Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 73, No. 186, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 19, 1962 Page: 4 of 38
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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Fair Gets
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Historic
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Resort Plans I Statuary
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Due Approval
MN
This 232-year-old porcelain statuary will be an educational exhibit at the State Fair.
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Textbook Bids Slated
in Storage
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sixth of the free textbooks Sarasota, Fla. It was given
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each year.
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GSA Offieial to Speak
Fast Action
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OCU Convocation Held
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Puritron
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Penn Square Open Thursday Night
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lamities; plentiful sup-
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cse
Hodge said the legisla-
ture appropriated $2.65 per
child for free textbooks.
The inadequate sum won't
supply all the books need-
ed, he said, and some dis-
tricts supplement the al-
location with local funds.
But, he pointed out, if
the state money is used for
school books, they must be
purchased from texts ap-
proved by the committee.
There were 546.092 chil-
dren in Oklahoma public
schools during the first
semester of the 1961-62
school year. A new nose
count hasn’t been made
for the present term.
IWI Small Electries,
lit PL Par* Art
Capitol Hill, Pana Savart
A valuable piece of porce-
lain statuary, modeled aft-
er Leonardo DaVinci’s paint-
ing of "The Last Supper,"
will be displayed at the
State Fair of Oklahoma.
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Oklahoma City University students were informed of
the latest developments on the OCU campus Wednesday
morning during “Operation Update,” themh of the first
convocation of the 1962-63 school year
Entertainment for the program was provided by the
Department of Speech and Drama and the Opera Work-
shop with a brief presentation from the musical operet-
ta, “Bye Bye Birdie.”
-88
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The state textbook com-
mittee will receive bids
Saturday in two classifi-
cations — reading and lit-
erature—but formal adop-
tions likely won't be made
until October.
Dr. Oliver Hodge, com-
mittee secretary, said bids
will be received on read-
ing texts for grades one to
eight, and literature for
grades one to twelve.
He said the committee
likely will vote on the
adoptions in October and
sign the contracts in De-
cember. The books would
be supplied for the 1963
School term and five years
thereafter.
The commission follows
a policy of adopting one-
Brewn’s Apollances, 4 Fleor, Swk Av*.
capitel HHI, Penn Square
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East Germans
Get Early Snow
BERLIN m — Snow has
come three weeks earlier
than usual on the Fichtel-
berg, East Germany’s high-
est mountain. Vacationers
hoping to enjoy late sum-
mer sun on the 3,982-foot
peak were surprised Tues-
day by snowfall, the offi-
cial East German News
agency, ADN, reported.
1
with 2 Trays
Bin
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of business, it was an-
nounced, is another $2 mil-
lion plant for Oklahoma
City.
Phillips is responsible
for federal buildings and
other installations under
General Services for Ok-
lahoma. Texas, Louisiana
and Arkansas.
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David Phillips, Dallas,
regional administrator for
the General Service Ad-
> ministration, will be the
principal speaker at a
meeting of directors of the
Oklahoma City Chamber
of Commerce Thursday.
Another “principal item"
Republican Plans Talk
Mrs. Phyllisjean Morris. Republican state vice-
chairman from Oklahoma City, left Wednesday for Oma-
ha where she will address the Nebraska state GOP con-
vention.
Mrs. Morris will speak Thursday on “How I or-
ganized the Oklahoma Republican state speakers com-
mittee.”
Two Hit in Gun Fight
A 43-year-old east-side resident was in serious con-
dition at St. Anthony Hospital Wednesday after being
wounded in a gun fight Tuesday.
The victim is Willis Pierce sr., 631 N Rhode Island.
Police are holding 42-year-old Arnold Sanders in con-
nection with the shooting, which occurred at an east-
side tavern.
Pierce's 18-year-old son, Willis Jr., received a gun-
shot wound in a leg, but hospital attendants said his con-
dition is not serious.
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(64
PRATT, Kan. — A Pratt
Junior College football play-
er from Pauls Valley, Okla.,
Charles Joe Bray, 17, has
been given the maximum
penalty of 60 days in jail
and a $100 fine by Police
Judge Bill Murray, follow-
ing Bray's plea of guilty to
a charge of disturbing the
peace and using profane
language following an inci-
dent in which a Pra t wom-
an allegedly was threatened
by Bray.
Judge Murray said, “I am
not going to put up with any
of these incidents this year
. . . it’s going to stop, I’ve
had enough.”
Murray said that if he
had to impose jail sentenc-
es of 30, 60 or 90 days, or
even six months, to stop fu-
ture disturbances of this
type, he would do so.
Bray was paroled for six
months to Rick LeFort, col-
lege football coach, under a
rigid set of parole condi-
tions.
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Declared sane, an Okla-
homa woman has asked
the State Supreme Court
to force Jefferson County
court to recognize her
competency to handle her
own affairs.
She is Mrs. Wilma Ed-
wards Baker, who 10
years ago was declared
incompetent in Jefferson
County court while she
was in Central State Hos-
pital at Norman.
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At that time, F. L. Ba-
ker, her h u s b a n d, was
named guardian.
On June 5 of this year
Mrs. Baker was found to
be mentally competent in
Oklahoma County court.
When she sought to re-
gain control of her own af-
fairs. special Jefferson
County Judge James H
Ivy said he was not bound
by the Oklahoma County
court ruling.
ANTIOCH, Calif. ( -
There really wasn't any
enemy attack here Tuesday.
But the alarm was genuine.
It happened this way:
At 7:12 a.m. police dis-
patcher Glen Blomseth
leaned casually against the
wall while reading a bulle-
tin.
He inadvertantly pressed
a large red button, which
triggered six new civil de-
fense air raid sirens in-
stalled for warning against
enemy attack.
Firemen and police offi-
cers prepared for’actjon and
off duty personnel leaped
out of bed to report to their
stations.
Telephone lines to the po-
lice station were so
jammed, police chief Hap
Carlson couldn't reach the
station.
When the excitement sub-
sided, Carlson shrugged:
Well, it's nice to see the
way everyone responded.”
______Adtvertivement
Don"+ Neglect Slipping
FALSE TEETH
Do talse teeth drop. dtp or wobbi,
when you talk, eat, laug or sneeze?
Don't bo oanoyed and embarressed
by such hapdicaps PASTEETH, on
alkaline i non-weld । powder to sprin-
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: Federal approval of final plans for two plush tour- inchesuthopricbin"wYghs
1st resorts on Eufaula reservoir is expected to be an- 70 pounds and is valued at
nounced this weekend. . $7,500. With it is linen table-
23 ErrmtnrscoPfeto wPenternstrttionkbldmastober cloth, embroidered on the is-
Redevelopment Authority, said Wednesday. “ napkins is "iked" at
Gourley said names for the multi-million-dollar $2 500. The linen dates to
lodges have been chosen. 1900
* That on the Checotah-Henryetta side of the lake ' _ 12
will be known as Fountainhead, because of six big bacK W ;
fountains to be built along its main walkway. .The statuarywa sdonein
: The south lodge on the McAlester side will be known ‘ . f-taly
as Arrowhead, drawn from design of the lodge. There.werethreesoriginally.
The lodges are being built with government help ! , . lost" , hp
as an economic shot in the arm for the depressed area in . Q . ’ one , he
■ ei " * * j in Italy, this one now is the
which they will be constructed., property of Wagon Wheel
-Each will contain 208 units and be in a 2,000-acre School at MeLoud, a reme-
Park dial boarding school for chil-
| dren aged six to 18.
This porcelian was for a
quarter century In the Ring-
ling Brothers Museum at
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.... BHB
(ooawjMAty taste er feei-
usteeth today at drag
erywhere.
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oumelkaseem
State Cowboys Ride High
Two Oklahomans this steer wrestling and fourth
week were among the top in calf roping. Brown was
, .1.. Doao. first in bull riding.
ten in the nation Rod Other Oklahomans listed
Cowboy Association stand- in the RCA standings this
lags for 1962 all-around week were: Bob Wegner,
cowboy. Ponca City, fifth in bull
Tom Nesmith of Bethel riding; Jim Painter, Mo-
wat second with winnings Alester, Seventh in steer
totaling $24,629 so far this wrestling; and in steer
year. Freckles Brown of roping, Everett Shaw,
lawton was fifth with $18,- Stonewall, first; S h o a t
016. In first place was Webster, Lenapah, fourth;
Oliver of Boise, Ida- Joe Snively, Pawhuska,
with $26 306 sixth and John Pogue, Mi-
S4) E• 4 wimhepereting
3“ A ,T a“I electrie trade
to Wagon Wheel school by a
relative of a former pupil
there. The donor desires to /
remain anonymous. (
School Just Grew
The gchool was started in
1949 by Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Daugherty. They were teach-
ers and church workers and
the first school was a sum-
mer session. From then it ,
“just seemed to grow. There
was a need for it on a full
year basis. These are not
mentally retarded children.
They have been delayed in
school progress by emotion-
al problems,” Daughterly
said.
The statuary to be shown
at the fair, in the Science
and Arts Museum, will be
I available to museums,
churches or similar places
for display upon payment of
transportation and insurance
costs, he said.
4 Wed., Sept. 11, 1962 OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 73, No. 186, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 19, 1962, newspaper, September 19, 1962; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2006144/m1/4/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.