Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 79, No. 188, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 25, 1968 Page: 3 of 42
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Pool-i-tics Contest
Play tho now Pool-l-tlcs gamo by predicting the
Oklahoma outcome of November's general election.
Rank (he races in tho order you think the nominees
will finish (1-2-3).
Be sure to forecast, too, the number of vote*
which will be ca*t In Oklahoma on November 5, for
this will be used as a tie-breaker, If necessary.
If a further tie-breaker is necessary, the winner
will be declared to be the one whose entry was first
received in our offices, so it will be to your ad-
vantage to get in your entries as early as possible.
Write your predictions (1-2-3) of how Oklahoma
will vote here:
PRESIDENT
Richard M. Nixou (R)-
Hubert Humphrey (D)-
George Wallace (A)-
U. S. SENATOR
Mike Monroney (D)-
Henry Bellmon (R)-
George Washington (A)-
Tie-Breaker
The total number of Ok-
lahomans voting Novem
her 3 will he:
SMT ->• ■¥■ ■ ■:::7'..! .V ««
CONGRESS DIST. 1
Page Belcher (R)-
John Jarboe (D)-
CONGRESS DIST. 2
Ed Edmondson (D)-
Robert Smith (R)-
CONGRESS DIST. S
Gerald Beasley (R)-
Carl Albert (D)-
CONGRESS DIST. 4
Tom Steed (D)-
•lames Smith (R)-
CONGRESS DIST. 3
Bolt Leeper (R)-
John Jarman (D)-
CONGRESS DIST. 6
John Goodwin (D)-
John Happy Camp (R)-
Name:
Street Address:
Postoffice:
.Zip:
Mall to: Pool-i-tics, Oklahoma City Times, P. 0.
Box 25611, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 7S125.
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES Wed , Sept. 25, lMt <
Rules of Pool-i-lies Contest
C The objective is to forecast, as closoly as you can, tho outcome of tho
•eneral election in Oklahoma November 5. , ,
2. The first place priio will be $350, second place $3S0, and third place,
$150. All entries must be received in tho Times office no lator than noon on
Monday. November 4, lf*l. ^ . 4W . .
3. Rank each race 1-2 (and where applicable, 3) showing tho order In
which you believe the nominees will finish. .. . ...
4. Be sure to make a prediction of the total number of votes which will
be cast in the election, since this fioure will be used as a tie-breaker, if
necessary. If an additional tie-breaker is necessary, the winner will bo declared
to be the entry received first in the Times office.
5. Enter as many times as you wish. Use either the form printed here-
with, or in lieu thereof, make your own copy of approximately the same sue,
beine sure that you give all the information asked on the printed form. Dupli-
cate entry forms will be furnished, free of charge, at The Okiahoman-Timos
building, NW 4 and Broadway, or wo will mail you a blank if you reouost it.
You need not be a Times subscriber to compete. r „
4. Employes of The Oklahoma Publishing Co. and tho State Klection Board
their immediate families are not eligible to compete.
7. Decision of the judges will be based on tho certified, official state returns#
will bo final. ________
and
and
Spacemen Turning
Out Paper Studies
By Dr. Leonard R«MM
t INI, World Book Sclanco Sorvlco
At tho moment, as every- can see that the gravitation-
body realizes, the space pro-
gram is going through some
pretty hard times. It seems
a bit strange, therefore, to
come upon, as I did recently,
projects extending far be-
Science
And You
yond the first few landings
on the moon. Such reports
have a peculiarly hollow
ring to them.
Nevertheless, sooner or
later, the squeeze on re-
search will relax a bit and so
the optimists of the space
age are continuing to think
about what might be done
with man’s newfound rocket
power and spacecraft tech-
nology.
Clearly, the most inviting
target beyond the moon is
Mars, and a good deal of ef-
fort is going into studying
that mission. Much more
ambitious projects are being
looked at, too. Several of
them go by tho very apt
name of “The Grand
Tours”.
One such grand tour envi-
sions visiting Jupiter, Sat-
urn, Uranus and Neptune
and then moving all the way
out of the solar system in a
single trip. This monumental
voyage would take advan-
tage of some peculiar align-
ments of the planets that
will occur in the very late
1970’s.
Suppose you launch a
spacecraft toward the mas'
give planet Jupiter and ar-
range to just miss it. You
al attraction of Jupiter, as it
rushes through space in its
own orbit, could act as kind
of a slingshot and hurl the
spacecraft on into deeper
space. This, in effect, is
what makes the grand tour
type of mission possible.
Whelher missions like
these are practical is, of
course, quite another ques-
tion. The communications
and reliability problems are
enormous. But the fact that
they are theoretically possi-
ble keeps quite a few space-
men excited and busy turn-
ing out reports.
'TRANSCENDENTAL
| MEDITATION
Instruction and Pr act let
flivtn bv
Rev. Ben E. Winter
Church of RaUltoua Science
- 3332 N. Meridian
I Thursday and Friday
8 P.M., September 26 & 27
I
*04
Fro* Will OtteriJl*
Paid Political Advsrtlcamcsf
Let the
Protile Pre.nl
PI.in help
prolong \our
Slender Ye.irs.
JOHN JARMAN
fifth district conrrrssman
Ladies and Gentlemen:
I will be at the Post Of-
fice in the places and at the
times listed below, available
to anyone on any matter on
which 1 may be of service:
4
Only your
HCBZ/O
dealer
gives you a
guarantee
like this...
MMMBiJMaigg
We guarantee
the lowest priced
ItC/l eolor TV set
will outperform
the highest priced
set of any other
make ... or your
money cheerfully
refunded*.
YOUR RCA DEALER
‘within 30 days of data of purchase
RCA advanced color
The Carry-ette
Modal EL-410
14” diagonal.
102 sqjara-inch picture
NOW $
ONLY ^
299"
r HERE'S. WHY!
No other television manufacturer can match RCA...
RESEARCH
RCA, alone, expended $130,000,000 in developing
today’s color television system . . . today's RCA
receiver.
MANUFACTURING EXPERIENCE
RCA, alone, moves into its 15th year of the manu-
facture and sale of color television.
CUSTOMER CONFIDENCE
Mors people own RCA color television than any
other kind...
AND WHEN YOU'RE FIRST
IN COLOR TV, THERE'S GOT
TO BE A REASON I
A disappearing handle provides a smart “table modal’’
look to this lightweight portable (less than 42 pounds).
Completo with many top-of-the-lino features.
Check the price
on this fine wood
big-screen color
Styled to save you floor
space and pricad to save you
money, this giant-screen
RCA consolette is one of the
finest Color TV values.
Transformer-powered
25,000-volt chassis features
Solid State components in
several key circuits for
greater dependability.
Big-screen
color in a
Colonial
Consolette
Space-saving cabinot fits
almost anywhere. Thrill to
unsurpassed color realism
on the glare-proof, big-screen
picture tube. 25,000-volt
chassis delivers bright,
high-contrast pictures.
Automatic chroma control
keeps color intensity the
way you want it.
49995
YOUR $
CHOICE
(modal GL-SH-modal GL-615I
NO MONEY DOWN!! NO PAYMENT TIL FEBRUARY 4, '69
RGil and whirlpool SWEEPSTAKES
8 TRIPS TO GERMANY—4 VWs—PLUS 250 OTHER PRIZES!
WIN A ’69 VOLKSWAGEN
Plus A 2-Week Trip (™)
to Qermany
• Fly to Germany via TWA
•. Pick up your VW at the Factory
• Tour Europe for two weeks... and
fly home
e Your VW will be shipped to you
Nothing to buy —No skill required! Just fill in an entry blank at your
local dealer. Not a national contest —for Oklahoma dealers only
TRIPS TO GERMANY VIA
Only TWA can fly you from Oklahoma City and
Tulsa to London, Paris, Frankfurt, Rome, Lisbon,
Madrid, Athens and beyond ... to Africa, Asia.
TWA
V0LKSWAGENS ARRANGED BY:
Eckhardt Motors
Oklahoma City
Gangas-Whitfield
Oklahoma City
Stevens
Enid
Scovil Motors
Norman
Hill Motors
Ardmore
Dan Rudder
Lawton
Land arrangements by Donna and Harry Kornbaum
RAINBOW TRAVEL SERVICE
THE SOUTHWEST’S MOST EXPERIENCED TRAVEL AGENCY
SEE RCA ADVANCED COLOR TV AT THE FOLLOWING AUTHORIZED DEALERS
ALAMO FURNITURE
4J0S S. Robinson
AMERICAN MUTUAL
N.W. 104k a Pass.
lARNirrs
S4S0 N.W. 14th
ADA
McFarland-Robartson
*Y.Vl* Harran Furn.
*Cif*»ra Mob*la TV
AMOR IT A
•sssaxr
a«KAtv
aAKhs v
A ftT
JBBh* ,un-
BRUNO'S
2421 S.W. 24tk
3704 N. Woitorn
■UCRNIR'S TV
43OS N. Moridian
•URT A PPL.
4S27 So. May
CADDO
Caddo Lumbar Co.
CANTON
Gant's Aopl.
CHANDLEB
Cecil Meyers Apal.
CHICOTAH
cM^r.'iHdw*-
Home Appi.
CHEYENNE
WlOener TV
CHICAAIHA
DICK CHRISTMAN APPI.
SI20 N. May
4S04 S. Pans.
121 S. Air Dapot
(Midwait City)
■ LMORB CITY
Kennody Lumbar
■L RENO
Matt TV A Apal.
■ NID
Hock adav’t
Wheeler TV
weaica
OKLAHOMA CITY
CORNISH FURNITURI
214 W. Rsno
CHUCK CRAMIR FURN.
1021 S.W. 24th
JIM HINSON'S TV RAPPL.
40th B N. Pass.
#kt»
Tms
L Western Auto Aseec. Star*
1 iiWu
LITTIRALS. INC.
4113 N.W. 10th
•OOORRPURN.
4001 S.E. 15th
(Midwast City)
**Rkaf TV Salas A Servica
MORRISON
Robinson A Karr
MOUNTAIN VIEW
Winters Home A Auto
MUSKORRR
nB‘£s'
Discount Canter
Western Auto Assoc, storo
Nl
PLAZA COURT MUSIC
1112 Classen Driva
R.O. ROSE HOMR FURN.
3400 E. Ratio
ROWDIN ELECTRONICS
4021 S-E. 24th
(Midwast City)
FURCELL „
r «l!£5Uv‘A,p|.
RiWiVitfr-
Kirkpatricks
SAYRE
Garrett A Carpenter
SRILINO
m*°c
SAPPINCTON HICKMAN
I400N.E. 23rd_
T.e.BT. FAMILY CENTER
1400 S.W. 74th Ex*
4220 N. Pass.
21 E. ISth (Edmond)
NORMAN WALKM APT
411 W. Irtttss Rd.
"VVSrttAStmaty
TONKAWA
Rider Refrlaaratlan
WAKITA
C. I
WASHINGTON
Mosel Herder era
WATONOA
Brinson's Msrderara
WEATHERFORD
KISS lor TV-APOI.
WELEETKA
J. T. Soanes
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 79, No. 188, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 25, 1968, newspaper, September 25, 1968; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc993114/m1/3/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.