The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 73, No. 175, Ed. 1 Monday, June 13, 1988 Page: 8 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.
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A
8 ■ THE OKLAHOMA DAILY ■ Monday, June 13, 1988
I
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► »
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called
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* HHi
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I
2 for 1 draft beer 2-7 p.m. and HI-12 a.m.
MOW
563 Buchanan
329-0040
Open Daily
11:30-2:00
5:00-10:00
Sunday
11:30-9:30
ACO BAR
4 p.m. - 6:17 p.m.
Somebody’s
Darling
is coming io
Brookhaven
Village
I
■ SALAD BAR ■
No sulfites or other chemicals
Putt-Putt
Golf Courses
$2”
Daily Lunch Special
f-J
vides a series of one-day activities
L. —___"___’
reaching out to new experiences.
Trip participants will take a
chartered bus to Bartlesville,
where they will tour the Frank
■
I
$
1U
J \
J
*
K x
After lunch, the tour will re-
turn to the community center for
a concert by a young musicians’
orchestra.
Fees for the trip are $25, in-
cluding all events and tours.
Participation is limited to 40
For details call 325-5101.
/
7
E
tn'
■
an internationally ac-
lARTS/ENTCRTAINMENTl
Cosby fan
meets star
Cosby
cool in the outdoor theater, she
was wearing two sweatshirts with
the sleeves pulled down over her
hands. Her attire caught Cosby’s
attention again.
“He said, ‘Hey, you down
there,”’ Stoegbauer recalled.
iiplMi
r CHINESE RESTAURANT
\ K Luncheon Buffet - $3.99
’ Mon-Fri 11:30-2:00
Deluxe Sunday Buffet - $4.99
11:30-3:00
Deliver after 5 p.m. and all day Sunday 321-2048
364-2100 722 Asp
KJ
L
CT
It
1
lege student, was returning from J
NTzktir V/at-L Tim a R u/hpn q cfp.w-
Louis L’Amour dies at 80
United States. ... His work far transcends the
Western novel genre.”
L’Amour, a meticulous researcher, dispelled
myths about life in the Old West, such as townfolk
fleeing from the bad guys. Many of the actual
settlers, he noted, were Civil War veterans not
home in Jamestown, N.D.,
when he was 15 for what he later called his “yon-
dering” years, picking up such odd jobs as prize
fighter, tugboat deckhand, longshoreman, lumber-
jack, gold prospector, coal miner, circus roust-
about, fruit picker, elephant handler and amateur
archaeologist.
As a result, he was largely self-educated. In
later years, however, he lectured on such campus-
es as the University of Southern California, the
University of Oklanoma and Baylor University.
He said that he “wanted to write almost from
the time I could walk.” He became a prolific
contributor in the 1940s and 1950s to pulp
magazines.
His first novel, “Hondo,” was published in
1953. It was followed by 85 more, along with 14
short story collections and one non-fiction book.
More than 45 of his novels and short stories
were made into movies, including “Hondo,”
“Burning Tights,” “How the West Was Won" and
“Stranger on Horseback.” Stars cast included
John Wayne, Tab Hunter, Natalie Wood and
Alan Ladd.
Among his readers were Presidents Dwight D.
Eisenhower, Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan,
who read “Jubal Sackett” while recovering from
surgery in 1985.
T 0 T O
Daily Specials
Served 11-5
7 Days a Week V /
All $2.65 Il-
All Served with Garlic Bread
Lasagna • Calzone •
Baked Ziti • Spaghetti
with Meat Sauce
Open 11 a.m. to 4 a.m.
315 White 364-2270 |
********
Complete
IBM PC Compatible
systems now available.
Diskettes still only 45<
only at;
lillCROLinK
COMPUTING SYSTEMS
1430 W Lindsey, Ste B, 391-8333
iBIM Behind Bury King
Senior citizens will have an op- Phillips mansion, the Bartlesville
portunity to hear the classical C ", ~ . . .?
tunes of Mozart Thursay when Tower, which was designed by re-
OU’s Elderleam program will
take a trip to the fourth annual
OK Mozart festival in
Bartlesville.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES - Louis L’Amour, whose
scores of Old West novels about gunfighters, law-
men and drifters drew on his colorful past as a
gold prospector, roustabout and jack-of-all-trades, --------------,
has died of lung cancer. He was 80. deterred by gunplay.
L’Amour died Friday night at his home, his L Amour left his I
wife, Kathy, said Sunday.
He wrote 101 books, nearly all of them West-
erns, including “Hondo,” “How the West Was
Won,” “The Iron Marshal,” “The Quick and the
Dead,” “Sackett’s Land,” “Down the Long Hills”
and “Ride the Dark Trail.”
A few hours before his death he was proofread-
ing the manuscript of his latest work, the autobi-
ography “Education of a Wandering Man,” ac-
cording to Bantam Books, his publisher.
L’Amour never smoked, Stuart Applebaum, his
editor at Bantam, said. “His doctor believed that
maybe (his lung cancer) was caused from his days
as coal miner, he said. “But Louis, ever the
historian, said he mined hard rock coal and it
should not have given off the kind of dust that
would cause cancer.”
L’Amour is survived by his wife of 32 years and
their two children, Beau and Angelique.
Nearly 200 million copies of L’Amour’s books
were printed; his works were translated into 20
languages, Bantam said.
“For millions of readers around the world, Lou-
is was the embodiment of the North American
frontier,” Applebaum said. “They were able to
relive our American history and heritage. His
books gave pleasure to truck drivers and truck
stop waitresses, financiers and presidents of the
Rirthefuno&t!
1606 24th Ave. S.W.
(Just North of Hwy. 9)
364-PUTT
54 Holes
(Group Rates Available)
40
Video ,
Games t;-
Batting
Cages
Baseball &
Softball
HL* 1
E
OU’s Elderleam program to visit Bartlesville
■" i claimed architectural master-
Community Center and Price piece,” was designed by the late
7 ‘ ‘ ‘ Bruce Goff, former chairman of
nowned architect Frank Lloyd OU’s School of Architecture.
Wright.
festival in Following the tour, participants
will lunch at Shin’enKan, OU’s
The~ Elderleam program pro- “center for creative thought.”
j •_ ' ___ ^"4 Shin’enKan was presented to
for older citizens interested in OU in 1985 by its former owner,
reaching out to new experiences. Joe D. Price, for use as a center
Trio participants will take a for educational seminars.
The facility, which has been persons.
<4**« intorn atinnallv For (1
in airport
ASSOCIATED PRESS
MILWAUKEE - Lori Stoeg-
bauer says the next time she
meets comedian Bill Cosby, she’ll M
know exactly what to say.
“Oh, my Bill,” she said, repeat- I
ing the line Cosby told her after I
the two met at Mitchell Airport in i
Milwaukee last week.
Stoegbauer, 22, a Marian Col-
New York on June 8 when a stew-
ardess told her Cosby was on the
airplane.
Stoegbauer, a longtime Cosby
fan, tracked down the comedian
in the airport and then screamed,
“Oh my God!”
“And then he just turned
around and said, ‘God? I don’t
see God anywhere. Who said there ■>* Stoegbauer recalled,
that?”’ Stoegbauer recalled. I .<And j said> -y^o, me?’ He said,
said I did, and he said, Don t say, ‘Yes, you. Come up here and
‘Oh my God,’ say, ‘Oh, my Bill. show everyone how you were just
Stoegbauer said she recovered walking.’
enough to shake Cosby’s hand, “He was in the middle of this
take his picture and tell him she big stage, and he had two big vid-
had fourth-row seats for his show eo screens on either side of him
that night at the Marcus Amphi- so everyone could see,” she
theater in Milwaukee. added.
That night at the show, Stoeg- “I got up there and he imitated
bauer walked down an aisle right me and just stood there
below the stage. Because it was laughing.”
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Jones, Brett. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 73, No. 175, Ed. 1 Monday, June 13, 1988, newspaper, June 13, 1988; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1822393/m1/8/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center.