Lake Keystone News (Mannford, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 49, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 17, 1982 Page: 3 of 20
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Mannford Area Newspapers and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Keystone Crossroads Historical Society.
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V
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Marketing seminar
Consumers are hesitant to Stheir dollars, to spend them
N
A
Lawrence’s Drive-In Pharmacy
Try Our
Drive Up
Service
Hrs. Mon. - Fri. 9-6, Sat. 9-5
h
Mannford Middle School
Honor Roll
lake Keystone News. Wednesday, November 17, Page 3
Locals advance in armed forces
Prescriptions Are Our Business
Service Is Our Middle Name
Try Our Drive-in Window
BILL FRANKLIN
EARL BRYANT
405 East Broadway
Sand Springs, OK 74063
245-1363
4 *
2 —
at your shop as opposed to
somewhere else.
"Furthermore, providing
customer service is rela-
tively easy. It is simply a
matter of recognizing what
needs to be done and
setting goals,” he says.
In order to help busi-
nesses decide what steps
and goals will lead to
improved customer service,
Manzer will teach a two-
day seminar in Stillwater,
Nov. 22 and 23 from 6:30
p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Kenneth Edward Shoe-
maker, a 1973 graduate of
Mannford High School, has
enlisted in the Army to
become a Lifting and Load-
ing Equipment Operator.
Since reporting for active
duty on Oct. 27, 1982.
Shoemaker has been at-
tending basic and advanced
individual training at Fort
Leonardwocd, Missouri.
After training he will be
assigned to Europe.
Shoemaker resides at 128
Granada Place in Mann-
ford.
Army, navy, and air force
news services have re-
leased announce ents of
military achieve nents of
several area residents.
First Lt. Stuart L Brog-
den, son of Wyndell E. and
Shirley B. Brogden of
Route 1, Terlton, has been
decorated with the U.S.
Army Commendation Med-
al in Hanau, West Ger-
many.
Brogden is a logistics offi-
cer with the 130 th Engin-
Phone 405 372 7860
P O Box 1328
2220 East 6th Street
Stillwater, Oklahoma 74074
Superintendent of Schools
Bob Hightower has re-
leased Mannford Middle
School’s nine-week honor
roll.
Listed on the straight-A
Honor Roll were:
Sixth grade:
. Jerri Gill, Adrianne Hale,
Lance Kirkpatrick, Marie
Naranjo, Lance Rice.
Seventh grade:
.Jon Hupp, Susan Miller,
Carla Shore.
Eighth Grade:
.Robbie Cupp, Shelly
Grenier, Robyn Holsom-
back, Joyce Kirkpatrick,
David Moore, Kendria Nor-
wood, Stacey Spess, Jack
W ard, Joel W inans, Aman-
da Wolfe.
On The Principal's Honor
Roll, students with a B
average and no grades
below C were listed:
Sixth Grade:
Angela Barrett, John Bie-
loh, Brandon Beaird, Alana
Berry, Shannon Boone, Er-
ic Brown, Michelle Capers,
Jeremy Chambers, Jeff
Clayton, Jenny Clow,
Charles Downum, Jason
Fincher, Joey Fisher, Chris
Gilreath, Greg Hamilton,
Stacey Hightower, Missey
Hildebrand, Clint Hladik,
Annette Holbrook, Nikki
Johnson, Cynthia Jones,
Tonya Jones, Bruce Laing,
Mary Beth Maddux, Da-
mon Maples.
Also Shannon McDonald,
Juli McIntire, Ron Mears,
Dale Mills, Sophia Muse,
Karen Potter, Janie Potts,
Shana Ramirez, Steve
Riggs, Tammy Roberts,
Marti Shackeford.
The First Day Without
Hunger, a special event for
Tulsa, was announced at
the Tulsa Indian Youth
Council last Thursday.
The event is being spon-
sored by Earth Rice, Inc., a
non-profit, Tulsa-based or-
ganization.
A city wide campaign to
call for the first day in
history when all people in
Tulsa could eat, on Nov. 24.
1982, the day before
Thanksgiving, was ex-
plained.
People in more than twen-
ty counties will be support-
ing Tulsa's pilot demon-
stration. Organizations
such as Elderly Nutrition,
Head Start, Neighbor for
Neighbor, Public Housing,
Urban League groups, the
Mayor of Tulsa, various
churches, schools, busi-
nesses and social service
agencies will be participat-
ing in more than 200 neigh-
borhoods and sites in Tul-
sa.
Claes Nobel, grand neph-
ew of Alfred Nobel, the
Nobel Peace Prize founder,
will come to Tulsa to cele-
brate the First Day Without
Hunger.
Canned goods will be
“Esionclgy,
TMOBILE HOMES
Also Mary Short, Joe
Smith, Christy Strow, Dar-
in Teeman, Kelly Thomas
Angela Troxell, Leia
Wheeler, Rhonda Wolcott.
Seventh Grade:
Melissa Adsit, Pam
Brown, Mary Bruce, Shari
Clifton, Vicki Croskrey,
Kelly Deeds, Jannette Er-
assarret, Andrea Farmer,
Kevin Fry.
Also Monica Hayden,
Manuel Jiminez, Bridgett
Maddux, Jason Moore,
Troy Morris, Samantha
Passmore, Joe Patrick, An-
dale Dnrzall
Also Robin Reed, Regina
Riddle, Natalie Robinson,
Kevin Snelling, Monica
Turner, Steve Watson,
Christine Weingarten, An-
gela Winans.
Eighth Grade:
David Barr, Tammy An-
derson, Brent Burk, Tracy
Callen, Paul Coleman, Kim
Cooley, Dennis Daniels,
Janette Davis, Trad Deeds,
Scott Edmundson, Scott
Epperly, Cherry Farrow,
Delbert Frost, Jason Gloss-
op, Bart Green.
Also Leslie Hammett,
April Heidler, Chris Hicks,
Justin Hope, Joel Hupp,
Usa Jarrell, Ricky Jordan,
Beth Lowery, Jimmy Mad-
dox.
Also Janelle McAdams,
Melinda McDaniels, Terri
McKinney, Michelle Muse,
Tami Sanders, Matt Sav-
age, Heather Smith, Faith
Thompson, Chuck Tudor,
Amy Weems, and Shane
W ooldridge.
Congratulations to each of
these young scholars.
formed last year by Grant
Cooper, now a music facul- Local students
ty member of the Univers-
ity of New York in Fredon- at State Tech
13, I. I.
The program for the pre- Fifty-nine students from
miere performance of Cov- Creek County are among
entry Chorale consists of' 3.292 students enrolled for
“Rejoice in the lord Al- the fall trimester at Okla-
way” (Bell Anthem), by homa State Tech, Okmul-
Purcell; Cantata Number gee.
118, "O Jesu Christ, Mannford residents en-
mein’s Lebens Licht", and rolled at State Tech for 016
Cantata Number 80, “Ein fall trimester are: Karen L
Feste Burg 1st Unser Hitcher, business data pro-
Gott”, both by Bach Han- cessing; David B. Holt,
del’s Concerto for Organ plumbing and pipefitting;
and Orchestra, Number 13, Ronald P. Jacques, numer-
“The Cuckoo”; and Missa ical control machinist; and
Brevis in F (K. 192) by James O. Martin, auto
Mozart. mechanics.
Fleet, embarked aboard the
amphibious command ship
USS Mount Whitney,
homeported in Norfolk, Va
During the two-month de-
ployment, the staff and
ship participated in exer-
cises “United Effort 82”
and “Northern Wedding
82.” “United Effort” was a
joint U.S. and Canadian
exercise with training em-
phasis on coordinates and
anti-air, anti-surface and
anti-submarine warfare, as
well as convoy protection.
“Northern Wedding” was
a major NATO exercise
conducted in Denmark The
axphibisus cnc:disc vas
designed to test the capac-
ity of alliance forces to
resist aggression in the
North Atlantic, Baltic and
Norwegian Seas.
Navy Aviation Structural
Mechanic 1st Class Wend-
ell L Smith, son of Lester
M. Smith of 49th, Sand
Springs, has reported for
duty at the Navy Recruiting
District, Little Rock, Ark.
planned
collected at Neighbor for
Neighbor food bank and
redistributed by the Tulsa
Fire Department stations
and community action a-
gencies to needy families
so that all might have a
bountiful Thanksgiving in
1982.
This special event will be
annualized for Thanksgiv-
ing every year with a
national campaign in 1983,
and as an international
event in 1984. Plans have
been made to recognize
Thanksgiving, currently a
national holiday in the
U.S., as an internation-
al holiday to celebrate the
First day Without Hunger
throughout the world.
" First day without hunger ”
ering Battalion.
Sherry J. Knisel, daughter
of Harold J. Hancock of
Mannford, and brother of
Sue A. Hammons of 111 W.
Monteray, Sapulpa, has
been promoted in the U.S.
Air Force to the rank of
staff sergeant.
Knisel is a law enforce-
ment specialist with the
443rd Security Police
Squadron at Altus Air
Force Base.
Marine Pvt. Greg F.
Barnes, son of Floyd E.
Barnes of Route 3, Box 380,
Sand Springs, has complet-
ed the infantry combat
training course at Manne
F.... n...— r______>1.
• Va Me •0V, UCAA I EauIU-
ton, Calif.
Navy Radioman 1st Class
Gary G. Todd, whose wife,
Sherie, is the daughter of
Everett and Oma Matherly
of Route 2, Box 456, Bris-
tow, Okla., recently re-
turned from a deployment
to the Northern European
area.
He is serving on the staff
of the Commander, Second
• •
• Marine Pvt. Greg F.,
Barnes, Sand Springs.
Music by Bach, Mozart,
Handel, and Purcell will
mark the debut of Tulsa’s
newest choral organization
at 4 p.m. Sunday Nov. 21 at
Trinity Episcipal Church,
501 South Cincinnati.
The Coventry Chorale,
directed by David M. Rollo,
was formed this year to
perform 17th and 18th cen-
tury choral music with tra-
ditional orchestrations.
Rollo, chairman of fine
arts at Holland Hall School
and director of the Tulsa
Junior College Community
Chorus, will be joined by
Robert Wisniewski,
a.a.g.o., director of music
for St. Bernard's Catholic
Church, as organist-
accompanist.
Providing orchestral ac-
companiment for the one-
hour concert will be Musica
Regala, an organization
spend their money these
days Most business people
don't need news commen-
tators to tell them that.
Their cash receipts tell
them.
Yet there is a way to
combat consumer hesitan-
cy, claims Oklahoma State
University associate pro-
fessor of marketing and
director of graduate studies
for OSU’s business admin-
istration program, Dr. Lee
Manzer.
“To succeed in these
times, a business must
have some competitive ad-
vantage over its competi-
tion. ‘That can be many
things-price, location, con-
venience, customer ser-
vice, etc,” Manzer says.
Yet he believes the best
way is by providing good
customer service.
“Just as price is the
decision making criteria in
many people’s buying hab-
its, customer service is for
a lot of other people. It is
one way to help consumers
who are reluctant to spend
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Green, John D. Lake Keystone News (Mannford, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 49, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 17, 1982, newspaper, November 17, 1982; Mannford, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1946041/m1/3/?q=technical+manual: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Keystone Crossroads Historical Society.