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FROM SAPULPA JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL
TAKE ONE OR ALL
"TELL IS LIKE IT IS"
VOCAL MUSIC DEPARTMENT
c. 1967 +/-
Herschel Avra, Director
Century Records #38819
1220 NW 39 Oklahoma City, OK
Side 1
Tell It Like It Is
Brother Let Me Take Your Hand
Check Him Out
What's God Like
Master Designer
Do As I Say
Rosy Tinted Glasses
Out Turn At Bat
When It's Gone
Consider Now the Lily
Side 2
Conform
A New Mind
That's For Me
A New Mind (reprise)
That's The Way It Is
Love Is Surrender
He's There Waiting
Pass It On
Tell It Like It Is
Sound Tested
Buyer Approved
Record plays EX+ > NM
Cover EX+ > NM (original cellophane)
+++PLUS+++
Junior High School Band
1966 - 1967
Majorie Skinner, Director
Dimension 70, Recording Systems
2 album set
Side 1
The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise (Alford)
The Great Gate of Kiev (Moussorgsky)
Manzoni requin (Verdi)
Side Two
Jubilee March (Goldman)
Honey In The Horn (arr. by Yoder)
Tijuana Brass Medley (arr. by Alpert)
Including Whipped Cream, SPansh Flea - So What's New? - American Civil War Fantasy (Bilik)
All the personnel are listed.
As well a group photo.
Sound Tested
Buyer Approved
Record plays EX+ > NM
Cover EX+ > NM
+++PLUS+++
Sapulpa, Oklahoma
Yearbook in Sound
SHS 69-70
Custom Pressed by Recorded Publications Company
Camnden, New Jersey (NJ)
AZM 74312
Recorded from client's furnished tape
Side 1
It's a Privilege
Side 2
It's a Privilege
Buyer Approved
Record plays EX+ > NM
Cover (NO COVER)
----------------------------------------------
FYI
The town was named after Chief Sapulpa, the area's first permanent settler, who was a full-blood Lower Creek Indian of the Kasihta Tribe from Osocheetown, Alabama. In about 1850, he established a trading post near the meeting of Polecat and Rock creeks (about one mile (1.6 km) southeast of present-day downtown Sapulpa). When the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad (later known as the Frisco railroad) built a spur to this area in 1886, it was known as Sapulpa Station. Sapulpa post office was chartered in 1889. The town was chartered in 1898.
Controversy over Creek County Seat location
After Oklahoma became a state, each county held an election to determine the location of the county seat. Sapulpa competed with Bristow, Oklahoma for county seat of Creek County. After five years of contested elections and court suits, the question was settled by the Oklahoma Supreme Court on August 1, 1913. Sapulpa was ruled the winner. The county courthouse was completed in 1914, replacing an earlier structure built in 1902.
Economic Development
The area around Sapulpa mainly produced walnuts when the town was founded. In 1898, the Sapulpa Pressed Brick was established, followed in a few years by the Sapulpa Brick Company. This began the clay products industry. The Frisco built a railyard in Sapulpa and by 1900 designated Sapulpa as the location of an overhaul base for its rolling stock. The founding of Premium Glass Company in 1912 marked Sapulpa's entry to glass manufacturing. Premium Glass was absorbed into Liberty Glass Company in 1918. Other glass producers in the city were Bartlett-Collins Glass Company, Schram Glass Company, and Sunflower Glass Company. According to the Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History, Sapulpa became known as "The Crystal City of the Southwest."
Economy
Sapulpa is notable as the home of Frankoma Pottery, Liberty Glass Company and Happy Burger.
Notable people
Max Meyer, an immigrant to the United States and settler in Sapulpa in 1906, was subject of the biography Preposterous Papa (reprint 1992 in paperback) by his son Lewis Meyer, Tulsa author and bookseller. Meyer was a merchant and philanthropist, who built public projects from profits from the more than 50 oil wells he developed.
The musicians known as The Collins Kids, Lorrie and Larry Collins, resided near Sapulpa in the early 1950s.
Former Major League Baseball player Don Wallace (who played for the Los Angeles Angels in the 1960s) was born in Sapulpa.
Eugene Bavinger (b. 1919, Sapulpa) is an abstract expressionist painter.
George William Miller (b. March 9, 1925 – d. March 17, 2006) was born in Sapulpa. He served as the 65th United States Secretary of the Treasury under President Carter from August 6, 1979 to January 20, 1981. He previously served as the 11th Chairman of the Federal Reserve, where he began service on March 8, 1978.
Shara Worden, the lead singer and songwriter for My Brightest Diamond, grew up in Sapulpa. She was previously a backup vocalist for Sufjan Stevens and the frontwoman of Awry.
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