld feud over money secretary of wars office, then under
shakedowns led to the gang- IMr. Royall." squelched the report as PAcL i cot ns i
Loehlein said he answered
“yes.” Then he was asked to tell
all about it with this threat: “If
you lie. that is a prison offense."
"I was getting flustered." the
• «ked it ht had been connected with
the wnuing of hl* country* com-
munist constitution
I don't call the American consti-
tution capitaltstic " he said Don t.
call our constitution communistic "
Prochazka asid this was his first
trip to the U S With him was his
wife and an adopted daughter, Vera
l. S. Negotiator Scorns Foe's
Claim of UN Plane Attacks
^1
order next week. It did this by postponing the compulsory
effective dates of six major manufacturers' price regula-
tions.
- /AewAg
wAA W
/* / “
r ■
—IP—H a r o l d Loehlein,
signal and radio interference
I Four coast guard boats and a plane
from Quonset, R I. air station were
ordered to search for the craft. No
exacL posttion was known
neutrality violations. The Reds merely rangement can be made
renewed their previous pledge. ‛Priee‛ Believed Suitable
mmama m-zosnma
Joy not only called the protest com- tween the, contending force* should be
pletely without validity but suggested parallelsomething to which
that the Red* might be "abusing the idgway. Will not. agree under any
use of white markings" on vehicle* bv circumstance. It is said here.
oEhLEIN Mid some 40 cadets camneufazgnseargysndle “ ot suaSy8^ wVta^« on
Gen Kim II Sung. North Korean Koearovidedthe. price is. not too
premier and commander in chief. and highoand officials.do not think it is.
Gen Peng Teh-Huai. Chinese com- .nAn otherfa ,,, informants, cite is
munist commander in chief. signed the thatAmerica allies in the fight are
Red pledge of reaffirmation to Ridg- in.some,cases even, more anxious than
way 5 the United States for peace and would
Truce Team Stands Be be.impatient with any evidence that
Their message, broadcast by Radio the talks.weretbeing delayed by the
Peiping, replied to Ridgway", demand UN. negotiations for, reasons other
for an iron dad guarantee against than those of major Importance
further neutrality violations before I cv . n . .
cease-fire negotiations were resumed Ult UenKUldS
Ridgway suspended talks Sunday be- .
Bi^er Arms Fund,
ten for the New York Journal-
American.
Showers Are Spotted
It rained hard in Nichols Hill*, with rr
a sprinkle at the Classen weather sta- I
tion, and sharp showers elsewhere over
the city. The clouds definitely held
temperatures down.
For the first time in a week., official
this country’s allies because at lean talent in Tokyo" had approved as
rising prices. Th* chairman of proper evidencearepotinamtng writer
the joint «*M. .1 «.« testi- gmeaterastmemond
fled before senators consider- ring in Japan
ing the bill.
cadet Mid "The three officers saw
! that and kept hammering at me.
f I further failure on our part to comply
would have told my part in the i with the agreement unless you should
cheating. But i wouldn’t have told deltberately fabricate incidents as an Highly placed officials here ex-
0’ roim" " ESH48cks raimrda.n ^CiesJmedOq'Sly'Thermion
Loehlein Mid he was handed a negotiator General Nam n lodged the at both the state department and
long sheet of paper by the examin- formal "grave protesta" against four. Pentagon appears to be that the
ing colonel and told to check the allesed United Nations volations of latest message from the com-
neutraltyasHescharged.vp.planesat- munist commanden fuifis Gen-
ply vehicles at 8260n0 Acangu and eral Matthew B. Ridgway’s con-
Sariwon, and that allied troop* fired ditions.
land rub-out of Tonv Bran- a result
cato and Tonv Trombino Mon- He said the report met a fate of
dav niaht indirect repudiation" when these men
"" ' "indicated this report never should
WASHINGTON. Aug. 9_P have been published
• . . , t -j Kenneth C. Royall, now a New York
F resident I ruman said and Washington lawyer, was secretary
Thursday he is backing Demo- of war at the time.
operating funds for the post- 1
office and treasury depart- apparatus sent * message to Moscow Most of Thursday a showers were
menu. It accepted by voice early in peacbertaikltw ere n like those which hit Oklahoma City
west a • eam nrom ise on dirrer- i... .. ,1. a JuSC DEiOre noon. Wnen bi edl Ulree
vote a compromise on out in Washington He quoted it as ad- „.i. 4 . . ..AAlt..... ....A 1.
enres with the house. The to-
Prochazka at first avoided re-
porter*. and when located com-
plained he was "too tired" to give
an interview after his ala-day At-
lantic croming
(
Police restrained 14 women who at-'gah dam across the Verdigris river 27
templed to force their way into the miles north of Tulsa.
U. S consul’t office Thursday to pro- A $4,100,000 fund was asked for
test western “interference" with a bank stabilisation on ths Arkansas
Red youth rally in East Berlin. The river, including revetments on Bra-
women identified themselves as mem- den bend near Sallisaw.
bera of “the International women's Planning money also was requested
patrol.
Became Officer In '4*
Tyler first became a patrol officer In
194*. when he was made * lieutenant
In carge of automobile maintenance
cause armed Red troops marched
within 100 yards of the Kaesong con-
ference area Saturday. G ver •
The communist commanders re- 34yS OmiUn
called they had informed Ridgway •
swasgtmarox -Auatnipatnnsz
sEdy • .h, s“m: olon
s aaumernturtatins Rd. Sheppard 68. 5" s
Joy and the four other UN truce Mhe s7 billion* t.v mu
negotiators were standing by at their passed 7 tenstaxhnrecently
advance base for word as to whether the nerseuset"i no takecare
dheFderenserata
^^tpVu^y"* Parhrarntoronaahasuto buy. the ca-
Ss^ar^T^, SheDpard so spent
up tothe UNFWhetherto reopenhe for.amitary.procurementislos to
conference. iThat means,
lions of this year's armed services
budget is going “down the rat hole of
inflation "
Sheppard pleaded for rigid price
controls.
As long as there is a “haphazard
control system," he said, "we will have
in Washington He quoted it as ad- separate light thunderstorms could be
vistng that if America refuses 10 seen from the airport weather station
compromise by the middle of October, —but not a drop of moisture was fall-1
Japan will attack America, the Malay Ing there
.. .. . .... ... Carnegie. Caddo county, reported [
Willoughby, former military iteli- 43 rain since 10 a. m. Thursday-)
more than half as much as the town ;
, . .. .. ___had in the entire month of July. The
thessenatitorzmgumcurtxequesennramndacoompanied enzntnin-nona
of whether there have been aubveraive Thursday. The month of July netted
only 82 of moisture.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 9—(P)—The government Thurs-
day delayed indefinitely the price rollbacks it had hoped to
HOLLYWOOD. Aug 9—IP—
Chief of Police William H.
• I am now here in the states and
I mist see the things and the
people he Mid
He rebuked one reporter »hen
Midwest City Thursday start-'
NEW YORK Aug 9 I -
- ’ Czechoslovakia s new am-
bassador to the United States
arrived here Thursday amid
a flurry of protests and ques-
tions about the imprisonment
of Associated Press correspon-
dent William Oatis
The new envoy. Dr Vladimir Pro-
chazka, was reluctant to talk about
the subject
I don 1 speak or give interview*
without full information.' he said.
Bu "
.. .
M 10120 ». ■.
M li:M a. ■.
a* 12130 • ■.
: 3: * -
h7
z 4
Hl* home 1» in Chicago. He was al-
leged to have helped himself to the
bank's cash Monday, shortly after go- later Thursday. He indicated both Tyler and Hamilton would be
ing W work. Newman Mid , consulted in the naming of the
Cathedral, Theater Burn State Prober's
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador, Aug
9—Fire destroyed the Metropoli-
The Weather
Prom the U 8 Weather Bureau
Airport Station
LOCAL—Partly cloudy with a
few light thundershowers today
and tonight. Not so hot thia aft-
ernoon and tonight, with high near
96, low tonight near 7*. Friday
partly eloudy and continued warm
with high In the Ms.
STATE—Partly eloudy (his aft-
ernoon, tonight and Friday, with
occasional showers or thunder-
•term* mostly in north portion; III-
______ ____ (Eventng Ealtion of The Dally Oklahoman ) Entered at Oklahoma CIty. Oklahoms, Votlofflco »« —coed tim moll miller uttovr tho act of March ». ISIS
VOL. LXII. NO. 158. 30 PAGES— 500 N BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY, THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1951
“I am disappointed the authori-
ties did not act more straightfor-
— — , . , -iy uuisuay man- nardly in releasing the information
- caie.died for lack f furthe U rd to drill two wells to give! of our situation." he added in tem-
n, l pl • e 4 • , 1 ipr Link ia Seen 'emergency relief from a water ing his own story.
HaroI I het AnnoniAci The committee ha* taken testimony shortage that has held the city
X till •I UIIII -AVFUIIIUUU that both Mrs. Smedley and Stein in its grip the las two months.
Stamp Probe Leads I 1 ; were connected with the Institute.of.The city council voted to star;
To Stolen Bank Funds As Gambill's Successor -
SALT LAKE CITY Aug 9 The committee's study is concen- they will add some 300.000 gallons a
An investigation of stolen stamna from „.MLKL trated now on the IPR ("
• Salt Lake City hotel Wednesday 5! Mark darchet Wiloughby listed two Japanese as w T Loman city manager Mid no
night led to the arrest of a youthful Maj. Carl Tyler, present highway patrol chief, will move up members of the spy ring and the sub- watering of shrubs or owers could
San Francisco bank teller wanted for to his old position as assistant commissioner of public safety committee a counsel identified them as b permitted
cerssdidmthetyemtengave hisnamerds August 15, replacing Cobel Gambill, who was asked 10 resign connec tedpwith the Japanese council Drilling Rig Moved
Phillip Courtney Parker, 17. this week by Dixie Gilmer, commissioner. Th„ were Hotsumi omk and One drilling rig was moved into the
Detective Jack Biazzard Mid some In naming Tyler to the No. 2 post in ‘.he department. Gilmer Kinkazu Salonji ' ‘ city.hallilot Thurday morning. Drin-
53 300 wa* recovered also named Capt. W. D. "Bill" Hamilton, present assistant chief, A handbook of the stxth conference ersttqidiomansthewewiuhecom-
Jay c Newman, special agent in as chief of the patrol. Both Tyler and Hamilton are original of the IPR, held at Yosemite park in ter system law next week The secnd
i, : — ' - 'f 2- troopers with the patrol and are considered career men. August, 1936, luted both as delegates well will be drilled in Lion* park 8s
to th* conference.ta I soon a* possible. A second drilling rig
Sorge Executed by Japa is being sought
Robert Morri*, committee counsel. * -
said that Salonji served at one time
as secretary of the institute's Japanese
council.
"Are you of the opinion that the
Japanese branch of the IPR was being
used for the soviet spy ring?" asked
---------- Sen. Ferguson iR.. Michi.
"This is a new start for the patrol." "I think that conelusion can be ar-
Gilmer Mid. "The troopers are going -----------------------—--
' / „ column0) Red Spies the municipal swimming pool and to
out drive on safety." _____________________water the park after the present
"At troop meetings over the state, emergency ts over. The city hall well
during the next two weeks. I intend T w n • ...
to tell each trooper that he is now HaIse Keeetg
expected to work harder than ever to -
Troops Limit
WASHINGTON, Aug. 9—(PThe
house refused Thursday to clamp a", .
six-division limit on the number of Loman pointed out the well in Lions
American ground troop* that can be parK. *!'* help fight .back-pressure , hnM.n e m., rnt..
sent to western Europe on city lines and should increase the cad et.theohurd i.w ”uh Ereater !
It beat down ill to 64 on a stand- pressure in the higher sections of the on the football player, he added. - midw.st
it beat down 1J1 to 84 on a sand "But cribbing wasn't the only as- man for flood control in the midwest.
Ing vote an amendment to the 556 - -____sistance. We also give them as N. R Graham, president of the Ar-
1 much genuine tutoring a* our own kansas Bastn Development association, DAVIS A » . .
studles would allow " • predicted Thursday. Hargauga,”zrThe annual
Loehlein said he think* the acad- Graham said Sooner* would benefit heetordetseaven.feeder sale wil be
emv should make it physically im- through the building of dams In the n*w ”” ■»»»■»■» »■__
possible ter cadet* to u rut-c.- state and through the control of flood nrmmemmmmmwwmm
class cribbing and should abolish the waters upstream on the Neosho and
"tear motive" in observance of the Verdigris riven,
honor system. Mr Truman requested the fund tn
—- a message Wednesday to the senate
Red Protesters Balked appropriations.committeeg.s I
i anciuded in wit IeQUeu Was
GLASGOW, Scotland, Aug 9—(P)— 000 for the continuance of the Oolo-
Jap Prober Says Ring Warned Soviet Early;
General Savs Pentagon Barred Expose i intermittent ram, which
- ~ 1 moved in during the morning,
WASHINGTON. Aug 9_8 -Japan's top investigating offi- cracked Oklahoma City s
been .officialiy" charged cer testified Thursday the Russians knew a month before Pearl days-long heat wave .Thurs
uuth "romm nit activities" Harbor of the Japanese plan to strike at the United States and day and promised to give
McCarthy in a sen! wch Britain in the Pacific. . some relief at least through
Mecarthy in.a.senate.sPesh. The house un-American activities committee drew this testi- Friday.
cen and ^ohnSton Davies ?r' mony trom Mitsusada Yoshikawa, chief of the special investigat- The Oklahoma City thermo-
among th- persons ag^ ing bureau of the Japanese attorney general s office. meter reading was only 75 de-
whom he said "letters of The house group and a senate subcommittee were simultane- gress at 1 30 p m compared
ously holding separate hearings revolving about activities of a with 93 at the same time captain-glect or ArmI s 1951
soviet spy ring, headed by Richard Sorge which operated ,n Wednesday, although it had X! team aid Th irsdaJ
------------ iJapan during reached 82 Thursday hewVas rorced, with the treat
RI 1 I FTINS Me-.geC.ned Turn morning Wednesday's high of of prison, to squeal" on his
DU HHL 1 1- V— Before the senator*. Maj. Gen. 100 degrees, which came late in teammates in the exam-crib-
IASHINGTON Aug 9__P Charles Willoughby testified he sought the afternoon, has little chance bing at the U. § military
WAh. . • 8 . in 1949 to "unmask" the acttvities of of repeating Friday, the weath- academv
-The senate completed con- members of this spy ring but was said I “caae:
gressional action Thursday on loverruled by miitary authorities in Ide, ... . The Kimball. Minn, youth, one
. 6,092208000 hill providinz Washington’ ,, ander T roree.si of 90 facing dismissal for violation
a $2,928,398,000 hill proviaing Washington He predict* * high somewhere in or the academy’s honor code, told
Yoshikawa testified that Sorge 5 spv the 90s for Oklahoma City Friday. his story in a by-line article writ-
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 62, No. 158, Ed. 2 Thursday, August 9, 1951, newspaper, August 9, 1951; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1995254/m1/1/: accessed June 13, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.