Resource Type

[Photograph 2012.201.B1327.0297]

Photograph used for a newspaper owned by the Oklahoma Publishing Company. Caption: "Here are the five finalists of Miss America contest, including the new queen for 1958, Colorado's Marilyn Van Derbur, fourth from left, Others are, left to right, Mary Nency Denner, Oklahoma; Jody Elizebeth Shattuck, Georgia; Dorothy Maria Steiner, Florida, Miss Derbur Lorna M. Anderson, California."
Date: 1957
Creator: unknown
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History

[Photograph 2012.201.B1327.0304]

Photograph used for a story in the Oklahoma Times newspaper. Caption: "MUCH TO DISCUSS. Wearing the Miss America crown, Denver's Marilyn Van Derbur chatted Thursday night with the 1956 Miss America, Sharon Kay Richie Cherry."
Date: 1957
Creator: unknown
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History

[Photograph 2012.201.B1327.0317]

Photograph used for a story in the Daily Oklahoman newspaper. Caption: "The winner was Miss Colorado, Marilyn Van Derbur, of Denver a tall regal blonda, who looks like Ingrid Bergman and plays the organ"
Date: 1957
Creator: unknown
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History

[Photograph 2012.201.B0237.0376]

Photograph used for a story in the Oklahoma Times newspaper. Caption: "ESTABLISHING A HOME temporarily in Denver will be Dr. and Mrs. John D. Glismann and their children, John Phillip, 3; Laura Ann, 22 months; Linda Gale, 7, and Diana Rae Glismann, 5. They have been the guests of Dr. glismann's parents, Dr. and Mrs. M. B. Glismann, 729 NW 17, following their return from Kingston, Jamaica, where they lived while Dr. Glismann was administrator of public health in the Caribbean area for the Pan-American Sanitary bureau."
Date: August 31, 1957
Creator: Lucas, Jim
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History

[Photograph 2012.201.B0504.0047]

Photograph used for a story in the Oklahoma Times newspaper. Caption: "There is no longer any question about whether or not cloudspeeding to increase rainfall will work ."
Date: October 15, 1957
Creator: Tapscott, George
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History