Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 103, Ed. 3 Monday, June 19, 1967 Page: 4 of 10
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Little Effect on Mideast Settlement Seen
I 4/Monday, June 19, 1967 OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
UN Debate Results Unpredictable
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Guard Puts Privacy
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Navy Shotrx EKG Test
Silence
Feet Tell on Heart
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Is Really
LONDON (AP) — Britain's
CAPE TOWN, South Africa
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Golden
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year-old patrol boat from a
THREE
The equip-
shipbuilder.
CE 2-8124
FOUR
Most impor-
THINK
Five Killed
In Crash
At Allen Academy
Legislators Eyed
■
(By a Staff Writer)
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J
dren,
18, Sharon Dawn Shannahan. Legislators in the 50 states
dition in a Laramie hospital.
CHICAGO (AP) — Richard day.
able to talk his girl friend'delegates and its alternates
Allen
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VILLA TO PENN. ON N.W. 23rd
72 STORES
TO
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Prepare Your
Son For College
Leap Fails
To Halt Trip
SEARCHING CITY, San Jose, Calif., has surpassed its
Bay Area rival, San Francisco, in industry and is one
of the nation’s fastest growing cities with a metropoli-
REFRIGERATION SALES
A ENGINEERING CO.
feet" test equipment would
have these advantages for
mmei
emew
AMAZING
INDIGESIION
FORMULA WIOEIY
RtcOmmI NOt n
BY DO IIIHS
When you plan
a convention
ment is designed so it can
be operated by untrained
personnel.
tin, 59, and Mary Dobbins.
63
in
Ruidoso, N. M.
—Ruidoso All Seasons, Inc.
Parents who want their sons
to have a better education should
investigate Allen Military Acad-
emy in Bryan, Texas, one of the
state's oldest prep schools.
Specializing in preparing boys
tan area population of more than 900,000. City father*,
however, say San Jose is still searching for its true
identity.
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Military Academy
Bryan, Texas
713-822-1530
IN THE
AMERICAN AIRLINE ASTROSPHERE
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Selling & Servicing Air Conditioners Since 1931
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On the final day for signing
or vetoing legislation. Texas
Gov. John Connally put his
name on 129 bills and resolu-
tions and vetoed 37.
STOPS
GAS PAIN
AFTER
JOU EAT
Suez (’losing
Janis Up Ship
(V/A
YOU CAN TAKE PART IN AN EXCITING EXPERIENCE
FLY WITHOUT LEAVING
THE GROUND
By Medical Men
•/
personal attention to each boy.
Allen Academy maintains high
academic standards so that grad-
uates are welcomed by most col-
leges.
The school classrooms and dor-
mitories are air conditioned for
student comfort. Complete faci-
lities for recreation and athletics
are provided.
Allen Academy elasses start
in the seventh grade and con-
tinue through high school and
junior college. Full information
may be obtained by writing or
telephoning the Director of Ad-
missions. Terms are available.
WANA.
half, the navy hired a
have drawn up only one res-
olution for consideration by
the house of delegates,
AMA's policy-making body.
The resolution calls for the
AMA to plan one national
program yearly that would
be of material educational
value to states and their leg-
isfators.
The idea behind the meas-
ure is that medical groups
can get better legislative re-
ception in getting enactment
of laws on such subjects as
quackery, mental health,
medical schools, medical
FEDDERS
World** Largest Selling Air-Conditioners
SAVE UP TO $50 ON ALL REMAINING
1966 MODELS—4.000 to 23,000 BTU
129 Bills Signed
AUSTIN, Texas (AP)
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LARAMIE, Wyo. (AP) said the navy's "stocking
Five persons were killed in a
Michael Shannahan,
condemns Israel and tells
it to withdraw and return
to the Arabs the land
seized in the war.
Before the a s s e m b l y
could even meet to discuss
such problems the Egyp-
tian ambassador to the
United Nations, Mohamed
El Kony, ruled out Sunday
any Israeli-Arab negotia-
tions.
He said, "By all means
we are going to get our ter-
ritory back, whatever the
cost.” Further, he said,
even if President Johnson
and Soviet Premier Alexei
N. Kosygin, who is in New
York for the debate, had a
summit meeting they
"couldn’t arrange anything
without our consent.”
- -
--
Sunday in more than 10 fleet from being slashed
The state's three AMA
• 6 1K
REHEARSING LINES for their parts in “The Philadelphia Story” are Princess
Lee Radziwill, sister of Mrs. John F. Kennedy, and John Eric son, who plays
opposite her in the production which opens Tuesday in Chicago.
15, are reported in good con-may be getting adequate
3i - , ' i1 medical attention from their
| personal physician, but they
TAKES YOU ON AN IMAGINARY FLIGHT
STEREO AUDIO & VISUALLY CREATED
JUNE2OTH THRU JULY 1ST
A tremendous experience for those never-flown ondthosewho
can qet enough of this wonderful way to travel. Take a flight at Shep-
herd Mall in the Astrosphere ... and then shop the exciting stores
on the Mall.
Shepherd ||all
aren't getting enough from
organized medicine itself,
the Oklahoma delegation to
| the American Medical Asso-
।elation convention said Mon-
years. Port Capt. A C. Mat-
son said shipping agents had
advised him of more than 100
additional vessels which had
been diverted from Suez
around southern Africa.
Y Di Gel
2 m re D (>'
by not only blots
” up excess acid,
but it also untraps the
pain-causing gas that
makes you feel full and
bloated. Relieves and
prevents gassy acid
build-up! Get it today.
DI-GEUATGJ
(AP) —With the Suez Canal ( 0 .Y a । Navy, once the,
, , . ,, nr 1 world's biggest, is renting a
closed since the Middle East . u u >
।boat for the next three weeks|
war,,21 ships waited in lineto keep its fleet of fast patrol
Sunday to enter Cape Town boats upto strength.
Soviet-American rela-
tions have been improving,
and the Soviets showed
reason and restraint when
the Mideast war broke out.
It's possible that, while
trying to endear them-
selves to the Arabs all over
again by castigating Is-
rael, they will try to avoid
anything that would anger
the United States.
It seems likely that no
matter what the General
Assembly says about the
Israeli-Arab war it will
have little effect on a Mid-
east settlement.
For instance, suppose
the assembly says Israel
and the Arabs ought to get
together and work out a
settlement. Or suppose it
And the Israeli foreign
minister, Abba Eban, who
is also in New York, said
Sunday there would be no
return to pre-war bounda-
ries "even if the General
Assembly votes 121 to 1 in
favor of it.” He said the
Arabs would have to ne-
gotiate .with Israel about
getting their real estate
back.
One of the most fascinat-
ing parts of the debate will
be the American role. It's
a good guess the United
States will at least start
out on a soft line, perhaps
letting Israel set off the or-
atorical fireworks, to avoid
any unnecessary show-
downs.
116th annual meeting here
through Thursday.
Quick and easy to use,
navy doctors from the U.
S. Naval Hospital in Phila-
delphia said the new equip-
ment holds great promise
for screening large groups
in order to detect which
persons have heart prob-
lems.
The device consists of
two foot plates and two fin-
ger clips, and unlike the
EKG test, requires only
the time it takes you to
take off your shoes.
An individual places his
feet on metal foot plates,
touches his index fingers
to the finger clips and then
is hooked up to the equip-
ment — which can meas-
ure the electrical activity
of the heart in one minute
flat.
Lt. Alex Birch. MD,
and allied manpower short-
ages and hospitals if legisla-
tors first had a working
knowledge of the facts in
each case and the problems.
The resolution suggests
that the AMA offer to pay
travel and other expenses of
legislators for the national
meeting, if possible.
The resolution makes state
medical associations respon-
sible for picking which key
legislators they wish to in-
vite to the meeting.
The measure was referred
Monday for action by a
reference committee. The
resolution and some 100 oth-
ers will go back to the house
of delegates, which recon-
venes Tuseday afternoon.
The 14,000 doctors attend-
ing the 116th annual medical
meeting will spend Monday
in reference committees and
attending the opening session
of scientific paper presenta-
tions. The convention closes
Thursday.
Don't Miss This Opportuni-
ty to Own the World's
Finest Air Conditioner At
Our Lowest Price of the
Yeor!
people are to participate in
a discussion.
Hastie said it cost under
$600 for the materials used
in making the compart-
ment, which was fabricat-
ed by guard technicians.
He said the plane is the
one designated for mission
support purposes and is
not primarily used. for
hauling cargo. Each guard
unit has one such plane.
When not used for trans-
port purposes, the general
said the plane is regularly
used for flight crew train-
ing.
W hen necessary. the
compart ment can be
speedily removed and the
plane could be available
for combat missions.
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•A flying conference room
that permanently seats
four and sleeps two was
being built into one of the
Oklahoma City National
Guard’s four-engine C-97's.
The room was built into
the forward part of the
‘ plane's second level to pro-
I vide privacy for guard
staff officers flying to con-
ferences and others author-
! ized to use the plane, in-
cluding Gov. Dewey Bart-
lett.
Brig. Gen Doyle W Has-
tie. commander of the
guard's 137th Military Air-
lift Wing, said the room
was primarily built into
the plane so that he, Maj.
Gen L E Weber, state
adjutant general. and oth-
out of taking a trip to Eu-
rope.
So the<22-year-old Decatur.
Ill., man jumped out of Miss
Maureen Warrick’s third-
floor apartment window,
said Detective Sgt. Edward
Nichols.
Police took Jewell to Weiss
Memorial Hospital, where of-
ficials said he wasn't even
limping.
Miss Warrick, 21, tele-
phoned police to make sure
Jewell was OK. and then
hopped on a plane for Lon-
don,,. * \
La . t.,.
Britain s Navy
Rents a Boat
%-60. O.t v a"’ e
—arham.m.La • • -*b
(By a Staff Writer)
• ATLANTIC CITY, N J.
— Kicking off your shoes
and stepping on some
equipment in your stocking
feet may be the method of
mass screening for heart
abnormalities in the fu-
ture, navy doctors said
here Monday.
The “stocking feet" test
for making electrocar-
diogram (EKG) or heart
wave examinations is on
display at the American
Medical Associations
scientific exhibit section.
The AMA is holding its
harbor, to fuel on the voyage | One of the navy's two 99-
from Asia and East Africa to]foot patrol boats, the Brave
Europe, jSwordsman, is going in for
it whs the port's busiest an overhaul. To keep the
—
head-on crash of two cars
about 12 miles south of Lara-
mie on U. S. 287 Sunday
night.
P The dead were identified
as air force Lt. Col. Billy
Rex Shannahan, 46, and his
wife, Maxine, 44, both of San
Jose, Calif., and three Lara-
mie residents, Mrs. Emily H
Paintin, 50; Joseph F. Pain-
-aE, J
tant, testing can be done
very quickly.
Birch emphasized that
while the device is good
for screening, it is in no
way designed to replace
the regular EKG.
The idea would be to use
the navy's device only for
mass screening, then refer
persons in whom heart
trouble was detected to a
physician for a detailed
EKG examination.
support of 10 other mem-
bers, to condemn the ac-
tion and demand Soviet
withdrawal. But Moscow
vetoed this.
This time, in the General
Assembly, the Soviets may
try to fry a lot of fish. Pos-
ing as friend of the Arabs,
it can seek to make the
United States look pro-
Israel and anti-Arab,
which the Arabs think it is
anyway.
For the Soviets this
would be a worthwhile pro-
ject if the result froze the
United States out of the
Middle East, which doesn't
seem likely, and made it-
self the dominant force
But the unpredictables in
all this are endless.
a mass screening pro-
gram :
TWO — Not having to
use special paste with elec-
trodes has two advantages
— it speeds up the process,
and gets away from the
messy part of a normal
EKGtest.
“2-2.
LANSING, Mich. (AP)
— The 250 employes at the
Michigan Millers Mutual
Insurance Co. in Lansing
don't talk .to each other
from the start of work at 8
a.m. until 9 a m.
For that hour, they ig-
nore each other, no out-
go i n g phone calls are
made, no one walks
around, no routine interde-
partmental communica-
tions are made.
Interest Grows
The company says the
“quiet hour” has increased
efficiency. The idea has at-
tracted the interest of oth-
er companies and business
journals.
“A few minutes talk
about last night’s TV show
doesn't sound like much." 1
Treasurer Harold C. Roost
said. “But when you take a
couple hundred people at
ten or 15 minutes apiece —
that’s a lot of company
time.”
Hour Added
Roost said the plan is so
successful that some de-
partment heads are adding
a second quiet hour after
lunch.
Manager Dies
STAMFORD, Conn — ploye benefits from Sperry-
Beecher H. Baldwin, 60, Rand Corp, died here Sun-
corporate manager of em- day.
Millers Mutual gives its 1 for college, Allen Academy has
employes two coffee ] small classes and an exception-
breaks and a 45-minute ] ally competent faculty that gives
er officers could discuss
classified material while
enroute to conferences and
not be overheard by other
occupants of the plane.
Four passenger-type
seats facing toward the
rear are in the room lined
with a light-colored wood
paneling that follows the
curvature of the plane A
dark paneling was used on
the outer side of the com-
partment. Transluscent
paneling covers the lights
A curtain separates the
main part of the compart-
ment from double-decker
bunks at the rear There
are two tables in the room
and folding chairs are
available, once the plane is
airborne, if more than four
tLwes:
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G.s.
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s”e"e
lunch daily and sponsors
classes and dances. No
coercion beyond a raised
eyebrow is used during the
quiet hour.
"I sort of enojy it," said
Helen Kont, an underwri-
ter who’s been with the
firm for 20 years.
“I thought it sounded
like a kindergarten when it
started 18 months ago.”
ONE — Since no chest
electrodes a re used, the
person being checked
would not have to disrobe.
By James Marlow
WASHINGTON (AP) —
Before the end of the Ts-
raeli-Egyptian war debate,
opening Monday in the UN
General Assembly, the
United States and Soviet
Union may get along bet-
ter or worse. It’s that un-
predictable.
But cynicism is part of
the bloodstream of the
United Nations which, at
the time of its creation in
1945, looked like a holy of
holies, or so the world
hoped then.
The Soviets, who prom-
ised the Arabs their sup-
port if they got into war
with Israel, did nothing ex-
cept piously protest vio-
lence when the war came
and the Israelis demol-
ished the Egyptians. This
cost the Soviets dearly in
Arab confidence.
So what they did when
the quick war ended was
obvious: they set out to re-
capture Arab goodwill bv
asking the UN Security
Council to condemn Israel
as an aggressor and de-
mand it withdraw from the
Arab land it seized.
The Soviets lost on this
maneuver in the council
when a majority of the 15
members, including the
United States, refused to
go along. So then Moscow
asked the full assembly to
do what the Council re-
fused to do.
This was a switch. In
1961, when India overran
the Portuguese enclave of
Gao-Damao-Diu on the
southwest coast of India,
territory Portugal had held
since the 16th century, the
United States, Britain and
France asked the Security
Council to condemn India's
aggression and demand it
withdraw
The Soviets, who had
praised the Indian attack,
vetoed this proposal.
Egypt also opposed it.
In 1956, when Moscow
sent its army into Hungary
to crush the anti-
Communist revolt there,
the United States asked the
Security Council, with the
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 103, Ed. 3 Monday, June 19, 1967, newspaper, June 19, 1967; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1846803/m1/4/: accessed July 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.