Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 68, No. 51, Ed. 4 Tuesday, April 9, 1957 Page: 4 of 5
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Cowboys
, APRIL 9,1957
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222-582, Billy West 579.
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George Grubb
Abbe Run Is First
Here Saturday
went on .to take the tournament1
BUY THE BEST TIRES
MELBA says...
21756
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Leaving the field after the game.
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Arena.
mile relay and her Jess Undlin
SWANSON’S
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star, Keith Gardner, was captain
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9th & N. Hudson • FO 5-8305
the
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Monday night rolled the first 300
LIKE MAGTI,
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Oklehema City
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TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED Ab ■
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Meeting
Arkansas
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Addrew .
ciy..
Monday night to wager $220,704
on the nine event harness racing
of the Jamacian Olympic squad.
Nebraska did not run at Texas.
DOT EVANS fired 198-526 for
Leonard Dickerson Co., in the
OR TREE HIM. IN THIS KIND OF
HUNTING, HUNTERS ARMED WITH
SHOTEUNS USING 88 OR NO. «
and made the 6-7 and 5-7-10 splits
for an exciting night. Bill Fauks
New
fresh look
and taste!
against four losses Monday night
by downing Sacramento 9-6.
Hockey Playoffs
MONDAY’S RESULTS
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Phillips' Wendell Dozier the medal-
ist with a 5-over-par 77.
♦
Fights Monday Night
Has Tax, Exchange
FREDERICKSON
TIRE COMPANY
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Meew sndmeyourmaee beeklat — "The
Imalde Stery el Temperery Melp"
SPORTSMANS
DIGEST "W
BOBCAT HUNTING
TACTICS
CHARLES BERKEY rolled with John Marshall taking second
227-600 in the Central at Civic
760x15
■tock
‘17”
White
$2127
470x15
Hack
$1434
White
Pet
37
JM
. .AM
2461
game shot this season by a woman
in league competition.
She sandwiched t h e perfect
game in between games of 176
and 195 for a 671 series in a
chemical company league.
A bowler for 15 years, Mrs.
Pashoff holds a combined 178-
average in league play. She bowls
four nights a week.
Ann Marshall of Milwaukee pre-
vously held high game honors in
league play with a 299 game.
Monday's Racing
worked four innings Winnie Stewart 496, Virginia Mc-
Connell 492, and Betty Beard
Quadrangular Meet
OU’s Parr
800x15
■tock
51909
White
52340
made the 4-5-7 and 3-10, Sally championship match 6-3, 6-2. Both ;
Theimer 6-7-10. D'ree Van Horn girls are still in highschool and
4-5. Edith Albro 5-7, Mary Sin- will probably play again this year. ■ .u
gletary 5-6. The Lawton highschool team —
Charles Carlson.
Ok’shoma got a couple of
creditable 226s in that event,
Jim McSlarrow running 21.2 and
Jim Dsnton 21.6. Each is recov-
Bring from indoor muscle pulls.
Bill Pritchett. Sooner junior
from Muskogee, ran a 48.4 quarter
and Co-Captain Phil Frazier a 48.3
one in the mile and sprint medley
L V?*
•hH.ro'
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Jay-Shee at Bowlarena, Cather-
ine Gheen 473. Maxine MeCon-
CE 2-1171
deserlotive boettat
710x15
I Block
‘15”
White
$1947
a 10-round feature fight at
Valley Arena, April 15.
College Baseball
place.
Medals for first and second place
weekly mixed doubles sweep-
stakes at Capital Sports Center
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with 1,265. Oleta (542) and Sam
Irion getting 1.239, Carrie and
Vince Waschevski 1.233. Velma
Sports Center.
May Bell Woods fired 180-528
In the Bowlarena Housewives
circuit. Evelyn Aven 477. Faith
Manpower, inc. comes to
OKLAHOMA CITY
school may enter three girls in a
team each player entering either
singles or doubles but not both.
And by tho way everyone who
has seen the big boy from Walters
swing a club aay he is a corner.
Gary la 6-5 and shoots regularly
in the tow 70’8. He might even do
better, they say, were he to prac-
tice and play more. He is only a
Jones to Appear
On Pro Mat Slate
Farmer Jones, the entertaining
Arkansas wrestler whose trained
pig always is a big hit with mat
fans, will tackle Angelo Savoldi,
the New Jersey ruffian, in Friday
night's main event match at Stock-
yards Coliseum
Savoldi, a top-rated junior heavy-
weight who is coming back for
the fifth straight week as a fea-
tured performer, was disqualified
after a stormy match with The
Great Zuma of Argentina last week
when he threw referee Leo Voss
out of the ring into the ringside
seats. Jones bested rough Tony
Austeri, also of New Jersey.
Ortiz Meets Filippo
HOLLYWOOD w - Lightweight
title contender Carlos Ortiz of New
York and Lou Filippo of Los An-
geles go into the ring at Holly-
wood stadium Tuesday night to
settle their controversial no deci-
sion fight here March 2.
---•----
Exhibitions
WAYNE HESTAND bowled a
622 series in the YMCA league
at Y alleys, with 224, 193 and
105
aiff Pate's 614 topped the
Jack Richards, also of Ardmore,
who strung 28 crappie which av-
eraged 1% pounds.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dullsworth
of Velma Alma enjoyed a good
sandie haul, catching 15 on min-
nows. Their sandies averaged 2
pounds.
Specializing more in size than
in number was Bobby Hagan, who
landed two blacks, averaging 5%
pounds each, and a 2-pound sandie.
He also had five crappie to show
for his efforts.
Rounding out the list of success-
ful fishermen was L. Z. Smith,
who caught seven in blacks.
Cole Wants to Keep
His Braves Uniform
Dick Cole, acquired from Pitts-
burgh in a trade, broke into the
Milwaukee Braves lineup for the
first time here Monday, relieving
Danny O’Connell at secondbase.
Cole was the pivot in one dou-
ble play and got to the plate twice,
hitting into a double play and
drawing a walk.
4-5-7, Dessie Allen 5-10.
Frances Novak with 526 and
Cartier Quits
Boxing Career
NEW YORK U—From now on
Walter Cartier is strictly an actor.
The onetime middleweight con-
tender hung up his gloves Tues-
day, ending a brief fling in a dou-
ble career of television acting and
boxing.
Handsome Walter announced his
retirement from the ring after suf-
fering a deep cut over the right
eye last night and lost on a third
round technical knockout to Jackie
City" .Nirmiqeham (SA at
AS Savannah (SAL at
/
, FAST PACK OF HOUNDS MAY 88
i FORCED TO CHASE A BOBCAT
: FOR HOURS Before THEY KILL
Distributed kv
McCARTY CIGAR CO.
t-u=m
When hotly pursued ev a
HUNTER WITH ONLY A COUPLE
OF HOUNDS, A BOBCAI, FLOUN-
OERING IN DEEP SNOW OF THE
NORTH, TIRES GUICKL%, MAKING
THE CHASE A SHORT ONE.
Where there * UTE OR no
SNOW BUT PLENTY OP BRUSH, A
Ruth Trosper 4-5 and 5-6. Fred
Jones bowlers had 2,177 and
Beatrice Foods leads Reinauer
Brothers by two games.
In the city women’s tourna-
ment’s ragtime doubles play at
Capital Sports Center, all women
entered in the tournament may
roU all next weekend or all day
during this week, until 5:45 p.m.
on Thursday, until 6:15 p.m. and
after 8:45 p.m. Tuesday and
Wednesday. There were 27
scores above 500 last "weekend.
Vernon Kelley shot 547. Law-
rence McCracken 528. Virgil
Dowding 523. Carl Grant 198-518
in the Bank league at Puddin'
Lanes. Joe Bush had 546, Paul
Kemp 539, Rocky Hansen 519.
Jack Clapp 502, Fran Crozier
209-512 in a mixed league at
Capital Sports Center.
HUBERT FITZGERALD, scor-
ing a giant 665 with 217, 181 and
267, and Sarah Campbell with
201-509, won the weekly mixed
doubles sweepstakes at Civic
Center Lanes with 1,342. Kate
was the longest hit of the after-
noon.
The game was witnessed by
some 300 fans, who found the
cloudless sky a far cry from
the blizzard predicted by the
weatherman.
ALM scored once in the second
and twice in the third, but Ar-
three months
Pro Basketball
A
HOMA CITY TIMES
I
Howard Upshaw shot 246-580 in
the Service league at Bowlarena,
Bill Hawley
Manager
vw
• CAROLA RADIO SHOP |
| 1214 Limweod Ea 2-147 j
Co. in the Soonerette. Ann Fei- j
genhauer shot 440, Pat Klein 418, .
Clare Carson 412, Clara Askey
167-400 in the Boomer.
Joe Hornak's 556 topped the
Military league at Tinker air-
base, Otto Wusnack doing 531,
John Gasson 529, Jim Hildum
519, Paul Paulsen 222, Dave
Lamper 211.
BOB JENKINS led the Classic
at Midwest Bowl with 565 for
Kiwanis Club, Atkinson Chevro-
let notching 2,517. Lee Beals 554,
Bill Bishoff 540, Bill Rucker 529.
Ernie Stout 524, Dice Roberts
209. Elvin Hooper's 510 was best
in a mixed doubles league, Rich-
ard Katz counting 208,506.
Skip Wusnack had 165-378.
Jack Thornton 366 and Dwight
Nalley made the 5-10 in the Mon-
roney junior highschool league
and Ronnie Baker hit 442 in the
Jarman league, Mike Barbo 171-
401. Arvin Lindofer 397, David
Miller 387, Warren Hood 381.
Bob Holcombe bowled 219-564
in the OCAMA league at Mid-
west Bowl, Bob Morse 547. Don
Becker 228-542, Joe Hornak 531,
' 0. T. Meadors 524, Ray Stachur-
sky 519. Kay Hildum scored 481
in the Housewives' league. Char-
lotte Mapes 465, Mickey Hansen
445 Joan Gaps made the 6-7-10,
Chick Bashaw 5-6-10, Jean Shirk
and Charlotte Mapes 4-5, Betty
Poe 5-6.
NEW YORK- Jackie Lal
York, stopped Walter Carl
York in three rounds (
NW ORLEANS-Ral ‘
nell 461. Rita Wagner 459. Patti
Wall 457, Ruth Trosper 456. Gil
Stephenson made the 3-5-10,
Charlotte Smith 5-6, 3-10 and 5-7.
sophomore.
The Chiefs have lost three
matches. They were beaten by
SMU, Phillips and Tulsa. But in
their last outing they looked good,
gaining a 6-6 tie with OBU. Thurs-
day they play Phillips again at
Enid. Also on the OCU schedule
is a home and home series with
West Texas... ditto Central
state and Wichita. The Chiefs also
will play the Bison golfers from
OBU another match.
lin Parks doing 604, Laymond
Crump 233-601, Kenneth Wood
220-591. Leonard Reed 583, Clint
Carringer 582, Bob Murawski
V
hind the east stadium, final event
of All Sports day here.
Parr is down for action in the
440-yard dash, the 880-yard dash
and as a possible anchor man in
the mile relay.
Timers at Austin ceught him
all the way between 1:49.2 to
1150 on his epic hale-mile an-
cher. Three of the four schools
in the meet here Saturday
scored in the lassy Texas event.
Arkansas ran second to Kansas
in the four-mile relay with Ed-
ward Carey, Earl Pond, Jerry
Carter and Ed Morton, distance
Mixgnk on vs Cleveland at Mami
rARMSRpia vs Bostom et Greenvimg, S. c.
MT3
The 33-year-old New Yorker,
who portrays Pfc. Claud Dilling-
ham in Phil Silvers' "Sgt. Ernie
. i
' 1/4.-1
Illinois Woman
Hits 300 Series
GRANITE CITY, IU. U_Mrs.
n V'
lale
i
Bainbridge 464, Dorothy Croom 1 In last year’s contests, Barbara
459, Ellen Stephens 454. Joy : Waid. Lawton. defeated Barbara
Parker 184 Barbara Henderson Buckley, Northwest, in the singles
The Weekly Role Saves You
21% Oyer the 1-Time Rato
You step down to a lower Classified rate
when you order your ad three or seven times.
Some readers can be reached today, others tomor-
row. Every day « a good selling day. /
ace. Arkansas’ distance medley
came fourth Tommy Oakley of
the Razorbacks ran fifth in the
two-mile run. Robert Mears. Ar-
kansas discus-pegger was fifth at
148-6%, defeating all of Oklaho-
ma’s men.
Kenneth Yob, Colorado jave-
liner, won that event at Texas
with a herculean heave of 222-1.
<,1
.Shields. ■
The OCU golf team is composed
of Gary Gardner of Walters, Nick
lannareni of Elkhart, Ind., BUI Mary Pashoff of Granite City
Long and Charles Kegans, both of ” J- i " ‘ " 3))
Oklahoma City.
A,W.,6X
WANT MORI INFORMATION? c«sll
or mail tho coupon for FREE 28 page
i ' ; ' । "
homa City University.
OCU has a golf team complete
with coach The coach of the
Chiefs' links team is Dick Tunni-
cliff. Dick, a former touring pro
and a close personal friend to both
Bo Wininger and Loddi Kempa,
has been living here for a year. ----- ,-------.1
. The Alabama graduate suffered Saturday and also Nebraska whose
. a broken back in a car wreck early
in 1955 and later spent 14 months
at the Mayo clinic. He got out of
his hospital bed last April. Dick
worked at Wedgewood last summer
and this season will work at Duffy
Martin’s Brookside layout on South
Marshall Upjohn rolled a 648
series in practice at Capital
Continental Baking league at
Capital Sports Center. Wayne |
Hestand posted 553, Catl Skiles
500 in the ACMY loop at the
Y. Dick Dixon shot 236-588 for
.....•.......“**
... and with it edmes a
successful record of helpful
service to businessmen
in over 90 other cities ...
j University of Oklahoma the first
EDMOND -Central State col-tna matcpest tan nmevFromctbf;
lege will sponsor a highschool at Norman Monday.
girls tennis tournament Saturday Medalist was Sooner Bob Rich-
~t MomArial nerk nkiahnma (litv . ... .* __
LTYFEATSSCPEPVUE,.. IM SHOT, WArTATA STAND WERE
* M neu "e“ THE CIRCLING CAT WILL PASS. .
program at May wood Park. The
I program featured the $1,500 mile
pace' won by Abbe Run.
Seals Win Exhibit
because I don’t want anyone to
take it away from me."
Fight Card Arranged
HOLYOKE, Mass. In—Heavy-
weights Wayne Bethea of New
York and Jeff Dyer of Spring-
field, Mass., have been signed for
7 • f I,
1.
WHAT IS MANPOWER, Inc?
Manpower, Inc. is a world-wide business set-
vice offering temporary help to businessmen
during peak periods, work overloads, vaco-
Kent, and other help emergencies.
WHO CAN USE MANPOWER SERVICES
Every office, factory, er store; large or small;
in every line) Manpower employees will do
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hourly rates.
kansas came back to tie with
three in the fourth. Then the
Pokes broke it open in the bot-
tom half of the same round with
four rns.
The Aggies added an insur-
ance run in the sixth, while th
Porkers pushed across another
pair in the seventh to end the
scoring.
The loss makes the Porkers’
record 2-3 for the season. They
lost two to Missouri, then won a
pair from Tulsa last weekend.
The Aggies beat Houston twice
and split with Texas Lutheran
during an early swing through
Texas.
"absh."prg2-poopnkaha-ied a the
way to win u>* amipitre mm at Gulf-
SEAqnEr* .-Tudor Era sooed by
IMS Eng-urm.
from behind to captor* ihe Rumlord
purse at Lncoln Downa.
Fish Biting
At Murray
ARDMORE- With only a slight
break in the weather, Lake Mur-
ray anglers turned out in droves
and posted satisfactory results as
the early spring fishing conditions
paid big dividends.
Heading the list were Ardmore-
ites Jay Woodruff and W. T. Jones,
who teamed to trick 35 crappie
on minnows. The crappie averaged
one-half pound each.
Not far behind were R D. and
won a spot in the vault at 13 feet
All these men will compete here
backs.
The Aggies, now 4-1 for the sea-
son. won Monday’s opener. 8-5,,
wrapping it up with a four-run
M in the fourth to break . M hit sas. John Howl Easy
EThe,Aautlineupnoksorliberahy “ Sacksom’s 26534 for lead.
Pokes committed six errors Mon- er Holland Roofing was best in
Ka^Sre?0 ied directy to ttamcomfhgtzcuyisrcentnn’win
Arkansas scores. son scored 198-518, Velma Ho-
Gary Johnston and Merlin t vasse 499. Mary Jones 197-498,
Nippert -----
apiece to the opener and their .---— — -
pitching was better than the made the 5-8-10. Bess Barton
five Arkansas runs would Indi-
* __-__-
... De DeBerry, hitting 598, won the
They allowed only seven hits. ....
thre of them flukes, and neither
man issued a walk—a rarity in
15, R
— college baseball.
‘Em Kn MIIGv Victim of the Aggie attack was — ------
I U D I) 113 v Everett Thomas, whose winning Hovasse had 518.
• season last year was highlighted:
NORMAN - K WV. ao:
the Sooner sprint medley, “uartet ofr to a slow start and carried
to triumph in new school record only a .167 average into Monday’s
time of 3:21.9 at the TexassRellays gme, hit two-for-three and walk-
last week will be busy insatur- twice to lead the Cowpokes
dav s quadrangular here with Col- The firstbaseman from Oklahoma
or*lo, Nebraska and Arkansas. City scored three times and drove
The meet will start at 4:30 p.m in one run. His triple in the sixth
on the Sooner outdoor track be-
manpower, inc.
New Orleans, outwinte
Pitriburibj itoppKl
Center, Herb Stender 231-598. H.
A. ,247-96, EredsJackson winnersrwill be awarded to the top
girls in the tournament.___________
552. Greer Shilling 550. Louise
Baker hit 201-500 for Wilson &
At Shawnee, Phillips university ATWATER, Calif.. (A-San Fran-
cisco won its 15th exhibition game
/ 1) 7 ' 'i y
STILLWATER-Oklahoma ARM Elks lodge loop atJenks.Be
sent sophomore righthander Roy lin Parks doing 604. Laymond
Peterson to the mound Tuday in
an effort to make it two in a row
over the visiting Arkansas Razor-
relays.
Colorado tied for fifth in the
futbeferoiinerSinD"k, 1
tia"eiss"orfeasm,‛u, Loulslana
Stdfamhuna (La.) 14, Mississipoi voca-
tiocehtehary ». Southwestern Logisiana T.
nQakana aM S. Arkanses ?
St Loci* t Arkaaaaa stete 1.
ft 2®?^ A
North Texas Clips
Oklahoma Linksmen aa31fAGoravNd‛aingrowdther
The perennially powerful North
Texas State golf team spotted the
: MELBA CIGARS
। "Sun, honey, a banker it a
; good catch ...if he doesn’t
lose interest first."
1 .......——i
For mild
I and mellow
moments
Classified Ads Will Pick
«
Buyers Out of the Deck
You can find buyers for unneeded
articles quickly and easily with Okla-
homan and Times Classified Ads. There
are buyers waiting to buy household
goods and appliances of all kinds. The
way to tell them what you have to sell
is to place a "For Sale” ad in the Okla-
homan and Times.
abua, 15 y. New
arier, 15942, New
_ of cheduled 10.
Ralph upa, 141%,
ed Vince Martinet*
Pope Paint Store at Midwest „ . . ,„vual„l wa ovvi. „„„ au1-
Bowl in the Merchant league, at Memorial park, Oklahoma City, ardson with a three-over par 75.
Lee Beals 585, Bob Jenkins 559. An annual event, the tourney I -----
.......
Play will begin at 9 a m. Each .....
It is a healthy situation to see
golf added to the sports program
at OCU. The city school should
have one of the finest minor sports
program of any school in the state,
excluding of course OU and ALM.
Track and tennis should be added
to the OCU agenda.
Again Oklahoma will be repre-
rented at the Kentucky Derby, May
4 in Louisville.
In Los Angeles Oklahoma oilman
Travis Kerr has announced he will
enter Round Table in the Derby.
Last Saturday Round Table won
the Bay Meadows Derby. The 3-
year-old Kerr thoroughbred has
won seven out of 16 starts.
Kerr also said Round Table
would race in both the Preakness
and Belmont stakes.
Player Breaks Ankle
SAN DIEGO, Calif..—Veteran
San Diego Padre outfielder Harry
EHiott fractured an ankle Monday
in a Pacific Coast league exhibition
game with Portland.
2 Agencies Earn Money
DENVER w-Colorado treasurer
. Homer Bedford said Tuesday state
agencies earned $94,305 in interest
on investments during the last
Atf K2
PL 14:2
Jim Blackwell of Colorado was
fifth at Texas in the shot put at
5149%.
Coach Frank Potts’ Colorado-
ans were third in the 880 relay
with dash men Larry Chace, Jack
Bessire, Charles Smith and
' 7. 1 ,
2, .3
LaBua of East Meadow, N. Y.. Leaving the field after the game,
in a telecast bout at Sb. Nicholas the bespectacled newcomer said.
"I am sleeping in this uniform.
"4’
ill
k
THF,g-4
(il
VOF IT
Vernon B. Snell :
riMis sewtrs idito*- l
I. p IN I AL George Grubb, one of I
I V the city’s most popular sports- I
1 men for many years, will be hear- I
ing jibes for years about Ms ab- I
। ‘sent-mindedness last weekend. He I
forgot his bowling ball when he I
went to the ABC tournament at I
Fort Worth.
Captain of the fast Oklahoma I
Tile Co. quintet of the Major Clas-
l ok league. Grubb discovered at I
the hotel in Fort Worth that his
I ball was at home. He rented a |
ball and. shoes and had 506 as his
' team compiled a brilliant 2.955
tally in the 3,000-team national -
tournament, good for 10th position.
The score was second best of all I
| time for an Oklahoma City team. •
High is s 2,979 by Seven-Up Bot-
tiers in 1953.
Grubb took a kidding from fel-
low bowlers at Fort Worth, but his
- old partner in Playmore bowling
lanes. Andy Koettker, who always
is ready with a pun, had the lgst
word.
When Grubb called him here to
ask Koettker to check his home
and send him his ball by airplane,
Koettker asked innocently: "What
I did you shoot with the rented ball '
in the team event?"
' Grubb replied, “I had a 506 ser-
des."
• To which Koettker snapped
back, "Well, why don’t you keep
using it—you wouldn’t have done
I any better with your own ball.”
Grubb finally persuaded the
fun-loving Koettker to put the ball
on a plane, then Grubb had to
drive to Dallas to pick up the ball
for use Saturday in the singles
and doubles. The ball was on the
floor in the middle of the Grubb
| • kitchen.
[ A fine sandlot baseball pitcher
I here as a youngster, a veteran
topnotch bowler snd a capable.
I golfer, Grubb is a salesman for a
steel company.
Last week's ABC tournament
I was the 18th attended by Grubb.
I He is a former Oklahoma All-Star
I champion, and has one of the most
I powerful bowling deliveries in the
southwest.
I Contral State at Edmond it get-
l ting seven new tennis courts. Work
I on the $31,000 construction project
| has been slowed by recent bad
| weather but if all goes well the
| new courts should be ready by
| April 18. That is the day the
I Broncho tennis team plays Okla-
| homa Baptist.
| The new courts are located north
| of Thatcher hall. When the project
I is completed ... say perhaps a
■ year or so from now . . . the
| courts wiU be lighted for night
I play and will have standings seat-
I ing 300 persons. A chain fence is
| being built now around the courts.
| The courts will have a dark green
| surface. Gene Land says they will
I be as fine as any in the state.
I Learned something the other day
| While browsing around out at Okla-
i *
Second Game
No xamefucgp/s SCXEniLK
National League
Boston at Montreal (Montreal leadi, I A)
American League
Rochster at Cleveland (first game of
1 1 10.7 series)
82 1818: Cherotte “ Fslhdelohtfhartotte
amRESSENe..
NnYrt c vs Cleveland, Dayton Beach,
stouis vs Chicaso U> at Lnchbare.
Ne York o xs Jacksonville (SAU at
khsgrcili"fte Rock (Sa) at Lttle
Kock mQxpars HESULTs
Eussaesdbatcv.innsnc
—h,
K A
Call cEntral 2-3311 ) 1
■ Motorola Car Radio*
I $4495avs.
F n
"*7T‛ y *551 T
la/ 41-, ..
ZowlbgNEWS
Bilko" television show, said "I
just don't have it. I could see
that right away.
"I was pushing my punches. It
was laborious. I was even wonder-
ing if I was throwing too many
and if I would have anything left.
When you get that way you might
as well quit I'll stick to acting."
ha
N -
AMERICAX LEAGUE
Sfemetokrjduk
THE PLAZA CLEANERS won the Salvation Army women’s basketball league
championship. Team members are, front row left to right, Phyllis Fisher, Mary
Cline, Verenell Hager, Mary Lane, JoAnn Holliday and Helen Hess. On the back
row are trainer Jan Ellard, Joyce Dunn, Cleo Walker, Jo Baker, Margaret Bowers,
Charlene Thompson, Wenona Dennis, Ophelia Lairson, Ozell Glazier and coach I. B.
and Earl Myers next with 1.221 Murray.______
as 12 teams bowled. • The pre- i
vious week. Joy Jackson had a C pntml SI fit ps
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 68, No. 51, Ed. 4 Tuesday, April 9, 1957, newspaper, April 9, 1957; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1996430/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.