Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 73, No. 102, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 13, 1962 Page: 9 of 36
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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I
k
VA Hospital Medical Chief Leaving
Resumed
On Apportion
years, is leaving the govern-
and Oklahoma City areas,
ment service and Oklahoma
(
and a graduate of Stillwa- heading a research labora-
as chief of medicine, effec-
about equal to demand, the associate chief. He is also
head of the research serv-
PRICE REDUCTIONS! VALUE-PACKED SPECIALS! DON’T MIM THIS CHANC
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the Minneapolis VA hospital.
Smith, born in Shawnee
ton VA Hospital but came
here in 1964 to complete it.
W. O. Smith, 36, a native
Oklahoman who is now the
ice, a post he will retain.
Hammarsten came here in
1953 from the School of Avi-
ation Medicine at Randolph
Air Force Base in Texas.
Previously he was an assist-
ant professor of medicine
at Minnesota and assistant
chief of medical service at
Words Tru-Cold refrigerator
prices start as low as 169.95
Oklahoma’s wheat harvest
resumed in most areas of the
own cleaning
DHIUXE SIGNATURI
AUTOMATIC UPRIGHT
Single
Pleat
USE MN M
COWVENIEMT
CHARGEMANS
CHEST has 2 lift-out baskets, is wide and
deep. Space divider moves to make best
use of lower storage space. Reg. 219.95.
Thompson is now chief of
medicine at Tinker Air Force
Base. The other two, who
were at the OU medical cen
ter as residents, are also th
proof
interior.
SAVE
’15
0
d
A
Powerful motor-driven
nylon brush suction*
deans, sweeps, beats
away deepest dirt and
grit; fluffs and combs
nap. Vinyl bumpers,
step-on toe switch.
Drs. Roy Carpenter, Keith
Klopenstein and John
UPRIGHT MODEL has easy-see open re*
frigerated shelves,drop-front basket,roomy
top-to-bottom door storage. Reg. 229.95.
We service what we sell!
A
I
about the most maddenig i
insect can cause. Scratchi
wana to make it itch want-
Fields were dr y i n g
throughout the state and
farmers, plagued by days of
rain, were ready to rush
through as much harvest as
possible before new rains
fell. Overnight dew kept
combines out of fields in
many areas until late in the
morning.
It still was damp in the
NO MOWIT bow
•JO A mona
mm
| 5
tory at Lackland Air Force
Base.
Three other staff physi-
cians in medicine will report
to the Oklahoma City VA
hospital July 1. They are
Va:
crisper, egg racks, roomy storage door. The
true-zero freezer has book-shelf storage.
He will become professor
of medicine at the Univer-
sity of Minnesota School of
Medicine, his alma mater.
He will also be chief of
medicine at Ankor Hospital,
St. Paul, which is affiliated
with the school.
Hammarsten’s departure
is one of a number of staff-
ing changes taking place this
summer at the giant federal
a
6
a
for straight-sewing
SA VB MW FOR YOUR NOMI AND FAMILY
Harvest
0
41
BOTH
STORES
OPEN
LATE
TOMORROW
NIGHT!
in
w
e.
nowr• spmeotm
f
U
3
4
Suit Expected
By Bob McMillin
Oklahomans will learn soon, possibly later this week,
whether the present legislative apportionment violates
the federal constitution.
A three-judge federal court concluded hearings Tues-
day afternoon on a legislative reapportionment suit and
A. P. Murrah, chief judge of the 10th U. S. Court of
Appeals, indicated a speedy ruling.
Murrah said the court would decide whether the
plaintiff, Harry R. Moss, made a case for invidious, un-
just discrimination.
If the court rules he did, a second hearing will be
held to determine what type of relief the court can pro-
vide or order.
The case was tried by Murrah and U. S. District
Judges Ross Rizley and Fred Daugherty. Rizley said,
“We hope to have a decision later this week."
The suit was filed against the state election board,
state auditor, state tax commission and Gov. Edmond-
son.
gi
"y
deep-d
I
II
I
Fi
I
u1nd
m.
Men and machines were
-o
3
________, ___ sand-feas,
gnats, deer flies and other crawling,
biting pesta.
So for instant relief from the mad-
dening itch of chigger bites, apply
AMPao-PAMNIQUE! Get CAtcrao-
PHENIQUB today.
A
I
A.-
43
The suit sought to halt state spending and the No-
vember general legislative elections until the legislature
apportions itself according to the constitution.
The case was unusual in that the plantiff and the de-
fendants argued on the same side—for reapportionment.
Dr. Joseph Pray of the University of Oklahoma’s gov-,
ermment department testified population should be the
hey faster in reapportioning the legislature.
His stand was attacked by Leon Hirsh, attorney for
an orginization known as Oklahomans for Local Gov-
ernment This is an organization backed by a number of
state senators and county commissioners.
Hirsh contended that such factors as valuation, taxa-
tion, population under 18, industry, voter turnout and
geography should be considered.
The OLG also contended present apportionment is
just and equitable.
Yanks Trick Reds,
Snap Spy Pictures
n‘
r
5"
2E1
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No monoy down— IMO a month
*
0 Regularly 249.95
• Frost never forms in refrigerator
• Full storage In both doors
Hore's a high-quality food-keeper at a low
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1688-
H 7 7 weh*, i* mer
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1 MONTGOMERY WARD
. 9
i 1
t
ter High School, attended
the University of Texas
and was graduated in 1949
from the Harvard Medical
School. He did most of his
resident training at the Bos-
If you've ever suffered the torment
of chigger bites, then you know it'S
‘ ‘ * itch serf
Ing “"•y
ary section and a new chief
of the radioisotope service.
Succeeding Hammarsten
a.
scale late Wednesday or by
Thursday. Yield is expected
to average 10 bushels an
acre.
Harvesting passed the
Modem in every detail, equal e
to every straight sewing situa- ■
Host Mend and dam without im
attachments. Automatic bobbin •
winder, built-in sowing light. A
cAnRViNOCASU *9gn8
4
.■ I
■
.d
pitals in 1956 and joined the
VA staff in 1956, starting as
assistant chief of the radio-
isotope service.
Coming to Oklahoma City
September 1 as genitouri-
nary chief will be Dr. Wil-
liam Parry, associate pro-
fessor of genitourinary sur-
gery at the University of
Rochester. Besides his VA
duties he will head of
genitourinary surgery for the
University of Oklaho-
ma Medical Center.
Dr. Walter Whitcomb, an
OU medical school gradu-
ate, will become chief of the
radioisotope service July 1.
For the past five years he
has been in the air force,
no relief — and finger nails often eauM
infection. y
Well, now you eaa atop the awful
itchint of chigger bites instantly ...
yea, instantly ... just apply sookhing
CAMPHO-PMNIQUE! And this pain-
relieving, antimeptie lotion helpe pre-
vent infection from scratching, too.
CAMPMo-PMENIQUE is equally af-
fective against itching from bitea of
mosquitoes, black
I ' " '
4 l ,/2 .
He was chief resident in Thompson,
medicine at University Hos-
Speedy Ruling
SLAX!
SLAX!
SLAX!
the Oklahoma State Employ* City,
ment Service said.
halfway mark in the Okla- ao cne « acuicate, enec-
homa City and Ponca City tive August 1, will be Dr.
areas Tuesday.
days Tuesday centered in the tion Hospital the past nine
Ponca City, Enid, Chickasha
Panhandle, but harvesting
was due to resume on a full facility on NE 13.
Matching gas dryer., 169.88
Eed • •
and started playing volley-
ball.
“One day,” the source
Mid. "the Neptune made
his usual before - lunch
visit, circled the ship, shot
his pictures and left just
as always. After disap-
pearing over the horizon
and loafing around a while
the plane came back, bel-
ly on the deck and so low
the Russians missed him
in their radar.
“We caught them with
their suspenders dangling
but with their aerials and
screens strung up all over
the place. We got some
wonderful pictures, too,
one showing a Russian
sailor shaking his fist at
the plane.”
British Snubbed
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.
(UPI) — The General As-
sembly, overriding British
objections, voted 62 to 26
Tuesday to discuss Southern
Rhodesia at its current ses-
sion.
employment service report- associate chief of staff and
Gives all fabrics perfect care I
g Automatic sediment ejector, 5
I water temperatures, lint filter.
| Matching electric dryer, 129.88
sznm y'
ii
Dr. James F. Hammar-
grain belt Wednesday, after sten, chief of medicine at
the best harvest period of 11 v e t e r a n s Adminlstra-
(—
OKLAHOMA CITT TIME!! Wed., Jupe 13, BM 9 ,
sg0"t:
2 cycles and 2 speeds
SA VI ON FAMILY-SIZE WASHER
f
e Disposabie dust bags,
* sanitized-fresh
e Vinyl dust-bag cover
" demetw • 3-position dandle
__
OROTHKRS
PEARL HARBOR (UPI)
—Navy sources told
Wednesday how its Nep-
tune patrol planes tricked
a Soviet spy ship in the
Pacific into showing its es-
pionage equipment.
Sources said U. S.
planes, ships and subma-
rines had been shadowing
the Russians Mt always
found the crews in a play-
ful mood.
“Every time one of our
planes passed overhead,
we'd see the happy Rus-
sians playing volleyball,
waving gleefully just like
a cruise ship," these
sources said.
But American ingenuity
won out.
THE PATROL planes
made sweeps on exact
schedules. No attempt was
made to hide the fact that
the planes were on a pho-
tographic mission.
The Russians fell for the
trick. They hid their equip-
ment at the scheduled time
-mi-K £288
como in tor oM
free demonstration) Df
no mour BOWN
$Sementh
g
w
The institution is getting a
new chief of the genitourin- Dr. James F. Hammarsten Dr. W. O. Smith
military service now.
~___~Advertisement.
CHIGGERBITES
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 73, No. 102, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 13, 1962, newspaper, June 13, 1962; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2005904/m1/9/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 8, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.