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| Volume 24 • Number 2 |
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| On the Cover |
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Once shielded from thinking of willed bodies as real people, today’s OU medical students learn all they can about the donors from those who knew and loved them best. Cover Design by George T. Dotson |
| Editor: |
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Carol J. Burr |
| Associate Editor: |
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Margaret French |
| Art Director: |
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George T. Dotson |
| Staff Photographer: |
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Robert Taylor |
| Publisher: |
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The University of Oklahoma Foundation, Inc. |
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Ron D. Burton, President |
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A LAST, LOVING GIFT

The Willed Body Program removes the long-established anonymity surrounding anatomical donors and introduces their families to OU medical students who benefit from this final benevolence.


STILL A STUDENT AT HEART

What Clarke Stroud didn’t think of doing as a college student probably hasn’t been done. Now he is dealing with another generation from the other side of the vice presidential desk.


CONNECTING WITH SCANDINAVIA

Scandinavian students have come to the University of Oklahoma since 1980 via a program created to say thanks to countries that shielded thousands of Jews from Hitler’s “final solution.”

HAULING IN THE HARDWARE

As a team, the 2003 football Sooners mourn the one that got away, but as individuals, they couldn’t have done much better than eight national trophies awarded to players and coach.

PADDLING THEIR OWN CANOE

Yes, concrete floats, and when skillfully designed, it can be crafted into a competitive racing vessel that could propel its dedicated team to academic accolades and even a national title.

AMERICA'S MAYOR

Former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani came to Norman to meet and greet, discuss the essence of leadership and courage under fire and collect an honorary doctorate.

HAVEN FROM THE STORM

Alone, frightened yet undeniably excited, 14-year-old Trude Kirchhausen escaped Nazi Germany on a journey that eventually led her to a sorority house at the University of Oklahoma.
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