OP
Thanks for the link, Sir 80. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/smile.gif.1ebc41e1811405b213edfc4622c41e27.gif
http://www.kotv.com/special/buried-car/inside.aspxWhat’s Buried In The Car?
A Douglas Aircraft Company aerial map of Tulsa airport facilities and aerial photographs of the area.
Flags with 48 stars that flew over the U.S. Capitol, the state Capitol, the County Courthouse and City Hall.
A record of "Riding into Tulsa" by Broken Arrow composer Ralph Blane. It was the official Golden Jubilee song.
Tulsarama! souvenirs, including three wooden nickels, flags, ashtrays, miniature oil barrels filled with crude oil, playing cards, key chains and souvenir historical plates. A copy of the official Tulsarama! program, Oklahoma semi-centennial program and a "Tulsa, Indian Territory" history book.
Copies of the “Tulsa Daily World” and “The Tulsa Tribune.”
A copy of the 1957 Tulsa Chamber of Commerce program of work and a copy of the 1956 annual report of the Community Chest Red Feather agencies.
A sound-motion-picture print of "24 Hours of Progress," produced by the Oil Information Committee of the American Petroleum Institute.
A case of Tulsa-manufactured motor oil, furnished by Sunray DX Oil Co.
A five-gallon can of gasoline.
Microfilmed records of guesses of Tulsa's population in 2007.
A letter from semi-centennial committeeman Dale Watt to his children.
The contents of a "typical" woman's handbag, including tranquilizer pills, 14 bobby pins, a compact, a tube of lipstick, two combs, a package of gum, a plastic rain hat, pocket-size facial tissues, an unpaid parking ticket, cigarettes and matches, and $2.73 in bills and coins. A statement from the Tulsa Council of Churches, a prayer for the greatest good for the next 50 years, a history of churches in Tulsa by then “Tulsa World” Religion Editor Beth Macklin and a directory of area churches.
A statement from the Tulsa School Board, historical data related to 50 years of education in Tulsa and copies of "School Life," the school newspaper co-published by all Tulsa high schools each month.
A statement from the Tulsa Trades and Labor Council.
Statements from Mayor George Norvell and Chamber of Commerce officials and the civic records of former mayors George H. Stoner, Dan Patton, Olney F. Flynn and Lee Price.