Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 68, No. 283, Ed. 3 Saturday, January 4, 1958 Page: 4 of 4
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32
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10 SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 19580KLAHOMA CITY TIMES
• 'A
Pokes Face Cincinnati
Oklahoma
,50 i;
107 points in trimming the Lobos.
1 <
FOOTBALL HERO Tom Forrestal,
Friday from the Cotton Bowl to see if his souvenir
passed Navy to a 20-7 victory over Rice.
, Ml
Top Fives Fear
(By the Associated Press)
99
New York but was opposed by
or if Aubrey gets that assign-
Sid Terry, two-time state cham-
V.
pion from Edmond, will add
Gene
1
Problems Due
z
NCAA Has
Prep Meet
Sugar Bowl final.
riod to take charge of Haller in
Final Test
NORMAN (P-The University
against John Marshall, by Clar-
Macomb, 111.
for two men or two women, with
1956.
Red-shirting” is the practice
Friday Cage Results
four seconds left.
167 stopped unbeaten Arch Doty
Rodden continued to win for the
cate.) n
to, Washinstos State
n.
until Tuesday.
3
72,
(overtime).
K-
M
f
)
\
\ •
$
\
S
Big League
Moves Due
Prep Grappters Busy
Putnam City Pinned
For First Mat Loss
Doubles Pin
Meet to End
Sooners Home
From Victory
In Orange Bowl
will be eligible for a second ma
jor league club.
TWO—Any major league club Kansas State. Michigan State,
desiring to transfer to an area Cincinnati and Maryland all top-
the Lobos, who continue their
trip at Wichita Saturday night.
The Chiefs led 51-30 at half-
time and at that stage of the
game it appeared they might du-
Rosi, fifth ranked lightweight,
complained about the weight
after the fight. He gave away
5% pounds to Busso who weighed
141 to Rosi’s 135%. Rod's han-
of holding college athletes, usu-
ally football players, out of in-
ood when sophomore Jim Hanna surprises by decisioning K-State’s
stole the ball and flipped in the two top operators, John Doyle
declared at the time he would
have sided with the NL had the
matter come to a vote, prevailed
upon the two leagues to table a
final vote until the January 25
meeting. It was then that he ap-
pointed his four-man committee.
At Friday's 4% hour session in
Frick's office, the committee rec-
ommended the following:
ONE—Any community which
has a population of two million
or more within the city lim’ts
Virginia edged Clemson, 88-85.
in double overtime at Clemson:
Creighton barely pulled past
Monmouth 41-58; Akron snapped
a tie in the last minute to de-
feat Lake Forest, 83-72, and
Edmond, new sporting a 2-1
record, was ranked sixth in the
ITYEDAY
CtErMoon-TV).
The mortality rate has been
> high for the major unbeatens
League action was featured
over the city as Midwest City
tumbled Edmond, 36-35, in a Mid-
land conference clash that saw
Bomber ace Gary White drop
In a surprising finish. Perry
heavyweight Gayion Webb post-
ed a 4-2 win over Marshall's
Wayne Lively, who was Perry's
No. 1 heavyweight last year be-
fore moving to Oklahoma City.
The Stillwater-Blackwell match
was dore enough that five of
the 10 matches ended in draws,
the Pioneers winning three of the
remaining decisions with Ken
Clark getting the decider at 167.
Amarillo ace Bob Johnson at
NewYo
Toromo,
MoUTMI
broken arm, who celebrated by
scoring a fall.
State champion Tim Haws,
moving up from 165 to heavy-
weight. also picked up a fall for
the Bulldogs.
are the only ones with a two
million or more population
The vote will bo by leagues,
not by clubs. In case of a dead-
lock, the commissioner will be
empowered to cast the deciding
vote. Frick indicated how he will
vote when he said he was “very
much in favor" of the commit-
tee’s recommendations. It is a
foregone conclusion how the Na
tional league will vote.
1
average.
Against New Mexico at the au-
ditorium Friday night Reed and
Leon Griffin scored enough be-
tween them to beat the Skyline
conference club. Griffin hit 24 as
Mississippi State is rated Ne.
9 behind the whole crowd in the
current rankings, and if it gets
past Auburn again — the first
score was 52-37—its stock will
rise.
But McCarthy and Co. will
have their fingers crossed when
* '
k I
winning basket.
Maryland, No. 7, was the only
one of the Top Ten to play Fri-
Maryland open up the flood
gates.
Incidentally, South Carolina
coach Frank Johnson said he
rated Maryland on a par with
North Carolina in the AAC. The
two teams meet twice in the
baseball.
Principal baseball question
to be settled here is how far
the summer leagues can go in
paying cellego players before ‘
they lose their amateur status.
A propesal considered Friday
night by the AACBC executive
committee put a limit of *325
a month plus certain expense
a 11lowrances.
Before that figure can be
agreed upon the coaches and the
NCAA will have to vote on its
acceptance. The vote probably
will not be held before the NCAA
business session on Wednesday.
Meanwhile the baseball coaches
are preparing another blast at
the major leagues about signing
college players before their eligi-
+
8
the official contracts called for
140. give or take a pound.
“When I'm supposed to fight
a lightweight, I want to fight a
Ambros "Bud" Dudley, for
mor Villenova university ath-
letic director, is vice-president
of stadium enterprises, which
would premote the event.
dgstern w.
wS Dekim-
Mat Duel
Cats Face
2 Squawks
NEW YORK UnBythe margin
of one point on the scorecard
of referee Teddy Martin, Paolo
Rosi Saturday owns a split 10-
round decision over Johnny Busso
in a battle of lightweight con-
tenders.
Although New York scores
fights by rounds, it permits of-
ficials to resort to a four-point
system in case the rounds come
out even. The winner of a round
gets from one to (our points and
the loser none.
Martin gave Rosi two points
for his third-round effort against
Busso Friday night at Madison
Square Garden and voted it even
in rounds, 5-5. Each round win-
ner received only one point with
the exception of Rosi in the third
when he shook up his heavier
opponent.
Judge Joe Agnello voted for
Roel 64 and Judge Jack Gor-
don had Busso a 5-4-1 winner.
The AP card had Busso on top
6-4.
By RON NANCE»
City prep basketball action got
away under full steam Friday
after a short lapse during the hol-
iday season with city teams com-
peting in nine games and a tour-
nament.
The lone tournament, Southeast
Invitational, moves into the finals
Saturday night. Three games are
set on the tourney schedule.
Host-team Southeast and pre-
tourney favorites will collide at
9 p.m. in the finals. A third-
plaice game between John Mar-
shall and Grant will start at 7:30
p.m. and the evening's opener
will be a consolation bracket af-
fair between Wewoka and Ed-
mond beginning at 6 p.m.
In Friday's semifinal action,
Southeast slipped past Grant,
46-43; Seminole dunked John
Marshall, 54-46; Wewoka edged
Capitol Hill, 51-49, in overtime
and Edmond bumped Guthrie,
35-28.
"I'm the only contender who
really is a lightweight. All the
rest come in 140—139 around
a
‛nere•
As for the fight, Rosi thought
he won by a comfortable mar-
gin although be was tense and
wild after a four-month layoff.
"I fight, he bold,” explained
Rosi.
Rosi has an offer to box Ralph
Dupas of New Orleans at Miami
Beach and will consider it only
if Dupas agrees to come in at
138 pounds. He also is mulling
an offer to box Dave Charnley,
the British champion, in London
later this month.
Busso, a 23-year-old New York-
er. thought he won by a 6-4 score.
“I was beating him to the punch
. -N
56 '
Friday Night Fights
(Or the Assoclated Pteso
The NL, at the Colorado so
Springs meeting in December, of college basketball the past
OKLAHOMA CITY U's Hub Reed (99) and John Teel (53) of New Mexico
fight for the ball against the OCU goal during the first half of their game
at Municipal auditorium Friday night. Troy Hill (55) is the only other player
who can be identified. Reed led an 89-60 Chieftain rout with 39 points and
Teel was New Mexico’s top scorer with 22.
course, was indisposed but is ex-
pected back in action when the
Jayhawks open defense of their
league and on those two games PAKMAN “-Ie. university
probably will hinge the AAC’s of Oklahoma football team was
representative to the NCAA tour- home Saturday, but, celebration
nament. North Carolina won it of its 48-21 Orange Bowl victory
last Wear of Duke continued as many fel-
”5 low students returned to the
campus early from the holidays.
The Sooners, minus their
coaches and three players, flew
in on two planes from Miami,
Fla., Friday night.
feat in four outings, was fourth.
In other matches Friday, top-
rated Perry thrashed John Mar-
shall, 24-6, sweeping the last
eight bouts after dropping two
to Ralph and John Huffman of
the Bears: Amarillo'rapped Cap-
itol Hill, 21-9; Stillwater nudged
Blackwell, 19-16; and Tulsa Rog-
ers walloped Tulsa Edison, 24-6.
Perry recorded three falls
day night and it marked the champion at 157, but trailed
Terps‛ first game since they were Wayne Murty all the way. Duane
upset by Memphis State in the asserted himself in the third pe-
*3 a series a person.
More than 40‘places are ex
(By the Amnoclated Praa)
aEUSEAENFS.t
nilaoto n. Temnessee AMI 71
In a Mid-State tilt, Enid raced
to a 21-15 advantage at halftime
and held on to the narrow mar-
gin as the Plainsmen defeated
Northwest, 45-40, on the winner's
court.
Bethany used a torrid second
half scoring spree to take a 49-35
from Harrah in a Central con-
ference game.
- A non-conference headliner saw
Harding trounce Capitol Hill,
59-38, with Harding's David Ew-
ing ripping out 21 points.
Douglass gathered in its sev-
enth consecutive win of the sea-
son as the Trojans, smashed out
a 68-52 decision over Lawton
Douglass.
Catholic ran up a quick 21-11
halftime margin and easily went
on to out man Dunjee, 44-27.
Dudley said plans were ap-
proved lor an initial game in
1958 or 1960 by the NCAA ex-
tra events committee last Au-
P *
3 t
"ak
The Bulldogs also were cheered
by the return of 147-pounder Ace
Ethridge, sidelined to dste by a
By JAY SIMON
Big Four basketball attention
centers on Stillwater and Tulsa
Saturday night as defensive-
minded Oklahoma State and
Tulsa try to put the shackles on
two of the nation's leading scor-
ers—Oscar Robertson of Cincin-
nati and Red Murrell of Drake.
Both Robertson and Murrell
will have to get up and go to
surpass the basket-shooting exhi-
bition uncorked by Oklahoma
City University's Hub Reed here
Friday night as be poured
through 39 points to lead the
Chiefs to an 89-60 rout of New
Mexico.
It was Reed's best scoring
night of the season, surpassing
his previous high of 27 against
Texas Christian. The 6-10 OCU
center boosted his average to
22.6.
Reed's latest harvest pushed
his career total to 1470 and
moved him past Bob Patterson
we could de it tomerrow."
"Philadelphia is a natural site
for such a game," the former
Villanova athletic director said.
“The bigger bowl games have
thrived on pageantry and with
the Mummers bands and their
colorful organizations wo could
put on a show to match any*
thing in the country.”
pected to be paid in the men's
division, six or more in the wom-
en's section of the handicap holi-
day tournament. >
Jenks will be open to all men
with league averages in its Pet-
o-Gold handicap singles tourna-
ment all this weekend, averages
starting at 160, entry 83.50, with
payoff Saturday night for this
week's play and another weekly
series starting Sunday to run a
full week.
sought to make available for fu-five’ days that Mississippi State Big Eight title next week,
ture moves all the territory in | has good cause to worry about
Saturday night's game with Au-
the American league Frick, who I burn.
last state ratings. While Putnam
City, saddled with its first de-
Two Big Tussles Slated Tonight
-- ——---
Not that the Maroons should
lose. No, indeed. Babe McCar-
thy's lads already have taken
care of Auburn once. That was
in the final of the Birmingham
Classic last month.
State now has compiled a rec-
ord of nine victories without a
"7E8RT8
' r *1* 2
(
oncA
S
Sweeping the first five bouts,
Edmond wrestlers pinned a 25-9
shellacking on previously un-
beaten Putnamity in Friday
night's highschool, mat feature
at Edmond.
Hockey at a Glance
Cy — ——— .—
Humlima, dor third).
Pro Basketball
ythe’AmnociatedPrew)
____ EestemDivielen_____
Enu’pzxu#
________WezteraDivtedn—
guxms barren. 7SB
ence fighting on scrub teams.
The Big Ten and Ivy leagues
now have ruled out this practice
by limiting competition.
Other conferences follow the
NCAA rule that says •" athlet
can use up five yuan to school
before ending his three sea-
sons of eligibility. This ques-
Noe to tu be sired at the NCAA
roundtable discussion on Mon-
day.
The compressed NCAA conven-
tion program also includes dis-
cussions Monday on summer
baseball, observation of coaches'
contracts, and various good and
bad features of intercollegiate
athletics.
The NCAA television commit-
tee, which is expected to have
its 1958 program ready for pub-
lic presentation at a Sunday
press conf etwee, won't make its
official report until Tuesday. No
major changes in the current na-
tional-regional programs are ex-
, J
PSCLEG,
For Change
NEW YORK m-The melee
leagues, at their joint session
three weeks from Saturday, are
expected to approve recommen-
dation to make any city with a
two million population eligible to
have two major league clubs.
This recommendation, along
with a number of provisions, was
included in a report to baseball
commissioner Ford Frick by his
specially appointed four - man
committee. The committee, con-
sisting of two officials from each
major league, was appointed last
month to explore the territorial
rights situation with instructions
to bring its recommendations to
the club owners.
The recommendations, could
Friday Racing
Mami-Festure geubie u.an
“^tortS "eton ■“ "ature
eBbE,"%2e"*
Aresdie, calt.-Lke Marie, ire— W
wiliieShoemakr. mcorgb a neck to
UM 11M00 Nature at luu Anita.
Vuc,
99
Philadelphia
Seeks/Bowl
PHILADELPHIA U—Approv-
al of a major new post-reason
football bowl game in Philadel-
service returnee
Robertson has paced Cincy to J
a 7-1 record with a 29.6 scoring
average and Murrell is hitting a
35.5 dip to rank second in the
Missouri Valley and 10th nation-
ally. Robertson's figure is
Motorola Car Radios
$4495
they step, on the hardwood at ment, Tulsa ophomore Fred
State College. Miss. Williams will be the pick at 147.
Three other major* conferences
possibly make two-team cities
out of Los Angeles, Philadelphia,
Detroit and New York, along
with Chicago.
They will be voted on at the _ m, .. .
next scheduled joint meeting L00P I lay UnuerU'Uy
here January 25. The five cities i ———----------------------------
„y agwd
*"e""
--au
on . sa •
Close Fight
Vote Brings Cagers Hit
Anchoring the OU lineup again
rUUIDALL nEnU 011 ruiEovi, Navy’s All- will be national champion Dick
American quarterback returned home to Cleveland Delgadoat 123 pounds and for-
--- 3 - _ . - . . mer NCAA king Gordon Roes-
E4TATK WT. 9KL.A1OMA
B 155255
147 and the Murty twins, Wayne
at 157 and Duane at 177 showing
the way.
Twins Scare Upsets
Wilson scored the only fall, a
5:46 accounting of K-State s
James Roberts, while the Murty
boys provided the night’s two big
Tonight
(By BOB DELLINGER
(Times Sports Writer)
NORMAN— Kansas State wrest-
lers, dealt a 26-0 beating Friday
by Oklahoma State, plunge
into the second half of their
stormy southern road trip here
Saturday night against Oklaho-
m defending national cham-
And the going doesn't look any
easier for the Wildcats, even
though the Sooners will be en-
tering their first match in four
seasons without the graduated
great Danny Hodge.
mmmmmwmmmmmmmmm.
of Tulsa into third place among
the state's all-time major college
scoring leaders
Patterson bagged 1440 in four
seasons at Tulsa, but he got only
two of them as a freshman (the
year yearlings were eligible).
Reed now trails only Bob Kur-
land of Oklahoma State, who tal-
lied 1669 in four seasons and Ar-
nold Short of Oklahoma City, who
hung up 1524 in three.
With two big nights on OCU’s
road trip to Memphis and West-
ern Kentucky next week Reed
could steam past Short, then be-
gin training his sights on Kur-
land's state record.
Robertson and Murrell can not
expect anything like the loose de-
fense Reed faced in the New
Mexico team, however. Coach
Clarence Iba of Tulsa has said
that his defensive ace, Clester
Harrington, will be assigned to
Robertson Saturday and Murrell
Monday when Drake moves on
ever to Tulsa to complete its
weekend series.
Hank Iba hasn’t divulged who
will “cover" the two visiting hot-
shots, but it would be a good
guess that Jerry Hale might
draw the starting assignment on
Murrell. The Cowboy who han-
dles Murrell best likely will pull
the picket job on Robertson when
Cincinnati invades Gallagher hall
Monday.
phia to be known as the Liberty
Bowl is expected at next week’s
meeting of the National Collegi- .____________, __
ate A t h l e t i c association, the ence Bradshaw at 147, Jay Gregg
bowl's backers said Friday at 156 and Ray Johnson at 167.
night.
The game in Philadelphia's
100,000-seat Municipal stadium
would feature the top eastern
team each year against a top
power from some other section
of the country.
68 -V'1-
dan
140
BBMreaNOLimK——BNNN
Aubrey, Tulsa junior who was
third; and Bernard Sullivan,
Ponca City senior who was third.
Shelton will go to 130, Sullivan
at 167 an dAubrey at either 137
147. depending on which of his
sophomore replacements coach
Port Robertson chooses to throw
into the bread.
Lawrence Gregory, yearling
from Pooca City, may go at 137,
The Lineups
AT STULWATER
„Et
which has reached this popula- pled Monday. Wilt the Stilt
tion standard must first obtain Chamberlain’s Kansas team fell
the consent of its league. Thursday. Wilt the SUH, of
THREE—in obtaining this con-
witarmzewet"a.
633
pner.cxey*7:
S^mninVhto’wrek's1^ also begin operations Saturday.—. --------— —
sociated Press poll, also has won The Bi Ten • which has been further sophomore flavor at 157
nine games and hasn't been in a merry scramble, in non- while
beaten. league games with the have nots
But look what's happened to showing most the class) has a
the five main pretenders to the full, schedule. The Southwest
Mountaineers' throne conference, also begins play as
does the Ivy league.
The Pacific Coast conference
and Gary Haller, respectively, by
identical 9-6 margins.
Doyle is current conference
sSx's'Hs"wLEz-rS".E
with league averages. Entry is
of Capitol Hill. 7-1, but J. D lightweight, not a 140-pounder."
- complained Rosi, a balding 29-
EesE"waare‛e
Tanelsco
S^t^odoeoFr-llo «,«■*— ag
SMarescwaahyb,weteraWass
s™m"rzudP& "Weters Mo
E"BsadrnzoThoFu"R.PmanM
EonE‛Szen"kta""iz‛Rednds <
.... c.. .... ... Coach Bud Wilkinson and his
ro past ' ew four assistants went from Miami
MeXco' 8960 , w,. to Philadelphia for a national
Western Blinds pulled out from coaches meeting. Guard Bill
a 13-point halftimei deficit to turn Krisher and halfback Clendon
back Tennessee Ail. 79465, in the Thomas are in Honolulu for Sun-
final of the NAIA (small college) : day’s Hula Bowl game.
Midwest Tipoff tournament at Tackle Byron Searcy and his
wife were returning to Norman
by car with his parents.
Several hundred fans were on
hand Friday night to greet the
eclipsed only by Kansas' Wilt
Chamberlain, who owns a 322 for 63 points—three more than
dlers claimed they had a private
agreement at 138 pounds although through a free throw with only
White will fill in for the depart-
ed Hodge
Match time is 7:30 p.m at the
OU fieldhouse.
0-State‛s young and virtually
played its first league game, untried youngsters scored a con-
Friday night with Southern Cali- vincing decision in Friday * open-
romia Whippingwashington er with junior Shelby Wilson at
State, 67-66; UCLA halting Ore-
gen. 64-58: Oregon State van
quishing California, 55-43, and
Idaho tumbling Stanford 67-59.
Oregon State, now 9-1, withstood
a late Cal rally in beating the
defending PCC champs. South-
ern Cal won to the very last sec-
The Underdogs =j
, tercollegiate competition for one
season while they gair experi-
, the night's most colorful affair.
.n^ve^cX?^ Ken Ellis, K-State ns-pound
lacing in an Atlantic Coast con- heavyweight, ran into an Aggie
ference game. South Carolina just asbig,as he is. Earl Lynn,
made it dore for more than a andthe PutnamaCity senior
half and pulled to a 57-all tie edged to a 54 win on riding
late in the game only to have ume
________________plicate last year's effort at Al-
the senior co-captains combined buquerque where they rolled up
sent, the league must first de-
termine that the club desiring to
transfer shall have a park with
a seating capacity and other
standards acceptable to the
league.
FOUR—Such park shall rot be
less than five miles from the
park of the existing club. This,
however, shall not prohibit clubs
occupying a single park, if cir-
cumstances warrant such joint
use.
FIVE—Any club moving to a
territory occupied by a club
which has within the past five
years drafted or otherwise occu-
pied minor league territory shall
compensate such club for an ap-
portionate share of its actual ex-
penses.
The committee also recom-
mended that the rule be amend-
ed to limit any city to two ma-
jor league clubs.
Under those condition*. the
American league, if it so desired,
could move into Los Angeles and
Philadelphia, while the National
could move into New York and
Detroit. Under those provisions,
the National could have only one
club, either in Brooklyn, Queens
or any one of its five boroughs.
The Polo Grounds, being only
about a mile away from Yankee
Stadium, would be out of bounds.
"I am highly in favor of the
commi ttee’s recommenda-
tions,” said Frick. "I think the
committee has done a wonderful
job. It is one of the most con-
structive pieces of work I have
seen since I've been in office."
more than to prizemoney, calegngathleticoleadersiureda
— “ • inirting and oi Ue Army ana
Hmhurtt u. wsenatoa
7 nun sy
24 Leasue
A doubles bowling Another main problem of the
•i.
>-N«k.
xli
Ind"a.
____ Garden Sooners, who now have won three
rpS»ya. "g***1* bowl games at Miami. OU beat
A. Maryland 7-0 in 1954 and 20-6 in
and he was missing," said the
loser. .
. ■ ' r
#xzr"i
—MGave
I Southemn 76, Northeast, U
Smih re. Tmoioo odima) re.
g"
Kasinpe6 “vertime).
2#. azan.h (no»
a
AT TULSA
M Mr' Hen i MoO Norma M
TtrOFT-S »■ . Fatrereunds pavit-
"BnonpAsr - Kvoo (rulsa), wi
Hol ‘Kallerain.
(srerttow B—Irr
. 00 fieldheune.
Divan, Perry.
"Qur erganization has al the i Kochtand t |
knew-how to put on such a ,.^,1. d#
game," Dudley said. "We feel ‘ _______ ,2
Vancouver, s."
• -62
g8d
k"N
Hbs
Ahm 4
Redskins with an 11-3 victory at year-old Italian who now lives
gust in Kansas City. He added 113 pounds in Ne* York's Bronx.
2eneral NCAA approval usually Amarillo moves on to Midwest
is routine after the committee's City for a 2:30 p.m. match Sat-
green light. urday.
— —. —.u L. ninvaa in One other scheduled match
tThaevamevanldabpeekxedpe Geary at classen, was postpoded
BaiMe M Hershey.
EcKater at Springfiid,
Fuv“if.RopdnWayne.
EasT
CAROLA RADIO SHOP
1716 LSnwoed PN Ct 2-6147
r- , K4. 4
I ®if \
. '. 4 7 % • •' 'New Pilin’- ‘
cember, Dudley Mid. President
of his group is George Kerri-
gan. former advertising execu-
tive.
Fights
PHILADEPHIA en - After
thinking things over for two
days, National Collegiate Athlet-
ic association leaders have not
come up with a redhot subject
for their 52nd annual meeting
next week—but college baseball
men may provide'a good one
The American Association of
College Baseball Coaches is the
first of a half-dozen groups of
college sports leaders to meet
here in the annual mid-winter
sessions. They have pulled back
from their strong stand of last
year over signing college players
to professional contracts, but
they still are stirred up about
that question and about summer
Stetson would fit pretty Beverly Boehm. Forrestal ler J11* ,lot
00ners Have Veterans
The Sooners also return three
placewinners from last season's
collegiate championship aggre-
gation in Leonard Shelton, Perry
junior who was fourth; Paul
1711111 w*. : -.nW i—।—in i rinn■ mu
The Pairings
3
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 68, No. 283, Ed. 3 Saturday, January 4, 1958, newspaper, January 4, 1958; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2001177/m1/4/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.