50 years ago, August 23, 1973NOC Enrollment Keeping Pace With Last Year Enrollment for the fall semester at Northern Oklahoma College continues to keep pace with the 1972 figures. According to Rex Herren, registrar, enrollment passed the 960 mark Friday.Accurate enrollment figures for the semester will not be available until the conclusion of open enrollment will continue until August 27, the first day of fall classes on the NOC campus.With the quickening pace of enrollment, class sections are filling rapidly. Herren suggested that students who work or have time periods around which classes must be scheduled, should enroll immediately.As an added convenience to working students the Registrar’s Office at NOC will remain open on Saturday August 25 from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon.Although Northern’s fall enrollment is not expected to reach the level it did two years ago, Herren suggested all statistics on enrollment are not actually comparable. He pointed to the growing number of classes beginning at mid-semester as a cause of many unclear comparisons.Lunch Managers School At THS Attended By 18 A management school for school lunch managers was conducted here last week from Monday through Friday at the Tonkawa High school cafeteria for 18 women representing nine area schools. Mrs. Phyllis Helberg, Ardmore, area school lunch consultant taught the school. Sessions were held from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. for the five days.Schools represented were Billings, Lamont-Deer Creek, Medford, Perry, Pawhuska, McCord, Covington. Union 61 and Tonkawa.Friday noon lunch was served in the cafeteria to 100 business people and visitors from other schools and the meal was prepared by those attending the school. Mrs. Judy Coffey, school cafeteria manager attended the session.Attending the luncheon as a special guest was Chester Coulter, Oklahoma City, state school lunch administrator. He complimented Tonkawa for the fine school facilities and especially the cafeteria and modern kitchen. “You probably have the highest percentage of students eating at your cafeteria in the state. I have found from experience that when the school superintendent is behind the school lunch program, schools always have a high percentage of students eating at the school,” Coulter said. Jerry McKeown, Billings superintendent, was a special guest.Ken Kreger Reported Slightly ImprovedKen Kreger, who suffered extensive burns July 11 in the crash of his light plane, is reported by his parents, Dr. and Mrs. Glenn Kreger, to be slightly improved at this time. He is still in the intensive care ...