Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 82, No. 126, Ed. 1 Friday, July 16, 1971 Page: 4 of 40
forty pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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>i ■■■inin - Sandra Rogers learns with help of controlled reader.
Florida Cruise Goal
You con bridge the "cloud nine"
budget gap with a trip to B. C. Clark
Jewelers. The settings they will show
you in the diamond department will
surprise you . . . wide bands, unusu-
al shapes, colored stones ... as well
as rings like mother's. Whatever your
taste or budget, B. C. Clark Jewelers
has diamonds of different qualities at
prices to match. You can be assured
that at B. C. Clark Jewelers you will
receive the quality you pay for —
nothing less!
The courteous personnel at B. C.
Clark Jewelers take pleasure in show-
ing you the differences in diamonds
and in helping you choose the dia-
mond you can afford to go with the
setting that fits your taste.
If you have $200 or $2,000 to spend
on a wedding set, B. C. Clark Jewel-
ers guarantees you will be satisfied.
Convenient terms can be easily ar-
ranged or use your Master Charge or
Bank Americard!
pie at OU. beginning with
a class to increase reading
speed and comprehension.
Some of the kids have in-
creased their reading
speeds aa much as 200
words per minute, Noley
says.
Then comes a communi-
cations course, which is a
combination of literature
English
is stressed in communica-
tions class, so the strict
form so often emphasized
w-«oss
443-4737
hearing aids
You can't buy a finer inatrument
than Zenith.
18 model* to choose from.
BAB HtARINO AID
MRVKI INC.
iiaw. tanioAN
SHinHItO MAU
during the summer.
Classes are held most of x .. _____________________
the (jay for the young peo- Jhat, and the final class is
either ballet and modern
dance or drama.
Mrs. R o bb i e Bowers 1
and this is their chance.
There are seven Upward
Bound projects at Oklaho-
ma colleges, with each
taking a slightly different
approach to the problem.
OU’s consists of seven
weeks of special classes which dea]s with topics
such as hygiene and drugs.
Physical education follows
Given Boost Upward
informal communica- teadies the math class and
is enthusiastic about Up-
ward Bound and the
chance it gives young peo-
ple. She is a West Junior
High teacher in Normar
• By Allen M. Bailey
NORMAN — Forty-five
teen-agers from low-in-
come families who have
the ’ potential ability for
college work but haven’t
done as well as they could
in school, are having a
chance to become better
stu&nte. .
group will join 500 other
Upward Bound students
this weekend for the first
state Upward Bound Day
at OU. . .
Upward Bound, Noley
explains, is “an extended
opportunity for students
who have deficient back-
grounds in education.”
They have shown the abili-
ty to^go places,^however, th'ey reached in their
spring school work.
Most students in the pro-
gram are black or Indian,
so afternoon classes begin
with either Indian history
or “black humanities.”
Then comes health life,
“The kids seem really
grateful for’ anything you
can do for them.” she
says. "Success is the
prime motivator.”
She says the kids don’t
do well in their regular
classes because of social
and academic pressures
from better prepared stu-
dents. The fear some
teachers have of teaching
blacks and Indians is also
a factor, she says.
r The kids repay their
selection for the program
by doing very well.
Thinking ot--
a hearing aid?
Zenith has over 50 years of
electronic experience
in case you haven’t heard
on
tions. “Communication is
largely informal,” Noley
said, "so we think it’s wise
to teach informal commu-
nlcationfirst."
Students in that .class
turn out short stories, po- during the school year,
etry and even some illus-
trations for them.
They are in the Upward Conversational
Bound program at the Uni-
versity of Oklahoma this
summer. Program Direc- _____
tor Grayson Noleyjsays his ^ngl ish teachers in reg-
kaa _.u__ ujar gchoois js Qt second-
ary importance, he noted.
“They start out writing
like they were talking and
it ends up really poetic,”
Noley explains.
The mathematics class
comes next, covering gen-
eral math and algebra.
Students take up the sum-
mer course work at the
‘‘He said I was worth
a million to him. i
But he only had $200 for the ring. * lv.
So we went to B. C. Clark Jewelers.’’ U
• It ■)!
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*
yxfl
b
and English with-emphasis
DALE
Hull, wife Linda, and B-
year-old Scott and 6-year-
old Stephen.
Their boat, a Chriscraft,
sleeps six, has two 300-
horsepower inboard
gines, wUJ
mately 2h
Tulsan Facing
10-Year Term
he shouldn’t have trouble I
navigating since he’s been
to a navigation school.
TULSA (>AP) - The
young Jerry Hull family
will leave the Port of Ca-
toosa this weekend for a
14-day trip in their 46-foot
cruiser to Ft. Lauderdale,
Fla.
The 29-year-old Tulsan
says the boat will go down
the Verdigris-Arkansas
Waterway to the Mississip-
pi River, then take the In-
land Waterway to Pensa-
cola, Fla. They will enter
the Gulf of Mexico there
CARNEGIE |
Smnnt classes fereHog » effec-
tive speaking. humin rriatian,
self csafflRM, utesatiesMp fl
supervision I minagtmMt trae
mg Call 2324614 f« Mails.
Oklahoma Leadership Institute
IM *M«.
en- .
cruise approxi-
miles per hour i
and needs to fill up on fuel
every 200 miles.
It shouldn’t be a rough I
trip. The 24-ton ship,
called Outward Bound, has
central air conditioning
and heating. It’s also load-
ed with radio communica-
tion equipment. Hull says
TULSA — A Tulsa man
faces a 10-year prison
term today after his con-
and travel to Tampa. Fla., viction Thursday on auto
and on to Ft. Myers, larceny charges after a
Fla., where they will get to former felony conviction.
He is 23-year-old Charles
Richardson. A motion for
a new trial was overruled.
the Atlantic through the
Okeechobee Waterway.
The family includes
Our World Today
• - _____
More Britons
Favor Market
Opinion Makers Abound
1967
Gunmen Free Terrorist
. ’ o • *
BELFAST (AP) — Five men armed with subma-
chine "guns burst into the Royal Victoria Hospital at
dawn today and rescued an injured terrorist from the
police.
Informed sources said the terrorist was one of two
men who threw a nail bomb at an army patrol earlier
this week. The pair tried to flee, the army said, and the
troops shot one of the men in the leg. The second man
was captured uninjured.
The terrorists were believed members of the out-
lawed Irish Republican Army which is battling to unite
Northern Ireland with the Irish Republic.
• LONDON (AP) — British public opinion is swinging
strongly in favor of joining the European Common Mar-
ket, a ipajor poll reported today. ,
National Opinion Polls said In the Daily. Mail that
the opposition to entry has fallen by 14 percentage points
. in a month.
The latest poll, taken since the terms of entry se-
cured by the Conservative government were made pub-
lic, recorded 34 per cent of voters in favor of member-
ship. That is 8 percentage points more than in June, be-
fore the terms were known. • *
Those against dropped from 58 per cent to 44.
Their mission was to probe
the government’s flexibili-
ty on its demand that
Egyptian troops be permit-
ted to cross to the Israeli-
occupied east bank of the
canal. «
The waterway has been
blocked since the
Arab-Israeli war.
KINSHASA, Congo (AP) — Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew says the United States, rather than training
enough bricklayers and carpenters, “is educating too
many opinion makers who can’t do anything with their
hands.”
He expressed this view Thursday night to Andre Bo-
Boliko, president of the National Assembly of the Congo.
Agnew arrived from Kenya Thursday for his third
stop in Black Africa. He goes to Spain Saturday.
Talks Find ‘Nothing New’
»
By The Associated Press
Michael Sterner, the A State Department an-
State Department’*-. ehiaf- • nouncement issued on
specialist pn Egyptian af- their arrival July 5 stated
fairs, left Bergus were
Washington after talks to discuss piwrudPe
with Egyptian officials on
the possibility of reopening
the Suez Canal.
Sterner and Donald C.
Bergus, top American dip-
lomat in Cairo, declined
comment on the talks, but
the Egyptians said the
men had brought "nothing
new” to the discussion.
Zenith
or
1
Headquarters
For
,Packard Bell
SOUTH
4219
S. Western
NORTH
6404
N. May
•<
We challenge anyone, dealer or
distributor to soli you a color T.V.
at a lower price, model for model!
(Vz ^OpenOollyJtil 9 pm Sun 1-4
8
*
<•1
L
4Frldaj
OKLAHOMA’S OLOIST JIWIltRS
■BiCCWt
DOWMTOWI
113Sltarwy
Ops Ms* ts 100
MATFMR
Oil I. fl
Ofl Thn. b I N '
serme
during the
wurh
stoppage:
Dial your own calls with
One-Plus Dialing.
' _____ _______ f \ 4
Dial 1+the Area Code*+the number.
(If It j Different From Your Own)
There s no cheaper or faster way to call Long Distance.
•rnBell
@ Southwest
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 82, No. 126, Ed. 1 Friday, July 16, 1971, newspaper, July 16, 1971; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1786735/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.