The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 74, No. 45, Ed. 1 Monday, October 23, 1989 Page: 7 of 13
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Monday, October 23, 1989 ■ THE OKLAHOMA DAILY ■ 7
Man saves
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
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1W
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For more information, contact:
Matt Sutherland, Restaurant Manager
364-6982
217 W. Boyd
HEISMAN 4
12th & Alameda
ALL SEATS ALWAYS SI.Qo'
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Large Group Orders!
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Robinson
Crossing 6
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LUNCHEON SPECIALS
ALL SPECIALS INCLUDE A SOFT DRINK ■ FRENCH FRIES
ON ALL SPECIALS EXCEPT SALADS
11 AM-2 PM MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY
THE PACKAGE
7:15-930 (R)
PETER PAN
730-9:15 (G)
CASUALTIES OF WAR
730-9:50 (R)
FIELD OF DREAMS
7:15-930 (PG)
$3.25 with all student I.P.'s
An Innocent Man r
5:20 7:40 10:10
Gross Anatomy PG13
5:30 7:50 9:50
Next of Kin r
5:10 7:40 10:10
Look Who’s Talking PG13
5:20 7:30 9:40
Black Rain r
5:00 7:30 10:00
Uncle Buck pg
______________7:50______________
When Harry Met Sally r
5:30 9:50
FAT MAN ANO UTTLE BOY
8:10-7:40-10:00 (PG-13)
DEAD POETS SOCIETY
520-7'40-1000 (PG)
THE FABULOUS BAKER BOVS
505-745-10:00 (R)
HALLOWEENS: THE REVENGE OF MCHAEL UVERS
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SEA OF LOVE
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PARENTHOOD
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Cellular
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lnJ!
MONDAY NIGHT
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VILLAGE 6
36th & W. Robinson 364-0310
Lecture to focus on park
ogy, particularly the interaction of
large grazing animals with their
forage grasses, has led me to do
research in the Wichita Moun-
tains Wildlife Refuge, the Seren-
geti grasslands of Tanzania and,
most recently, in Yellowstone,”
she said.
: 5OO Minutes of
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7
/_____________________
ATHLETIC
Sportswear & souvenirs
| OWNED & OPERATED BY THE 0U ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT ~~|
LOCATED AT THE SW CORNER OF OKLAHOMA MEMORIAL STADIUM
OPEN MONDAY - FRIDAY 8-5; TUESDAYS UNTIL 6 P.M.;OPEN SATURDAYS
(405) 325-8383
“ Watch it at the Delta
75<t Draws
Peel 8c Eat Shrimp
Oysters the 1/2- Shell
Don’t forget our
Luncheon Buffet 11-2
ALL YOU CAN EAT $3.99
An OU associate professor of
botany who has done extensive
research at Yellowstone National
Park will speak on “Yellowstone:
An Ecosystem in Danger?” at the
meeting of the OU Botanical So-
ciety Wednesday.
Linda Wallace has been at Yel-
lowstone Park either consulting
or doing research in the summers
since 1986.
She will speak at 8 p.m. in 131
Botany-Microbiology Building.
“During 1988-1989, I was on
sabbatical leave in the Park, stay-
ing there continuously from May
1988 through September 1989,”
Wallace said. “As such, 1 was
there from start to finish of the
fires of 1988.
“My interest in grassland ecol-
Wallace received her doctoral
degree from the University of
Georgia. Wallace did postdoctor-
al research at Syracuse
University.
HEY
5O°/o off'
OKLAHOMA CITY - Task
Force 2000 gave tentative approv-
al Saturday to a recommendation
that would annually increase
teacher salaries in each of the
next four school years by no less
than $1,500.
Wallace’s talk will focus on a
number of points: what really
happened during the 1988 fires,
whether the fires were an ecologi-
cal disaster and what is imperiling
the world’s first national park.
Her lecture also will include a
personal view of how her research
has been affected.
A great deal for:
• Fraternity and Sorority council meetings.
• Dorm parties and activities.
• Departmental faculty meetings.
• Campus organization parties and
meetings.
dining area and a small enclosed
playground.
They bought the building with
grant money from Norman and
donations from area churches.
They had to raise the money for
the down payment.
Previously, Food for Friends
operated out of a 900 square-foot
house on Himes Street. The
group also has two other family
shelters in Norman and will con-
tinue to operate them, Leigh said.
Leigh expressed gratitude to
the Norman Builders Association
for helping with the facility. Mike
Galluzzo, a member of the associ-
ation, said the group had been
like to include a statement sup-
porting a salary differential for
teachers who work in specialized
fields or less desirable geographi-
cal areas.
The task force also approved a
recommendation that “standards
be set for determination of when
provision of a teacher’s aide is
appropriate and necessary” in the
public schools.
After some discussion and op-
position, the panel also voted to
recommend the elimination of
the use of corporal punishment in
public schools.
JJous
FLOWERS &. GIFTS
Roses
$15
Loose Roses Only
$15 a Dozen
$20 Arranged
(Delivery Extra)
ES
Carriage Plaza
2001 W. Main • 364-1743
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SALT LAKE CITY - State
Trooper Scott Smith didn’t hesi-
tate to jump a fence to reach a
drowning baby kangaroo, but the
idea of mouth-to-snout resuscita-
tion gave him a moment’s pause.
Nevertheless, the trooper said,
he “blew into the nose a couple of
quick breaths and that brought it
right around.”
The Ogden man was watching
the kangaroos at Hogle Zoo with
his family when a female kanga-
roo hopped over to a pond for a
drink and her 18-inch-talI baby -
called a joey - followed.
“Something spooked the joey
and it jumped and landed in the
water,” Smith said.
Two black swans began flap-
ping their wings, driving the joey
into deeper water.
“My wife started screaming at
me, ‘Scott, it’s drowning! It’s
drowning!’ ” he said. So he
jumped the fence and pulled the
animal to safety.
Smith said he could feel the
joey’s rapid heartbeat slow and its
eyes became glassy. The mouth
was clamped shut, so he puffed
into the nose.
“Some of it boils down to
pride. I’m in this thing this far. I
can’t let it die now,” he said.
Richard Andrews, a zoo fore-
man, said the joey was placed
back in its hutch and was
recovering.
Great Gift Idea
Greek letter drops.
Beautiful 14k gold.
From $24”.
Norman Coin
& Jewelry
218 E. Main 360-2515
Harriette Leigh, president of
Food and Shelter for Friends,
called the grand opening of the
organization’s new 5,000 square-
foot shelter Sunday “a dream
come true.”
The group, which provides
temporary shelter and food for
the homeless now has the new
shelter at 104 W. Comanche St.
and two other shelters in
Norman.
The facility has four shelter
apartments as well as a large
kitchen, three pantries, a large
. ...
Food and Shelter tor Friends, formerly headquartered manche St. tor the homeless families Sunday. Photo by
on Himes Street, opened a new facility at 104 W. Co- T.C. Lobaugh
HOLLYWOOD
Lindsey & McGee 364-4433
ALL REGULAR SHOWS ONLY $1
The recommendation, written
by task force chairman George
Singer of Tulsa, said “If we wish
to attract and retain the best
teachers for our state’s children
we must begin to make meaning-
ful adjustments in the level of
compensation we offer them.”
The recommendations on
teacher pay also included a sug-
gestion that salaries not be limit-
ed to a fraction of principals’ in-
come, because “such a system
encourages good teachers to be-
come administrators in order to
continue to receive salary
Task force calls for salary increase
Group also seeks teacher’s aide standards
increases.”
The task force, charged with
providing the state Legislature
with recommendations for im-
proved educational standards,
also suggested the establishment
of a committee to develop and
implement state-wide incentive
compensation standards for
teachers by the beginning of the
1994-95 school year.
Under the recommendation,
implementation of the plan would
be on a district basis, with all
teacher evaluations done at the
local level.
Singer also told the task force
that before it made its final draft
of recommendations he would
News!--
Group opens homeless facility
By Jonathan Nicholson
CITY REPORTER
helping since March and its con-
tributions in material and labor
amounted to approximately
$60,000 to $70,000.
She said the organization feeds
about 75 to 100 people Monday
through Saturday. Eighty percent
of the people the shelter helps
are young women with children,
she said, but because Shelter for
Friends emphasizes families,
there is no place single homeless
can go to for shelter.
Attending the opening were
Norman Mayor Dick Reynolds,
Ward 1 City Councilman Ed
Crocker and state Sen. Gary
Gardenhire.
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Simmons, Brook. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 74, No. 45, Ed. 1 Monday, October 23, 1989, newspaper, October 23, 1989; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1822673/m1/7/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center.