Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 79, No. 235, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 19, 1968 Page: 2 of 26
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Tum.. Nov. 1®, 1968 OKLAHOMA CITY TIME!
2 Coeds Fail
%
To Show Up
(ConUiaed From Pago 1)
troublesome.
While the CSC Afro-
American Students picket-
ed Tuesday on behalf of
the two coeds, Dr. Godfrey
again declined to comment
on the girls’ alleged mis-
conduct.
“I better not make any
statement. I might preju-
dice the hearing," Godfrey
said. He did say, however,
a number of white parents
had telephoned the school
to complain about the two
coeds.
"They (white parents)
are very disturbed about
It,” he said.
'Refusal to Obey’
Dr. Charles Richmond,
dean of otudents, said the
two women, In the pres-
ence of Dean of Women
Wilma Armstrong “were
told specifically what their
offenses were.”
Asked to be more specif-
ic, Richmond said, "Ac-
tually, It was a refusal to
obey college regulations.”
Miss Butler and Miss
Greene denied they were
ever given specific details
about any misconduct.
Coeds Gather
Both described a night of
confusion in the dormitory
on November 4, when they
Old City
Terminal
To Tumble
Symptoms
Of Anger
Explored
* Judge
(Continued From Page 1)
The old terminal building
at Will Rogers World Airport
will be the target of demoli-
tion crews in the near fu-
ture.
At Tuesday’s Oklahoma
City council meeting, a reso-
lution was approved for the
building's destruction and a
December 3 bid opening date
was set.
The structure, built in
1932, became surplus in 1966,
when the city’s new terminal
opened for operation.
The possibility of utilizing
the old terminal for a freight
warehouse was discounted
when an airport spokesman
pointed out the design of the
structure made it unfeasible.
Help Seen
On Knees
EAST LANSING. Mich
(AP) — People with trick
knees may get help from re-
search on artificial liga-
ments being conducted at
Michigan State University.
Veterinary s u r g e o n s are
trying to implant synthetic
ligaments in the knees of in-
jured dogs.
Working on the project are
Dr. Wade Brinker. professor
of veterinary surgery and
medicines, and two mem
bers of the department of
metallurgy, mechanics and
materials science. Dr. Rob-
ert W. Little and Rogcit C.
Haut.
Little and Haut are trying
to develop a synthetic liga-
ment designed to replace a
ruptured knee ligament.
Brinker hopes soon to im-
plant the device in a dog and
observe how well it works.
said a group of seven or
eight black coeds congre-
gated In one girl’s room.
"We were playing rec-
ords, and we popped some
popcorn, but mainly we
just talked and laughed,"
Miss Butler said.
She claimed the group
was making no more noise
than other congregations
of girls in other rooms
were. She said one white
girl had on several prior
occasions complained that
Miss Greene was noisy,
when Miss Greene was not
even involved in the noise.
Call Cited
During the evening, she
said, one of the white girls
called her father on the
telephone, and the father
called Miss Greene to the
telephone and “got real
nasty with her."
Miss Butler said after
the father’s call, Dean
Armstrong and other ad-
ministration officials came
to the dorm and instructed
Miss Greene to get her
personal belongings. She
said they told her they in
tended to move her out of
the dorm that night.
He's Not Sure
Miss Butler claimed it
was after midnight, and
that Miss Greene’s only
relative in Oklahoma City,
an aunt, had not been con-
tacted about taking in her
niece.
Miss Butler said when
she objected strongly to
the administrators' effort
to remove Miss Greene "to
the street after midnight,”
she was also drawn into
the disciplinary action.
Dr. Godfrey said Tues-
day he does not know
hether Miss Greene's
aunt was called before the
dean of women attempted
to remove her from the
dorm.
Chair Incident Involved?
“I’m not too clear on
that. The hearing did not
touch on that.”
Henry Floyd, attorney
for the two girls, said
there was a student inci-
dent in the student union
on November 1, in which a
white student hit a Negro
student in the head with a
chair. He claimed Miss
Greene was accidentally
struck by the chair, and so
far as he knows, that is the
reason for her suspension
after the hearing.
Monday’s lengthy hear-
ing before Judge Theus did
not touch on any of the al-
legations of misconduct
and discrimination.
Those matters will be
taken up later when the
two women’s separate law-
suits come up for trial.
Dale Crowder, an assist-
ant attorney general who
represents school adminis-
trators. said no definite
time for the second hear-
ing has been set.
By Ervin Watson
The golfer who mls»e» a
putt then ilamn his club
againit the nearest tree is
simply acting out a behavior
pattern of anger.
A patient wife who can lis-
ten attentively while her
husband relates problems
and pressure* of the day, is
serving the same purpose —
that of an amateur psychia-
trist solving the anger prob-
lem.
This is the view of Dr.
Robert A. Schneider, profes-
sor of Medicine and consult-
ant professor of psychiatry,
at the University of Oklaho-
ma Medical achool.
Dr. Schneider spoke Tues-
day at sessions of the Ameri-
can College of Physicians
during week-long studies of
stress and disease at the
Oklahoma Medical Research
Foundation.
Although everyone Is fa-
miliar with some definition
of anger, there Is a problem
of a physician recognizing
the symptom in his patients.
Dr. Schneider said.
"The doctor must learn to
HUNGER STRIKE is staged outside the Greek embas-
sy in Lonndon by actress Melina Mercouri and Statais
Panagoulis on behalf of the latter’s brother, Alexan-
der, condemned to die for plotting to kill Greek Pre-
mier George Papadopoulos. (AP Wlrephoto)
recognize anger in his pa- Midwest City accepted Tues
tient in a detached sort of Jav an overall educationa
Junior College
Plan Accepted
Trustees for a proposed buildings: student center,
junior community college in
way,” Dr. Schneider said,
adding that anger works
both ways and doctor must
provide an atmosphere of re-
laxation and avoid getting
angry himself.
The angry driver, another
form of venting one’s inner
feelings, is “loaded with dy-
namite,” Dr. Schneider said,
“because he often involves
lives of innocent people.”
“Many fatal accidents are
really suicides,” the speaker
said.
Dr. Schneider said two
areas of anger trouble pa-
tients. One is fear of being
unable to control anger that
might result in harm to an-
other individual. Another is
the fear of alienating other
people through overt ac-
tions.”
“The patient must first
learn to identify and accept
his anger,” Dr. Schneider
explained.
He said there are as many
definitions of anger as there
are patients.
He cited, as an example, a
patient who denied ever
and architectural master
plan for the school.
The plan is to be submit-
ted to the state higher re-
gents for education.
A development study for
campus layout includes eight
Dirksen
In Hospital
gymnasium, acadpmic labo-
ratory, library, administra-
tion, theatre "spectator
gym” and learning center.
In the plan, presented to
college board members by
architects Bishop and Quinn
of Midwest City and a Hous-
ton firm, Caudill-Rowlett-
Scott.
It describes the college as
a "12-month day-night oper-
ation." Two basic "building
zones” are outlined in the
plan: 1he academic zone for
instruction, and the public
zone, for parking and admin
istration offices.
Building cost estimates in
the plan were divided into
LIVINGSTON, N. J. (AP)
— Sen. Everett M. Dirksen
(R-Ill.) has checked into St.
Barnabas Medical Center;— phases _ ,or compie.
hiTP, f°r..a ,JPVl d3lS ,f°La lion by 1970.1975 and 1980.
checkup, the hospital dis-i •’ ....
closed today. ! Phase one completion m-
The 72-year-old senate mi-
nority leader underwent a
full battery of undisclosed
tests following his arrival at
the hospital Monday after-
noon, a hospital spokesman
said.
eludes an estimated cost of
$4.1 million for buildings,
land cost and site develop-
ment.
Phase II costs are estimat-
ed at $2.4 million, and phase
three costs will be about
tion’s largest hyperbaric
v.......... ....... ....high pressure oxygen cham-
being angry but when the her. This unit has been used
The hospital has the na-| $4.1, the plan estimates.
Cost estimates are based
on current cost data.
general’s office. He said
that “does not change my
personal feelings,” but
that there would have been
obvious conflicts. He is a
member of the NAACP
This is not the first va-
cancy on the bench for
which Owens was nominat-
ed.
His first nomination
came last year when an
entirely different nominat-
ing commission put him up
for another Oklahoma
County judge vacancy. He
was passed over by the
governor that time. The
fact that two different
commissions nominated
Owens is known to have
impressed Gov. Bartlett.
The governor received
the latest nominations
Monday morning, made
the appointment that after-
noon, and announced it
Tuesday.
The term Smith is vacat-
ing will end Jan. 19, 1971.
If Owens wants to continue
on the bench he will have
to put his name on the bal-
lot for retention or rejec-
tion at the next election.
Owens is a native of Tul-
sa, and was educated in its
public schools.
He was graduated with
cum laude honors from
Lincoln University, Jeffer-
son City, Mo'., in 1952.
After two years in the
army he returned to Tulsa
and joined the Tulsa Police
Department as a radio pa-
trolman, then a vice squad
detective, until 1960.
While working as a po-
liceman, he went through
the Tulsa school of law’s
4-year course and was ad-
mitted to the bar in 1960.
After three years of pri-
vate practice in Tulsa, he
was tapped for an assist-
ant attorney general by
Charles R. Nesbitt when
the latter went into oliice
in 1963.
When Blankenship suc-
ceeded Nesbitt as attorney
general, he retained Ow-
ens on the staff.
Owens is married and
the father of a 10-year-old
son, Charles jr., and a 7-
month-old daughter, Me-
lanie Lynn. His wife, Ed-
ythe Owens, a Langston
University graduate, pres-
ently is a teacher at Cres-
ton Hills Elementary
School, Oklahoma City.
(Continued From Page 1)
get anyone to do anything abou‘th,H* C‘" y
We reported heaUh
, . in in the navement in the alley behind
There is a hole in the I jyj K0biB#M.
the First National Bank and Trust ( 0. #
Can you get it fixed? B. L.
this hole has now been repanod.
» m- x- »•s-
We reported this to the office of traffic control and
this tree branch now has been remove .
„ <„ii where to get small sized Oklahoma
R.T.
ground floor of the stale capdol building.
I have three small ehildren. all of whom rest in tha
Xi'trss: -»• *— —
Mrs. R. S. P.
1 j n r II MeCasland to investigate
L.lri have been a substitute earner, but they woum
npei the date U occurred. Further, the postmaster says
it is the intention of the post office to honor such requests
by patrons.
There is an old ear parked at the eorner of SW 51
and Thompson. Can you got it moved. Mrs. J. M.
Sorry but Maj. S. W. Stephens, poller department
traffic commander, says this car is parked on private
property.
Action Line will study every inquiry or request, Wh
it isn’t possible lo answer each one personally. Don l en-
close self-addressed, stamped envelopes, as answers to
general interest questions can be given only in this
umn. ___—--
NOW...the Hearing Aids
that AIM to
help you Hear
better!
question was re-phrased and
she was asked if she was
ever mad, she replied, "Oh,
yes, all the time.”
2 Firms Plan
Korea Venture
MIDLAND. Mich. (AP) —
Dow Chemical Co. and Chu-
ngju Fertilizer, owned by the
Republic of Korea, report
they have reached agree-
ment on a joint venture in
Korea.
The new plants, planned
near Ulsan on the southeast
coast of Korea as part of a
$100 million petrochemical
complex, will initially manu-
facture vinyl chorida mon-
in the treatment of lung dis-
orders, particularly emphy-
sema, from which Dirksen
has long suffered.
Plant Expert Dies
SANTA MONICA, Calif.
(AP) — Dr. Carl Epling, a
world authority on mint
plants, is dead at 74, appar-
ently of a heart attack.
President Elected
NEW YORK (AP) — John
R. White, New York, has
been elected president of the
American Society of Real
Estate Counselors.
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THE0AIIY OKLAHOMAN
Mornm^
TWE SUNDAY OKLAHOMAN
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 79, No. 235, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 19, 1968, newspaper, November 19, 1968; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc993303/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.