The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 66, No. 18, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 18, 1979 Page: 2 of 14
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Goddard
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Article stoppage abandoned
Norman
weekend
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Traffic crashes fatal
City council to meet
No charges to be filed
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of Duncan.
Golf
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Two Locations
to serve you
Through the hustle and
bustle of a Norman foot-
ball weekend, this daring
couple appears to be go-
ing against the flow of
traffic.
•1121 Elm in
Stubbeman Village
364-6133
•1325 E.Lindsey in
Colonial Estates Mall
360-1106
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Op«n
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was Jerrikaye Savage, 18 9
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Fine Italian Food
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News Department
Business i Advertising
Chuck Mouse Edikxiei Supervisor
Susan Sasso Advertising and Business
Manager. Robert R Salmon Production
Superintendent
5 565 BUCHANAN S
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Th« OIMmu O«il, « mu>m m m-
com clooo »••>••• M H Hanaao. |
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o< (be Education Amendments o( i®72
does not discriminate on the basis ot race
color national origin or sea in any ot its
policies practices or procedures Thia m-
ouoes, out is not tunned to admission
emptoyment fmane »ai aid and educe-
liOnai aei»H,ea
Subscription Price
The Oklahoma Daih
Published Monday through Friday (except for the
following University holidays: September 3.
November 19-23, December 18-January 9, March 10
14, May 6-June 4 and July 4) plus the following
Saturdays: 15 & 22- October 6 & 27, and
Oklahoma 73019.
USPS No. 406-540
ONE
WAY
S !
NO MEMBERSHIP REQUIRED
SOONER
* T> A A/”»T TT-irri w~» > — —. .
AMUSEMENT CENTER7^
• Racquet Bell
• Pinball b Vending Machines
• Self Service Laundry
364-7544
Across From Intramural F<«id
1425 George
Stout said that advisory board needs to be
reconstituted.
The proposal for a student board is for positive,
open dialogue where the students' input is worth
something, Wintory added.
The student board would consist of pre-med and
pre-pharmacy students or students whose parents are
involved in medicine or hospital administration.
These students would have access to ideas for hospital
administration and serve a minimum two-year term,
Wintory said.
The Cleveland County
District Attorney’s office
Monday moved to file no
charges against an OU
student following a
weekend auto accident
which killed another stu-
dent.
No charges were filed
against Scott Henry Sch-
weinsberg, 20, driver of a
vehicle which collided
with another vehicle at
College Avenue and
Hoover Street.
Killed in the accident
Feeling
Romantic?
Bring
Your Date*
to Orins Pizza
Enjoy Our
Romantic Atmosphere
737 Asp
I Block North ol th« Union
Th* Otluhomu Dall, it pubi.thtd t>, m«
Pubkctlions BourO ot mt Uiworntv ot
Or ithomt at a student nowapapor tuning
lha Univstsuy community
V.tnl ... aiM.M» in IM
OtlaMma Oatl, ata moat ol Ths
Ottattomi Oslty ut tult and con*
*-t»v*o'3 Opinion, sc not nacattaM,
'oprotont views ol 0 U student, faculty
ot admm.avafott
IM Onanoma Oa«y ess founded m
1*14 it It a memos' ol the Aaaoctatad
p'”t sssoetsted Collegiate Pratt, and
Ouahoma Proa, AitociaWn
Hut oubhcetion pnmad oy ma Joor.
naMm Prat a. it ittuad Oy ma Universal,
Ol OSIshums end avllwicM tty ttoo Wao-
two Ouociot ol Student PuBucaiiona
*4 .MO copipa novo seen propar ad and
dittributoo at no eott Io ma taiMyott ol
tha Stste ol Oklahoma At an avarapa coat
ot -7000 00 par issue. Tha Oklahoma OaUy
’• Imancad entirely through tha tala ot
advancing and subscription,
Thit .natrtufion m compliance with Title
moltMCwn Right, Acto"N4and TulaIX
OKC visit on schedule
OKLAHOMA CITY
(AP) — Vice President
Walter Mondale has
scheduled a November
visit to Oklahoma City to
help Oklahoma
Democrats raise funds
and stage their annual
(continued from page 1)
With this universal language, the dying will at-
tempt to communicate with whom he most wants to
communicate, tell him when he needs help and what
he needs.
Kubler-Ross asked the audience how each would
feel if a dying person wished to speak not to them but
to another individual when death was close. As the
audience responded with feelings of shame, guilt and
hurt, Kubler-Ross emphasized the effect such feelings
would have on a terminally ill patient.
Terminally ill patients need the security of what
Kubler-Ross terms unconditional love or love that
asks nothing in return. It is the same way that Kubler-
Ross stresses children should be raised in order to
produce a society where the third cause of death
among children is not suicide.
“We don’t want a society where love is dependent
on whether you buy me a sable coat this year,”
Kubler-Ross said.
Death has profound effects upon families as a unit,
Kubler-Ross emphasized, and it is the family as a
whole that must work to complete a dying in-
* dividual’s “unfinished business.”
In her research Kubler-Ross works with families
who have a terminally ill family member. Kubler-
Ross quite often works with children.
To an audience that hardly breathed long enough
to utter a cough, she detailed the story of a young
girl’s fight with cancer and the shattering toil it took
on her family.
In three visits Kubler-Ross attempted to take the
child from the hospital atmosphere back to the home,
help the family become accustomed to the idea of her
impending death and to put the child in livable and
meaningful surroundings.
After the child, Jamie, was put on a “large bed,
under a large window in the living room” not in the
bedroom where she would become isolated and
restricted, Kubler-Ross used the technique of spon-
taneous interpretation of pictures to better unders-
tand the child’s feelings toward death.
The technique is borrowed from Susan Bach and is
a process by which a picture drawn by the child is
divided into quadrants to be examined individually.
“Three quadrants of the picture were filled with
color and figures,” Kubler-Ross said, “but the top
left hand corner which depicts her spirituality was
empty except for a balloon,” she said.
According to Kubler-Ross the balloon, colored
purple, was indicative of Jamie’s ability to leave this
world. Purple, Kubler-Ross said, is the color for
spirituality.
It was this knowledge that helped Jamie’s mother
to relax in her attitude toward Jamie's death.
As the physical quadrant deterioates, the spirituali-
ty grows, Kubler-Ross said.
By watching for a dying person’s symbolic
language and helping to deal with unfinished
business, it is possible to subtract much of the grief
from the sense of loss that remains after death.
“Grief is allowed, grief work is preventable,"
Kubler-Ross said.
Grief work is the fear, shame and guilt that ac-
company death and can be dealt with by using un-
Mane Man
1364-13251
(continued from page 1)
Blumenthal said the competition in women’s
golf was getting much better, but said Ohio
State’s performance was somewhat of a surprise.
Blumenthal said she doesn’t believe a team can
consistently play as low as Tulsa and the other
teams did, and predicted that the team to shoot
under 300 each round would win the tournament
which ends Wednesday.
The coach also added that Oklahoma’s
notorious winds might benefit the Sooners later in
the tournament.
Ob’s Kris Monathan said the Lincoln Park
course was in great shape, and the weather was
also good for low scores.
Monathan was very enthusiastic about OU’s
chances to finish with a good score. She said most
of OU’s players were capable playing a little better
than they played in the first round.
Monathan predicted the winning individual
would shoot between 210 and 215.
OU player’s scores were: Dorea Mitchell, 72;
Monathan, 73; Sheri Guariglia, 75; Steph
Mischke, 78; and Susan Smail, 81.
Monday-Saturday
11:30am to IZmidnight
Sunday
11:30am-11pm
(continued from page 1)
percent of the financial support of Goddard, which
was established in the early 1970s. Despite opposition
by the OU administration, OU board of governors
and state regents, students fought for the fee increase
to support the health center, he said.
Wintory wants policy input to Goddard to be pro-
portionate with financial input. The two-member stu-
dent advisory board used in the past has proved to be
inadequate, he said.
£
percent since last winter and the subcommittee is at-
tempting to determine whether the industry will heed
Carter’s appeal for a price freeze.
Eight other oil companies also failed to show up at
Monday’s hearing on heating-oil prices, but these all
promised to send representatives to a subsequent ses-
sion, Moffett said.
In a Sept. 14 letter released by the subcommittee,
Texaco President John K. McKinley told Moffett:
“As you know, Texaco has already announced its
WASHINGTON (AP) — Two major U.S. oil com-
panies told Congress Monday they can’t endorse
President Carter’s request for a freeze on heating oil
prices and a third refused to testify.
Both Gulf and Sun Oil companies told the House
Government Operations Committee’s energy sub-
committee that, while they plan to hold prices as low
as possible, they can’t make any promises.
A Gulf official said a mild winter might actually
mean a slight drop in consumer prices from the record
high current levels of around 80 cents to 83 cents a
gallon. But he cautioned congressmen against being
overly optimistic.
The holdout, Texaco, was immediately threatened
with a subpoena. The subcommittee scheduled a
Tuesday session to determine whether the firm should
be forced to appear.
Texaco previously announced it intends to freeze
her ling oil prices this winter — winning the praise of
the president, who held Texaco up as a standard for
the industry.
But a congressional staff official alleged Monday
that Texaco actually may raise its prices in January
despite its public line-holding assertions. And the oil
clairn^^5^ t0 Sh°W UP t0 defend itSdf against thc
The subcommittee chairman, Rep. Toby Moffett,
D-Conn., said of the 11 major oil companies he had
refused^odo"fy’ TeXaC° Was thc only onc ,hat flatl*
WASHINGTON (AP) — The government Mon-
day abandoned its efforts to stop publication of news
articles describing construction of the hydrogen
bomb, although it had contended such information
could compromise national security and lead to the
spread of thermonuclear weapons.
The Justice Department announced that it would
seek dismissal of two suits it had filed in an effort to
stop publication of H-bomb data.
Those suits were filed against The Progressive
magazine of Madison, Wis., and against the Daily
Californian, a student newspaper at the University of
California at Berkeley.
“The reason for the dismissal was the publication
of an article containing restricted information con-
cerning thermonuclear weapons information by a
newspaper in Madison, Wis.,” said Terrence Adam-
son, chief Justice Department spokesman.
The Madison Press Connection published what the
government said was secret information about the
hydrodgen bomb on Sunday. The article was based
on information supplied by Charles Hansen, 32, a
computer programmer from Mountain View, Calif.
Although the Justice Department said it would
seek dismissal of the two “prior restraint” suits it had
filed, Adamson left open the possibility of criminal
prosecution in connection with publication of the ar-
ticle.
Adamson said the department’s criminal division
“will undertake a preliminary inquiry to determine
whether any prosecution is appropriate for violation
of court orders in the two cases and the Atomic
Energy Act."
The Progressive had been barred by a federal court
in March from publishing its article on hydrogen
bombs. There were indications that the department
investigation would focus on whether the Progressive
leaked the content of its article to other publications
in violation of the court injunction.
Adamson refused to explain what course the in-
vestigation would take.
The government also has maintained that publica-
tion of restricted data dealing with the H-bomb
would violate the Atomic Energy Act.
However, Adamson said there would be no risk in
any future publication of Hansen’s information
because, he said, it is now in the public domain.
Adamson said the government feels that national
security may have been hurt by publication of the
Hansen letter, which Adamson said exposed three
critical concepts dealing with H-bomb construction.
The Progressive had contended the information in
its article was readily available to the public and that
the article was about secrecy in the nuclear weapons
industry and not about the making of a bomb.
Oil companies reject freeze
By JANE ALDRIDGE
Three individuals were pronounced dead on arrival
at Norman Municipal Hospital Monday afternoon
following a head-on collision on Highway 9 near
108th Avenue, Norman police said.
Victims of the crash were identified as Mark Allen
Cartwright, 18, of Maud and Edith Ardelta Mason,
61, and Hazel Marie Lawrence, 65, both of Norman
Officer Robert Post of the Norman Police Depart-
ment Traffic Unit is still investigating the collision.
However, it has been determined that Cartwright was
westbound on Highway 9 when his car went left of the
center line and crashed into the vehicle driven by
Mason.
Lt. Leon Sugg said Mason’s car braked and skidd-
ed prior to impact, then was pushed backward to the
west.
There were no other passengers in either vehicle.
A Noble man, Phenic A. Smith, was killed in a
Saturday auto accident near Moore on Sunnylane.
Two passengers in Smith’s car were admitted to Nor-
man Municipal Hospital and found to be in good con-
dition. Smith’s wife, DeeLois, and George W
Ragsdale were treated for multiple cuts and bruises.
Smith’s car, police determined, was traveling south
on Sunnylane when it swerved to miss a northbound
cat which had entered his lane after passing another
Driving the other car was Dean Gilbert Wright 23
of Midwest City.
Cuts for Men & Women
1213 W. Lindsey
(Across the street from McDonalds)
conditional love prior to death.
Kubler-Ross went on to stress the importance of in-
hospital liaisons for dying persons and their families,
screaming rooms for families to express first-felt
emotions upon the death of the individual and later
contact by hospitals with the families, especially of
accident victims, to answer questions.
Viewing the body while it is still in the hospital is
also necessary to eradicate later self-denial of the per-
son’s death by family members.
With the larger part of her speech over, Kubler-
Ross kept an already captive audience in their seats as
she revealed her already much publicized research
and in (he period that transpires immediately
Calling the criticisms of her work on life after death
the “BS that was the fertilizer for my work,” Kubler-
Ross said the attacks by the news media reflected peo-
ple s “fear that what you are doing is actually right.”
Dying, Kubler-Ross said, is identical for all per-
sons.
“At the moment of death you shed your body. You
are in an existence that has no time or space ” she
said.
People at death are capable of communicating with
persons who preceded them in death. Kubler-Ross
supports her theories with accounts by individuals
who were declared dead and survived. These persons
tell of feeling detached from their body and of being a
whole person despite the loss of limbs, Kubler-Ross
said.
A blind man told of the persons who were in his
room and came in and out,” Kubler-Ross said.
After the dying person feels the wholeness, he
crosses a bridge or a tunnel to a source of light
Kubler-Ross said.
It is her idea that he is there met by a God or a force
with Whom he then recalls every moment of his total
existence.
There is no Hell, but that time where he is forced to
meet with his every thought and deed is his Hell.
hen, Kubler-Ross said, is when we learn whether
we lean closer to Hitler or Mother Teresa. Bad or
Good.
- $
RACQUET BALL & U'
iL
heating oil plan ... We do not believe it would be ap-
propriate for us to participate in discussions with
competitors regarding their future heating oil pricing
policies and related plans. ”
Attempts to reach Texaco officials on Monday for
comment were not immediately successful.
John Galloway, subcommittee staff director, told
the panel that Texaco’s promise to freeze heating oil
prices was misleading. He noted that the “promise”
only covers the rest of this year — before the heaviest
part of the heating season gets underway.
“Much of the discussion...ignores the het that
Texaco has made no pledge whatsoever concerning
heating oil prices after Dec. 31,” Galloway testified.
And he said that despite Texaco’s vow to liberalize its
credit policies, “Texaco credit terms remain among
the most stringent in the industry.”
"Texaco appears to be doing little beyond what the
rest of the industry is already doing. Its prices are
among the highest in the industry and will remain so
with no assurances regarding price incrases after Dec.
31,"Galloway said.
Jefferson-Jackson Day
dinner.
The $25-a-plate dinner
isscheduled for7:30p.m.
Nov. 2 at the Appliance
Building at the State
Fairgrounds in
Oklahoma City.
■ 5
■ ■ ■ ■ - .... .
page 2 THE OKLAHOMA DAILY, Norman, Oklahoma Tuesday, September 18,1979
_
A motion for a sublease of the George M. Sutton
Wilderness Park to the Oklahoma Tourism and
Recreation Department and the State Board of Public
Affairs will be considered by the Norman City Coun-
cil at its regular meeting Tuesday evening.
The contract provides the sublease would be in ef-
fect for 99 years, terminating July 1, 2078. The lease
payments, amounting to a total of $99, will be
payable at the time the contract is executed.
Also to be considered will be the addition of a final
tract of land to the Western View Addition, im-
provements at a railroad crossing located at Post Oak
Road, and a contract with an Iowa company for
$50,000 for treatment of portions of the city sewers
for root control.
The public is invited to attend the meeting held at
7:30 p.m. in the meeting room of Pioneer Multi-
County Library.
■
B
B-
following University holidays: September 3
.—. _ * • r. J
14, May 6-June 4 and July 4) plus the following
NovemberJO.^at 860 Van Vleet Oval, Norman,
ISSN NO. 0030-171X
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Robertson, Stephen. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 66, No. 18, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 18, 1979, newspaper, September 18, 1979; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1829516/m1/2/?q=%22led+zeppelin%22: accessed June 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center.