Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 83, No. 74, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 16, 1972 Page: 3 of 26
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END DENTURE MISERY
National Affairs
be confined to a hospital
bed. But his press secre-
ROTC End Favored
PRINCETON, N..J (AP)
— Two-thirds of Princeton
University’s students favor
ending the ROTC ■ pro-
’ grams at the university.
. ■
when the Democrats hold
their convention in Miami
Beach in July/
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BECAUSE IT’S BEAUTIFUL
...do something beautiful! If you’re
young, tolerate an oldster's viewpoint
chances of actually win-
ning the nomination were
increasing. In fact, his
Miracle plsstic DFNTURITF
..... . — -------_
utes. This " Cushion of Comfort
eases sore gum
Laugh, talk, «»
particles under plates.
• DENTUMTE lasts for months.
Ends daily bother of powder,
paste or cushions.
when refit is needc _. —
Odorless. Money back guarantee.
At alldrug counters.
strive for was to be a man
to be reckoned with—and,
dealt with—
HAVE
ANEW
BOAT
FOR
2)
D.
gon and Rhode Island, but
neither is in territory like-
ly to prove particularly
friendly.
His three primary elec-
tion victories were scored
in the South, in Florida,
Tennessee, and North Car-
olina. He ran strong in los-
deficit was $2.8 in« the primaries in Wis-
paign this year although
he indicated it was not
probable. Furthermore,
* time was running out for
any meaningful revival of
his American Independent
Party campaign.
Wallace never clearly
defined his goals in thb
1972 campaign although he
said periodically that his
1
•■’•'•'I
^7^,. '
The $3.5 billion first-
quarter <-------
billion lest than the $6.3
billion deficit recorded in
the last three months of
1971. .
The deficit was figured
on the official reserves
transactions basis, which
mainly measures transac-
tions between foreign cen-
tral banks and govern-
ments, and U.S. banking
sources.
TT
ri
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D. Infinity ring, $25.
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T
T
The Trip Is On, Pat Says
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon will be going
to Moscow after all, his wife says.
••It’s no secret. It’s on,” Mrs. Nixon said Monday.
It was the first firm word from the White Housethat
«« Russiw^opposirion'would not MocK the Mo,-
“m “ NteT^d Xe and tlw Pre»£dent wUl be depurl-
Ing Saturday morning £
F?
P
I
4
tUMMatKMOOt
teM Tar* Softas *00- **
Write for talminoMno
Peme MtUtery AtaAemy
Moan City, Okfo. 74001
consin and Pennsylvania.
Wallace is not entered in
the California primary
which will award 271 nomi-
nating votes, on June 6. He
talked of a write-in cam-
paign there, and had con-
sidered the possibility of
campaigning in New Mexi-
co which votes the same
day.
Now a Wallace proxy
could turn up in one or
'more of those campaign
states to seek whatever
support there is to±eJxad
for the wounded Alabama
governor.
It is conceivable that
•___________ Cornelia Wallace, wife of
in Southeast Asia and the the governor, might stand
Burial at Sea
CORONADO, Calif. (AP)
— RearxHdm. Rembrandt
C. Robinson, killed in a
helicopter crash in the
Gulf of Tonkin, will be bur-
ied at sea Wednesday.
prospects started at zero
and never went up much.
What Wallace seemed to he .hoped,
necessary.
In Maryland and Mlchi-
litical cause, than as an gan, Wallace is sure to en-
stilled his presidential active campaigner trying large
campaign.
It is a campaign that
seemed destined to reach
its high point today, with
the Alabama governor fa-
vored to win the Demo-
in for him at some cam-
paign appearances.
He never flatly ruled out-
53,(1 ’'•‘yior&kburg? Austria, the’first ‘
stop on the four-country, two-week journey.
A
cratic primary elections in tary, Billy Joe Camp, told
_ __2?'■/ ■_ . newsmen today the gover-
But Wallace could prove nor will continue his cam-
_ > on the bloc of presi-
* to become a Democratic dential-nominatlng votes
power broker. that now rank him third in '
Doctors aren’t saying the field. Wallace has 210
just how long Wallace will votes. Sen. George Mc-
Govern leads with 358
first-ballot commitments,
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey
has 2411/j. •
It appears certain that
| somehow the 1972 Wallace
I movement is going to be
| continued even with the
k candidate himself out of
An Analysis
| action—that almost surely
the effort will be made to
i hold his delegates in a
force that will have clout
; in the divided Democratic
convention.
There is no obvious
stand-in or campaign suc-
cessor to Wallace. His was
essentially a one-man
show. There were about
1,000 people on hand at
Laurel, Md., when Wallace
was gunned down Monday.
No other Democrat can
turn out that kind of crowd
for a weekday political ral-
ly-
Nonetheless, with the
governor temporarily out
of the campaign, it is like-
ly someone will stand in
Now you can quench two appetites in one hour at The First. One
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Our loan officers have the experience and ability to expedite loan
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portant, they’ll arrange a low-cost Lunch Hour Loan for that new
boat on terms suited to your budget.
Come to our Instalment Loan De-
partment, on the north side of the
main lobby. And we’ll take care of
your Lunch Hour Loan in time for
you to take care of a sandwich. Have
a new boat for lunch! .
____;
IpMNRProMw
<m> nmmns ’**
To Europe
WASHINGTON (AP) —
Secretary of Defense Mel-
vin R. Laird left today for
Europe to explain to
America’s NATO allies
what he called President
Nixon’s “bold decision for
peace in Indochina.” ,
“I believe the majority
of the defense ministers
will understand this most
generous offer for peace,” .3
Laird told newsmen.
He was referring to the
President’s offer last week
- to withdraw all U.S. troops
from Vietnam four months
after the North agrees to
return all American pris-
oners and an international-
ly supervised ceasefire
throughout Indochina.
Courts Urged |
WASHINGTON (AP) — Chief Justice Warren E. Burg-
er today recommended establishment of a new national
center to assist state courts with technical problems.
He advanced the proposal at a meeting of the Ameri-
can Law Institute, saying the center should be organized
along the lines of the National Institutes of Health.
Congress would authorize the center. It would be di-
rected by the three federal branches of government,
awarding grants for court improvement.
Weather Hard to Beat
r
By The Associated Press
Pleasant weather favored most of the nation today
with only scattered showers and thunderstorms marring |0 represent him as a sym-
an over-all pattern of fair skies and temperatures above of the mOod of protest
the seasonal normals. on the Democratic right.
Readings in the 70s and 80s were widespread Monday, After today, Wallace ap-
except in the Great Lakes region and the Pacific Coast. peared to have no place to
The Southwest sixiled In the upper 90s. go in the primaries. His
Showers and thunderstorms wet down parts of the At- name is on the ballot for
lantic Coast, the Great Lakes, the Northern Plains, the the May 33 election in Ore-
Rio Grande Valley and the Pacific Northwest.
Deficit High, Rate Is Less
WASHINGTON (AP) — dollar is to remain stable
The nation's balance-of- in foreign exchange mar-
payments deficit improved jjets.
markedly in the first three
months of the year, the
* Commerce Department
said today.
D e a p i t e the improve-
ment, the deficit still re-
mained at a high level,
reaching $3.5 billion by one
yardstick.
The improvement less-
ens pressure on the dollar
overseas, but the Nixon
administration says the
deficit must be brought
close to equilibrium if the
refits loon dentures in fir* mtn-
_ Writ*- •</'__
-is. You eat anything.
____ even sneete without
embarrassment. No more food
particles under plates.
DENTUR1TE lasts For months.
lust remote
I. Tasteless.
By Walter R. Mears
WASHINGTON (AP) — Maryland and Michigan.
Gov. George (J. Wallace 1
political protest that won’t weeks ahead from a hoepi-
be silenced by the bullets
that for the present have
has played upon'a chord of more formidable in the paign, in a wheelchair if
tai bed, a martyr to his po-
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 83, No. 74, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 16, 1972, newspaper, May 16, 1972; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1788184/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.