Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 92, No. 114, Ed. 1 Friday, July 3, 1981 Page: 2 of 42
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Court defers
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
2. Friday, July 3, 1981
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Bottles in park banned
EL RENO — The city council has adopted
an ordinance prohibiting possession of glass
containers at city parks, an action aimed at
preventing injuries from broken bottles.
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Barefoot Originals
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Van Eli
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Hospice
Continued “
to get the program un*
der way.
A 30-member board,
consisting of business*
men, doctors, nurses
and other health pro-
fessionals, will oversee
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rodeos,” said White, whose father
owns a ranch in Okmulgee. Several
rodeo families attended the Edmond
competition.
Tom Walker's parents rode the ro-
deo circuit and he started roping
calves when he was 10. His wife,
Kerry, is a world champion barrel
racer. Their son, B. J., is of pre-rodeo
age but, “He'll be starting up pretty
quick.”
“We've been raised on it all our
lives. It's about all we know," said
Walker, 31, of Norman.
There also are loners like Jeff
Thompson, 19, a bareback rider
from Plano, Texas. "I’m scared of
marriage. You can't afford to think
about a wife and child.”
Wistfully eyeing the Edmond
• 74.04
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the organization’s oper-
ation.
“We will use a team
approach to meet fami-
ly needs that may in- ’
elude social services,
help in meeting the fi-
nancial care for a pa- l
tient and spiritual ser-
a
i
Oxiahoma C
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Continued
cations Inc., a Denver-based cable TV corpo-
ration.
"The people of El Reno have been good to
me and I feel like I did a good job," said
Neal, city manager since March 1979. He
said he gave the city council 60 days notice.
Neal will be ATC regional manager in Nor-
man, succeeding Charles Gramlich.
Slaughterhouse zone OK’d
HARRAH — Town trustees have voted 4-1
to rezone property at 101 E Main from com-
mercial to heavy industrial zoning for a pro-
posed slaughterhouse.
Recommended for denial by the planning
commission, the request has drawn consid-
erable protest from citizens who fear the
slaughterhouse will lower surrounding prop-
erty values and encroach on nearby residen-
tial areas. Mike Owens, who intends to oper-
ate the slaughterhouse, said it will be a fair-
ly small operation.
Firemen without contract
DEL CITY - City firefighters are official-
ly working without a contract since the 1980-
^K^conjyact expired“Tuesdayinghtgbut the
city has gone ahead and glven employees an
8 percent cost-of-living increase, Mayor Jim
Nolen said.
Nolen said despite the contract's expira-
tion, the city granted firefighters the raise
as “a measure of good faith. It also re-en-
forces our stand on the cost-of-living In-
crease as we proposed it in the contract ne-
gotiations."
Faculty fees questioned
NORMAN - The University of Oklahoma
Provost's Office is expected to reconsider
charging OU faculty and staff members fees
for use of the Huston Huffman Physical Fit-
ness Center, an OU Faculty Senate spokes-
man said.
Dr. erree Foster, chairman-elect of the
faculty senate, said Jack Stout, vice provost
for student affairs, will make a recommen-
dation next month concerning fees charged
faculty and staff for use of Huffman Center's
physical and recreational facilities. A facul-
ty senate executive committee recently rec-
ommended charging one flat rate for use of
all OU recreational facilities.
$
Stray pickup ends,
f ST. LOUIS (AP) -
, jThe Humane Society,
vhich has picked up
tay dogs at the city's
request for 30 years,
eas it will drop the
service because the
es surveyed showed "there are some
serious problems which have o be
remedied." He said the six later cas-
es surveyed had fewer problems
than loans granted before 1980.
The report concluded problems
with specific homeowner com-
plaints were a small part of the
1,500 such loans awarded since
1967, indicating OCURA provided
good overall assistance.
Edwards challenged why OCURA
officials, in the news release, men-
tioned problems cited in the report
only near the end of the release. Jer-
ry Salyer, OCURA attorney, said
problems appear minor compared
to overall loans issued.
"I don't care if there's 1,800 or
18,000 people who have received
loans," Edwards said.
“If 18 people had their lives ru-
ined and their homes destroyed by
this program, then that's too much.
We’re talking about individuals.
This is not a matter of big num-
bers."
Salyer said the press release was
circulated to "balance out" criti-
cism of OCURA's role in the pro-
gram. "This program is worthwhile
and there have been results."
V
h *
afford little precedential value for subsequent
cases."
“We are obviously deciding only one more epi-
sode in the never-ending tension between the pres-
ident exercising the executive authority in a
Thompson is employed at his fa- world that presents each day some new challenge
ther's paint and general contracting with which he must deal and the Constitution un-
business. der which we all live and which no one disputes
doesn’t pay
231-3440
54 19474
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E3hi3 M99 aa288 And uhile emphasizing That the lme pressure
MS forced a decision on the possible
Timenetetphotoby-mArg grounds, Rehnquist made it clear that the court
Wayne Walker of Chandler shows weekend rodeo can be a family project win think twice about second-guessing the presi-
i he cradles son Justin while riding the fence at the Edmond rodeo. dent in an international crisis.
Rehnquist said the court's intrusions into the
day-to-day issues confronting both the president
and the Congress have been “rare, episodic, and
I
I
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I
Seagram
fires back
at Conoco
:]NEw YORK - Jo-
sph E. Seagram &
Sons filed a countersuit
Thursday against Cono-
(a; the oil company in
which it is trying to ac-
quite a 40.7 percent in-
lerest.
•.The suit charges
hoco’s directors with
: dilations of securities
jaws and with blatant
■ reach of their corpo-
tate duties to share-
1 Inders and asks for in-
unctive relief.
’' Early today, U.S. Dis-
trict Judge Edward
Weinfeld of the South-
i m District of New
fork denied Seagram’s 4;
। notion for a temporary
82**. •
The Oklahoman and Times
TU DAILY OKLAHOMAN
(uses 144-700)
Publlshed eech morning. Monday through Friday
ns BUNDA OKLAHOMAN
(88 10-330)
Pubilehed every Sunday morning
OKLABOMA CITY THUN
(U8P8 406-4800)
Evening edition at The Daily Oklahoman
Publlahed auary evening, Monday through Friday
TUSATVBDAY OSLABOMAN STIMO
turn 120-650)
FuMMhao every Saturday morning
500 North Broadway. See 25125
rules infractions.
Huskerson's complaints about
the Thursday story were part of a
two-page press release distributed
during the afternoon hearing.
. •-However, Edwards said Husker-
spn’s comments showed a “very ca-
talier attitude on their part about
these problems.
he Urban Renewal Authority
Wvoll apparently have you believe
HUD report found nothing much
wreng, but I see the report as very
secious and very damaging. Per-
beps the agency should read it
, again, and then maybe the real mes-
Gae I see there wonit be lost."
:-5mil Huber, HUD area director,
said the conclusions were based on
Ge overall program and were writ-
te separately from the investiga-
ive segment of the report.
• ‘‘We tried to express a perspec-
Ive," he said. "There was an origi-
lal batch of conclusions which were
narsher, and we tempered the tone
of the (final) conclusions."
: Buber said he “directed the gen-
prl tone of the conclusions to be
constructive in the recommenda-
Lions to urban renewal."
J He said a majority of the loan cas-
direction of Kay
Trager, a Carter Coun-
ty Health Department
nurse.
She said a group of
nurses in the health de-
partment has been pro-
viding special care for
cancer patients the
past six years.
"We feel we have a
good start toward a
hospice program," she
said.
In Norman, Nita Ra-
binovitch, a social ser-
vices counselor at Nor-
man Municipal Hospi-
tal, said the hospice as-
sociation there has a
group known as “One
Day at A Time," which
meets monthly.
Scouts taxed . '
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP) - The Court of
Appeals has ruled the
By Scouts of America
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vices," she said.
Medox Nursing Ser- ■
vice of Oklahoma City
began offering hospice ■
services May 1, 1980, n2
served 55 patients last 5
year and 56 patients so zg
far in 1981, said Betty "
Farrell, a Medox nurse s
and also a member of
the central Oklahoma ■
group’s board of direc-
tors.
In Tulsa, hospice ser* “
vices are offered by 5
Nursing Service Inc. M
and the Palliative Care ■
Service based at St.
John's Hospital.
The organization of- 1
fers service in patients' as
homes. It also can offer
help through coordina-
tion with hospital per-
sonnel.
The service began
operation June 2, 1980
with a grant from Unit-
ed Way and some pub-
lic donations, said
Coralie Herrick, a hos-
pice care specialist.
More than 50 patients
have been served on a
physician-referred ba-
sis.
- When a physician re-
fers a patient to the
nursing organization, a
nurse can be sent to the
home to determine
physical, emotional
and other needs of the
patient and family,
Herrick said.
"First, we seek to
control pain and offer
emotional support for
the patient and family,
and then we offer to show’s $14,000 in prize money,
teach family members Thompson said he's been riding four
how to care for the pa- years, but doesn't have the $750 in
tient’s needs and then winnings required to be a full-
extend counseling ser- fledged member in the IRA.
vices as needed."
The Palliative Care
Service of Tulsa is the
only known hospital-
based hospice program
in Oklahoma, Petering
said.
The hospital's hos-
pice program has been
in operation since May
4 and is providing ser-
vice for about 30 pa-
tients who are seen
both at the hospital and
in their homes.
In Bartlesville, a hos-
pice program is being
organized through the
efforts of Jan Gillie and
the Cancer Society.
Gillie said the Bar-
tlesville group hopes to
train its members in
Tulsa and Dallas and
begin operations before
year's end.
At Muskogee, hospice
organizational efforts
are being directed by
Mary McDaniel, in-ser-
vice education director
at Muskogee General
Hospital, and the Mus-
kogee Cooperative Min-
istry.
Another hospice pro-
gram is being planned
in Ardmore under the
t 'I •
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City nawa Okla............ .............
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Unlike Thompson, many young . embodies some sort of system of checks and bal-
cowboys started out with rodeo ances," Rehnquist wrote.
teams in high school and college be- Rehnquist said Carter’s authority to enter into
fore striking out on their own. Roger the hostage accord was embodied in a composite
Branch, 19, recently earned a rodeo of powers granted by the lawmakers, rather than
scholarship to Southwestern State in one specific congressional act.
at Weatherford. "Crucial to our decision today is the conclusion
A computer math major, Branch that Congress has implicitly approved the prac- J
said he has averaged four or five ro- tice of claim settlement by executive agreement,"
deos a week but hasn't decided Rehnquist wrote.
whether to turn professional. "Just as Importantly," he said, “Congress has
John Butler of E mond decided not disapproved of the action taken here. Though .
long ago to become a steer wrestler. Congress has held hearings on the Iranian agree- •
which he’s been since 1956. "I told ment itself, Congress has not enacted legislation,
myself a while back, when I get to or even passed a resolution indicating its dis-
40 I'm gonna quit," said Butler, now pleasure with the agreement"
42. m Th court made it clear that firms and individu-
Poking a plug of tobacco in his als with claims against Iran who cannot get satis-
mouth, he jawed about his age: "I'm faction from the international tribunal may take
going to be like George Blanda. As their disputes to the U.S. Court of Claims, on the
long as I feel like it, I'm going to grounds that the hostage accord resulted in an un-
keep doing it." just taking of property by the U.S. government.
I in Iran pact
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court, tak-
ing just eight days to approve an agreement that
took 444 days to achieve, is deferring to presiden-
l tial authority in international crises and allowing
the next stage of the Iranian hostage accord to go
I forward.
The unanimous decision Thursday clears the
way for the transfer by July 19 of $2.3 billion in
Iranian assets to Iran and an international tribu-
l nal, which will decide claims against Iran.
But the court left open the possibility that some
of those claims might still be settled in the U.S.
| Court of Claims.
Just moments after the decision, the Treasury
I a Department announced it would issue regulations
I Monday requiring that Iranian assets remaining
I in U.S. banks be transferred to the Federal Re-
serve Bank of New York in preparation for deliv-
ery to a foreign central bank. No further details
■ were disclosed.
Acknowledging that the issues struck at the
very heart of American government, the high
. court deterred to then-President Carter’s efforts
P to win the release of the 52 American hostages
last Jan. 20.
“The questions presented by this case touch fun-
damentally upon the manner in which our repub-
lic is to be governed," Justice William H. Rehn-
— quist wrote for the court, which heard oral argu-
I ments on June 24.
mmmm MWBPMEN
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D4OwrySarvfca.3N.7171.
- before 6.30 a.m.
Times, cell betore 730 p.m.
MI betore 10 a.m.
1 1
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37.02 4.17.
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restraining order
against Conoco. The
1 udge set a date of July
14 for a hearing on
Sagram's request for
a preliminary injunc-
lion.
• Seagram attorneys
sought the restraining
order after Conoco filed
notice with the Securi-
ties and Exchange
Commission that Cono-
co was considering a
variety of options, in-
cluding selling part or
-all of the company to a
company other than
Seagram.
« Earlier this week,
Conoco directors rec-
ommended against
Seagram's $73-a-share
tender offer for 35 mil-
lion shares, and filed a
$1 billion federal court
damage suit seeking to
block the tender offer.
Seagram said in the
countersuit that Cono-
co negotiated in bad
faith by using Seagram
to bargain with Dome
Petroleum Ltd., which
had made a tender of-
fer for 22 million
shares at $65 a share.
'/Dome did buy 22 mil-
lion shares and traded
them along with $200
million for Conoco's
52.9 percent holding in
the Hudson's Bay Oil
and Gas Co.
-The suit also charges
that the same day that
Conoco's board reject-
ed.' Seagram's offer it
approved "lucrative"
long-term contracts for
Conoco’s nine top offi-
cers with the purpose
of entrenching Cono-
co‛s management.
1: Conoco declined com-
ment on the suit. A
spekesman did say di-
retors approved em-
ployee agreements that
would take effect if an-
other firm or individual
acquired 20 percent of
■its stock.
WewVerkTimen
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Standard, Jim. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 92, No. 114, Ed. 1 Friday, July 3, 1981, newspaper, July 3, 1981; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1848118/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.