Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 92, No. 312, Ed. 1 Friday, February 19, 1982 Page: 2 of 40
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OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
Metro
From Page One
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Trip
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Co-op
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Spring to take peek
at state this weekend
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Oklahoma City is expected to be clear to partly
cloudy through Saturday with a low tonight near
40 and a high Saturday near 70.
He admitted accept-
ing the trips violated
his oath of office "if you
want to term it that
di
n
si
$169.95
..$94.95
.$79.95
$249.00
$149.95
$i64.95
$249.95
$139.00
funds for its operation.
"I will be sad to leave
here in a way," she said
of her upcoming gradu-
c
ti
FULL SIZE
PIANOS
AS LOW AS
$108
145
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Management could
be more difficult In a
scattered site situation,
where the co-op buys
several single family
homes, but are often
the best buys, Askew
said.
Some co-ops have
239-7"1
231-3588
2014310
Candidates accepted
WARR ACRES — Candidates may file
with the Oklahoma County Election Board
between Monday and Friday for two-year
terms on the Warr Acres City Council.
Voters will fill four council seats during a
primary election March 16 and general elec-
tion April 6. The seats are: Ward l, currently i
held by Jim Hoyt; Ward 2, incumbent Carl
Drumeller; Ward 3, Incumbent J.M. Morales;
and Ward 4, incubent Henry Grass.
Ramgopalsaid.
The antibiotic also la
used to fight common
infections contracted
by the two million pa-
tients who contract in-
fections while being
treated each year — an
extra $1.5 billion in
costs.
One drawback, how-
WE OFFER
OUR OWN
CONVENIENT
FINANCING
COME IN AND
COMPARE
OUR TERMS
Mustang positions open
MUSTANG — Candidates for two positions
open on the Mustang City Council may file
between Monday and Friday at the Canadian
County Election Board.
A primary election will be March 16 and
general election April 6. Up for two-year
terms are the Ward 2 seat, now held by Cal-
vin Welch, and the Ward 4 seat, held by Mor-
ris Helfin.
ing one living unit.
Each couple or family
pays a monthly fee —
with no landlord — to-
ward operating costs.
The plan is seen as an
excellent way to get a
buyer or family into the
first home. Equity be-
gins building with the
first payment.
The co-op can be for
those who have a lot in
A high pressure ridge is expected to remain
over the state throughout the weekend, providing
cool nights and warm afternoons with clear to
partly cloudy skies.
Overnight, the state was cool, with lows in the
low to mid-30s. Oklahoma City was fair, with some
patchy ground fog and an overnight low of 35.
Skies should be clear to partly cloudy tonight
with lows ranging from the low 30s to low 40s.
Highs Saturday will range from 68 to 74.
Clear to partly cloudy skies should prevail Sun-
day through Tuesday with daytime highs Sunday
in the mid-60s and climbing into the upper 60s and
low 70s Monday and Tuesday. Overnight lows Sun-
day through Tuesday should range from the upper
30s to low 50s.
Excellent Selection Of
Now and Used Major Brand
PIANOS and ORGANS
1Me
5.81
201
Vincent Sard I, owner
of New York's famed
Sardi’s restaurant,
waded into an ley Cen-
tral Park Lake to res-
ene a woman who near-
ly drowned while trying
to save two brothers
who had fallen through
thin lee.
OVER 60 SHERMAN CLAY STORES CELEBRATE
PANOaORGAN
7404
04
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rts can 21-3434
wasmawwewen
' men enticed to make a
military career by the
promise of such bene-
(Ms as Social Security
- checks for survivors,
she said.
A graduate of the
U.S. Air Force Acade-
my’s first class, Davis
was sent to the Philip-
- pines in 1966. His
’young wife and baby
daughter came to live
with relatives in Okla-
homa City.
"He knew he was go-
; ing to have to go," Mrs.
Carns said. "He said
he'd rather go then and
get back, before Sher-
' rie knew a real loss
from her father being
- gone."
I From the Philip-
• pines. Davis flew air
• raids into Vietnam.
After three months, the
: 30-year-old pilot was
killed when his jet was
• shot down.
The young widow lat-
er remarried another
• career officer. Army
Col. Edwin H.J. Carns,
and forfeited her own
survivor benefits. Sher-
rie now receives $400 a
month, Mrs. Carns said.
Carns is also out-
raged over the cut-
backs, Mrs. Carns said.
He spent a year in the
hospital recuperating
from injuries he re-
ceived in Vietnam.
Marcia Keathly of
Ponca City is also try-
ing to get a job leave to
go to Washington next
week.
Mrs. Keathly's first
husband. Marine 1st LL
Robert Trigalet, was
killed in a mid-air heli-
copter collision over
Vietnam in 1969.
Robert Trigalet’s fa-
ther also died while in
the Marine uniform —
killed in World War II
action.
To Mrs. Keathly's
mind, her 14-year-old
son. Bryan, has given
enough — a father and
grandfather — to de-
serve his $370 a month
Social Security survi-
vor benefits for college,
she said.
“I saw a little notice
•ue
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Stiles park adopted
Stiles Circle, NW 5 and Harrison, is the
first city park to be adopted by a neighbor-
• hood association in the citywide Adopt-A-
Park project.
The Harrison-Walnut Neighborhood Asso-
ciation plans to keep the park clean and
raise money for landscaping. Planned are
Drug
Continued
people allergic to that
drug.
Continued
other firm because "we
didn't know nothing
about them.
"They were way down
in Oklahoma City and
we didn't think they
would deliver."
Boston said higher
bids were sometimes
accepted, based on a
firm's past perform-
ance and service. He
acknowledged that ac-
cepting a lower bid
could have forced down
other vendors prices.
Several times during
his testimony Boston
became irritated when
discussing the vendors
who testified against
him.
Of one vendor, Boston
said, “If you want me to
say he's a liar, I will.
He's a liar."
Boston also admitted
he accepted two ex-
pense paid trips to
Phoenix, Arix., and was
accompanied by sup-
plier J. B. Davis. He
1
1
c
it
a center fountain and
v* / i $
‘ 4atatueorsu
Continued
Athletic Association allows an additional contest
if it is outside the mainland U.S.
Bill Dickerson, assistant business manager in
the OU athletic department, said part of the con-
tract with Hawaii was that OU would be allotted
no tickets. He said the concession was made be-
cause the trip is seen as primarily a recruiting
tool and a reward for players and coaches.
He said fans — tickets or not — will win in the
long run since the game might bring in better tal-
ent and winning seasons. The gate guarantee will
cover only the team's travel expenses.
"The University of Hawaii didn't really want to
play us," Dickerson said. “The ball was in their
court, so they can dictate what they want to do."
Hawaii, 9-2 last year and a bowl prospect, has
no problem getting rid of its tickets to the 50,000-
seat stadium. “Right now, they (Hawaii officials)
did not want to say there were any tickets avail-
•able," Dickerson said.
Dickerson said the office has received only two
or three phone calls from fans upset about ticket
terms. "Usually when we explain it to them, they
see why we agreed to this. People just need to be
informed."
r
a
e
universities In the mid*
70s were able to accom-
s
ll
Continued
leave the city unable to support suddenly ex-
panded park maintenance requirements.
Library measure studied
A bill increasing the she of the Metropol!
tan Library Commission of Oklahoma Coun
ty to ensure broader representation from
area cities will be considered by state House
members soon
House Bill 1868. Introduced by Rep. Neal
McCaleb of Edmond, would increase the size
of the commission from 11 members to 19 by
adding more Oklahoma City appointees and
allowing the mayors of six area communi-
ties to make appointments.
Project nears goal
Oklahoma €Hy Beautiful is about two
thirds of the way complete on its 1982 mem-
bership and finance campaign goal, execu-
tive director Jim Neal said Thursday.
Campaign workers will meet again next
week. Neal said volunteers hope to raise
$65,000 to provide the annual budget of the
beautification group.
Moore hospital work on tap
MOORE — Workers will begin tearing the
roofing from the second floor c* the Moore
Municipal Hospital Monday so concrete can
be poured for the floor of the third story ad-
dition. Administrator Bob Thompson said
three inches of concrete will be poured on
the existing second floor roof.
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3110 L BAT AHNK 943-1047
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An early taste of spring is forecast for the state
this weekend, with daytime highs in the upper 60s
and low 70s expected through early next week.
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GA WEEK’
tors decided to pick up said, however, the trips
the program and pro- were to inspect road
vide Miss Birdwell with equipment.
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CAMBRIDGE, Mass.
(AP) — Radical Susan
Saxe and four others at
Framingham Stale
Prison have been in-
dicted on income tax
violations in connec-
tion with an Inmate-run
computer business, of-
ficials say.
Canon
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The electronic system
camera that’s
changing the course of
photography
F -Smuragrnpryatomatioepo-
co-op housing last year prime to co-op buying,
at an Albuquerque, she said
N M.. seminar. "I've Askew said the plan
would work the same
whether a small co-op
wanted to purchase two
or three houses, or a
large one sought 20 to
30 houses. It works as
well for widows seeking
Condominiums or pro-
Enterteinment.
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A WEEK
While Miss Birdwell
picked a college, she
traveled to the Univer-
sity of California-Los
Angeles (UCLA), to re-
ceive acupuncture
treatments to relieve
the symptoms of
Friedreich’s ataxia.
"She fell in love with
California, found a
school which was more
than accessible to her
and decided to enroll,"
Mrs Birdwell said.
CSU-Northridge was
a leader, she said, in
providing educational
80-200 F4
SALE PAICE
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in the paper that they
were cutting back on
survivor benefits, but I
thought it can't be talk-
ing about us," said Mrs.
Keathly, who has re-
married. “I thought it
can't include children
whose parents were
killed in action."
Mrs. Carns, Mrs.
Keathly and other mili-
tary widows from 35
states have formed Sur-
vivors of Sacrifice
(SOS) to lobby for rein-
statement of those
benefits for military
survivors.
"I'm luckier than
most; my feeling is we
don't really need the
money,” Mrs. Carns
said, admitting she
feels uncomfortable in
the forefront of a
"cause."
"But what about the
other women who ha-
ven't remarried? What
about the kids who
don't have fathers? I
can't sit back and do
nothing."
Their trip next week
is to put focus on a bill
scheduled to be intro-
duced Monday by Rep.
Duncan Hunter, R-
Calif., said Madeline
Van Wagenen, a Cali-
fornia military widow
who founded SOS.
The bill calls for the
Veterans Administra-
tion to pick up the mili-
tary survivor benefits
dropped by Social Se-
curity, she said.
"We're saying to
them "you should pay
for the death you
caused,’ " Mrs. Van
Wagenen said.
common — young pro-' blocks, was picked
fessionals or retired partly because owners
couples — or those who were mostly elderly,
share nothing but the "As they left the old-
desire to own a home er homes to move into
Jay Askew, from the smaller houses, proper-
National Bank's Fort ties began to be ac.
Worth regional center, quired by absentee
said there are no in- landlords. They were
come limits. Created by rapidly deteriorating.”
Congress in 1978, the Ivins said. The co-op is
co-op bank doesn’t fund restoring the area,
the down payment ex- She knows of several
cept in rare circum- Oklahoma City areas
stances It gives techni- she thinks would be
cal help and can offer prime targets. Any
some renovation funds, neighborhood in which
Askew said. there are several
Ivins learned about homes for sale would be
Patients it may help fessionals trying to get
include those who al- into their first house,
ready are being treated "The co-op can be
for one ailment and structured any way you
contract another dis- want it to. Usually, it's
. ease, such as pneumo- easier to acquire a
nia, but suffer serious blanket mortgage at a
side effects from anti- lower Interest rste and
biotics now in use, with smaller down pay-
A WEEK* '
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VIVITAR
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MACROZOOM ioy
ever, is that Pipracil is tax-exempt bond mon-
expensive, costing per- ey or city help. When
haps as much as $120 a buyers want to reno-
day or more for 1 6 to 20 vate a nelghMrhooif,
grams, Ramgopal said. Askew said lenders ap-
"Over the period of a pear more willing to of-
normal hospital stay, fer group mortgages
we're talking about as than single loans. They
much as $1,200 for the like the fact that “up-
medication." keep will begin to hap-
Ramgopal says he pen," he said.
has successfully used it In the Fort Worth
on five patients. It case. Askew said the
shows potential for city is not giving the
fighting infections com- funds. The money has
mon in burn and cancer to be repaid, but Askew
patients, plus female said city officials ha-
genital infections The ven't decided yet
drug is manufactured whether to lend it inter-
and marketed by est-free or assess a
Lederle Pharmaceuti- very low Interest rats,
cals, Pearl River, N.Y. possibly 1 or 2 percent.
Most Oklahoma
schools were ruled out.
Miss Birdwell's mother,
Wilma, said, because
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ataxia, a rare neurolog- opportunities for handi-
ical disease that at- capped students from
tacks the spinal cord throughout the country,
and is often fatal. The Frustration mounted
disease frequently re- yearly, though. Miss
suits In slurred speech Birdwell said, as her
and a severe loss of condition worsened and
muscle coordination daily routine became a
and balance. slower and slower task.
Managing the attend- “I kept meeting more
ant care program is de- and more kids who
manding and the pay is were in the same boat I
minimal, but Miss was, and with their sup-
Birdwell says the prog- port we decided to do
ress has made her see something about it."
the need for similar as- Miss Birdwell wrote
sistance for all hand!- a grant proposal to
capped people. match able-bodied stu-
Her disease was diag- dents with the disabled
nosed when she was 10 students to assist the
years old and a student disadvantaged in mov-
at Oklahoma City's ing through library
Heritage Hall. stacks, carrying lunch
At that time, Miss trays and going to the
Birdwell says she had bathroom.
her parents to do for The grant was ap-
her those things she proved and the
progressively found Birdwell project pro-
harder to do. Then vided help for about 20
came high school grad- disabled students,
uatlon and the time to when the grant ex-
pick a college. pired, CSU administra-
Morming. •ving. Sunday
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been working since
then to get this going.
"One of the things
that intrigued me was a
Fort Worth group used
CDBG (community de-
velopment block
grants) funds to con-
vert a whole neighbor-
hood to cooperative
housing ”
The neighborhood,
covering three square
2 Friday. February 19, 1992
IV 842-3361
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The Oklahoman and Times
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Standard, Jim. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 92, No. 312, Ed. 1 Friday, February 19, 1982, newspaper, February 19, 1982; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1848300/m1/2/?q=%22dewey+redman%22: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.