Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 79, No. 61, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 30, 1968 Page: 4 of 24
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■ 4 Tuwday, April 30. 1968 OKLAHOMA CITY TIMKA
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Rational Affairs
LBJ Urging
Taper Gold’
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Johnson asked
congress Tuesday tn approve what he termed a land-
mark plan to create new international money — paper
gold — and coupled his request with another plea for
higher taxes. In a special message. Johnson sought ap-
proval of amendments to the International Monetary
Fund's Articles of Agreement distributed to govern-
ments of the non-Communist world earlier this month.
“As one of the leaders in the formulation of this pro-
posal . it is fitting that the United States be one of the
first nations to accept the Special Drawing Rights Plan."
the president said
The new mone\ would be in the form of a bookkeep-
ing entry at the International Monetary Fund and would
be used only to settle debts among governments. Individ-
ual Americans would never see the paper gold as the
proposed special drawing rights are frequently called.
The plan must he approved by 65 member nations of
the 107-Nation Fund with 80 percent of the weighted vote.
Approval by congress would represent a big step in this
direction since the United States controls about 22 per-
cent of the votes in the fund.
Fired Cook Cashes In
Jean Hanna Retires
Sooner Ends Indian Office Career
OPENING SESSION of the national convention of the League of Women Voters
is addressed by Illinois Gov. Otto Kerner in Chicago. Listening are Mrs. Robert
•I. Stuart. Spokane. Wash., president, left, and Mrs. Dixie Drake, Washington,
D. C.. executive secretary. (AP W'irephoto)
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Jean R. Hanna, a part-ln-
dian from Oklahoma, re-
tires Tuesday after 21
years as clerk and chief
administrative officer of
the Indian Claims Com-
mission.
Mrs. Hanna's parents
were pioneer settlers in
the Indian territory of
what is now southeastern
Oklahoma. As a little girl,
she learned to speak Choc-
taw' from the Indians who
traded at her father’s gen-
eral store.
Mrs. Hanna not only
grew up with Indians but
is part-Choctaw. “Just a
little hit, I guess about one
thirty-second part,” she
explained.
Mrs. Hanna, a 60-year-
old widow, said her 21
years with the commission
have been interesting and
rewa rding.
"I served during a time
of testing and proving. The
Indian Claims Commission
Act set up an entirely new
Doctor
NEW YORK (AP) — Annemarie Huste, former rook
for Mrs. John F. Kennedy, said Monday she has signed a ; _ .
contract for publishing a cookbook. The book will contain 1 ■ |i of ft / £
Miss Huste's favorite recipes. j 1 llol/l.l(o
Miss Huste. '14-year-old German blonde, was dis-
missed by Mrs. Kennedy two weeks ago. apparently be-
cause she revealed her ambitions to write a cookbook
and do a television show on cooking. Reportedly, Mrs.
Kennedy feared her cook would discuss the former First
Lady's private life.
Asked if her book would mention that she was em-
ployed by Mrs. Kennedy. Miss Huste said, “Yes, but it's
just a matter of reference."
kind of commission to
right the wrongs that had
been done to the Indians,"
she said,
Congress established the
commission in 1047 to con-
sider claims against the
United Stab's by various
Indian tribes, most often
for payment for land the
government took 100 to 150
years ago.
Formerly, Indian tribes
had to go to congress for
jurisdictional legislation
giving them permission to
sue the government in the
l\ S. Court of Claims.
The largest award the
commission has marie was
$29,100,000 to the Califor-
nia Indians. Coming from
Oklahoma, Mrs. Hanna
was particularly interested
in the cases resulting in
awards of $14,364,476 to the
Cherokoos and $3,489,843 to
the Choctaw’-Chickasaws.
As Jean Roberts, she
finished school in Idabel
and then attended the Uni-
versity of Oklahoma and
the Oklahoma College for
College of Liberal Arts).
During the depression,
jobs were scarce in Okla-
homa, so she came to
Washington where her
brother worked for an
Oklahoma congressman.
She was employed for
several years by the war
department and by the Re-
construction Finance Cor-
poration.
“I had been reading
about the progress of legis-
lation to set up the Indian
Claims Commission. I was
very interested in the leg-
islation and in the Indians.
So when the commission
was created I went after
the clerk's job and got it."
she said. Later she be-
came administrative offi-
cer.
Mrs. Hanna is returning
to Oklahoma and w ill build
a retirement home in Tish-
o m i n g o. Her daughter.
Mrs. George Orr, will go
with her. Mrs. Orr's hus-
band is serving in the
armed forces in South
Equality Project Endorsed
Women (now Oklahoma Vietnam.
Faces and Places
Marian Anderson
MARIAN ANDERSON, retired concert
singer, will be the first Negro to receive
an honorary degree from Tulane Uni-
versity.
HARRY S. TRUMAN, whose once-famil-
y-- inr walks have become rare, strolled
eight blocks
W- Monday.
in Independence, Mo.,
JACK VALENTI told a Hollywood ban-
quet for Norway's King Olav V: “I sup-
port the claim that Leif Ericson dis-
covered America. No Italian-American
can do more for his country."
.House Cuts USD A Budget
v* WASHINGTON (AP) — The House Appropriations
Committee cut deeply Tuesday into 1969 budget requests
fpr the agriculture department, but spared most of the
long-established programs from the proposed economies.
'* It sent to the house floor for Friday debate a bill to
appropriate $5.5 billion, a cut of $1.4 billion or 20 percent
from presidential requests and 21 percent under current
year allotments.
It cut funds for credit agencies from $955 million to
$527.5 million and chopped $1.08 billion from the $4.23 bil-
lion requested for the department’s corporate activities.
Congressional Boxscore
MAJOR LEGISLATION IN 90TH CONGRESS
$«<*"d S*vv,ttn
SCHEDULED
IN PROCESS
COMPLETED
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lie* up #4
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To* Surcharge
Pi
★
*1
0
Balance of Payment*
Anticrime
★ 0
Wiretapping Ban
★I
* _
Cun Control
★1
*
0
1
Drug Abuse Control
♦Mil
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f
Employment Opportunities
MM
0
1
Heme Ownership
O'Tti
*|ol
Model Cities Funds
★i
0
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Rent Supplements Funds
* i
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Poverty Funds
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0
1
Child Health
Hospital Aid
1 1
Student Aid
*Oi
★
Vocational Education
Antiriot Open Housing
*n
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* * *
*
★
★
★
Foreign Aid Authorization [Q
*
oTT
Truth-in-lendinq
*.*
¥
* ★
★
0
Scenic Rivers
*T|
★ ★ ★
Air Softly
| |
Redwood, Park
A
★
★
★
ir
Congressional Reorganization
*1
*
*
★
*
Campaign Spending Reform
★LL
★
★
*
★
Codes of Ethics
★ *!★!★
*
*
★
♦
Copyright Revision
*l*l*l*l
*
Dimples
HOLLYWOOD. Fla.
(AP) — Dr. Benito Rish
puts dents in patients'
faces and gets paid for it.
He is a plastic surgeon
who installs dimples.
Rish. who rebuilds faces
to order for those who
don't like the original de-
sign. told Monday of his
new technique for making
sexy dimples or craggy
Kirk Douglas clefts.
The New York City sur-
geon told his colleagues in
head and neck plastic sur-
gery there is a great de-
mand for the little touches
in cosmetic surgery like
chin dimples.
"Most of the women
wanted a chin like Ava
Gardner's," Rish told the
200 doctors attending a
meeting of ihe American
Academy of Facial Plastic
and Reconstructive Sur-
gery.
Rish said his operation,
done in an office under lo-
cal anesthesia, takes only
about five minutes.
For mannish cleft or
dainty dimple. Rish said,
he nicks the skin under the
chin, then makes a small
pocket under the flesh and
stitches the skin to the
chin bone with two steel
sutures.
A tiny hole cut through
the chin from outside
makes a scar too tiny to
notice that heals to the
chinbone in a pretty puck-
er.
A week later, the sutures
come out and — voila —
instant dimple.
Industrialist Dies
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa.
(AP) — Robert F. Rich, 84,
retired industralist and for-
mer Republican congress-
man. died Sunday night.
Advertisement
Holding Dentures
No Secret...Firm
60S ANGELES. Calif.—Authori-
I ties of s western drug firm say
there is no secret to holding den-
tures tight. All it takes is per-
imeter suction. Trouble is. most
products haven't got it. Bite 'N
Hold, a new product has perim-
eter suction. "It feels different"
observed first users, "a secure
sensation like having real teeth,
and Bite 'N Hold lasts months."
Bite 'N Hold is it most druggists
Methodists Push Unity
DALLAS (AP) - Riding a
wave of change, the newly
: merged United Methodist
I Church Tuesday geared for
j further, broader unification
of Christian forces. And it
j backed their combined use
! of economic power to but-
tress their ethical ideals in
American business.
The new thrusts by the de-
inomination's governing
• conference were described
jas reflecting an upsurge of
progressive sentiment.
Predicted opposition failed
to materialize as representa-
tives of ihe ll-million-mem-
ber church overhwelmingly
authorized negotiations of a
' specific plan for union with
eight other denominations
In a rapid-fire series of ac-
tions Monday night
gates also:
—Endorsed "project
in withdrawing a SID-million
investment portfolio from a
New York bank on the
ground that it participated in
renewing a loan to the South
African government, which
imposes racial separation.
—Ordered an investigation
of personnel practices of the
church's own Methodist
publishing house in Nash-
ville. It had been accused in
a magazine article of racial
discrimination on jobs, and
anti-union activity.
—Set up a new commis-
sion on religion and race,
with Negroes and other mi-
norities making up more
than half Its 34 members, to!
lead work to cleanse the
church of any racism and
enlist it in various "move-
dele-lmpnts for racial and social
justice."
—Directed, by a close |
toward wider
merger, none was
to the move
church
voiced.
Delegates authorized its
ecumenical commission, as
participants in the consulta-
iton on church union, to join
in drafting a concrete plan
to unite nine denominations
with a total of 25' midion
members.
Railroad Struck
DENVER (AP) — Union
switchmen struck the Rio
Grande Railway Tuesday.
equality," a nationwide, in-lvote. the re-establishment of
ter-faith movement by which a special periodicial on ap-
church agencies patronize!plication of Christian princi-
firms stressing racial equali-jples to current social issues,
ty in employment. FulllSueh an organ, "Concern,"j
Methodist participation was: had been abolished in Febru-
urged across the country. ary by a publications board.
—Upheld the action of the Although considerable op-
church's board of missions position had been expected
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COMING
FIRST SERVICE • TUES. • APRIL 30 • 7:30 P.M.
Area-Wide Missionary
CONVENTION at the
KIWANIS CLUB AUDITORIUM
333 Southwest 29th
Oklahoma City
FOR ALL PEOPLE OF ALL CHURCHES
David Tsrrell
with
Evangelist
DAVID TERRELL
and Party
APRIL 30 & MAY 1
10:30 AM & 7:30 PM
2 GREAT DAYS ONLY
TSi$ man has one of the most
unique ministries in the world.
He Has ministered in many na-
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prays.
Prnachinq Bible Deliverance and
Praying for the Sick.
PLAN NOW TO ATTEND
THESE SERVICES
A Convention That II ill Build Your Fiiith in God
Red Troops
Increased
Chicago Dally News Service
SAIGON — The number of
North Vietnamese troops en-
gaged In the war has now
climbed to more than 80.000
men — more than 70 percent
of total enemy main force
•trength, U. S. military
sources said Tuesday.
The latest intelligence esti-
mate on the North Viet-
namese presence In the
South compares with about
80 percent last November
and about 62 percent In Feb-
ruary.
During that time the total
main force enemy strength
-imt remained around
l 118,000*
QUALITY TEACHERS NEEDED
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Mrs. Felieiee Glass** end Mrs. Kathryn Parker
Public Schaels *f the District at Calumbla
Will he In Oklahoma City
at tho Howard Johnson's Motor L«drp
Wednesday, May I, 1941
9:00 A.M. to 4:00 P M.
Phono: JA 1*7148
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 79, No. 61, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 30, 1968, newspaper, April 30, 1968; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc993200/m1/4/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.