Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 80, No. 276, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 7, 1970 Page: 4 of 32
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I
K
o
Men's Furnishings I
W9
■
3”
s
Parly Dress Shirts... Solids and stripes... white.
French ar button cuffs, Reg. $1.50 T-‘^"‘*‘*^TTTr~TTTttrT«asas teats sin ■■
fytksclulcbs annual
January
tjit r J
of menswear
Entire itochs not included. Sorry. no phone or mail
orders. All Sales Final!
A SALE.
Fashion tone solid dress shirts, double button cuffs ... Perma Press, Reg. $7.00
.12.99
4.99
Perma Press dacron polyester & cotton sport shirts, Reg. $9 00 •eoa*****a***e*e****aaa*o*45.99
Hathaway and Peerless dress shirts, Reg. $9.OO-$14.OO 5.99
Cardigan sweaters in alpaca stitch, Reg. $22.00
ew
; •
«
f
0
i\
IhriS
anoi to Get
IQuery on Son
~ North Vietnamese Embas-
i
Laos. His co-pilot was res-
Nature’s
Art Gallery
the subject of war crimi-
nals and they were never
the least bit rude,” he
said.
cued, and Fors was be-
lieved to have been cap-
daughter.
He has been active in a
wide range of civic and
advisory committee of the
Goodwill Industries, Okla-
More Schools Open
JACKSON, Miss. (AP)
— Seven more Mississippi
school districts opened for
calsses today under Imme-
diate desegregation or-
ders.
Waves of Ice and fountains sculputared In wintry
remains capture the more picturesque part of Oklaho-
ma City's recent weather for Oklahoma City Universe
ty students who paw by the fountains in the school’s
Piersol Plaza. (Times Staff Photo by George Tapscott)
.past dozen years.
!' He helped develop and
'administer its Great Plan,
sl.-f
<<
I
Fire Controlled
On Survey Ship
ADELAIDE, Australia
(AP) — The U.S. seismic
survey ship Polaris burned
for more than two hours
today at its berth in Ade-
laide, but firemen were
able to keep the blaze
from reaching thousands
of gallons of kerosene in
storage tanks aboard the
ship.
They finally extin-
guished the fire, and none
of the ship's 30 crewmen
was hurt.
not to wait in Moscow for
the news of his son’s fate
but to return home and
"influence your friends to
bring the war to an end.”
■ ■'
I
All are taught by teams
of faculty members, with
Instructors coming from
several departments and
The program completely divisions^
. OCU trustees’ executive revamped and updated the L.. 7-----... -----
committee stressed today.
1 A native of Arkansas,
. Whitten came to OCU in
business in Vietnam. •
He said the North Viet-
namese diplomats told him homa Science and Arts
Foundation and the Okla-
homa Zoological Society.
Borman May Run
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP)
They never brought up Astronaut Frank Bor-
man says he may run in
1974 for the U.S. Senate
seat now held by Republi-
can Barry Goldwater.
eapons
• May Be Needed
WASHINGTON (AP) — plane to succeed the B52.
— — A —— A* — ■ ■ ■■
vhi R~Lalnd"said today the Blj has been under re-
united States will have to
consider possible produc-
tion of a new strategic
bomber or deploy more
strategic missiles at sea if
the Soviet Union’s offen-
sive threat continues to
mount.
The defense chief told
newsmen that new offen-
sive weapons may be re-
quired if the Soviet Union
continues its high rate of
deployment of SS9 missiles
which could knock out U.S.
retaliatory forces and if
there is no progress in the
joint U.S.-Soviet arms lim-
itation talks in Helsinki.
Laird made clear no de-
cision has yet been made
to go into new offensive
arms production, but he
said various options will
be considered by the Nixon
administration in forth-
coming deliberations by
the National Security
Council.
Laird said several op-
tions are open.
One, he said, would be
speeding up work on a new
nuclear - bomb - carrying
’•
1-
I
■F- W <
i
EW. ■
■It- <>
Key Role in OCU Rise
„io ask Hanoi whether his
; * son was captured alive or
' killed in action.
; ’ Henry Fors, a ]
■* farmer from Puyallup,
-.. Wash., said he received
2* * unbelievably polite”
7 -treatment during a two-
•* hour meeting at the em-
.£• bassy Tuesday.
"They seemed to under-
stand the distress of a fa-
jfrther looking for his son,”
T. Fors said.
His son Gary was shot
j*?down two years ago over
L A'
headed the Downtown Ro-
tary Club, Civic Music As-
sociation, and the Greater
strides have Oklahoma City Chapter of
the United Nations.
He is a lay leader of
Wesley Methodist Church,
active in various commis-
sions of the Oklahoma
Methodist Conference and
has headed the commis-
sion on religion and educa-
tion of the Oklahoma State
Council of Churches.
He is a member of the
metropolitan library com-
mission and committees of
the Oklahoma City Cham-
ber of Commerce and has
served on the boards of
the American people,” the Lyric Theater, Sunbean
Home and Family Serv-
ices, Community Action
Secretary of Defense Mel- The craft, now designated
search for years. 1 .
Another would be accel-
erating the underiev
launched missile program,
which would essentially be
upgrading the Polaris* lub-
marine fleet with more
subs and more far-reach-
ing missiles.
Pushing ahead with ei-
ther or both, Laird said,
would be a means of ex-
panding the American ar-
senal of nuclear weapons
and thereby increasing
chances of the survival
U.S. retaliatory force in
case of attack from the So-
viet Union.
Laird indicated last
weekend the administra-
tion hopes to expand the
Safeguard antiballlstic
missile system this year,
but he gave no details,
The administration' nar-
rowly won congressional
approval of plans for th*
first phase of the multibil-
lion dollar Safeguard sys-
tem last spring—the Initial
defense of two Air Fore*
Minuteman Missile com-
plexes in the Northwest.
£ MOSCOW (AP) - The
Cfather of a missing U.S. -------------
£ Marine pilot said today the tured.
^JNorth Vietnamese Embas- "The North Vietnamese
. Pay in Moscow has agreed have nothing but love for
£to ask Hanoi whether his f" *---*-----" ““
•An uzna rantnred alive nr elder Fors Said today,
"and I told them we Amer-
poultry leans believe we have no program, Urban League,
• •■eellaawi kiidnAfla In Uintrronn * * ______ Iaa__ >
J
■BaLte > c, fat > 7
' *7' ■ its ■ t 4> <
* *.' -Ha
come in the past two
years, resulting in the Uni-
versity Studies program
initiated last fall.
A completely new "core
basic curriculum” now is
offered all students. In-
stead of concentrating on
five basic subjects, stu-
dents concentrate on only
three major areas of
an academic improvement study.
program Linking the local
university with Massachu-
setts Institute of Technolo-
gy-
‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ i Dr. Whitten holds the
university’s science curric- Ph.D. from the University
ulum and laboratories. It of Texas. He is married
also strengthened the OCU and the father of one
>1958 from Henderson State scholarship program, en-
Teachers College at Arka- larged its faculty with top
delphia, where he directed personnel, developed a
(extension and placement
•services for 11 years.
; Earlier, he was a teach-
Played by Dr. Whitten
iDr. Dolphus Whitten Jr., He grew up in Gurdon,
newly-appointed president Ark., where he attended
Cof Oklahoma City Univer- high school with a boy
(£slty, has had a key role in named Jack Wilkes, who
T^OCU’s efforts to upgrade was destined to become
J~its academic quality in the OCU president. Dr. Wilkes
dozen years. brought his long-time
friend here in May, 1958.
In the dozen years since,
U an academic program Dr. Whitten has had a key
linking OCU and the Mas- role in OCU’s Great Plan,
tfsachusetts Institute of
Technology.
r* The MIT tie will contin-
p* ue under Dr. Whitten’s ad-
1?. mlnlstratin, Luther T. Du-
TZlaney, chairman of the
broader base of financial cultural activities, having ,
support and recruited stu-
dents from a wider geo-
•r and principal in several graphic area.
Arkansas public schools. Greatest l------ -----
Men’s Shoes
*
Reg. $20.00 to $28.00
I
i
Thursday Store Hoort: Downtown Uptown 9'30-A Penn Square 19-9
* ♦
•-
Discontinued Myles & coltrs. Broken sizes & widths.
19.15 Reg. $34.00 to $42.00 21.15
[Men’s Hats]
Reg. $20.00 14.15
Mm's Sbo*s, Hats, 2ad Floor Dowatowa; 1st Floor F*m Sqaar*
\
Men’s Hosiery—dress and sport, all lengths, Reg. $1.50
Long sleeved cotton corduroy jump suits. Reg. $20.00 ..
Fancy long sleeved wool knit shirts
...... 99c
,..12.99
’/i Off
1.59 ea. 2 for 13.
Parly boxer shorts. Perma Press, Reg. $2.40
Parly Perma Press pajamas, Reg. $8.00 and $9.00
5.99
Men's neckwear, Reg. $5.00 and up
I
>•**•*••*•••••••••• 3.19
Men’s neckwear, Reg. $3.00 and $4.00
~ 2.19
'••••I
EXTRA
QUALITY
i*
V
GEZorjfd;
I
I
NOW
Store Hours:
><2StoriM*
SUM
SpwkM
SyitMM
SISM
TanrtMti
• MOST MAJOR
CREDIT CAROS ACCEFft0
Claud
Saadays
TRAMSISTOR
RADIO
AM-FM
k Rie.l4.9S
\ SMC.
\»6«
ROBERTS
M.4.1 I ns HI
)«.,M I.K Oft—**' 0
Raleigh
12
TtANSISTOR
FM/1M "IC v kitten ever
itef* I triaeeSm utoe is
hstn*t Heuare.
REG. S24.95
SPEC.
$ 12”
FREE
8 TRACK TAPE
—with purchasa *f—
STERLING STEREO SYSTEM
£ iaefadas:
9^ • Starling Automatic Record
Changer with Diamond Stylus
W 0 2 Sterling Speakers in
oiled walnut cabinets
• Sterling 40 watt
AM-FM Stereo
■
■QH S204 90
s 159’Wi
•«•■ Me, MMJt H.w '399” |
TV
RABBIT
EARS
taryDur I
television
R*1. $1.49 aa.
SCOTT 342 C FM
110-Watt Stereo Receiver Set
ladadas thasa^^^^
4 pieces
■to TERM PAYMENT RIANS AVAILARLE
Doily Mon. & Thurs.
9 'til 5:30 9 'til 9
STERLING HOME ELECTRONICS
4327 N.W. 23rd St. • Rhea. 744-W4
Dual Bati-Treble Controls
Stereo Indicator bght Norte
Filter-Front Panel Stereo
Headphone Output — Ste-
reo/Mono Mode Switch.
>ti
9M20 Complete
STEREO SYSTEM
Combinei I track
tape player, AM-FM
■ ‘.'ft--.:
\ I -
Lloydt speaker sys-
■ terns in oiled walnut
cabinets
H*’ P"C,S’59S5
■■■$ 179”
I
( Separata tone controls for each channel
( 2 VU meters — 4 Speeds — Horitontal or
* Verticle operation — edit A pause lever.
! REG. $270 NOW$249’5
ONLY
79L
----to.—to. J
Lloyd'»
4-Transistar
Portible Radio
Complete with corrying
strop I earphene. Reg.
*49 SPECIAL
i t
GET IN ON THESE
1970
SfflWSl
liiu
.................
___ , |
‘ y ■ ■ .....
J
4-..U
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.
Matching Search Results
View 10 places within this issue that match your search.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. 80, No. 276, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 7, 1970, newspaper, January 7, 1970; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1785417/m1/4/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.