The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 44, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 24, 1970 Page: 4 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: University of Oklahoma Student Newspapers and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE LOOK
FOR FALL
is at the
Kent State disorders
outsiders
• b*>'
blamed
on
:•
r,
The
ooooooooooooooooo
59-21
•I
1
I
c-
oooooooomoooooom
■
r
Little red's back
back;
Palmer
is
as
I
£
r
/
*
T"
*
>
J
Welcome To
O.I.. Dads!
*
364-4452
321*1743
313 W. Boyd
II
_
WE SELL LEVI’S ONLY
735 ASP
TOM’S
IW JJP W M Ml fpu
I
We Specialize
In the Biaarre
ned by a I
General Court
--*4
We find the Six
embarrassingly hard
to surpass. So, we
think, will you.
THOMSON
SOUND SYSTEMS
Witch Cults Seances
Orgies-Cockfights
Plumbers Conventions
or
Any unmentionable
event of your choice
114 E. Main
321-7771
The KLH* Modal Sixf
irobably sounds better on a
wider variety of musical
material than any other
speaker. It was the first
ull-range speaker designed
and built entirely by KLH.
And after eleven years on
the market, it remains the
most consistent best seller in
the history of the audio
industry.
PARTY PICS
364-1777 Call Today
TIRES BALANCED
$1.50 each
LEO'S GULF
•04 N. Porter
4!
The reason is that the Model
Six is the point of sharply
diminishing returns in
speakers. Any improvement
on it is more likely to be
one to measure than to
hear, and every small
improvement will cost a lot.
■h
1ZLOTHES
IYloset
V/’i' k
I
KLH
•• oe ossseacas stw^eeelV «•••
ISuggetled retail pncet. to*1
Coati, $134;
N
........... *
41
,f
rally leader
ruling of the Student
>urt. However the rul-
ing left the loophole that anyone
could try out for cheerleader in
any costume.
i
Large isleetis— of
these papular labels:
Act III
Jonathan Logan
Butte Knft
Modern Junior
Whinwee
By George
Allee Martin
Vicky Vaughn
and many others
THE
KLOTHES KLOSET
Open M Mondays till 8 p.m.
Layaways Welcome
BankAmerkard Mastercharge
717 N. Porter 32MMB
li — I
bl 1 feh'1'
Randy Palmer < left). Anadarko freshman and Bryan Beachboard
congratulate each other in being selected as the new rally leaders
for OU football contests. Palmer will appear in his traditional Indian
costume and Beachboard will appear in a raccoon coat.
(Photo by Steve Hutchens)
KENT, Ohio (UPI) — Kent
State University President Ro-
bert I. White Friday was pre-
sented a student petition which
blamed last spring’s campus dis-
turbances which led to the death
of four students on “outside agi-
tation.*’
Another Kent State student
was arrested Friday on an in-
didtment handed down by a
special state grand Jury which
conducted a month-long investi-
gation into the May 4 shootings
of the four students by National
Guard troops.
The students presented the pe-
tition to White as part of a “civil
liberties moratorium” held here
and on other college campuses
Randy Palmer, Anadarko
freshman, was selected rally
leader by the B-member Sooner
Rally Council Thursday night
Palmer, the center of a contro-
versy about former OU mascot
Little Red. will appear in Indian
costume at OU football games
Bryan Beachwood. Enid soph-
omore who will appear at games
in a raccoon coat, was also se-
lected rally leader.
The two were chosen from
among four students who tried
out on the basis of costume, tal-
ent and ability to generate spirit,
according to R Z. Howell, Nor-
man graduate student and coun-
cil member
Palmer appeared in Indian cos-
tume at the OU • Oregon State
football game as Little Red His i
apearance as Little Red was ban-
New Arrival. ..
The knit look
of matching berets,
gloves, and scarves.
“LET US COMPETE in ele-
vating the human spirit, in
fostering respect for law
among nations and in promot-
ing the works of peace. In this
kind of competition, no one los-
es and everyone benefits.”
In his second speech before
the world organization since
becoming President, Nixon said
there were many sound reasons
why the United States and the
Soviet Union should seek a new
course towards peaceful rival-
ry
Nixon cautioned against un-
derestimating the "seriousness
of the disagreements” between
Moscow and Washington but
cited four specific areas that he
said provided a basis for U.S.-
Soviet cooperation.
HE LISTED tbeao an: Avoid-
Si
NARROWS - STRAIGHTS - FLARES - BELLS
Nixon invites Soviets to work for peace
IN THE MIDDLE EAST, he
said, the United States and Rm-
sia should work for “continuat-
ion of the cease-fire and the cre-
ation of confidence in which
peace efforts can go forward.”
In mentioning his Vietnam
peace proposals he urged the
United Nations to register its
concern about treatment of pri-
soners of war taken captive in
the conflict.
ing a nuclear exchange that
would cost the lives of tens of
millions of people.
Reducing “the enormous cost
of arms” and redirecting re-
sources toward progress. In-
creasing trade and contact.
Competing in the "global chall-
enge of economic and social de-
velopment.”
Nixon did not refer specifical-
ly to a hardline U.N. speech
two days ago by Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko, but
his reference was clear when
he remarked pointedly:
“I see no point in respond-
ing in kind to traditional cold
war rhetoric. The facts of the
recent past speak for them-
selves. An effort to score de-
bating points is not the way to
UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -
President Nixon invited leaders
of the Soviet Union today to
Join him in building a "new
road” to peace by ending the
arms race and competing in-
stead in leading the world to
economic and social progress.
In a speech to the 25th an-
niversary session of the Gener-
al Assembly of the United Na-
tions, Nixon made this appeal:
“I invite the leaders of the
Soviet Union to Join us in tak-
ing that new road-to join in a
peaceful competition, not in the
accumulation of arms but in the
dissemination of progress; not
in the building of missiles but
in waging a winning war
against hunger and disease and
human misery in our own coun-
tries and around the globe.
following the grand Jury report
of its investigation.
The grand Jury said "major
responsibility” for the Kent inci-
dents was the "permissiveness"
and “over-indulgence” of the
school's administration.
The petition was signed by 2,100
students. They told White the
petition would have an addition-
al 10,000 signatures by next
"The members of Kent State
University, who are primarily
here for an education, wish to
express the desire of our institu-
tion to remain open," the peti-
tion said. "We do not wish to
have our university closed due
to those acts committed by those
not associated with our institu-
tion.
"Outside agitation is not view-
ed favorably no matter what
cause the agitators support."
’ >• 1*1
6 ’’ < v '
•rarMMOrraEUST^^he
speech dealt with improvement
of Soviet-American relations.
There were no major surprises
or explicit new offers in the
address although Nixon stress-
ed the need for the two super
powers to prevent war in the
Middle East.
He touched only briefly on
his recent Indochina peace plan
which included a proposal for
a standstill cease-fire.
Of America’s role in the
world, Nixon said: "We can
with complete honesty say that
we maintain our strength to
keep the peace and not to
threaten the peace The power
of the United States will be
used to defend freedom and
never to destroy freedom ”
1311 3. Jeakins
EVERYDAY PRICES
All 8-Track Tapes 6.98 for 4.95
All Record Albums 4.98 for 2.99
All other topos end records
discounted 25-35%
THE HUB
Pew* Underground F*k Service Benkert*
Saturday, October M, lftg
THE OKLAHOMA DAILY, University at Oklahoma, Norman, Okla
page fear
I • i
•al
i
I
i
1
I
i
1
1
i
I
i
1
1
1
I
I
<
I
I
i
I
«
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.
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.
Livermore, Sarah. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 44, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 24, 1970, newspaper, October 24, 1970; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1825038/m1/4/?q=%22Education+-+Colleges+and+Universities+-+Faculty+and+Staff%22&rotate=90: accessed July 10, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center.