The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 66, No. 138, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 3, 1980 Page: 3 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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Thursday, April 3,1980
THE OKLAHOMA DAILY, Norman. Oklahoma
page 3
r— campus briefs
Exhibit shows
z1985 disaster'
New class offered
Topic to be 'batted' around
Egg hunt slated
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SPECIAL EDUCATION
Izods now S15.90
*
ILLINOIS RIVER!
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WIieeIer DeaIer
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Indian
$22.50
Hills
Inn
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$20 off on All Bikes!
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BOYD & JENKINS
329-3553
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2 FOR 1 DRINKS
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Campus Corner
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Roller Skates
Skateboards
Accessories
Includes salad bar & choice of
potatoes, & hot rolls
In the
country
between
Moore &
Norman
Exodus will sponsor an Easier egg hunt al
noon Friday in Oklahoma City’s Lincoln Park
for children from Mount Carmel Nursery
School.
The activity is a community service project
designed to help children, Robert Hudson,
organization spokesman, said Wednesday.
The child who finds the most eggs will
receive a championship basket, he said.
Norman’s headquarters
for Izods. Over 18 colors
to choose from
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CANOE FLOAT TRIPS ON THE
t'’- Il I iniiis nivcm
Step into spring
with our fashionable
Plumers Bag. Monogram
free for a limited time.
PEUGEOT/X<|
*$quirc5hop’
ftfAMOW HAW <AM»*
LoopRt. Box 337
(2mi. North onHiway 10)
Tahlequah, Okla. 74464
(918)456-8371
Grigsby’s slide presentation will focus on the 13
species of bats which frequent northeast Oklahoma.
Special attention will be given to the brown bat, which
spends the temperate seasons in Oklahoma before
heading back to the caves of Arkansas and Missouri for
the winter.
The lecture will concentrate on insectivorous bats for
the benefit of the faint-hearted, and not on those blood-
sucking beasts which instill fear in the hearts of fair-
necked maidens.
The public is invited to this free lecture, after which a
reception will be held in Stovall’s main building.
I CfIB I
SAIL
THROUGH
‘ATTITUDE
ADJUSTMENT
HOUR’ 1
4-6 & 10-12
Take some action
before the moment is gone
forever...
1-35 & Indian Hills Road
14 oz. Filet s9”
Rph
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• • A™
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on economics and the media at 1 p.m. in Meacham
Auditorium. The discussion, which is open to the
public, should provide a “give and take question-and-
answer period” for participants in the seminar, Clark
said.
Registration for the event will begin at 10 a m. in
Meacham Auditorium. There w ill be a $25 registration
fee.
The seminar is the first major event offered by the In-
stitute of American Enterprise, Clark said. The in-
stitute, he said, is a privately funded organization in the
College of Business Administration. It was formed this
year to * * spread econom ic literacy. ’ ’
One of history’s most misunderstood and mythicized
mammals which also is abundant in Oklahoma will be
demystified at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Stovall
Museum.
Everett M. Grigsby, chairman of the Division of
Natural Science and Mathematics at Northeastern State
University, will lecture on this creature in "Movements
and Mysteries of Oklahoma Bats.” Grigsby, who is
working on his doctoral degree under the tutelage of
Keever Greer, curator of mammals at Stovall, has been
active in conservation of endangered bat species.
BPU candidates must attend
Candidates running for Black People’s Union offices
must attend an election board meeting at 4:30 p.m. Fri-
day in the Cultural Center conference room, BPU Elec-
tion Chairman Greg Branch said Wednesday.
Joe Battles and Mitchell Robinson are running for
BPU president.
Candidates for vice president are Rebecca Marks,
Kevin Jeffrey and Randall Bush.
Journalistic seminar offered
To provide tips on reporting economic issues,
“Economics and the Media: A Seminar for Working
Journalists” will be offered Saturday by the Instituteof
American Enterprise.
The seminar will feature Ray Shaw, president of the
Wall Street Journal, and Mike Jensen, economic cor-
respondent for NBC News, at morning workshops, said
W illiam Clark, assistant director of the Institute.
After a noon lunch, Charles Kittrell, executive vice
president of Phillips Petroleum Co., will speak, Clark
said.
Alexander Holmes, director of the institute, Shaw,
Jensetrand Kittrell will conduct a roundtable discussion
Special Student Rates,
effective until May 16:
for a 13 mi, 4-6 hr. trip
$5/per person; Other
trips available.
Bring Student ID.
Write or Phone
for FREE brochure.
Tracy Sampson and Harold Bennett are running for
treasurer. Running for recording secretary are Ann
Nolan and Laurie White, and Jackie Smith is running
for corresponding secretary.
BPU members are to attend a special meeting Tues-
day in the Cultural Center to hear the candidates’ plat-
forms. Campaigning will take place from April 2-9 and
the election will be April 9.
“In 1985 a cataclysmic coincidence of previous
unknown proportion extinguished virtually all formsof
life on the North American continent. On the morning
of November 27th an accidental reduction in postal
rates on a substance called third and fourth class mail
literally buried and the North Americans under tons of
brochures, flyers and small containers called free.”
“That afternoon impurities that had apparently
hung unnoticed in the air for centuries finally succumb-
ed to gravity and collapsed on what was left of an
already stunned populaton. In less than a day the most
advanced civilization of the ancient world perished.”
Thus begins author/artist David Macaulay’s ex-
planation of the subject of his 22 pen drawings on
display through April 27 at the OU Museum of Art.
Macaulay’s book, “Motel of the Mysteries,” ex-
pounds on the "catastrophe of ’85” while assimilating
the use of his drawings. Macaulay’s art attempts to
guess how present-day lifestyle would be interpreted by
those unearthing its remains.
Onedrawmg, entitled “The Ancient Urn," is in reali-
ty a toilet. So goes the author’s imagination.
Macaulay’s "Ceremonial Burial Cap” depicts a human
skull wearing the 1985 version of (he shower cap.
Macaulay is the author of several books on architec-
tural history, including “Cathedral,” "Castle” and
“Pyramid.”
Macaulay’s exhibition was arranged with the
assistance of Richard Rose of the OU College of En-
vironmental Design and is co-sponsored by the OU
School of Architecture and the Museum of Art.
Museum director Sam Olkinetzky said, "We are for-
tunate to have this delightful and provocative group of
drawings in the spring exhibition season.”
Museum hours are from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday
through Friday, 10 a.m. to I p.m. Saturday and 1 p.m.
to 4 p.m. Sunday. Admission is free.
A multi-media and interdisciplinary ap-
proach will be used by a group of OU pro-
fessors during the 1980 fall semester in explor-
ing the intellectual backgrounds of the 19th
century.
Carolyn Ahern, coordinator of the
classroom experiment, said each professor will
offer his own perspective in discussing the in-
tellectual activity which characterizes the cen-
tury.
Films, music and dramatic productions will
be used.
Listed under English 2050.5, the class will
meet Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from
9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a m., and may be applied
toward the humanities requirement.
Professors include Susan Caldwell, art
history; Jack Kendall, English; Mary Jo Nye,
history of science; and Gary Cohen, history.
*
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Jones, Darla. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 66, No. 138, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 3, 1980, newspaper, April 3, 1980; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1830614/m1/3/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center.