The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 74, No. 202, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 26, 1990 Page: 2 of 12
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.
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*4
*5
I RESTAL I . ETC. \
I
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Wj3
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<y-4
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tan & natural.
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TELEPHONE NUMBERS
News Department
Business Office
Classified and Display Advertising
1101 ELM
STUBBEMAN VILLAGE MALL
FRIED CLAMS
CHICKEN BREAST
SANDWICH
CAESAR BURGER
TACO SALAD..
ALL SPECIALS
INCLUDE A SOFT DRINK
FRENCH FRIES ON
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SERVED 11 AM - 2 PM
LOOK WHAT'S SPECIAL ON
THURSDAY
M290
2 ■ THE OKLAHOMA DAILY ■ Thursday, July 26, 1990
-----NEWSLINE --
*16”
short sleeve by Holbrook, Racquet Club and Wimbledon
which cost more than $800 mil-
lion apiece.
The defense session came on
the heels of another meeting be- porters the two sides have tenta-
tween L
ers of Congress the group held to to 1995 the Gramm-Rudman
THE OKLAHOMA DAILY is published Monday through Friday (except for
University Holidays) plus home football Saturdays, by the Publications Board of
the University of Oklahoma, 860 Van Vleet Oval, Norman, Oklahoma 73019.
Subscription rates are —6 months, $15.00; yearly, $25.00.
Dear Stanley H-J
the
LS AT lifesaver,
(Excerpts from actual letters* j
Stanley H Kaplan has received I
from satisfied LSAT-prep takers.)
.. I was quite pleased when
1 received my score (99th per-
centile). 1 am certain that I
would not have done that well
without taking the Stanley H
Kaplan course."
—Student from Gainesville, FL
“. Thank you! 1 was hoping
to score close to the 90th per-
centile, but that was a dream.
Well, thanks to Stanley H.
Kaplan, that dream has come
true."
—Student from Seattle, WA
Kaplan has more "over 40'
LSAT grads than any one any-
where. So if you want the best
and most experienced in test
prep—call Kaplan today!
•if YOU'D LIKE TO RE AD MORE LETTERS UKE THESE.
COME VISIT US
LKAPLAN
siahut h. itnui twanoHU anna in>
Sooner Federal Building
401 W. Main, Ste.140
321-7362
• Duckhead Shorts
100% cotton - assorterd group of plaids and stripes
• Sport Shirts reg. to VO
100% cotton, i
• Sansabelt Golf Wear 50% off
Short-Slacks-Knit Shirts, all cottons and blends.
—cLathain'§-------
campus conur- r
319 W. Boyd • 360-2908
Open til 6 dailv • Til 8 Mon & Thurs.
The Oklahoma Daily is published by the Publications Board of the University
of Oklahoma as a student newspaper serving the University of Oklahoma
community. r •
Views expressed in articles in I he Oklahoma Daily are those of The Oklahoma
Daily news staff and contributors. Opinions do not necessarily represent views of
OU students, faculty, staff or administrators.
The Oklahoma Daily was founded in 1914. It is a member of the Associated
Press, Associated Collegiate Press and the Oklahoma Press Association. This
publication, printed by the Journalism Press, is issued by the University of
Oklahoma and authorized by Fred Weddle, Director of Student Publications.
13,800 copies have been prepared and distributed at no cost to the taxpayers of
Oklahoma at an average cost of $3,424. The Oklahoma Daily is financed through
the sale of advertising and subscriptions.
This institute, in compliance with Titles VI and VII of the Civil Rights Act of
1964, Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, Section 503 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Section 402 of the Readjustment Assistance Act of
1974, and other Federal laws and regulations does not discriminate on the basis
of race, color, origin, sex, age, religion, handicaps, or status as a veteran, in any of
its policies, practices or procedures. This includes, but is not limited to admis-
sions, employment, financial aid, and educational services.
LOCAL:
Calling all Frankies and Annettes...
The Murray Case Sells Swim Complex, 1701 Asp Ave., will host
a beach party at 8:15 p.m. Friday.
Volleyball and slip-n-slide games coupled with Beach Boys mu-
sic are planned for the evening. Food will be available for purchase
as the snack bar will be open. Admission will be $1 per person.
“This is a good opportunity to relax in an enjoyable and com-
fortable atmosphere,” pool supervisor Kristie Dowdy said.
The next midnight swim is scheduled for Aug. 17, when KMGL
Magic 104.1 FM will broadcast its “Love Songs After Dark” show
from the complex.
STATE:
Massive rains fall on Lawton
LAWTON (AP) - Up to 11 inches of rain fell on Lawton in
four hours Wednesday afternoon, knocking out power for thousands
and causing several accidents, authorities said.
Lawton police did not know of any serious injuries, Capt. Terry
Ball said.
“We’ve had some accidents with injuries, but they could be
anything from a sprained back to a busted lip. We just ship them to
the hospital,” Ball said.
The National Weather Service said 11 inches fell at a Lawton
television station between 2 p.m. and 6:45 p.m.
A flash flood warning was in effect for Comanche County until
7:45 p.m.
“The low water crossings are filling up,” Ball said just after 6
p.m. “I just hope it’ll slack off so drainage can catch up.”
NATION:
Governor vetoes record labeling bill
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) - Gov. Buddy Roemer vetoed a
bill Wednesday that would have required warning labels on record-
ings deemed as promoting such behavior as deviant sex, drug
abuse and violence.
Musicians and recording industry executives had threatened to
boycott Louisiana if Roemer signed the bill — the first of its kind in
the nation. He denied those warnings guided his decision.
“Now, I speak not as a governor, just as a skinny, 46-year-old
parent,” Roemer told reporters. “As a parent and as a governor, this
legislation has presented to me my most severe philosophical con-
flict - my strong belief about decency in the proper upbringing of
my own children versus my strong belief and dedication to free-
dom of speech ... and my innate desire to avoid excessive govern-
mental interference.”
The bill would have required warning labels on recordings in-
terpreted as promoting deviant sex, violence, drug abuse, suicide or
child abuse and prohibited their sale to people under age 17.
WORLD:
Britain announces big defense cuts
LONDON (AP) - Britain, NATO’s most hawkish member,
said Wednesday it plans to pull half its troops from West Germany
and cut its overall regular forces by 18 percent in response to a re-
duced Soviet threat.
The United States announced defense reductions after last
year’s democratic revolutions in Eastern Europe. But British offi-
cials had cautioned against any quick decisions to slash forces.
In Wednesday’s announcement to the House of Commons,
however, Defense Secretary Tom King acknowledged the lowering
of global tensions. “Our aim is an orderly and planned transition
to the new world unfolding,” King said. “It is a time of opportunity
and hope for change, yet without putting at risk the safe protec-
tion of our country.”
WEATHER:
Cloudy skies may offer more relief
Today: Partly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of afternoon
thunderstorms. High in the lower 90s. South wind 10 to 20 mph. To-
night: Partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of evening thunder-
i storms. Low in the lower 70s. Friday: 20 percent chance of afternoon
thunderstorms. Otherwise partly cloudy with a high in the lower
90s.
budget.
Gephardt said major differ-
ences in defense levels is a major
hang-up in reaching an overall
budget compromise.
Despite Bush’s earlier agree-
ment that the government must
pull in more tax revenues, “no-
■ t-----------------
hard to put the final package to-
gether,” the Democratic leader
said.
---1 PAGE 2 I--
Bush asks for small defense cuts
push the budget summit talks deadline for balancing the
along.
White House spokesman Mar-
lin Fitzwater said that at either
Thursday’s or Friday’s meeting,
both sides will “simultaneously”
put proposals on the table for cut-
ting $50 billion from the deficit
next year and $500 billion over
Bu^Democratic budget bar- ’x,dY wants??Jairs,i 5?xes.lt’sv<:ry
gainers disputed that, saying no
decision had been made on ex-
588
—Only at Latham’s
hipoppotamus
both congressional armed
with production of the B-2 bomb-
L_
The House is considering halting
ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON - President
George Bush pleaded with law-
makers Wednesday to spare the
defense budget from cuts even
deeper than the $18 billion al-
ready targeted by the Senate
Armed Services Committee.
Bush urged key lawmakers on
both congressional armed ser-
vices committees to press ahead
’ r
er and other major new weapons, changing offers.
The House is considering halting “That is so silly,” said Senate
production of radar-evading jets, Budget Committee Chairman
james Sasser, D-Tenn.
House Majority Leader Rich-
ard Gephardt, D-Mo., told re-
Bush and the five top lead- tively agreed to extend from 1993
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Eek, Erik. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 74, No. 202, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 26, 1990, newspaper, July 26, 1990; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1819020/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center.